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My Blueberry Nights
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Directed by Wong Kar-Wai.
Legendary filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai directs Jude Law, Natalie Portman, Rachel Weisz, and Norah Jones in his first English-language feature film -- a romantic road movie detailing the cross-country journey of a woman who sets off across the United States in hopes of mending her broken heart. Elizabeth (Jones) has just been through a particularly nasty breakup, and now she's ready to leave her friends and memories behind as she chases her dreams across the country. In order to support herself on her journey, Elizabeth picks up a series of waitress jobs along the way. As Elizabeth crosses paths with a series of lost souls whose yearnings are even greater than her own -- including a troubled cop (David Strathairn), his estranged wife (Rachel Weisz), and an embittered gambler (Natalie Portman) -- their emotional turmoil ultimately helps her gain a greater understanding of her own problems. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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indieabby88indieabby88 Re:Top 5 Everybody Seems To Lov ...
by indieabby88 in Top 5
hasn't rated it.
"Here's another one: My Blueberry Nights. When I saw this movie, I couldn't believe how bad the writing was. Rachel Weisz's acting was way over the top, Norah Jones' character's motivations were completely unexplained, and Natalie Portman and Jude Law spouted cliche after world-wise cliche. But when I mentioned this on the filmspotting message board, I got shot down. I have no explanation for why this is. Maybe Wong Kar-Wai put something in the coke machine that brainwashed the viewers? Ah well. C'est la vie. " [More]
scswngrscswngr Wong Kar-Wai I still love you.
by scswngr in Film Obsessed
liked it.
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"About 13 or 14 years ago I fell in love with Wong Kar-Wai and foreign film when I saw Chungking Express. my blueberry nights had me reminiscing and remember why I love this director even more than many of his intervening films have over the past decade. Although I could have done without the closing line in the film (I really though the visual spoke for itself), my blueberry nights is a worthy english language addition to Wong's already phenomenal repertoire. I even watched with the subtitles on, and felt like I was a teenager again, beginning to truly recognize the beauty of film. " [More]
CinemaRianCinemaRian My Blueberry Nights (2007, Hong ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"At times, My Blueberry Nights doesn't even seem like a movie. It reminded my of a first novel by an English major, in love with the tone of their own writing. Believing that film is a visual medium, I often don't comment much on the script, but I have to say that there's really no way this could have been a good movie. The screenplay is so stupid and self-consciously arty (is that word?) that no director, not Wong Kar-Wai, not Ingmar Bergman, not Francis Ford Coppola, could have made it work. That's not to say the only flaw is the script, but we'll get to that later. The movie is three different stories concerning the wandering Elizabeth (singer Norah Jones in her first movie) who is recovering from a break-up. She stars in New York, and forges a friendship with Jeremy (Jude Law) a British guy who owns a café. He falls in love with her, and she gets close to him, but she's not ready to commit. Although she already has a job, Elizabeth can't sleep at night, so she gets ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog 5 Worst Directorial Sellouts of ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"On Saturday, Karina and I were discussing the upcoming Judd Apatow-produced comedy Pineapple Express, which I think is a waste of David Gordon Green’s directorial talent. Even more, I think it’s a waste of his writing talent, as it’s his first film where he’s not (credited as) one of the screenwriters. But, as Karina argued, a guy has to earn a paycheck now and again, and if him making this stoner comedy means I get to see more beautiful little films from Green in the future, then I should be happy for him and thankful to Apatow and Columbia Pictures. After all, great actors do this sort of thing all the time, so why shouldn’t it be okay for directors? However, all too often a sellout film can leave a really bad taste in our mouths. Sometimes that one really commercial movie will harm a filmmaker’s career for a long time, whether because it’s a box office flop or because it ends up only being the first in a new, more-mainstream direction for the filmmaker (see John Woo, sort of). H ... " [More]
KarinaKarina My Blueberry Nights Bumped from ...
by Karina in Karina on SpoutBlog
hasn't rated it.
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"Via The Reeler comes news that Wong Kar Wai’s My Blueberry Nights, the Hong Kong auteur’s English language debut, which opened the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, has been bumped from its Valentine’s Day release date to early April. Release date delays of multiple months are rarely considered a positive sign??????especially when we’re talking about a film that was mostly excoriated by the international press at the one and only film festival at which it screened??????but in this case, I don’t know. The Weinsteins haven’t started to promote Blueberry in earnest, so it’s not like they’re throwing away money already spent. There’s plenty of datey competition the first two weeks of February (although, it should be noted, nothing remotely arty or adult), with TWC’s own Diary of the Dead slotted in as Valentine’s counter-programming on the 15th. If nothing else, moving Blueberry to April gives the struggling Weinsteins time to support it without dividing their resources, which is what I blame ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog My Blueberry Nights Bumped from ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Via The Reeler comes news that Wong Kar Wai’s My Blueberry Nights, the Hong Kong auteur’s English language debut, which opened the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, has been bumped from its Valentine’s Day release date to early April. Release date delays of multiple months are rarely considered a positive sign??????especially when we’re talking about a film that was mostly excoriated by the international press at the one and only film festival at which it screened??????but in this case, I don’t know. The Weinsteins haven’t started to promote Blueberry in earnest, so it’s not like they’re throwing away money already spent. There’s plenty of datey competition the first two weeks of February (although, it should be noted, nothing remotely arty or adult), with TWC’s own Diary of the Dead slotted in as Valentine’s counter-programming on the 15th. If nothing else, moving Blueberry to April gives the struggling Weinsteins time to support it without dividing their resources, which is what I blame ... " [More]
tinokievtinokiev I will never eat a blueberry pi ...
by tinokiev in tinokiev Blog
loved it.
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"Just finished watching Wong Kar Wai My Blueberry Nights . It was all the signatures of the director, subtle and not so subtle sexual analogies. The whole film is an allegory to attach and deattachment in relationships. In 2046, Days of Being Wild and In the mood for love he explored similar aspects of life, but this movie approaches love on a total different way, being his first English speaking film. It follows the story of a girl trying to forget about a love on a road trip, this journey starts on a Cafe where he is desperately looking for his ex-partner, but her search turns into a very curious friendly relationship with the Cafe owner, who seems to have his own theories about forgotten loves. During her trip she meets different characters that somehow are experiencing relationship problems and are desperately finding a way to cope with them, as she travels around the country she learns from them and grows with them, always writing postcards of her experiences to the Cafe owne ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Fans of vocalist Norah Jones who feel curious to glimpse the star's capacity for feature drama may walk away from screens with more questions than they had going in, after checking out this English-language directorial debut by famed Chinese director Wong Kar-Wai, which hits U.S. video store shelves on July 1st. An arty, hyper-stylized ensemble piece, My Blueberry Nights features Jones in lead billing, and Kar-Wai and co-scripter Lawrence Block build the narrative trajectory on the geographic journey of her character, Elizabeth. The actress, however, does little onscreen other than narrating portions of the movie, and bearing witness to vicissitudes from the lives of various middle-American characters Elizabeth encounters - making this a vignette-laced showcase for the work of four A-listers: Jude Law, David Strathairn, Rachel Weisz and Natalie Portman. Everything else here is just window dressing. A whopping great part of the emotional impact and intellectual power in Kar-Wai's Chinese-language films (Chungking Express, Happy Together, etc.) derives from their ability to adroitly merge alluring visual effects (fast and slow motion, stop motion, surrealistic lighting, flashy montages, superimpositions, impressionistic color) with semi-improvised performances that enable the actors and actresses to feel out and work through almost intangible and inarticulate emotions and psychological states onscreen. This juxtaposition typically enhances the depth of the material. My Blueberry Nights retains one-half of the equation: the stylization is here ad nauseum, but the film demonstrates little sign of improvisation: the narrative is clear-cut, the dialogue may have been ad-libbed but sounds completely written and rehearsed; dramatic events (including an alcoholic cop's gun-wielding tirade with his loose-limbed, dysfunctional wife and a young gambler's journey to a Vegas hospital to see her father one last time) feel calculated and planned, and resemble slightly diluted derivatives of Sam Shepard stories, with more than a passing influence by Tennessee Williams. That isn't necessarily a problem; the ability to pull out everyday events from middle American lives, with a strand or two of melodrama, has a certain capacity for charm, and nothing here is the least bit dislikable; the film goes down easily. Kar-Wai misses the mark for which he was aiming, however. His absurdly exaggerated visuals not only fail to serve any apparent purpose, but detract from the material onscreen in an almost Brechtian manner by calling attention to the drama's artificiality and making it seem both thin and transparent. If he wants to bring us to the point of complete emotional intimacy and empathy with these middle American characters, he should at least give us some indication of a realistic and plausible onscreen environment, with ontological depth and dimension - in the way that scriptwriter Shepard, director Wim Wenders and cinematographer Robby Muller did with their masterpiece Paris, Texas (1984). That doesn't happen here - not even once - and unlike Shepard, Wenders and Muller, Kar-Wai demonstrates no respect for the middle American landscape - not even during a cross-country road trip to Vegas sequence. What a missed opportunity. My Blueberry Nights will invariably draw critical comparisons to Jim Jarmusch thanks to the Memphis setting for much of the narrative and the almost anecdotal structure, but that comparison feels unfair to Jarmusch. It lacks his offbeat originality and his quirky take on Middle America. Had the director tamed and subdued his aesthetic impulses (enabling us to believe in the world that he hands us) and given us a clearer sense of the environment, he could have improved the feature tenfold, but even moreso with subtly nuanced and finely-felt performances from his stars. Despite overwhelming geniality simply wrought via their presence onscreen, the ensemblers rarely plumb the depth, nuance and emotional complexity necessary to give this material weight and dimension. As a case in point, Weisz feels infuriatingly inconsistent - to such a degree that both scrapes the bottom of the barrel and brings the film to its zenith in one ten-minute span. Her nadir hits when her character, Sue Lynne (the aforementioned cop's wife) responds to devastating tragedy with an agonizing, drunken rant about a saloon tab, that finds her screaming her lungs out at a barkeep. This is the stuff of paper-thin, southern-fried gothic melodrama, and there may be a way to make it work onscreen, but Weisz and Kar-Wai don't find it, and the actress isn't for a second convincing during this scene; she instead feels embarrassing. Conversely, Sue Lynne has a lovely intimate confessional with Elizabeth while seated on some outdoor steps - merely a few minutes later - that represents some of the finest onscreen work this intuitively gifted actress has ever done. From this instance and others in the film that demonstrate the same mercurial unevenness, one senses that Kar-Wai had little control over his cast, and perhaps felt ill-equipped to direct the performers in English. At its best, My Blueberry Nights retains a comfortable narrative flow and occasionally touches elements of lyricism, but it suffers more dramatically from what it neglects to accomplish than from what is actually onscreen. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
 



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