Paddington was a little 3D model and everything else was drawn in 2D, and it was narrated by Michael Hordern. It was lovely. Lots of it on youtube.
I watched some of them and I could see where the inspiration for the scene came from. Simple, but evocative. The movie benefits hugely from excellent casting all around, I think. And Ben Whishaw as Paddington's voice lends him just the right amount of sweet naivete.
This is a little bit of how I feel just having watched Brigsby Bear
Tasha Robinson from The Next Picture Show has been a big champion of this movie. I've been meaning to catch it for a while -- looks like it's streaming on Amazon, yay!
Also, I finally got out to Phantom Thread. I don't really get the Rebecca comparisons.
There are superficial similarities plot-wise, at least. Worldly older man takes on a green young girl of uncertain origin on a whirlwind romance, and whisks her off to his place of residence/business where things don't quite meet the eye, etc. Tonally, it diverges from there - Rebecca is very much in a Gothic mould whereas Phantom Thread is... I don't honestly know how to classify it. Cyrill serves nicely as a Mrs. Danvers analog at least at the beginning, although I find her much more interesting and layered. And Alma has much more of steel in her backbone than the second Mrs. De Winter.
I haven't seen much of PT Anderson -- I had mixed feelings about Magnolia and Boogie Nights, so haven't bothered with much of his recent work. PT has me curious to dive in a bit. Hulu is streaming Punch Drunk Love so I might start with that.
I haven't seen much of PT Anderson -- I had mixed feelings about Magnolia and Boogie Nights, so haven't bothered with much of his recent work. PT has me curious to dive in a bit. Hulu is streaming Punch Drunk Love so I might start with that.
I have now seen everything but
Hard Eight.
(Well, I think I may have seen
Hard Eight
but I'm not sure.)
The Math Greek had been trying to get me to watch
Magnolia
forever; however, since I resist all movies over two hours he did not have much luck until now. But I caved and we actually watched it as a double bill with
Phantom Thread.
I liked it a lot more than I thought I would. His favorite PTA is
Punch Drunk Love,
which I remember liking a lot but I'm such a sucker for westerns that I'd have to see it again before I could rank it above
There Will Be Blood.
I remember being a little confounded by
Magnolia,
although it wasn't unwatchable, but
Boogie Nights
is my favorite of his (I say that not having seen
The Master
or
Punch Drunk Love
or
There Will Be Blood -- yet).
I have only seen Punch Drunk Love and There Will Be Blood. I liked them both well enough, but am not really tempted to see the rest of his work.
Saw I, Tonya tonight. It was fine.
As for Anderson, I liked Boogie Nights, but loathed Magnolia and did not enjoy Punch Drunk Love. I would never seek out his work, but might eventually watch the others.
I think
Boogie Nights
is the only one of his movies I've seen. I'll probably add
Phantom Thread
as #2.
I definitely want to see
Phantom Thread,
and of the others
Punch Drunk Love
and
There Will Be Blood.
You know, someday.
I love Boogie Nights and Punch Drunk and like the rest of his films.
I saw Boogie Nights and found myself basically indifferent to it at the end. Pretty much a sense of, "That was a thing I saw. OK." I didn't want to see Magnolia or Punch Drunk Love, and nothing I heard about them changed my mind. They seemed to have a lot of awful people being awful, and nothing much to make up for it, and I can watch the news as part of my cable package if I want that.
I hated Magnolia so much that I haven't been willing to watch any other PTA movies, even though I heard good stuff about Boogie Nights, Punch Drunk Love, and There Will Be Blood. (Because I also heard good stuff about Magnolia, and that was a goddamn lie.)
They seemed to have a lot of awful people being awful, and nothing much to make up for it
Because basically this. Ugh.
(To be fair, I also seem to be lacking the gene to appreciate Wes Anderson movies -- maybe it's just an Anderson thing across the board? -- but I didn't *loathe* Rushmore or The Royal Tenenbaums; I just didn't really get the point of them.) (Apparently I am meant to stick to superhero movies.)