Steve McQueen's 12 YEARS A SLAVE, starring Chiwetel Ejiofor

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i thought you were making some really deep reference to "babe"

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:12 (ten years ago) link

I agree, and expect that is entirely a coincidence. xxxxp

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:12 (ten years ago) link

I think "Gravity" would have been an even better choice, but who really cares. it's not like that movie lacked for critical plaudits (if anything there was even more of a consensus than re. "12 Years") or commercial success.

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:13 (ten years ago) link

I was gonna say "best since The Hurt Locker"

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:14 (ten years ago) link

"hurt locker," pfffff. not even near bigelow's best work, and falls apart on second viewing IMO.

more important: is mcqueen the first experimental filmmaker to go on and win a best picture oscar?!?!

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:15 (ten years ago) link

except for peter kubelka's "crash," i mean.

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:15 (ten years ago) link

I've made my peace with Gravity getting the consolation prize owing entirely to the face that now at least we've all been spared thousands of think pieces.

Eric H., Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:18 (ten years ago) link

I'm still fond of The Hurt Locker but I haven't seen it a second time.

I've watched NCFOM a second time.

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:18 (ten years ago) link

xxp you should see Kevin costner's student films

Eric H., Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:19 (ten years ago) link

is mcqueen the first experimental filmmaker to go on and win a best picture oscar?!?!

Spike Jonze ascent arguably more surprising. Funny he would win the Best Original Screenplay Oscar the same year he also wrote "Bad Grandpa" (which also got an Oscar nom!!!!).

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:20 (ten years ago) link

"hurt locker," pfffff. not even near bigelow's best work,

it isn't but is near the top of Best Picture winners.

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:20 (ten years ago) link

to me that just means "not near Near Dark."

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:23 (ten years ago) link

serious question though (re. is mcqueen the first experimental filmmaker to go on and win a best picture oscar?!?!)

xpost

i wouldn't put it near the top at all, not when you've got

7th heaven
it happened one night
rebecca
how green was my valley (best win ever)
casablanca
going my way
the lost weekend
best years of our lives (2nd best?)
an american in paris
gigi
the apartment
...this is about when things take a turn for the dire... but there's still:
patton
the godfather
rocky
silence of the lambs

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:24 (ten years ago) link

near dark is great (though my students didn't think much of it), point break is good, strange days has its moments (though is intensely dislikable)... yeah I guess you can consider her overrated.

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:25 (ten years ago) link

the loveless has its moments too. i think kathryn bigelow is very talented as an action director, but "hurt locker" was rather pedestrian in that respect. but as a PHENOMENON (powerful feminist director of male-orienated action movies) she is pretty singular.

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:26 (ten years ago) link

anyway let's get back to 12 years a slave.

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:26 (ten years ago) link

i make the whirly-crazy sign when the young Turks talk about movies like Point Break as "great" .. oh man, Strange Days too huh...

Going My Way is no Bells of Sy Mary's and The Lost Weekend is no Kiss Me, Stupid

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:27 (ten years ago) link

Gigi? Oy.

Anyway.

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:27 (ten years ago) link

gigi isn't the best of the best but it's an excellent movie!

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:28 (ten years ago) link

and i left out good but not great stuff like all quiet on the western front, the sting, etc. i don't even think "hurt locker" is that good.

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:30 (ten years ago) link

I just read Alfred's harrumph about 12 Years of Slave and man, Pauline Kael has a lot to answer for. :D

this was posted in November and it's terrific:

Odie and Steve take it on: http://bigmediavandal.blogspot.com/2013/11/black-man-talk-12-years-slave.html

I just saw Gigi again and like it too, "Thank Heaven for Little Girls" is creepiest and it's over quickly.

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:30 (ten years ago) link

I liked it! Kael wouldn't have seen anything with "Steve McQueen" in the credits.

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:32 (ten years ago) link

Let's follow am's advice and confine Oscar chatter to this thread: vote for the best Oscar-winning Best Pictures of all time

Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:33 (ten years ago) link

yes, fine

haven't done my rewatch yet, so that's all i got

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:34 (ten years ago) link

You can always put that ...

patton
rocky
silence of the lambs

... where your heart ought to be.

Eric H., Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:35 (ten years ago) link

cross-posting from that other, more appropriate thread:

http://www.ofcs.org/the-best-of-the-best-picture-oscar-winners-part-6/

Pretty amusing juxtaposition:

22. Gone With the Wind (1939)
23. 12 Years a Slave (2013)

Eric H., Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:39 (ten years ago) link

well they pretty pointedly didn't follow up the wizard of oz tribute with a gone with the wind tribute, did they? would have been pretty awkward.

am still waiting for the "young mr lincoln" tribute with rows of dancers in top hats and beards.

espring (amateurist), Tuesday, 4 March 2014 22:45 (ten years ago) link

btw we all know John Ridley wrote and directed the imminent Hendrix movie starring Andre Benjamin?

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 March 2014 17:32 (ten years ago) link

Is it called 12 Minutes A Solo?

Virginia, Plain and Tall (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 7 March 2014 17:47 (ten years ago) link

No, that's the title of the Yngwie Malmsteen biopic

Quinoa Phoenix (latebloomer), Friday, 7 March 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link

So what is the rift between Ridley and McQueen about? Yes, as reported by The Wrap, McQueen did discuss sharing the screenplay credit with Ridley, who told me that he would have shared the story by credit if he could with McQueen, with Ridley taking sole screenplay credit. He had settled for a story by credit once before, when writer-director David O. Russell took the screenplay credit on "Three Kings." No rancor there anymore, as Ridley gave Russell, and not McQueen, a hug on the way to the Oscar podium. (Ridley also hugged "12 Years" producer Dede Gardner, who developed the script with him.)

Ridley explains that when a screenwriter adapts a memoir, the Writers Guild of America won't permit a story by credit--in this case, Solomon Northup wrote the true story that the movie is based on. As Ridley wrote the first draft for Plan B (on spec), it would be difficult for a director like McQueen to get a shared Screenplay By credit, which would require a WGA arbitration. "For both of us, I would have been happy to have Story By credit," says Ridley. "Steve never tried to get an arbitration. A lot of people assume we wrote the script together every day for four years. The reality is that Steve lives in Amsterdam and I live in Los Angeles. We met a dozen times at most. I can't say in all honesty that Steve and I had an opportunity to become super tight. It starts to bother me when the story becomes that we didn't give each other foot massages. Steve was never not deferential to me and I hope I always expressed admiration for him, the cast and crew. Steve did a lot for me. I don't know if Steve is upset. We got to have our moment. It was a beautiful moment for us."

Ridley points out that he thanked McQueen many times over the season, including the Independent Spirits the day before the Oscars, and that on the Academy Awards show, many folks omitted any mention of who wrote their movies. "We should have equal concern for people who did not get their due," he says. "People included me in this. I never got the sense that I should go stand in the corner." Ridley kept his 30-second speech short on Oscar night, thanking Solomon Northup. (Truth be told he was relieved that he didn't cry, something he tends to do.)

http://blogs.indiewire.com/thompsononhollywood/12-years-a-slave-oscar-winner-john-ridley-talks-rift-with-steve-mcqueen

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Monday, 10 March 2014 16:49 (ten years ago) link

two weeks pass...

i went into this with some dread but ended up really liking it. most of the things that people objected to i thought were either not-problems (the passage of time) or really great (zimmer) or probably just plainly true (pitt's canadian laborer)

goole, Monday, 24 March 2014 19:56 (ten years ago) link

sarah paulson is just crazy good. nobody in it was bad at all except maybe pitt, who isn't exactly a bad actor but just seems like someone who's unfamiliar with the act of talking

goole, Monday, 24 March 2014 19:58 (ten years ago) link

one month passes...

boring oscar-bait pabulum imo.

― tell it to my arse (jim in glasgow), Tuesday, November 26, 2013 10:18 PM (4 months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

eh, fuck you. we have "folk heroes" saying shit like this dude, and this shit doesn't even surprise me in the slightest. we need people to make movies like this. people need to see movies like this. if some "oscar-bait" film gets a large number of people to think about 400 years of slavery that basically happened about 5 minutes ago in our history, i'm pretty happy about that.

marcos, Friday, 25 April 2014 18:33 (ten years ago) link

anyways, i thought it was really good. agree with some of the criticisms upthread, especially re: brad pitt (who as an actor is just too distracting for any film) and the lack of portrayal of other slaves besides solomon and patsy. i also feel like it could've been an hour longer, for sure.

the movie does an excellent job in showing how the first owner is both "nice" and perhaps even "liberal" (in a formulation I'm not sure is entirely anachronistic) but also totally complicit in the perpetuation of the institution of slavery. i think that's one of the most remarkable things about the film, especially a film that won the best-picture Oscar.

this is otm, too.

marcos, Friday, 25 April 2014 18:37 (ten years ago) link

I think the full visceral effect of the point that J Hoberman and others have latched onto--that in a culture of slavery "there is no 'why'" and Solomon's liberation is as arbitrary as his enslavement and does nothing to diminish the horrors of the institution--may have been partially lost thanks to the film's ending. you can give credit to the screenwriter and director for believing that the audience will not take the ending as an affirmation of the rightness of the world, but rather consider those who were not liberated--and still wonder if most of the actual audience lived up to that respect.

yea, i was certainly thinking about patsy and the others who were left behind, standing around as solomon looks back from the carriage, but i think that effect could've been made a lot more powerful if the other slaves were more developed as characters in the film.

re: solomon's lonerism, the fact that we didn't really see him interacting much with other slaves (besides patsy and the woman earlier, eliza?), was definitely somewhat of a fault. at the same time though, i kept thinking about basically all the other slaves, born into this, will die into this, and solomon has this whole other existence that he continues to have some hope of returning to even amidst moments of great despair, and that to settle into this life would to be to surender that hope. obviously that scene when he stands silent during the slaves' song but then joins shows his acceptance taht he's there and not going anywhere, and it's a rare moment and that's what made it so powerful for me, at least.

marcos, Friday, 25 April 2014 18:42 (ten years ago) link

yeah the scene with him falling into (not 'breaking into' as we usually say) song is key

goole, Friday, 25 April 2014 18:45 (ten years ago) link

i find it kinda weird and sort of reprehensible that any mainstream movie that deals with any remotely serious historical subject gets dismissed as 'oscar-bait,' as if you could class this movie with something like 'the king's speech' or whatever.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 25 April 2014 18:49 (ten years ago) link

i agree

marcos, Friday, 25 April 2014 18:53 (ten years ago) link

also for all the criticism the pitt character gets (either b/c he's a "white savior" or b/c he's brad pitt), i kind of thought this was interesting, from http://www.slate.com/blogs/browbeat/2013/10/17/_12_years_a_slave_true_story_fact_and_fiction_in_mostly_accurate_movie_about.html:

Bass (Brad Pitt)

As unlikely as his character is—an abolitionist in Louisiana, and a contrarian who everyone likes—Bass is drawn straight from the book’s account. His argument with Epps (“but begging the law’s pardon, it lies,” “There will be a reckoning yet”) is reproduced almost verbatim.

The real Bass, in fact, did more for Northup, sending multiple letters on his behalf, meeting with him in the middle of the night to hear his story, and—when they initially got no response from their letters—vowing to travel up to New York himself, to secure Northup’s freedom. The process took months, and Northup’s freedom eventually came from Bass’s first letter after all, so the movie understandably chooses to elide all this.

marcos, Friday, 25 April 2014 19:29 (ten years ago) link

five years pass...

One of ILX's most hated film directors looks due for some awards!

You can say that again,

https://www.vogue.co.uk/news/article/steve-mcqueen-knighthood

Most hated title not in danger.

Soup on my lanyard (Tom D.), Saturday, 28 December 2019 11:55 (four years ago) link

nobody in it was bad at all except maybe pitt, who isn't exactly a bad actor but just seems like someone who's unfamiliar with the act of talking

― goole, Monday, March 24, 2014 3:58 PM

I miss goole

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 28 December 2019 12:27 (four years ago) link


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