Jan. 6th, 2007

I decided to see this alone tonight, knowing (correctly) that I'd want to see it again with people. it is very excellent, but I make a solemn vow never, ever to go to another movie on the Upper East Side, ever, because the audience was frightful and evil.

The Children of Men is a remarkably unsentimental film, something which borders on the frustrating in places. Music swells and you want a moment, just a moment to grieve, to take in the import to assimilate what is happening around you. And, if Cuaron gave you that moment there might be tremendously more art to talk about in this film, but it wouldn't make it a more artful picture by any means.

While The Children of Men contains no sudden plot twists worth discussing in a review and we all know the basics of the plot by now, the less you know going into it, the better. Do not obsessively read reviews before you see this and be prepared to be shaken by small details and the film's technical brillance (everyone keeps going on about the long, singleshot which is utterly astounding, but the sound mixing and editing on this is a thing of terror).

Clive Owen is astounding in this; it hurts to watch him in places.

Fasntastic use of pop music to devastating effect. Of particular note, Ruby Tuesday and the creepiest use of In the Court of the Crimson King, EVER.

some spoilery stuff below the cut.

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For all the noise this film is generating, it's surprisingly small in a lot of ways, but, while we knew Cuaron was really talented, this makes him a major, major force to be reckoned with.

my hair

Jan. 6th, 2007 12:34 pm
For the record for those who don't see me f2f, it's about at my shoulders right now.

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