Like some kind of Biblical fable about a secret angel showing it's weakness to a
group of humans in order to judge their compassion DOGVILLE is the story of a
frail woman, Grace (Nicole Kidman), who wanders into the small "town" of
Dogville in need of help. I say town in quotes because its only got
like 15 people living there, all on one street. Anyway, Grace is penniless
and looking for shelter. The townsfolk, somewhat reluctantly, take her in
and even after it's discovered that she's wanted by the Law they keep hiding
her. To earn her keep she does odd jobs for citizens of Dogville.
Then things start to take a more sinister turn.
Before you take it upon yourself to watch DOGVILLE you're first going to need to
gird your loins. The runtime is nearly 3 hours and that's just ridiculous
because this story could have easily been told in less than two. Next (and
this is the biggest thing) is there isn't an actual town or sky or trees or
anything. The entire movie is filmed on a single "black box theater"-style
stage with the imaginary street and houses and plants and everything drawn out
on the floor. Outside of a few minor set pieces (a desk, an organ, a bed,
etc.) the entire film is in your head. That's an interesting experiment,
but it gets old quickly and just comes off looking cheap and pretentious.
Next is the camerawork that seems, by the way it's always teetering around and
never standing still, to be taken by somebody wearing Google Glass. After
that is the editing which is just all over the place. I don't even have
any idea what was going on there...was it taken from multiple takes with
absolutely no consideration for continuity or flow? One moment a person
will be laying down (cut to the next angle) and literally 0.0001 of a second
later they're sitting up. It happened so flagrantly that it had to
been on purpose. The acting by the impressive cast was good for the most
part, but there were a few that seemed not up to their normal standards, so I'm
guessing once again: the stiff acting was done intentionally for some kind of
artistic reason?
I didn't dislike DOGVILLE. I'm all for filmmakers taking chances and
trying something new, but a lot of the stuff that went on here went right over
my stupid little head. I did take issue with the excessive run time.
I liked the story (even though I didn't really understand what the point of the
whole thing was), but it was just too long-winded and the characters too
unbelievable. That last act took forever and how dumb could that main guy
be?!
Interesting watch for the braver film lover, but I think most people will be
totally unamused.
Showing posts with label John Hurt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Hurt. Show all posts
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Friday, August 2, 2013
INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE CRYSTAL SKULL (2008)
Hmmm. I'm a little torn on this one. On the one hand the story is interesting (at least at the beginning) and the action is fun, but then as it goes on, things start to fall apart and you got some dude swinging through the tree with a bunch of computer-generated monkeys!
1957. Indy is kidnapped by some evil Russians and brought to a gigantic government warehouse in the Nevada desert. Stuff happens and next thing you know Indy's involved with a nuclear explosion! Once back at his teaching job, he learns from a Marlon Brando impersonator that there's some shenanigans going on with a crystal skull in Peru. Indy goes to investigate. All kinds of crap happens: Indians, lens flares, spaceships, floods, computer-generated ants, lens flares, sword fighting, bad accents, a graveyard, motorcycle chase, car chase, lens flares, auto-writing, dry quicksand.
I understand that the filmmakers were going for a kinda 50's sci-fi feel, but it didn't really settle all that well with me. Fun first half, but it loses steam towards the end. Worth watching for sure, but my least favorite of the series, so far.
Part 1 - Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Part 2 (prequel) - Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)
Part 3 - Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (2008)
1957. Indy is kidnapped by some evil Russians and brought to a gigantic government warehouse in the Nevada desert. Stuff happens and next thing you know Indy's involved with a nuclear explosion! Once back at his teaching job, he learns from a Marlon Brando impersonator that there's some shenanigans going on with a crystal skull in Peru. Indy goes to investigate. All kinds of crap happens: Indians, lens flares, spaceships, floods, computer-generated ants, lens flares, sword fighting, bad accents, a graveyard, motorcycle chase, car chase, lens flares, auto-writing, dry quicksand.
I understand that the filmmakers were going for a kinda 50's sci-fi feel, but it didn't really settle all that well with me. Fun first half, but it loses steam towards the end. Worth watching for sure, but my least favorite of the series, so far.
Part 1 - Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Part 2 (prequel) - Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)
Part 3 - Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (2008)
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