Sunday, February 3, 2013

Fighting for The Cause













Paul Thomas Anderson is one of the best directors at the moment, so I was of course looking forward to this one. And as he doesn't rush with the productions of his movies it took almost 6 years to finally get a new movie from him. Freddie Quell (Joaquin Phoenix) is an alcoholic World War II veteran who has some serious anger issues. He meets a cult religiously believing in The Cause and befriends the leader Lancaster Dodd (Philip Seymour Hoffman). Even though Freddie's anger seems to cause more trouble than anything good they still become depended on each other and together spread the word of The Cause. The story is quite interesting and even though this is not about scientology the similarities are quite obvious at times. The cast is superb, Joaquin Phoenix portrays probably the best performance of his career, Philip Seymour Hoffman is great as always and Amy Adams was surprisingly good as well. The movie looks larger than it actually is, mostly thanks to the beautiful 65 mm photography. Direction focuses on closeups and the sets are usually quite small so the photography gives it the larger scale. Even though I understand why it was used, to bring more scale for the emotions, I still think it could have been utilized a bit better. Especially since the biggest problem this movie had was the feeling it left me with. Even though I was entertained and even amazed at times, still I was thinking “was that it?” when the end credits rolled. And to be honest that's a bit unforgivable. I mean I like open endings, it's good to leave something for the viewer to ponder on, but as this movie does it most of the time right from the start and the characters are quite grand, I was constantly waiting for some kind of closure of epic proportions. The kind which would tie up the movie and leave me thinking how it actually got there, kind of like in There Will BeBlood (2007), but there is none. And that's a huge disappointment in an otherwise brilliant movie.
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