(no subject)
Jan. 29th, 2005 08:50 pmSo I went and saw Hotel Rwanda and Million Dollar Baby today.
Hotel Rwanda just ... hell, I haven't cried that hard in a theater in years. There's a scene in the movie that's hinted at in the trailer where the UN evacuates all of the non-Rwandans at the hotel and basically just leaves the Rwandans behind to be slaughtered. Joaquin Phoenix's character, as he walks to the bus that's going to take them away, whispers to his friend, "Jesus, I feel ashamed." And just when you think you're more uncomfortable than you've been in a while, suddenly a bunch of foreign missionaries run up with a group of Rwandan orphans, and the UN won't let the orphans on the bus. And just ... just ... *sniffle*
Don Cheadle in this movie was simply brilliant. The comparisons to Schindler's List are obviously apt to the situation, but it's incredible, the way he carries it off. He's not trying to save anybody but his family, and just gets swept into this place of having to keep as many people alive as possible using his well-honed skills as a hotel manager. I'd have to say that this had to have been my second-favorite performance of the year after Jamie Foxx in Ray. And Sophie Okonedo, who played his wife, was incredible.
As for the subject of the movie itself, the genocide in Rwanda, I think I whispered, "What the fuck is wrong with people?!" about five times during the film.
And then there was Million Dollar Baby. I take back any qualms I had about the movie. That was an incredible film, and I say that as someone who usually doesn't like anything that Clint Eastwood is involved in. (But I'll get to Clint later.)
The whole plot shift towards the end, with her getting injured and wanting him to pull the plug ... it's not as bad as it sounds. To be honest, it's one of the best portrayals of the subject I've ever seen. It's not annoying or heavy-handed or whacking you upside the head in an attempt to make you cry. I think the only complaint I had about it was that watching the injury happen is one big OW.
If Hilary Swank wins Best Actress, I won't be surprised, and I'll totally back it up. The same with Morgan Freeman, although I'm not sure his chances for Best Supporting Actor are as good as hers.
Now, for Clint and the Best Actor nomination. I'm going to state something that's probably going to get me bludgeoned to death in an alleyway by a bunch of angry fangirls. I've seen all five of the Best Actor performances, and in my personal opinion, Clint Eastwood did not steal Paul Giamatti's nomination -- Johnny Depp did. Now, I love Johnny, but my assessment of the Best Actor nominees goes in this order from best to worst -- Jamie Foxx, Don Cheadle, Clint Eastwood, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Johnny Depp, with Paul Giamatti probably coming right before Clint on that list. Johnny was great in the role as always, but Clint in that movie managed to make me love him and want to see him onscreen. And I love Clint, but I hate watching him on screen.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to watch something idiotic and absolutely not intended to make me cry. And hey, look, Snow Dogs is on. That's idiotic. Then again, it may make me cry, although more in mourning of Cuba Gooding's career than anything else.
Hotel Rwanda just ... hell, I haven't cried that hard in a theater in years. There's a scene in the movie that's hinted at in the trailer where the UN evacuates all of the non-Rwandans at the hotel and basically just leaves the Rwandans behind to be slaughtered. Joaquin Phoenix's character, as he walks to the bus that's going to take them away, whispers to his friend, "Jesus, I feel ashamed." And just when you think you're more uncomfortable than you've been in a while, suddenly a bunch of foreign missionaries run up with a group of Rwandan orphans, and the UN won't let the orphans on the bus. And just ... just ... *sniffle*
Don Cheadle in this movie was simply brilliant. The comparisons to Schindler's List are obviously apt to the situation, but it's incredible, the way he carries it off. He's not trying to save anybody but his family, and just gets swept into this place of having to keep as many people alive as possible using his well-honed skills as a hotel manager. I'd have to say that this had to have been my second-favorite performance of the year after Jamie Foxx in Ray. And Sophie Okonedo, who played his wife, was incredible.
As for the subject of the movie itself, the genocide in Rwanda, I think I whispered, "What the fuck is wrong with people?!" about five times during the film.
And then there was Million Dollar Baby. I take back any qualms I had about the movie. That was an incredible film, and I say that as someone who usually doesn't like anything that Clint Eastwood is involved in. (But I'll get to Clint later.)
The whole plot shift towards the end, with her getting injured and wanting him to pull the plug ... it's not as bad as it sounds. To be honest, it's one of the best portrayals of the subject I've ever seen. It's not annoying or heavy-handed or whacking you upside the head in an attempt to make you cry. I think the only complaint I had about it was that watching the injury happen is one big OW.
If Hilary Swank wins Best Actress, I won't be surprised, and I'll totally back it up. The same with Morgan Freeman, although I'm not sure his chances for Best Supporting Actor are as good as hers.
Now, for Clint and the Best Actor nomination. I'm going to state something that's probably going to get me bludgeoned to death in an alleyway by a bunch of angry fangirls. I've seen all five of the Best Actor performances, and in my personal opinion, Clint Eastwood did not steal Paul Giamatti's nomination -- Johnny Depp did. Now, I love Johnny, but my assessment of the Best Actor nominees goes in this order from best to worst -- Jamie Foxx, Don Cheadle, Clint Eastwood, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Johnny Depp, with Paul Giamatti probably coming right before Clint on that list. Johnny was great in the role as always, but Clint in that movie managed to make me love him and want to see him onscreen. And I love Clint, but I hate watching him on screen.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to watch something idiotic and absolutely not intended to make me cry. And hey, look, Snow Dogs is on. That's idiotic. Then again, it may make me cry, although more in mourning of Cuba Gooding's career than anything else.
no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 04:15 am (UTC)The reason I ask is my dad really wants to see Baby but he hated Cold Mountian for what happened to Law's character in that movie...
/nerdy question
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Date: 2005-01-30 04:18 am (UTC)I spend way too much time reading.
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Date: 2005-01-30 04:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 04:39 am (UTC)I think what differentiates what happens to Jude in that movie and Hilary in this one is that this one is dealt with as a much more natural progression in the plot. With Jude, even with all of the deserters being shot throughout the movie, it's supposed to be an "OMG DEAD JUDE!!1!1" moment. Whereas with this one, the clues are there throughout the story, but in a nice, subtle way. (Well, storywise, it's nice -- when you know what's coming, they pop up everywhere and it gets a wee bit creepy.) They establish that boxers get hurt and get hurt bad so that by the time it comes -- and it really ends up being a bit of a freak accident in the end -- you're shocked that it's happening but not that surprised. And the hospital parts are just emotionally painful.
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Date: 2005-01-30 05:33 am (UTC)The thing that made me lose it the most in Hotel Rwanda was when the Rwandan hotel staff were shielding the Europeans with umbrellas. The subtle irony of the situation made me weep.
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Date: 2005-01-30 06:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 09:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 11:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 11:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 11:58 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 12:23 pm (UTC)The head of the UN peacekeeping troups said that he could have stopped it from happening if he'd been given the ok by the UN.
It was all the timing. At the beginning of the massacre, they could have stepped in if they'd been given the order. But by the end of it Belgium pulled out its troups and the remaining UN guys didn't have enough men to even hope to stop it.
no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 12:27 pm (UTC)The documentary sounds very interesting. What's it called?
I actually studied the genocide a little in my Holocaust class and we went to see the film together. Also read Phil Gourevitch's "We wish to inform you..." A very good read.
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Date: 2005-01-30 02:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 02:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 02:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 02:14 pm (UTC)Oh, yeah. Between that guy and Gregoire, the guy at the hotel who turned on them, I just got so disgusted with how low the human race could go.
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Date: 2005-01-30 02:18 pm (UTC)I need to get this when it comes out on DVD, but God only knows how often I'll have the emotional fortitude to watch it. I think I was the only not crying at the end of Million Dollar Baby because I'd been cried out in Hotel Rwanda.
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Date: 2005-01-30 07:06 pm (UTC)This doesn't mean that I only watch happy movies, but something like that is too much for me. I can't imagine how you watched these two movies in the same day, you're much stronger than I am, for sure.
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Date: 2005-01-30 07:16 pm (UTC)The whole thing was like they pointed out in the interview with Paul Rusesabagina I saw on the TV this morning, which is that the strength of the movie is that you really don't see all that much violence firsthand. You see the effects of the attrocities -- bodies everywhere, attacks from afar, and at one point, Paul's poor son literally soaked in blood not his own -- but you don't actually see that many characters killed onscreen.
What you really end up seeing is the heroism of Paul and those with him. I swear, if I'd seen that interview before the movie, I would have been too much of a wreck after the movie to do anything else but go home and cry. The man might not want to think of himself as a hero, but he's just amazing. Not to mention Don Cheadle, who just ... *hugs* God, I love that man.
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Date: 2005-01-30 07:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-31 02:56 am (UTC)