Kenneth Lonergan's MARGARET, starring Anna Paquin as a teenager in turmoil

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The reviews have been mixed, but the box office not good -- less than $1000 per screen last weekend in 14 theaters.

I found the UWS classroom donnybrooks over history and terrorism entirely convincing.

incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Friday, 14 October 2011 14:52 (fourteen years ago)

Liked this a lot, though I'd be be eager to see the "non-Scorsese cut" (if it indeed exists).

Simon H., Friday, 14 October 2011 15:01 (fourteen years ago)

xp I found them unconvincing at first, before I realized they were taking place in a classroom full of "privileged liberal Jews."

Ice Old Bee (jaymc), Friday, 14 October 2011 15:02 (fourteen years ago)

Sympathetic to Lonergan's vision, but I find it hard to imagine what an extra half-hour would've done for this film.

Ice Old Bee (jaymc), Friday, 14 October 2011 15:03 (fourteen years ago)

Yeah, it was long enough. While I find Matt Damon more enticing as a geometry teacher than as an action hero, I think going where they did was a mistake, one plot strand too many.

incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Friday, 14 October 2011 15:09 (fourteen years ago)

I'm gonna see this tonight in Austin. Hopefully I can time my bathroom break correctly.

ryan, Friday, 14 October 2011 15:13 (fourteen years ago)

149 minutes ain't no thing

incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Friday, 14 October 2011 15:29 (fourteen years ago)

Yeah the real fools are the ones planning to catch Turin Horse and Once Upon a Time in Anatolia back-to-back at a local fest here in Mtl this weekend. That takes some kinda perseverance I can't match (having only seen the former).

Simon H., Friday, 14 October 2011 16:33 (fourteen years ago)

I missed the four-hour Mysteries of Lisbon last weekend because its only showing interfered with dinner plans.

lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 14 October 2011 16:35 (fourteen years ago)

I'm guessing most of you recognized Lonergan as Lisa's dad? I didn't know he was in it, and probably haven't seen a photo or interview in years, but he has an Irish-artist lumpenness about him.

incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 19 October 2011 20:22 (fourteen years ago)

I recognized him.

I really, really liked this. Been thinking about it a lot since I saw it last weekend. I hope we get to see a "director's cut" at some point.

ryan, Wednesday, 19 October 2011 20:50 (fourteen years ago)

I wasn't 100% sure it was him right away, but yeah. He's in YCCOM, too, as the priest.

Google W. Buzz (jaymc), Wednesday, 19 October 2011 21:07 (fourteen years ago)

this movie is still buzzing around in my head.

i think, though, that in large measure that it's about the perils of empathy, and the ways we protect ourselves from it. (witness every single political discussion revolves around rejecting the very possibility of the other's real suffering or grievances.) Lisa's initiation into adult life is then, i guess, about developing this capacity for rejecting empathy, perhaps? (or the ways empathy gets refracted into things like opera..)

that's just a first pass at it, as I'm sure there's other things going on.

ryan, Monday, 24 October 2011 19:54 (fourteen years ago)

I recenrly saw A Seperation and I kept thinking back to this film - intense family-related dramas that also comment on their societies at large, both revolving around injury/accident (to varying degrees). I think this is by far the richer movie, though.

Simon H., Monday, 24 October 2011 20:18 (fourteen years ago)

*A Separation

Simon H., Monday, 24 October 2011 20:19 (fourteen years ago)

that's high praise. psyched to catch this/if i can ever catch this.

mid-song laughing elvis (schlump), Monday, 24 October 2011 20:36 (fourteen years ago)

Bear in mind I don't like A Saparation as much as virtually everyone else seems to.

Simon H., Monday, 24 October 2011 20:39 (fourteen years ago)

hence the constant misspelling.

Simon H., Monday, 24 October 2011 20:39 (fourteen years ago)

huh. just didn't love it or had problems with it? cause part of its strength was it just being unindictably thorough & well put together, to me, so i can understand how not being sold on the contents would change things somewhat.

mid-song laughing elvis (schlump), Monday, 24 October 2011 20:59 (fourteen years ago)

Just didn't love it.

Simon H., Monday, 24 October 2011 21:40 (fourteen years ago)

two months pass...

duuude

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Sunday, 8 January 2012 23:21 (fourteen years ago)

i wouldve watched 4 hours of this

maghrib is back (Hungry4Ass), Sunday, 8 January 2012 23:29 (fourteen years ago)

yeah me too, easily.

404 (Lamp), Sunday, 8 January 2012 23:44 (fourteen years ago)

word. i was going to SPOILER reference a scene i wanted to mention, but i don't have to, because you can just choose any scene from the last third of the film and it still applies: it was so rich & multifaceted, everything was just laden with the dimensions & weight of everyone and everything involved.

SPOILER-ESQUE: so say the phone conference in the lawyer's office, there were these unfurling threads of money & blame & responsibility & guilt & mis-connecting & law & anguish & self-awareness. i kinda feel like the distributors for this should be tried for unamerican activities, it just felt crucial, useful.

quietly entered the canon of best-films-about-being-a-teenager, also.

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Sunday, 8 January 2012 23:55 (fourteen years ago)

This is, IMO, the best American movie since Mulholland Drive, and the best film I've ever seen on an initial screening run. As Ryan says upthread, empathy and solipsism are its primary concerns, but it finds a far more intangible paradigm amongst the drama: society as a mental construct, built and fractured within each character's mind, where everybody has their reasons and their righteousness but where conflict bears the subtle grace of inevitability.

I mean, quite apart from its invoking of my favourite poet and its dynamite script (I laughed, I cried etc), it is a film where people's relevant and entirely believable problems interact with one another in a sympathetic, unresolving manner - the other film of recent years to do this (that I've seen) was The White Ribbon (which was, perhaps, less positive about its characters, but which bore the stench of warfare and deprivation to a far higher degree than the metropolitan excoriation of Margaret). The two movies are, I would say, the two best I've seen in the past decade. These are films that operate at the highest pitch of mystery and confluence - a movie must have confluence (or, more crudely, alchemy) for it to work, otherwise it is just screened logic (which sadly constitutes the vast majority of Hollywood and UK film atm). Did not La Regle Du Jeu operate in the same poetically all-embracing, affably intermeshed way as these films? Did not Bunuel's later movies demonstrate the worshipful truth of coincidence and confluence?

Margaret and The White Ribbon are movies of great heart. Each character is given weight, and each character is given their reasons. Of course, Margaret concentrates most rewardingly upon the central figure. Anna Paquin shows integrity, even when she lies. She discovers personal integrity even as everyone and everything around her becomes an extension of herself. And she leads the viewer into a story whose unbalanced complexity resembles their own life, and where resolution is less unrequired, more complete anathema. Such are the greatest of films - where the tale careens onward, beyond the cinema. (Certified Copy is another great ILE recommendation of recent times - my wife & I even had a Certified Copy roleplay evening afterwards, demonstrating the power that an unresolved analysis of pretence and present-moment reality can have. Not as good or exciting as Margaret, though - it's very much limited around a traditional marital paradigm rather than a societal one.)

As a subordinate point, I hope I've conveyed which kind of cinema appeals to me the most, and that some amongst you could suggest further viewing along (or parallel/perpendicular to) such lines. My gratitude besets you.

once a week is ample, Monday, 9 January 2012 00:16 (fourteen years ago)

wtf paquin is like 30

seasonal thug (some dude), Monday, 9 January 2012 00:57 (fourteen years ago)

she filmed this just after the piano though

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:05 (fourteen years ago)

she's so good in this anyway

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:06 (fourteen years ago)

like your post btw once-a-week, going to chew on it & come back to you when i've some time. this film reminded me of one i've forgotten since coming out of the theatre, but one of the reference points kicked around upthread is farhadi's a separation, which came out last year (or only just, in the states, i think) & topped a lot of lists for being v rounded & sympathetic. think you would dig if you don't already, & that there are probably other iranian routes you'd be into along similar lines

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:15 (fourteen years ago)

oh ok somehow missed the mention in the OP of it being filmed so long ago

seasonal thug (some dude), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:24 (fourteen years ago)

some backstory here if it's of interest:
http://entertainment.time.com/2011/12/02/director-kenneth-lonergan-emerges-to-tell-us-hes-on-team-margaret/

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:25 (fourteen years ago)

has a play on bway in may, also

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:26 (fourteen years ago)

white ribbon is such joyless and moralizing film i never wouldve thought of it in comparison to 'maragaret'. the best thing about the latter is how much it shares a teenagers sense of curiosity and freshness towards the world, its interested in how things work w/o really feeling like its trying to explain to you how things work whereas 'the white ribbon' is cynical and didactic imo

404 (Lamp), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:31 (fourteen years ago)

anyway once a week you might really like céline sciamma's 'tomboy', from this year, i think its a movie w/ a great sense of empathy and it uses character study to examine big, important qn abt gender/society &c &c

404 (Lamp), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:35 (fourteen years ago)

I loved your review but recoiled when you mentioned The White Ribbon.

lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:35 (fourteen years ago)

Is this on DVD yet?

☆★☆彡彡 (ENBB), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:42 (fourteen years ago)

i wasn't crazy about the white ribbon either - i think i liked it well enough, maybe i just thought it was sorta autopilot haneke with a slightly jarring context change - but i could imagine tying in code unknown or cache with margaret, i guess. i'm sorta blanking on films to recommend, particularly re your emphasis on 'confluence', which is very otm, because i feel like there are a lot of well-woven films from the past decade (i just can't think which), the ones that aren't as brash or literal as like babel or w/e

(I laughed, I cried etc)

this bears repeating wrt this film; it was frequently very funny, sharp and rhythmic, & there were parts - kind of strangely separate from or at least dissynchronous with whatever its emotional peaks were - where i was feeling teary (her running across the square downtown after leaving the meeting was one); another example of its range. i also thought it did a much better, bolder job using new york atmospherically than most anything recent i can remember, &, to get a cheap dig in, infinitely better than shame did; its music-&-drifting-camera passages were very effective & exemplary of the kind of purposeful, contributory content that enriched the film as it increased its running time.

still processing slightly, & i guess 'empathy' does encompass a lot of what the film was concerned w/, but i think there's something else, definitely something societal. i think what was so affecting for me about the scene when they're arguing over the phonecall was that it was testament to everyone processing & living with an event that's happened, doing whatever they can to reconstruct, but in very narrative terms, & with that autonomy there being the inevitable butting of heads. like i think it was very concentrated on balance in a lot of ways - obv in those high-school classroom discussions, but also in AP striving for a counterweight to her initial actions.

xp nuh-uh :/, idk whether it's on IFC on demand or something though? dvd date not even announced afaik, i think the guy wants to screen his 3 hr cut somehow

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:56 (fourteen years ago)

maybe i should say imbalance. like the hilarious argument w/her mom about jean reno (also mainly hilarious)

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 01:57 (fourteen years ago)

i dont really know what the white ribbon is - haneke right? - but a lot of once a week's post seems apt to me. margaret seems like too 'big' a movie for me to be able to say something big picture about it, but i can talk about some things i liked

i dont think 'margaret' SHARES a teenagers sense of curiosity/freshness wrt the world - if it did i'd find it unbearable - but i do think it's sensitive to how teenagers feel and experience things, without also valorizing that experience. the clarity with which the movie sees margaret herself is remarkable to me, she bursts at the seams with selfishness and unearned moral certitude, but the film doesnt condemn her - it doesnt need to, because she's barreling headfirst into the adult world, where the consequence-free upper west side private school echo chamber that has cultivated her bullying persona is repeatedly shown to create friction, and then consequences, with the adults who Don't Have To Put Up With Her Shit. no remonstration of margaret on the movie's part is ever required

the reason i could watch basically an infinitely longer version of this, no matter how useless the tangents in it get, is that everything about the movie's world is so sharply observed. the moment we meet the jeannie berlin character in tight close-up, remembering her friend, i knew exactly who this woman was, she's so aptly presented that i had no doubt that lonergan would be capable of 'observing' her in any situation without ever striking a false note

the scene where margaret horrifyingly posits that she was actually inhabited by the ghost of allison janey's daughter or some shit is unbelievable in how observant it is, how it nails that narcissistic grasping-for-maturity moment that this character would clearly find herself settling into, and how berlin (who you could see as a margaret who's actually been around the block a few times) reacts with rage at the way this child is trying to make herself the center of her dead friend's life

maghrib is back (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 9 January 2012 02:06 (fourteen years ago)

i also thought it did a much better, bolder job using new york atmospherically than most anything recent i can remember, &, to get a cheap dig in, infinitely better than shame did; its music-&-drifting-camera passages were very effective & exemplary of the kind of purposeful, contributory content that enriched the film as it increased its running time.

i think this may partly be that the movie deeply understands new york culturally, or at least its particular slice of new york, so its images of the city are naturally more resonant, just as a part of the movie's world. shame displays no particular understanding of new york as anything other than a place that can be photographed prettily

maghrib is back (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 9 January 2012 02:12 (fourteen years ago)

wow yes, definitely. which takes me back slightly to a couple of the points in yr reading of the film; i think you're much harsher on margaret than me (it is possible the weight of my teenage crush on anna paquin makes me over-sympathetic) - so say with the scene in which she's talking about inhabiting the body of the daughter or w/e, &c&c, while it is totally horrifying, & utterly without perspective or sensitivity, to me the real thing about that scene is just the inability to articulate, because there's clearly a thing she's trying to express - that theoretically it could be nice in someone's last moments to have even the confused delusion of feeling as if one were with one's daughter, to have that illusion, & that that's a legitimate thing to wonder, but it exists as an idea basically for the audience and only in between the characters. & when you mention the consequence-free upper west side private school echo chamber that has cultivated her bullying persona - this was another great strand, i thought (which to go on about the phonecall some more seemed to get some sense of pay-off in someone saying maybe $350000 isn't a lot of money to ~you~) that sorta existed from multiple angles.

prior to the film i hadn't really known, beyond a mention in a blurb, in what sense this was a 9/11 film, but it was a powerful element, like i think particularly in scenes like the lunch with the lawyer in which they're weighing the importance of suffering & having to contemplate it & revisit it, weirder still in this strange, removed context it now exists in (in this case, money). or what the other lawyer says, this is how we punish people now.

so good.

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 02:32 (fourteen years ago)

like this film for me had a lot of "what then means, now", the lens through which people have to look back on things, even recent things, changes in friendships, stages of relationships with family, & how to deal with that day-to-day. lisa flags under the weight of that, and then the additional weight of global context, people dying &c&c

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 02:35 (fourteen years ago)

(it is possible the weight of my teenage crush on anna paquin makes me over-sympathetic)

heh, well its possible my distaste for paquin on true blood makes me overly harsh (i cant front on this performance though)

i havent thought much about the 9/11 stuff. it kinda doesnt interest me, but it's certainly there. the role of jewish identity seems really important in this movie, but im not sure if its a thematic thing or just because it's part of accurately portraying the milieu

maghrib is back (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 9 January 2012 02:52 (fourteen years ago)

i was sure i posted about this film on ilx but it must have been the sandbox. i absolutely loved it, could easily see how it could/should have been longer, would def watch a director's cut. so well observed, lonergan has a real ear for the nuances and details on which conversations turn - all the human interaction felt so recognisable and true to life.

i thought the tonal shifts worked in the film's favour - they also felt true to life, specifically the double-backing criss-crossing random illogic of adolescent life (lisa's life) that nonetheless feels absolutely straight & true at the time. it handled her fundamental dislikeability really well - never condemnatory enough for you to want to turn her off - though the REAL TALK scene that you've been discussing was definitely much needed.

how berlin (who you could see as a margaret who's actually been around the block a few times)

totally!

all i see is angels in my eyes (lex pretend), Monday, 9 January 2012 10:56 (fourteen years ago)

i really want to read a good in-depth essay on this - nothing i've read so far has quite gotten as into it as i want.

all i see is angels in my eyes (lex pretend), Monday, 9 January 2012 10:57 (fourteen years ago)

Paquin's name isn't Margaret. The name's only said in English class.

Dr Morbois de Bologne (Dr Morbius), Monday, 9 January 2012 12:38 (fourteen years ago)

think i simultaneously referred to her as both lisa & m above, oops

consumer warning: There are no characters named Margaret in the film.

― incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 12 October 2011 19:10 (2 months ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 12:47 (fourteen years ago)

Paquin's name isn't Margaret. The name's only said in English class.

― Dr Morbois de Bologne (Dr Morbius), Monday, January 9, 2012 7:38 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark

lol yeah, how could i forget that. i even call her lisa upthread. stupid poem

maghrib is back (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 9 January 2012 13:55 (fourteen years ago)

lol

quick brown fox triangle (schlump), Monday, 9 January 2012 13:57 (fourteen years ago)

three weeks pass...

Lincoln Center has a screening w/ Lonergan & cast members in 3 weeks:

http://www.filmlinc.com/press/entry/fslc-announces-12th-edition-of-film-comment-selects-february-17-march-1

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 31 January 2012 20:36 (fourteen years ago)

Finally saw this last night, the 3 hour cut. Yes it could do with tightening up but I don't think that detracted too much. Thought the sound design was interesting with overlapping conversations and eg. passing traffic mixed as high as the main dialogue and making it difficult to focus, kind of suggesting how we all have these competing personal narratives struggling to make sense of the world. Really great film.

ewar woowar (or something), Tuesday, 20 May 2014 09:41 (twelve years ago)

four months pass...

watched the 3-hr cut and immediately wanted to rewatch

not sure what was cut from it but i don't think anything needed to be. or there were a million things he could cut that were of equal significance/insignificance, because nearly everything seems like a subplot. the film enters this flat, sequential rhythm where every scene, even the Big ones, seem equally important and there's enough there in each that i wouldn't want to lose them. maybe they could've ended the legal drama sooner but then we'd miss the great image of lisa screaming into a machine (maybe the one time in the entire movie where the camera concentrates on something other than a human body or a skyscraper -- it was an impt break in that rhythm for me) or the all the matt damon shit, but i found that whole thing an interesting parallel/practically a retelling of the bus scene. i'm probably caught up in the hype of the whole "directors cut = true vision!!!" thing but i'm tickled (and sympathetic wrt) that lonergan must've found everything he included so necessary to lisa's story. i believe him!

there were at least 3 Great scenes in this

linda cardellini (zachlyon), Saturday, 20 September 2014 22:23 (eleven years ago)

i haven't seen this for awhile, but how far removed the conference call scene is from the accident it's discussing, while still ostensibly being tethered to it, & how much is being folded into the incredibly insubstantial exchange that's happening -- it's so profound, & is such a moment, & yeah is the argument for the film accommodating just such a weight of incident & digression.

new lonergan & matt damon flick forthcoming btw. one day.

schlump, Saturday, 20 September 2014 22:31 (eleven years ago)

just remembered the other inanimate object the movie cared about, the shopping cart -- both stand-ins for human bodies obv

linda cardellini (zachlyon), Saturday, 20 September 2014 22:46 (eleven years ago)

also the wiki cast list insists that ruffalo's wife's name was margaret (it was just "Mrs. Maretti" in the end credits iirc)

linda cardellini (zachlyon), Saturday, 20 September 2014 23:12 (eleven years ago)

totally want to see this again

jaymc, Sunday, 21 September 2014 05:50 (eleven years ago)

For This Is Our Youth, does anyone have advice on seating or when to go?

youn, Sunday, 21 September 2014 15:59 (eleven years ago)

eight months pass...

Second viewing, long version. I don't know how much was added, but the one scene that clearly wasn't there the first time I saw it--the drama group getting in touch with their feelings about each other--was pretty awkward (although undercut nicely by Kieran Culkin's benign ridicule). The rest of the film held up fine.

It's such a sprawl...What I thought especially strong this time was the mother-daughter stuff. One scene that bothered me the first time--Jeannie Berlin going off on Paquin--didn't this time. Paqin gives one of those Agnes Moorehead-in-Ambersons (or Julianne Moore-in-Magnolia) performances that is so odd and so intense that you're bound to have a strong reaction in one direction or the other. Liked both lawyers a lot. (The second one has a great deadpan moment, something like "You're going to get a lot of money"/"What's the point of doing this?"/"You're going to get a lot of money.") I've never set foot in a private school, but I found that one class (the one where they scream at each other about terrorism and Israel) a little weird. The teacher runs the class, but he has an assistant there to moderate?

clemenza, Saturday, 13 June 2015 14:10 (ten years ago)

I loved the classroom scenes. Was the getting-in-touch-with-feelings one a different one than the discussion on the "as flies to wanton boys are we to the gods" speech from King Lear (I haven't seen it since it first hit DVD)? Cause if so, that may have been my fave scene in the whole film.

The New Gay Sadness (cryptosicko), Sunday, 14 June 2015 00:38 (ten years ago)

Different scene, yes. The one you're remembering, where Broderick gets into the argument with the student, that's also one of my favourites (even though, as I said a few months ago, I think most teachers would welcome the disagreement). The theatre group is just in the long cut, and it verges on self-parody--Culkin saves it at the end.

clemenza, Sunday, 14 June 2015 02:27 (ten years ago)

seven months pass...

New movie:
http://www.rogerebert.com/sundance/sundance-2016-manchester-by-the-sea

... (Eazy), Monday, 25 January 2016 19:02 (ten years ago)

That's good news! I look forward to seeing it in 2021.

she pnuched me in my weinre when I was asleep (Old Lunch), Monday, 25 January 2016 19:07 (ten years ago)

this one seems fully edited

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Monday, 25 January 2016 19:08 (ten years ago)

"Anchored by a breathtaking performance from Casey Affleck"

is this possible

remove butt (abanana), Tuesday, 26 January 2016 01:56 (ten years ago)

Excited about another film from this guy. Not so much another film starring an afleck as a working class dude from Boston

Heez, Tuesday, 26 January 2016 02:58 (ten years ago)

oh c'mon he's been good in plenty of things xp

a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Tuesday, 26 January 2016 03:16 (ten years ago)

Kyle Chandler is kinda cornering the market on small-but-memorable roles in American indies, huh

a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Tuesday, 26 January 2016 03:17 (ten years ago)

nine months pass...

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/11/07/the-cinematic-traumas-of-kenneth-lonergan

Number None, Monday, 31 October 2016 19:38 (nine years ago)

manchester by the sea is p great imo. loved casey affleck in it

harold melvin and the bluetones (jim in vancouver), Monday, 31 October 2016 20:08 (nine years ago)

oh cool, we saw Little Men yesterday and I told tt it reminded me a bit of Margaret so we have to watch it now

imago, Monday, 31 October 2016 20:19 (nine years ago)

two months pass...

I'm not sure how I felt about the film overall but jesus christ the big Williams/Affleck scene at the end is just utterly devastating

Number None, Sunday, 29 January 2017 02:49 (nine years ago)

Surely this deserves a thread of its own?

Matt DC, Sunday, 29 January 2017 12:30 (nine years ago)

saw this a few weeks ago & was surprised there wasn't a thread or much discussion (even a post search just revealed a lot of lists of titles on that dreadful tetris thread)

I saw a preview which meant I went in without having seen a trailer, which probably helped. I really liked it, I was chuckling pretty much start to finish while also finding it quite affecting

wins, Sunday, 29 January 2017 12:38 (nine years ago)

wasn't too sure about the broderick bit tho, it was funny but at a different pitch to the rest of the film, seemed like?

wins, Sunday, 29 January 2017 12:45 (nine years ago)

two months pass...

I liked Manchester by the Sea, but maybe not as much as I think I should have, and definitely not as much as I expected to. Affleck is fantastic, and his scene with Williams towards the end (spoiled a bit by Oscar clips, though far more powerful once you know what it is actually about) is indeed devastating. After a while, though, I started to wonder how it might have played minus all of the flashback scenes (and certainly minus the one brief but terrible dream sequence) which felt a bit too telling-not-showing for me. I did like Broderick's scene, though, mostly because I love Broderick as a middle-aged sad sack (see also, Election, and You Can Count on Me). Also great: Lonergan's cameo, and "Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts" (!!) scoring a sex scene.

I dunno, though--it may grow on me in time, but Lonergan's already made two of my favourite movies, so this one cannot help but feel like a very minor letdown in comparison.

some sad trombone Twilight Zone shit (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 29 March 2017 16:00 (nine years ago)

Broderick has the funniest of his middle-aged schlump roles in awhile in Rules Don't Apply.

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 29 March 2017 16:03 (nine years ago)

seven years pass...

The three hour cut of Margaret is on Hulu (even though it says it's the 2 1/2 hour version). Incredible performances all around. We knew nothing about it before watching last night and absolutely loved it.

j.o.h.n. in evanston (john. a resident of chicago.), Wednesday, 3 July 2024 16:17 (one year ago)

It's great, one of my all-time favorites.

birdistheword, Wednesday, 3 July 2024 21:52 (one year ago)

I still think the original theatrical cut is just about perfect, too. Very lucky to have seen it in 35mm during its one-week Oscar-qualifying run at the Landmark in Los Angeles

beamish13, Wednesday, 3 July 2024 22:03 (one year ago)

and I wonder if Lonergan ever paid Matthew Broderick back that million dollars for extra editing time

beamish13, Wednesday, 3 July 2024 22:04 (one year ago)

Lisa Cohen is the most realistically unbearable precocious teenager in movie history

karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Friday, 5 July 2024 01:34 (one year ago)


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