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| ![There Will Be Blood (2 disc Special Edition) [2007]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41cOHPXkDBL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Paul Thomas Anderson Actors: Daniel Day-lewis, Ciaran Hinds, Kevin J. O'connor, Barry Del Sherman, Dillon Freasier Studio: Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainm Category: DVD
List Price: £19.99 Buy New: £12.48 You Save: £7.51 (38%)
Format: Pal Language: English (Unknown) Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over Number Of Items: 2 Running Time: 152 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.3 x 0.5
EAN: 8717418164577 ASIN: B0012L6AC8
Theatrical Release Date: 2007 Release Date: July 7, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews:
Overrated, but good performances September 11, 2008 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
This film suffers from the fact that it progresses at snail's pace, and not a lot happens. Daniel Day-lewis is the highlight of the film dominating every scene he is in but it feels like he is treading the same ground as that of his role in 'Gangs of New York' as Bill The Butcher. There will be Blood would've have been a cracking film if the flow of the plot had been faster and more dynamic. On a high note the dialogue between Plainview and Sunday at the climax was very good with excellent performances from both actors.
Very, very good, but not quite great. September 1, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Although I enjoyed this film I'd have to say that an awful lot is sacrificed to DDL's acting.The fact that what everyone talks about is his performance says it all really.He is fantastic, but that's largely due to the fact that nobody else seems to get a word in edgeways.Paul Dano does his best, but like every other character he pops in and out of the film without any great rhyme or reason.There are a few faults,like other reviewers, I was confused for a long time by Dano playing identical twin brothers and there are other elements of the film that are confusing.Dano's congregation grows without the town ever seeming to, and the religous elements are only introduced in short, sharp bursts. But none of this really matters because the film is really about DDL's portrayal of a monster so driven that he even sacrifices his son to his ambition. He ends the film evil and alone and,as he says himself, finished.A fitting ending, but nevertheless very abrupt, and like other sections of the film, with the feeling that something had been heavily cut.
I felt that DDL's performance, particularly the voice, was heavily modelled on John Huston, especially Huston's performance of the evil father in Chinatown. Perhaps because of that I began to note similarities between Dano's character and that of Brad Dourif's in Huston's film Wiseblood, about a deranged young man who creates his own church.
The set pieces are fantastic, as is the cinematography and the soundtrack, which is pitch perfect and almost a character in its own right.However, far too much is only sketched in; characters, plot, motivation, location, for this to be a truly great film. Nevertheless it still stands a head and shoulders above most other films released in the last year and Anderson, like the Coen Bros.,has again shown himself to be a film maker with a great deal of style and ability and with something worth saying
Some get it, some don't August 31, 2008 1 out of 7 found this review helpful
I really enjoyed reading the one star reviews of this film-they are entitled to their (strangely) similar opinions of course. Make up your own mind I say. I thought it was brilliant, and the music even greater. there you go
Fabulous, epic... but what's it all about? August 27, 2008 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
What a very strange and remarkable film this is. Visually, it's brilliant, mesmerising, full of staggering set pieces and resonant images (the old photographs which acted as inspiration are in the extras and well worth checking out). Daniel Day Lewis' performance is towering; he completely occupies the role and utterly dominates the film just as he utterly dominates everything around him. That's the part, as scripted, of course, but there's more to his performance than that - his charismatic presence in the film is remarkable, particularly as it's achieved with almost no shouting, arm-waving or showboating of any kind, and it's hard to imagine any other actor creating it... contrast and compare, for example, Leonardo diCaprio's boyish efforts at Howard Hughes in 'The Aviator'. I'd suggest that this is the film that finally sets Day-Lewis among the all-time screen greats.
Setting aside the bravura performances and direction, however, it's less clear what the film is actually about. Plainview's character is so unique, so individual, that it's hard to draw any broad conclusions. Over-vaunting ambition against family and personal relationships? The ongoing struggle with evangelical religion - God vs Mammon? It's all powerfully realised, but exactly what it is is more problematic. Puzzling too that this epic story ends less on a bang than on a weirdly inconclusive whimper.
Maybe I need to watch it again. I certainly will.
A hollow shell of a movie August 27, 2008 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
Two great, chilling performances from the central characters, each embodying different forms of obsession (the gaining of control through wealth accumulation vs the gaining of control via the use of religious fanaticism), but there it ends - a beautifully-photographed, but a curiously uninvolving scenario that depends far too much on sudden and unexplained outbursts of violence when the film begins to drag. Great films need more than this.
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