Sunday, February 1, 2009

The Wrestler

*spoilers*

my original post, right after seeing it, was as follows:

just shivered at the end of this. i could see why people may not be into the ending but...about 15-20 mins before the end give or take, i think i realized how it would end. and i wondered if it would go there...or if aronofsky would hollywood it out. i thought he would not do the hollywood ending...but it seemed building toward it and i was nervously anticipating (because i knew either way he chose to end it, he would do a great job).

Then you get what he leaves you with...and you know how it ends. Really...it was the only way it could end. I will be the first to admit i'm an aronofsky fanboy...and i guarantee i'm biased...but it was powerful. and after the job him and rourke do of getting the viewer invested in the character of the Ram...leaving you with the ending like he did just hits...

damn...great flick

I have since seen it a second time, and man...Rourke played the role he was meant to play. You can see the struggle his character is facing embodied by Rourke throughout the entire movie. The faces he makes, the tears that are shed, the frustration that he emotes. It truly is an incredible performance. The movie is not about wrestling. It's not about the love story. It's not about his relationship with his daughter. It's not even about wrestling. It's about Randy the Ram's internal struggle. While he's gone from the top of the wrestling entertainment world to a much smaller role...he's now living a rough life...but, still knows he can do what he's always done. As his age and health catch up to him, and he can no longer do what he loves and, really, the only thing he knows, he is faced with the reality that he has nothing else in this world. He desperately tries his best to find things around him, his estranged daughter, the stripper whom he takes a fancy too, and even his supermarket job to help him find some substance to his now wrestling-free life. While he is genuine in his attempts to kindle a relationship, repair a broken father daughter bond, and even to just carry out a normal day-to-day job...he inadvertantly fucks it all up or isn't given the chance to reconcile because of his past. In his mind, there is only one thing that never let him down...his fans. They still cheer, so despite his health, he wants to give them one last show, and being the showman he is he decides to go out in a blaze of bittersweet glory. His character is an extremely relatable character, and i recommend EVERYONE, not just wrestling or aronofsky fans to see this movie about the human struggle to find where they belong in this world.

Wendy and Lucy movie review

Watched this movie this morning. I'm not the greatest reviewer, so bear with me. This is a "simple slice of life" movie at it's most base level. However the story, the cinematography, and Michelle Williams acting bring it to life. This is a story of a young lady making her way from Muncie, IN to seemingly find work where they need people in Alaska. While there are people in her life, she doesn't feel like she can come to them for help...or perhaps she's not welcome to. Living out of her car with her dog Lucy, the only truly loving relationship in her life, she finds herself in Oregon. The story follows the economic struggle she goes through while her money runs low as she tries to make it to somewhere she can find work, and all the troubles that go along with that. Michelle Williams plays the role beautifully as a social outcast who once seemingly had a normal life and has been driven to dire straights trying to make a better life. You can see the pain and struggle as she has to make increasingly difficult emotional decisions on how to move forward. It's not a very fast paced movie, no sense of extraordinary movie magic...just a stripped down little indie film that you find you can't take your eyes off of. It is engaging and forces you to endure the struggle along with her and not turn away. The descent towards destitution by a character that you can fully identify with and sympathize with makes you recognize that all the homeless people you see today once, most likely, had some semblance of a normal life. It makes you think and it makes you feel...those are two things just about anyone should hope to find in a good, touching movie. It comes recommended if anyone finds themselves with a chance to see it.

The Fountain review

Well, this is sort of a review...sort of MY interpretation of the film and what I got out of it. It seems that a lot of people give it a bad wrap. My assumption is either the typical (or pretentious, whichever way you want to look at it) response that "they just don't get it". I don't think the people that give it a bad wrap are incompetent, but I feel either it's just not their type of movie, or they went into it expecting the wrong thing. I'm a HUGE Aronofsky fan, so I'll also admit a bias. nonetheless. The cinematography is stellar, as well as the story line. Without further ado, I'm just going to cut and paste an "explanation" I posted last year on a message board regarding the movie:

well...darren aronofsky is one of my favorite directors. and when i saw this, it blew my mind. i was incredibly into it. but i must say, if you don't know what you're getting into, it may be hard to follow. I'm gonna attempt to give an overview, but i've only really seen it twice, and i'm not gonna look anything up to talk about it. So, if i'm not entirely accurate, don't crucify me for it.

***Spoilers***

Basically, what I got out of it, was that it was a love story. A love story of the same type, not the same 100% actual people (maybe it is, but there are some plot holes which beg to differ...especially between conquistador and present time[if he knew of the tree of life then, wouldn't he know to use that in the future if he was the same?]), but basically the same type of characters over different time periods. Or i guess it can be looked at as the same person reincarnated...so they don't necessarily know all the details, but they may envision bits and pieces. Anyways...I digress...

It is a love story of the same type, with a woman played by Rachel Weisz and a man played by Hugh Jackman, described and shown over three distinctly different time periods. That is the simple explanation. And instead of showing them one at a time, they are paralleled, and it jumps between them, to show the similarities as the situation continues the same way in different ages.

The first is set in the same time as the Spanish Inquisition. Hugh Jackman's character is a conquistador who is in love with the queen, Rachel Weisz. She sends him in search of the tree of life, which should be located around where the Mayan empire is. He loves her, and will stop at nothing to complete his mission to be with her. This is part of a story being written...

The second one is set in current time. She is a writer, and he is a doctor/scientist. She has cancer and is inevitably close to death. While she just wants him there and wants his love and for him to be by her side, he "ignores her" (not purposefully), but is so in love, that he spends all his time trying to find a cure. When he does, it is too late...and his work was in vain. He should have enjoyed all of the experiences he could have with her, instead of missing all that time together to try and postpone the inevitable. She was writing the story about the conquistador, and dies before it is completed and he is forced to finish it.

The third is in the future. Where she has died and is no longer around. She is seen in images and visions tho. This is where I get hazy and can't remember all details. However, i think it may have been something like he planted a tree of life, over her body...or for some reason, she became a part of it. He is now in a futuristic sci-fi bubble. with the tree of life. they are heading to some sort of astronomical phenomenon. (an exploding star perhaps?? like i said, i don't remember all the details here.) But he is trying to keep himself, and the tree alive to make it there. and he's been eating little pieces of the tree to stay alive all of these years. The mayans believed by traveling to this place, it is the afterworld. He wants to get there, so him and his love can be together forever. The tree dies just before getting there, and he is left alone.

At this point, it all comes together. basically, the realization that giving up all hope is freedom. Letting the world run its course and not trying to manipulate fate. You cannot truly love until you've accepted the love, the world, life...for what it actually is. She was happy that he cared and tried, and she loved him...but he felt like a failure and thought he should have been able to keep her alive and for himself. And he was living a frustrated life thinking he was a failure at the one thing that mattered most. Instead, he should have enjoyed her love while he could. and accepted fate and enjoyed all of the experiences they had. Once he realizes this, after she/the tree dies, he lets go on his own and then is truly free from the ties that have binded him down, such as his own frustration and remorse for not being able to save her. He is able to find peace with his life, and that they really did have true love.

...at least that's what i got out of it. And what I remember. I should watch it again...

I'd like to hear others opinions too. I know that it was not widely liked. I would like to know if that was because people felt lost and did not get anything out of it, if they "got it" but just didn't dig it, or if they got something else out of it and looked at it in a different matter than myself. I saw it as an incredibly intense love story, where the male lead had trouble taking things at face value and enjoying it, and tried to extend it beyond its natural and fate-defined life span. And, in doing, so, he lost the true meaning of love. And it took till he gave up all hope to be free and really understand the love that he had was so intense and the best it could be and he needs to accept and embrace that.

your thoughts?

yeah...I forgot i made this

So, I forgot I made this site. And I never used it. I think I'm going to start. Let's see if I can get some content on here soon.