Archive for the Movies Category

Watchmen Thoughts: NOT SPOILER FREE

Posted in Movies on March 6, 2009 by doomcookie

My reactions to the film. I’m not going to explicate the plot, as I am more interesting in looking at the thematic devices, especially the handling of the character Rorschach, but there will probably certainly be some sort of spoiler material to follow. Mostly in discussion of the fact that Zack Snyder does not pull punches and my goodness do I love him for it. Nothing that will probably bother you if you have read the book, but have yet to see the movie, but in case you want to go in complete unpolluted, don’t read ahead.

Got that?

Really?

Sucka, if you didn’t listen, and are going to be mad at me for this, turn back now.

All right. Personally, I thought it was a very good movie. I thoroughly enjoyed it. I was never bored, and never too turned off by anything I was seeing on the screen in order to be distracted. I think the fact that it is down to a 63% on Rotten Tomatoes, especially having started out closer to an 80% with all early reviews raving, is ridiculous. The progression of these ratings seemed to be: early reviews were calling it genius. New reviews are calling it flawed genius. But does flawed genius make a movie “rotten”? No. I think without such a hype storm raising everyone’s hackles, it might have ended up in the mid-to-high 70’s, which is a good spot for a comic book movie with no pretensions of winning Oscars to be.

Now, I do think it was flawed. To begin with, I had to wonder: if I were not a fan of the book, had not read the book, or had even read the book but not paid that close of attention, would a lot of this have come off as strongly? For example, did the montage at the very beginning completely lose a new viewer? Did they ever truly get a grasp of who the Minutemen were and their place in it? I’m not sure, but it did give me pause. Was everything explained well enough? For example, they mentioned the “Keene Act”, but did they ever explain that was an Act that unmasked the masked men and made them illegal? I can’t recall. Personally, I enjoyed all these touches quite a bit, but I have read the book, more than once, and once very recently. That said, though, for fans of the comic, there were a lot of nice little touches – things you had to look for in the backgrounds (such as the “Millenium” poster in the end).

I understand some of the critics who have said that at times the movie was too in love with itself, too in love with its message, and that it came off as heavy handed because of it. I agree. There were moments where I thought to myself, “Really? There wasn’t a more subtle way to say/convey that?” Again, that said, I feel like this was worse toward the beginning of the film, and that it hit its stride going into it, but then some of the Ozymandias scenes reverted back to that.

I actually did not find the change to the ending to be offensive, and thought it worked quite well. Admittedly, when I first became aware that there had been a change, my hackles raised, I crossed my arms, and waited, but had faith that if Zach Snyder actually filmed the Comedian shooting a woman pregnant with his baby, he was not going to pull the final punch. Making Dr. Manhattan the manufactured by Ozymandias/abstract/non-human threat was, in my opinion, just as effective as making it an “alien thread” and required fewer scenes to do. The one thing I will say about that is that it thus became far too easy for the Comedian to figure it out. I liked that the fact he figured it out in the graphic novel was such a matter of chance. In the movie, you had to wonder: if Ozymandias was not able to do that without the Comedian seeing, what were any of them able to do? But it wasn’t that much of a distraction.

Oh but I was a little annoyed that Seymour (the kid in the very end who got the journal) was a brunette and not a redhead. Just because that robbed me from getting to say, “Gingers kill Utopia”, for a moment of ironic self-loathing. ;)

The stilted/stylized acting… was not done as well as I think it has been in some other movies, *but* I don’t think they should have gone for a realistic/naturalistic acting style either. I preferred that they went stylized, and it fell short, to them going naturalistic. The Watchmen was never trying to do what Dark Knight did in that it took a completely realistic approach to superhero films and that, I think, was one of the things that made it genius. It was a superhero comic in many ways, and it was still a literary masterwork, and that was what made it so fantastic. Any attempts to make a naturalistic film would have frustrated me. That said, there were people who I thought were better – Jeffrey Dean Morgan [Comedian], Jackie Earle Haley [Rorschach] – and people I thought were worse – Matthew Goode [Ozymandias].

The soundtrack… Sometimes it worked for me, sometimes it didn’t. “Times They Are a Changin’” was perfect; “99 Red Balooons”, maybe not as perfect. Admittedly, I am not sure what I would have preferred. I wouldn’t have wanted it to have done the usual fare of metal and hard rock comic movies frequently do, but I’m not sure I would have wanted it to do symphonic Oscar movie score. Maybe something in between. I’m not sure. I am certain that was one of the harder decisions.

Visually, I might have liked to see Snyder be as faithful to the visual source as he was to 300 and done something with a palette closer to the graphic novel just to see if he could pull it off, but I still enjoyed what he did instead. I never did not like looking at the movie. Again, a case where it was very much not naturalistic, and I thought that was good.

I knew the Pirate Story would not be there. Snyder said as much in the first panel he ever went to. I completely understand why it wouldn’t. It was a genius literary device. It was a: in case you don’t get it, here it is, plain as day, exactly what I want to say in this novel,and yet somehow it did not come off as cheap. Tied in with that were the ruminations of the newspaper salesman, representing both a sort of Greek chorus and also the common man’s position in all the uncommon events surrounding him, the terror of the end of the world that everyone felt at that time. *But* to address both of these things would have added… a lot of length to the movie. I am hoping maybe we will get Lord of the Rings style 3 1/2 hour extended editions in which we see it, and more of those characters, but I’m not holding my breath. I was happy enough that they were still present in the movie and I could see Old Bernard selling papers and Young Bernard obviously reading the Pirate Story.

Now, Rorschach’s character, who was so key to the novel, was, I think, handled okay, but I did think there was not enough of those small humanizing moments you get in the novel that lead up to Rorschach being the only one to oppose covering up what Ozymandias did, and dying for it. For example, I don’t know know why they left out his line, early in the graphic novel: “Nothing is insoluble. Nothing is hopeless. Not while there’s life.” For a man who would later claim to his therapist that there is nothing at all beautiful in human kind, that’s an amazingly optimistic statement. Also, the interesting use of the “Nostalgia” cologne produced by Veidt, tying in both with the woman in the picture in his room, and the bottle he kept in his pocket. I’m not sure what all there is to say about that but if nothing else, it instilled the idea of the world gone-mad-what-did-we-fight-for chaos that contributed to the necessity for such a broad, real threat to unite everyone. A Nostalgia for simpler times gone past.

Also, another missing thing was the most direct explanation for why it is his name is Rorschach and the further implications on the reader’s relationship with the story: that is, him going off to his psychiatrist about how he had wanted there to be a meaning, a purpose, a design, but that he had long since realized there was not, and any attempt of ours to create a reason for things being the way they are – “fate”, “god” – is more of a reflection of our own psyches and our own attempt to make sense of the world than any absolute existence of said things – much like we do a Rorschach blob. I thought this was huge because one of the secondary reasons I think his name is Rorschach is that he himself becomes the Rorschach test for the audience, as he is a very difficult character to make judgments about, to condemn or condone, and that trying to understand and judge him, you learn more about yourself than you do about him as a character.

Anyway, all of these things, as far as I am concerned, make this movie a work of flawed genius, but genius none the less, and easily the best Alan Moore adaptation to date. It was maybe an impossible book to film, but I think they did a damn good job of trying and may see it again before it leaves the theaters if for no other reason than to look for more of the nice little touches in the background I might have missed.

One More Before I Sleep… Why I Love Slumdog Millionaire.

Posted in Movies, Personal with tags , , , , on January 31, 2009 by doomcookie

I have been singing the praises of this movie since I was invited to go see it roughly a month ago, and not knowing anything about it, went in without any expectations and came out amazed. Since then I have heard a lot of different things in reactions to it; a lot of people are now refusing to see it because of the hype, people are arguing over whether it is realistic or not, or whether it is exploitative of the children that it depicted. I don’t know much about the controversy. I have meant to look it up, but haven’t yet, so this reaction is based simply on walking out of a piece of art and letting people know how it made me feel. Maybe later I’ll read something that turns me around on it, but I hope not.

It could be the place I am in right now. On a personal level, I have every reason at the moment to be looking back on my life, all the good and the bad, and the people who have touched me, and so a movie like this was extra capable of striking close to home. But to me, what this movie seemed to say was that in all the mire, all the muck, in even the worst possible corners of the world, there is beauty, and hope, and love, and that they persist through even the harshest environs, because if they didn’t, why wouldn’t the human race have given up by now? The ending is troubling, tragic but also infinitesimally beautiful, but in the end, I know that I left feeling as if I had just seen incredible beauty, and loved it.

Everything about the movie added up to this. The vibrant cinematography, the brilliant score that effectively carried you throughout the troubled sea of emotions, the simple but effective performances of its cast, and the structure of its story. Paralleling a modern symbol of the most desperate sort of hope – the game show and its ability to lift one out of ones circumstances – with a stark and moving tale of love, both familial and romantic, and brutality, triumph and defeat, all in what could be seen as one of the bleakest corners of the world serves as a way to tell this as a story of the whole world. Because how many people haven’t watched a game show and dreamed? Not too many. Even touches as simple as choosing “Hoppipolla” by Sigur Ros to be in the trailer, a song that so captures that bittersweet celebration of life, and ending with a dance scene that brought the whole cast together, were brilliant.

Sometimes I think it is too easy to latch onto realism as a means of communicating truth, which is why I judge this movie as a fairy tale. Does a not completely stark view of the world eliminate its ability to resonate? I don’t believe so, or we would not be telling the same fairy tales in and out thousands of years after they were written. Sometimes parable is a more effective way of communicating an idea, because it goes past our brain and reaches down into a deeper place in us – a sometimes spooky but altogether unyielding place where dreams live and do battle with depression and anger and hopelessness. It is not often that movies try that, and even rarer that they succeed, but Slumdog Millionaire did, and it is worth all of the accolades it is getting.

There Will Be Oscars

Posted in Movies on February 21, 2008 by doomcookie

So it occurred to me yesterday in the mild delirium that comes with packing and moving for many days straight that There Will Be Blood is destined to sweep the Oscars simply so that the headlines can read, “There Will Be Oscars”.

Maybe not, though.

(It turns out my pun is not very original at all, and this video is the funniest of the results I found for it:

http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/d8f1db3c4e

David Spade as DDL in Blood in an Oscars preview.)

So yes, moving. This is how I have spent my week off of work (along with neglected dentist and doc appointments). We decided that we were determined to have all of the loose stuff out by Sunday, at which point a crew of friends will come and help us move all the furniture in one 17″ moving truck. And we are actually looking pretty durn good for the goal. Pretty much everything is packed and the number of remaining boxes is nothing that a few trips can’t handle. Thank goodness for the beat up little Ford Ranger. The most unpleasantness of the week came about yesterday afternoon when the landlord showed up with some potential new tenants (with no notice) and then railed me for the house being unpresentable. A) You didn’t warn us. B) We are moving. How nice to you expect it to look? And it’s not like there were piles of refuse everywhere. I have been cleaning as I have gone (take everything off a shelf, clean said shelf, take everything out of said cabinet, clean said cabinet) so everything was really pretty clean… with the exception of one roommate’s room. She recently got a second “job” (volunteer work, but it’s a 20 hour per week commitment) that she has been training for and wasn’t ready at all for him to come. Anyway, it was just frustrating.

So, yes, the Oscars. I am one of those who watches it every year, despite what I recognize as a highly politicized popularity contest. I love movies, and I love taking that night to celebrate both current cinema and the history of cinema. I’m the person who all the extra stuff is in there for. I love the look backs and the tributes, and I am ready to cry when they show the faces of everyone that we’ve lost over the last year. And, to be perfectly honest, I do think a lot of the “old guard” mentality is being chipped away. Of the best picture nominees, only Atonement and, to a lesser extent, There Will be Blood strike me as your more typical Oscar films, and even Atonement did a lot of bold things in the way it was composed. Now, to be honest, I don’t know much about Michael Clayton, it’s the only one of the five I haven’t seen (and if we weren’t moving, you’d have bet I’d have rented it this week since it came out on DVD Tuesday), so it could be moreso as well. But both Juno and No Country for Old Men have facets that make them unlikely best picture nominees. The heartfelt indie comedy has begun to get more esteem in recent years, but I still think that of the examples of this (Sideways, Little Miss Sunshine, Lost in Translation), Juno is considerably less high brow. This isn’t to say there isn’t depth to Juno, the characters are so well drawn and go through such wonderful journeys over the course of the film, but it’s not thrust in your face the way the others do. Not to mention that I think it’s the most genuinely funny nominee that I can remember since As Good as it Gets; the others I’ve listed were good for some chuckles, but I spent Juno cramping up with sidesplitting laughter.

So, predictions. Last year I think I got around 3/4 of my predictions right, but this year I feel a lot less certain about things. I think Daniel Day Lewis is a clear winner for best actor, but the academy has snubbed him before (it would be ridiculous to snub him for There Will be Blood, though, as he carried the whole movie and was incredible). I think best picture will go to No Country for Old Men, if the voters are honest, or Atonement if they go for their melodramatic war flick and also follow the Golden Globes (though, of the nominees, only Atonement got less than a 90% on Rotten Tomatoes, so it strikes me as odd if it would win). I could also see them going for There Will Be Blood, but not Juno or Michael Clayton. I think screenplay should go to Juno and No Country for Old Men. Javier Bardem should be a shoe in for best supporting actor, and all the buzz seems to suggest Julie Christine for best actress and Cate Blanchet for best supporting actress. Second to DDL’s performance, the directing shone strongly in There Will Be Blood, so I think Paul Thomas Andersen could take it; possibly the Coen brothers could take it though if this becomes No Country’s night. Despite my general criticism of the movie, I think Atonement could get (and would deserve as some of its visuals were astounding) best cinematography, though I wouldn’t be surprised if No Country grabbed it either, and also best score. I would give Art Direction to Sweeny Todd as the visual mood of that movie was enough to make up for the subpar singing. The animated film has me in a quandary. Everyone is saying Ratatouille but Persepolis is much more of an academy film. The Rat was a very good family film, but Persepolis was a work of art. Still, Finding Nemo managed to defeat the Triplets of Belville in 2004 so I am going to have to say the academy is going to favor the idea that animation must be for children and say the Rat will grab it. The editing in No Country was brilliant, so I hope it grabs it. Makeup… Pirates. Costumes… possibly Sweeny Todd or Elizabeth. Visual effects… I want to say Golden Compass but Transformers is probably more likely. I’m pretty angry at the Academy for passing over King of Kong, and have no strong opinion on the others, though it’ll probably be Sicko. The rest of the categories I have no strong opinion on.

So, I may not even get to watch the Oscars this year due to the move, but the U-Haul has to be back by 5, so I should get to see at least some of them. I doubt I’ll be able to make the Oscars party I was going to go to, though. At least our new DVR is set up, so if nothing else, I can record them (but much like a football fan would say that recording the Superbowl is really not a good substitute for seeing them in the moment, so would I say about the Oscars.)