1. Absolutely agree... I was detached from the cgi dinosaur scenes (and the subsequent 15 minutes of all that creation jazz, tbh).Kropinski wrote:Two notes, though:
1) A Con! Dinosaurs. Much has been written on Malick's delay of Tree of Life, in parts due to the visual effects. Now, it seems, much more is being written on Voyage of Time, how Malick hopes to now complete it. And, if this IMAX presentation is to include the same quality of effects, in terms of dinosaurs, then I wont sit for it. Because, ultimately, no matter how beautiful the Universe creation, no matter how stunning the landscape photography is, a bad CG dinosaur is still a bad CG dinosaur. As soon as that Pleisiosaurus (Water Horse?) sat on the beach, I was out. The illusion broke. And the following scenes with other dino denizens, felt clunky, overly soundeffects heavy (what was with those pebbles?), and plastic. They had no texture, no life. Now, I for one, due to the amount of time Malick spent on this film, was willing to give him the benefit of the doubt in terms of VFX, but he too succumbed to the squint test. They really ruin the Creation sequence for me. What ever happened to those good ol' 1993 JP dinos?
2) A Pro! Brad Pitt is phenomenal. Finally, he leads with that jaw; finally the pretty boy is beaten out of him.
2. I thought he was fantastic for the most part, but I don't understand why he or Malick felt that his character would be so ostensible with his sentimentality when he finally does reveal it. He doesn't even lower his head when he weeps. I thought that was somewhat odd and unfitting for his character's machismo...
Yup, it's as if both are crafted around a "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man" mold of the epiphanies that build one's subconscious at a young age. And though I've only seen The Long Day Closes once, I think I also prefer it to TToL after the initial viewing.gokinsmen wrote:I know exactly what you mean.* And in terms of an elliptical, poetic coming-of-age film that limns the line between memory and imagination, I definitely prefer The Long Day Closes (then again, it's one of my all-time favorite films). Whereas The Tree of Life attempts to unite the personal and the sublime, Davies' film elevates the personal to the sublime.James Mills wrote:I will just say that it really reminds me of Davies' The Long Day Closes, and that I will need to view it again with a more relaxed and receptive open mind to fully gauge my opinions of it (also like Davies' film).
I can't hate though because just discussing it with y'all is getting me really antsy about seeing TToL again.