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10/10
Remarkable story which touches the deepest issues in life ... and death
29 February 2004
Warning: Spoilers
What a wonderful film, though that immediately requires qualification: its genre is more documentary, than film. But that adds to its appeal, especially in a year that brought such monsters as Return of the King and Cold Mountain.

The story is immensely powerful, but it's Joe Simpson's reflections on what was happening that make this something really rather special.

WARNING - SPOILER AHEAD: I think particularly here of how he did not turn to God as he faced the black void below him. I also love the moment where he lies against the rock and looks up at the stars wheeling in their course above and he thinks that he has been in that place for an eternity.

I could go on ... if you haven't seen it, do. I can't recommend this film too highly. Stunning.
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9/10
Wonderfully subversive movie
17 January 2004
Saw this for the second time last night & I really love it. It's a masterpiece - the weirdest yet most enjoyable film noire I've seen.

Those who 'explain' the plot are doing a grand job ... but in many ways the point of this movie is that subverts all plots. Just when you think it 'works', it doesn't! No reviewer quite manages to put their finger on how the plot holds, and I love that! I couldn't help but wonder at times if Lynch was taking the p*** out of Hollywood in general, and maybe Tarantino in particular. Whereas Pulp Fiction (a favourite of mine) 'works', Mulholland Drive deliberately subverts the plotline. The result is gorgeous. Oh, and talking of gorgeous ... Naomi Watts. She puts in a stunning performance.

Terrific film - a dream-like trance mixing humour and dark, dark, thoughts. What a great antidote to the 95%+ pap that comes out of Tinsel town.
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2/10
Drivel
11 January 2004
It's sort of ok-ish for about an hour. Then it descends into silly farce.

The sort of people who complain that Lost in Translation has no plot will probably like it.
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Alien (1979)
9/10
Saw it again ... and it remains brilliant
11 January 2004
I saw this film again recently on DVD. I remember it's release - came out the same time as Clockwise & the latter filled up the cinemas whereas me and my friend were alone in the cinema for Alien (a very scary experience!). Then it began to catch on, until it became one of the great cult films of a generation.

Re-seeing it reminded me of how fabulous this film is. It's got everything, from brilliant acting to wonderful cinematography. The dramatic tension is unmatched by any film in any genre. The underlying story helps. And I remember being quite shocked in '79 - many people thought space was going to be 'nice'. The idea that a creature would exist with the all-out drive for survival at any cost wasn't featuring much in popular culture.

I don't think any sci-fi film before or since matches this (not even Scott's later Blade Runner). An outstanding film which stands the test of time.
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9/10
Wonderful film that should take the Oscars
9 January 2004
Warning: Spoilers
This film is quite exquisite, and one of the finest films I've seen for a long time. I couldn't help but compare it to Return of the King - but it's like comparing the Mona Lisa with a 3rd grade scrawl. Where ROTK is clumsy, clanky and overegged this is subtle, classy, sophisiticated.

In one sense, not a lot happens in the movie. In other everything that matters in life does. This is a film above love and loss, about what really matters, about chemistry between two people and the lack of it with others. And it's a very funny commentary on cross-cultural work. <Warning - one minor spoiler ahead> The finale contains a quite lovely moment with the question hanging: what did he say to her?

The cinematography is out of this world. It defies words. I came away thinking 'I haven't such genius since Apocalypse Now ... and then remembered who the Director's father is! Hats off to her - this is quite stunningly filmed.

And as for the performances: the two finest leads I've seen since Silence of the Lambs. Bill Murray is outstanding and as for Scarlett Johanssen - wow, what a find! She's an exceptional talent. They both are - really, really, extraordinary perfomances. One of the great love stories on screen.

This is an outstanding movie. I don't suppose anyone at the Academy ever reads reviews from IMDB people, and I doubt they'd care very much, especially at a review by an Englishman. But this film is in a different league to Return of the King. Maybe it's too subtle for Oscar night, but the Academy have had courage recently - the brilliant Adaptation and The Hours being great examples. Will they dare this time? They should - there hasn't been a film as beautiful crafted as this for a long time.
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5/10
The biggest problem of all is lack of character development ...
29 December 2003
I went to see ROTK for the 2nd time yesterday and aside from the myriad of minor flaws, want to concentrate on major issues surrounding Jackson's character development.

ARAGORN is the first big problem. In the book he is both a ranger from the north, but also a man destined to be king. He knows who he is, and he has an expectation of that destiny. Likewise in the book he has 'spiritual' awareness. Aragorn is descended, not merely from men, but from Numenor: so he already has in him some of the blood of the Elves. Now Jackson gives all foresight to the Elves - making the men merely, men. But the whole point is that the-man-born-to-be-king has the spiritual awareness of the great kings of old. Thus, in book II at the river it is Aragorn, not Legolas (as in Jackson's version), who is aware of a shadow growing in his heart. And, more significantly, it is Aragorn who in the book takes the palantir by his right (Gandalf actually bows to give it to him). Gandalf counsels him not to use it, but Aragorn knows who he is. So he looks in the palantir and shows Sauron the sword. He challenges Sauron, and then wrenches the palantir away from the Eye to use as HE wills, not as Sauron wills. In so doing he sees the black fleet, and so knows the threat. That's why he takes the path of the dead. And when he goes under the Dimholt he REALLY summons the dead. The exchange in the film between Aragorn and the Geoffrey-Rush-Pirates-of-the-Caribbean-look-alike ghost is feeble in the film. In the book Aragorn does not doubt who he is: he calls them, not barters with them.

Now Aragorn's action here is part of a much larger cohesion in Tolkien that is entirely absent in Jackson. As a result we're left with a desperately anti-climactic coronation. Why? There's simply been no character development of Aragorn. He's been denuded of a sense of who he is.

SAURON is the next big problem. It's true that in the book he is mostly referred to as the Eye. But he also has personality. In the film, apart from the opening sequence to film I (which was brilliant) all we have is a plasma lamp sometime searchlight. Since in the book Gandalf has told Frodo that 'Sauron is taking shape again' why on earth didn't Jackson then develop Sauron from the figure in film I? In the book, we are told of Sauron's gnawing doubt. We hear of reports about 'spies' entering Mordor. We know that he is consumed by fear of the upstart heir of Elendil. None of this is developed in the film. (And the Ring seems to lose power on entering Mordor, not gain it!) Result? There was no sense of elation at the fall of Barad'dur.

Now this is a serious theological error that I suspect Tolkien would have detested. Personify good, and you must also personify evil. Tolkien's epic was all about those forces being personified: and how you discern them. Sauron is a personification of evil. He's not actually the worst - that belongs to Morgoth (of whom the Balrog is a servant). Whilst Tolkien rightly loathed allegory, he nonetheless never would have countenanced such a weak and ineffectual portrayal of the enemy. The whole point, and if this isn't obvious in the world today then Jackson is even less astute than I imagined, is that evil in many guises takes human form.

OTHERS

The same lack of characterisation in Aragorn and Sauron goes on with many of the others. Notable exceptions are GANDALF and SARUMAN (both well acted). Jackson made a mistake in cutting Saruman out of III having made so much of him in I and II (more than the book). ARWEN is drippy throughout. EOWYN is changed in the film. Miranda Otto was excellent. But Jackson plays up the love between her and Aragorn so much that we are left wondering how Eowyn is apparently beatifically happy to see him with Arwen. On the subject of Eowyn it's such a shame Jackson didn't do the slaying of the witch-king better. In the book the battlefield pauses - a cloud goes up and everyone in Minas Tirith is happy. It's one of the truly great moments, lost by Jackson. The reports even leak back to the orcs in the tower above Shelob's lair so that Sam and Frodo hear that 'No.1. has been done in'.

As for the HOBBITS . I think this may be a question of preference. Personally I think Sean Astin's acting as SAM is execrable, but some like it. For me, the simple gardener becomes a mini-philosopher and I find his soliloquy both at the end of film II in Osgiliath (to which they never go in the book) and on the mountain (twice) truly toe-curlingly dreadful: pap I'm afraid. And, oh dear, we even veered towards Titanic-music-moments at the end of film I and again on the mountain. BILBO was fine until the end. Yes, we know he ages fast now he's lost the ring, but the Salieri-style prosthetics are poor. Jackson loves the slow-motion work so much that we have to endure some particularly dreadful sequences with the Hobbits (most notably the already infamous bed scene) and at the end (where I really thought Frodo was going to give Sam a full-on smacker!). A similarly tacky piece of directing occurs when the elves appear - the soft focus lens is deployed with 'celtic' singing. Argh - this is kindergarten film production.

I expect the film will garner the Oscars ceremony. But I hope some people in Tinsel town have the courage to acknowledge that whilst some of the visuals are outstanding (though many are not - e.g. the oliphaunt descent by Legolas, the Merrick-style leader of the orcs, and the Army of the dead), the film is not actually very good.

Peter - I'm afraid you've let us, and J.R.R. Tolkien, down.
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5/10
When the initial gush dies down the massive flaws will become clear ...
20 December 2003
Warning: Spoilers
Sorry folks, but this film is nowhere near as good as some gushing people on IMDB seem to think. I do notice more +ve comments in the US than the UK.

OK, so the visual effects are good. So what? Jackson had the technology available to do that. He needs to do much more than employ them effectively to produce a film worthy of greatness. This isn't great, indeed it's barely good.

The film is full of flaws. Important plotlines are absent, as noted by a few others here. To name but a few:

  • the palantir cast by Wormtongue out of Orthanc in the book simply appears in the pool. This is absurd. It's the most valuable thing in the tower (as Gandalf tells Pippin in the book). This happens because Jackson has cut Saruman out entirely from film III. This is a terrible mistake. Having made so much of Saruman in I and II it just leaves a hole in III full of the unexplained. Jackson's error occurs because he should have put the full fall of Saruman at the end of II (as in the book).


  • Eowyn's love for Aragorn is much stronger in the films than the book. The problem with this is that she simply stands idly by whilst Aragorn takes the limp character of Arwen to him. There is no development of the love between Eowyn and Faramic which in part answers the aforementioned in the book.


  • Eowyn's slaying of the witch king of Angmar is one of the best moments of the book - a truly wondrous occurrence. In the film it is hacked in two halves whilst we await Aragorn's arrival by boat. Even the tossing of her golden hair is underplayed so much that it's anticlimactic for those of us who know the book well.


  • Faramir's character is completely changed from the book. He now appears less nice than Boromir, which is deeply problematic and raises a major flaw in why he releases the ring from his grasp.


  • Sorry everyone but much as I like Gollum he is little more than a CGI cartoon character. If you like computer games, fine. If you want a bit of realism, not.


  • Am I alone in finding the slaying of the poor oliphaunt by Legolas sad? I felt sorry for the creature.


  • the John Merrick style leader of the Orcs is one of the worst creature-creations I've seen


  • Sam is awful. For those of you who like Sean Austin ... o dear. I think this may be a British / American thing. Some of those around me in the cinema started laughing at his toe-curlingly awful soppiness. Truly dreadful. The plausibly simple gardener of the book is now transformed into a college philosopher, and it's not a pretty spectacle.


  • the moment when the hobbits appear to bounce over Frodo's bed is another soppy Jackson moment. Again, people in the cinema in London laughed at it. Even if Tolkien did intend a slight homosexual underplay to their relationships, I don't think he'd have admired Jackson heavy-handidness here.


  • the scouring of the shire has gone altogether. Maybe that was right, but part of the whole point of this epic tale is that simple folk rise up against the mighty, and then have to confront that evil on their doorstep.


  • the Shire is hideously twee, with not a petal out of place. Argh. If that's paradise give me the Emyn Muil any day!


  • and finally, after more than 10 hours the demise of Sauron is dreadfully anti-climactic. The particularly silly portrayal of Sauron as a 1970's electrical storm-lamp is part of the problem here. Instead of personifying him, we have the demise of a 'thing' for which I felt no satisfaction at all. Dull.


  • we then have to endure another 40 minutes as the movie drifts away into a confused ending, with a terrible prosthetic-Bilbo (looking like Salieri in Amadeus).


If this wins an Oscar other than for special effects it will be a scandal. But then, since when has that mattered. Afterall, if Titanic can win them it shows that the appetite for drivel is unassuaged.
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