Sunday, January 20, 2008

There Will Be Blood

Date: January 19
Location: Muvico Palace

Paul Thomas Anderson has cemented his place as the finest filmmaker of his very talented generation with this extraordinary, mesmerizing turn-of-the-century saga about a sociopathic oil man's descent into hell. The most impressive thing about Anderson's work in There Will Be Blood is how little it resembles anything he's ever done before — it has none of the hip Scorsese stylings of Boogie Nights, none of the Altmanesque cross-cutting or brazen sentimentality of Magnolia. Instead it is a very straightforward (lack of) morality tale that brings to mind Citizen Kane more than anything else.

Plenty has been written about Daniel Day Lewis' wonderful work as Daniel Plainview — he is, and has been, among the finest actors alive, and he's doing his best work here. And just as much has been written about Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood's amazing score. Anderson has always used music splendidly, from the 70s radio hits of Boogie Nights to Aimee Mann's song-score of Magnolia, and here he's allowed Greenwood to craft a score that practically becomes a character in the film. If he loses the Oscar, there's no justice.

I have no doubt that Anderson has crafted an American classic that will be watched, written about and studied decades from now. I personally gravitate more toward Boogie Nights and Magnolia, which have a brazen pop sensibility that I thrive on, but I'm blown away by the powerful classicism he taps here.

Once again, I'm thrilled at what a wonderful year for movies 2007 has turned out to be — the best of the decade so far, by far. It's interesting that my top six contains three dark, brutal, pessimistic films and three that are lighter than air. As for why There Will Be Blood wound up at #3, despite the "best of the year" level praise I've heaped on it — in a nutshell, when I walked out of No Country For Old Men, I immediately wanted to watch it again... when I walked out of There Will Be Blood, I immediately wanted to watch Juno.