About Schmidt [message #5529] |
Sat, 27 November 2004 09:39 |
Manualblock
Messages: 4973 Registered: May 2009
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Illuminati (13th Degree) |
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Anyone see or have an opinion about this Jack Nicholson movie? I saw it; wrote it off but it is staying with me and upon watching it again I find it deeper than I originally thought. I cannot figure out if I am making more of it or if it is truely a good work. It appears to operate as a morality play; but maybe I am wrong. Strangely haunting.
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Recent Nicholson films [message #5531 is a reply to message #5529] |
Sun, 28 November 2004 13:04 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18793 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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I keep meaning to watch "About Schmidt" too. I haven't because I understand it's pretty much an introspective film and kind of slow going. Seems like my tastes are kind of seasonal, and I'm not in the mood for it right now. But one of these times, I'll check it out for sure.
I'll tell you a relatively recent Nicholson film I liked. "As Good As It Gets" is a movie where Nicholson plays a rather cynical curmudgeon with a bit of heart that he desperately tries to keep hidden under wraps. But it shows anyway, just through the cracks, just enough that you can tell. It's a part that I think was made for Nicholson.
Another recent film that I thought was worth seeing was "Something's Gotta Give." Another made-for-Nicholson film, in this one, he's an aging Playboy that's always gone for younger women. When he meets the mother of his latest girlfriend (Diane Keaton), everything changes.
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Re: Recent Nicholson films [message #5535 is a reply to message #5533] |
Sun, 28 November 2004 15:17 |
lon
Messages: 760 Registered: May 2009
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Illuminati (2nd Degree) |
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Don't know the About Schmidt film, but for dialog that shows maturity, I'd point to any one od the films or plays by David Mamet: Glen Gary Glennross being the most well-known example. I have not cared much about seeing any Nicholson films per se since the first Batman. Or any Robt DeNiro films at all. I made an _extreme_ exception for Wag The Dog... see Mamet above.
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Re: Recent Nicholson films [message #5537 is a reply to message #5536] |
Sun, 28 November 2004 22:22 |
lon
Messages: 760 Registered: May 2009
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Illuminati (2nd Degree) |
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Those are goods ones, but don't forget "Oleanna"... a play made into a film and all done by Mamet. Oleanna is the closest thing done to a stage play as a dialog that I've seen in a long time. Also not to forget "A Life In The Theatre" w/Jack Lemmon and Matthew Broderick. I managed to see that as a stage play and film both. Go you Huskies.
But I don't think American films have to be dumbed down for European audiences, though I know that's not what you are saying. Look at "Amelie" for example. And I just viewed "Monsoon Wedding" last night. It's a shame that rental places feat the loss of vaulable shelf space for additional copies of Scooby Doo to stock more foreign films of good quality.
Which remionds me: anybody see "Hero" with Jett Li?
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Re: Yes, but........ [message #5544 is a reply to message #5542] |
Wed, 01 December 2004 06:58 |
Manualblock
Messages: 4973 Registered: May 2009
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Illuminati (13th Degree) |
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Yes well Somethings Got to Give was sophomoric and contrived. As Good As it Gets was a perfectly cast film that became greater than the sum of it's parts. But Jack playing a neurotic curmudgeonly crank; not that much of a stretch. Schmidt I believe; will be recognised as one of his best in the future. "Dear Ndgu", funny how this guy who just lost his wife, retired and his daughter is marrying a slub he cannot stand; finds a way to communicate his thoughts to himself by writing letters to some person he has never met and knows nothing about. The kid lives in Africa; a place so far and so different from Kansas he might as well be on the moon. He has an RV and takes a trip through his past; The Quest. The scene on top of the RV with those little totem figures and the shooting star? Lots and lots of stuff that lingers in that film. Metaphor for alienation and disaffection of modern life maybe? Done masterfully.
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