Cover of Joaquin Phoenix |
I bow to no one in my
admiration for Paul Thomas Anderson’s marvellous film, There Will Be Blood in which Daniel Day Lewis gave one of his
astounding portrayals, that time of a predatory, ruthless pioneer of the
American oil industry.
That movie was based on the
first few chapters of a book by radical novelist Upton Sinclair, and it was
such a riveting movie that, even when I later happened upon it two or three
times on TV, my interest on each occasion was immediately caught by whatever
scene happened to come up, and I was unable to drag myself away until the end.
I am unhappy to have to
report that I cannot work up a comparable enthusiasm for the same director’s
new movie, The Master, which has been
said to have been loosely based on the life of L. Ron Hubbard in creating the
cult of Scientology. Far from being an
account of Hubbard’s life, even loosely translated, this movie is actually an
account of the relationship between a war-affected ex-serviceman, an unstable
drifter with a tendency towards violence, played by Joaquin Phoenix, and the
man who became his Master, played by the amazing actor Philip Seymour Hoffman.
Just what accounted for the closeness of this relationship is never adequately
explained to the audience, nor is the basis of their friendship.
A batch of reviews handed out
by the Cinema du Parc, where I saw
the movie, suggests that critics have been united in only one thing, which is
their puzzlement over the meaning of the movie.
Te method of telling the story is so disparate, so disjointed, that it
was difficult to follow what was
actually happening.
For myself, I thought I was
watching a rather too sympathetic accunt of the life of an unscrupulous cult
leader, of whom his son said, at one point, “he is making it up as he goes
along. Can’t you see that?” But my friend with whom I saw the movie saw it as
an account of a love affair between the Master, leader of the cult, and this
violent, attractive drifter. That never occurred to me, to tell the truth, but
I cannot dismiss it as completely unreasonable.
What does puzzle me is the
opinion expressed by a good number of the leading film critics in the United
States (and elsewhere) that the movie was so puzzling that probably in the
future it will emerge as a masterpiece. /several of them had already seen the
movie two, and even three times.
Although how they could have
borne sitting through it ---- two hours and twenty minutes of it --- three
times leaves me almost as baffled as what the move was about .
My Log 338 Jan 21 2013
The Master, a strange,
hard-to-understand portrait of a cult leader and his follower
I bow to no one in my
admiration for Paul Thomas Anderson’s marvellous film, There Will Be Blood in which Daniel Day Lewis gave one of his
astounding portrayals, that time of a predatory, ruthless pioneer of the
American oil industry.
That movie was based on the
first few chapters of a book by radical novelist Upton Sinclair, and it was
such a riveting movie that, even when I later happened upon it two or three
times on TV, my interest on each occasion was immediately caught by whatever
scene happened to come up, and I was unable to drag myself away until the end.
I am unhappy to have to
report that I cannot work up a comparable enthusiasm for the same director’s
new movie, The Master, which has been
said to have been loosely based on the life of L. Ron Hubbard in creating the
cult of Scientology. Far from being an
account of Hubbard’s life, even loosely translated, this movie is actually an
account of the relationship between a war-affected ex-serviceman, an unstable
drifter with a tendency towards violence, played by Joaquin Phoenix, and the
man who became his Master, played by the amazing actor Philip Seymour Hoffman.
Just what accounted for the closeness of this relationship is never adequately
explained to the audience, nor is the basis of their friendship.
A batch of reviews handed out
by the Cinema du Parc, where I saw
the movie, suggests that critics have been united in only one thing, which is
their puzzlement over the meaning of the movie.
Te method of telling the story is so disparate, so disjointed, that it
was difficult to follow what was
actually happening.
For myself, I thought I was
watching a rather too sympathetic accunt of the life of an unscrupulous cult
leader, of whom his son said, at one point, “he is making it up as he goes
along. Can’t you see that?” But my friend with whom I saw the movie saw it as
an account of a love affair between the Master, leader of the cult, and this
violent, attractive drifter. That never occurred to me, to tell the truth, but
I cannot dismiss it as completely unreasonable.
What does puzzle me is the
opinion expressed by a good number of the leading film critics in the United
States (and elsewhere) that the movie was so puzzling that probably in the
future it will emerge as a masterpiece. /several of them had already seen the
movie two, and even three times.
Although how they could have
borne sitting through it ---- two hours and twenty minutes of it --- three
times leaves me almost as baffled as what the move was about .
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