Blog Archive
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2009
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October
(40)
- HAPPY HALLOWEEN!
- Happy 214th Birthday John Keats!
- Happy 113th Birthday Ruth Gordon!
- Where the Wild Things Are - My Uncertain Review
- Art I Love
- Inglourious Basterds - My Review
- I want to see this.
- The best residential design with tree landscaping
- Modern Bungalow residential exterior design
- Modern Home Remodeling with Contemporary Architect
- Elizabethan Styled Fashion Editorial
- Photo I Love
- Bungalow Exterior after wall renovation
- Exterior Home Improvement with new paint
- Happy 92nd Birthday Joan Fontaine!
- Happy 66th Birthday Catherine Deneuve!
- Teenage nieces, Drew Barrymore, and Whip It!
- Photo I Love
- Happy 51st Birthday Viggo Mortensen!
- American on Purpose - Book Review
- Happy 89th Birthday Montgomery Clift!
- Art I Love
- Happy 155th Birthday Oscar Wilde!
- Happy 128th Birthday P.G. Wodehouse!
- 10 Movies That Scared the Crap Out of Me When I Wa...
- Bright Star - My Review
- Annie - Then and Now
- Photo I Love
- From Blip.fm - Chopin - Nocturne in E Minor, Op. 7...
- My Epiphany at a Professional Bra Fitting
- A Tim Burton Inspired Fashion Editorial
- Home Design Exterior with Small Victorian Design
- Art I Love
- Ch-ch-ch-changes
- Home Design Exterior with Building Exterior Design
- Home Design Exterior with Front Exterior Design Look
- Home Design Exterior From Back To Front Exterior D...
- Exterior Design Ideas with Modern House Exterior D...
- Home Exterior Design Look From Front Design
- Exterior Design Ideas with Double Paint New House ...
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October
(40)
Where the Wild Things Are - My Uncertain Review
I’ve been trying to collect my thoughts about Where the Wild Things Are since I saw it last week. The fact that I’m still thinking about it and mulling it over in my brain is a positive sign. I’ve even amended my first reaction which was "I never want to watch this again," to "Ok, maybe I NEED to watch this again."
I went in sure that I was going to love the film. The trailers alone filled me with so much happiness that I would tear up a little bit. Yes, I cry when I’m happy as well as when I’m sad. I retained my initial positive attitude as the film began but it soon started spiraling downward as the film progressed. By the end I was a wreck: crying, depressed, disappointed. I’m still kind of angry that Spike Jonze chose to tell the story in such a gloomy way that I was not left buoyed by it at all, but rather deflated.
I get what he was trying to do. I understand completely what his intent was and I even admire his determination. But what’s wrong with a little bit of happiness? What’s wrong with a little bit of joy? Every time those emotions peeked through in the film, they were quickly choked back by jealousy, mean spiritedness, and loneliness. Ugh.
Things I liked:
Max Records - the kid is incredible and he carries the film firmly on his strong, little shoulders.
The look of the film – everything was absolutely freaking gorgeous: cinematography, the use of light, set design, the creatures, props, everything. There were scenes that made my heart ache they were so beautiful.
The music – I have the soundtrack by "Karen O and the Kids" and it’s wonderful. The music taken on its own gives me the feeling that I wanted the film itself to give me.
The voice actors – these actors contributed stunning voice work for the wild things and it was a seamless transition from the expressions in their voices to the physical expressiveness of the creatures.
In the end, I still don’t know how I feel about the film. I wanted to love it, but I didn’t. I never thought of Sendak’s book as being a sad story but Spike Jonze gave us a sad film. The film captured my imagination with its unique visual beauty, but it didn’t capture my heart.