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"De Palma Blog-A-Thon: And So It Began"

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Blogger Adam Zanzie said...

Truffaut once said that every great filmmaker has a "flawed great film", AKA an alternative title to the filmmaker's masterpiece. We all have our own pick for what De Palma's so-called masterpiece may be, but it's hard not to argue that his "flawed great film" has to be "The Untouchables". There are some errors here and there that hamper it from being the ultimate De Palma experience- David Mamet's screenplay is ordinary and, as Ebert complained, could have been written by anybody- and Ness's final confrontation with Bill Drago is pretty weak.

But the film offers at least 90 minutes of classic De Palma, and, as Mr. Sadasyula correctly noted in his review, Sean Connery's performance is superb. I could watch that train station shootout over and over again. De Palma recycled an early idea by Eisenstein and then made it all his own. It has certainly influenced the way I look at gangster shootout sequences to this day.

A nice intro to the blogathon.

September 7, 2009 at 5:05 PM

Blogger Ryan Kelly said...

I may have to argue that it's a flawed great film, Adam. I like it enough but I've never really understood the greatness (okay, that's not true, this was one of my favorites in middle school, but at the time I was in love with the old gangster movies that this was very much paying homage to). As you say, there's maybe a decent 90 minute movie in there, but I feel it's a tad on the overlong side. It's hard for me to describe, there's just something plastic and restrained about it. Perhaps the sheer size of the movie made De Palma pull back?

But this is still a good piece to get the whole thing kick-started with. I'll have to read some of the author's other takes on De Palma.

And, if Mr. Sadasyula is reading this: yes, see all those movies you mentioned! I particularly love Hi, Mom! and Phantom of the Paradise.

September 8, 2009 at 10:44 AM

Blogger Ratnakar Sadasyula said...

Ryan, just Ratnakar will do, yeah am looking for those movies. The Untouchables as i mentioned is the most Hollywoodish of BDP's movies, but i still have a fondness for it,as it was my first BDP one, and then for some excellent sequences.

September 8, 2009 at 10:46 AM

Blogger Adam Zanzie said...

It was one of my favorites back in middle school, too. Actually, I used to write movie reviews on Yahoo! in 7th and 8th grade, and some of my old-ass reviews can still be located on there... including my "Untouchables" review. The title of my review went something like this: "Brian De Palma's greatest achievement!" Which was pretty weird for me to say considering that I had only seen three other De Palma films at the time: "Carrie", "Mission: Impossible" and "Mission to Mars". Not kidding.

Have you ever read James Berardinelli's 4-star review of "The Untouchables"? He loves the film for all the wrong reasons, and like my thirteen-year old self, he thinks that it's the best De Palma film ever made. That may explain why Berardinelli has disliked every De Palma release that came afterwards. He falls for all the obvious criticisms of the man's work.

lol, Ryan and I both referred to Ratnakar as "Mr. Sandasyula". I feel incredibly guilty now!

September 9, 2009 at 2:07 AM

Blogger Ratnakar Sadasyula said...

Lol, Ryan, Adam nothing to feel guilty of.

JB is one of my favorite reviewers,along with Ebert. That said i would say he is heavily biased towards Spielberg, elevating even some of his more mediocre works.

And honestly don't get it how he gave a 2 star rating to Heat, which was a much better cops n robbers drama compared to The Untouchables, in terms of character delineation.

September 9, 2009 at 2:55 AM

Blogger Adam Zanzie said...

I don't even think I consider Berardinelli's appreciation for Spielberg all that credible. Did you ever read his review of "A.I."? He only gives it 3 stars and writes in his review, "it's no question that the final thirty minutes are all Spielberg", which is completely untrue! Kubrick's influence is all over the film. I even prefer Armond White's reviews of Spielberg over Berardinelli's.

September 9, 2009 at 10:30 AM

Blogger Tony Dayoub said...

You're on your own on both assertions in that last statement, Adam (especially your preference for White's reviews). LOL

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September 9, 2009 at 10:38 AM

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