If you'll indulge me, I'm going to take a slightly different tack with the latest Movie Club...
I first saw There Will Be Blood around a month ago and will start off by posting my thoughts from the time. Hopefully it'll start the ball rolling and I'll watch it again (I've been itching to but haven't had the time until this weekend) - just to see if anyone is able to convince me of ... well ... things I'm not entirely convinced of.
Anyway:
As you can see, I liked There Will Be Blood. Liked it more than any other PT Anderson film actually, got quite a lot out of it but definitely didn't love it.
Where would the director's fans place the film in his canon?
Daniel Day Lewis - Deserved Academy Award or the lucky recipient of a termendously meaty role? Would Steve Guttenberg have done the same with the material?
Questions, questions...
My main question is this: Can anyone convince me that There Will Be Blood is the Great American Movie that some say it is? Alternatively, can anyone persuade me that the film is, indeed, a directionless and overblown exercise in shouting?
I first saw There Will Be Blood around a month ago and will start off by posting my thoughts from the time. Hopefully it'll start the ball rolling and I'll watch it again (I've been itching to but haven't had the time until this weekend) - just to see if anyone is able to convince me of ... well ... things I'm not entirely convinced of.
Anyway:
There Will Be Blood (2007, Paul Thomas Anderson)
Citizen Cain & Abel?
I'm ambivalent to most of Anderson's prior work (Magnolia aside, which I think is a spectacularly awful movie) and therefore approached There Will Be Blood with a certain amount of trepidation, considering the ballyhoo surrounding it from the Kermodes of this world.
What I found was neither one of the great American movies nor a directionless and overblown exercise in shouting.
Shame.
Everyone's favourite Anglo-Irish shoemaker, Daniel Day-Lewis, is pretty good, it has to be said. Yes, he spends 80% of his screen time grandstanding - reminding me a little of consummate old ham Tony Hopkins' portrayal of that Kellogg bloke in Alan Parker's The Road To Wellville - but I'd counter that this is because Plainview spent most of his life doing exactly that. It works here.
There's a shred of humanity, however warped it might be, running through DDL's Plainview that pulls the performance back from the brink. It's better than, say, his equally shouty and moustachioed Bill the Butcher...
Paul Dano (does anyone else get the urge to shout "Book 'em!" whenever they read his name? Oh ) is also more than adequate. I'd heard differing views on his performance but thought he captured the young charlatan that was Eli pretty well.
The film, like a lot of modern Hollywood productions, is beautifully shot. The screenplay by Anderson is probably the best I've seen from him.
That said, I don't think that There Will Be Blood is a great film, far from it. There are too many 'so what?' moments - Kevin O'Connor's Henry, for instance - for it to be so. Strangely, for someone with this particular gripe, I didn't mind the movie's length...
There are powerful forces at work here, witness the double (almost) fratricide and the baptism scene. They're spread a little thin, though.
Oh brother, where art though?
PS - Top drooling by the boy Lewis!
Citizen Cain & Abel?
I'm ambivalent to most of Anderson's prior work (Magnolia aside, which I think is a spectacularly awful movie) and therefore approached There Will Be Blood with a certain amount of trepidation, considering the ballyhoo surrounding it from the Kermodes of this world.
What I found was neither one of the great American movies nor a directionless and overblown exercise in shouting.
Shame.
Everyone's favourite Anglo-Irish shoemaker, Daniel Day-Lewis, is pretty good, it has to be said. Yes, he spends 80% of his screen time grandstanding - reminding me a little of consummate old ham Tony Hopkins' portrayal of that Kellogg bloke in Alan Parker's The Road To Wellville - but I'd counter that this is because Plainview spent most of his life doing exactly that. It works here.
There's a shred of humanity, however warped it might be, running through DDL's Plainview that pulls the performance back from the brink. It's better than, say, his equally shouty and moustachioed Bill the Butcher...
Paul Dano (does anyone else get the urge to shout "Book 'em!" whenever they read his name? Oh ) is also more than adequate. I'd heard differing views on his performance but thought he captured the young charlatan that was Eli pretty well.
The film, like a lot of modern Hollywood productions, is beautifully shot. The screenplay by Anderson is probably the best I've seen from him.
That said, I don't think that There Will Be Blood is a great film, far from it. There are too many 'so what?' moments - Kevin O'Connor's Henry, for instance - for it to be so. Strangely, for someone with this particular gripe, I didn't mind the movie's length...
There are powerful forces at work here, witness the double (almost) fratricide and the baptism scene. They're spread a little thin, though.
Oh brother, where art though?
PS - Top drooling by the boy Lewis!
Where would the director's fans place the film in his canon?
Daniel Day Lewis - Deserved Academy Award or the lucky recipient of a termendously meaty role? Would Steve Guttenberg have done the same with the material?
Questions, questions...
My main question is this: Can anyone convince me that There Will Be Blood is the Great American Movie that some say it is? Alternatively, can anyone persuade me that the film is, indeed, a directionless and overblown exercise in shouting?
__________________
"Critics are like eunuchs in a harem; they know how the Tatty 100 is done, they've seen it done every day, but they're unable to do it themselves." - Brendan Behan
"Critics are like eunuchs in a harem; they know how the Tatty 100 is done, they've seen it done every day, but they're unable to do it themselves." - Brendan Behan