by Ice Cream Jonsey » Tue May 27, 2008 11:15 am
We watched it over the course of two days. A movie really, really needs to have a good reason to be longer than 90 minutes, as far as I am concerned, and it's nothing against Boogie Nights - hundreds of movies can't justify their extreme length.
I should mention that we saw, after concluding Boogie Nights, a movie from 2001 called "The Shaft." It is basically about a killer elevator, and it was one hour and forty-nine minutes long. The Shaft should have been 83 minutes. It felt like four hours and twenty-two minutes. By comparison, Boogie Nights was two hours and thirty-five minutes, and felt like two hours.
I guess that is a long-winded way of saying that Boogie Nights was not a slog (not by any means) but there's only so much you can do to make your movie fly by. You are probably thinking to yourself, "What an asshole. There's nothing anyone can do about the length of movies, and if you really have a problem with that then movies aren't for you."
But I am only, now and for the next few paragraphs, highlighting the negatives. I enjoyed the movie! It's a perfectly fine movie, very entertaining. I shall comment on some things that I think could be improved.
- There were a few characters that could have been cut. I like movies with William Macy and Don Cheadle in them, but they didn't exactly have a lot to do. Though I did read later that after William Macy blows his head off (spoiler) it sort of signifies things going bad for the characters.
- The doughnut scene was amazing, especially in context. I totally thought he was going to get beat up because of his inter-racial baby, and the director changed things around on me. So that was GOOD. But was there really enough money in a doughnut store safe to make the difference when it came to opening his store?
- I think my main GRIPE with PTA's films is that he will take large amounts of time to depict characters getting their comeuppance from their horrible, horrible actions and decisions, which just brings forth from me a desire to yell at the screen. "You are a cokehead! Yes, you are not going to get custody of your kid!" "You see nothing but the worst in people! Yes, you will be a miserable old oil man!" "You cheated on your husband! Yes, you should be ashamed of yourself when he's on his death bed!"
And this seems to be a theme in his films, and it's beyond me. I don't even think he's moralizing, which a lesser filmmaker would do.
But there are plenty of self-contained little storyettes that work amazingly well in it. "The drug deal scene" at the end was great. PSH breaking down into the "I'm a fucking idiot" bit was powerful. This has to be the best work Burt Reynolds has ever done. And so forth. Oh, and the donut scene was totally kick-ass. Scenes like that make the movie impossible to dislike. If you are scanning this text to see me say, in no uncertain terms, that I enjoyed it, here we go: I enjoyed it. But the depictions of the results of a set of horrible decisions made by people up on the screen is something that PTA isn't going to stop doing, and that stops me from fully enjoying his movies with the same passion that you do.
We watched it over the course of two days. A movie really, really needs to have a good reason to be longer than 90 minutes, as far as I am concerned, and it's nothing against Boogie Nights - [i]hundreds[/i] of movies can't justify their extreme length.
I should mention that we saw, after concluding Boogie Nights, a movie from 2001 called "The Shaft." It is basically about a killer elevator, and it was one hour and forty-nine minutes long. The Shaft should have been 83 minutes. It felt like four hours and twenty-two minutes. By comparison, Boogie Nights was two hours and thirty-five minutes, and felt like two hours.
I guess that is a long-winded way of saying that Boogie Nights was not a slog (not by any means) but there's only so much you can do to make your movie fly by. You are probably thinking to yourself, "What an asshole. There's nothing anyone can do about the length of movies, and if you really have a problem with that then movies aren't for you."
But I am only, now and for the next few paragraphs, highlighting the negatives. I enjoyed the movie! It's a perfectly fine movie, very entertaining. I shall comment on some things that I think could be improved.
- There were a few characters that could have been cut. I like movies with William Macy and Don Cheadle in them, but they didn't exactly have a lot to do. Though I did read later that after William Macy blows his head off (spoiler) it sort of signifies things going bad for the characters.
- The doughnut scene was amazing, especially in context. I totally thought he was going to get beat up because of his inter-racial baby, and the director changed things around on me. So that was GOOD. But was there really enough money in a doughnut store safe to make the difference when it came to opening his store?
- I think my main GRIPE with PTA's films is that he will take large amounts of time to depict characters getting their comeuppance from their horrible, horrible actions and decisions, which just brings forth from me a desire to yell at the screen. "You are a cokehead! Yes, you are not going to get custody of your kid!" "You see nothing but the worst in people! Yes, you will be a miserable old oil man!" "You cheated on your husband! Yes, you should be ashamed of yourself when he's on his death bed!"
And this seems to be a theme in his films, and it's beyond me. I don't even think he's moralizing, which a lesser filmmaker would do.
But there are plenty of self-contained little storyettes that work amazingly well in it. "The drug deal scene" at the end was great. PSH breaking down into the "I'm a fucking idiot" bit was powerful. This has to be the best work Burt Reynolds has ever done. And so forth. Oh, and the donut scene was totally kick-ass. Scenes like that make the movie impossible to dislike. If you are scanning this text to see me say, in no uncertain terms, that I enjoyed it, here we go: I enjoyed it. But the depictions of the results of a set of horrible decisions made by people up on the screen is something that PTA isn't going to stop doing, and that stops me from fully enjoying his movies with the same passion that you do.