I started to watch the dvd but had to switch films when my partner arrived and said she didn't want to watch some old crap
Maybe the director thought this was a game and not the movie, made with easy mode chosen.
Quote from: Rich on February 01, 2009, 06:41:33 PMMaybe the director thought this was a game and not the movie, made with easy mode chosen.I reckon you've hit the nail on the head. I have no wish to see this film as I haven't seen one decent comment (poor old Whalberg, after this and The Happening), but I bet half the problem with this and other game adaptations is that the director has not played the game, or even any other game since 1987. So he has no idea how sophisticated they actually can be now and thinks he's making it for action junkies who don't give a shit about even the tiniest hint of realism.
How did this beat High Noon to the best picture?Clearly made for the big screen, the cast of thousands and multiple scenes within one would no doubt have been better to watch in the cinema. It does come across rather lack-lustre and dated, and I was underwhelmed by Heston as the lead.By far the best part of the film was watching the real circus performers, both human and animals, totally spectacular performances and something that must have been amazing to see live, in truth I would have preferred watching them without the piss poor editing and wet dialogue of the movie itself.The worst part besides the corny acting, the appalling 'train crash' scene, Hornby must have been rubbing his hands together!Seen once, you'd have to be a clown to see it twice
"John Wayne strongly despised the film because he felt it was an allegory for blacklisting, which he and his good friends Ward Bond and Howard Hawks actively supported. In his Playboy interview from May 1971, Wayne stated he considered High Noon "the most un-American thing I’ve ever seen in my whole life"[4] and went on to say he would never regret having helped blacklist liberal screenwriter Carl Foreman from Hollywood. He later teamed up with director Howard Hawks to make Rio Bravo as a conservative response. Ironically, Cooper himself had conservative political views, and was a "friendly witness" to the HUAC several years earlier, although he did not "name names" and later strongly opposed blacklisting,[5] and Wayne also accepted Cooper's Academy Award for the role as Cooper was unable to attend the presentation.The Left appreciated the film for what they believed was an allegory of people (Hollywood people, particular) that were afraid to stand up to HUAC. However, the film would eventually gain the respect of people with conservative/anti-communist views. Ronald Reagan, a conservative and fervent anti-communist, would appreciate the film because the main character had a strong dedication to duty, law, and the well being of the town, despite their refusal to help."
Boooo! Where did I leave my squeaky nose and size 19 shoes? It's a creaky old melodrama, but harmless. I've seen it loads of times and it's a decent film. James Stewart makes it for me.