Notes on a Movie
I saw "Notes on a Scandal" tonight, and it is quite the Judi Dench-Cate Blanchett face-off. I agree with Robert Roeper, however, in his newly-found confident opinion (sans erstwhile senior sidekick Roger Ebert) that Philip Glass' soundtrack is a bit much. It seemed to play almost as large a part as any of the characters in the film.
It was more a character study of Judi Dench's "Barbara" than of Blanchett's "Sheba."
I also saw "Little Children," an un-redeeming, kicked-in-the-stomach-feeling type film, which deals unsuccessfully with pedophilia and infidelity, and "Children of Men," whose Holocaust-like imagery was its highlight, in my opinion (as far as comparing a future scenario of desperation with what happened in Nazi Germany).
It was more a character study of Judi Dench's "Barbara" than of Blanchett's "Sheba."
I also saw "Little Children," an un-redeeming, kicked-in-the-stomach-feeling type film, which deals unsuccessfully with pedophilia and infidelity, and "Children of Men," whose Holocaust-like imagery was its highlight, in my opinion (as far as comparing a future scenario of desperation with what happened in Nazi Germany).
Comments