C/D -- Charlie Kaufman

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shockah

j blount (papa la bas), Sunday, 7 May 2006 20:28 (twenty years ago)

Human Nature is pretty horrible, save for Arquette being nude most of the time.

Adaptation is a total dud. I was on the fence about it until seeing it for a second time.

erklie (erklie), Sunday, 7 May 2006 20:38 (twenty years ago)

IOW, you wanted to watch a completely different movie?

Well, maybe, the movie started as a relationship between real people, but spent way too much time showing the interaction between Carrey and the imaginary Winslet. I didn't really see what was the point of it.

Tuomas (Tuomas), Sunday, 7 May 2006 20:58 (twenty years ago)

i sort of think Adaptation way better than any of the rest. but i can barely remember BJM. Eternal Sunshine is just kind of miserable and overly sentimental and mopey. and the music sucks. and the photography is dark and dull and colorless. and it panders to people who think their romantic relationships are the ultimate existential experience that can be had. fuck that.

ryan (ryan), Sunday, 7 May 2006 21:44 (twenty years ago)

and it's always cold in the movie and i hate the cold.

i mean gondry's hermetic style here is as much as the culprit for me as kaufman's writing. but for christ's sake shallow self-involved hipsters break up all the time and their solipsistic fetishization of their relationships AND their break-ups stay in their own head where it belongs!

i mean i just ask for one "wow these two are kind of pathetic huh?" kind of moment to validate this feeling but it never came.

ryan (ryan), Sunday, 7 May 2006 21:58 (twenty years ago)

love BJM, really really like Adaptation, liked Eternal Sunshine, but thought was not as good as the first two, and haven't seen Confessions

Dominique (dleone), Sunday, 7 May 2006 22:07 (twenty years ago)

Now I admit I'm avoiding that film because frankly, fuck a Jim Carrey.

I would usually agree with you 100% here, but he really does give a startlingly restrained performance in this film - it's a revelation.

Eternal Sunshine, OTOH, is brilliant, much better than I gave it credit for at the time. The only one of Kauffman's scripts that has a heart and emotions and human messiness, rather than just reading like a meta-joke or pure formal problem.

I see what you're saying, but I personally love his first two films for daring to be so meta and formal in an age of formulaic blockbusters. Also, I think they have more heart and emotional resonance than you give them credit for; it's just that those aspects tend to be a bit overwhelmed by the wackiness.

chap who would dare to be a nerd, not a geek (chap), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:03 (twenty years ago)

i agree. plus the "heart and emotions and human messiness" of Eternal Sunshine are just lame.

ryan (ryan), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:13 (twenty years ago)

ryan u mad

jaymc (jaymc), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:30 (twenty years ago)

Ryan, wtf are you talking about?

Dan (Very Odd Read On This Movie, IMO) Perry (Dan Perry), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:33 (twenty years ago)

Well, maybe, the movie started as a relationship between real people, but spent way too much time showing the interaction between Carrey and the imaginary Winslet. I didn't really see what was the point of it.

Uhh, that *was* part of the point of it, wasn't it? I mean, they've wiped their memories of their relationship then spend time scrambling thru the mind trying desperately to recover it out of regret. At least thats what I brought from it.

Caveat: I was quite stoned when I watched it, so my attention span was all over the place; I need to watch it again. Or several times, even.

Trayce (trayce), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:41 (twenty years ago)

Also I'll echo: Ned, I'm not a huge Carrey fan either, but he is great in this, completely subdued. Think the more humble parts of his Truman Show performance, and ramp it down even more.

Trayce (trayce), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:42 (twenty years ago)

Uhh, that *was* part of the point of it, wasn't it?

That was the ENTIRE point of the movie.

Dan (Oh, Tuomaspaws) Perry (Dan Perry), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:44 (twenty years ago)

Heh.

Trayce (trayce), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:50 (twenty years ago)

that's fair Dan, it is an odd reading i admit!

look im perfectly willing to admit that playing under the covers with a lover* can be a perfect memory you wouldnt want to lose, a real life affirming moment and all that, but on the other hand it is a major cliche and a bit cloying the way it is staged. and this is symptomatic of the ENTIRE movie for me in a sense. elevating the banal and quite boring (come on, their relationship is boring!) visscisitudes of a typical relationship and subsequent break up to the heights of sublimity is just sort of, well, pandering to people's already heightened self-regard in these matters.

in other words: i wanted some objectivity and critical distance but didn't really get any. (tho this appears in the winslet character being a bit of a bitch, but not in the Carey character if i remember)

*I may have this wrong

ryan (ryan), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:53 (twenty years ago)

i should note: the movie is GREAT on its own terms.

ryan (ryan), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:54 (twenty years ago)

I admit im being a bit Armond White on this movie, i guess i just want to defend Adaptation (a movie i found as movie as many find Eternal Sunshine to be) so I am being overly-critical.

ryan (ryan), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:57 (twenty years ago)

movie=moving. haha

ryan (ryan), Sunday, 7 May 2006 23:57 (twenty years ago)

I found both Adaptation and Eternal Sunshine extremely moving, and affecting to me on a personal level.

I guess that must mean I have boring cutsey relationships and I am a neurotic, paranoid writer trying to find validation who is a boring sod.

Or something.

Trayce (trayce), Monday, 8 May 2006 00:01 (twenty years ago)

I never saw "Adaptation" so I can't compare.

I don't think the point was so much that being in bed with Clementine was the greatest memory Joel ever had as much as it was each memory that was taken away made him that much more desperate to hold onto the ones he had left; the implication was that if he could hold onto at least one memory of her, he could get back all of the others.

Every long-term relationship I know of has extremely rough patches where the very things that attracted you to each other now drive you completely crazy; I thought the movie did a marvelous job of capturing this.

Dan (Don't Hate!) Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 8 May 2006 00:13 (twenty years ago)

Carrey's also good (and subdued) in that fake Frank Capra movie he did between the Truman Show and Eternal Sunshine. The Majestic, I think, or something like that.

milo z (mlp), Monday, 8 May 2006 00:15 (twenty years ago)

the movie started as a relationship between real people, but spent way too much time showing the interaction between Carrey and the imaginary Winslet.

y'know, almost all movies are about imaginary people.

Sym Sym (sym), Monday, 8 May 2006 00:18 (twenty years ago)

Every long-term relationship I know of has extremely rough patches where the very things that attracted you to each other now drive you completely crazy; I thought the movie did a marvelous job of capturing this.

Totally spot on!

Trayce (trayce), Monday, 8 May 2006 00:50 (twenty years ago)

I'm going to file that away for retrieval if/when in a long-term relationship again and the holy-shit-i-am-going-to-kill-you-nows hit.

And I'm going to watch this RIGHT NOW too!

rrrobyn (rrrobyn), Monday, 8 May 2006 00:59 (twenty years ago)

y'know, almost all movies are about imaginary people.

see one (1) Maysles Bros film

jinx hijinks (sanskrit), Monday, 8 May 2006 01:02 (twenty years ago)

Yeah this thread has me wanting to go out and buy Adaptaion and Sunshine on DVD now.

Trayce (trayce), Monday, 8 May 2006 01:08 (twenty years ago)

I think Adaptation is a bitt too smart for it's own good, and that the screenplay overpowers the actual film, which is unfortunate.

The Brainwasher (Twilight), Monday, 8 May 2006 02:48 (twenty years ago)

whew, well that was good. spookier than i remembered. and it seemed, well, deeper on this watching. but this is, i guess, a subjective thing. and perhaps that is why the movie impresses me too, now.
(i didn't realize that the end-credit song was Beck! weird. it's a good song. the use of music/score is really impressive throughout, i noticed.)

rrrobyn (rrrobyn), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:12 (twenty years ago)

Ryan saying "the music sucks" was the main reason I got all ad-hominem.

jaymc (jaymc), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:13 (twenty years ago)

haha, i didn't even notice that he said that! i just thought it worked for the film.

and it panders to people who think their romantic relationships are the ultimate existential experience that can be had. fuck that.
hrm. i can understand where this is coming from. but again, different viewers, different responses. i don't think this re: relationships, but i like the movie. i just thought it was about, well, life, not nec in an existential way.)

i like adaptation too. esp the ending.

rrrobyn (rrrobyn), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:20 (twenty years ago)

very clever

gabbneb (gabbneb), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:24 (twenty years ago)

D

gabbneb (gabbneb), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:24 (twenty years ago)

is that an eyeless smile?

rrrobyn (rrrobyn), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:25 (twenty years ago)

crepey

rrrobyn (rrrobyn), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:25 (twenty years ago)

de sucre

gabbneb (gabbneb), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:26 (twenty years ago)

D

rrrobyn (rrrobyn), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:27 (twenty years ago)

http://www.moviexplosion.com/silenthillpostersmall.jpg

jaymc (jaymc), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:29 (twenty years ago)

:

jaymc (jaymc), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:30 (twenty years ago)

aah!
well you know how in the movie they don't have faces at one point? this is probably why i said that. it FREAKS ME OUT. erg.

hi john.

rrrobyn (rrrobyn), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:34 (twenty years ago)

hi robyn.

there was a twilight zone episode that had a woman without a mouth on it, and that gave me nightmares as a kid.

jaymc (jaymc), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:36 (twenty years ago)

yeah yeah that's where it all started oh I REMEMBER alright (nightmare city)

rrrobyn (rrrobyn), Monday, 8 May 2006 03:40 (twenty years ago)

i like jim carrey.

the Enrique who acts like some kind of good taste gestapo (Enrique), Monday, 8 May 2006 07:28 (twenty years ago)

I think Adpatation has its moments but is a bit too clever-clever and Nic Cage, in general, makes me want to hang myself. The annoying thing about Nic Cage is that he always manages to get parts in really good films. But I can't stop hating his "I'm acting so hard" face.

I think Eternal Sunshine is basically a good romantic comedy which, in a world where romantic comedies are absolute shite, is a bit of a revelation. It does have some visually stunning set pieces too.

BJM is great. I think it's lazy to criticise it for being Meta. I hate that knee-jerk reaction that people have to something being meta. It's almost as if, because the arm chair critic is clever enough to be able to know the correct technical term - metafiction - then it must be a shallow trick that only stupid people would buy into. BJM revolves around a really interesting idea. Its Metaness is secondary.

JoseMaria (JoseMaria), Monday, 8 May 2006 08:52 (twenty years ago)

BJM's training movie and "I've been very lonely in my isolated tower of indecipherable speech." are worth the price of admission by themselves.

pandering to people's already heightened self-regard in these matters

Yes, because without this movie those people would see themselves as they are. Where by 'those people' I mean everyone ever.

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Monday, 8 May 2006 09:00 (twenty years ago)

while enjoying i never quite got the point of BJM; 'adaptation' and 'eternal...' are two of my all-time favourite films.

the Enrique who acts like some kind of good taste gestapo (Enrique), Monday, 8 May 2006 09:05 (twenty years ago)

adaptation is 1 of my favorite movies, malkovich is really good too tho cusack grates, never saw eternal sunshine but reading this thread i really dont think its up my alley - if its beloved by ppl who thought dudes first 2 movies are cold formal exercises it must be the most nakedly emo bullshit ever filmed

-+-+-+++- (ooo), Monday, 8 May 2006 12:56 (twenty years ago)

I also loved "Being John Malkovich" and I'm not emo.

Dan (Bah) Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 8 May 2006 14:22 (twenty years ago)

http://www.beingcharliekaufman.com/roomies.pdf

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Monday, 8 May 2006 14:38 (twenty years ago)

(say goodbye to your lunch break.)

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Monday, 8 May 2006 14:42 (twenty years ago)

i like adaptation too. esp the ending.

See, for the last 20 mins I was all I GET IT AWREADY.

The first 20 mins of the Barris movie are astonishing -- big ups to Rockwell and Clooney -- then it just sorta flops around.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 8 May 2006 14:52 (twenty years ago)

also thanks for reminding me about the swingset exchange, one of my favorite parts of the movie

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Saturday, 19 September 2020 22:54 (five years ago)

i was totally waiting for like, the names from the credit of the movie set in the diner to show up as characters

flopson, Saturday, 19 September 2020 23:06 (five years ago)

one thing i like about charlie kaufman movies is they seem really fun to write. i saw or read an interview with him where he said the usual line about how 'writing is excruciating torture', which is prob true, but i like to think that i'd have a blast if *i* were writing a CK-style screenplay

flopson, Saturday, 19 September 2020 23:10 (five years ago)

one thing i like about charlie kaufman movies is they seem really fun to write. i saw or read an interview with him where he said the usual line about how 'writing is excruciating torture', which is prob true, but i like to think that i'd have a blast if *i* were writing a CK-style screenplay

flopson, Saturday, 19 September 2020 23:10 (five years ago)

Synecdoche is a great movie about one of my favorite themes: trying to determine the correct way to lead "the examined life" (and how you completely destroy your life when you fuck it up)

Simon H., Saturday, 19 September 2020 23:40 (five years ago)

I wanted to love this but

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 20 September 2020 01:58 (five years ago)

same. by the time the Kael recitation started the roomie and I basically exclaimed "oh, come on!" in concert.

Simon H., Sunday, 20 September 2020 02:13 (five years ago)

especially since the Kael review has sharper writing than Kaufman offers.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 20 September 2020 02:14 (five years ago)

I wondered aloud if the movie was overlong on purpose as a supremely meta reference to the revie. I think that was when I really turned against it, lol

Simon H., Sunday, 20 September 2020 02:17 (five years ago)

The horror-movie setup & lighting & camera-work made the first half of this weirdly tense. I watched this with my wife and she was sure a jump scare was coming any minute ("Don't go in the basement!" etc.)

dinnerboat, Monday, 21 September 2020 15:30 (five years ago)

I can see the ending of Synecdoche as dragging, but that last scene with the old woman? The slow fade to white? the in ear command to "DIE"?

https://i.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/001/498/077/88e.png

flappy bird, Monday, 21 September 2020 18:58 (five years ago)

Too on the nose

plax (ico), Monday, 21 September 2020 19:06 (five years ago)

Maybe for you but it hit me in the gut! I was 16 when it came out but damn, still does!

flappy bird, Monday, 21 September 2020 19:10 (five years ago)

Synecdoche is also his funniest movie

Simon H., Monday, 21 September 2020 23:38 (five years ago)

OTM

I love the overeager actor that doesn't age yet continues working with Caden thru Death of a Salesman up into Caden's 70s in the warehouse(s).

"I shall walk more... ambivalently."
"Yeah that's good, use that."

flappy bird, Tuesday, 22 September 2020 05:14 (five years ago)

Jon Brion's score is perfect and I can't imagine the movie without it

flappy bird, Tuesday, 22 September 2020 05:15 (five years ago)

i started antkind & im enjoying

johnny crunch, Tuesday, 22 September 2020 13:04 (five years ago)

found this almost exactly equal parts riveting and annoying, which is a neat trick I guess

― Simon H., Friday, September 18, 2020 11:57 PM (one week ago) bookmarkflaglink

at least it was an admirably impenetrable way to toss a few of Netflix's millions into a snowy trashcan

― Simon H., Saturday, September 19, 2020 12:07 AM (one week ago) bookmarkflaglink

A White, White Gay (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 30 September 2020 18:46 (five years ago)

More people should post about this movie because I'm not sure what I made of it but everyone so far otm. The Tulsey Town bit was my favourite, nearly leaned over into 'actually menacing' rather than flirting with it in an uncomfortable way. I liked Jessie Buckley's sort of drunk persona in the high school and the dumpster full of drink cartons was super-creepy to me.
All the lengthy quotations and reiterations of online opinions just remind me of that Little Britain (sorry) sketch where the romantic novelist is trying to fill pages: ""Do you know the Bible?" said Lord Harper. "No," said Geraldine. "I've never even heard of it." "Oh, it's really good. Let me read it to you," said Lord Harper. "Oh, OK then," said Geraldine. "Chapter One. Genesis. In the beginning God created heaven and earth..."'"

kinder, Sunday, 11 October 2020 19:19 (five years ago)

I haven't been able to get it out of my mind since watching it nearly two weeks ago, which I take as a good sign.

A White, White Gay (cryptosicko), Sunday, 11 October 2020 20:25 (five years ago)

My problem with this is what it did with the weird/surreal. Commonly in art that deals with the weird either it's part of all the characters' world and they don't notice it as the proverbial fish don't notice the water they're swimming in (as in Synecdoche) or it's used to discomfit and disorientate the protagonist - and the viewer. This film doesn't take either of those paths. When a character in one scene is an ancient and bed-ridden old lady and immediately afterwards is a dancing housewife, and the protagonist obviously notices it but doesn't lose her shit, you know that for all the grand themes of death, aging, relationships etc, that the world we're in isn't real and nothing is at stake. My favourite bits were probably the two car trips, which realistically and painfully depicted her relationship crisis with just enough of a weird edge to keep you on your toes.

Question: who did she turn into in the second car trip, after the Kael monologue, discussing some book (I forget which)?

neith moon (ledge), Monday, 12 October 2020 08:26 (five years ago)

one month passes...

I haven't thought about it much since September which is a bummer

flappy bird, Monday, 23 November 2020 02:28 (five years ago)

I go back to September all the time

cerebral halsey (rip van wanko), Monday, 23 November 2020 02:45 (five years ago)

do you remember

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Monday, 23 November 2020 02:51 (five years ago)

https://i.imgur.com/NYyGITK.jpg
i was your Butch

cerebral halsey (rip van wanko), Monday, 23 November 2020 02:58 (five years ago)

ack hueg!

cerebral halsey (rip van wanko), Monday, 23 November 2020 02:58 (five years ago)

Lol

Robert Gotopieces (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 23 November 2020 03:20 (five years ago)

She was very good, much better movie on the whole even if it was unsuccessful or uneven than Wild Rose, the only other thing I've seen her in

flappy bird, Monday, 23 November 2020 05:29 (five years ago)

one month passes...

I haven't been able to get it out of my mind since watching it nearly two weeks ago, which I take as a good sign.
― A White, White Gay (cryptosicko), Sunday, October 11, 2020 4:25 PM (two months ago)

I started I'm Thinking of Ending Things a couple of months ago, stopped 20 minutes in--just wasn't in the mood--finally watched it this week. (Not in one sitting, though I of course restarted.) Cryptosicko's comment is pretty much where I am right now: I'm fairly sure I won't forget it, and there are strange films I forget immediately. I don't think I'd started the third season of Fargo yet when I made the first attempt, so I didn't know Jessie Buckley--she had some kind of year there. This is a lazy way to approach the film, I know, but I think my two favourite parts were when it felt like it was about to turn into a horror film: the scratched-up door to the basement, and the whispered warning from the Tulsey Town server.

clemenza, Monday, 28 December 2020 14:43 (five years ago)

I haven't read the novel the film is based on, but I have seen it classified as horror. I suspected that Kaufman heavily, er, Kaufmanized the source material, but this makes me curious to read how this material might play with a more genre-specific orientation (though, again, haven't read, so I have no idea if that's what the novel actually is).

Langdon Alger Stole the Highlights (cryptosicko), Monday, 28 December 2020 17:15 (five years ago)

the novel is definitely horror

na (NA), Monday, 28 December 2020 17:16 (five years ago)

"psychological horror" i guess

na (NA), Monday, 28 December 2020 17:16 (five years ago)

yeah, Horrorible

flappy bird, Monday, 28 December 2020 19:03 (five years ago)

oh I thought you meant Antkind. hold fire on the author of I'm thinking of ending things

flappy bird, Monday, 28 December 2020 19:04 (five years ago)

two months pass...

didn't love I’m Thinking of Ending Things while watching it the first time but it has stayed in my mind and I now want to see it again

Dan S, Wednesday, 3 March 2021 00:30 (five years ago)

My partner audibly hating every second of it made it hard for me to form a considered opinion.

chap, Wednesday, 3 March 2021 09:18 (five years ago)

one year passes...

i watched what the theater claimed was the official big screen debut of Ending Things with Kaufman there to talk, preceded by his new sad-poetry-slam-meets-john-wilson short Jackals and Fireflies.

i got to ask Kaufman a question that's been on my mind with most of his movies which is if his intent is to leave the audience playing with the puzzlebox and trying to keep up with his story or if he means for us just to try to hang on and enjoy the immediate ride. He said his goal was for people to appreciate the moment to moment experience of the film and not get caught up in the details, which gives it a framework for response on his terms: Jackals and Fireflies was not much to write home about but I found Ending Things equal parts disturbing, frustrating and very very good. Gonna have to see it again. It's very much an existential horror film with a knockout cast.

POLIZISTEN VERSINKEN IM SCHLAMM (forksclovetofu), Friday, 10 February 2023 06:46 (three years ago)


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