N
NastiMarvasti
Lurker
I deeply admire what Nolan tries to accomplish on a macro-level with Interstellar because only he has the ability to do it. All other filmmakers, no matter their talent, are shackled to pre-established brands, making the adaptations easily accessible for an international audience, and reluctantly tacking on 3D. Nolan gets to work from an original screenplay, shoot in IMAX, and do things like use the theory of relativity to create easily understood dramatic stakes in a picture that celebrates space travel. Buried beneath the poor dialogue, bland characters, and narrative leaps, Interstellar has a beautiful and noble goal. But burdened with so many faults and contrivances, Nolan’s sci-fi epic never achieves escape velocity.
Rating: C-
Read more at http://collider.com/interstellar-review/#doYU4SQO8KPZM5rH.99
Then, going to USC I began to watch movies in a different way and was exposed to different kinds of movies, foreign films. We had directors like Orson Welles, Alfred Hitchcock, Howard Hawks and John Ford come down and lecture us. It was unbelievable! Roman Polanski was there with his bride, Sharon Tate, in 1968, with Fearless Vampire Killers. To sit and listen to Orson Welles … man, oh, man. He was there filming his last movie, The Other Side Of The Wind, so he had a camera crew there trying to get the students to ask his character questions. He was off screen but wanted these bull**** questions that didn’t make any sense to him that he thought intellectually pretentious students would ask. We were like little kids around the campfire, listening to the master speak. Everybody in that room was totally aware of who he was, what he’d done, what he hadn’t done, how he lost control in Hollywood.
A faithful adaptation of Pynchon’s slightly more digestible novel (at least compared to author’s denser works), ultimately, “Inherent Vice” is about the long con job literally and figuratively; the twisty conspiracy that Doc Sportello unravels and the lies his peace and love generation has been sold. Big, wonderfully oddball, sometimes confounding and beautiful, “Inherent Vice” supplies good dosages of stoner giggles. But its doobage is potent and reflects some heavy ideas you’ll need to unpack and meditate on for a long while. [B+]
Just saw Interstellar in 70mm IMAX at Universal. Freakin' incredible. Ordering the score now. Christopher Nolan is my hero.
Now bring it, JD.
I bought tickets to see it in 70mm tomorrow afternoon. Super ****ing excited, both because of the movie and because I'll actually be GOING TO THE MOVIES. I think this will only be the 5th or 6th time all year, honestly. It's ****ing depressing.
Here's the thing. Even if you absolutely hate the movie, I can't imagine someone seeing it and not at least appreciating the different film experience that comes with seeing a Nolan flick. It makes you think long after the credits have rolled. It ain't "just another movie that you forget about tomorrow" which is the same reason I haven't been going to the movies as often in the last couple of years.
This should be fun.
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See NM that's exactly the reason WHY I rail so much about Nolan's movies. GUESS WHAT. It's just a movie. Not an 'experience'. That's the side effect of youse guys being snookered into buying the emperors new clothes. What do I mean? Ok, saw Batman Begins. Struggled to get through it. TDK...better, but almost entirely due to a legacy defining performance by Ledger, so dark that it could be included in his cause of death. TDKR was a laffable, overlong mess. With Bane's comical voice affect, Bale's 'oooh scawy' growly voice, and EVERYONE knowing Batman's secret identity. Entertaining and entirely forgettable. JUST LIKE MOST MOVIES. And Inception. A mess within a mess within a mess. Once again...marginally entertaining(and horrifyingly overlong) and COMPLETELY forgettable. Nolan's movies(to me) have almost NO rewatch value simply because they are so busy trying to be MORE that they wear on you. And I am the KING of rewatching stuff. I keep reading a lot of warning signs about this flick too...overreaching, overlong, etc. I just wish Nolan, in his unending dissertation on what film is, could be bothered to stop hitting us over the head with his deep thoughts and actually try to entertain. Inception is no better or worse than Avatar, which is the worst case of an 'auteur' trying to school us poor dumb humans but at least that movie had a sense of some fun. Nolan wants to live in both worlds. Applying arthouse Danish(or whatever he is) values to a tentpole popcorn movie. Which is fine. But, and maybe it's perception, he does it in such an overbearing joyless fashion that you almost can't help but feel insulted. Not trying to entertain, but teach us foolish Americans. In the end...just a movie. Not an event. That's the mass hysteria speaking.