Hollywoodland
Sep. 13th, 2006 12:55 amI'm writing a real review for AC, but I saw Hollywoodland at the SAG screening tonight.
It's about the death of childhood. It's very well made. It contains several AMAZING performances (Ben Affleck, who I normally loathe, absolutely BLEW ME AWAY. Unfortunately, he also reminded me of my ex, which was kinda disturbing). Ultimately it's two and a half hours of sitting in a movie theater so you can say the following three things:
1. It's about the death of childhood
2. Woah, Ben Affleck
3. So it's a period mystery set in California -- did they have to try to imitate the Chinatown score?
Skip it. That siad, SAG film society is the greatest thing ever. The upcoming movies are really of interest and they are adding a lot more off-schedule bonus scrrenings than I suspected.
Aproppo to nothing, Kali and I are working on some Descensus sstuff you won't get to see for ages yet, but it's so fun, and involves an OC who I just love love love.
It's about the death of childhood. It's very well made. It contains several AMAZING performances (Ben Affleck, who I normally loathe, absolutely BLEW ME AWAY. Unfortunately, he also reminded me of my ex, which was kinda disturbing). Ultimately it's two and a half hours of sitting in a movie theater so you can say the following three things:
1. It's about the death of childhood
2. Woah, Ben Affleck
3. So it's a period mystery set in California -- did they have to try to imitate the Chinatown score?
Skip it. That siad, SAG film society is the greatest thing ever. The upcoming movies are really of interest and they are adding a lot more off-schedule bonus scrrenings than I suspected.
Aproppo to nothing, Kali and I are working on some Descensus sstuff you won't get to see for ages yet, but it's so fun, and involves an OC who I just love love love.
no subject
Date: 2006-09-13 05:12 am (UTC)an yeah, I was on teh film noir bandwagon,until the lat 10 minutes or so:
we can that film of George tryig to prove he's fit enough to wrestle, Bordys character having that stupid drunk moment with his son in teh school yard, the boy registering all that, then the home movie of the kid -- it was like "hey, hammer us with the message about men growing up and what happens when they fail to" And it was an interesting idea, but poorly integrated. I also thought there were a lot of false leads early in the film about what the story was really going to be about, that were sloppily dangled before us and not well integrated. Similarly, all the great oddities that added up to nothing when they should have tied in at least slightly more closely.
no subject
Date: 2006-09-13 05:34 am (UTC)I agree, he seemed the fulcrum to move the plot. I think this role keeps him in line for further good work. He has a long career ahead of him and I am very interested in his future choices, but this movie SAVED Affleck's potential acting career.
I also agree on the points of overkill. THe script suffered from some true flaws. But overall, it was interesting and an inventive approach to the demise of a superhero and the face of Hollywood. I wouldn't see it again but I am glad that I saw it.
As for tight scripts, I was quite taken with Little Miss Sunshine. This script moved like a finely tuned watch. I am always pleasantly surprised at the roles that Toni Collette chooses. And I love Alan Arkin. The man is a silent treasure. Just the cadence of his speech... Have you seen it?
I look forward to your article on Hollywoodland.