skizzerflake

skizzerflake

Audioholic Field Marshall
We saw this tonight. I don't know just what to think about it. Yes, it has two epic performances by Philip Hoffman (Lancaster Dodd) and Joachin Phoenix (Freddie Quell), as you suspect. As for plot and narrative, it's a muddled story. Phoenix is a post WW II wandering alcoholic with tendencies to violence, a guy who can whip of the meanest batch of drink you ever had, especially if there's some paint thinner or lysol available. He's seriously damaged goods. He gets roped into a family cult by Hoffman, not because he believes, so much as that he doesn't know what else to do at the moment. Hoffman's character seems to like Quell as a challenging convert, but also because he too has an occasional taste for paint thinner.

Is this about Hubbard and Scientology? I don't know enough about either to have an opinion, but Dodd definitely made up his own pseudo-religious self improvement regimen that seems like a cult...draw your own opinions. None of the characters in this movie are likable at all, neither Quell, nor Dodd, nor Dodd's female followers, nor the military or police or anybody. I thought I was mistaken but two other people also thought that the movie implied homoerotic moments between Quell and Dodd, but that plot didn't materialize either.

Phoenix apparently lost a LOT of weight for this role. He looks as pathetic as his character, wrinkled, slouchy, wasted and too lean.

It's definitely an interesting movie. Will it get reactions similar to the last meandering movie I saw, The Tree of Life? Will it be popular? Is it Hubbard and Scientology? I just don't know.
 
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Alex2507

Alex2507

Audioholic Slumlord
It's odd that I enjoy reading your reviews about movies that I am almost sure to dislike. :)
 
skizzerflake

skizzerflake

Audioholic Field Marshall
Would you please go into much greater detail.

Thanking you in advance.
Signed,
Adam
Alex
Doug

:D
I don't know what it was, but something subliminal about they were looking at each other. I would have ignored it except that once my wife mentioned it, the other three of us replied something like that we had the same impression but were not going to say anything with nothing objective to back it up. We all thought that something was about to happen, but it didn't.
 
skizzerflake

skizzerflake

Audioholic Field Marshall
It's odd that I enjoy reading your reviews about movies that I am almost sure to dislike. :)
Often I enjoy movies I don't like in an odd way. They broaden the mind or something like that and sometimes I end up liking them later. In the scheme of things, also, I think that often there is more going on creatively in small indie flicks than in the big budget blockbusters. I'd take one "Me and Orson Welles" to 5 Jason Bourne movies any day.
 
Alex2507

Alex2507

Audioholic Slumlord
Often I enjoy movies I don't like in an odd way. They broaden the mind or something like that and sometimes I end up liking them later. In the scheme of things, also, I think that often there is more going on creatively in small indie flicks than in the big budget blockbusters. I'd take one "Me and Orson Welles" to 5 Jason Bourne movies any day.
I saw Me and Orson Wells and thought the world of it. I see your point on that. Movies cram packed with unlikable characters generally put me off but like most people I appreciate good work (acting) so I'll more than likely watch The Master at some point.
 

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