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Movie Reviews of Cassandra's DreamMovie Review: One of the best films of last year: Summary: 4 Stars
It seems that there has been developed a certain trend among the majority of critics and even Allen's fans regarding his work of the 1990 - 2000+ period. With every new movie he's made there are complains that Woody lost it and would never create anything as great as some of his best films of the 70s and 80s. It is a good thing that Allen does not seem to care and keeps releasing year after year the films that are still among the best the industry has to offer. I've seen every picture Allen has made, and I said in one of my reviews, "Woody Allen makes good, very good, and great movies". Even if I don't love all his movies equally, they are all good, there is something (often - a lot) to enjoy in every single one. His latest, "Cassandra's Dream" is not an exception. This is a tale of two London brothers, Ian (Ewan McGregor) and Terry (Colin Farrell), who are good friends and have been very close since their childhood. At one fateful moment of their lives they both would face an inevitable choice of how far they would go to get what they want and what price they would pay. I found both McGregor and Farrell terrific and they had a very believable chemistry together. Tom Wilkinson, as the successful and wealthy American uncle/Mephistopolis who seduces the nephews with a terrifying yet promising offer is wonderful as always. I happened to read a few critical reviews before I watched the film and after I finished it, I couldn't help thinking if it was the same movie we saw? Yes, once again, Allen meditates on the eternal subject of Crime and Punishment and he comes up with the superb script, confident directing, and as a result - a gripping and thrilling film that is as much a crime movie as it is about family values, loyalty, choices, doubt, guilt, and regrets. The film is beautifully shot by great Vilmos Zsigmond (McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, The Deer Hunter, The Black Dahlia, Images, The Long Goodbye, and Melinda and Melinda}, and the original dramatic unsettling score is composed by Philip Glass. As you can see, there is a lot to enjoy in the Allen's movie of 2007 which I see as one of the best of the last year. I personally can't wait for the next Allen's project to be released, the new film set in Barcelona.
Movie Review: Woody Allen, London, Fine Acting, Suspense Summary: 4 Stars
Colin Farrell and Ewan McGregor, playing two London brothers, buy a sailboat and name it Cassandra's Dream. In this Woody Allen movie (thankfully he's not in it; his tics and neuroses have long since worn thin) Farrell is a pill-popper, chain-smoker, alcoholic, compulsive gambler, and a lovable [...] with a conscience. His brother is brighter but has a pie in the sky mentality.
The brothers, both needing money, go to their rich uncle, Tom Wilkinson, in a part that should have been fleshed out more, for dough, but he in return wants them to be his hit men to get rid of a whistle blower.
The two men are like clowns as they go through their plans to get rid of the uncle's enemy. It's almost farcical as they fail in one attempt. Both actors are extremely good in their roles. A moral dilemma is presented, but the story doesn't quite sound credible. Farrell, very likable, has to teeter on the edge of caricature.
It's filmed in stunning sunlight with glorious views of London and the countryside which looks idyllic until you get into the minds of the two brothers who are trapped by their own ambitions and flaws. "The New Yorker" featured the DVD in its May 26, 2008 edition. The piece says that Allen's purpose is "to depict life as cruel, grim, and doomed" with "a hopeless view of existence." Because the two brothers are so cloddish in their planning and because they seem so lacking in real guile, I don't think the movie is quite that grim.
Cassandra, after all, was the Trojan prophetess whose correct predictions were not believed because she had spurned Apollo. The movie bears similarities to "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead." This movie will hold your interest.
Movie Review: Woody gives us a dark tale of crime and greed Summary: 4 Stars
Very well acted and beautifully shot, "Cassandra's Dream" is certainly worth the time of anyone who enjoys a good drama. I particularly enjoyed Philip Glass' moody score and Colin Farrell's skillful turn as the guilt-ridden brother who can't live with the crime he and his sibling commit for monetary gain. Colin, by the way, is clearly the "good" brother here (or, at least, the less bad one), and only considers the crime because he needs to pay off loan sharks, not because he wants to make some easy money, which is closer to the motivation of the brother chillingly played by Ewan McGregor.
If there's a slight downside to the story, it's the predictability of the message: crime doesn't pay. Other Woody Allen movies have you walking out of the theater debating the actions and decisions of the central characters. In this one there's nothing to debate. Two brothers cross the line and everything soon spirals downward for them. Still absolutely worth seeing, just not a heck of a lot to talk about afterward.
The DVD features a print that looks absolutely wonderful, sharp with rich colors. I can't imagine that even a Blu-Ray version could look much better. Aside from a few previews, there are no extras on the DVD. But that's nothing new for Woody, who likes his movies to speak for themselves.
Movie Review: A Spine-tingling Fable. . . Summary: 4 Stars
Woody Allen's "Cassandra's Dream" is a tightly-wound fable about the morality and consequences of overweening ambition. Ewan McGregor and Colin Farrell star as two working-class brothers who start out with outsized dreams but end up with a wealth of troubles wrought by obsessive social climbing. Ian (McGregor) passes himself off as a high-rolling property investor/developer, largely to impress his paramour, an alluring actress with a wondering eye (Hayley Atwell), while Terry (Farrell) sinks into the mire of compulsive gambling. In their desperation to finance their respective endeavors, the brothers turn to a wealthy uncle (Tom Wilkinson), who in turn extracts a deadly Faustian bargain from his nephews. Like 2006's "Match Point," "Cassandra's Dream" is yet another in a string of movies that are propelled by Woody Allen's lifelong fascination with class, morality (especially as it is defined or interpreted by the socially prominent) and the resulting friction. As with "Match Point," "Cassandra's Dream" has a spine-tingling, thriller-like urgency that quickens and intensifies as the story moves along. And Colin Farrell gives what may be one of his finer performances as the boozing, pill-popping and guilt-ridden prole unwittingly roped into an unspeakable vendetta.
Movie Review: Choices Summary: 4 Stars
"Cassandra's Dreams" is an interesting Woody Allen film. It has a lot of the elements of "Match Point" but it does not quite rise to that level. The essential reason for that is that the audience is asked to buy into two successive choices that our lead character has to make. The writer/director has certainly done a good job of making his case for those two choices. However, many might buy into the first one but the second one may have been a choice too far. As a result it will, for many, end up as a film that does not fully relate to the viewer.
The acting is very good, the directing is excellent and the movie approaches the level of a thriller. After the movie was over, I was left quite impressed with the irony of the ending. As I thought about it the next day, I realized the depth of the irony that I hadn't comprehended the night before. This might be just the movie for a person who has fretted long and hard over a bad choice they made in their past. Perhaps things could have turned out worse? "Cassandra's Dream" really is an excellent film except for the reason I stated. It may not be "Match Point" but it's certainly better than "Scoop".
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