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The Archives => The Green Screen => Topic started by: Gold Trumpet on January 07, 2008, 07:28:16 PM

Title: False Idol
Post by: Gold Trumpet on January 07, 2008, 07:28:16 PM
(The original idea wasn't to write a slam of Magnolia. It was to come to better understanding to what I felt about the film. I didn't know how I felt so I set myself to write an essay of the postivies and negatives of the film. Clarity would be found in the process. This, sadly, is the edited version. Around 6000 words make up the original piece but I had to get rid of a lot to keep the criticism coherent and on a certain path.)



FALSE IDOL

Why Magnolia isn't a great film

I – Paul Thomas Anderson and Magnolia

1999 was a turning point for American independent cinema. Not only is it considered by many to be the last strong year for all around movie releases, but was the year in which most current American independent filmmakers came to fruition. In the span of two years (1998-99), our best acclaimed filmmakers made their defining works. This group includes David Fincher (Fight Club), Wes Anderson (Rushmore), Spike Jonze (Being John Malkovich), and Paul Thomas Anderson (Magnolia). Even other important filmmakers like Michel Gondry (Human Nature) were beginning at this time. This influx of new filmmakers wasn't accidental. It was the cause of the success of Pulp Fiction. That film, a financial and creative juggernaut, opened up more independent films for green light. The first few years brought bad copy cats of Pulp's style but soon a vibrant, stylistic film scene was created.

My favorite of this group is Paul Thomas Anderson. He is the credited filmmaker of Boogie Nights and Magnolia, but he distinguished himself with his debut, Hard Eight. It was a low key, character piece about a professional gambler on the verge of finding an adopted family at the end of sordid, tough life. Anderson made the film noteworthy because he made the ambiguous questions about the gambler's life the most important element of the film. The majority of the other filmmakers dialed up their stylistic inspiration first while Anderson instead tapped into a quiet, moving story. When he made Boogie Nights shortly after it seemed like he was answering the call of the challenge to be as daring as the rest of his generation. Boogie Nights not only had a vastly larger story, but allowed Anderson to show his stylistic virtuosity by making a film that referenced  cinemas and styles going from the early 1960s and extending all the way through to the 1970s. The purpose of the selection was to capture the time period of the story, but it also showed Anderson's range in how much he was able to take from other works for a single film. The benefit is that he also transitioned the quality storytelling of Hard Eight into Boogie Nights.

Knowing that he had accomplished a lot with Boogie Nights, the question was what Anderson could do to take the next step. He had the intention to make his third film larger in both length and scope. Since not every film could be a look back to a different era and style, the challenge would be to write a modern story that had a deeper storyline and broadened Anderson's horizon. These characteristics meant for the development of personal themes and greater ideas in his works. His first two films had a common plot in a dysfunctional family storyline. His first film was good and his second excellent, but they had an indirect relationship to him. The films didn't reflect his life. Part of the development of a personal filmmaker is to take consideration of your life in your work. Doing this would make the third film continue what his first two films had done and also bring the subject of dysfunctional family's full circle to make it a legitimate theme in his filmography.

Magnolia was the creation that represented Anderson personally. Not only did he think highly of the film by claiming it would likely be the best film he ever made, but its multiple storylines allowed for Anderson to take different looks into his life. It was a tale set in dreary San Fernando Valley over the course of twenty-four hours and how bad decisions ended up becoming fateful ones to random characters who had little in common but a shared experience to a miraculous event. There is the story of the two fathers, one who is facing his past abuses with the creation of a drug addicted daughter and the other who drove away a son that became an egocentric spokesperson of misogyny and can't find any warmth in his heart. Then there are two child geniuses, one young and old, who live day to day with the pains of their situations because of overbearing parents who drive them to succeed. The younger is trying to find a way to escape the life and salvage his future while the elder only looks back at bad memories that have left uglier scars. Mix in supporting characters that are peacemakers, mysteries and sad cases and you're getting the emotional ball that is Magnolia.

It doesn't look like the four major stories have direct correlation to Anderson's life, but they do involve television. Two of the major stories are about children of television figures. Anderson himself is a child of a television figure and he was also someone raised to become involved with the visual medium because of his early interest in filmmaking. Boogie Nights only related back to Anderson's surroundings of growing up in the Valley, but Magnolia relates back to his experience. Even if the personal connection is doubted, it should also be noted that Roman Polanski didn't have a direct connection to the story of Wladyslaw Szpilman, but he did to the Holocaust. The shared experience and his ability to implement moments of personal experience into the film, The Pianist, is what made it auto-biographical for Polanski. The same situation applies to Paul Thomas Anderson in Magnolia.

Then there is the ending event. It is the phenomenon that ties all the characters together and decides their fate after a tumultuous twenty-four hours. The raining of the frogs has a biblical tie in, but Anderson isn't making Magnolia a theological study. There are no serious ideas within the parameters of the film to suggest it. The larger implication of the end is that it makes the film a fatalist work. The characters, because of previous actions or situations, march head on to a conclusion that will decide their future. The incarnation of fatalist drama has always been in use with the tragedy. Magnolia does not meet the typical standards of a tragedy, but it shares similar ideas. Arthur Miller defined the basis of modern tragedy with "Tragedy and the Common Man". He said it has a focus on psychiatry. Immediately after he cleared up a fallacy by saying that tragedy isn't based on pessimism. That combination leads to Miller's defining idea of tragedy: "If it is true to say that in essence the tragic hero is intent upon claiming his whole due as a personality, and if this struggle must be total and without reservation, then it automatically demonstrates the indestructible will of man to achieve his humanity." Some die and others come to absolution in Magnolia, but it is more accurate to say that by the end they all find their own humanities.

A lot of critical attention came to Magnolia. The deserving praise focused on Anderson's ability to make a film with as much confidence and grace as any film he made beforehand. The numerous references in Boogie Nights were mixed with Hard Eight in creating a style that was energetic, but rooted in character perspective. Not one once of Magnolia is hampered by too much direction or composition. That is a lot to say for a film that is exciting. If Hard Eight was Anderson's beginning work of learning how to adequately film then Boogie Nights was his experimentation. Magnolia is the fruition of both projects and shows the cinematic language that would be the basis for all his films to come. Future projects would be alterations or extensions from what was established in Magnolia.

II – The Subject of Metaphysics

The choices Anderson made to elevate Magnolia showed the right idea of ambition, but all the choices had to do with the outlook of the film. The second layer to Magnolia is its makeup and composition. The success of the film came about because it was considered a strong ode to one of Anderson's main influences, Robert Altman. The comparisons between Altman and Anderson have always been prevalent. One reason is because of the admiration both have for each other and the other is because both filmmakers rely on similar sweeping camera movements. The idea is that when Anderson made Magnolia he began to take on the personality of Robert Altman by making a film that looked and felt like one of his. Magnolia resembles Altman's Short Cuts in many ways, but the similarities are all general. Anderson really took a step beyond Short Cuts and asked to be compared to a greater filmmaker.

The filmmaker in question is Krzysztof Kieslowski . When Anderson made Magnolia, he dealt specifically with themes and ideas that were already hallmarks in Kieslowski's filmography. The description of Magnolia is that the coincidence between all the characters with similar events and personal situations is simply a study in chance and fate, but actually it is metaphysics. The purpose of Magnolia is to associate the interconnection of strangers to a higher meaning. Kieslowski has made this a common theme in the majority of his later films. He even tied the Decalogue to a religious theme, but Kieslowski has been devoted to a study of the connections between people that cannot be identified. The prologue of Magnolia shows side stories that promote the great examples of happenstance, but an entire film about happenstance leads into the territory of metaphysics. Metaphysics are about the deep but unidentifiable connections between people. It deals with events and connections that can only be related to the characters in question. When Robert Altman made Short Cuts, he connected all the characters together at the end with a chance earthquake. It was a weak climax because earthquakes affect all in the general area but a raining of the frogs involves only the selected few.

The problem is that Anderson deals with the identity of metaphysics, but his handling of the subject matter shows no development from what Kieslowski has created. Anderson manages to take a subject like metaphysics and reduce it down to general human subject matter. Even the problems that make up the characters problems resemble standard subject material already seen in numerous films. The question of whether Anderson is able to probe the depths of his subject comes into question. The problems with the subject lead to an unexpected situation of poor writing in the film. Anderson has the task to connect all the characters to such a mighty end that the characterization becomes too simplistic and identifiable. Anderson is still able to write scenes well, but the length of the film makes the script feel like an unedited first draft. Magnolia was Anderson's third film and he was trying to find clarity in a subject that took Kieslowski the majority of feature length filmmaking career to achieve comfort with. The question has to be whether Anderson took on too much with his third film and over shot a youthful and exuberant ambition.

Situations of similarity between Anderson and Kieslowski are everywhere in Magnolia. One instance is with the correlating characters that mirror each other. There is the game show whiz kid looking for breathing room from an overzealous father and the aging game show kid who is hard on luck and desperate for some affection. Both characters mirror the other end of who the other is because of an abusive history. In the Double Life of Veronique, you have two Veronique's with one in Poland and the other in France. When the one in Poland dies of a heart ailment at a concert, the other receives an unidentifiable sign that her affiliation with singing has to end. This happens at the beginning of the story and the rest of the film is an investigation into the unforeseen similarities between the two women. Both films are about characters that represent two different physical bodies, but are about the dualistic identity of the self. The problem with Magnolia is that the connections between these two people are too slim to be considered deep. Children of television are already considered prime candidates for abuse from parents and an adult life to be filled with problems and addictions. Magnolia banks on the fact that since these characters are whiz kids it will lead to belief there is a true connection, but there has to be numerous people in the Los Angeles area with a similar general connection. Showbiz breeds failures at all ages. The only major evidence of a metaphysical connection happens with the raining of the frogs.

Then there are the two fathers in peril who suffer over past mistakes. One is the host of a game show and the other is a television producer. Both men deal with life threatening illnesses. Being at the end of their lives, their chance for salvation seems to lie in making good with the children they once abused. The producer has a son who has disassociated himself from him because he left the family entangled in pain and misery. Then the TV host is considered the perpetrator of sexual abuse against his daughter that has sent her into an adulthood of drug addiction. The film sets up the story so both fathers will get a chance to meet their past head on. It happens with the producer who gets to meet his son while on his death bed but it doesn't happen to the TV host. He drives away his wife because of an admitted affair and it is his wife who is able to find resolution with her daughter. He is left alone to attempt a suicide that is divinely interrupted. Again the purposeful similarities between stories turn out to only be semi-coincidental. Certainly both stories were meant to mirror each other like the whiz kids, but the similarities aren't the kind that has anything to do with metaphysics. They only deal with the qualities of an intricate drama.

If the question is asked whether Magnolia even has a sincere interest in metaphysics, I think the information in the film supports it. Already taking into account the prologue, there are the numerous signs of 82 everywhere to signal the raining of the frogs. The signals are so entrenched within the film that re-viewings can always lead to new discoveries of it in the background. Then there is the scene that has all the actors singing along together to an Amee Mann song. The metaphysical connection is that they all do it privately but at the same time and for similar reasons. Other clues and markers are spread throughout the film. Dramatic films add elements to deepen the story, but Magnolia has so much of itself dedicated to metaphysics that the fact the film does little to show it is disheartening. The only summation of Magnolia is that it is a watered down story of its theme.

III – The Nature of Drama

Metaphysics dealt with the themes of the film, but a lot of the praise for Magnolia came from the dramatic prowess Anderson showed. He had already defined himself as an excellent writer of ensemble pieces with Boogie Nights. While that film was not perfect, a lot of the praise was justified. Boogie Nights proved Anderson could take a multi-character drama and make it satisfactory on all levels of human interest. The greatness about the film is that it made all the characters poignant without making their characterization overblown. All the stories came to an end but there was variety to what happened and how meaningful their resolutions were to the main story. Some characters had small happy moments while others met sad fates. The point is that the writing kept all the characters in check. The saddest and most heartfelt ending came in the main story.

Magnolia is considerably sadder than Boogie Nights, but Anderson paints the characterization of all the characters to have momentous moments by the end. The film defends its decision that a raining of the frogs is itself a momentous event, but the film makes general mistakes by having minor characters doing things like make suicide attempts (Julianne Moore's) and have other revelations of grandness that seemed reserved for the major characters. Anderson understands the importance each character is striving for is their own humanity, but he weakens the strengths the story by having so many characters have so many revelations. Characters portrayed by Philip Seymour Hoffmann and a few others are truly minor characters in that they do assist the others to come to their point, but Anderson still throws a blanket over the entire story and allows for a wave of revelations to hit one after the other. Each ending reflects the other one way too much.

The problem with the wave of sad endings is that Anderson doesn't fully understand Miller's points about tragedy. The modern idea is that tragedy isn't rooted in pessimism.  The general interpretation of this is that it all the stories don't end in murders and deaths, but the full idea is that tragedies also encompass beautiful and even lovely moments. The idea of tragedy as the highest form of drama doesn't exist because the stories are the bleakest, but because the stories ask the greatest questions. This isn't to say tragedy can encompass beauty the way a comedy does, but in its objectification of life it does have to take into account all strands and feelings of life that are important to a story. The purpose is to give the most whole interpretation of the character meaning and existence in life.

Out of this comes the problem that there is a lack of variety in the characters and their problems. The film tried purposely to have characters mirror each other for the metaphysical perspective, but on the grounds of my earlier argument, the problem becomes that the film doesn't encapsulate life the way Miller argued tragedy should. The film grounds itself with a few tones and subjects, all of which are sad. Kieslowski made a very similar film to Magnolia in The Decalogue. It was ten stories that were dramatic interpretations of the Ten Commandments. Even though some commandments have resemblances to others, Kieslowski did a lot of good to make all the stories very different from each other. Magnolia doesn't have the time to differentiate the stories like The Decalogue does, but characters that aren't meant to mirror each other have similar problems in life. Problem wise, the majority of the characters deal with addiction.  Julianne Moore is a drug addict in much the same way Melora Walters is. They are different people with different stories, but both stories follow a general drug addiction outline. Because Moore's character got a quarter of the time, it felt like the story descended into repetition. 

Continuing the question on the subject of tragedy, the next question has to do with how modern Magnolia truly is. The film is really done to a mode of tragedy so classical it could be argued as irrelevant. The characters begin the film on a march to their fate. Their identities and problems are summed up in mere moments. The time after the introduction and before the final resolutions is dramatic realization of their character traits. That isn't a compliment because most of the characters do not develop over the story. They encounter new situations and deal with different problems, but their makeup is essentially the same until the end. The only character who does begin at one point and evolves to another because of dramatic arc is Tom Cruise's. His progression throughout the film is the erosion of a superficial confidence that turns into a desperate need for his father. The majority of the other characters go into the end pretty much as they began. Greek tragedy believed this style to be important. That style does have its place, but it is a classical definition of drama. A film like Road to Perdition had a similar style of story and it worked better because the film wanted to exhibit a classical look and structure.

The combination and influx of an old structure into a new story makes for a film that looks and feel different. Magnolia fits the bill of that department fine, but it still lags in other departments of character and structural concerns. The elements of Greek tragedy still have their place for consideration, but it fits a mold of story that has become a relic today. The purpose of all dramas is to progress to be able reflect the nuances and signs of their respective times. The Decalogue does that fine for incorporating new structures and character nuances to make its perspective of the Ten Commandments relevant today. Magnolia does make a biblical connection with the raining of the frogs, but we do not associate the event with anything else but the Bible. The Ten Commandments are still very much a reality today with how morality is questioned. The only topicality of the raining of the frogs is that it was reported a few times in the last century in the back end of a newspaper. That's exactly where Anderson got the idea from. It's a flimsy idea.

To briefly debate the relevancy of tragedy in the context of Magnolia, I believe it is there and is an important idea to be based on when questioning a film. Tragedy does have its beginning in theater and has seen the large majority of its development on stage, but tragedy has grown to become an important idea of art in general. It now exists within the confines of other arts from different performance based ones to even film. Other filmmakers have tried to film their interpretations of tragedy on screen. I will not deduce Magnolia by doing a film to play comparison, but I will deduce the film by looking at tragedy from its greater moral importance.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Alexandro on January 08, 2008, 06:16:17 PM
I gotta hand it to you. Certainly you like to stirr up the conversation. This article is well written, but it seems to me youkeep ignoring one basic reality about filmmakers and artists in general: they are not critics, they don't start with an idea for a screenplay and weight it down against the context and history of what came before. I seriously, seriously doubt PTA took Greek tragedy or anything you mention into consideration with Magnolia. I would say that about Kieslowski too. Any reference he made to the Decalogue or Veronique had more to do with intricate similarities on subject matter than an intentional wink to it. Perhaps the fact that he didn't do that validates your argument, but I wouldn't fault him or the movie for not achieving something they weren't trying to achieve.

Magnolia is not a perfect movie. I know is the holy Grail in xixax, and i love it deeply, but i recognize it's flaws. In my opinion they're way more grounded in simple things than what you suggest. It's a little overlong, and after the 2 hour mark it drags for a while. Sometimes it's a little too much. But in it's excesses lies it's charm. As an audience, I might not know exactly where this film is autobiographical, but nevertheless I can feel it. The energy and emotion is too powerfull, and that's the real triumph of it. Great movies are not necessarily perfect.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Gold Trumpet on January 08, 2008, 06:48:48 PM
Quote from: Alexandro on January 08, 2008, 06:16:17 PM
I gotta hand it to you. Certainly you like to stirr up the conversation. This article is well written, but it seems to me youkeep ignoring one basic reality about filmmakers and artists in general: they are not critics, they don't start with an idea for a screenplay and weight it down against the context and history of what came before. I seriously, seriously doubt PTA took Greek tragedy or anything you mention into consideration with Magnolia.

It doesn't matter if PTA had intended to intentionally reference Kieslowski or Greek tragedy. The artist does many things they are not aware of with their choices. This is understood. It is also understood that the critic writes about the relationship of a work with other works. It may not have been the artist's original intention to do this or that, but the critic can make a good argument to show that the such a work does deserve to be compared against other works or artists. It is his duty to make his argument convincing. His work shouldn't be beholden to artist's intention. Art is an open work.

Quote from: Alexandro on January 08, 2008, 06:16:17 PM
Perhaps the fact that he didn't do that validates your argument, but I wouldn't fault him or the movie for not achieving something they weren't trying to achieve.

With what I said up above, ask yourself how limited every film would be if they were to be judged only according to artist's intention. The fact is that criticism is a literature and an art and requires creativity.

Quote from: Alexandro on January 08, 2008, 06:16:17 PM
Magnolia is not a perfect movie. I know is the holy Grail in xixax, and i love it deeply, but i recognize it's flaws. In my opinion they're way more grounded in simple things than what you suggest. It's a little overlong, and after the 2 hour mark it drags for a while. Sometimes it's a little too much. But in it's excesses lies it's charm. As an audience, I might not know exactly where this film is autobiographical, but nevertheless I can feel it. The energy and emotion is too powerfull, and that's the real triumph of it. Great movies are not necessarily perfect.

If you disagree with what I say, then say what you disagree with. Take argument with my ideas. If you believe I am out of touch with my criticism, I don't believe there is much use to the everyman approach you suggest in which to criticize the film. Essays aren't meant to be basic reviews. They are illustrations of ideas that reflect the author's thoughts and personality.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: hedwig on January 08, 2008, 08:57:18 PM
excellent stuff GT. i've read the essay and thought about your points. it was fun to read, i enjoy reading thoughtful criticisms of my favorite films almost as much as i love to read thoughtful praises. kudos.

it's your assessment of the whiz kid connection that most succinctly encapsulates why i disagree with you. you've limited your own perception of the connections between stanley and donnie to their abuse from parents and the failure predetermined for these two people by their forced involvement in showbiz during childhood. but what about donnie's comment about confusing children with angels? what about stanley pissing his pants and unleashing a shakey fuck-you speech to the people who exploit his genius for their amusement? these moments are crucial and they mean something. connections are deepened as the movie reveals each characters' personal crises. i would say the same line of thought applies to your assertion that the film restricts itself by focusing so narrowly on addiction. magnolia is a tapestry of human emotion and struggle, addiction is an essential thread but there are others. the problem lies not in the film's limitations but in your refusal to appreciate its thematic breadth.

Quote from: The Gold Trumpet on January 07, 2008, 07:28:16 PM
Dramatic films add elements to deepen the story, but Magnolia has so much of itself dedicated to metaphysics that the fact the film does little to show it is disheartening. The only summation of Magnolia is that it is a watered down story of its theme.

perhaps your insistence to view the film in a metaphysical framework prevents you from appreciating its themes beyond their fulfilment of metaphysical connection. also, i doubt the 82s prove the film has metaphysical intentions. that would be pretty shallow.. :yabbse-undecided:

Quote from: The Gold Trumpet on January 07, 2008, 07:28:16 PM
The problem with the wave of sad endings is that Anderson doesn't fully understand Miller's points about tragedy. The modern idea is that tragedy isn't rooted in pessimism.  The general interpretation of this is that it all the stories don't end in murders and deaths, but the full idea is that tragedies also encompass beautiful and even lovely moments. The idea of tragedy as the highest form of drama doesn't exist because the stories are the bleakest, but because the stories ask the greatest questions. This isn't to say tragedy can encompass beauty the way a comedy does, but in its objectification of life it does have to take into account all strands and feelings of life that are important to a story. The purpose is to give the most whole interpretation of the character meaning and existence in life.

Magnolia's objectification of life does not limit itself to a single feeling. it has never struck me as pessimistic. the ending is certainly not a "bleak" statement in any way. as the film reaches its finish, jim kurring speaks about forgiving people and says that the ultimate challenge in life is to discern right from wrong and what can be forgiven. this is the last thing we hear before jim visits claudia and the film ends. you wrote that the idea of tragedy as the highest form of drama asks the greatest questions and i think Magnolia is a fine example of that. this is a film rooted in moral questioning.

the tragedy of magnolia does indeed encompass beautiful and lovely moments. the movie ENDS on a beautiful and lovely moment! claudia has been drug-fucked and brimming with tears in almost every scene but in the end, this beacon of light and innocence arrives to comfort her.. she looks at the audience and smiles. one of the most tortured characters punctuates the story with a glimmer of hope. this doesn't seem dull after the storm of sad events leading up to it because the context heightens the complexity and beauty of claudia's smile.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Gold Trumpet on January 09, 2008, 05:31:46 PM
Quote from: Hedwig on January 08, 2008, 08:57:18 PM
excellent stuff GT. i've read the essay and thought about your points. it was fun to read, i enjoy reading thoughtful criticisms of my favorite films almost as much as i love to read thoughtful praises. kudos.

Thank you. I must say I am grateful for your post.

Quote from: Hedwig on January 08, 2008, 08:57:18 PM
it's your assessment of the whiz kid connection that most succinctly encapsulates why i disagree with you. you've limited your own perception of the connections between stanley and donnie to their abuse from parents and the failure predetermined for these two people by their forced involvement in showbiz during childhood. but what about donnie's comment about confusing children with angels? what about stanley pissing his pants and unleashing a shakey fuck-you speech to the people who exploit his genius for their amusement? these moments are crucial and they mean something. connections are deepened as the movie reveals each characters' personal crises.

Those moments do mean something. As fas as metaphysical connection is concerned, it shows two people with similarities in their background coming to a breaking point at the same time. The point about metaphysics is that it is rooted in the deepest similarities and connections. When the Double Life of Veronique started making connections between the two Veroniques, it started with their similar occupation and ailment. It continued on to personal connections that went beyond the terrain of their job. Magnolia focuses on the similarities two whiz kids would have with their profession. It doesn't go beyond that. It associates all their problems with the ones you would have assume children of television would have. That isn't a truly deep connection, but a large problem that plagues many. As you said, the true moments is when you see them start to blow up and make suspicious remarks, but these incidents aren't enough to be thorougly convincing of a deeper connection overall.

Quote from: Hedwig on January 08, 2008, 08:57:18 PM
i would say the same line of thought applies to your assertion that the film restricts itself by focusing so narrowly on addiction. magnolia is a tapestry of human emotion and struggle, addiction is an essential thread but there are others. the problem lies not in the film's limitations but in your refusal to appreciate its thematic breadth.

I don't think so. I said addiction was the major theme, but I never implied it was the only one. If the film wants to reward itself with multiplicity in looking at different facets of human struggle, it would realize the numerous strands of addiction were already too many. Certain storylines began to resemble each other and make the audience question the relevancy their relevancy. Moore's story certainly takes on a look of Walter's.

Plus, the film really has three major storylines that are meant to counter their twin story. You have the two fathers dealing with past mistakes and then their children dealing with assorted problems. Then you have the genius whiz kids old and young dealing with their dilemmas. Then there are smaller stories with John C. Reilly's character but the film doesn't seem to me to predicate itself on wide breath. It has three large stories, but I do believe they mean to resemble each other and delve into a few human subjects instead of many.

The Decalogue prided itself on multiplicity. Magnolia has the wide storytelling of a film like Decalogue, but the personal closeness of the characters are meant to mirror each other the way it was done in The Double Life of Veronique. One of my major points is that an extensive storyline involving numerous stories doesn't work well to examine personal connections. The film would have done better to either reduce the numerous characters or re-align their meaning to not resemble each other, but to speak about the identity of Los Angeles or a greater subject. The Decalogue kept its stories in check because they were under the umbrella of a larger subject with the Ten Commandments.

Quote from: Hedwig on January 08, 2008, 08:57:18 PM
perhaps your insistence to view the film in a metaphysical framework prevents you from appreciating its themes beyond their fulfilment of metaphysical connection. also, i doubt the 82s prove the film has metaphysical intentions. that would be pretty shallow.. :yabbse-undecided:

I completely believe the film is metaphysical. I don't see how I'm making a new point. I already throught it was understood. It's not a big deal to say the film takes after Short Cuts, but look at that film. It deals with themes in Kieslowski's filmography. Just because Magnolia doesn't look completely like The Double Life of Veronique or The Deacalogue does not mean it places. Magnolia really resembles a film like Love Stories (1997) by Jerzy Stuhr, but that film was meant to honor Kieslowski. Films about metaphysics come in all shapes and sizes. It's just that they all are to be questioned against the giants of the subject, Decalogue and Double Life.


Quote from: Hedwig on January 08, 2008, 08:57:18 PM
Magnolia's objectification of life does not limit itself to a single feeling. it has never struck me as pessimistic. the ending is certainly not a "bleak" statement in any way. as the film reaches its finish, jim kurring speaks about forgiving people and says that the ultimate challenge in life is to discern right from wrong and what can be forgiven. this is the last thing we hear before jim visits claudia and the film ends. you wrote that the idea of tragedy as the highest form of drama asks the greatest questions and i think Magnolia is a fine example of that. this is a film rooted in moral questioning.

the tragedy of magnolia does indeed encompass beautiful and lovely moments. the movie ENDS on a beautiful and lovely moment! claudia has been drug-fucked and brimming with tears in almost every scene but in the end, this beacon of light and innocence arrives to comfort her.. she looks at the audience and smiles. one of the most tortured characters punctuates the story with a glimmer of hope. this doesn't seem dull after the storm of sad events leading up to it because the context heightens the complexity and beauty of claudia's smile.

The point I'm trying to make is that Magnolia follows a realism tract with the stories. Since it does take place over the course of 24 hours it sorta has to. The film has to gage it's characters at their most depressive levels and then find a way to bring it around with the tranquility or other things they feel after the raining of the frogs. My point about the film being one note is because of that. Tortured souls tend to resemble each other.

If the film wanted multiplicity it would have looked at the characters over time up until the raining of the frogs. Plays that are tragedies and have to follow a realistic tract offer better context and nuance to the characters. They understand the importance of time and how it speaks to the development of a character. This film takes numerous characters and tries to gage them all within both a short time frame and with limited amount of time to really make them meaningful. I understand a few examples of hope and what not bleed into the story by the end, but imagine how much more nuance and perspective could have been attained if the film spread out the stories over time or even eliminated some of them.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Alexandro on January 09, 2008, 06:59:06 PM
Quote from: The Gold Trumpet on January 08, 2008, 06:48:48 PM
Quote from: Alexandro on January 08, 2008, 06:16:17 PM
I gotta hand it to you. Certainly you like to stirr up the conversation. This article is well written, but it seems to me youkeep ignoring one basic reality about filmmakers and artists in general: they are not critics, they don't start with an idea for a screenplay and weight it down against the context and history of what came before. I seriously, seriously doubt PTA took Greek tragedy or anything you mention into consideration with Magnolia.

It doesn't matter if PTA had intended to intentionally reference Kieslowski or Greek tragedy. The artist does many things they are not aware of with their choices. This is understood. It is also understood that the critic writes about the relationship of a work with other works. It may not have been the artist's original intention to do this or that, but the critic can make a good argument to show that the such a work does deserve to be compared against other works or artists. It is his duty to make his argument convincing. His work shouldn't be beholden to artist's intention. Art is an open work.

Quote from: Alexandro on January 08, 2008, 06:16:17 PM
Perhaps the fact that he didn't do that validates your argument, but I wouldn't fault him or the movie for not achieving something they weren't trying to achieve.

With what I said up above, ask yourself how limited every film would be if they were to be judged only according to artist's intention. The fact is that criticism is a literature and an art and requires creativity.

Quote from: Alexandro on January 08, 2008, 06:16:17 PM
Magnolia is not a perfect movie. I know is the holy Grail in xixax, and i love it deeply, but i recognize it's flaws. In my opinion they're way more grounded in simple things than what you suggest. It's a little overlong, and after the 2 hour mark it drags for a while. Sometimes it's a little too much. But in it's excesses lies it's charm. As an audience, I might not know exactly where this film is autobiographical, but nevertheless I can feel it. The energy and emotion is too powerfull, and that's the real triumph of it. Great movies are not necessarily perfect.

If you disagree with what I say, then say what you disagree with. Take argument with my ideas. If you believe I am out of touch with my criticism, I don't believe there is much use to the everyman approach you suggest in which to criticize the film. Essays aren't meant to be basic reviews. They are illustrations of ideas that reflect the author's thoughts and personality.

I dont disagree with your points and arguments about why Magnolia fails to succesfully play with the themes in other films like the Kieslowski ones, or fails to go to the same depth as the great greek tragedies. I agree with you on that to the extent my knowlegde on both of those subjects permist me. I enjoy your articles and I like reflections on movies that are worth them. I disagree with you on one single point: your article is subtitled "why magnolia isn't a great film". Not being satisfactory as a tragedy, not being satisfactory as metaphysics film, not getting there where Kieslowski was better and more self conscious of it (and Im not sure I could say he was a "better" artist than anyone, let alone Altman), to me, are not reasons enough for me to think Magnolia is not a great film. The comparisons are very interesting though, but why not being something automatically makes a film or a piece of art less "good" is something you insist on over and over, but it's your style and it's ok, I just don't agree with a judgement about the greatness of Magnolia on that basis. It is not perfect, as I said before, but it's still great, and I won't go and find the reasons in past filmmakers or other artistic expressions for that, but I'm not really a critic also.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Gold Trumpet on January 09, 2008, 08:05:35 PM
Quote from: Alexandro on January 09, 2008, 06:59:06 PM
I dont disagree with your points and arguments about why Magnolia fails to succesfully play with the themes in other films like the Kieslowski ones, or fails to go to the same depth as the great greek tragedies. I agree with you on that to the extent my knowlegde on both of those subjects permist me. I enjoy your articles and I like reflections on movies that are worth them. I disagree with you on one single point: your article is subtitled "why magnolia isn't a great film". Not being satisfactory as a tragedy, not being satisfactory as metaphysics film, not getting there where Kieslowski was better and more self conscious of it (and Im not sure I could say he was a "better" artist than anyone, let alone Altman), to me, are not reasons enough for me to think Magnolia is not a great film.

I think they are good enough reasons. I'm not just making my case by saying how Magnolia doesn't compare to the best of Kieslowski, but I'm making my points about how doesn't work as a metaphysical or tragic film in general. You may take issue with that still, but I believe the film is a metaphysical work. Thus I direct the majority of my criticisms to the subject. As I outline in my essay, the ideas of metaphysics in the film seem to have more to do with heightened dramatics than anything. To back that up, I take stances on dramatic issues within the film.

I said the essay didn't have the compass to rectify the whole film. I had to deal with elements of the film I believed were crucial to the film's identity. My comparisons of Magnolia with other works and structures isn't me extending the film outside of its boundaries, but detailing my ideas of what the film is. I think a lot of our disagreement is based on the fact we look at the film as two different things.

Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Alexandro on January 10, 2008, 09:54:04 AM
Yes, we see things differently. Still, these kind of articles are always interesting to read and digest. If any, they make the film itself even more interesting than before. What I would like to see is you making a case for a film that's been labelled as uninteresting and expendable, deffending it as something more. And if would be great if to do that, you wouldn't have to compare other films unfavorably to it, hence putting down someone else's work. Sometimes critics find this necessary for some reason. Finding praise for certain films in their trashing of others. But that's kind of easy (I know I'm going off topic with this), but it reminds me of this very obnoxious french girl I knew who couldn't find the strength in her to say one thing about the world or people she knew without saying something negative about something else. It became harder and harder to take her seriously.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Gold Trumpet on January 10, 2008, 01:10:33 PM
Quote from: Alexandro on January 10, 2008, 09:54:04 AM
Yes, we see things differently. Still, these kind of articles are always interesting to read and digest. If any, they make the film itself even more interesting than before. What I would like to see is you making a case for a film that's been labelled as uninteresting and expendable, deffending it as something more. And if would be great if to do that, you wouldn't have to compare other films unfavorably to it, hence putting down someone else's work. Sometimes critics find this necessary for some reason. Finding praise for certain films in their trashing of others. But that's kind of easy (I know I'm going off topic with this), but it reminds me of this very obnoxious french girl I knew who couldn't find the strength in her to say one thing about the world or people she knew without saying something negative about something else. It became harder and harder to take her seriously.

It's hard not to use the negative aspects of other films to emphasize the positives of another. Sometimes I almost think it is necessary to do, but the reason isn't out of arrogance. Using other films as comparisons becomes a good point of reference and almost every critic does it. The reason is because criticism deals with the intangibles of an ambigious subject and the reader can become easily lost. Using other films as examples helps keep the reader following the author's points better.

I could do essays on filmmakers and films that go unnoticed. I believe John Stockwell could be our Charles Dickens, a forceful genius of little sophistication. I think the Joel Schumacher film Tigerland is one of the best of the decade. I'm sure there are a few others as well. I never don't have ambitions to write about these subjects. I really do, but I start writing about a lot of subjects. It's always a struggle to keep the writing of one interesting all the way through.

Your French friend could be obnoxious. I'm not a big fan of discussing films personally. In my day to day conversations, I sound as simple minded as most people when the subject of a movie comes up. I don't think its important or useful to talk the way I do here to friends and other people I know. First, I'm not good with elaborating on my opinion because it takes me time to think about my positions. Second, it reeks of over confidence and arrogance to take on a subject seriously in the middle of a light conversation. That's why writing is ideal to me. I don't know. Like you, I got off subject. Your words just reminded me of that.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Pozer on January 11, 2008, 12:19:32 PM
in your defense, i havnt read any of this (and i plan to) but there is no doubt that you are going to DESPISE There Will Be Blood.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Gold Trumpet on January 11, 2008, 12:57:06 PM
Quote from: pozer on January 11, 2008, 12:19:32 PM
in your defense, i havnt read any of this (and i plan to) but there is no doubt that you are going to DESPISE There Will Be Blood.

Don't make that much of the my dissent against Magnolia. It is the one film of PTA's I don't like. I've softened on my appreciation of PDL, but PTA is still one of my favorite filmmakers. I and friends of mine have little doubt I'll like There Will be Blood. I already bought and hung up the poster.

Of course, I could be wrong. I just really really really hope not.
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Pozer on January 11, 2008, 03:02:48 PM
Quote from: The Gold Trumpet on January 11, 2008, 12:57:06 PM
I and friends of mine have little doubt I'll like There Will be Blood...

Of course, I could be wrong. I just really really really hope not.

wait, youre hoping you DONT like it?
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Gold Trumpet on January 11, 2008, 03:12:00 PM
Quote from: pozer on January 11, 2008, 03:02:48 PM
Quote from: The Gold Trumpet on January 11, 2008, 12:57:06 PM
I and friends of mine have little doubt I'll like There Will be Blood...

Of course, I could be wrong. I just really really really hope not.

wait, youre hoping you DONT like it?

no...
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Neil on January 11, 2009, 03:17:04 PM
I read this whole thread rather quickly and tried to take in as much as i could. i just had a quick queston. maybe I'm quoting you incorrectly, however, you said that without the context of characters' past, you can't consider this a good tragedy?

although I'm not well versed in these other films you speak of. i do understand the idea of metaphysics in film. if you believe i need to see these movies in order to have an opinion, then i guess stop reading here.

[/quote]
I think they are good enough reasons. I'm not just making my case by saying how Magnolia doesn't compare to the best of Kieslowski, but I'm making my points about how doesn't work as a metaphysical or tragic film in general. You may take issue with that still, but I believe the film is a metaphysical work. Thus I direct the majority of my criticisms to the subject. As I outline in my essay, the ideas of metaphysics in the film seem to have more to do with heightened dramatics than anything. To back that up, I take stances on dramatic issues within the film.


just want to clear this up.  had magnolia taken longer than a 24 hr timeline, it would have worked? i don't really want to start typing a reply if I've misinterpreted you. so, I'm ready to talk about this again. if you are.

I said the essay didn't have the compass to rectify the whole film. I had to deal with elements of the film I believed were crucial to the film's identity. My comparisons of Magnolia with other works and structures isn't me extending the film outside of its boundaries, but detailing my ideas of what the film is. I think a lot of our disagreement is based on the fact we look at the film as two different things.
[/quote]
Title: Re: False Idol
Post by: Gold Trumpet on December 05, 2009, 03:11:06 PM
I just noticed this reply so I'll answer it quickly: No. The film going longer than 24 hrs would not have much variation on the results of the film.