There Will Be Blood

There Will Be Blood

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There Will Be Blood

A sprawling epic of family, faith, power and oil, THERE WILL BE BLOOD is set on the incendiary frontier of California?s turn-of-the-century petroleum boom. The story chronicles the life and times of one Daniel Plainview (Daniel Day-Lewis), who transforms himself from a down-and-out silver miner raising a son on his own into a self-made oil tycoon. When Plainview gets a mysterious tip-off that there?s a little town out West where an ocean of oil is oozing out of the ground, he heads with his son, H.W. (Dillon Freasier), to take their chances in dust-worn Little Boston. In this hardscrabble town, where the main excitement centers around the holy roller church of charismatic preacher Eli Sunday (Paul Dano), Plainview and H.W. make their lucky strike. But even as the well raises all of their fortunes, nothing will remain the same as conflicts escalate and every human value ? love, hope, community, belief, ambition and even the bond between father and son ? is imperiled by corruption, deception and the flow of oil.

 

Unmistakably a shot at greatness, Paul Thomas Anderson's There Will Be Blood succeeds in wild, explosive ways. The film digs into nothing less than the sources of peculiarly American kinds of ambition, corruption, and industry--and makes exhilarating cinema from it all. Although inspired by Upton Sinclair's 1927 novel Oil!, Anderson has crafted his own take on the material, focusing on a black-eyed, self-made oilman named Daniel Plainview (Daniel Day-Lewis), whose voracious appetite for oil turns him into a California tycoon in the early years of the 20th century. The early reels are a mesmerizing look at the getting of oil from the ground, an intensely physical process that later broadens into Plainview's equally indomitable urge to control land and power. Curious, diverting episodes accumulate during Plainview's rise: a mighty derrick fire (a bravura opportunity that Anderson, with the aid of cinematographer Robert Elswit, does not fail to meet), a visit from a long-lost brother (Kevin J. O'Connor), the ongoing involvement of Plainview's poker-faced adoptive son (Dillon Freasier). As the film progresses, it gravitates toward Plainview's rivalry with the local representative of God, a preacher named Eli Sunday (brimstone-spitting Paul Dano); religion and capitalism are thus presented not so much as opposing forces but as two sides of the same coin. And the worm in the apple here is less man's greed than his vanity. Anderson's offbeat take on all this--exemplified by the astonishing musical score by Jonny Greenwood--occasionally threatens to break the film apart, but even when it founders, it excites. As for Daniel Day-Lewis, his performance is Olivier-like in its grand scope and its attention to details of behavior; Plainview speaks in the rum-rich voice of John Huston, and squints with the wariness of Walter Huston. It's a fearsome performance, and the engine behind the film's relentless power. --Robert Horton

 

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There Will Be Blood Reviews

Everything came on time and in good condition. Why did the makers of the film have to put it in the crappy cardboard case?
 
I love this movie. DDL is wonderful in every way and satisfyingly pissy and iconoclastic. He intentionally looks like a beautiful scarecrow in this movie. Without DDL, Paul Dano's excellent portrayal of stinker would have been unbearable to watch.
 
The real egomaniac in this production is the director, another one who thinks this uninteresting mess is actually his great vision, forget that movies are still supposed to be entertaining first. Ponderous, boring in the extreme, and only saved at all by Daniel Day-Lewis, but why he got in this thing I can't imagine. Watch this when you feel like punishing yourself for something.
 
nice offer. excellent business, I'd buy again with confidence. The DVD was in excellent conditions, as they said it would.
 
My own Blu-ray didn't come from Amazon so I can't address those specific issues, but my version had almost flawless picture (I have a Pioneer plasma which has exceptional black level and I noticed some night time scenes that were a little gray) and the score which embodies so much of the film doesn't drown out the dialogue (I have a 5.1 system, not sure if there is a 7.1 surround track).

As far as the movie goes, obviously without Daniel Day Lewis as the titular role there really is no movie. To say that he embodies the character of Daniel Plainview would be a heavy understatement. The musical score is such a huge part of the film and truly sets the tone for the whole movie, that combined with the gorgeous cinematography I can only wait impatiently for Paul Thomas Anderson's next movie.

For those that have a problem with the ending it's easy to see why you didn't like the movie. The ending pretty much encapsulates the entire point of the movie, a great bloody exclamation as one evil monstrous blood-sucking misquito squashes one of its lesser kin.

But yes, this is the sort of person we all want to see as the steward of our companies, profits before all, greed financing the American dream and all that good stuff. Or maybe we do want some regulation mixed with our capitalism?
 
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