I enjoyed this piece of Hollywood fluff because it moved right along and surprised me several times and was funny. H didn't like it because it was "implausible." Good grief, 99.9% of the movies made in LaLaLand are implausible! That's like saying you didn't like a sonnet because it rhymed. Implausibility is a given in "the Hollywood movie." This is the landscape of hopes and dreams, with only the most optimistic connections to the world outside under the threatening sky. This is "wouldn't it be nice if" country. This is film as pop entertainment. And in films like Hancock and Titantic, Hollywood does what it does best, make an entertaining piece of fluff that rakes in obscene amounts of money. This is Show Business. When the hell does anyone ever talk about Show Art? Even feels strange on the tongue.
Anyway, I thought Will Smith was a hoot. Textbook story structure. Good twists. What else do you want to watch with your popcorn?
Arriving today from Netflix was a failed film, financially, Cradle Will Rock, that I greatly admire and will watch later today or soon. The only reasons films like this get done is that stars and other participants like them and work cheap. I think it lasted one week in theaters here. It's a zillion times a better film than Hancock, IMHO, but it ain't fluff and it makes you think.
Wednesday, July 09, 2008
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4 comments:
I actually liked Cradle will rock quite a bit. Though, most of the folks I watched the movie with thought that Tim Robbins had gone crazy to have made this movie.
I thought it was a pretty good effort and had a lot of good threads.
Yes, clearly a heart-felt project for him. When you get power, you now and again can throw caution to the wind and do what you want. Often you don't get a second chance, though, because these pet projects usually lose money. So you have to choose your pet project carefully.
Cradle Will Rock...
Isn't that the movie about the show which was to open on Broadway during the Depression, the Government banned it and locked the theater, so they went across town and did it anyway?
I would kill to see this movie! I never have, and it is the closest I could ever come to actually seeing this incident.
John, yep, that's the one. Netflix has it. Also published, script and history and lots of pics, in a paperback coffee table book.
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