dotinthesky: (Default)
Dot in the Sky ([personal profile] dotinthesky) wrote2008-08-25 10:53 am
Entry tags:

Beauty & Horror

Bound for Glory, dir. Hal Ashby, 1976
I'm slowly making my way through Hal Ashby's filmography, shaking my head and wondering what could have been if this genius had lived a little longer. This film is based on the protest singer Woody Guthrie's autobiography. It shows his life in middle America before he was known, his struggle to reach California, his early musical career, his support of the workers and the unions (a commie bastard in many people's eyes.) Some scenes of migrant workers arriving in California, and the treatment they received, are very reminiscent of the arrival of jews at concentration camps. Scenes of Woody playing music with his friends, of young women strumming their guitars in the migrant worker camps, catch the viewer by surprise with their simple beauty. Ashby told stories that he cared about, about people who were unique and otherworldly. Although this film lacks a strong plotline, it's never boring; and some scenes, especially the ones involving music, are gorgeous.

Hard Candy, dir. David Slade, 2005
Torture porn leaves me cold. This film could have been so much more - an updated "Fatal Attraction" or "Misery" - but it feels more often like a play adapted to the screen with a badly-disguised agenda to polarise the viewer. There's a pivotal scene that will have all male viewers squirming in their seats - everything else is padding and chatting about events that happened off screen. The actors do a somewhat good job (it's nice to see Ellen Page in her pre-anorexic stage) but the plot twists are not always unsurprising or exciting. I found it more interesting that the pedophile met the 14-year-old girl in a coffee shop where the male barrista didn't even blink an eye at them. This element of male collusion could have been explored further, for added controversy.

[identity profile] olamina.livejournal.com 2008-08-25 12:19 pm (UTC)(link)
I thought Hard Candy was boring and self-indulgent and a totally wasted opportunity. Yawn yawn.

[identity profile] desayuno-ingles.livejournal.com 2008-08-25 12:57 pm (UTC)(link)
OMG! I totally didn't connect that the girl in Hard Candy is the girl in Juno!

I really didn't like her acting, it was...acting? I was annoyed by it, but it got better as it went along. Actually, I felt that way about the acting in Juno, too.

[identity profile] doraphilia.livejournal.com 2008-08-25 01:47 pm (UTC)(link)
I hated Hard Candy, for much of the reasons you describe.

ALWAYS LONG

[identity profile] ex-louter.livejournal.com 2008-08-25 03:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Hahaha. I liked the latter (obviously) for the sole reason that two people pretty much carried the film (kind of but not really why I so enjoyed The History Boys which actually was a play adapted to screen, so...). I've got a terrible attention span, but watched it all in one sitting which is pretty good; my mind wanders often. Oh and because I felt for the pedophile. Was I supposed to? I don't know! But I did. Girl was crazy.

alsobecauseIamimmature watching that scene with my father was hilarious.
AND the movie inspired this (http://wear-red.com/); I am so detached. The film, though I liked it, did not make me want to join a cause. It feels ~extreme~ or maybe I'm just an apathetic individual.

[identity profile] phyrephly.livejournal.com 2008-08-25 06:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I find Ellen Page unbearable to watch. I didn't know she didn't used to be as skinny, but I did think it was odd how often I noted how thin she was. I guess it's because it didn't look natural.

[identity profile] sallypointzero.livejournal.com 2008-08-26 02:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I watched Hard Candy online, streaming from director's kid's very own iTorrent last year. The thing I kept noticing was absence of sympathy-partial then total- for the girl victim.

[identity profile] stormecho.livejournal.com 2008-08-26 07:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Hard Candy was in the $5 DVD bin at Walmart this weekend. I passed on it. A bit too disturbing, though I'd've done different things to Patrick Wilson.