4 reviews
I have seen this movie on Karlovy Vary IFF and was surprised by the enthusiasm of a director and actors (and all film crew too, of course) doing this film. At first, I couldn't find out, what is this all about, like many other people in the cinema (I think that is why so many of them left during the screening). But then I realized, that it is all about improvisation and evolving a simple idea into a short, but so interesting story. Watching the actors was astonishing. Couple in a park - talk and argue ... Their situation is so special and simple too. Everything is filmed on camera, crew debating about purpose too. This mix of shots will thrill you.
This would be just one part of a project. Not bad, but nothing unusual. Just director and actors playing on the ground, but ...
... after almost 30 years, the crew meet again, continuing in the story. The people get old and changed, and so the plot. Entangled live of an actor and character. So natural. Like watching two ordinary people talking about unusual situation.
This film is not for all kind of audience. It's really interesting for those, who can enjoy the improvisation of actors and idea of continuing on work after so many years. I hope, that this film will continue again after 10 or 20 years, as a director and actors promised on festival. How does it finish? Nobody knows.
This would be just one part of a project. Not bad, but nothing unusual. Just director and actors playing on the ground, but ...
... after almost 30 years, the crew meet again, continuing in the story. The people get old and changed, and so the plot. Entangled live of an actor and character. So natural. Like watching two ordinary people talking about unusual situation.
This film is not for all kind of audience. It's really interesting for those, who can enjoy the improvisation of actors and idea of continuing on work after so many years. I hope, that this film will continue again after 10 or 20 years, as a director and actors promised on festival. How does it finish? Nobody knows.
I can't call it one of the most pointless sequels of all time, because I'm not sure what the point was.
But I do think it was disappointing compared to the first, which is a little more playful and fun, and had the distinction of being ahead of its time when it came to all the confusing meta stuff.
This one, it's like the film disappears too far up its own butt, whereas the first one almost disappeared too far up its own butt, holding back from going too far to the point where it became frustrating.
If that makes sense?
Doesn't matter if it doesn't, really, because neither does this movie.
But I do think it was disappointing compared to the first, which is a little more playful and fun, and had the distinction of being ahead of its time when it came to all the confusing meta stuff.
This one, it's like the film disappears too far up its own butt, whereas the first one almost disappeared too far up its own butt, holding back from going too far to the point where it became frustrating.
If that makes sense?
Doesn't matter if it doesn't, really, because neither does this movie.
- Jeremy_Urquhart
- Jul 1, 2022
- Permalink
Well definitely watch version 1 first, if you've stumbled here somehow beforehand. Read nothing, other than expect the experimental nature from '68.
Now as for Part Deux and a Half....
Trying to pull the string back through the labyrinth after 35 years has its difficulties. Especially as we already know that there was no Minotaur and Daedalus was more of a PhilosoPrankster.
These days certainly, and even by 2005 there were Director's Commentaries and Behind the Scenes bonus sections...so some of the power is gone from the 'Plasm. But the return of Marcia Karp and the "Let's Do Psychodrama" this introduces the conflict that Greaves looks for.
It's the actors being forced into truer emotions than the soap opera words that Greaves lay out there. At this point the raw amateur/auteur vibe Greaves experimented so well with in Part 1 finally is found momentarily again. That was worth it for me, along with the other bonus bio info on Mr. Greaves himself.
The whole package, quite interesting. Scenes behind the actual (throwaway) scenes. It was fascinating that Audry Henningham doesn't recognize Marcia Karp, and Ada forgets she's playing Jamila. Is it like a master wanting to make a student film? The way Neil Young needed the raw Crazy Horse. To keep it simple and strange, a real shadow of the artificial. Who is moving who....and how?
Something about Greaves himself in both parts, he's got a sort blissful way of appearing in the moment, even if he's miles away.
Now as for Part Deux and a Half....
Trying to pull the string back through the labyrinth after 35 years has its difficulties. Especially as we already know that there was no Minotaur and Daedalus was more of a PhilosoPrankster.
These days certainly, and even by 2005 there were Director's Commentaries and Behind the Scenes bonus sections...so some of the power is gone from the 'Plasm. But the return of Marcia Karp and the "Let's Do Psychodrama" this introduces the conflict that Greaves looks for.
It's the actors being forced into truer emotions than the soap opera words that Greaves lay out there. At this point the raw amateur/auteur vibe Greaves experimented so well with in Part 1 finally is found momentarily again. That was worth it for me, along with the other bonus bio info on Mr. Greaves himself.
The whole package, quite interesting. Scenes behind the actual (throwaway) scenes. It was fascinating that Audry Henningham doesn't recognize Marcia Karp, and Ada forgets she's playing Jamila. Is it like a master wanting to make a student film? The way Neil Young needed the raw Crazy Horse. To keep it simple and strange, a real shadow of the artificial. Who is moving who....and how?
Something about Greaves himself in both parts, he's got a sort blissful way of appearing in the moment, even if he's miles away.
- ThurstonHunger
- Jul 31, 2022
- Permalink
- Polaris_DiB
- Jan 9, 2008
- Permalink