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Sin City
"a Groundbreaker of HUGE
Proportion" Joe De Matteo,
HugeReviews.com |
| REVIEW |
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| Year:
2005 |
Rated:
R |
Runtime:
126 min. |
| Starring:
Bruce Willis, Jessica
Alba, Mickey Rourke, Jaime King, Clive Owen, Brittany
Murphy, Rosario Dawson, Devon Aoki, Alexis Bledel,
Benicio Del Toro, Elijah Wood, Josh Hartnett, Marley
Shelton, Carla Gugino, Nick Stahl, Michael Clarke
Duncan, Michael Madsen, Michael Douglas, Christopher
Walken, Rick Gomez, Jason Douglas, Makenzie Vega,
Katherine Willis |
| Directed
by: Robert
Rodriguez, Frank Miller |
| Written
by: Robert Rodriguez |
| Based
on the Comic Series by:
Frank Miller |
| Music
by: John Debney,
Graeme Revell, Robert Rodriguez |
| Movie
Studio: Dimension
Films |
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Sin City 2 & 3
UPDATES & PREVIEWS
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Review |
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DVD Release: The HOT DVD release of the
theatrical version. This fantastic film is a
must have. While some are
waiting for the director's cut, a number of fans,
myself included, want both. Yes. It's
that good! Read my review below. |
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Sin City; a groundbreaker of
HUGE proportion.
by Joe De Matteo
HUGE
Sin City explodes on the screen
with a fury and terror that will glue you to your
seat, and then have you jump up from it. Sin City
is a masterpiece in the annals of Graphic Novels to
Film.
Robert Rodriquez is the
Robert Oppenheimer* of
the “Sin City Project;” he is the genius behind Sin
City the movie: the director, screenplay writer,
producer, cinematographer, composer, and editor.
Sin City, the movie, is the sum all of the full body
of Rodriquez’s previous work and experiences; no one
else could have created this extraordinary film.
Part of his genius is his respect for the work that
came before him, and obviously, the people that did
it. He is like the master sculptor who respects and
honors the clay or stone he works in.
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Frank Miller, creator of Sin City - its lives and
times, also has directing credit for the film. And
boy is it obvious. Quentin Tarantino – what can one
say about Tarantino, his name is an adjective – has
directed a portion of the film as well. These two
facts are another credit to Rodriquez’s genius, for
at first viewing, none of the 7 HugeReviewers that I
saw the movie with could tell who did what. I’m
sure, or not, that after some other viewing each
will find his or her own signpost that will lead him
to believe that, “this is Tarantino’s work,” or,
“this is Miller.” Maybe the wow factor is what
keeps us from seeing the brick and mortar behind the
art. That leaves the questions of, how many
viewings will it take to stop being wowed? Or is
the wow factor the art itself: the graphics, the
film craft? |
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The acting and the actors. I
am a Bruce Willis fan. I can't think of anything
he’s done that I don’t like. His comedy is great
(The Whole Nine Yards, Death Becomes Her, Bandits…),
he is the consummate action/adventure light-comedic
hero (the Die Hard series, Fifth Element…), and his
serious acting is always convicting and never cookie
cutter.
Mickey Rourke gives a great
performance. His narrative ability is absolutely
excellent for this film. This is one of his best
roles; Marv is a mighty and astounding character; his screen presence is! And that screen presence is
all Mickey Rourke. Not the make up, the shooting,
but the power of Mickey Rourke himself.
One can go down the line and credit the abilities of
all the actors (Del Toro, Wood, Stahl) and I’m not
going to do that. The women in the film
were remarkable. Casting had a lot to do with that,
I’m sure. So many of them were characters, but they
were all positive to the storytelling. Rosario
Dawson, Jessica Alba and Carla Gugino gave us a
lusty and exciting ride.
Basin City, and Old Town are place I love being in -
through the magic of film only.
The use of color: The Wizard of
Oz opened the eyes of a generation to the
informative quality that the movement between black
and white, and color could have. When we saw OZ as
a world in color, while Kansas had been a black and
white world, we instinctively knew that, “we weren’t
in reality anymore, Toto.”
Certainly, at the time The
Wizard of Oz was shown in color and black and white,
the body of film since the 1800s was black
and white; color was still in the early days of its
evolution. However, it quickly got to the point
that when a new movie came out in black and white,
the general public couldn’t understand why someone
would do that.
"Art?"
"Color is more artistic than
black and white."
As more of us became enamored
with the art of film craft we instinctively
understood the communication abilities of the use of
color. Even if we couldn’t articulate this
knowledge, we viscerally, in our gut, understood
what was being communicated to us.
From Woody Allen to Steven
Soderbergh’s Traffic we have moviemakers
communicating, storytelling via color.
In Sin City the use of color is
at times shocking. The opening scene is in black and
white; enter screen bottom a woman walking toward
screen top; black and white, clad in a beautiful,
red shimmering gown. She turns and her lips are a
deep, outstanding red. Vibrancy against...? Sin City.
She is of Sin City, but represents something, some
state beyond it. Enter a man. He narrates. He is
black and white, as is the quality of his voice.
Wonderful.
Our introduction to Sin City is complete by scene
end.
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"WOW! is the only way to
describe Sin City; a groundbreaker of HUGE
proportion" Yes, The Wizard of Oz opened
our eyes to storytelling by the use of color, and of
black and white.
But maybe it took Paul
Simon to tell us in “Kodachrome.” He said…oh, hell,
this is what he said: |
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If you took all the girls I
knew
When I was single
And brought them all together
for one night
I know they'd never match
My sweet imagination
And everything looks worse in black and white (©
Paul Simon) |
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*Robert
Oppenheimer was the director of the Manhattan
Project that produced two Atomic Bombs, “Little Boy”
“Fat Man,” which were dropped on Japan in 1945,
driving
Japan to surrender, thus ending the war in the
pacific and saving an estimated one million Allied lives. |
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| HugeReviews.com
Rating: What'll
it be? |
Review
by: Step
up and review this puppy! |
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Sin
City
by Michael Flanagan
HUGE
What a great movie.
You’ll hear people say it’s a comic book exploding
onto the screen. They’ll
say it’s electricity popping off the screen.
They’ll say it comes to life like a living, breathing
being.
I don’t know about any of that. I don’t even know who “they” are. But I do know that Sin City is a great time in the theatre.
It’s got thugs, gangs, prostitutes, and they all have
large guns. It’s
got people with awful scars.
It’s got supermen with red Converse sneakers.
It’s got prostitutes with guns.
It’s got naked lesbians.
It’s got cool cars, and they chase.
It’s got prostitutes.
It’s got priests, politicians, and Yellow Bastards.
It’s got murderous, rampaging hobbits.
It’s got prostitutes.
It’s got…
Well, it’s got a lot worth seeing. On top of all this, it has great, great noir dialogue,
monologue, and asides. And
a wonderfully dark world created almost entirely in CGI.
Anakin and Obi Wan should fight in this world. Batman should crusade in this world. And, just for kicks, Harry Potter should fight Marv in this
world. Just for
kicks.
Kudos to Robert Rodriguez and to Frank
Miller. A great
cast. A wonderful idea. And
prostitutes. |
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