eternal sunshine of the spotless mind
Mar. 27th, 2004 10:59 pmKim and i just saw it. It is a lovely, wonderful movie. It's a journey into relationships gone wrong and their aftermath; it examines the horrible things we do and say when we know that the relationship is running off the rails, and how true they feel regardless of how true they are. It made me think about the malleability of memory (which i reëxamined while my parents were visiting recently for
palecur's 30th birthday; Mom & Dad would remind me of stuff which i either remembered incorrectly or not at all), and about the risks we take with allowing intimacy. It shows that mental anæsthesia's no good if you've not dealt with the root of the pain. Kate Winslet as Joel's babysitter had a total Illeana Douglas vibe going. Elijah Wood hit the right note as the creepy, desperate nerd. Everyone was really good. From a technical perspective, the movie captures exactly the disorienting feeling of being in a dream where the setting is familiar but things don't behave correctly. It's the first movie since "Shakespeare In Love" that i wanted to see again as soon as it was over.
no subject
Date: 2004-03-28 05:13 am (UTC)As we learn more about how human memory actually works, it has some sobering implications for a lot of fields of human endeavor: politics, spirituality, history, etc.
"What is truth?" -Pontius Pilate
no subject
Date: 2004-03-28 06:15 am (UTC)(There's this particular comic-American accent that they seem to teach them in drama school that shows up in lots of British comedy shows. It makes me wince.)
For some reason, Australians seem to be much better at faking American accents. I'm not sure why; perhaps one or two critical phonemes are closer to begin with.
no subject
Date: 2004-03-28 09:33 am (UTC)Sure, but I've never heard an accent on a Britcom that's as egregiously awful as say, Kevin Costner in Robin Hood or Dick Van Dyke in Mary Poppins.