Quote from: Antares on March 02, 2011, 06:18:30 AMThe Departed (2006) 3/5 I hope that the original is better than this.Well I thought you were being a bit harsh! I really like The Departed, but I love Infernal Affairs. It's leaner and better focused, certainly. Like a Michael Mann film.
The Departed (2006) 3/5 I hope that the original is better than this.
But that's because you never lived in Massachusetts. I can't remember who it was on this site who hated Rock-n-Rolla because of the exaggerated dialogue, but that's exactly the way I felt watching this tedious mish-mosh of Scorsese pablum.
My Night at Maud's (1969) 4/5...and the film kind of ends on a whimper.
Quote from: Antares on March 02, 2011, 06:18:30 AMMy Night at Maud's (1969) 4/5...and the film kind of ends on a whimper.Rohmer didn't go that often for emotionally powerful endings as in L'amour l'après-midi, but to call the double-twist of the reveal and the protagonist's reaction to it a whimper...
I hope you're not trying to say that Bostonians don't have very distinct and heavy dialect.
Was Francoise, Maud's ex-husband's mistress?
If a Kennedy and a regular person from Boston say the following sentence... I parked the car on Cape CodA Kennedy says it this way...I pawked the caw awn Cape Cawd, a noticeable Boston Braman dialect.The average Bostonian says it... I pahked the cah ahn Cape Cahd
Quote from: Antares on March 03, 2011, 12:18:47 AMWas Francoise, Maud's ex-husband's mistress?Indeed, she was.
Then I definitely change my feelings about the end of the film. But I also wonder about your interpretation of Jean-Louis' reaction. To me, his reaction wasn't indifference but more that the reality went right by him. He was so blinded by his love for Francoise that he had emotional blinders on and didn't get the inference of Maud & Francoise knowing each other. Maybe I'm wrong, but that's what I felt as the scene happened.