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Has David Fincher decided he has to atone for ‘Seven’, his 1995 cat-and-mouse thriller which gave serial killers and their crimes a renewed sheen of Hollywood cool? His latest offering, ‘Zodiac’, presented 5 years after ‘Panic Room’, a claustrophobic mess that probably warrants the most penance among his previous works, tracks the long, frustrating and ultimately fruitless struggle to apprehend the real-life serial killer, Zodiac, a letter-writing, cipher-making lunatic who terrorized the citizens of California and stumped its police force in the late 60s and early 70s. Opening with a surprisingly matter-of-fact depiction of a Zodiac killing, the movie quickly shifts its focus to the offices of the San Francisco Chronicle, one of the main recipients of the Zodiac’s letters, and the investigatory efforts of the San Francisco policemen assigned to the case. A few more attacks are shown, in a similarly unglamorous manner, where pertinent, but what follows is partly a police procedural of sorts, intercut with the efforts of two journalists, the grandstanding Paul Avery (Robert Downey, Jr,) and the increasingly obsessed cartoonist Robert Graysmith (Jake Gylenhall) to crack the case. Haflway through, Graysmith’s efforts dominate the movie, which is only fair since the script is adapted from one of two books he wrote about the case.
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Re:Zodiac (dir. David Fincher)
Sep 14 2007 14:30:18 Nice review. In all mentions of Zodiac I always like to draw a comparison with the Korean movie Memories of Murder, by Bong Joon Ho (The Host), which I prefer because of the more unique sensibilities of that film, including giving police brutality a hilarious edge.
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Re:Zodiac (dir. David Fincher)
Sep 14 2007 23:55:32 I'd have watched it by now if they got Dirty Harry to investigate the Zodiac case but yeah, I'll check it out anyway. JP's supposed to be bringing me his DVD when we meet tomorrow.
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Re:Zodiac (dir. David Fincher)
Sep 16 2007 02:13:51 I caught MoM yesterday and have to say I'm pretty impressed even though the first half seemed to drag a 'lil bit and to be honest I only came to be on my toes when they started chasing that fellow who was masturbating. From then on it was quite an exhilarating ride. You could really feel the frustations at not being able to pin down anything on the fellow when the results came in and also when the nutjob jumps in front of the train, which is quite unlike Zodiac where you just glimpsed 'what would happen if he was caught', or at the most took a neutral stance. Maybe if you're too peculiar even side with Leigh. I also thought Leigh was one of the most interesting villians portrayed onscreen in recent times, I mean I was really impressed when he was being interrogated at the factory(?). IMO way better than 'Nurse Ratched', 'Norman Bates', or argh, 'Darth Vader'.
On a different tangent also saw The Host and House of Sand & Fog, both of which were pretty darned terrific. |
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