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NANCAN Blog

  • What? Who? Where? Duh?

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    Under discussion:

    The Black Dahlia  (2006)

    I was sooooooooooo disappointed by this film - how did it even make it to the theatre? Was there no test audience done on this picture? Let's start with the cast: Hilary Swank has two Oscars - did she just want to wear something black in any 'ol movie? Scarlett Johansson, bimbo du jour, struts around looking way too perfect for the 1940's and then there's Josh Hartnett. How does this guy keep getting acting jobs? It's as though he went to the James Brolin School of Wooden Acting. He's horrible! And then there's the convoluted story about how and why the murder happens ... there's family rivalries, suggestions of incest, who's stabbing who? huh? And, then it seems to go on and on and on. If you don't believe me, go ahead and rent this piece of crap and you, too, will wish you'd done something better with this week's Netflix mailing. I notice that this film is currently selling for OVER a dime on this site - shame, shame on you!

  • Much Better Version

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    Under discussion:

    Infamous  (2006)

    I think I've seen all the major films regarding the Clutter murders including the poor remake of "In Cold Blood" with Eric Roberts and Anthony Edwards ... and I thought this film was going to be in the same category when compared to "Capote". First of all, I really, really like Phillip Seymour Hoffman and thought he definitely deserved his Oscar .... but I really wish he'd received it for "Boggie Nights" and that "Infamous" had come out in another year because Toby Jones IS the very best Capote I have ever seen. This Capote is one very talented and troubled man, all wrapped in a wry, cynical, hilarious and campy outside persona. Not only does Toby Jones physically resemble Capote, he's captured what makes him the worthy subject matter of two films. Different from "Capote", "Infamous" shows you who Capote was before and after writing "In Cold Blood". Capote may have used and abused the two murderers for his book, but it cannot be denied that the many years it took to create his "novel based on fact" didn't take a serious toll on him. The details of how he actually wrote the book, wording phrases by bouncing them off his friends, is particularly interesting. I loved the interviews with his socialite friends, particularly Juliet Stevenson's terrific portrayal of Diana Vreeland. What petty people they were! This film suggests a more complex relationship between Capote and Perry Smith, which most probably was the case since Smith actually left Capote all his worldly belongings when he was executed. Hoffman's Capote was out of place in Holcomb, Kansas ... by the Jones Capote stood out like a neon sign ... and his dialogue about this reality is simply wonderful. Supporting cast includes Sandra Bullock (finally in something worth watching)  as Harper Lee, Bogdanovich as Capote's agent, Jeff Daniels as the DA and Signorney Weaver as Babe Paley complement Jones as Capote very nicely indeed. The only flaw of this film would be the casting of Mark Ruffalo as a beefy Perry Smith, but who could top Robert Blake's unforgettable performance anyway?

 

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