Culture One Battle After Another Review - Paul Thomas Anderson and Leonardo DiCaprio finally team up, and the result is a 10/10 masterpiece.

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One of Leonardo DiCaprio’s biggest career regrets, and one of the biggest casting “what ifs” of all time, was the actor’s near-miss playing Dirk Diggler in Paul Thomas Anderson’s Boogie Nights. One Battle After Another, the latest film from PTA, and one which finally teams the writer-director and actor, may not be a time machine. But like Boogie Nights, it goes hard.

Boogie Nights is one of my favorite movies of all time. My dad recorded it off of HBO in the late ’90s, and when he and my mom went to sleep, I would sneak downstairs, snag the tape, and quietly watch in my room over and over. I’m not sure what came first – my love of movies, or my love of Boogie Nights.

Now, PT Anderson is back with One Battle After Another—a film I’m so excited for, I rewatched most of his back catalog and read the book it’s loosely based on. (Time well spent.) Despite the absurdly high expectations I set for this movie, Paul Thomas Anderson’s first $100M+ budget delivers an S-tier PTA flick about a stoner ex-extremist trying to reunite with his daughter before a Colonel with a penchant for martial law and secrets to hide can get to her first.
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One Battle After Another: The Plot​

The film follows DiCaprio’s Bob Ferguson, a former lefty revolutionary, who is raising his daughter Willa (Chase Infiniti). He’s been living in hiding ever since things went bad with his revolutionary group, the French 75, years earlier.

One Battle opens with the group’s back story, with one of its leaders, Perfidia Beverly Hills (Teyana Taylor), exclaiming, “Free borders. Free choices. Free from fear,” before they forcibly release all the detainees in a detention facility near the Mexican border. That line pretty much sums up the French 75’s politics, who spend the rest of the first act robbing banks and blowing up buildings as a means to that end.

Things move pretty quickly here. Think Bonnie & Clyde, Wild at Heart, Queen & Slim: the old romantic outlaws plot on fast forward. There’s a lot of sex and violence, but with a twist.

Perfidia may be hot and heavy with Leo’s Bob, but there’s also a simmering Dom/Sub sexual tension building between her and Col. Steven J. Lockjaw (Sean Penn), who has had the hots for her ever since he got a massive erection while she held him up during the detention liberation scene.

Paul Thomas Anderson has hit another high point of his career.


That sexual tension ultimately pays off in one of the strangest sex scenes I’ve seen in a while. (It’s kind of like that sex scene in The Sopranos between Richie Aprile and Janice, but the roles are reversed. You know the one. I’ve actually got a lot to say about this scene, but we’ll get to that later.)

Anyway, the freewheeling rebellion of the French 75 ultimately comes to an end after a botched bank robbery and Perfidia’s arrest, which sends everyone into hiding. Sixteen years later, Lockjaw is back on the hunt for Bob and his daughter. But when Willa goes missing, Bob has to battle with his past and years of substance abuse in his quest to reunite with his daughter.

The Performances​

Perfidia​

I’m trying not to give away the whole movie here, just enough for context and to highlight what really makes this plot sing: the performances. We need to start with Teyana Taylor’s Perfidia Beverly Hills, who owns the first act and is the kind of femme fatale that would make Faye Dunaway and Sharon Stone blush.

Taylor’s performance goes far deeper than just being a smokeshow who brings out the worst in Bob and Lockjaw. This especially true after she has Willa, as the actress does an incredible job of externalizing Perfidia’s struggles with depression, guilt, and the loss of the individual autonomy that comes with starting a family. When she tells Bob, “I put myself first,” and storms out, you understand why. And when she regrets her decisions later in the film, you feel for her then, too.

The end of One Battle – and how it tugs on your heartstrings – wouldn’t be nearly as effective if it weren’t for Taylor’s performance.

Willa​

You know what they say: Like mother, like daughter. Chase Infiniti’s Willa is the heart and soul of the film. Unfortunately, for the purposes of this review, some of Infiniti’s best scenes are really spoiler-laden. But one that isn’t is Infiniti’s first moment onscreen with Leo.

You know the scene – the responsible child scolding the irresponsible parent – but this one is written by PTA. One of the biggest laughs in my theater came when Bob responds to Willa’s grilling with, “I know how to drink and drive. I know what I’m doing.”

They bicker, for sure, but it’s clear they care for each other, which Bob shows by threatening her friends in that fatherly way, while also casually insulting them, as they pick her up for the high school dance. It’s moments like these that give One Battle After Another its soul. This is a very politically-charged film, but it can also transcend the politics and remind the audience that this story, at its core, is about a father trying to connect with his daughter.

Bob​

Bob Ferguson is an odd mix of Leo’s previous characters. Think of Bob as a cross between The Wolf of Wall Street’s Jordan Belfort and his love of drugs, and Killers of the Flower Moon’s Ernest Burkhart and his stupidity. Bob genuinely loves his daughter, but he’s not the brightest bulb, dimmer now thanks to decades of drugs and alcohol, which is unfortunate because he’s being hunted.

There’s a great ongoing bit throughout the film that’s heavily featured in the trailer, with Bob on a payphone talking to someone from the resistance. But he can’t remember the super secret password. After multiple interactions with the mysterious voice, Bob goes full Karen, essentially demanding to speak to a manager. This all ends up being a very funny button to his plotline.

But Leo’s performance as a degenerate fuck-up revolutionary isn’t all about laughs. It’s got heart too, especially when he connects with Benicio del Toro’s Sensei Sergio.

Sensei Sergio St. Carlos​

In the production notes for the film, Leo refers to Sensei Sergio St. Carlos as Bob’s Obi-Wan, and it’s kind of true in a PTA way. And while he does help Bob out, and is a rebellious do-gooder himself, del Toro’s character isn’t in the film as much as the trailers would lead you to believe. There’s one scene where he and Bob are sharing some road sodas, while Bob is being really vulnerable about Willa, that continues to elevate the story above today’s contemporary political environment. But just because it’s heartfelt doesn’t mean it’s not funny. It's the scene that culminates with del Toro’s “Means no fear, like Tom Cruise!” moment. Great line.
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PTA DIRECTS LEONARDO DICAPRIO AND BENICIO DEL TORO.

Col. Stephen J. Lockjaw​

If this film has an Obi-wan, it must also have a Darth Vader, so enter Sean Penn. Like the Sith Lord, Penn as Lockjaw is also despicably evil and absolutely captivating.

Part pervert, part right-wing military psychopath, Penn plays Lockjaw kind of like a mix of A Few Good Men’s Col. Nathan R. Jessep and General Jack D. Ripper from Dr. Strangelove. But instead of being obsessed with “our precious bodily fluids!”, he’s more concerned with the semen demon.

There’s a scene where he’s being recruited to join a cabal of ultra-rich white nationalists. He’s clearly nervous, so the colonel decides to comb his hair by awkwardly licking his comb. It’s a moment that shows some of the insecurities bubbling under the surface of Col. Stephen J. Lockjaw.

The Pynchon and Politics of It All​

The Christmas Adventurers club – what kind of goofy club is that? It sounds like something out of a Thomas Pynchon novel. Well, it’s not – but it sounds like it could be.

It’s no secret that this movie is a loose adaptation of Pynchon’s 1990 novel Vineland. This would be PTA’s second Pynchon movie after 2011’s Inherent Vice, but One Battle feels more along the lines of how There Will Be Blood is an adaptation of Oil! by Upton Sinclair (even while being a looser adaptation than that work was).

PTA’s adaptation preserves most of the ways that the characters connected, but strips away all the novel’s sociopolitical context. Vineland’s Brock Vond and his war on drugs at the behest of the Reagan administration is replaced with Col. Lockjaw’s war on immigration and his willingness to enact martial law at the behest of a secret society of rich, white Americans who are pulling the strings of the government in an attempt to keep the U.S. “safe and pure.” And Vineland’s 24fps collective has been replaced with the French 75 revolutionaries, who believe in “Free borders. Free Choices. Free from fear.”

One Battle After Another draws a clear line in the sand, politically – there’s no such thing as a neutral bystander, and every character in this film has picked a side. They’re either part of the revolutionaries, trying to help the downtrodden, or they help the secret elite cabal trying to bring about a racially pure America. But having heavy stakes like that doesn’t mean PTA doesn’t try to adapt some of Pynchon’s absurdist humor. (There’s an order of nuns called Sisters of the Brave Beaver who train revolutionaries and grow weed.)

As for the Christmas Adventurers club, that’s the guild of calamitous intent that Lockjaw is trying to join. How fun! And they greet each other by saying “Hail St. Nick” – an almost childish auditory take on “Hail Satan.” But you know what? It works.

PTA’s instinct to take only the parts he liked from Vineland and fill in the rest is definitely the right move – especially for a $100M-plus movie. A straightforward adaptation of Vineland probably wouldn’t have netted a better film, and certainly wouldn’t have made for a more accessible one.

One Battle After Another draws a clear line in the sand, politically – there’s no such thing as a neutral bystander.


And for those of you who, like me, read Vineland to prep? Good news! Your time wasn’t wasted. This movie will make much more sense right from the jump. For those that haven’t, you might get a little lost with everything going on in the first act – it sets up a lot – but it’ll all make sense, especially on repeat viewings.

The Man of the Hour​

And now, for the man of the hour – the writer, the director, Paul Thomas Anderson.

To be blunt, I’m still in awe that this film actually exists. It’s so much fun to watch, while also telling a timeless story about what a father would go through to protect his daughter. And PTA does all this while making an incisive commentary on America’s current political climate. Let us not forget that he does all of this while managing to make his most expensive movie to date, of original-ish IP, no less. One Battle After Another is estimated to have cost between $130M and $175M. PTAs biggest earner, There Will Be Blood, which only brought in $70M+ at the box office, cost $25M.

And you can see that budget on the screen. There’s not one, but two car chases! And each is distinct, with the climactic one proving particularly memorable. I can’t recall hills used in a car chase to such dramatic effect, and the filmmaker creates a whole chase out of oscillating roads, building tension in a way that would make Alfred Hitchcock proud. The oscillating rhythm as the car goes in and out of sight is an incredible visual foreshadowing of how Willa will ultimately fight back. I won’t say more.


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LEONARDO DICAPRIO’S BOB IS A WASHED-UP FREEDOM FIGHTER WHO’S DRAWN BACK INTO HIS PAST LIFE.

But it takes more than a car chase and some fat stacks to hold my attention for not quite, but almost, three hours. We’re so lucky that PTA decided to make his blank-check movie 30 years into his career. This movie’s pacing relies on narrative tricks he developed on his older, cheaper movies like Magnolia and Boogie Nights. As with those movies, One Battle After Another also starts in a frantic burst of exposition. Scenes are short and the camera basically never stops moving, allowing PTA to cover a lot of narrative ground quickly. However, as the plot thickens, with Anderson spending time letting layers of character drama peel away, scenes take longer. He thus has to rely on editing to convey a juxtaposition of thematic elements to keep audiences enticed.

Look at Magnolia. The film starts with a rapid telling of three unrelated deaths to convey its focus on coincidence, before setting up the plotlines of all the characters and how all their seemingly unrelated stories will eventually affect each other. PTA employs these speedy narrative hacks in One Battle After Another – albeit this time with more expensive stunts and action – to set up the French 75’s history. But once the group disbands, he uses the Magnolia editing technique to create interesting juxtapositions. For example, take the contrast of Bob’s parent-teacher conference with Lockjaw’s conditional acceptance into the Christmas Adventurers – both are moments of pride for the men.

To be clear, this is what a director working at his peak looks like. One Battle After another is, without a doubt, amazing. But is it a masterpiece?

Verdict​

Frankly, when trying to come up with my final score for this movie, I’ve spent an absurd amount of time trying to figure out the difference between a 9 out of 10 and a 10 out of 10. What does an abstract “one better” mean?

Then it hit me: Who says our review scale is linear, with each number being equally spaced from the other? We’re “measuring” art with numbers, for Christ’s sake; it’s all a construction we’ve collectively made up. So let me ask: What if the gaps between the numbers in the middle of the spectrum – 5 to 6, 6 to 7, etc. – are larger than the quality gap between the numbers at the end of the spectrum? We may not care much about the nuanced improvements between an “Unbearable” 1 and a “Painful” 2, but we can probably agree they are slight. And if the differences are slight at one end of the spectrum, then logic reasons that the differences are also slight on the other.

The point I’m trying to make here is that the elements that separate an “amazing” film from a “masterpiece” are minor. Know that this 10 I’m about to drop does not come lightly. There are so many subtle things that make this film just that much better.

Take that sex scene that I hinted at earlier. PTA uses a Scorsese-esque needle-drop of “Soldier Boy” by The Shirelles as Perfidia holds Lockjaw’s own gun to his back as she pleasures him. The director then smash-cuts to an extremely pregnant Perfidia shooting a machine gun. At first glance, you could argue that the sequence is vulgar, but it’s not. It’s PTA in perfect control of his characters and the tone.

The same could be said for the Steely Dan “Dirty Work” needle-drop as we’re introduced to a teenage Willa and her dad’s parent-teacher conference prep of smoking dope in the car. Steely’s easy listening, yacht rock-tone perfectly embodies the vibe of their exile, but the lyrics hint at something else.

Even the things PTA whole-cloth invented for the film, like the harmony transponders, Bob forgetting the code words, the Christopher Reeve Superman poster in Sensei Sergio’s dojo, semen demon, the car chases, the stunt fall off a building down a tree… There are so many little details, seemingly inconsequential touches – the filmmaker’s style, if you will – that all add up bit by bit to turn this amazing movie into a masterpiece.

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L/A
 
I'm just so sick of every single movie having nigger relationships or mulattos and white people who get a Sean King style makeover forced in. I recently saw a trailer for a Western where a negress was the adoptive "mother" of a blonde white girl. Enough is enough.
 
I legit don't get what "semen demon" is supposed to mean. Is it supposed to be a reference to something? I feel like I'm missing out on the joke but is it just the fact it rhymes that's funny..? (all of the humour in this movie is lowbrow weed haha funny style comedy so I wouldn't be too shocked honestly).
It's just another term for an ultra gooner or coomer or whatever.
 
I legit don't get what "semen demon" is supposed to mean. Is it supposed to be a reference to something? I feel like I'm missing out on the joke but is it just the fact it rhymes that's funny..? (all of the humour in this movie is lowbrow weed haha funny style comedy so I wouldn't be too shocked honestly).
Saw the movie last week in a pretty full theatre in Paris. It has extremely good ratings here, and the audience seemed to like it.
Spoilers below, and an explanation of the semen demon thing.


The first scene is the whole antifa storming a detention facility for illegals. Unlike what's written in the articles, the Sean Penn villain doesn't "get an erection" from being detained by the black girl Perfidia. She forces him to "get it up" repeatedly, and unless he can, she shoots him. It was so fucking uncomfortable to watch, and an elderly man in the audience left the screening. (The only one to go during the whole movie).

Anyways, DiCaprio plays a bomb-maker named Ghetto Pat, who sleeps with Perfidia almost instantly, in yet another super awkward scene of her forcing herself on him and yelling "do you like black girls, huh?".

Meanwhile, Sean Penn watches them making out as he masturbates in a car.

The discount antifa then plan a terrorist attack on the courthouse, and Sean Penn catches Perfidia putting a bomb in the restroom. He says he doesn't care about her shit as long as she meets him in a hotel later. She does, and there's a very weird sex scene where it looks like she fucks him with a strap-on against a wall.

Fast forward, and Perfidia is pregnant. She still fights, and there's a scene where it looks like she drinks alcohol while telling DiCaprio off, as he looks shocked.

She gives birth, and laments the fact that Ghetto Pat seems to give more attention to the newborn baby than to her, and their revolution. They get into an argument, and she walks out to rob a bank, saying she'll always put herself first. The robbery goes super badly, and she kills an unarmed black guard. (So much for black brotherhood).

She's caught, and tries to seduce Sean Penn as he visits her in the hospital to get a plea deal. Then, she rats out all of her comrades, and gets into witness protection.

Ghetto Pat and his newborn daughter have to move asap with new identities ; they're one of the few antifas not to get caught. Meanwhile, Perfidia decides to leave witness protection, and flees to Mexico, never to be seen again.

Fast forward 15 years, and Ghetto Pat is living in a house in the woods next to a sanctuary city. He's completely stoned during a parent-teacher meeting, and gets into an argument with his daughter Willa over him drinking and driving.

Willa seems like a good student, and practices karate with her Mexican sensei played by Benicio del Torro. She then goes to the school dance, while DiCaprio reminds her off all the safety procedures they have in place in case something goes wrong.

Meanwhile, Sean Penn is being invited to a secret society of white supremacists called the Christmas Adventurers Club. He's asked if he ever slept with a black woman, to which he replies "no". The Club says they'll check his yankee ancestry.

Exiting the meeting, he panics and calls in the army to find and raid all the remaining antifags, who weren't swept 15 years ago. They get the dude who made the fake IDs for Ghetto Pat and his daughter, and obviously, he snitches on them too.

Sean Penn then decides to raid the sanctuary city they reside in, and get all the illegals while he's out there looking for Willa.

The Christmas Adventurers Club catch on to his scheme, because they have records of one of the antifas called Junglepussy claiming that Sean Penn has had an affair with Perfidia back in the day. They are also upset that he raided the factories full of illegals, since they're the owners, and would like their cheap labour to get back to work. So they dispatch a hit man to take care of Sean Penn, that blood-traitor.

Willa's school dance is raided, but she's safely exfiltrated by an antifa black lady who's gotten a distress signal. They drive away to a safe location.

Ghetto Pat's home is also raided, but he escapes through a tunnel he dug, and runs to Mexican Sensei for help. There's a whole scene of him not managing to charge his antifa phone, and then not remembering the special codewords to get the meeting point location to find Willa.

Meanwhile, the Mexican Sensei is organising an evacuation of all the illegal families he's housing, since the entire city is being raided by ICE. He gives Ghetto Pat a rifle, and tells him to escape through the roof. Ghetto Pat fails miserably, and is captured by cops. They think he's just a random protester, and transfer him to the hospital as he pretends to be a diabetic having forgotten his shots. From there, he reunites with Mexican Sensei, whose done with the illegals' evacuation, and they set off to find Willa.

Willa's friends (a fat kid, a Mexican, and a non-binary abomination) are being interrogated by the army over her location, and her phone number. Obviously, they all snitch when put under pressure, and Sean Penn manages to get a location off her phone before the antifa lady throws it away.

Willa's being brought to the Sisters of the Holy Beaver, a congregation of antifa black ladies who grow weed, and hate Willa's mom over being a snitch. Nonetheless, she's allowed to stay, and we even get a training montage.

Mexican Sensei and Ghetto Pat drink and drive until they're being pulled over by cops, and Ghetto Pat has to escape the car and continue the journey on his own.

Sean Penn reaches the Sisters' hideout before, and arrests everyone. He pulls Willa aside, and has her take a DNA test. Congratulations, he is the father. Deciding that his Christmas Adventurers' membership is worth more than the life of his child, he calls a Native American human trafficker to dispose of her.

In the meantime, Ghetto Pat has stolen a car, and chases Sean Penn, not knowing that Willa is in the hands (and car) of the traffickers, speeding in the opposite direction.

The Christmas Adventurers' hitman catches up with Sean Penn before Ghetto Pat does, and shoots him in the face, causing his car to crash.

Ghetto Pat reaches the wreck, and doesn't find Willa in it, so he turns around.

Willa meanwhile has been dropped off to some white supremacists' hideout, awaiting God knows what. The Indian trafficker feels some remorse for it since she's a kid, and doubles back to shoot everyone, and die in the process.

Willa then escapes in his car, and gets chased by the Christmas hit man, who's being chased in turn by DiCaprio.

She manages to kill the hit man, and then reunites with her father in an emotional scene.

Also, it turns out that Sean Penn isn't dead, just disfigured, and still tries to join the Christmas Adventurers Club. He gets interviewed over his relationship with Perfidia and his mixed-race child, and he explains it by saying Perfidia reverse-raped him because she's a "semen demon" who wanted his superior white genetics.
The board seems to accept his explanation, and his membership. They lead him to an office cubicle, saying it's his now, and exit as Sean Penn gets gased to death.

Willa and Ghetto Pat are back at their survivalist house, now complete with brand new Iphones. Willa leaves to drive to a protest, and Ghetto Pat goes back to day drinking. All is well that ends well.

 
Nazis were on the cutting edge of radio and movies. Leni Riefenstahl was brilliant.
Ditto the Fascists and Soviets. The idea that authoritarians abhor art is just delusional snobbery by wealthy liberals using their "education" as an excuse to see themselves as superior.

In practice, authoritarian regimes have both the reason and means of creating amazing works of media celebrating their power and publishing them across the world. It is far simpler than feeding their own populace.
 
I watched it only because of the 70mm IMAX (its 35mm VistaVision so its a 70mm blow up) showing without knowing anything going in. The theater was only like a third filled which for a 70mm showing is very uncommon. Movie was shit. None of the jokes were funny but the entire audience laughed outloud at all of them, especially the semen demon line.

There is like, one scene (the road one at the end) that is remotely worth anything cinematically.
This post is correct, the road chase is the only scene worth watching, just wait for a YouTube clip.

I regret watching it, even though the 70mm was the full frame IMAX for the entire movie because it was shot in VistaVision. It's a very hateful movie and it coming out after Charlie Kirk being killed and the continual left wing violence just makes me feel sick. Its just a lefty propagandist circlejerk.

The White male character who got cucked by the negress spends the entire movie being a bumbling idiot who only gets anywhere because of all the brave brown people who help him. His daughter saves herself after the Indian (feather) guy decides to just kill all the White mercenaries, killing the christmas assassin (they love christmas because they are White supremists, christmas being a Christian, aka White, holiday) herself, only for her cuck White dad to arrive after all the conflict, achieving nothing the entire movie.
 
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and she kills an unarmed black guard. (So much for black brotherhood).
I actually laughed out loud when that happened. Considering that "jungle pussy" character had her rant about black power, only for perfidia to shoot the black guy. Peak hypocrisy
Willa and Ghetto Pat are back at their survivalist house, now complete with brand new Iphones. Willa leaves to drive to a protest, and Ghetto Pat goes back to day drinking. All is well that ends well.
Goes to show how there are literally no consequences in the movie. The characters are in the exact same place as they where at the start of the movie.
 
Was watching a Nerdrotic Daily video and saw this comment. Don't want to confirm its validity, but it would make sense that the original work would cast Weather Underground as terrible people because they are.
Nerdrotic Daily Antifa.png
 
Unlike what's written in the articles, the Sean Penn villain doesn't "get an erection" from being detained by the black girl Perfidia. She forces him to "get it up" repeatedly, and unless he can, she shoots him.
PTA might take the blame for this one, but this kind of thing is what Pynchon was all about. I'm amazed at how many people walk around praising Gravity's Rainbow because they associate it with leftism or serious ideas about Operation Paperclip but seem unaware that its contents include nonstop sex, rape, pedophile rape, etc. You bring it up to them and they look at you puzzled. Then you realize oh nobody actually reads Pynchon
 
Estimated break even point was 300 million.

175 budget reported, plus marketing.

Only took in 48 million WW with 22 domestic, which studio makes the most off of given international returns are lower after distribution.

This film will be lucky to crack 100 million total when it's all said and done.

Confirmed faggot leftist flop.
Anderson is still one of the few directors who is still allowed the "we know his films won't break events at the box office but they will eventually become evergreen sellers on dvd plus will get us awards". Especially the later part, since you know damn well that OBAA is going to get the mother of all pushes at Oscar time since the left are going to "want to send a message" to Trump by having it sweep the Oscars.
 
idk, the movie was just okay. I disagreed with pretty much every point it was trying to make, but I still had an alright time with it. Definitely not PTA’s best work like everyone on Letterboxd and film twitter is acting like it is. I honestly can’t understand how it cost more than $100 million to make. I looked up Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood and that budget was around $90 million, and that movie had way more spectacle and wasnt set in the modern day. I get that this was post COVID, but even then I don’t see how PTA managed to burn through that kind of budget.
 
I haven't read Vineland in years but if I remember right, the opening scene is the main character going into town because once a year he needs to put on a big show of jumping through a storeftont window in order to prove to the government that he's insane and needs to collect benefits. Pynchon sets up from the beginning what he thinks of all these people who were self-righteous radicals in the 70s, they became useless hateful burnout losers in the 80s. It sounds like this film version starts with an über-cool battle scene which isn't the right tone at all.

Vineland's a great book, if you're going to do just one Pynchon, that's the most readable one.
 
Anderson is still one of the few directors who is still allowed the "we know his films won't break events at the box office but they will eventually become evergreen sellers on dvd plus will get us awards". Especially the later part, since you know damn well that OBAA is going to get the mother of all pushes at Oscar time since the left are going to "want to send a message" to Trump by having it sweep the Oscars.
"He insists upon himself" applies to more and more movies these days.
 
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