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Balthazar-5's profile image

Balthazar-5

Joined Mar 2000
Lifetime cinephile. Largely created and ran as Director, the Queen's Film Theatre, Belfast from 1969 until (early)retirement in 2004. Created and edited privately financed film magazine "Cinephile" 1971. Edited Ireland's then only film magazine, "film directions" from 1977-1987. Book: Fading Lights, Silver Screens - a history of the cinema in Belfast, 1985. Associate Editor: "Film Ireland" - 2006-2008.
Currently writing scripts, enjoying not having to deal with ignorant bureaucrats.
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Ratings990

Balthazar-5's rating
Une vie cachée
7.410
Une vie cachée
Un coeur pris au piège
7.79
Un coeur pris au piège
Les garçons et Guillaume, à table!
6.68
Les garçons et Guillaume, à table!
Calvary
7.47
Calvary
Une nuit à Casablanca
6.96
Une nuit à Casablanca
L'Intendant Sansho
8.310
L'Intendant Sansho
Les 8 Salopards
7.85
Les 8 Salopards
Old Enough
6.49
Old Enough
Girlfriends
7.28
Girlfriends
Knight of Cups
5.68
Knight of Cups
À la merveille
5.89
À la merveille
Une belle fin
7.48
Une belle fin
Lola
7.49
Lola
La Doublure
6.63
La Doublure
Ridicule
7.38
Ridicule
Magic in the Moonlight
6.58
Magic in the Moonlight
L'Impératrice rouge
7.510
L'Impératrice rouge
Le Dîner de cons
7.69
Le Dîner de cons
Interstellar
8.76
Interstellar
Signes
6.84
Signes
Sidewalk Stories
7.210
Sidewalk Stories
Miss Oyu
7.48
Miss Oyu
Christmas Special 2011
7.810
Christmas Special 2011
Le Loup de Wall Street
8.25
Le Loup de Wall Street
Bargain Hunt
6.18
Bargain Hunt

Lists1

  • Naissance d'une nation (1915)
    40 films to help you understand the art of the cinema...
    • 40 titles
    • Public
    • Modified Apr 13, 2018

Reviews111

Balthazar-5's rating
Knight of Cups

Knight of Cups

5.6
8
  • Sep 16, 2015
  • An enigma within and enigma (albeit a beautiful one).

    Let me start by saying that I regard Terrence Malick as the sole currently working director who can be spoken of with the same reverence as that for the great early masters of cinema – Welles, Chaplin, Hitchcock, Renoir (make your own list). Since 'The Tree of Life' - even since 'The New World', I have thought of him as the saviour of modern cinema from the slurry of bland naturalism.

    But the enormous stylistic advances in cinematic expression that have characterised his recent works have come at a price, and the price is clarity of vision. We do not necessarily need to *know* what his images represent, but we need to *feel* it. Occasionally in 'The Tree of Life', frequently in 'To the WONDER' and most of the time in 'Knight of Cups' most people would, I suspect, be at a loss to rationally explain the relevance of much of Malick's visual expression. (They don't always 'feel' right, either.)

    So (after three viewings) I offer my 'guide' to this enigmatic film. The 'story' (no story) of 'Knight of Cups' is that of a 'celebrity' Rick (Christian Bale) on the loose in Hollywood, who has lost his moral compass and lives a life of total debauchery drifting from one soulless sexual encounter to another in between failed relationships.

    This is represented in a kaleidoscopic torrent of imagery reminiscent of the works of Bruce Connor in the 1960s. Bale does the best he can with the central role of Rick, a 'celebrity' in Hollywood, but, like Sean Penn in 'The Tree of Life', he has really drawn the short straw, as he, like Ben Affleck, Penn and Richard Gere before him tries to wordlessly express his response to ambiguous emotional and moral situations.

    Malick, to his credit, tells us what the film is about in an opening voice-over, which recounts a story ('Hymn of the Pearl') from Acts of Thomas in the Apocrypha. A king sends his son to search for a pearl in a foreign land. The pearl is to be found in the sea, protected by a hissing serpent, but the prince is seduced by the inhabitants of the foreign country and given a sleeping draft. After he awakes, he has forgotten not only what he came for, but even that he is a prince.

    Much of the first half of the film memorably (but not graphically) depicts the life of total decadence that Rick finds in Tinseltown. But this is interspersed with encounters – real or imagined, present or past – with people from his former life – wife, brother, father.

    The term 'emotional roller coaster' is often inappropriately used, but here it is very precisely apt, as one has the sense of Rick being propelled down paths he'd rather not take by external forces over which he has lost control. But, for me, at least, this section is too long and suffers from overkill, in the 'when you've seen one, you've seen 'em all' sense.

    The rest of the film follows Rick in his attempts to make sense of his life and find 'the pearl', and, to be fair, the film does give the sense of an inexorable move in this direction which aids dramatic tension and gives clarity in some measure. As in 'To the WONDER', with the story of the crisis of faith of the priest, here also there are tangential sections in which compassion is seen as the alter ego of passion, and the place of young children adds positive emotion to an otherwise extremely bleak, if dazzlingly beautiful work.

    Yes, Malick's unique visual lyricism is frequently on display, but, I would have to say that it seems less well integrated into the work's thematic thrust than it is in other of his films, but I could be mistaken here and I will be wanting to see it at least four or five more times when it opens in France in a couple of months.

    Visually it is, from time to time, spectacular; sometimes Malick's montages are breathtaking, but there are great mysteries here that I have not come near to fathoming even after three viewings. Frequent shots of high-flying passenger jets, fast-moving shots from the front of a car on desert roads and long-held bleak landscapes from Death Valley and environs punctuate the film. It is not difficult to see the 'meaning' that these images carry, but it is difficult to know why they are repeated so often.

    If I sound disappointed, I have not deceived, but Malick, with his entire work, has set the bar so high that anything not bordering on masterpiece simply has to be a disappointment. I drove a thousand kilometres to see this film and back again, and I do not regret the time and effort, but this is a desperately difficult work to fathom and, frankly, for me, makes 'To the WONDER' look like a model of clarity.

    I see it as the third (and sadly least) in an intensely personal trilogy for Malick. So where next?
    La Doublure

    La Doublure

    6.6
    3
  • Apr 22, 2015
  • An immense disappointment

    At a time when French cinema is at, IMHO, its lowest ebb, with not a single great auteur in sight, I had come to rely on Francis Veber to provide excellence in comedy if of only a not very profound type. After Three Fugitives (both versions) and Le Dîner des Cons (to name just two) his films seemed to be heading into Blake Edwards territory.

    But, oh my word!, what a catastrophe is this grotesque. The central character drifts through a series of 'adventures' involving an unpleasant millionaire (Daniel Auteuil) who is cheating on his wife (the fabulous Kristin Scott Thomas) with a model.

    The whole thing is flat as a pancake, probably due to the casting of Gad Elmaleh - French cinema's most over-rated actor. This numb-skull drifts through promising scenes but doesn't give what is needed to bring them alive.

    This is all the more troubling as, given he is playing the same character (or at least the character with the same name) as the central character in Le Dîner des Cons, François Pignon, One imagines what the magnificent Jacques Villeret could have done in the same rôle, had he not died just before the film went into production.
    Magic in the Moonlight

    Magic in the Moonlight

    6.5
    8
  • Nov 16, 2014
  • Very enjoyable and effortlessly cinematic

    See all reviews

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    • Une vie cachée
      May 22, 2019

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