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YOUR taste at work...
http://www.moviepig.com
Kind of a misrepresentation there Piggy, methinks.
Well, no, it's not a Sandra Bullock souffle, but neither did I find
much in it that sticks to the ribs. It seemed to me a lot more hip
than heavy...
Your situation may vary, but I saw it with someone that had recently
been laid off after working at the same place for 47 years.
Indeed, that could hang a bit of crepe. And, admittedly, graveyard
humor does happen in a graveyard...
I enjoyed Up in the Air a lot though I can't imagine it working nearly
as well with any other leading male but George Clooney.
Well, you'd have to at least consider Aaron Eckhart, if only to see
what *else* the filmmakers could've carried over from THANK YOU FOR
SMOKING (...which carryover could explain the novel-to-film
reorientation you describe, btw). Meanwhile, I'm not sure I'd agree
that Clooney "found it". "Found it out", maybe...
I liked the film too, but felt it does not deserve to be atop so many
best of lists.
I would have liked the film even more if it had ended with the pull
away shot of Clooney all alone in his hotel room after finding out
about her.
Well, I think the book was written almost a decade ago, I heard part
of n interview with the author on NPR, since writing the book he too
has been fired from a job at the magazine he once wrote for.
But the last shot in Up in the Air is the best part. That "finding
out about her" scene, though, has been used in about literally a
thousand times before in movies and television. It's too soap opera.
That and his "gift" at the end--it's meant to show character growth
but it was too telegraphed--were the only things I was bothered by.
Yeah, as Best Picture material . . . I can see a popular uprising
against Hollywood if Up in the Air beats out Avatar.
It's easy to imagine Up in the Air as a 30s screwball comedy. I see
William Powell travelling around the country in a train during the
repressing, firing people for bosses too spineless to do it on their
own (Clooney called those bosses "pussies"; Powell would just call
them "nincompoops" or something like that), with maybe Myrna Loy or
Barbara Stanwyk along for the ride.
For its first two acts, I thought UItA *was* a '30s screwball
comedy' ...even including the funny but candid 3-way dialogue in the
airport lounge. And, yeah, his gift did show a softening, but I don't
think it went as far as lethal 'character growth'... (and, even if it
did, help was on the way...)
its ok
Shouldn't such a person be ready to RETIRE, anyway?
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