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:: Sunday, May 16, 2004 ::

Where to begin?
I've been "offline" for quite a while owing to a nasty virus that settled in my puter, and even when active, I've been posting poems to ElectricPoetry and not concentrating on the movie blog. I have been watching films, albeit not too often in the theater. "Girl With a Pearl Earring" a DVD rental, was a very fine film, filled with period detail of Dutch life in the 15th Century. It was directed by Peter Webber, who has a credit directing a TV movie version of "Stepford Wives." (I'm anticipating the muppet, er, I mean, Frank Oz's retelling of the original movie this summer, love the idea of Christopher Walken as Diz.) I admit I only watched "Pearl Earring" for Scarlett Johannsen and Colin Firth. I'm in love with Scarlett and have been following her career since the excellent "Ghost World" and the Coen's "Man Who Wasn't There". Needless to say she became a major player with "Lost in Translation" last year. She is remarkable as the Girl, Griet, who is a servant for Johannes Vermeer, the Dutch Master painter, played with understatement by the gloriously gifted Colin Firth. Not only does dear Scarlett look like the girl in the painting, the various scenes are inspired by Dutch paintings of the period, much like the cinematography in Ridley Scott's first feature, "The Duellists" and Kubrick's "Barry Lyndon" was inspired by paintings.
The plot is about how this waif/servant girl fits or more properly fails to fit in with the household, and the end result is the creation of the painting. A wonderful film, and an acting powerhouse.
Colin Firth is becoming one of my faves. I saw the DVD of "Love, Actually" for the first time the other day, and it has become one of my all time favorite romantic comedies. I was entrhalled with the section concerning Colin Firth's Englishman and his Portequese maid/lover. So much so that I rented another Firth starrer, with Heather Graham and Minnie Driver called Hope Springs which was directed by Mark Herman who directed "Brassed Off" and "Little Voice" both very well done films. "Hope Springs" is set in America, and not England and concerns the travails of Colin's character who is escaping his ex girlfriend in England (Driver) who follows him to the picturesque New England town of Hope Springs to get him back, but after he has already fallen in love with "caregiver" Mandy, played by Graham. I was delighted with the proceedings in this film as well.
I'd like to spend hours talking about "Love, Actually", which plays sort of like an English "Playing with Hearts". Bill Nighy, Hugh Grant, a lovely lass named Martine McCutcheon, Emma Thompson, the aforementioned Colin Firth, Liam Neeson, Keira Knightley, I'm sure I've left some other wondrous performance out. The film is filled with many stories which take place around Christmas time, and the viewer doesn't get confused or bored. Each story line is interweaved beautifully, and director Richard Curtis, who wrote "Briget Jones' Diary" and "Notting Hill" introduces the deleted scenes which couldn't fit in the movie, but which enrich the story of Liam Neeson's recently widowed father.
This is a film worth watching more than once.

:: Michael Nyiri 1:00 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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