by pinback » Sat Jan 25, 2014 5:56 pm
The Master has been out on DVDs/Blu-Rays/etc for over a year now, and I've only just seen it again for the second time.
It is the hardest PTA movie to like (other than Punch-Drunk Love, I guess, which for some reason some people dislike, which is just so beyond my understanding that I'll save it for a separate thread.) It is his most inscrutable work. The relationship between The Master and Freddie Quell is a puzzle within an enigma, and the movie itself, unlike PTA's previous "There Will Be Blood", is offering no closure for this dysfunctional duo. Where "TWBB" had a rousing, bowling-pin-wielding finale to settle whatever differences the primary combatants may have had, The Master offers instead a quiet acapella rendition of "Slow Boat to China" which, your guess is as good as mine what that's all about.
It is still all-consumably watchable. The 70mm filming even translates well to home-video formats. Every frame is a portrait. It feels at times primarily like a love letter to film itself.
And yet, as memorable as the scenes are, as powerful and perfect as the performances are, as gorgeous the imagery, there seems to be nothing to grab onto.
I wonder if in some perverse way that makes The Master PTA's best film. I'll never admit it, because Magnolia is still the greatest movie I've ever seen.
But just as Freddie and The Master are intrigued, drawn to, and mystified by each other, so is the relationship between this viewer and the film.
Perhaps nothing but a trip with it on a slow boat to China will do.
The Master has been out on DVDs/Blu-Rays/etc for over a year now, and I've only just seen it again for the second time.
It is the hardest PTA movie to like (other than Punch-Drunk Love, I guess, which for some reason some people dislike, which is just so beyond my understanding that I'll save it for a separate thread.) It is his most inscrutable work. The relationship between The Master and Freddie Quell is a puzzle within an enigma, and the movie itself, unlike PTA's previous "There Will Be Blood", is offering no closure for this dysfunctional duo. Where "TWBB" had a rousing, bowling-pin-wielding finale to settle whatever differences the primary combatants may have had, The Master offers instead a quiet acapella rendition of "Slow Boat to China" which, your guess is as good as mine what that's all about.
It is still all-consumably watchable. The 70mm filming even translates well to home-video formats. Every frame is a portrait. It feels at times primarily like a love letter to film itself.
And yet, as memorable as the scenes are, as powerful and perfect as the performances are, as gorgeous the imagery, there seems to be nothing to grab onto.
I wonder if in some perverse way that makes The Master PTA's best film. I'll never admit it, because Magnolia is still the greatest movie I've ever seen.
But just as Freddie and The Master are intrigued, drawn to, and mystified by each other, so is the relationship between this viewer and the film.
Perhaps nothing but a trip with it on a slow boat to China will do.