Most Wanted
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Ishtar
(May, 1987)
The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (OOP)
(Ross, 1976)
The Devils
(Russell, 1974)
The Pirates of Penzance
(Papp/Leach, 1983)
The Fortune
(Nichols, 1975)
-30-
(Webb, 1959)
Betrayal
(Jones, 1983)
Play It As It Lays
(Perry, 1972)
The Outfit
(Flynn, 1973)
Alex in Wonderland
(Mazursky, 1969)
The Legend of Lylah Clare
(Aldrich, 1968)
In The Cool of the Day
(Stevens, 1963)
That Cold Day in the Park
(Altman, 1969)
Thumb Trippin'
(Masters, 1972)
Midas Run
(Kjellin, 1969)
At Long Last Love
(Bogdanovich, 1973)
Brewster McCloud
(Altman, 1972)
Outcast of the Islands
(Reed, 1951)

Reader Submissions

1930's-1950's
The Moon's Our Home
(Seiter, 1936)
Sh! The Octopus
(McGann, 1937)
The Mating Season
(Leisen, 1951)
Bad for Each Other
(Rapper, 1953)
The Phenix City Story
(Karlson, 1955)
Run of the Arrow
(Fuller, 1956)
House of Secrets
(Green, 1956)
Saint Joan
(Preminger, 1957)
Macabre
(Castle, 1958)
The Fiend Who Walked the West
(G. Douglas, 1958
Five Gates to Hell
(Clavell, 1959)
1960's
Key Witness
(Karlson, 1960)
Summer and Smoke
(Glenville, 1961)
The Chapman Report
(Cukor,1962)
Bachelor Flat
(Tashlin, 1962) [on Hulu]
The L Shaped Room
(Forbes, 1963)
The Chalk Garden
(Neame, 1964)
A Thousand Clowns
(Coe, 1965)
You're a Big Boy Now
(Coppola, 1966)
The Whisperers
(Forbes, 1967)
Dark of the Sun
(Cardiff, 1968)
Skidoo
(Preminger, 1968)
Last Summer
(Perry, 1969)
The Comic
(C. Reiner, 1969)
1970-1974
The Revolutionary
(Williams, 1970)
The Landlord
(Ashby, 1970)
Diary of a Mad Housewife
(Perry, 1970)
Tropic of Cancer
(Strick, 1970)
I Never Sang for My Father
(Cates, 1970)
Sometimes a Great Notion
(Newman, 1971)
Marriage of a Young Stockbroker
(Turman, 1971)
The Music Lovers
(Russell, 1971)
Drive, He Said
(Nicholson, 1971)
The Steagle
(Sylbert, 1971)
The Last Movie
(Hopper, 1971)
Made For Each Other
(Bean, 1971)
The Day the Clown Cried
(Lewis, 1972)
Hickey & Boggs (OOP)
(Culp, 1972)
The Carey Treatment
(Edwards, 1972)
Pete 'n' Tillie
(Ritt, 1972)
Slither
(Zieff, 1973)
Man on a Swing
(Perry, 1974)
Open Season
(Collinson, 1974)
The Tamarind Seed
(Edwards, 1974)
Law and Disorder
(Passer, 1974)
Homebodies
(Yust, 1974)
Stardust
(Apted, 1974)
Celine and Julie Go Boating
(Rivette, 1974)
1975-1979
Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins
(Richards, 1975
At Long Last Love
(Bogdanovich, 1975)
Hearts of the West
(Zieff, 1975)
Welcome to L.A.
(Rudolph, 1976)
W.C. Fields and Me
(Hiller, 1976)
Citizens Band
(Demme, 1977)
Twilight's Last Gleaming
(Aldrich, 1977)
Looking for Mr. Goodbar
(Brooks, 1977)
Girlfriends
(Weill, 1978)
Movie Movie
(Donen, 1978)
The Medusa Touch
(Gold, 1978)
American Hot Wax
(Mutrux, 1978)
Hot Stuff
(DeLuise, 1979)
Scavenger Hunt
(Schultz , 1979)
Players
(Harvey, 1979)
Rich Kids
(Young, 1979)
Nightwing
(Hiller, 1979)
Screams of a Winter's Night
(Wilson, 1979
When You Comin' Back Red Ryder?
(Katselas, 1979
1980's
Resurrection
(Petrie, 1980)
The Awakening
(Newell, 1980)
Simon
(Brickman, 1980)
God's Angry Man
(Herzog, 1980)
Fast-Walking
(Harris, 1982)
Twice Upon a Time
(Korty & Swenson, 1983)
Trouble in Mind
(Rudolph, 1985)
When the Wind Blows
(Murikami, 1986)
Housekeeping
(Forsyth, 1987)
The Glass Menagerie
(Newman, 1987)
Patty Hearst
(Schrader, 1988)
Drowning by Numbers
(Greenaway, 1988)
Haunted Summer
(Passer, 1988)
The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years
(Spheeris, 1988)
1990's
Old Times
(Curtis, 1991)
Prospero's Books
(Greenaway, 1991)
City of Hope
(Sayles, 1991)
The Baby of Macon
(Greenaway, 1993)
King of the Hill
(Soderbergh, 1993)
Dadetown
(Hexter, 1995)
SubUrbia
(Linklater, 1997)

Monday Will Tell

I'm down for a Reader screening tomorrow at 2 pm, and then a 7 pm Benjamin Button unveiling at MOMA's Titus with a David Fincher q & a to follow. Whatever and however I and my New York colleagues wind up responding the next morning, the L.A. crowd has gotten the first looksee and posted the first reviews, and that's that.


Here's Variety's Anne Thompson....

"When The Curious Case of Benjamin Button reaches its climax, it is extraordinarily moving," she begins, "although some find the movie cold and dispassionate. It may pack a more powerful punch the older you are and the more people you have lost. In that case it will score with the Academy, who will also recognize the skillful filmmaking on display.

"The movie marks a seismic shift in terms of what is possible in moviemaking. What Fincher and his team have done is no small technological feat. Button starts off as a CG-aged baby, moves through CG-altered older Pitt faces superimposed on small bodies, and then proceeds to the 'real' Pitt wearing makeup and then getting younger and younger.

"Thus the film's central performance is in great part a visual effect. (Cate Blanchett is also made younger digitally, but aged with makeup.) That accounts in part for the movie's high cost (well above $150 million) but is also its primary limitation.

"Thus while I admire the film's amazing accomplishment -- it's hard to imagine that anyone but the digitally sophisticated Fincher, who has become adept at "painting" his digital canvases, could have pulled this off--the movie is not entirely satisfying. But given what it is, it's hard to imagine it being done done any better. The actors are superb, especially Pitt and Blanchett, who should earn Oscar noms.

"What's missing has partly to do with the limitations of the technology. Button reminds me of Peter Sellers as Chauncey Gardner in Being There. He's oddly passive and restrained, zen-like as he floats through all the decades, watching, listening, learning. He narrates the tale via his diary, along with his dying love Blanchett. We see him engaging with people, but he never says much. We see him from the outside; we never get under his skin, and we never learn the fruits of his wisdom. He stays much the same.

"Still, the movie is sadly beautiful, of a piece, as impeccably wrought as its ornate clock that runs counterclockwise. Do Paramount and Warner Bros. have a prayer of making their money back? This movie needs all the help it can get, from anyone who loves movies and wants the studios to take more risky bets like this one."

Rahmbo << previous | next >>Where's The Blame?

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on November 23, 2008 at 8:17 PM

comment #1

actionman Author Profile Page says ...

http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117939098.html?categoryid=2880&cs=1

Todd McCarthy praises the film overall, and then scolds Fincher and Miranda for shooting the film digitally. Very interesting.

Shooting digitally has worked, for me, on one occasion: Miami Vice.

Apocalypto and Zodiac looked great too, but those should have been shot on film as well.

Posted by actionman Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 8:50 PM

comment #2

actionman Author Profile Page says ...

And have a great time, Wells. You're a lucky dude.

Posted by actionman Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 8:53 PM

comment #3

mutinyco Author Profile Page says ...

A movie like this could never work on film. With this much CGI inherent to its success, it had to be of digital origin.

Posted by mutinyco Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 9:09 PM

comment #4

BurmaShave Author Profile Page says ...

Same with ZODIAC.

Posted by BurmaShave Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 9:26 PM

comment #5

BurmaShave Author Profile Page says ...

Also the refrain now is maybe Pitt has underplayed it too much and will be left out of the nominations. Has a film ever won Best Picture without the title character at least being nominated for Best Actor or Actress?

Posted by BurmaShave Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 9:28 PM

comment #6

btwnproductions Author Profile Page says ...

I came up with The Great Ziegfeld, The Last Emperor, and Shakespeare in Love.

Posted by btwnproductions Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 9:47 PM

comment #7

BurmaShave Author Profile Page says ...

Nicely done. Certainly can't say those were mistakes either, though John Lone should already have had a nomination for YEAR OF THE DRAGON.

Posted by BurmaShave Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 9:51 PM

comment #8

T. Holly Author Profile Page says ...

I want to know how many times you cry, or if it's just one long on-and-off cry, or big crying after it's over. Lots of crying description of you and everyone nearby. When did you cry, how did you cry, and where did you cry. Does anything else matter at this point, really?

Posted by T. Holly Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 10:06 PM

Posted by D.Z. Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 10:49 PM

comment #10

ZayTonday Author Profile Page says ...

You're gonna love it Wells. I think you're going to be as sure of it being the eventual Best Pic winner as I am.

Posted by ZayTonday Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 10:49 PM

Posted by D.Z. Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 10:51 PM

Posted by D.Z. Author Profile Page at November 23, 2008 11:24 PM

Posted by D.Z. Author Profile Page at November 24, 2008 12:24 AM

comment #14

bfm Author Profile Page says ...

Gwyneth won Best Actress for Shakespeare in Love.

There were no acting noms at all for Lord of the Rings, Return of the King. And Leonardo was famously overlooked for Titanic.

Posted by bfm Author Profile Page at November 24, 2008 1:44 AM

comment #15

btwnproductions Author Profile Page says ...

Paltrow wasn't playing Shakespeare, though.

Also Oliver!

Posted by btwnproductions Author Profile Page at November 24, 2008 9:19 AM

comment #16

lawnorder Author Profile Page says ...

Saw it yesterday - and I agree with Todd McCarthy, digital was the wrong format to shoot it - especially the Viper cam. The film lacks warmth and texture due to the cold, clean look of digital. It's a very strong film with superb performances and visual FX, but I wish it had probed a little deeper about the conflicts of the flesh aging and growing older in the couple at the same time. There was a lot of great emotional material that was never mined. Alexander Desplat deserves a special shout-out for his beautiful, John Barry-esque score.

Posted by lawnorder Author Profile Page at November 24, 2008 9:27 AM

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