
Pieces of April
Review created: 04/03/09(updated 04/24/09)

I bought this movie because some moron in the Wall Street Journal said positive things about it. I greatly disliked the film. It incorporates all the trendy techniques that make so many movies unwatchable lately. The camera is almost always too close to the subject; minor movements are shot at a distance of about six inches. My response is "back off!" "Get out of my face!" "Give me some space!" It is impossible to enjoy a film made with these production "values." The story was warm and fuzzy and supports the Thanksgiving ideal, but you have to endure this nearly unwatchable film to the end to get the point. I paid almost nothing for it, but it still wasn't worth it.
In short, this is a miserable movie, unless you like tight closeups, fast cuts, the obsession with faces, and the nearly complete absence of medium and long shots (the things that make a movie watchable, in my opinion). I'm being blunt here so that you won't be disappointed as I was. Now if you favor the modern camera techniques that I call technological masturbation, then take a gamble. But don't think that you're going to sit back, relax, and enjoy broad vistas into another sphere. Instead, you'll be seeing tight shots of a pan handle, somebody's ear lobe, and other narrow views that deny you access to the broad scene, the context, the space. This movie demonstrates precisely what has ruined movie-making--and much of TV for that matter. This is "liberal" movie-making, wherein the makers seek to control precisely what you look at, by leaving everything else out of the frame. It's micromanagement of your viewing experience--they, the makers, know better than you do what you should be paying attention to. They're smarter than you are, and you need to give up control and let them direct your life. That's the heart of liberalism. As I said, it has wrecked movies and TV.
Ebert & Roeper give it two thumbs up: They must be all thumbs.
"One of the best films of the year," says FOX TV: If that's true, it's no wonder I never go to the movies.
You've been warned!
Review ID: 10000000011419935

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