Goshen News, Goshen, IN

Breaking News

Movie Reviews

October 7, 2008

‘Blindness’ pretentious, bad

An unnamed disease afflicts the unnamed citizens of an unnamed city, all of which is too precious. One by one, the victims are left sightless but they see white instead of black, a sensation one character compares to “swimming in milk.” Once they’re rounded up by soldiers and quarantined in a grubby, abandoned mental asylum (because apparently The Ritz-Carlton wasn’t available), their worst primal instincts emerge: urination and defecation in the hallways, theft, assaults and, ultimately, rape.

The physical and moral deterioration calls to mind the situation in the Superdome after Hurricane Katrina, but director Fernando Meirelles, in adapting a novel by Nobel Prize-winner Jose Saramago, is clearly trying to suggest that society similarly could collapse anywhere, anytime. Rather than being thought-provoking, though, the whole dreary exercise feels like an overlong beat-down — as if we’re being scolded just for showing up.

Somehow, “City of God,” Meirelles’ brutally violent 2002 drama about life in the Rio de Janeiro slums, was more subtle. Here, the director relies too heavily on obvious symbolism, such as glass reflections and various shades of white in the form of blazing sunlight or bright floor tiles. He even floods the screen with white at times, as if to make us feel what the characters are experiencing in Don McKellar’s script. If we share any emotion with these people, it’s a yearning to get up and go home.

Even Julianne Moore can’t liven up this slog, despite a typically strong performance as the one person who can still see — a phenomenon which is never explained, probably because it’s an arbitrary plot device. She pretends she’s blind, though, to stay with her husband (Mark Ruffalo), who is an eye doctor. This means she can help navigate the chaos, but only to a certain extent; she’s also forced to witness it without revealing her secret and, therefore, risking her life.

Big Brother is watching as heavily armed soldiers who will shoot anyone who dares to step out of line, but there’s also a video playing on endless loop on monitors throughout the building, with a man spelling out the useless rules. This, too, feels heavy-handed.

Other victims include a little boy (Mitchell Nye), a hooker with a heart of gold (Alice Braga) and an elderly man (Danny Glover), all of whom were the doctor’s patients. There’s also a Japanese couple (Yusuke Iseya and Yoshino Kimura), the husband of which started all this when he went blind behind the wheel of his car in traffic. Then there’s the bartender at the hotel where the prostitute worked (Gael Garcia Bernal), who appoints himself the King of Ward Three.

Basically, this means he takes over, adding a level of depravity to these already grim circumstances by forcing the others to fork over their valuables in exchange for the food he has hoarded. When there’s nothing left of worth, he and his followers have their way with the women. If we’d known a single thing about him before his rise to power, he might have seemed more fearsome; because he’s barely fleshed out, his demands come out of nowhere, and the group rape scene he orchestrates merely feels gratuitous.

Some of the visual imagery is striking in the post-apocalyptic wasteland outside the asylum. But then the laughably upbeat way in which “Blindness” ends only reinforces what a waste of time it was.

“Blindness,” a Miramax Films release, is rated R for violence including sexual assaults, language and sexuality/nudity. Running time: 121 minutes. One and a half stars out of four.

Text Only
Movie Reviews
  • ‘Goats’ has fuzzy vision A fun tone is undermined by disjointed storytelling in George Clooney’s “The Men Who Stare at Goats,” and it all starts with the disclaimer that opens the movie: “More of this is true than what you might imagine.”

    November 11, 2009

  • images_sizedimage_289100122 Supernatural success LOS ANGELES — The critics have spoken. Here’s what more than a few have to say:

    “Scariest movie of the decade.”

    October 16, 2009 1 Photo 1 Link

  • ‘Getaway’ imperfect but fun “A Perfect Getaway” is essentially one big red herring, flopping around on an idyllic Hawaiian beach, desperately trying to call attention to itself.

    August 7, 2009

  • images_sizedimage_217100540 ‘G.I. Joe’ show no go LOS ANGELES — It’s the biggest movie of the summer that practically no one has seen.

    August 5, 2009 1 Photo

  • ‘Transformers’ noisy, nonsensical A joyless cacophony, an insistent and seemingly endless onslaught, “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,” director Michael Bay’s follow-up to the 2007 smash “Transformers” plays more like a parody of a Bay movie.

    June 26, 2009

  • images_sizedimage_171150006 ‘Proposal’ says yes to cliches All the romantic comedy conventions are shamelessly on parade in “The Proposal,” trampling on our brains and turning them into mush.

    June 20, 2009 1 Photo

  • ‘Imagine That’ a solid comedy The words “Eddie Murphy family comedy” are enough to send shivers down the spine of any self-respecting film lover.

    June 12, 2009

  • images_sizedimage_162104417 ‘Pelham’ an overcaffeinated thriller The way the original 1974 film’s title has been condensed tells you everything you need to know about the direction “The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3” is headed. In these fast-paced, mixed-up times, it simply takes too long to spell out the numbers.

    June 11, 2009 1 Photo

  • This movie in ‘Ruins’ LOS ANGELES — As we learn from “My Life in Ruins,” the Greek word for mojo — or zest for life — is “kefi.” Nia Vardalos’ character has lost hers and needs to get it back.

    June 10, 2009

  • This movie is not a ‘Drag’ The name alone, “Drag Me to Hell,” tells you exactly what this is: an unabashed celebration of B-movie schlockery. But the dichotomies director Sam Raimi presents within that familiar genre are what make this such a kick.

    May 29, 2009

Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
AP Video
Recording Superstar Whitney Houston Dead at 48 Maine GOP Chairman Says Romney Wins Caucuses Palin Brings Anti-Washington Message to CPAC Obama Scraps Birth Control Mandate US Airmen's Killer Sentenced to Life in Germany Navy Names Ship for Gabrielle Giffords Raw Video: Deadly Blasts in Syria Romney Slams President Obama at CPAC Gingrich: Pres. Obama 'waging War on Religion' 5 Killed in Wrong-way Crash on I-10 in La. Uzbek Man Pleads Guilty in Plot to Kill Obama Denver's Largest-Ever Drug Bust Nets Dozens Marines: No Punishment for Nazi-like Flag Vets Look to Translate Military Skills Into Jobs Raw Video: School Bus Burst Into Flames LA School Reopens Amid Sex Abuse Scandal $25B Settlement Reached Over Foreclosure Abuses Pentagon: Allow Women Closer to Front Lines LA School in Sex Abuse Scandal Reopens Raw Video: Italy's Mount Etna Bursts Into Life
Poll

The Goshen Housing Authority has a $571,050 shortfall. Should the Goshen City Council use money from its $4.7-million “rainy day” fund to pay the debt and maintain the current level of service provided by the voucher program?

Yes, the Council should allocate all the money owed
No, the Council should not allocate any money
The Council should pay what cannot be raised privately
     View Results