A Dangerous Method
First, I must say that I'm a huge Cronnenberg fan. Love his work, perhaps less so the older I get. Eventually, nihilism and cynisism start to weigh heavy on the soul and I find myself not being attracted to such depressing works of fiction as I used to when I was younger (I don't dig heavy metal as much as I used to as well so there's probably a correlation there).
Anyways, love his work. I don't know if I could stand to do a Cronnenberg marathon like I could a John Carpenter marathon but Cronnenberg is easily one of the most impressive film directors working today.
That being said, I was dissapointed with this film. The scope of this film was too large. We only get bits and pieces of personel conflicts. Characters aren't really fleshed out all that much (though the preformances are amazing). This film feels like a slightly raunchy version of a pseudo documentary that you'd see on BBC or even PBS. Nothing truely visionairy here. The film's actually kind of tame, but after you've done the things Cronnenberg has done you eventually can't shock people anymore.
The only thing that's not tame about this film...is it's tone. The film ends on a bleak note (actually the ending is a text book example of a "That's it??" moment) after having it's entire run time be rather bleak. It seems that we are only meant to suffer according to this film and that personel relationships always end in pain. Some truth to that obviously, but there's a cheerier argument to be had that's just as valid. I dunno...might just be the mood I'm in tonight, just wanted to watch something different I guess.
Now, I'm going to watch an episode of the insanely hysterical Kamen Rider OOOs to cheer myself up
