I enjoy end-of-the-world movies. I believe it's 
healthy to face one's fears, and that all the end-
of-the-world movies gracing the cinema these 
days are ultimately salubrious. 

I also enjoy attractive, naked women, so this 
movie sounds like a twofer for me.

But wait, there's more. Another planet that had 
been hidden by the sun? Sounds like Ruben Bolling's 
Counter-Earth, a comic device that cheers me 
immensely. And with that, Lars von Trier scores 
a hat trick! Go Lars!

What will Obama do to get sun and wind?
http://bit.ly/qBCljx 

The President is forced to get "pro life"!
http://bit.ly/oSNtK9 

The Department of Education, kicking ass!
http://bit.ly/nyABdT 

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu <noozguru@...> wrote:
>
> On 11/11/2011 12:15 PM, turquoiseb wrote:
> > In a sentence, "Cinematically prettier than Terrence Malick's 'The Tree
> > Of Life,' just as pretentious, a little less ponderous in parts, but on
> > the whole more depressing because it's about...uh...depression."
> >
> > The plot of Danish bad boy Lars von Trier's new movie is not exactly a
> > nail-biter. You see the ending of the movie (and coincidentally the end
> > of the planet Earth) in the first 7-1/2 minutes, appropriately with
> > Wagner as the soundtrack. Because I suspect that few here will be drawn
> > to see it, I'll do a kind of flippant mini-review.
> >
> > Basically, it's about two sisters, played by Kirsten Dunst (who we
> > finally get to see naked) and Charlotte Gainsbourg (who we've seen naked
> > onscreen many times before), both playing their parts well -- clothed or
> > naked. There are other heavyweight actors, too, including a father and
> > son played by Stellan and Alexander Skarsgård. Then you've got
> > Charlotte Rampling as the sisters' mother, John Hurt as their father,
> > and Keifer Sutherland thrown in there somewhere as an American corporate
> > asshole. He manages to pull this off as convincingly as the
> > Skarsgårds pull off being father and son.
> >
> > The movie, which is strangely being billed as SciFi, opens at a wedding,
> > which goes sour in the way that big, expensive family weddings tend to
> > go sour onscreen. But then the sourness escalates when everyone learns
> > that the "new star" that Justine (Dunst) saw in the sky on the way to
> > the wedding is really a planet on a possible collision course with
> > Earth. This news could be perceived as somewhat depressing, and sure
> > enough many of the characters in the movie find it so, pretty much for
> > the rest of the film.
> >
> > This movie won Kirsten Dunst a Best Actress award at Cannes but lost out
> > on its supposedly "foregone conclusion" Palme d'Or award because von
> > Trier tried to make a dumb joke about Hitler in a country that still
> > hasn't gotten over its collective guilt about its behavior during the
> > Nazi years. Since he's admitted that the film is partly about his own
> > bouts with depression, maybe he was just experiencing one of them that
> > night.
> >
> > It's a Lars von Trier movie. You either like him or you don't, and
> > you'll either like this movie or you won't. I'm not even sure it was
> > intended to be liked. It seems to me that it was intended to be a kind
> > of Wagnerian-scored homage to German Romanticism. As von Trier said
> > about it, "It's not a film about the end of the world; it's a film about
> > a state of mind." Personally I just wish that the state of mind didn't
> > rely so much on playing the same theme from Tristan und Isolde over and
> > over again as its soundtrack. I would have preferred something cheerier
> > and more uptempo, like Leonard Cohen's "Dress Rehearsal Rag." :-)
> >
> > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzD0U841LRM
> > <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzD0U841LRM>
> >
> > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNTFqSaFwyo
> > <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNTFqSaFwyo>
> 
> Available on Vudu (probably Comcast and other VOD too):
> http://www.vudu.com/movies/#!content/216792/Melancholia
> 
> I'm used to Trier's stuff. ;-)
>


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