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    The Artist

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    JWF
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    Post by JWF Sun Dec 25, 2011 1:43 pm

    "The Artist" has it all----no spoken words (almost), subtitles, black and white look, an actor and actress most of us has never seen. And a corny predictable teary script.


    This adorable and attractive film is why we embrace the cinema and willing to pay the price of admission. It's Magic!


    I'm a big fan of such classics such as "A Star is Born" and "Sunset Boulevard" (among others), but"The Artist" is much more than a retelling of these films. An invigorating fresh look during an era that was the purest of the times.


    It's a story of silent era film star George Valentine (think of Fairbanks/Valentino) who can't (or won't) adjust to the onset of sound. By 1931 (film opens in 1927) he's finished and broke. His wife has left him. He's a drunk. The only two that stayed by his side is his faithful dog Uggie (thank of Asta) and his driver/servant. However, while George's career collapses it's also time when unknowns turn into stars. Enters Peppy Miller (think of the Flapper or It Girl).


    Jean Dujardin as George Valentin performance is as good as most silent era actors. The supporting cast adds to the enjoyment: John Goodman as the studio head (think Leo B Mayer). Penelope Ann Miller as George's wife. And the beautiful Berenice Bejo as the rising starlet.


    It works on all levels. The ending would make MGM and Lockwood & Selden really proud.

    A+

    Jack


    Last edited by JWF on Sat Dec 31, 2011 7:40 pm; edited 1 time in total
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    Post by JWF Sun Dec 25, 2011 1:44 pm



    I have just revisited "The Artist" for the third time. One of the loveliest films I've ever seen. It's total magic. Hopefully, now that it has been released country-wide more movie fans will see it.

    Jack
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    Post by Shale Sat Jan 07, 2012 12:04 am

    The Artist
    Movie Blurb by Shale
    January 6, 2012

    Had a free movie pass and picked up one of the flicks that got pushed back during the holiday movies. This was an "art flick," a black & white and mostly silent movie.

    It opens in 1927 with a silent movie staring popular heartthrob actor, George Valentin (Jean Dujardin). After the silent movie ends, the current movie is also silent, with no one talking and the occasional written dialogue shown onscreen just as it was in the real silent movies.

    Outside the theater the press (just as it is today) were snapping fotos of George when a girl with moxie (Bérénice Bejo), started playing the cameras and there was a great shot of her kissing George.

    Groupy Kissing George
    The Artist The-artist_620x350

    Of course that pic makes front page of Variety and the girl with moxie shows up to audition the next day and her name is Peppy Miller.

    Peppy Reading Variety
    The Artist The-Artist_B%C3%A9r%C3%A9nice-Bejo-cloche-mid_Image-credit-Warner-Bros.-France

    Peppy and George hit it off instantly especially since George is in an unhappy marriage to Doris (Penelope Ann Miller) and Peppy is infatuated with the silver screen idol.

    Angry Wife Reading Variety
    The Artist The-artist-2011-movie

    Studio mogul Al Zimmer (John Goodman) realizes that she is the girl on the front page of Variety who took publicity away from his movie and fires her on the spot. But, George insists she stay and gives her the first break in the movies.

    Al Zimmer, Movie Mogul
    The Artist The-artist-2011-movie

    The story progresses to talkies, the technological innovation in the late 1929 that actually ruined the careers of many silent movie stars. George is one of those who refuse to do talkies and his pride sends him into a downward spin.

    His wife divorces him, he loses everything in the Great Depression and ends up in cheap apartments where everyone sorta writes him off except for his Jack Russell Terrier (Uggie) and his faithful chauffer Clifton (James Cromwell).

    Meanwhile, Peppy is making it big in the talkies and still carries feelings for George. Well, you see where this is going.

    It was a fun movie, especially for those who like movies and can relate to the history of cinema and sit thru a mostly silent black and white movie today

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