There Will Be Blood
Director: Paul Thomas Anderson
Cast: Daniel Day-Lewis, Paul Dano, Ciaran Hinds, Kevin J. O'Connor, Russell Harvard, Colleen Foy, Mary Elizabeth Barrett
Genre: Drama / Period
Rated: R
Review By:
Michael Dance
School:
NYU Tisch '07
Quote:
"...And hey, I met you. You are not cool." -Almost Famous
There Will Be Blood
Review By: Michael Dance
MichaelDance@TheCinemaSource.com
Click Here For Our Interview with Daniel Day-Lewis
Click Here For Our Interview with Paul Dano
There Will Be Blood
There Will Be Blood is a one-of-a-kind movie, on one level a Citizen Kane-esque story about a miserable man corrupted by ambition, on another level a clash of business versus faith, and on quite another level, a horror movie. At the center of it all is another remarkably performance by Daniel Day-Lewis, soft-spoken in real life, who, like in Gangs of New York, speaks here with a rich bass that seems to set him on a higher plane from everyone else in the movie.
Day-Lewis plays Daniel Plainview, a self-made oil tycoon who travels with his young son H.W. (Dillon Freasier) and right-hand man Fletcher Hamilton (Ciaran Hinds). He gets a mysterious tip one day from a young man named Paul Sunday (Paul Dano) that there's a town out west called Little Boston where the oil is so plentiful it's literally oozing out of the ground.
His interest piqued, Plainview travels there, and what Paul said was true. But while Plainview calls in his work troops in and transforms Little Boston into a veritable oil colony, he has to deal with the town's denizens, led by Eli Sunday "” Paul's twin brother, also played by Dano "” the fire-and-brimstone preacher of the town church.
(If you miss exactly one line of dialogue, you might be as helplessly confused about the Paul/Eli relationship as much as I was "” for a good three-fourths of the movie I was convinced that they were the same person, because Paul completely disappears from the story after his one early scene. Then again, I talked to a few people at my screening who didn't seem to have a problem.)
At its heart, There Will Be Blood is the story of petty, hateful men whose chief delight is to humiliate one another. This sort of character study might turn off some, and I can see their point; by the end of the film it's hard to feel much except sad disgust for both Daniel Plainview and Eli Sunday. But the extraordinary performances by Day-Lewis and Dano make up for that.
Day-Lewis's performance will be compared to his much-heralded role in Gangs of New York, although with a twist since he's technically playing the protagonist here. The real find is Dano, who fully announces himself as one of the best young actors out there after his near-mute role in last year's Little Miss Sunshine. His Eli is charismatic, self-righteous, cruel, and not as smart as he thinks he is, but at the same time he's wholly unlike any other holy-roller preacher we've seen on film before. Normally he would be no match for the life force that Plainview is, but what if Plainview is put into a
This is a long, unhappy tale, and it involves a few significant subplots, one concerns H.W. and another sees another relative of Plainview's coming to Little Boston unexpectedly. I'm sure much will be made of the final sequence, which takes places years later and allows all the principal characters to say what was only hidden in the subtext before. It's a bold scene, but in that sense it's a microcosm for the whole film; after Magnolia and Punch-Drunk Love, writer/director Paul Thomas Anderson once again creates something entirely different.
There's one more thing worth noting: the music. Like I said, There Will Be Blood is sometimes reminiscent of a horror film; that's mostly thanks to the score, which uses classical instruments but in dissident, creepy tones that set the unique mode perfectly. They assure us, along with the film's title, that happy things are not in store for Daniel Plainview and company.
Movie Grade: A-
Synopsis:
A sprawling epic about family, greed, corruption, and the pursuit of the American dream. Set in the booming West coast oil fields at the turn of the 20th century, There Will Be Blood follows the rise of rugged prospector Daniel Plainview (Daniel Day-Lewis) who becomes an independent oilman after hitting it rich with the strike of a lifetime. Written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, the film is inspired by Upton Sinclair’s novel Oil!