There Will Be Blood (2007) - Movie Review![]()
Written by Paul Thomas Anderson, inspired by the book Oil! by Upton Sinclair My Advice: Could do with a matinee. The 20th Century is young. The land is alive with oil and the land is filled with people like Daniel Plainview (Day-Lewis) trying to dig down deep enough to tap into said oil. Plainview works hard and starts to build an empire based upon his knowledge, his land ownings and, of course, what seeps up from underneath. When he's tipped off to a huge "ocean of oil" under a small town, he, his son (Freasier), and his company move in to take advantage. This brings him into direct and indirect conflict with a young evangelical preacher (Dano) who is also there to...take advantage. It appears that this year's best movies are not the sort of light and fluffy films that you can just walk away from. This, like No Country For Old Men, is a film that lingers. One that you discuss, one that you turn over in your head, one that you can dissect for days afterward. It's, in other words, a pretty damn good flick.
(Also, and I have to mention this because it was driving me nuts while watching the film--I agree with others who have said that John Huston's is the voice that Day-Lewis used as a template for Plainview's. I should have caught this because I did just watch the entirety of the Under the Volcano Criterion DVD not too long ago, but I just couldn't bring it to the surface. But damned if that's not a good call.) One of the biggest concerns about this film was Paul Dano, since he had just come off the buzz of Little Miss Sunshine, and it's a helluva thing to go from that to playing opposite Day-Lewis. Of course, there was no need to be concerned. I thought he performed excellently and really captured the dual nature of the role. He makes for just as believable a crazy demon-fighting preacher as anyone. Also of note is Hinds, who seems to be in every other movie these days--he isn't given much to do but does it well. O'Connor also comes in late but conducts himself well. One of the standouts, and possibly the standout besides Day-Lewis, is Jonny Greenwood, who creates an excellent musical score that put me in the mind of Bernard Herrmann's Psycho, actually. Greenwood is a member of Radiohead, and when he finally gets tired of being in that band, he is more than welcome to score another film, because, honestly, it's quite good. I mark this as a matinee just because you want to see it on the big screen. Were it not for Day-Lewis' performance and the wide open vistas of arid America, it would be okay as a DVD. But by all means, watch it.
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Your review corroborates something I've always believed; stories aren't made epic by their scope but rather by their characters. A movie like, say, Gladiator might be an "epic," but only because Russell Crowe acted the hell out of it so hard we can't help caring about him.
Comment by Will Entrekin — January 28, 2008 @ 10:48 pm
2.I think the characters are the framework that the epic rests upon with something like Gladiator. The battle sequence at the beginning is nice and epic, but you're absolutely right, it's only because we care about Crowe's character that we give a shit rather than just going "Well, that looked cool." Thanks for the comment, amigo.
Comment by Widge — January 28, 2008 @ 11:13 pm