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The Artist - quick review

post #1 of 6
Thread Starter 
What's this, a silent film about the transitional period of silent flms turning into the talkies? The ironic meta-ness of this film, "The Artist" is quite charming, and uses quite a few cinematic nuggets from the film era of the late 1920s to tell the story of George Valentin (Jean Dujardin), star of many silent films, and Peppy Miller (Berenice Bejo), a up-and-coming dancing starlet, who become somewhat intertwined in the business of making movies as George's star descents and Peppy's star ascents. Jujardin and Bejo have nice on-screen chemistry, and Valentin's dog is great.

The film has lot going for it, though the middle act is dramatically a bummer, purposefully so, otherwise, with such a light touch in tone and style, the film more than makes up for it with such a faithful use of the silent film genre to tell its tale. One theme that resonated with me is when it examines, broadly, the notion of whether or not the meaning of art comes from the message or the medium, or a confluence of both.

I give it 3.5 stars, or a grade of B+.
post #2 of 6
Just saw this last night and it is the best experience I've had at a movie theater in a long time. Thoroughly enjoyable, and very well done. Hopefully this will do for silent films what Avatar did for 3D....
post #3 of 6

This one strikes me as being too pretentious even for the Oscars.

post #4 of 6

Loved this film!!!!

 

I have seen all the nominees except for EXTREMELY
LOUD and MIDNIGHT IN PARIS.

 

Thus far, THE ARTIST is my pick for Best Picture. 

 

To be able to pull off the impossible of making a B&W

silent film in this era, that is incredibly entertaining, is

quite an accomplishment.

post #5 of 6
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lord Dalek View Post

This one strikes me as being too pretentious even for the Oscars.



There you go...

 

I thought it was a fine film, but to win BP is such a pretentious act by the Academy and the film industry.

 

post #6 of 6
I loved it and I'm glad it won best picture. I went with my mom & my sister and my sister confessed at the end of the film that she had worried the film was going to drag due to the lack of dialogue (I don't think she's ever seen a silent movie before). She was pleasantly surprised. I believe this was also a digital projection- a first for me. It seemed fine, except that there was a distracting line that went down the middle of the screen for the entire duration of the movie. I don't know if that was a defect in the screen itself or a defect in the image (I suspect it was the screen).

I saw Hugo the following week, and I loved that as well (it's actually the first 3D movie I've seen since Spacehunter back in the '80s!). That film would have also been deserving of a Best Picture win.
Too bad neither film really seemed to set the box office on fire.
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