![]() This thematically dark and bravely bleak film is an oilwell that you know will eventually gush - and it does, it does - with a chancy ending that's bizarre and, satisfying or not, unforgettable.Īlthough the considerable running time (more than 2.5 hours) may not quite be justified by what sometimes seems a narrowly focused profile, the film is never less than fascinating and thoroughly compelling. “There Will Be Blood” (2007) - nominated for seven Oscars, including Best Picture, Director, Editing and Adapted Screenplay - is a character study from the “Citizen Kane” template, another view of the corrupting power of wealth in this country. Of course, once the oil is flowing, the stakes rising, and the money rolling in, the deception and corruption quotients skyrocket. Daniel, who never met a man he wouldn’t trample, is after the oil under the land upon which the Sundays’ church sits and he obtains drilling rights to that land under false pretenses. Father and son head west to the dusty (fictional) town of Little Boston, California, where the main attraction is the holy-roller church run by charismatic preacher Eli Sunday, a scheming opportunist played by Paul Dano, who also portrays Eli’s twin brother. (Like most of the finest American directors working now, Mr. The script tracks the relationship between Daniel, a down-and-out silver and gold miner who transforms himself into an oil tycoon, played by Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis, and his adopted son over three decades. There Will Be Blood involves a tangle of relationships, mainly intersecting sets of fathers and sons and pairs of brothers. Focusing on Southern California’s turn-of-the-20th-century petroleum boom, it’s an exploration of capitalism run rampant that also touches on family and faith and power and greed.Īnd there will be “Oil!,” which was the title of the 1927 Upton Sinclair novel about prospectors for black gold in California from which the film’s been loosely adapted by writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson. Either way, this guy comes the closest, saying, in “There Will Be Blood," “I look at people and see nothing worth liking."ĭaniel Plainview is this charmer's name, and his contempt for humankind is in - yep - plain view.ĭespite sporting a title that makes it sound like a refreshingly forthright slasher flick, this sprawling epic is actually a thought-provoking morality fable about manifest destiny and man-first destiny. Maybe it’s true that no man is an island, and maybe it's not. Each week, veteran film critic Bill Wine will look back at an important film that is worth watching, either for the first time or again.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |