3/9/2023 0 Comments Road to nowhere 2010Do not watch this if you're in the mood for "Peewee's Big Adventure" or you'll be likely to crash your own airplane into a lake. This is a very serious movie, made by serious people, intended for serious cinephiles. It's also vaguely reminiscent of Jim Jarmusch ("Limits of Control") but it doesn't have Jarmusch's humorous moments, or any humor really. Make no mistake, even though I'm not a big fan of this movie, I enjoyed parts of it and would recommend it to fans of David Lynch ("Mulholland Drive"), Peter Greenaway ("Zed and two Naughts") or maybe-this is a stretch-Wim Wenders ("Paris, Texas"). Another scene, a short one of a plane crashing into a lake, struck me as beautiful. I'd never heard that poem before and immediately paused the movie to look it up. There was one part I'm very glad I saw: a scene where one character recites the poem "Sonnet XXV" by George Santayana. But I guess that's where you're supposed to watch it again. The abrupt ending may leave you feeling unsatisfied as it did me. When the big picture finally materializes, it's almost too late. Do not watch this movie unless you're prepared to sit for nearly 2 hours like a deer in the headlights. But for the first hour I was just struggling to figure out what's going on, and the long, slow pacing seemed to mock my struggle. It's actually pretty clever of the director to hit us with 2 simultaneous stories unfolding in cryptic bits, and if I had more patience, I could have absorbed it all. The whole time, a movie is being filmed about the crime, and that's the real plot. The story takes us to a small town where we piece together a crime based on small fragments. It's the kind of movie you're probably expected to view several times before you truly get it. ![]() It carries a dark, brooding sense of imminent tragedy, characters are mysterious (some may say deliberately 2-dimensional), and the story disorients the viewer by leaping through different planes of existence. "Road to Nowhere" seems like a very Lynchian film. Ever see a movie that is full of art, depth and meaning, but you just don't like it? David Lynch movies strike me the same way.
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