10 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :- The World of Blood and Oil According to Plainview, 6 January 2008
Author:
David H. Schleicher from New Jersey, USA
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
There's a recurring nightmare of mine where I am falling down a well.
Our reality is an illusion. This life is simply the dream we have while
we are actually falling down a well. It always seemed as if the well
was bottomless. After watching "There Will Be Blood" I discovered the
well has a bottom. At the bottom of the well is one thing. Oil.
Also falling down this well was "The Performance." Watching Daniel Day
Lewis play the unstoppable, unshakable, unfathomably misanthropic and
greedy oil man that is Daniel Plainview, one is left to imagine that
"The Performance" was always out there. It always existed somewhere in
the ether, in our collective unconscious, in our nightmares and
anxieties. It took a visionary auteur like Paul Thomas Anderson to
realize that if he did a modern film update of Upton Sinclair's early
20th century novel "Oil!" and ominously renamed it "There Will Be
Blood" then this performance could be channeled onto celluloid as a
testament to the defining struggles of 21st century mankind.
Blistering cinematography of stark California landscapes from Robert
Elswit, an evocatively organic and haunting music score from Jonny
Greenwood (from the rock band Radiohead), and the beautifully fluid
movement and framing of Paul Thomas Anderson's maniacally calculating
camera grab you from scene one and never let go. Daniel Day Lewis moves
through the film like a cold burning firestorm combining and combusting
with the technical elements and the fabulous ensemble cast around him
to create a rising tension that is unlike anything experienced in
cinema since the golden era of Stanley Kubrick.
The story is multilayered and allegorical. Led to an untapped area
floating in dust on rivers of oil by a mysterious young man, Plainview
soon comes face to face with that young man's twin brother, Eli Sunday
(a fecklessly manipulative Paul Dano). Eli is a wunderkind preacher at
the Church of the Third Revelation and has the town wrapped around his
finger with his claims to be a healer and prophet. Eli agrees to let
Plainview buy his family's land for the right price. The profits are to
be used to build a bigger church. But when Plainview refuses to let Eli
properly bless the drill site, a series of events unfold that Eli
trumpets as acts of "God" while Plainview views them as results of
meddling people he can scarcely see any good in and must crush.
The heart of the movie lies in Plainview's relationship with his
adopted son H. W. (a wonderfully naturalistic and quietly expressive
Dillon Freasier). When the boy is injured on a drilling site and loses
his hearing, Plainview, torn by his love for the idea of the boy
looking up to him and the friendly face the boy has leant to the family
business, abandons him only to latch on to a shady vagabond (Kevin J.
O'Connor) who trots into town claiming to be his long lost brother
Henry. Plainview's replacing of a fake son with a fake brother shows
his character's deep-seeded and wounded need to connect to someone when
insatiable greed has been his only driving force.
To explore in detail the film's deeper message and resonance for
today's audience would be to spoil the ending. Suffice it to say, after
the slowly infectious, nerve-shattering build-up, the film culminates
with a soliloquy from Plainview to Eli that will make your jaw drop. In
the end, it lives up to its title. There was blood. Whose was spilled
is not a matter of debate, but what that blood says to its 21st century
audience will be discussed and argued and studied for years to come. If
you want to know what happens when greed guised in religious zealotry
falls down a dark seemingly bottomless well with greed blatant as
corporate capitalism, look no further than this film. There is a bottom
to that well. There is a winner at the finish line. Meanwhile the blood
is on the floor, the walls, the desert sand, the silver screen, the
nightly news, and pumping through our bodies until we die.
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10 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :-

The World of Blood and Oil According to Plainview, 6 January 2008
Author: David H. Schleicher from New Jersey, USA
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
There's a recurring nightmare of mine where I am falling down a well. Our reality is an illusion. This life is simply the dream we have while we are actually falling down a well. It always seemed as if the well was bottomless. After watching "There Will Be Blood" I discovered the well has a bottom. At the bottom of the well is one thing. Oil.
Also falling down this well was "The Performance." Watching Daniel Day Lewis play the unstoppable, unshakable, unfathomably misanthropic and greedy oil man that is Daniel Plainview, one is left to imagine that "The Performance" was always out there. It always existed somewhere in the ether, in our collective unconscious, in our nightmares and anxieties. It took a visionary auteur like Paul Thomas Anderson to realize that if he did a modern film update of Upton Sinclair's early 20th century novel "Oil!" and ominously renamed it "There Will Be Blood" then this performance could be channeled onto celluloid as a testament to the defining struggles of 21st century mankind.
Blistering cinematography of stark California landscapes from Robert Elswit, an evocatively organic and haunting music score from Jonny Greenwood (from the rock band Radiohead), and the beautifully fluid movement and framing of Paul Thomas Anderson's maniacally calculating camera grab you from scene one and never let go. Daniel Day Lewis moves through the film like a cold burning firestorm combining and combusting with the technical elements and the fabulous ensemble cast around him to create a rising tension that is unlike anything experienced in cinema since the golden era of Stanley Kubrick.
The story is multilayered and allegorical. Led to an untapped area floating in dust on rivers of oil by a mysterious young man, Plainview soon comes face to face with that young man's twin brother, Eli Sunday (a fecklessly manipulative Paul Dano). Eli is a wunderkind preacher at the Church of the Third Revelation and has the town wrapped around his finger with his claims to be a healer and prophet. Eli agrees to let Plainview buy his family's land for the right price. The profits are to be used to build a bigger church. But when Plainview refuses to let Eli properly bless the drill site, a series of events unfold that Eli trumpets as acts of "God" while Plainview views them as results of meddling people he can scarcely see any good in and must crush.
The heart of the movie lies in Plainview's relationship with his adopted son H. W. (a wonderfully naturalistic and quietly expressive Dillon Freasier). When the boy is injured on a drilling site and loses his hearing, Plainview, torn by his love for the idea of the boy looking up to him and the friendly face the boy has leant to the family business, abandons him only to latch on to a shady vagabond (Kevin J. O'Connor) who trots into town claiming to be his long lost brother Henry. Plainview's replacing of a fake son with a fake brother shows his character's deep-seeded and wounded need to connect to someone when insatiable greed has been his only driving force.
To explore in detail the film's deeper message and resonance for today's audience would be to spoil the ending. Suffice it to say, after the slowly infectious, nerve-shattering build-up, the film culminates with a soliloquy from Plainview to Eli that will make your jaw drop. In the end, it lives up to its title. There was blood. Whose was spilled is not a matter of debate, but what that blood says to its 21st century audience will be discussed and argued and studied for years to come. If you want to know what happens when greed guised in religious zealotry falls down a dark seemingly bottomless well with greed blatant as corporate capitalism, look no further than this film. There is a bottom to that well. There is a winner at the finish line. Meanwhile the blood is on the floor, the walls, the desert sand, the silver screen, the nightly news, and pumping through our bodies until we die.
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