"And whoever made humanity, will find no humanity here. No sir. No sir. So beware... Beware..."
The Road, based off the 2007 Pulitzer Prize winner for fiction and starring Viggo Mortensen, Kodi Smit-McPhee and a supporting role by Charlize Theron--has no atmosphere. Has no mood. Has no sunlight. Has no animals and barely any insects. No electricity. Has no food or vegetables. Has no feelings, or remorse. Only the death of the land that is now gone, and the life that was once on it. It doesn't sugar-coat, or try to sell a million tickets to make it's investor's happy. It doesn't have a gaudy trailer that invites you to come and witness something for college kids or tween audiences who want a thrilling story. It does the book some good, and turns itself into the the little engine that could. It achieves the feat in itself of translating a Cormac McCarthy novel to the screen. And then wins double the points when it does it right.
The Road, directed by John Hillcoat. The dude responsible for making Australian cowboys not only real, but badass with depth and redeeming qualities even in the '05 film The Proposition. He did it again here with pitch perfect casting and honest transcribing from page to picture. Before I get into the meat and potatoes of this thing, let me just say that I loved this film, loved this film, loved this film. So, if you're a reader, and you trust my criticism, taste and eagle eye analyzing, then go see it if that's good enough for you. That'd be fuckin' raw son if it was.


The 76 year old author's work is no easy task to translate. God knows how bad Billy Bob screwed the pooch on All The Pretty Horses arguably Cormac's most celebrated work. And then The Coen's came back with No Country For Old Men and gave me a film that took my heart to new levels as i fell in love from the first shot of the desert and Jones' first words uttered. And with the latest edition to Cormac's book-to-films, the cast and crew did what they though was appropriate to do in shooting this project. They assembled something that will gain more respect in years to come, as all under-appreciated/misunderstood films tend to do. (Simply judging from the general consensus out there that the film sorta missed with audiences) We'll only have to see what Todd Field (Little Children, In The Bedroom) will do with Blood Meridian. Widely recognized not only as McCarthy's masterpiece, but also as one of the most acclaimed American novels of the 20th century period. I'm all about Field and his work, a 2/2 Oscar nominee in screenwriting. With him now adapting not only a McCarthy novel, but this one, I'm real stoked about what's gonna be coming for our eyes and ears in theaters.
Hillcoat is the one I'm on the lookout for. Whichever route he decides to go with his next film, I'll be there to proverbially shake his hand and enjoy each and every frame of his work.
If you've got that movie you HAVE to hand it over...they weren't playing that shit in theaters anywhere around here
ReplyDeleteOh, and if you could get the Ghostwriter, that'd be great
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