Rewatch!

Dolores 2022-05-04 06:01:02

The big screen is re-brushed-finally I have the opportunity to write this sentence... My dream seems to be realized here, watching a wide screen full of screens in the golden seat 13-3 of the cinema, really So beautiful. Those moving filters, the conflict between two indoor and outdoor. Noisy, chaotic, and surprisingly romantic town people. The most important thing is, this time, it seems that I have really experienced something, and the three songs of Cohen and the violin in the tavern are simply beautiful. According to Morricone-Leone’s analysis: Dealer is Warren Beatty, Sister is a prostitute, and lady is Mrs. Miller. (It’s been a long time since there is no NetEase Cloud member to listen to that album.) Macomber is a great character. In the words of a trader, he is impossible, irrational, like all kinds of defects..., the so-called anti-heroes, but those occasional monologues and faint brim of the hat make his existence very charming, and he is very sincere. The performance is also great.

If I am not wrong, the effect of the zoom lens on the big screen is extraordinary, great. Compared with Leonne, Leonne's eyes are horizontal, and Altman's end can be turned upside down, approaching step by step until it becomes blurred.

The character's psychology is very moving. The last paragraph of the Warren Beatty line and the firefighting line parallel editing is great, there is indescribable irony/appreciation/loving mixed feelings. A/group of people who are neurotic, dreaming of dreams that are destined to be unfulfilled, simple and modest, low-efficiency, modest.....

At the end I heard someone say why it is an anti-Western movie? It would be great if someone really analyzed it. Perhaps there is a small detail to illustrate. It's that young man. The little boy crossed the bridge, was almost tricked into taking a gun by another person, and was shot. In the past, Western films seemed to be quite "fair" than guns. The filming method of the film is based on the onlookers, so the onlookers may only think that they are fighting each other. But the young man is not. This seems to be a violation of the rules.

In short it is very romantic. I think of watching "Once Upon a Time in the Tropics" two days ago, there is no sense of romance no matter how it was filmed, I think it is because the director does not respect his character story themes, he does not want to take them seriously, and express the most complicated/unexplainable things in his heart ( Maybe there is no such thing, or the technology is not enough). So I imagine a movie like Hanamura, he may always be a good watch. And unexpectedly, people kept leaving the scene... However, I heard that many people abandoned the popular Ruan Lingyu to see it, and countless film critics praised it sincerely. Hey, I don't know what to think.

(But Mrs. Miller is very important, and the image of prostitutes in the film is also very interesting. There is always a feeling of complex emotions in the world. There is also the image of Chinatown, which is extremely important after being mentioned. Altman seems After shooting a long farewell, Chinatown seems to exist in the entire American movie very, very important. It seems that Chinatown means chaos, disorder, and crime...like in noir. And then the Orientals should be added. Pipe. I don’t know)

/Listening to so-familiar tunes keep appearing in the movie. What is the relationship between Cohn’s album and this movie~~ This squishy filter is so beautiful. Hahaha warren beatty is so handsome, it's weird

View more about McCabe & Mrs. Miller reviews

Extended Reading

McCabe & Mrs. Miller quotes

  • Butler: That man? That man never killed anybody.

  • [first lines]

    John McCabe: [muttering to himself] I told you... Think I'm stupid?... S'exactly what I said. Six, six of 'em...