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Slaughterhouse-Five
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Directed by George Roy Hill
"Billy Pilgrim has come unstuck in time." These opening words of Kurt Vonnegut's famous novel make an effective and short summary of a haunting, funny film. For the screen, director George Roy Hill faithfully renders Vonnegut's black anti-war comedy about Pilgrim (well played in a low key by Michael Sacks), who survives the horrendous 1945 fire bombing of Dresden then lives simultaneously in his past as a naïve American POW and in the future as a well-cared-for zoo resident on the planet Tralfamadore (with zaftig Valerie Perrine as his mate). In the present, he's a middle-aged optometrist in Ilium, NY. If this sounds like a bit of a jumble -- it is. But viewers willing to watch carefully will find the movie as intricate and harmonious as Glenn Gould's plaintive renderings of the Bach keyboard pieces that decorate its soundtrack. It's not essential, but fans who read the short, poetic book will find it a treat in itself, and it will help them appreciate Hill's genius in bringing this "Children's Crusade" to the screen. In addition to Sacks, there are noteworthy performances by Ron Leibman (Norma's union man in Norma Rae) as Pilgrim's crazed nemesis and by radio/TV/movie legend, John Dehner as the arrogant Professor Rumfoord. Hill, of course, came to this film from a big hit, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and went on to triumph with The Sting one year later. The elaborate medieval and baroque architecture of pre-bombing Dresden was represented authentically in the film by scenes from Prague, since much of Dresden's architecture was lost to the bombing, and that city, in any case, was deep in East Germany, thus inaccessible at the time of filming. ~ Michael P. Rogers, All Movie Guide
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SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Guillermo del Toro To Combine A ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
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"Nerds the world over have been juggling feelings of confusion and excitement over the laundry list of projects reportedly attached to their favored son, [More]
JimBellJimBell Slaughter House Five
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
loved it.
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"Every generation has its few favourite authors, and Uncle Kurt, as he was called him, was a loved by a lot of young people in the 1970s (he called himself “an old fart with a pack of Camels”). Slaughter House Five (1972) is the film version of what is probably Kurt V[More]
HairyLimeHairyLime M*A*S*H
by HairyLime in HairyLime Blog
loved it.
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"In a discussion group recently the topic of 'book adaptations' has been brought up, and while I was watching this last night it occurred to me that this one is another good example of a successful 'book to movie' transformation that is neither too literal of a rote retelling, and stands on its own as a film.Caught the final third of this one a couple weekends ago while flipping channels, and then watched the rest of the movie yesterday evening. Not the first time I' " [More]
TheWorkingDeadTheWorkingDead Re:Kurt Vonnegut
by TheWorkingDead in sci-fi
"[quote user="SkyPilot"] My friend porcupine would like to see more Vonnegut movies made. I won't avoid these movies (I'm looking forward to 2081, inspired by the short story "Harrison Bergeron") but I don't expect them to be very good. Much of Vonnegut's sci-fi work seems incredibly "bookish" to me. That is, something like Cat's Cradle or Slapstick is ideally experienced as a book and not as a film. Maybe Slaughterhouse-Five could make a good movie, " [More]
leeroy711leeroy711 Re:Kurt Vonnegut
by leeroy711 in sci-fi
"[quote user="SkyPilot"] Much of Vonnegut's sci-fi work seems incredibly "bookish" to me. That is, something like Cat's Cradle or Slapstick is ideally experienced as a book and not as a film. Maybe Slaughterhouse-Five could make a good movie, but I thought Slaughterhouse-Five was lame. [/quote] I watched Slaughterhouse-Five in an " [More]
SkyPilotSkyPilot Kurt Vonnegut
by SkyPilot in sci-fi
"What Vonnegut stories would you like to see turned into movies? My friend Porcupine wants to see a Sirens of Titan movie made starring Johnny Depp, and I think would really like that! I'm looking forward to 2081, based on the short story "Harrison Bergeron." Another question: is most of Vonnegut's sci-fi work too "bookish" to make a good movie? I mean, is Cat's Cradle or Slapstick ideally experienced as a book and not as a film? Maybe Slaught " [More]
josephkuzmajosephkuzma Re: Top War Films
by josephkuzma in Top 5
"I agree with a lot of these picks (specifically Dr. Strangelove, Platoon, Full Metal Jacket and Apocalypse Now) but I'm surprised that no one mentioned " [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
In tackling a big-screen adaptation of Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut's classic novel about a man who becomes temporally unstuck, director George Roy Hill and screenwriter Stephen Geller took on an unenviable task. Chief among their challenges was how to keep the viewer oriented within the story, when the protagonist himself is in a constant state of disorientation. As it turns out, following the scattershot rhythms of the novel works pretty well, provided the various timelines proceed forward more or less chronologically. The film shrewdly accomplishes this by using Billy Pilgrim's POW experience as a narrative through line, only mildly tempering Vonnegut's trademark structural wildness in the process. Michael Sacks gets Billy's essential passivity down perfectly. By lingering only temporarily in the moments of his life, Billy is rarely present enough to be anything more than an observer, a man without the spine to keep from getting cuffed around by life's bullies and hardships. However, Billy isn't tragic either; his gradual understanding of his own state of consciousness, provided by an alien race who keep him caged as a zoo attraction (with a Hollywood starlet as his companion), allows him to harmonize with the perpetual now-ness of the past, present and future. As the discussion thus far indicates, Slaughterhouse-Five is no walk in the part on a Sunday afternoon. Fans attuned to Vonnegut's unique wavelength and black humor are likely to get more out of the film than those coming in cold. However, a second viewing is well worthwhile if it means bringing the uninitiated on board with this original and finely crafted film, from a director in the midst of his creative peak. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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