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Author
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Topic: The Dancer Upstairs
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Gerard S. Cohen
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 975
From: Forest Hills, NY, USA
Registered: Sep 2001
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posted 05-09-2003 09:57 PM
Screened opening night, 5/9/03 at the Kew Gardens Theatre in an attractive theatre lined with pleated red drapery, and a fluted procenium. But the auditorium is so much wider than deep, that the best seating is only about a dozen seats in the center of the last row.
Clean bright image and adequate sound, but grease-pencil markings were visible on the green bands of the trailers. The policy trailer could use a good cleaning.
The feature is a detective/suspense story about a pair of civil police attempting to track down a revolutionary terrorist ringleader in a South American country, parallel to the Shining Path movement in Peru. Conflicts with political and military authorities, and sexy women complicate the search.
Noteworthy: Bob Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower" and a song about time on the soundtrack, and references to "The Battle of Algiers" video.
I was annoyed with the main production titles shown by fading, one-by-one against a black screen at the beginning of the film, which was tedious and got the film off to a slow start, that never really accellerated.
This was John Malkovich's first feature film as director. The script was written by the author of the novel, a writer improbably named Shakespeare. My wife put her finger on the problem by saying a novelist should not attempt to script a film of his book, since the style and pacing of the two forms are entirely different. I agree, despite D.W. Griffith's claim that he learned to film by studying the novels of Charles Dickens, and Sergie Eisenstein's claim that he learned to edit by studying the films of Griffith.
The film moves very slowly despite interrupting acts of terrorism Suspense/detective/political films are not my favorite genre, and this one is not one I'll remember for very long.
Although all the actors have Spanish or Indian languages as their native ones, they spoke English in the film, except for brief dialog moments in the Indian tongue, when English sub-titles were provided. The cast and Equadorian crew titles were scrolled at the end, consisting entirely of Spanish and Indian names. The audience, politely silent throughout the 2':23" show, filed out without a word. [ 05-10-2003, 09:11 AM: Message edited by: Gerard S. Cohen ]
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