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Across the Universe
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Directed by Julie Taymor.
Set against the anti-war protests, rock and roll revolution, and mind-expanding psychedelia of the 1960s, Julie Taymor's hallucinogenic musical follows the arduous journey of star crossed lovers Jude (Jim Sturgess) and Lucy (Evan Rachel Wood) as they and a small group of musicians are swept up in the raging waters of the volatile counterculture movement. Guided through their journey by a pair known only as Dr. Robert (Bono) and Mr. Kite (Eddie Izzard), Jude and Lucy are eventually forced to find their way back to one another after being split apart by powerful forces beyond their control. The music in the film consists exclusively of songs made popular by The Beatles during the time period depicted in the movie. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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mrbuckykmrbuckyk Eddie Izzard and John Lennon???
by mrbuckyk in mrbuckyk Blog
liked it.
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"Julie Taymor's movie musical incorporating the Beatles' music. Loved the interpretations and her visual style is always amazing (Watch Titus!!! AMAZING FILM!!!). The movie was highly entertaining but I wasn't blown away by it... musicals just tend to work better on stage for me. " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog The Fall Trailer
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Call me crazy (again), but I really like Tarsem’s debut feature, The Cell. If I had any complaints, though, it would be that there wasn’t enough visual stimuli. I’m sure others would have preferred a better story instead, but I have a greater appreciation for those films that are primarily meant to be looked at, and not as much followed. Favorites include Terry Giliam’s The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, Julie Taymor’s Titus and Zhang Yimou’s Hero, though I could probably go on and on. It’s an interesting affection coming from me, a guy occasionally inclined to criticize Hollywood’s spectacle-over-substance model of blockbustering. But I can’t help falling for a combination of beautiful cinematography and art direction. I shouldn’t, but I’ll even admit to enjoying What Dreams May Come – with my eyes wide open and my ears plugged shut, of course. The problem, though, with filmmakers like Tarsem and the rest is that eventually their painterly visions may dry up or become repetitive ... " [More]
lopezdashlopezdash Across the Universe
by lopezdash in Final Cut
loved it.
"A thought on Across the Universe: When you remove the amazing soundtrack from the equation, you are left with a mediocre love story set in the 1960s. Agree or disagree? " [More]
laststarfighterlaststarfighter Re:Soundtrack you *listen* to t ...
by laststarfighter in Best Movie Soundtracks
liked it.
"No REAL particular order: 1. Star Wars: A new hope (on cassette tape or vinyl) Repetatively.again somewhat of a big fan of the star wars original Tril. 2. Amelie (love Yaan Tiersen) 3. Wicker park 4. Once (love the swell season / glen hansard ) 5. I'm not there 6. Requiem for a dream 7. The Fountain (<3 Clint Mansell) 8. Juno 9. Across the universe 10. High Fidelity " [More]
treyswaytreysway One of the best musicals of the ...
by treysway in treysway Blog
loved it.
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"I thought its use of the beatles music was great and its unique visuals left me in awwww!!! " [More]
wongawonga my 2007 movie lists
by wonga in wonga's filmblog
liked it.
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"i have a wonderful picture of all my movie ticket stubs from this year in a pile but i can’t get it transferred to my filmblog (yes, i save my ticket stubs and scrapbook them at the end of the year…i know, it’s sad really)! armed with discount movie coupons, i saw 118 movies this year at the theater and, as usual, it was really hard to narrow them down but here’s my list, for what it’s worth. some are from 2006 that i didn’t see until later. my 15 favorite movies at the theater in 2007the assassination of jesse james by the coward robert fordthe diving bell and the butterflythe lives of othersjunothe painted veilonceno country for old menthe darjeeling limitedwaitressstarting out in the eveningsunshinefirst snow zodiacin the shadow of the moonacross the universehonorable mention (alphabetically)2 days in paris 3:10 to yuma51 birch streetdirty dancing (20th anniversary)dreamgirlshairspra yinto the wildthe jane austen book clubkiller of sheepknock ... " [More]
ronmauldinronmauldin Gotta Get You Into My Life...
by ronmauldin in ronmauldin Blog
loved it.
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"To truly enjoy and understand this film, you need to be a Beatles music fan and it helps to be a child of the Beatles era... so naturally, I loved it. My 16 year old son who is also a Beatles music fan also loved it. However, my wife walked out of the theater commenting that she did not get it... since to her, a beatle is something to step on.Contrary to the synopsis above... the movie is about putting a story to Beatles music, nothing more... and of course the music was about love and later "anti-war protests, rock and roll revolution, non-sense and mind-expanding psychedelia of the 1960s". Director Julie Taymor did an excellent job of threading a movie around the Beatles music. I loved the movie and plan to buy the dvd. " [More]
ronmauldinronmauldin Gotta Get You Into My Life...
by ronmauldin in ronmauldin Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"To truly enjoy and understand this film, you need to be a Beatles music fan and it helps to be a child of the Beatles era... so naturally, I loved it. My 16 year old son who is also a Beatles music fan also loved it. However, my wife walked out of the theater commenting that she did not get it... since to her, a beatle is something to step on.Contrary to the synopsis above... the movie is about putting a story to Beatles music, nothing more... and of course the music was about love and later "anti-war protests, rock and roll revolution, non-sense and mind-expanding psychedelia of the 1960s". Director Julie Taymor did an excellent job of threading a movie around the Beatles music. I loved the movie and plan to buy the dvd. " [More]
The1TheOnlyJPThe1TheOnlyJP Top 10 Favorite Films of 2007
by The1TheOnlyJP in The Paxton Log
liked it.
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"Here it is, one final post relating to the movies of 2007. This in my opinion is really the only list that counts. Here I'm not talking about the supposed best films of the year (although some certainly are) but rather which ones I personally loved most. This time I'm actually going to place them in order though. So sit back and relax as I unveil my top ten favorite films of 2007. (Sadly, 'Bratz' is not one of them.)[10] 'Black Snake Moan'I love Samuel L. Jackson. He's the only reason I'm even interested in the upcoming action-flick 'Jumper.' His role in 'Black Snake Moan' as the bluesman Lazarus was something completely different for him. This was a movie which basically boils down to being about a black man reaching out to a lust driven white girl in an attempt at helping her with her sickness. Sounds a little dirty when in fact their relationship in the film is anything but. The sad thing is this turned out to be a defini ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog The Best Mainstream Movies of 2007
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Here is my follow-up to last month’s question of what mainstream movie will feature on the most top ten movie lists. And the winner is … Ratatouille. Oh wait, didn’t I disqualify that one for being too obvious? No? Well, I should have. Yes, according to Movie City News’ Big Ass Chart (aka Scorecard) of critics’ top tens, the Pixar movie made it on to 51 best-of lists, making it the best-grossing best movie of the year. But maybe it wasn’t the most mainstream, if you define mainstream as studio-produced fare. Under that qualification Zodiac was the best mainstream movie of 2007, having been made jointly by Warner Bros. and Paramount and showing up on 70 best-of lists. Other Warner successes include Michael Clayton, which featured on 54 lists, Sweeney Todd, which received 44 mentions, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, which showed up on one list, and Letters From Iwo Jima, which showed up a little late on one list. As far as those mainstream movies I predicted would feature ... " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Aside from Baz Luhrman, Julie Taymor would seem to be a perfect director for Across the Universe, a musical about the late 1960s set exclusively to music by The Beatles. She was, after all, the woman who so successfully translated Disney's biggest box office hit, The Lion King, into one of the most popular and critically acclaimed stage musicals of all time. Sadly, Taymor's formidable skills in the theater just don't translate to the silver screen. Although her unconventional eye helps her create memorable images, Taymor's creative sensibilities are painfully literal-minded, hampering the film on numerous occasions. The most glaring example of this can be found in her staging of "I Want You/She's So Heavy." The sequence begins with the character Max visiting his local draft board where he's serenaded "I want you," by a towering animated Uncle Sam leaning down from a recruiting poster. Then comes a group of officers performing Busby Berkley-esque sequences that strongly recall Alan Parker's most famous sequences in The Wall, followed by a scene where Max and other new recruits walk through a miniaturized version of a Vietnam rice paddy. We can see that he and the others are carrying something on their backs while they sing, "She's So Heavy," and lo and behold, the object they are straining to support is The Statue of Liberty. The imagery is so obvious and heavy-handed, it manages to nullify the poetry of the songs themselves. Taymor's failure to find interesting, let alone meaningful, ways to recontexualize these songs is bad enough - as we are talking about some of the most iconic music in history here - but the awkwardness with which she stages the songs is even worse. "I Want to Hold Your Hand," for instance, becomes the quiet lament of a high school girl crushing on a fellow cheerleader. Although it's one of the few times one of the songs is reinterpreted in a thought-provoking way, the choreography of the girl's stroll across the football field, with football players falling and cartwheeling behind her in slow motion, kills any interest in the song. They aren't "dancing" and they don't look like they've actually just been hit. It's just a bunch of movement for movement's sake, the surest sign of a director not knowing what to do with material. "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite" becomes a pointless special effects extravaganza with Eddie Izzard failing to find any of the song's inherent whimsy or humor in his utterly bent delivery. Bono, looking a great deal like Robin Williams, shows up as Dr. Robert in order to sing a version of "I am the Walrus" awash in such obviously trippy psychedelic explosions of color that the sequence could easily be viewed as camp or kitsch, if the entire film weren't so earnest. The actors all have fine singing voices, but it's hard to know if they are truly skilled because they're not really playing characters, just cardboard cutouts in a story constructed around familiar sixties imagery and puns on Beatles lyrics. When asked how a character got into the apartment they share, our hero quips, "she came in through the bathroom window." All that's missing is a rim shot. Across the Universe tells us nothing new about the sixties, offers not a single sequence that can be savored by movie musical enthusiasts, and never once comes anywhere close to the magic of the original Beatles recordings. The movie fails so spectacularly because never once does Julie Taymor convince us that it needs to exist. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
 



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