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Kubrick's a genius, blahblahblah
12 September 2000
Don't get me wrong-- his movie has a lot to recommend it. Like all Stanley Kubrick movies, it's unconventional, challenging, and unlike anything any other director could craft.

However, in reading the comments listed here for Paths of Glory, it strikes me that when viewing the work of geniuses, a lot of people have trouble judging objectively. This movie is undoubtedly a cut above the average war film, but can't we have an honest assessment? For starters, Kubrick shows here in his early work his almost complete inability to work with actors. He simply does not get good perormances from his cast. When an actor in one of his movies performs well, it seems almost like an accident. To contrast Kubrick's work with actors with that of a true actor's director, compare Tom Cruise's performance in Eyes Wide Shut with his performance in Magnolia. Night and day. Kirk Douglas gives a good performance in PoG, but when doesn't he?

Another problem I had with this movie is its flat dramatic arc. Kubrick is so strong visually, but he doesn't always seem in command of the story he's telling. Unlike another war movie dealing with a similar plot, The Caine Mutiny directed by the underappreciated Edward Dmytryk, this movie doesn't drive inevitably towards its climax and conflicts so much as it meanders to a conclusion.

And finally, has anyone else noticed that Kubrick's films almost all, at some point or another, go through at least a short period where they seem to be making fun of themselves? The trial sequence in PoG had, to me, an unmistakable tone of mocking parody. Maybe it's just me.
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is it just me?
29 August 2000
I finally saw this movie after hearing how great it was and I didn't like it. I seem to be the only one. Did anyone else think it was just... flat? For satire to work it has to be subtle (at least subtle in the right places) and it has to show us something we didn't know about something we did, if that makes sense. What I mean to say is that it has to say something new about something we thought we'd made up our minds about, namely the thing that's being satirized. Does anyone find it a refreshingly wacky thing to suggest that movie stars have big egos and act like jerks? Because I don't This movie, to me, is not subtle. The performances, in particular, were obvious and blunt. The writing was, I felt, the same. I didn't care in the least whether the movie ever got made, I didn't find Buscemi's character at all sympathetic or interesting, and while he was supposed to be the straight man, the Kafka-esque bearer of all things ridiculous (egos, zany mishaps, etc.), I just thought he was boring and irritating. Every time I tell someone I didn't like this movie, they say, "Well you just don't like independent films." But I do like independent films. Honest. Am I alone here? I couldn't wait for it to end.
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fabulous
26 August 2000
This movie will air soon on PBS. My girlfriend works for WGBH in Boston and brought a VHS copy home. Despite the questionable title (which I still don't quite get) this is a fantastic, clever, self-assured movie. A few familiar faces pop up in it (notably Andy Dick, and the crazy UFO guy from Waiting for Guffman), but for the most part all the faces were new to me. The film takes the shape of a mockumentary, and the story follows a stand-up comic from New York and her boyfriend as she heads to LA for pilot season and he tags along. Gradually, the boyfriend gets sucked into the LA lifestyle and begins hunting as frantically as everyone else for a TV deal. Then their relationship (never exactly healthy and stable) begins to break down. Along the way, LA culture is mercilessly skewered, but don't make up your mind that this is just a shot at LA-- everyone is raked over the coals before the final shot, and you won't quite guess what's really happening until the last scene. This is one of those small independent films so full of brilliant performers you can't imagine how you haven't seen them all before. Nearly every performance is note-perfect and hilarious. Watch TV listings for this one, and do not miss it.
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