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The Emperor and the Assassin
23rd Portland International Film
Festival
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by D. K. Holm But then, Kaige is just one of many import filmmakers whose reputation excedes his ostensible talents, among them Abbas Kiarostami. All too often people esteem movies not for what they are, but for what they aren't. I get the impression that festival-goers gravitate toward the work of, for example, the Iranian filmmakers not because of any actual earthshaking story telling or visual technique on display, but because they are contre Hollywood, which they deem manipulative and phoney. A little more Hollywoody zest and concise storytelling would really come to the aid of The Emperor and the Assasin, and given how melodramatic in a commerical sense the film already is, one imagines that Kaige would welcome just that kind of help. Besides taxing the viewer's patience with its length, the film then foreshadows events broadly, in the most basic manner of silent era melodrama, so that the film's longheurs are compounded by the fact that the spectator also knows exactly what is going to happen next. And Kaige uses music in a way time honored in Hollywood. When a character tells another that he needs to remove hate from his heart the music commences swellingily in the background, cueing our emotions. For more information about the film festival, visit the website for the Northwest Film Center. For an alternative view of this film, visit 24 frames.com 02/00 |
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Review for Output Copyright
© 2000 D.K.Holm. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited. |
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