While I still haven't seen Life Aquatic, this is the third time Murray has worked with Wes Anderson, and I'm sure they have quite a rapport, and one that doesn't seem to allow for Murray to phone it in.
From all the set reports I heard, Bill Murray was miserable and cranky and not hiding it at all, and so I wouldn't be surprised if his performance had an air of indifference, if not outright hostility about it.
(Of course, I haven't seen it either, so, you know, this is just my ass talking.)
Dogville was easily the most interesting movie I saw all year. I wouldn't wish the experience of watching it on anyone, but I wish more people had seen it so I could talk about it with them.
From all the set reports I heard, Bill Murray was miserable and cranky and not hiding it at all
Ah.... Even the best professional relationships must pass the honeymoon period.
Every interview, review, bit-o-gossip about Bill Murray these days seems to say Murray = cranktastic.
Maybe he should take up stained glass crafting or something.
If you hate the gig, don't do the gig. Even for mortgage payments Bill!
Stripes lovers like me would still buy your stained glass! Don't destroy the legacy!!
eta: all this to say...I haven't seen Aquatic either.
I went to see The Life Aquatic etc. on Christmas. I liked it quite a bit, even though it's Wes Anderson's least coherent movie. Word of warning: my wife, who was expecting a comedy, was very disappointed with it. It's not a very funny movie; most of the funniest parts are in the commercials. It would be more accurate to describe it as a sad and surreal movie with a few funny parts
I think I'm in the minority here because I thought it was hilarious. I'm biased because I love Wes Anderson films quite a bit, but I thought this was much funnier than The Royal Tenenbaums and probably as funny as Rushmore. How about the line "Don't point that gun at him - he's an unpaid intern." ? However, it was also definitely the most depressing Anderson movie so far with almost nothing going right for Zissou, the pirates, and OW's death.
I don't understand the mixed reviews it's getting, though. I think it's much more mature than Wes Anderson's previous films and Murray's performance is wonderful. Steve Zissou is a lot like Royal Tenenbaum and Max Fischer, but at the same time, I think he's the first Wes Anderson character to be a grandiose jerk, but also be completely aware that he is a grandiose jerk from the first frame to the last. He's so human. What I liked most about the movie was the defeat that's a permanent feature of Bill Murray's face. He can barely motivate himself, let alone his crew, but they still keep going. His art keeps getting more problamatic and even mediocre, but he (and his crew) can't give it up. I really loved this movie.
ETA: I meant the mixed reviews in the press, not by the buffistas.
Well, I'm editing this again, idiotically, to say that I guess I can see why it's not getting the usual Wes Anderson wunderkind response by the critics - it does meander a lot and seems to bob around aimlessly sometimes, but I think that's part of its charm. Not to everyone's taste, though, obviously.
Eeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!!!
Not a movie, but still -- Profit on DVD! Next summer!
I thought Before Sunset was just okay, largely because I found Ethan Hawke's character fairly annoying. (I think intentionally so, but it's still not a great trait in a two-person movie.) Julie Delpy deserves the praise, but the whole package didn't affect me half as much as Before Sunrise does.
And Jessica, I will second that EEEEEEE!.
Jessica, even without having seen a single episode, that gets a monstrous SQUEEEEEEEE!!!!!
Maybe there's hope for the animated TICK? Or ACTION?
t /living in a fantasy world
No, that's not closing, is it?
In Praise of Dogville: [link]
Finally got to see
Shaun of the Dead.
It's fairly gross and gory, in a "Doom" or "Mortal Kombat" video-game sort of way, but I guess that's only to be expected in a zombie movie.
Mostly it's just funny. I haven't laughed that long or that hard in quite some time.