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Subject: "The first twenty minutes or so were the best part." Previous topic | Next topic
Frank Longo
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Mon Apr-15-13 10:24 AM

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25. "The first twenty minutes or so were the best part."
In response to In response to 24


  

          

>Because I know many people, myself included, who would
>disagree with this statement:
>
>>Love is only present because they keep saying
>>love in the narration. We never see it.
>
>The love is palpable in the Paris scenes, and a friend of mine
>who saw this with me called first scenes in Texas when they're
>playing with the lampshades over their heads "domestic bliss
>personified."
>
>After that, though (almost all of the movie) the love is
>absent, so of course you're not going to see much of it.

They struck a note at the beginning. She is full of strong emotion and childlike wonder. He isn't, he's just sort of quiet and observant, but I assumed he would show more as the film went.

And for me, he didn't. Affleck is the least ideal Malick protag I've ever seen, because he doesn't come across as pensive at all-- he's just kind of a lunk. I felt absolutely nothing coming from him the entire film. Which in a film about relationships... is a problem.


>I personally think this can be disputed:
>
>>All other Malick films are far superior in terms of
>character
>>development.
>
>>People compare this one to Tree of Life, but
>>Pitt, Chastain, and most certainly the kids had
>interactions,
>>emotional complexity, and a series of tangible life events
>we
>>could root their growth and development in.
>
>I think I'd argue that the "series of life events" in this
>movie is AT LEAST as tangible as those in Tree of Life.
>SPOILERS: They fall in love. They move to America. The
>relationship begins to fracture. The daughter moves back
>home. Olga travels to France and Ben has an brief affair with
>a former flame. Olga comes back and they get married. The
>relationship continues to decay, and they get divorced.
>
>Stylistically it might be a little more abstract than TOL, but
>in terms of the actually stuff that happens, it's more "plot
>based" (or at least more linear) than TOL.

I put the word tangible in there very intentionally. I agree that events do take place here. We get the who and the what. But we rarely get the why and the how. When we do, it's simplistic to the point of monotony. He struggles with expressing emotion, she overflows with it. I don't doubt that the Malick style could work in building a seemingly idyllic relationship before breaking it down, but their interaction is virtually non-existent. There are countless moments of running away from people,staring away at people, or existing in the same vicinity as people posed as to state away from them to make a pretty picture. If the characters don't shine, then Malick's style which I normally love begins to feel obnoxiously false.

The depiction of women, for example. A one-note flitty pixie dream girl who leaves her daughter overseas to be with the man who rarely expresses emotion on screen. Why? I realize sometimes in life one doesn't know why one falls for another, but in a movie, you kind of need the why, especially when such melodramatic heights are reached.

Then we have the independent working woman, working hard on the ranch, as a refreshing counter-point to the woman who spins and flits incessantly... but she too suddenly expresses wanting to be his wife. Why? All we've seen is them bang once or twice and her watch him do his oil work a couple of times. We hear him say he knew her from back in the day, and she's a strong working woman, so we understand his attraction to her. Why no vice versa? Why are we to just assume Silent Affleck is a partner worthy of two women bending their lives backwards to be with?

Finally, after we got the scene of Olga running outside hysterical screaming "HE'S KILLING ME" followed by the slut-shaming sequence, it just started to feel like Malick telling a personal story in which Affleck as the Malick figure is the presumed person of interest because why not? He's a pensive handsome man, and while he's super emotionally constipated, at least he didn't fuck a carpenter once.

Am I reading too far into the depiction of women and why Malick chose to depict them as such? Possibly. But when the male protagonist contributes basically nothing and the women are so one-note, I struggled to find other more complex reads.


>>This one, I nearly walked out.
>
>I guess I'm just really surprised that you disliked this
>enough to nearly walk out, because that's a REALLY STRONG
>amount of dislike. Maybe I'll end up being the only defender
>of this in PTP, but I do know a few other people who really
>liked it in real life.
>
>I definitely thought there was plenty you could take away from
>the movie if you wanted to. It probably feels rather small
>and maybe even slight in the shadow of Tree of Life, but
>that's fine with me.

I wanted to desperately, as I've loved every other Malick. No reason for me to not like it in advance-- I assumed it'd be great. It's unquestionably slight compared to Tree of Life, but most films are compared to a film that shows the creation of the universe, lol. My problem wasn't scale... In fact, my problem might be it's not as intimate as Tree of Life. Tree of Life had family relationships that were complex, that were troubled, yet were unquestionably rooted in deep love. The lampshade scene is domestic bliss... if you feel the relationship feels real. Otherwise, it's simplistic to the point of obnoxiousness. (Perhaps my least favorite "aren't they cute?" shot is Olga touching the dirt on the ground and putting it to her face. Simplistic depiction of pixie charm to the point of cartoonish.)

Maybe the casting needs to be blamed, especially Affleck. Maybe the editing needs to be blamed. Maybe Malick's style of shooting was destined to one day result in a film that was nothing more than pretty, because you can't strike gold every time with that improvisational fix-it-together-in-editing-room technique. I don't know.

All I know is me no likey. And outside of appreciating the cinematography, I doubt it's a grower for me.

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To the Wonder (Malick, 2013) [View all] , ZooTown74, Wed Dec-19-12 11:40 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
Let me get my hate out of the way: TERRIBLE title, lol.
Dec 19th 2012
1
Many have tried, few have conquered...n/m
Dec 19th 2012
4
Huh?
Dec 19th 2012
5
      You're right. Read quick & missed your point.
Dec 19th 2012
8
      lmao we became the watched
Dec 21st 2012
11
I agree with all of this
Dec 19th 2012
9
Can't wait for this, but the mixed reviews have me apprehensive...
Dec 19th 2012
2
favorite working director
Dec 19th 2012
3
+1
Dec 20th 2012
10
Jount look like the Final Fantasy 8 intro CGI cutscene.
Dec 19th 2012
6
I don't know if I can see this...
Dec 19th 2012
7
give his cinematographer an award right now..lol
Dec 21st 2012
12
Lucky enough to catch an advance screening of this..
Mar 31st 2013
13
It was alright
Apr 01st 2013
14
For anyone interested, this hits OnDemand and iTunes today...
Apr 12th 2013
15
gotta say, as much as I love seeing flicks in theaters I might try this
Apr 12th 2013
16
I'll be trying that out this weekend
Apr 13th 2013
17
Olga Kurylenko
Apr 13th 2013
18
Seriously
Apr 13th 2013
19
Pro: Emmanuel Lubetzki. Con: everything else.
Apr 14th 2013
20
is this another lyrical film poem?
Apr 14th 2013
21
      Yeah.
Apr 14th 2013
22
      In theory, this film is about love, yes.
Apr 14th 2013
23
           Perception is a funny thing...
Apr 15th 2013
24
               
Malick's most obtusely poetic movie yet.
Apr 30th 2013
26
Yep. All of this.
Apr 30th 2013
27
      He didn't say he almost walked out the theater though...
May 01st 2013
28
           Yeah, I read Ebiri fairly regularly...
May 01st 2013
29
           in that case, Bardem's self-evangelism seems even more shoehorned in
May 01st 2013
30
the theology behind To the Wonder:
Aug 07th 2013
31
Thanks for posting that. Interesting take.
Aug 07th 2013
32
      People just love to hate on Malick
Aug 07th 2013
33

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