There Will Be Blood

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Daniel Day-Lewis in There Will Be Blood

Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>5/5

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<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5
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Time Out says

Mon Feb 4 2008

We begin down a hole. It’s 1898 in the Southern Californian desert and Daniel Plainview (Daniel Day-Lewis) is a lithe, daddy-long-legs of a man, a lone-gun silver prospector whose tools, as he scratches around in the dark, are a pickaxe, a rope, some dynamite and sheer will. The scene, like many in the film, is gruelling, elemental, horrific even.

He falls, breaks his leg and gains a limp that will stay with him for the rest of this bold, epic film. We hop forward to 1902, and Plainview is digging again, only now he’s on the hunt for something else: oil. He strikes black and brandishes his filthy hands to his accomplices. The dirt under his nails is a badge of honour, and one never to be removed; he wears it years later, even when he’s moping around a mansion, his mind driven loopy by success and paranoia.

Another hop and it’s 1911, and we reach the meat of the movie. A smarter Plainview, a fedora on his brow, is in the shadows of a meeting of folk in Little Boston, California on whose land he wants to dig. ‘I’m an oil man…’ he implores, the first noise we hear from his mouth, not a word wasted, barely a breath not invested in his success. His voice is simple but mellifluous, its stresses and dips unusual but alluring. It’s the first hint in this long, odd and stunning film that this character – this wicked creation, this symbol of a nation, this quiet monster – will lodge in your psyche long after the movie cuts dead on an ending that’s strange and sudden, irritating and pleasing.

On one level, Plainview is a pure businessman – ruthless, self-centred, adaptable. On another, he’s a mystery – sexless, rootless, unfathomable, silent. The questions roll off the screen. Does he care for his adopted son, HW (Dillon Freasier) or does he see him only as a useful face to have around during negotiations? Are we meant to root for Plainview’s individualist tendencies against the expansion of the Standard and Union oil companies? No – as soon as the film hints this is going to be the tale of an underdog, Plainview does something awful. Faceless, corporate behaviour begins to look benign. On yet another level, Plainview reflects, then and now, the power of the church; it’s a local pastor, Eli Sunday (a wily Paul Dano) who leads him to the loot. It’s the same pastor whose pockets he must line and religion he must embrace.

This is Paul Thomas Anderson’s foundation myth – taken from Upton Sinclair’s 1927 novel ‘Oil!’, which in turn was inspired by men like Edward Doheny, the oil man who went from rags to riches and died in 1935 in the same mansion where Anderson shot his final scenes. Anderson’s story is precisely dated, stretching from 1898 to 1927, and mostly lingers around 1911 as Plainview builds a gushing derrick.

But the beginning of his film feels like the beginning of the world for all its sense that nothing came before. Anderson is arguing that this chasm in the earth, and similar chasms, were the birthplace of America. Little Boston becomes a theatre for his Genesis, or for Exodus, from which the film takes its name. It’s stressed by the primal buzz of Jonny Greenwood’s wonderful score that’s set to the film’s first image of a barren hillside.

Day-Lewis’s performance is as good as the awards suggest: it’s big, it’s wild, yet it’s also restrained by the sparing talk of his character and framed by a film whose ambitions are bigger than his acting. That Anderson, the film’s writer-director, whose ‘Boogie Nights’ was a riot but ‘Magnolia’ and ‘Punch-Drunk Love’ both noble failures, has come to make this intelligent and enthralling masterpiece is both a little surprising and intensely satisfying.

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Release details

UK release:

Fri Feb 8 2008

Cast and crew

Music:

Jonny Greenwood

Cast:

Paul Dano, Kevin J O'Connor, Ciarán Hinds, Dillon Freasier, Daniel Day-Lewis

Cinematography:

Robert Elswit

Production Designer:

Jack Fisk

Screenwriter:

Paul Thomas Anderson

Editor:

Dylan Tichenor

Director:

Paul Thomas Anderson

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 4/5 (44 ratings)
  • i hate this movie so much! omg

    mama Wed Apr 24
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  • I have only just got around to seeing this movie, and based on some of the comments above, I can only assume they weren't paying attention, or aren't intelligent enough to watch a film like this. Why give it 3 stars if you think it was the most boring film you've ever seen..... There Will Be Blood gets you slowly but surely, I must admit 15 minutes in I was wondering where it was all going - but it creeps up on you and by the end has you hook, line and sinker. DDL is a brilliant actor, and he does a great job of a complex character (as always). I disagree that the last scene is drawn out.. I think it was a great example of a man believing his own worth, his own hype, his own importance, finally believing that he was akin to God. Do not watch this movie if you have something else on your mind, you will miss the point, but if you let yourself be absorbed into Plainview's world for a couple of hours, you won't be disappointed

    lexie Sun Aug 8 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • How he goes from rugged individualist to rotting, soulless millionaire. Why can't Che run a country? The type A personality. Who is more driven than the miserable? Tiger Woods, Richard Nixon. "Unhappy the Land that has no hero? No. Unhappy the land that needs a hero." Bert Brecht in Galileo. And if wretched men like Plainview did not exist? More living native Americans and fewer women burnt at Salem. The man is not a "rugged individualist" he's just in an agony that fuels his life. Great movie. The real John Wayne.

    dikran Wed Apr 21 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Until watching this film I thought Rabbit Proof Fence was the most boring film I'd ever seen. The Missus liked it, and I hated it -which is very unusual. Daniel had a brilliant acting part, but in a film that was: far too long, devoid of any soul, badly directed and, with annoyingly innappropriate soundtrack. If I had to watch it again I'd peirce my eyes and ears with knitting needles. Awful in every conceivable way!

    Gapster Sat Jan 24 2009
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  • Think of a bunsen-burner burning in a vacuum. Think of an oilman vs a snakeoil salesman. Think of acting as impersonation. Think of John Huston in Chinatown. Replace an orange grove with a desert. Replace water with oil. Think of the audience as prospectors,digging Drilling for the epiphany through the arduous minutes and hours. Think of all the props-minor characters,cinematography, industrial music,storyline then kick them away as a trickle becomes a geyser to pick up awards.

    Popcorn Thu Aug 28 2008
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • Very slow at times.Of course prospecting for oil,building oil derricks,digging the earth and buillding cabins and extracting oil is a lonely,long,sweat-inducing experience.But...there was not enough tension or dramatic contrast or dynamic interaction between groups of characters.All the other characters outside Plainview's(DDL) including adopted son and Pastor were more like props to set the story up,one dimensional in itself,so that the 'oil' of Day-Lewis's acting can spew forth from the admittedly brilliant cinematography and material stagecraft and wide open vistas.Day-Lewis's acting is so intense,pressured and theatrical but I couldn't get away from an impression of John Huston in 'Chinatown',which DDL was aware of. This diminished it for me and the lack of female characters to leaven the heavy dough of the performance.There seemed lots missing from the story- line as no doubt there was. I believe lots about unionism and communism which would have balanced the somewhat singular individualism of Plainview.I saw it on DVD and was more impressed by the montage of early 20th century photographs and moving documentary images in the extra'15 minutes'. Now that would have made a great documentary!

    Technoguy Wed Aug 27 2008
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • Daniel Day Lewis bores for oil, and bores and bores and bores.

    teesween Wed Aug 13 2008
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  • I went to see this at a festival with high expectations. I've always been a fan of Daniel Day-Lewis and have seen enough of Paul Thomas Anderson's films to expect something bold and ambitious. There is a great deal to admire about the film, particularly its achievement in creating a sense of time and place. In the early stages, I felt that we were being set up for an exploration of the entwinement of capitalism and religion and a great character study. But, ultimately I felt that the film failed quite spectacularly in achieving its potential. Day-Lewis attended the screening that I was at and spoke afterwards about the experience of making the film and praised the director for allowing his cast free reign to improvise and develop their characters. I think that such an approach can yield interesting results, but I think that it is the downfall of this film. For me, there are several moments in the film where I became aware that I was watching ACTING, instead of being absorbed in the story and watching the characters react naturally to the situation. This created a theatrical feeling to the performances, which seems to be very good for winning awards, but actually hurts the film as a whole. For me, the final scene was is the worst example of this, where the overacting is allowed to get totally out of control, killing off any chance of subtelty. Ultimately, there was little complexity to ponder or insight to be derived, in spite of all the technical bravura on display.

    Sean Ellis Tue May 6 2008
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • Fantastic film making, thought provoking and - very provoking, where did it leave us?!

    John Gamlin Wed Apr 30 2008
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • there will be blood ,maybe guts but there shall be no brains . this is a classic example of executing an errand worth a few minutes in a few hours and it begins to tell on your nerves or what is left of them at 3 mind and butt numbing hours,and yes most pretentious american directors LIKE ANDERSON are making movies without female presence forgetting that cinema is a reflection of life and you cannot make credible movies without somehow representing the opposite sex ,this movie has no feminine roles ,it implicitly refers to lewis character as frequenting brothels and being a man of sin ,but we dont ever see any wench in his life ,most sensitivity and dynamic power in a drama or reality is derived from the frailty of the opposite sex ,though it might be called the weaker sex but everything from mona lisa to death of a virgin by caravaggio that is labelled as great art ,from all about eve to gone with the wind has one singular plot in common-a strong central woman to make it great ART AND THAT is essential maybe that is why movies like NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN AND this rather rumbling and ranting bull fall flat on their face as they celebrate power without emotion ,reducing them to a burlesque state and their subjects rendered fake and worth mockery,there is a clear oppurtunity to indulge in melodrama here and anderson takes that full on with hilarious results ,the script is humorless and its clear his son who appears with him in deadpan ,monotonous speeches throughout is clearly neglected and being used as a to entice a family image for business expansion ,as for his so called wife or whores ,we never get to indulge in their sight,but he does cry for a brother we have or even he has never set sight on , bizarrely he kills only 2 souls who virtually are both deserving of their fate ,so if he is evil then he is redeeemed indeed as he has a good enough excuse for murder and his end state suggests lunacy which will be reason enough to justify any act BUT LUNATICS they all are from the priest of the flock to the son ,from miners to the butlers and from blundering fathers to abusinve sons who are all sufferring in a stark ,naked landscape resembling the purgatory , the movies other protagonist is an impassioned evangelical priest who damns lewis even before the poor man has a chance to open his mouth ,he then rants and ramps for the rest of the movie reducing some scenes to almost senseless comic detail .religion is not as awful as mr.anderson is viewing it in this biased manner ,it has its place but in this movie every soul is black ,just because it is about oil,we have devil worshippers around every nook and corner ,and if that is not a clich ,then please remind me of a bigger stereotype . this is overwritten with scenes and dialogues that reverberate persistently and under-edited to the point where a simple scene of an oilman descending into a well can consume half the time god has given to us mortals in this measly life .the pace is not slack ,its like a dead horse with flies buzzing over the corpse and no one can flag a dead horse to life .even mr day lewis is not a magician ,just a sincere actor and he delivers the goods to the best effect he can muster ,but that is simply not enough as if the movie already is not metaphorical enough ,the message is not subtle here it is rammed down our throats like the IRAQ WAR ,leaving no doubt about its immorality as conceived by its creators ,whether it be makers or politicians ,the parable about oil is of course reminiscent of this infamous conflict and RELIGION comes in with all its glory in the form of church to remind us of the CRUSADES ,popes and presidents of today and yeteryears ,for if the persian gulf has the black gold raining all over it ,then this movie is showered with its own excretions in the form of spewing dialogue full of venom and unnecessary ranting which borders onto pantomime and DANIEL DAY LEWIS IS very good BUT HE is covered in so much muck and the movie is so devoid of light , to render him almost invisible at times , the comparisons with GEORGE STEVENS GIANT are incomparable as that movie still will be my choice to watch and the great act by james dean is still more rewarding then this hokum. its worth seeing for amazing cinemato graphy ,particularly the oil drilling sequences and days great act as well as the finale which was good but not great ,but the middle half just sags into a dreadful monotone just like the son who goes deaf from the oil well exploding ,which is captured beautifully by the camera ,but i think the plot and script are definitely flawed with the characters too. as there is no redemption for anyone -them or the audience with a cliched plot and political religious satire gone awry

    usman khawaja Mon Apr 14 2008
    Rated as: 2/5
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