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You know that a Terrence Malick film about
the music industry won't be like any other film about the music
industry but then a Terrence Malick film won't be like anything other
than the Terrence Malick film that preceded it and the one before that
and quite possibly the one before that. You could say that Terrence
Malick's films are unique..except they aren't; nowadays they all look
and sound the same which is why so many people have written him off. I
think I may be one of the very few people who not only liked "Knight of
Cups" but actually chose it as my best film of the year.
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That was
about the movie industry, or at least about an actor in Hollywood, and
"Song to Song" is about the music industry or at least about a handful
of people involved with the music industry and like the last couple of
Malick pictures it basically dispenses with dialogue and 'conversations'
in favour of a stream of consciousness narration, or several
narrations, as various characters take up 'the story'.
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What
story, you may ask? Perhaps unusually for Malick there are more
characters than usual on display with at least three stories running
through the picture. The central characters are Faye, (Rooney Mara), a
would-be performer, Cook, (Michael Fassbender), the Svengali-like
producer Faye is sleeping with in the hope that it will advance her
career and BV, (Ryan Gosling), another musician with whom she embarks on
an affair. Then there's Rhonda, (Natalie Portman), the waitress that
Cook marries and Amanda, (Cate Blanchett), the older woman BV falls for,
not to mention an extraordinarily good Patti Smith playing herself.
Each of these characters has 'a story' to tell and all are beautifully
played. In many respects this is Malick's most accessible film since
"The Tree of Life
".
Of course, how you respond to it will depend
on how you respond to Malick in general. Personally I think this is a
vast improvement on "To the Wonder" and it's certainly the equal of the
vastly underrated "Knight of Cups". This is an intelligent and
surprisingly engaging film and once again the dazzlingly brilliant
cinematography is courtesy of Emmanuel Lubezki. It really shouldn't
be missed.
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