The Prestige...
Nov. 6th, 2006 09:38 amI went to see The Prestige yesterday. Good movie. Stellar cast: with the likes of Christian Bale (who impresses me more every time I see him, and I've liked him from the beginning), Hugh Jackman, Scarlet Johansson, Andy Serkis, David Bowie, and Michael Caine.... and a setting of late Victorian London and Colorado Springs. I have been to Colorado Springs. Gorgeous place. It was fun to see it as a movie setting.
I enjoyed the twists and turns of the plot, though I guessed Alfred's secret rather early in the movie - too many clues - and that made a lot of it just fall into place. (I admit I was confused about Angier's main trick - the body in the tank - until I saw the hats and the cats on the mountainside.) By the end I wasn't sure how convincing it all was, but it was fun to be along for the ride.
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Date: 2006-11-06 04:14 pm (UTC)(I made a squeaky noise when he showed up)
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Date: 2006-11-06 04:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-07 01:20 am (UTC)Here's an additional page of video interviews and clips:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0443543/videosites
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Date: 2006-11-07 01:53 am (UTC)I liked The Illusionist as well. Saw it a couple of months ago.... I thought both movies were good, and both flawed, but in different ways. The Illusionist seemed to have more heart.
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Date: 2006-11-08 01:45 am (UTC)I also enjoyed the psychology. Leopold doesn't question the frame, because for all he knows, he did kill her, and just can't remember. Also, I got the impression that Leopold would have arranged an accident for her, anyway, at whatever point she was no longer politically necessary.
As a fan of vintage radio shows, I also drew parallels between Eisenheim and Sophie & Lamont Cranston (The Shadow) and Margo Lane. I imagined the four of them would have a great deal to say to each other.
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Date: 2006-11-08 01:49 am (UTC)I didn't see a "Romeo and Juliet" angle to it... still don't. Could you elaborate? Do you just mean that their families would have separated them and kept them separated if they could have?
I enjoyed Leopold, mostly because I like Rufus Sewell. I couldn't believe that he didn't get his stables cleaned daily, though.
I like the parallel with Lamont Cranston, whom I have always liked.
I loved the use of the noncorporeal, the blurring of illusions into reality and back again.
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Date: 2006-11-08 05:48 am (UTC)Yup, that's what I mean.
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Date: 2006-11-08 12:23 pm (UTC)