Safetydan
Well-Known Member
It was a heist movie. It engages in all the tropes of the genre, right down to lines about "one last job" and reasons why, for the leader of the heist, this is the most important job he's ever pulled.
On those terms, it's a success. But people are acting like it's bigger than that. It's not. There's nothing mind-blowing about it.
Nolan directs this movie the way Earl Boykins played point guard: it's all one speed all the time. No dynamism to the pacing of his film, and that's exhausting when it's two and a half hours long. It's even more exhausting when he compounds the singular pacing of the film with a very aggressive musical score. It's an assault on the viewer.
Marion Cotillard is the best part of the movie and is featured significantly in its best two scenes: the ledge jump, and the venture to the basement level with Ellen Page.
Speaking of Ellen Page: naming her "Ariadne" is Nolan thinking he's too clever by half. New rule when making movies: if you're going for a parallel to mythology and you need to include a character name that's four syllables long just stop right there. Anyone named "Ariadne" would be going by a nickname. In this instance, the use of the Ariadne name is particularly heavy handed given that Ellen Page uses the word labyrinthe multiple times.
Speaking of heavy handed, DiCaprio's world is literally crumbling? Wow.
I could go on, but that's enough for now.
Thank you for your thoughts