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David
Pure Phase
Joined: Tue Feb 15, 2005 7:33 am Posts: 34865 Location: Maryland
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The Sea of Trees
Quote: The Sea of Trees is a 2015 American drama mystery film directed by Gus Van Sant and written by Chris Sparling. The film stars Matthew McConaughey, Ken Watanabe, Naomi Watts, Katie Aselton, and Jordan Gavaris.
_________________1. The Lost City of Z - 2. A Cure for Wellness - 3. Phantom Thread - 4. T2 Trainspotting - 5. Detroit - 6. Good Time - 7. The Beguiled - 8. The Florida Project - 9. Logan and 10. Molly's Game
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Fri Aug 26, 2016 9:25 pm |
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David
Pure Phase
Joined: Tue Feb 15, 2005 7:33 am Posts: 34865 Location: Maryland
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Re: The Sea of Trees
American teacher Arthur (Matthew McConaughey) flies to Japan to end his life in the island nation's quote-unquote suicide forest. Just as he prepares to overdose, a Japanese man (Ken Watanabe) emerges from the trees, his clothes filthy and his wrists bleeding. Arthur agrees to delay his fatal plan to help the stranger find the trail, but both men realize they are lost, leaving them to endure the cold and navigate treacherous ground as they also reflect on what drew them to this foreboding place. For Arthur, the primary reason involves his intense, troubled relationship with his alcoholic wife (Naomi Watts). Gus Van Sant is one of my absolute favorite directors, but The Sea of Trees may be his worst film, unfortunately. He is as in control of aesthetic and mood as ever—the forest is an enigmatic and gorgeous location, alternately a deep, verdant dream realm and an eerie place of dense shadow and biting wind—and draws credible-if-overwrought performances from McConaughey and Watts, though Watanabe is hamstrung by a role too obviously designed to be exotic, inscrutable, and oh so wise. And this brings us to the film's chief problem: the screenplay by Buried writer Chris Sparling is uneven and at times simply abominable. To call it contrived is an understatement: there is obvious trouble when a slice-of-life grief drama leans on Rube Goldberg-style twists and turns, each more maudlin than the next and often requiring laborious remember-this-earlier-moment?/it-was-a-clue! explanation. The interplay of past and present is arbitrary and disorganized, the two prongs stunting the momentum of each other, and so many of the small details (the way certain lines are crafted, certain tensions introduced) ring false, defusing any potential emotional investment even as the music swells and totems of faux-import—mystical orchids, an unopened envelope—crowd the frame.
C
_________________1. The Lost City of Z - 2. A Cure for Wellness - 3. Phantom Thread - 4. T2 Trainspotting - 5. Detroit - 6. Good Time - 7. The Beguiled - 8. The Florida Project - 9. Logan and 10. Molly's Game
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Fri Aug 26, 2016 9:26 pm |
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David
Pure Phase
Joined: Tue Feb 15, 2005 7:33 am Posts: 34865 Location: Maryland
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Re: The Sea of Trees
My main issue with this movie: it ultimately turns on the idea Ghost Naomi Watts presents herself as a bloodied Japanese salaryman in order to mysteriously answer her widower's lingering questions ("yellow...winter," which I feel is a bit too evocative of a dog peeing in the snow, but I digress). And this just strikes me as bullshit. The bullshit factor is an infection which spreads through the entire movie's system, undermining scenic photography and decent acting.
I have other grievances and groans, too: for instance, the whole unnecessary, splashily morbid complication of, "She survived the dreaded surgery, but immediately dies after when her ambulance is wiped out by a semi!"
I love Gus Van Sant, but it disturbs me he did not see and fix the chief problems here. This to me is much worse than the frequently maligned Finding Forrester, where he just gave a nice, restrained, sentimental platform to Sean Connery.
_________________1. The Lost City of Z - 2. A Cure for Wellness - 3. Phantom Thread - 4. T2 Trainspotting - 5. Detroit - 6. Good Time - 7. The Beguiled - 8. The Florida Project - 9. Logan and 10. Molly's Game
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Sat Aug 27, 2016 12:01 am |
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Algren
now we know
Joined: Tue Oct 19, 2004 9:31 pm Posts: 67056
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Re: The Sea of Trees
I liked this. A man travels to Japan to kill himself, but he isn't ready. He just thinks he is because he's grieving and feeling guilt over the relationship with his wife before she died. I love how perfectly everything slots together by the end, and Matthew McConaughey, Naomi Watts, and Ken Watanabe give decent performances. I've no idea why this got trashed by critics. Ok, it's no masterpiece, but it's a nice and tidy film. I suspect it is something to do with critics disliking the pompous-sounding Gus Van Sant, and they haven't forgiven him for Psycho. B+
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Tue Oct 23, 2018 12:01 pm |
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