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Adam
02-10-2011, 05:16 PM
An action-thriller centered on the threat posed by a deadly disease and an international team of doctors contracted by the CDC to deal with the outbreak


starring...

Matt Damon
Gwyneth Paltrow
Marion Cotillard
Jude Law
John Hawkes
Laurence Fishburne
Bryan Cranston
Sanaa Lathan

I'm a sucker for these kinds of movies (and also Soderbergh, to an extent) so I'm pretty much already in the bag for this one. Comes out October 21st

Morris Schæffer
02-10-2011, 05:31 PM
Somehow that premise sounds like it doesn't quite go together with the name Soderbergh, but I ain't complaining. Still think Traffic is the man's best work so I'd love to see him return to an established genre rather than going oddball & quirky on us although I guess Ché was anything but.

So since there's little else to discuss at the moment, I just wanna say that Petersen's 1995 Outbreak is pretty damn exciting.

Dukefrukem
02-10-2011, 07:45 PM
so it's essentially... Outbreak

Matt Damon was in that movie too.

Raiders
02-10-2011, 08:00 PM
so it's essentially... Outbreak

Matt Damon was in that movie too.

No, he wasn't.

Soderbergh's other film releasing this year, Haywire (written by Lem Dobbs, same writer as The Limey, Soderbergh's masterpiece) interests me far more than this film.

Dukefrukem
02-10-2011, 08:05 PM
No, he wasn't.


Yes he was. :crazy:

edit: I think

Morris Schæffer
02-11-2011, 05:18 AM
Doubt that Damon was in Outbreak. Perhaps as a bit player since he certainly wasn't known then, two years before Good Will Hunting.

soitgoes...
02-11-2011, 10:54 AM
Doubt that Damon was in Outbreak. Perhaps as a bit player since he certainly wasn't known then, two years before Good Will Hunting.He wasn't. Duke must be thinking of Cuba Gooding Jr.

Dukefrukem
02-11-2011, 12:08 PM
You guys need to go back and watch the movie. Look at Donald Sutherland's helicopter pilot.

He's uncredited for some reason.

DavidSeven
02-11-2011, 10:18 PM
Sounds more like Ocean's Eleven MDs: Outbreak.

Watashi
02-11-2011, 10:39 PM
This is also shot in 3D.

Dukefrukem
06-21-2011, 07:23 PM
http://i148.photobucket.com/albums/s36/Dukefrukem/Movie%20%20Misc/contag.png

Raiders
06-21-2011, 07:32 PM
Still think Haywire looks far more appealing than this film, but it has been moved back to January now. Ugh.

Henry Gale
06-21-2011, 10:03 PM
That's probably the most Oscar-touting I've ever seen on a poster. It's kind of impressive.

MadMan
06-22-2011, 09:27 AM
Maybe a trailer for this could convince me that it looks appealing.

amberlita
06-23-2011, 07:26 AM
That will be the most beautiful group of doctors I've ever seen in my life.

number8
06-24-2011, 03:14 PM
Nice. Soderbergh is gonna be at Comic-Con for this.

Watashi
07-14-2011, 12:00 AM
e0v8BSYq7KY

'Dat Cast.

Lazlo
07-14-2011, 12:10 AM
Yezzir.

DavidSeven
07-14-2011, 12:55 AM
That trailer has a huge and totally unnecessary spoiler.

Otherwise, I guess it looks cool.

B-side
07-14-2011, 05:08 AM
I'm looking forward to it.

Also, yes, dat cast.

Raiders
07-14-2011, 01:20 PM
That trailer has a huge and totally unnecessary spoiler.

Otherwise, I guess it looks cool.

Eh, in case people choose not to watch the trailer, I'll tag this...

Yeah, it seems like her death should have been an early-film shock to the audience ("what, they killed Gwyneth?"). But, it also seems potentially likely that her death isn't the last word on her character (we don't really know the specifics of the contagion).

Ezee E
07-15-2011, 05:54 AM
I think this looks great.

Bosco B Thug
07-15-2011, 06:37 PM
I haven't seen a Soderbergh, but this looks pretty cool.

Chac Mool
07-16-2011, 12:04 AM
I haven't seen a Soderbergh, but this looks pretty cool.

Like, ever?

Out of Time, The Limey and Traffic are all very good -- and most of his stuff is at least worth a look.

Ezee E
07-16-2011, 01:50 AM
Like, ever?

Out of Time, The Limey and Traffic are all very good -- and most of his stuff is at least worth a look.
And it seems like everyone's seen at least an Ocean's movie..

BTW, Out of Sight :lol:

EyesWideOpen
07-16-2011, 04:39 AM
Solaris is fantastic. My favorite film of his easily.

Bosco B Thug
07-16-2011, 05:11 AM
Like, ever?

Out of Time, The Limey and Traffic are all very good -- and most of his stuff is at least worth a look.

Oh wait, I've seen Ocean's 12 & 13, and Solaris. Whoops, red-faced.

I'll give him a try, like his acclaimed 90s work, eventually. Maybe if I like Contagion.

Boner M
07-16-2011, 06:29 AM
You'd like The Limey, BBT. Start there.

Pop Trash
07-16-2011, 05:57 PM
Is Soderbergh still retiring? I'm still a big fan of his pre-Oceans work. He also gives great commentary.

Qrazy
07-16-2011, 06:30 PM
Is Soderbergh still retiring? I'm still a big fan of his pre-Oceans work. He also gives great commentary.

As far as we know. For someone as prolific as him though I would think that it would be a short lived retirement. Right now he's probably constantly taking off more than he can chew and he needs a break but at some point he'll get bored and want to make another film.

Bosco B Thug
07-16-2011, 07:13 PM
You'd like The Limey, BBT. Start there. Cool, noted.

Qrazy
07-16-2011, 08:20 PM
Cool, noted.

Personally I think Sex Lies and Videotape and Schizopolis are better.

Sxottlan
09-10-2011, 09:44 AM
Meh. Fairly rote and slow-going. Seemed Soderbergh was trying to mimic his work in Traffic, but it wasn't nearly as engaging (not that I've seen that film since I saw it in theatres 11 years ago). Then again I don't often find virus movies that engaging to begin with.

I think the best may still be The Andromeda Strain.

BTW, between this movie and watching Johnnie To's Vengeance Thursday night, it's been a Macau weekend for me.

number8
09-12-2011, 02:37 PM
I thought it was neat. I kinda love the aesthetic and how it avoided dramatizing pretty much anything and just patiently and clinically detail how the CDC and WHO would actually handle this kind of outbreak. It makes the whole thing entirely anticlimactic and mundane (SOLUTION: just wait at home and carry on with normal life until the government get around to taking care of everything!) but if you're interested in that kind of stuff, it's fairly engaging.

It was a mistake to see it opening weekend though. Packed theater and everyone seemed bored by it. People kept checking the time on their phones.

number8
09-12-2011, 03:03 PM
Plus, this movie gives the finger to homeopathy, so that's a plus.

NickGlass
09-12-2011, 06:23 PM
I thought it was neat. I kinda love the aesthetic and how it avoided dramatizing pretty much anything and just patiently and clinically detail how the CDC and WHO would actually handle this kind of outbreak. It makes the whole thing entirely anticlimactic and mundane (SOLUTION: just wait at home and carry on with normal life until the government get around to taking care of everything!) but if you're interested in that kind of stuff, it's fairly engaging.

It was a mistake to see it opening weekend though. Packed theater and everyone seemed bored by it. People kept checking the time on their phones.

I agree that Soderberg approached the subject with a fair amount of clinical professionalism, which I appreciate, but you don't believe it was dramatized at all? Perhaps my problem with the film is that it dramatically toed the line so much and yet couldn't follow through with an effective subplot--leading to a half-dramatization of many threads. It feeds into the recent problem I've had in regards to Soderberg's recent films. Also, the aesthetic seemed stale by Soderberg standards; I know it's cold in Minnesota and warm in Georgia--so you still need to use the color gels? I think this is used much more effectively in Traffic.

Best in show, considering the role/sub-plot and performance: Jennifer Ehle.

Rowland
09-12-2011, 06:28 PM
I thought it was amusing that half the film played like a music-video of endless montage, albeit a pleasantly stylish one in that modern Soderbergh aesthetic scored to danceable techno beats.

number8
09-12-2011, 06:53 PM
I agree that Soderberg approached the subject with a fair amount of clinical professionalism, which I appreciate, but you don't believe it was dramatized at all? Perhaps my problem with the film is that it dramatically toed the line so much and yet couldn't follow through with an effective subplot--leading to a half-dramatization of many threads.

Well, I don't believe the virus plot itself gets any dramatization. There's no race against time, no herculean effort to find a cure, none of the characters gets thrusted into a dangerous journey, and there's no real dramatic investigation to find patient zero and the cause of the virus as the trailers cheekily suggested. It's just... hey, a new virus appeared, let's learn it. Even the fact that millions of people are dying from it is just treated as background news statistics in the film, rather than a ticking clock.

There's enough drama in the individual characters just to distinguish them apart so they're not just scientists babbling research terms, but they never go beyond the mundane reality of their situations.

Matt Damon loses his wife to the virus, so this everyman is transformed into... a guy who shuts himself and his daughter at home and just waits things out.

Lawrence Fishburne is the insider who stumbles into a scandal, so the government comes after him... and tells him, "Hey, chief, keep doing what you're doing, but you should probably stop talking to reporters, please."

Kate Winslet is the brilliant researcher given the task of finding the cure, so she... visits a bunch of sick people and collects data.

Jude Law's is my favorite because it's clearly thumbing its nose at the standard Hollywood approach to this premise, which is the lone guy with the conspiracy theory fighting the system... except instead of being the hero who's right all along, he ends up just being a nutjob blogger who's full of shit.

Marion Cotillard's kidnapping subplot was terrible, though. I could do without that one.

Barty
09-13-2011, 08:58 PM
I thought it was neat. I kinda love the aesthetic and how it avoided dramatizing pretty much anything and just patiently and clinically detail how the CDC and WHO would actually handle this kind of outbreak. It makes the whole thing entirely anticlimactic and mundane (SOLUTION: just wait at home and carry on with normal life until the government get around to taking care of everything!) but if you're interested in that kind of stuff, it's fairly engaging.


Agreed.

Barty
09-13-2011, 09:00 PM
The lack of dramatization was effectively more creepy and unnerving than anything else I've seen recently. Loved how they handled the deaths of Paltrow and their son. It just happens...no music, no breakdown, bam your dead.

number8
09-14-2011, 12:46 PM
Paltrow really sold that death twitch, too. That set the tone for the rest of the film.

EyesWideOpen
09-17-2011, 12:57 AM
LppK4ZtsDdM

Mysterious Dude
12-10-2011, 04:41 PM
I thought this was quite good. Except there was this annoying couple sitting behind me in the theater, and whenever they heard or saw something from Minneapolis that they recognized, they, for some reason, had to repeat it out loud.

- "Where are you right now?"
- "I'm at, uh, Lake and Lyndale."

"Ahahaha! Lake and Lyndale!"

Yeah, I fucking heard it.

Li Lili
12-17-2011, 09:37 PM
Saw it today at the theatre, I thought it was just ok. It seemed to me that there were lots of topics, but dealt quite superfluously.

Ezee E
12-28-2011, 05:34 AM
Fortyfive minutes into it. I need to go to bed, but this might be my movie of the year.

Scar
12-28-2011, 01:05 PM
Fortyfive minutes into it. I need to go to bed, but this might be my movie of the year.

Just watched it a couple days ago, and I really enjoyed it.

Robby P
12-28-2011, 02:37 PM
This movie reminded me of most of Soderbergh's recent output. Engrossing and captivating but the material is handled in a very superficial manner. It seems like Soderbergh is more interested in juggling subplots than saying anything particularly meaningful. Most of the movie was pretty forgettable although the final scene was a nice, surprising touch.

Ezee E
12-29-2011, 05:53 PM
This was great all around. Just enough drama to keep things interesting for each character, but never overthetop. Enough clinical talk, but not so wordy that you couldn't understand.

If anything, this movie shows me that Gwyneath Paltrow needs to be in more movies. This and Two Lovers makes me think she's one of the better actresses out there. Her seizure was probably the most realistic (and I've seen plenty on the field) I've seen in a movie before. Chilling.

Dukefrukem
01-02-2012, 02:07 PM
I loved this. It's definitely my favorite Soderbergh movie.

Dukefrukem
01-09-2012, 02:44 PM
You guys need to go back and watch the movie. Look at Donald Sutherland's helicopter pilot.

He's uncredited for some reason.

This is who I thought was Damon.

http://img827.imageshack.us/img827/3004/damonj.png

D_Davis
01-09-2012, 02:56 PM
Great looking and sounding film. Probably one of my favorite scores of the year, and that's pretty much what I would expect from Cliff Martinez.

Kurosawa Fan
01-10-2012, 02:54 AM
This movie reminded me of most of Soderbergh's recent output. Engrossing and captivating but the material is handled in a very superficial manner. It seems like Soderbergh is more interested in juggling subplots than saying anything particularly meaningful. Most of the movie was pretty forgettable although the final scene was a nice, surprising touch.

Felt identical. Interesting, sometimes fascinating, but far too clinical to leave much of a lasting impression. The beginning of the film made me want to go wash my hands.

EyesWideOpen
01-10-2012, 02:55 AM
I don't think that's Matt Damon.

Ezee E
01-10-2012, 04:06 AM
I don't think that's Matt Damon.
It's not. Duke thought it was a while ago.

Izzy Black
01-11-2012, 09:47 PM
Soderbergh is a formalist. It's best to think of him that way.

I thought Jude Law's character was a bit over-the-top and unconvincing. He struck me as a caricature. It didn't jive well with the film's overall sense of realism. Aside from that, I really liked this picture.

And am I the only one who prefers Soderbergh's post-Ocean's Eleven work?

Pop Trash
01-11-2012, 09:58 PM
And am I the only one who prefers Soderbergh's post-Ocean's Eleven work?

I think they are underrated, as is Soderbergh in general. I've never quite understood why he never had the drooling fanboy following of, say, PT Anderson, Fincher, or Tarantino.

number8
01-11-2012, 10:04 PM
I think they are underrated, as is Soderbergh in general. I've never quite understood why he never had the drooling fanboy following of, say, PT Anderson, Fincher, or Tarantino.

I'm guessing because those three never made Erin Brockovich.

BAZING.

Izzy Black
01-11-2012, 10:08 PM
I think they are underrated, as is Soderbergh in general. I've never quite understood why he never had the drooling fanboy following of, say, PT Anderson, Fincher, or Tarantino.

Yep. Soderbergh gets no love. But in the case those guys, my guess is because they make movies for Guys Who Like Movies. Soderbergh is too delicate for fanboys.

Robby P
01-11-2012, 10:41 PM
Nothing says Macho Guy Movie like Punch Drunk Love and Magnolia.

D_Davis
01-11-2012, 11:09 PM
I'm guessing because those three never made Erin Brockovich.

BAZING.

Those three also never made Out of Sight.

Raiders
01-11-2012, 11:34 PM
Soderbergh always has an angle with his films, which is what I respect. By this I mean he always has some formalist idea to bring to the film. But, I don't think he has managed to top what he did with the jazzy rhythms of Out of Sight (though Ocean's Twelve came damn close and is definitely my favorite of that trilogy) or the rather profoundly meta The Limey. I also adore King of the Hill, definitely the most woefully underseen of his films.

Izzy Black
01-11-2012, 11:45 PM
I echo the (unpopular) sentiment that Twelve is the best of the series. I would also second the claim that Ought of Sight is perhaps one of his finest (and arguably most influential) formal achievements. I still think that his best or at least most interesting work comes post-Eleven, with Solaris and Twelve at the forefront of his portfolio.

Dukefrukem
01-12-2012, 12:39 AM
I echo the (unpopular) sentiment that Twelve is the best of the series. I would also second the claim that Ought of Sight is perhaps one of his finest (and arguably most influential) formal achievements. I still think that his best or at least most interesting work comes post-Eleven, with Solaris and Twelve at the forefront of his portfolio.

The silly Red Sox Yankees ending? :lol:

transmogrifier
01-12-2012, 12:54 AM
Well, make that three of us that prefer Ocean's 12 over the other two in the series. But Soderbergh's crowning achievement is still Out of Sight. His best since then has been The Informant!. He's a weird director in that you never really think of him as having much of a signature style, but then you watch something of his and you're like, this is such a Soderbergh movie.

Kurosawa Fan
01-12-2012, 01:24 AM
Hate to make it seem ordinary, but I also prefer Ocean's 12 to the other two in the trilogy, and think Out of Sight is his best film, and included it in my top 100 way back when. The Limey would likely run a close second. I think where I seem to separate myself from most is that I think Traffic is pretty fantastic, though I haven't seen it since the year it was released on DVD, so perhaps that opinion would change with another viewing.

Winston*
01-12-2012, 01:26 AM
Oceans 12 is awful.

Ezee E
01-12-2012, 01:33 AM
I also like Ocean's 12, but I'm in the high minority when you take this out of Match Cut.

Izzy Black
01-12-2012, 01:45 AM
I suppose on MC I should expect more agreement with my tastes than less. You guys make it much more difficult to be a contrarian!

Irish
01-12-2012, 01:46 AM
I've never quite understood why he never had the drooling fanboy following of, say, PT Anderson, Fincher, or Tarantino.

Because he's all over the map, going from indie gangster movies to family films to Oscar bait dramas to mainstream comedies to experimental stuff. On one hand, it's cool that he's going for some artistic range, on the other there's something to be said for consistency.

And fanboys demand consistency above most other things. You walk into a movie by those other guys, you know exactly what you'll be getting. But somebody who loved The Limey or Out of Sight and checks out Brokavich or The Girlfriend Experience or Solaris is going to be all, "... the fuck?" fifteen minutes in.

His filmography reminds me a little bit of Alan Parker, who's made some pretty well known, big commercial films, but nobody ever talks about him. He once said that his career goal was to make a movie in every genre. That's a commendable thing to reach for, but it's also a difficult thing to build a following around.

Kurosawa Fan
01-12-2012, 01:50 AM
Shit, I forgot about Solaris. That's my #2 Soderbergh for those scoring at home. That's what I get for trying to go off the top of my head.

Izzy Black
01-12-2012, 02:03 AM
I agree Soderbergh's polystylism is alienating and no doubt contributes to resisting that kind of audience, but it's also important to note that the aforementioned directors had fanboys after only one film. It took only one film for Tarantino to have fanboys, same for Fincher and Anderson. Soderbergh doesn't really have an iconic 'fanboy' film of that caliber. The closest he's got is Sex, Lies, and Videotape, which is merely iconic for its indie status and influence, not because it's the kind of film that could engender an audience of fanboys, particularly given its thematic focus.

Irish
01-12-2012, 02:33 AM
There's a few things at play there.

Soderburgh got a huge start but then essentially dropped off the face of the earth for 10 years, half a generation. He also didn't have the benefit of the Internet to fuel fanboyism, which Fincher and Anderson had just as their careers took off.

Soderburgh, as I said, is much more mainstream and less artistically rigid than the others (I can't think of anyone who sucks all the air out of a room quite like PT Anderson). He also doesn't pander to a specific audience (as Tarantino does).

I dunno if these other guys had fanboys as immediately as you say. It seems to me more th built up over a 5 year or so period, because they were able to consistently turn out very similar sorts of movies.

Soderburgh wasn't able to do that, or really, hasn't shown much interest in doing it.

Izzy Black
01-12-2012, 03:05 AM
I am not sure what you mean by dropping off the face of the earth for ten years. He's been releasing quality films almost every year or every other year since his debut. I've followed his career since Videotape. I also don't think it's accurate to call Soderbergh more mainstream than Tarantino, Fincher, and Anderson. I'd say they are all pretty comparable commercially and critically.

As for fanboyism, in many ways, I think Tarantino and Kevin Smith gave rise to the very first wave of fanboyism with Pulp Fiction and Clerks, respectively. Tarantino garnered a cult following of geeks much like Nolan did with Memento, Fincher with Fight Club, and Anderson with Magnolia. These films are all hallmark examples of fanboy iconography, as far as I can tell. Soderbergh simply doesn't have a film like that. I don't think he appeals to that kind of audience, in part because of his polystylism, as you note.

I agree that Soderbergh hasn't capitalized on a particular style the way these other filmmakers have, but I don't think he ever garnered the level of cultic attention around a particular film in the way these guys did.

Izzy Black
01-12-2012, 03:09 AM
A useful way of thinking about it is to take the directors out of the equation. Soderbergh doesn't have a film that has enjoyed the kind of cult following films like Memento, Pulp Fiction, Magnolia, and Fight Club have, that's to say nothing of their directors.

transmogrifier
01-12-2012, 05:40 AM
That's the key point, I guess. Soderbergh has not made a film as good as Magnolia, Boogie Nights, Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Seven or Fight Club. Out of Sight is his closest, and I love it, but it is a rung lower than those other films.

I think it is cute how much Irish hates PT Anderson. Artistically rigid? Sucks the air out of the room? That shit doesn't even make sense. But I admire the forthright, consistent way he peddles this nonsense.

Irish
01-12-2012, 06:47 AM
A useful way of thinking about it is to take the directors out of the equation. Soderbergh doesn't have a film that has enjoyed the kind of cult following films like Memento, Pulp Fiction, Magnolia, and Fight Club have, that's to say nothing of their directors.

I think you're confusing, in some cases, fans of specific cult films with fans of specific directors.

That is, mistakenly believing the people loved Fight Club because of Fincher and not because its subject matter hit a cultural nerve or because of Palaniuk's twisty story. (Somehow I doubt this subset of fans were eagerly awaiting The Game when it hit theaters or running to Blockbuster to rent Alien 3. For one, they were to busy punching each other in crab grass filled backyards, much to the delight of local news crews across the country).

It's similar, to me, as universally conflating Star Wars fans with George fanboys. Or thinking that everyone who loves Indiana Jones rabidly follows the career of Steven Spielberg.

I say Soderburgh disappeared for 10 years because he pretty much did. From 89 to 98 he made a string of movies that nobody saw. His career, and his name, had faded from public view when he came out with The Limey and Out of Sight at the end of the 90s.

I say he's more mainstream because he doesn't do small art house stuff like Punch Drunk Love. He does big budget studio Oscar bait crammed with A-listers and in between experiments with the commercial market. He's also, afaik, the only one who has done multiple sequels to his own work, which is a huge indicator as to where his interests lie. (And no, you don't get to sneak in Nolan. Without one of the biggest, most famous franchises in the world, Nolan would be a footnote in an Intro to American Independent Film textbook at a community college.)

While Soderburgh had a 10 year head start on the other guys, he's also made 3 times as many movies, and produced nearly a dozen others. By comparison, Anderson has made what? Six? Fincher about the same? They're a lot more careful about the stuff they put out there.

I call them artistically rigid because I can almost guarantee you these guys will rarely, if ever, deviate from their established styles and fields of interest (can you imagine Taantino attempting something like Age of Innocence or Kundun?).

Their work has become so codified they operate almost like their own brands, like Woody Allen does and Martin Scorcese and Spike Lee used to.

Winston*
01-12-2012, 07:29 AM
I find your post confusing. What's an "experiment with the commercial market" and how does that differ from "small arthouse fair"? Also how is There Will Be Blood for example not a deviation?

Irish
01-12-2012, 08:04 AM
I find your post confusing. What's an "experiment with the commercial market" and how does that differ from "small arthouse fair"? Also how is There Will Be Blood for example not a deviation?

A few years back Soderburgh got a lot of press by making a small budget picture and simultaneously releasing it in theaters, on pay per view, and DvD. That's what I mean by commercial experiments.

He's also big on improv in mainstream projects, with huge chunks of K Street, Full Frontal & the Girlfriend Experience being done off the cuff (and, I suspect, parts of Ocean's 12). That's more artistic experimentation, & given the precise nature of their work, I don't believe it is something Fincher or Anderson would ever do.

Art house stuff isn't experimental at this point, at least not in the US, either commercially or artistically. It's really just a euphemism for a form that's aimed at a very specific, narrow audience with appropriately sized budgets, cast, & expectations.

I don't think of There Will Be Blood as any kind of deviation, outside the obvious trappings of its setting. Tonally and thematically, it fits very nicely with the rest of Anderson's work.

Deviation would be more doing Midnight Express and following it up with Fame, or doing Casino and then Kundun.

Boner M
01-12-2012, 08:29 AM
Sodaburger

Dukefrukem
01-12-2012, 12:47 PM
Oceans 12 is awful.

Yeh it's bad compared to the first movie, but not as bad as 13.

What is the word that describes an event that takes place in a movie that is completely out of the realm of the synopsis? An example of this is the War of the Worlds ending… That’s how I feel 12 took advantage of their audience.

TripZone
01-12-2012, 01:09 PM
I thought Twelve was hugely enjoyable and very stylish when I saw it at cinemas.

Izzy Black
01-12-2012, 01:35 PM
I think you're confusing, in some cases, fans of specific cult films with fans of specific directors.

That is, mistakenly believing the people loved Fight Club because of Fincher and not because its subject matter hit a cultural nerve or because of Palaniuk's twisty story. (Somehow I doubt this subset of fans were eagerly awaiting The Game when it hit theaters or running to Blockbuster to rent Alien 3. For one, they were to busy punching each other in crab grass filled backyards, much to the delight of local news crews across the country).

It's similar, to me, as universally conflating Star Wars fans with George fanboys. Or thinking that everyone who loves Indiana Jones rabidly follows the career of Steven Spielberg.

I could indeed be making such a mistake, but it's not obvious to me that I am, or that the distinctions here are so fine. I imagine that those cult fans of Fight Club are also fans of Fincher and at least some of his other films. Fanboys tend to be pop culturally literate - they're movie buffs and sophisticated enough to be aware of the importance and impact of the director on a film. I find no trouble in thinking that fans of Fight Club also sought out and own S7even on DVD (and perhaps The Game) on the basis of the director. You will also see no trouble in finding fanboys of Batman Begins and The Dark Knight are also Chris Nolan fans with a copy of Memento on DVD. Likewise, you'll find that fanboys of the Matrix are also often fanboys of Wachowski. Fanboys typically use their intimate knowledge of the director of a film as a means of vindicating their obsessive love for that given film.

Let's push this further. I have stated that fanboyism finds its early roots in the response to Pulp Fiction and Clerks. These films have a cult following, and to say that the cult following of fans that formed around these films at the time of their release are not also cult fans, in some sense, of the directors, I think is a mistake. That doesn't imply that early fans of Tarantino and Kevin Smith are also cinephilies of the kind we find here on MC, but it's also not to deny that these directors didn't enjoy a cult following of fans that might be described as a "fanboy" audience.


I say Soderburgh disappeared for 10 years because he pretty much did. From 89 to 98 he made a string of movies that nobody saw. His career, and his name, had faded from public view when he came out with The Limey and Out of Sight at the end of the 90s.

I don't really agree. He was still part of the indie culture in the 90s, and many film publications covered his work and activity. I remember this first hand. Kafka, King of the Hill, Schizopolis, and Gray's Anatomy, released (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001752/) in 1991, 1993, and 1996 respectively (and perhaps less notably he made Underneath in 1995), are some of his finest films. If you look at the poster for Gray's Anatomy (1996), the New York Times gives the film four stars and describes the film as "... a wild, whimsical philosophy from America's master of monologue." Indeed, Soderbergh had a very strong cinematic identity in the 90s, largely connected to his work on Sex Lies and Videotape, emphasizing talky characters in quirky experimental roles. In truth, Soderberg's work in the 90s is most properly compared to the likes of Noah Baumbach, Richard Linklater, Gus Van Sant, and Jim Jarmusch. He was a part of this entire 90s indie New Wave movement, of which Smith and Tarantino were also a part, but who generated bigger cult followings, in many ways, than these other guys did.


I say he's more mainstream because he doesn't do small art house stuff like Punch Drunk Love. He does big budget studio Oscar bait crammed with A-listers and in between experiments with the commercial market. He's also, afaik, the only one who has done multiple sequels to his own work, which is a huge indicator as to where his interests lie. (And no, you don't get to sneak in Nolan. Without one of the biggest, most famous franchises in the world, Nolan would be a footnote in an Intro to American Independent Film textbook at a community college.)

Again, the dark shadow of the 90s you assume reflects Soderbergh's hiatus from film was actually when he was very involved in independent cinema and was actively building the foundations of his entire career. By the time he made Ought of Sight and Erin Brockovich, he was considered a consummate professional who had finally paid his dues. That's how he was able to get big budget films like that. You also don't seem to realize that he's as much an experimenter at the box office as he is on the art-house circuit (i.e., non-commercial markets). Solaris was a bold adaptation of a challenging novel and Soviet arthouse filmmaker that was essentially marketed as big budget arthouse cinema. He paid the price for it too, hence why it wasn't a box office success. You can't fault the man for working with a big budget and all star cast no more than you can Robert Altman or PTA for doing the same.


While Soderburgh had a 10 year head start on the other guys, he's also made 3 times as many movies, and produced nearly a dozen others. By comparison, Anderson has made what? Six? Fincher about the same? They're a lot more careful about the stuff they put out there.

Dubious. Soderbergh is prolific but that says nothing about his artistry. Woody Allen and Hitchcock were also extremely prolific, but we don't gain any insight about their careers by leaving it at that. Secondly, Soderbergh didn't really have a 10 year head start. If his career really begins in '89/'90, then PTA and Anderson are only a couple years off, and Tarantino, of course, is right there with him. The fact is Soderbergh isn't best classed with these guys, especially not his 90s work, as much as he is with the other filmmakers I mentioned from the 90s (who are no less talented).


I call them artistically rigid because I can almost guarantee you these guys will rarely, if ever, deviate from their established styles and fields of interest (can you imagine Taantino attempting something like Age of Innocence or Kundun?).

Their work has become so codified they operate almost like their own brands, like Woody Allen does and Martin Scorcese and Spike Lee used to.

I've already agreed that Soderbergh's polystylism helps ward off that kind of attention. For one, his style was (slightly) more contained in the 90s. By the 2000s, he had fully evolved into a kind of filmmaker that consciously engages different styles and approaches to film (like Gus Van Sant and Richard Linklater, all of which might be described as polystylists at various points in their career based on this experimental independent movement in the 90s). He's an intellectually curious filmmaker, and that's why he has gotten the attention of critics, even if not fanboys. But I don't think this tells the whole story. I also think he lacks an iconic fanboyish film that these other filmmakers have. That's why he ought to be classed more with the other filmmakers I cite.

Izzy Black
01-12-2012, 01:35 PM
That's the key point, I guess. Soderbergh has not made a film as good as Magnolia, Boogie Nights, Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Seven or Fight Club. Out of Sight is his closest, and I love it, but it is a rung lower than those other films.

I don't agree.


I think it is cute how much Irish hates PT Anderson. Artistically rigid? Sucks the air out of the room? That shit doesn't even make sense. But I admire the forthright, consistent way he peddles this nonsense.

I thought he was defending PT. I don't think he means artistically rigid in a bad way. He's trying to say he's an auteur of sorts and Soderbergh lacks this sort of consistent artistic identity. Although I personally don't think his inconsistency in style disqualifies his status as an auteur. To the contrary, even.

Izzy Black
01-12-2012, 02:14 PM
A few years back Soderburgh got a lot of press by making a small budget picture and simultaneously releasing it in theaters, on pay per view, and DvD. That's what I mean by commercial experiments.

He's also big on improv in mainstream projects, with huge chunks of K Street, Full Frontal & the Girlfriend Experience being done off the cuff (and, I suspect, parts of Ocean's 12). That's more artistic experimentation, & given the precise nature of their work, I don't believe it is something Fincher or Anderson would ever do.

How you are able to describe The Girlfriend Experience and Full Frontal as "mainstream projects" entirely escapes me. The Girlfriend Experience was produced on a shoe-string million dollar budget and Soderberg cites Bergman and Antonioni as inspirations for the film. It casts a non-professional actor in pornstar Sasha Gray and has a nonconventional structure. It screams low-budget, experimental independent cinema, and you describe it as, I guess, improvisational mainstream. Full Frontal, shot on two million dollar budget is practically French New Wave exploitation cinema. Similarly, Bubble was shot on a million dollar budget, without a script, and was one of the early forays in feature-length HD video, and Soderbergh was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for it. In fact, as you well note, neither Fincher, Tarantino, nor Anderson take these kind of risks as A-list filmmakers. Soderbergh does. Again, Soderbergh is much more like Gus Van Sant, his true contemporary, who went from mainstream success with Good Will Hunting to low-budget experiments like Elephant. The idea, then, that these other filmmaekrs are "less mainstream" seems totally alien to me. Quentin Tarantino, David Fincher, and Paul Thomas Anderson are as Hollywood as you can get. The difference is that Soderbergh isn't afraid to risk his A-list celebrity on some risky, experimental low-budget projects.


Art house stuff isn't experimental at this point, at least not in the US, either commercially or artistically. It's really just a euphemism for a form that's aimed at a very specific, narrow audience with appropriately sized budgets, cast, & expectations.

So, Gust Van Sant, Richard Linklater, Harmony Korine, Jim Jarmusch, David Lynch, and Stan Brakhage aren't art-house? And I'm not sure how much attention you've been paying to the film festival circuit, but certainly there's some very experimental American cinema going on out there. And if this isn't art-house, fine, but it's becoming very mysterious to me as to what it is you want to say. You want to say Soderbergh is more mainstream, I guess, because he's experimental and has the tendency to venture into low-budget cinema? I'm not following.

number8
01-12-2012, 02:21 PM
What is the word that describes an event that takes place in a movie that is completely out of the realm of the synopsis? An example of this is the War of the Worlds ending… That’s how I feel 12 took advantage of their audience.

I read this several times and I still don't know what you were trying to refer to. How is the WotW ending an example of this thing you're thinking of?

number8
01-12-2012, 02:24 PM
By the way, I don't know what you guys are arguing about anymore, but I'm pretty sure the correct answer is still Julia Roberts.

Raiders
01-12-2012, 02:33 PM
She's pretty good in the first two Ocean's films, in particular the second when she is playing someone playing herself. Love her scenes with Bruce Willis.

There are times I wonder why the film even bothered with a plot. It's gotta be the most casual mainstream film ever.

Sven
01-12-2012, 02:54 PM
Yeah, the idea that Soderbergh was "gone" in the 90s is one of the most hilariously incorrect things I've read on this site, let alone by Irish.

Also, I don't know in what world Punch Drunk Love is "small art house" cinema and The Girlfriend Experience is not. Punch Drunk Love played in multiplexes around the country within weeks of its release, to much buzz and fanfare and mainstream confusion surrounding Sandler.

Also, props, Israfel, for propping up Kafka, which I've always loved.

Also, Ocean's Twelve FTW.

Dead & Messed Up
02-04-2012, 06:08 PM
This movie was very good.

I wish there would've been a bit more time devoted to the death in the movie. For a film about a worldwide virus that kills tens of millions of people, we never get a sense of scale. I'm not talking about enormous scenes of ruined cities and crowds, some sort of Emmerichian vistapocalypse, but more than one small-scale body-dump would be appropriate. And I also felt that the Jude Law subplot was poorly-handled. It's a plausible circumstance, but he lays the conspiratorial lunacy on a bit too thick.

Having whined about those elements, I thought all the character actors did a great job, and, as mentioned by Barty, the almost casual way that people die was haunting...

Kate Winslet reaching to give a man a blanket stands out.

The score bubbled with the same fast-paced bleeps and bloops that made The Social Network feel like a boiling pot of computer code. I guess that, for film composers, the drama of scientific discovery will forever be associated with Atari-era video game noises. There's also pleasure in how the film never quite hits a climax - even the turning point with a smiling monkey feels like just another development. If there are high points, they occur in the first five minutes of the film and the last five, where Soderbergh demonstrates how effortlessly the contagion spreads...

and how it spread in the first place.

One of the better films of last year, for sure.

number8
05-11-2012, 03:07 PM
WTF, they're making a sequel.

DavidSeven
08-17-2020, 07:13 AM
I thought Jude Law's character was a bit over-the-top and unconvincing. He struck me as a caricature. It didn't jive well with the film's overall sense of realism. Aside from that, I really liked this picture.

It’s funny - I would’ve really agreed with this in 2012. Turns out that the film may have actually underplayed the prevelance of grifters like Jude Law’s character and the conspiracy theory enthusiasts who will eat up their unsupported nonsense. I’m giving the film full points for presciently touching on this, though. The only thing that would’ve been more accurate is making Law a politician (even a President!) rather than a blogger.

Great film and (obviously) well researched.

Yxklyx
08-17-2020, 08:33 PM
Thanks for bringing this back up - there's some good reading on this last page!

[ETM]
08-18-2020, 12:39 PM
Well, to be fair, no one had any clue just how far the internet craziness would overload our daily lives. 2012 was such a quaint time in comparison. Anti-vaxxers and flat-Earthers were barely a blip on the radar.

Mysterious Dude
08-18-2020, 08:54 PM
Definitely a movie worth thinking about, these days. I've often thought about the movie's vaccine rollout, and I wonder if we'll have to institute a similar type of lottery. It would probably be better to prioritize more vulnerable people, and the movie didn't predict that so many people would refuse to be vaccinated.

[ETM]
08-18-2020, 11:56 PM
It has shown an incredibly deadly virus with high contagiousness.By contrast, even with so many dead everywhere there are people still claiming Coronavirus is a hoax.

Sent from my Mi 9 Lite using Tapatalk

Yxklyx
08-19-2020, 03:23 AM
What got me in this thread was the Alan Parker reference, and he just died...

Dead & Messed Up
08-21-2020, 10:48 PM
And I also felt that the Jude Law subplot was poorly-handled. It's a plausible circumstance, but he lays the conspiratorial lunacy on a bit too thick.

WELP

DavidSeven
08-24-2020, 03:17 AM
;625236']Well, to be fair, no one had any clue just how far the internet craziness would overload our daily lives. 2012 was such a quaint time in comparison. Anti-vaxxers and flat-Earthers were barely a blip on the radar.

All the more reason I’m impressed that the filmmakers chose to make the conspiracy nut angle such a prominent part of the story. Even before the rise of the current lunacy to the online mainstream, the film pretty much nailed that this would be a huge element of a global pandemic, particularly in the U.S.