|  | Posted by Gunther Gloop on 02/28/06 17:41 
Tricky Dicky wrote:> Just finished watching it. I was surprised to say the least by the
 > denoument but in reflection it was the only ending that could be
 > possible. In any other year it would have swept the oscars but
 > unfortunately we have Capote as well
 >
 
 I saw Capote yesterday and I think it illustrates a point I was making
 earlier in this thread...
 
 
 Take "Dead Man Walking". On the whole, I thought it was an alright movie. I
 liked the fact that it wasn't saying "this man is innocent" in order to get
 its point across.
 But still, it cranked up the audience-manipulation and in the end missed the
 opportunity by being so one-sided and fingerwaggerly.
 
 Now take Capote. It's not about judging a person or an event. It's not about
 taking sides, or swaying a particular point-of-view one way or another.
 
 It's an unbiased presentation of the story. It contains complex (though not
 complicated) thoughts and emotions and points-of-view. It has people that do
 very bad things in different ways.
 It also shows these individuals as _real_ 3-dimensional people. They're not
 all bad. They are far from all-good.
 
 There is no "accepted viewpoint". In my opinion, this marks Capote as a
 superior film. I'd love a little bit more insight into the main characters
 (and their wider-circles), but that's not really what this movie is about,
 so I'll just sit in hope that a dvd special will fill in those gaps for me
 (out on the 14th of March on R1 I believe! -not sure of the quality of
 extras though)
 
 
 ....Apart from Philip Seymour Hoffman, I doubt it'll win too many other
 Oscars though. It's too subtle for that.
 
 -Kevin.
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