War Starts at Midnight!
Posted in Marathons, Week in Review on February 17th, 2011 by Dwight – Comments OffJanuary 24th – February 13th
As a result of a new promotion, I’ve had less time to get to my weekly posts. I’ve still managed to watch a few things, just never seem to find the time to write about them. What follows is a complete, but altogether too brief, recap of the last three weeks.
Buried — Surprisingly well-executed considering it takes place entirely within a wooden coffin.
Scott Pilgrim vs. The World — Playful diversion from Edgar Wright that ultimately lacked any emotional core to make it great.
The Last Exorcism — Good concept that starts out rather nicely only to fall very flat in the last scenes.
Jack Goes Boating — Not a bad movie at all. But one I could definitely see living much more comfortably in its former incarnation as a stage play.
Blue Valentine — Just a really solid film. Great performances from Michelle Williams (I could look at her all day) and Ryan Gosling (he’s growing on me). The story seems both well examined and comfortably lived in such that a real honesty emerges. The camera maintains a perfect distance that is intimate yet unobtrusive. Even the Grizzly Bear score seems to fit perfectly.
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp — While it clocks in at nearly three hours, this first film in our Michael Powell Marathon really engaged me. It seemed quite subversive for what I expected. It seemed to both show a sympathetic German solider (during the heat of WWII) as well as criticism of imperial England (asking, in a sense, how is what the Nazi’s are doing that much different from the worst of imperialism). It’d probably help if I remembered my British history a little better though. I know Powell is praised for his use of Technicolor. But, my god, this looked beautiful. I was genuinely surprised. I was expecting B&W. Definitely better use of color than I was expecting for a 1943 film. And how about Roger Livesey. I literally looked him up on IMDB after the movie to see if it was just him or if there were three separate actors that played Candy. He was just that good.
Letters to God, Left Behind: World at War, MST3K: Laserblast — A trio of movies best viewed with good alcohol and/or good friends. Luckily I had both.
