Showing posts with label Jena Malone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jena Malone. Show all posts

Friday, August 4, 2017

Donnie Darko (2001)

I saw the Director's Cut at a screening at the MoMA. Donnie Darko is weird--that's a compliment. It's a very fitting quote pulled straight from the movie, but in reference to Donnie himself. Weird is perhaps even an understatement. I can't imagine how anyone could possibly have interpreted the ambiguity of the original version. I know there have been criticisms about the Director's Cut engaging in too much hand holding in providing the director's interpretation. But I think I otherwise would have been quite lost. Cause it's just so darn strange.

I think there is an excellent use of music throughout the use of the movie. It really places it in the time period and it is quite stylish. Jake and Maggie Gyllenhaal  acting together as siblings is kind of neat. I never realized it before, but I think Jake has kind of gotten typecast-ed as a weirdo (a la Nightcrawler). The plot is kind of brilliant. There is a fantastic combination of comedy and darkness and science fiction alternate universe's and philosophy about religion. It's trippy. 

Thursday, June 2, 2016

The Neon Demon (2016)

There is only one good thing about this movie, and that is the cinematography. Many of the shots you might find in a Vogue photoshoot. They are stylish and glitzy. The models: stoic and sexy. The first third of the film makes use of bold colors and lights, especially in the club scene. But after that, it seems like Refn gives up on style, and is just going for shock. His manner of shock is disgusting and misogynistic (and would have guessed that cannibalism would be a common theme in the Festival?). The characters are flat and one-dimensional, reducing these women to vicious animals, and one deer in the headlights.  Concerning the male characters, their stories are underdeveloped and unfinished. We are left hanging, not that I was ever really invested in them enough to care. Sure, I get the message about the modeling industry--but it is an inherently misogynistic one. As far as plot goes, there is beginning and end, but the middle is severely lacking. You are constantly asking "what the heck is happening?" Take the catwalk for example. What was the inexplicable triforce light doing there? I would go so far as to say it is boring and offensive movie.