Great review and a great film. As much as I liked No Country for Old Men, this was the better film that year and should have won for Best Picture.As to the ending...I am one of those who found fault with it, because Dano's character is reduced to a babbling idiot of sorts. If Anderson had made Dano portray it with a bit less absurdity, it may have worked. But to have him appear as a petulant, whiny child with ADD , throws all sense of believabilty right out the window. You mentioned Altman earlier, and I could see Altman doing something like this, just to throw the audience a curve ball, but as it would have with Altman, here too, it doesn't work.
The Road
Why aren’t people working together? How did all the bad guys find each other and get sort of organised, but the good guys don’t?
Some dismiss it as depressing, but they were probably depressed because they couldn’t see past the lack of plot and set-pieces to find the genuine and substantial human drama within.
This is the only film of De Palma's I would rate so high.
I respect your opinion when it comes to film, but I feel that you do yourself a disservice by rating films in this manner. If someone joins this forum or reads your blog and you rate a film such as this (a film I would be hard pressed to rate above 4) with the same rating as Ikiru, Casablanca or M, and they watch and it doesn't live up to the quality of the films I've mentioned, then you lose credibility with that person in any further review you write.
There Will Be Blood[...]Daniel Plainview and son are independent oil men,
Quote from: Jon on July 24, 2010, 06:07:49 PMThe RoadI watched this last night and quite liked it. As you said, the acting is very good, the production design is marvelous and cinematography is also excellent.... (click to show/hide)I take it from your review that you opted for the "good ending", that guy Pearce's character is a good guy who will help the son rather than provide him as food for the family? Which weaves into into my other question: Did you also find it a bit strange that Guy Pearce had followed them around for a long time? And for what purpose? And if he did, why didn't he help against the black guy who stole everything?I agree with your identification of the "carrying the fire" line being the key-point of this film. Two other great lines came from the son (I put some of it in spoilers, as it's best to discover the full extent of their meaning while watrching the film):"I wish I could be with my mom." (click to show/hide)Father: "So you wish you were dead?"Son: "Yes."and (click to show/hide)Father: "You are not the one who has to carry all the responsibilities"Son: "Yes I am the one!"Especially the latter goes very close with what you said about the scene with Robert Duvall (his comment about the son being an angel).
Quote from: Jon on July 30, 2010, 10:08:58 PMThis is the only film of De Palma's I would rate so high.
I thought about this just a week ago myself. In fact, in order to use ratings from this forum for a purchase decision you must have been here for while, know what kind of films each reviewer likes and how he/she rates them. We discussed this in the past and agreed, that we want to make our rating personal.If I were to use "real" ratings for the films I review I'd probably get more 3s rather than 4s and 5s. But, in the end it's about showing people how YOU rate the film, not how you think it should be placed within film history (which I think was the argument that let us to the result in before mentioned discussion). Actually, isn't that how you have to approach other reviews? Maybe you like films Ebert likes, but hate stuff Kael praises? Maybe films reviewed by Kermode fall in the middle? You still need to find a reviewer whose opinion matches yours.Your reviews are clear on their purpose, as you use a different rating scale, which is placed below your reviews. Most of use our own scale, which is more about personal judgement. I guess your "complaint" is, that John uses a star rating (which indicates that he rates like you do) but then applies it in the same way the others use the smiley rating...
Quote from: Jon on August 01, 2010, 06:42:24 PMThere Will Be Blood[...]Daniel Plainview and son are independent oil men,Interesting. Is this a real-life character...? Or did Rockstar games pay tribute to the movie in Red Dead Redemption? (There is an oil-site in the game which is called "Plainview".)
Excellent use of spoilers there, Achim!
(click to show/hide)Within the context of the film, I didn't find it odd that Guy Pearce and his missus had been following them and not helping. It fits in with the rest of the film. Adults cannot and will not trust anyone. They focus on the children only. It isn't a perfect explanation, but then it isn't a perfect film and this is the aspect I found a little sentimental and naive. It's all to a purpose though and by being simple, it rams the idea home.
The Constant Gardener5 out of 5...I love it when this happens. I’d already seen The Constant Gardener and knew I liked it, but I had an urge to watch it again and it seemed to take on a whole new level. On this occasion, I found it achingly brilliant.
I'm deeply suspicious about commercial message movies dealing with contemporary issues of this scale. And the le Carré quote at the end just rubs me the wrong way - if the issue really matters to you, why did you end up making just a "holiday postcard"?But I do like the visual style and I agree that Fiennes and especially Weisz are pretty good, but their love story feels a bit shorthanded and some of their flashback scenes together are just... not exactly too clichéd, but too suitable, I guess.
Junior Bonner3 out of 5
On the other hand, the director did surprise me with occasional clumsiness, including the dated split screen titles that make it look like a TV movie and a cheesy freeze frame montage at the end.
Plus the lighter hearted “Milking” event is both very funny and impressively staged. Add in a classy cowboy barroom brawl, a lively cast, a poignant story and you have a passable couple of hours. And the film might keep coming back to you, despite its humble nature. Another overview I read claimed this was Peckinpah's favourite film of his own. While I think it is far from his best, I can well believe it. It has a good heart.
You have to remember Jon, that the split screen imagery was still quite fresh in 1972, being only 2 years removed from the seminal documentary of Woodstock.
It is definitely a film that I will revisit from time to time in the future. I wish Peckinpah would have made more films like this in his career.
Have you ever seen The Hunter? Quirky, but really good. I reviewed for the last Alphathon.