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WearetheMovies Forum :: Dubai's Finest Film Discussion Community  |  Movies  |  Sunset Boulevard  |  The Ghost Writer (Polanski, 2010)
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Author Topic: The Ghost Writer (Polanski, 2010)  (Read 2492 times)
fizz
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« on: May 06, 2010, 02:29:PM »

Polanski is incapable of making bad films. Less watchable perhaps (Ninth Gate anyone?) but never bad. His latest hits our shores May 20th and should be necessary viewing for all film aficionado's.


* ghost_writer_poster.jpg (83.94 KB, 445x660 - viewed 77 times.)
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« Reply #1 on: May 08, 2010, 08:12:PM »

Saw the trailer in cinemas yesterday. It looks wow.
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« Reply #2 on: June 05, 2010, 04:04:AM »

People do yourselves a favour and watch this asap. Polanski has still got the flair of direction in him. His passion for the film oozes on screen, The underrated Ewan McGregor is brilliant as always, wonder why we dont see him often. 
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« Reply #3 on: June 05, 2010, 09:07:PM »

Roman Polanski is a consummate artist. The Ghost Writer could be described as a political thriller and then left at just being that, but it is so much more. Encompassing some of the director’s favourite motifs, it is the quintessential Polanski film, representing his uncompromising nature and drenched in the harsh pessimism shaped by his own tumultuous personal life.

Full of heightened intrigue, the film opens with the discovery of a body washed up at shore. When Ewan McGregor’s character (listed during the end credits simply as ‘The Ghost’) is given the job of ghostwriting the memoir of former British Prime Minister Adam Lang (Brosnan, still suave after his post Bond prime), we learn that the body was of Lang’s long term aide, also the previous ghostwriter. McGregor’s character is given the unenviable task of rewriting the draft and finishing it for publication in just under a month. Escorted to a picturesque yet stormy seaside resort in Martha’s Vineyard, where Lang now resides, the writer arrives just as allegations against Lang start to mount for authorizing the illegal torture of terror suspects and shipping them off to US soil whilst in power. As former political foes and the media demand a trial of the ex-PM, the writer unknowingly uncovers a conspiracy that slowly starts to both engulf and endanger him.

In its execution, Ghost Writer is a culmination of all of Polanski’s favourite themes brought under one cinematic roof. Lang’s wife Ruth (Olivia Williams, brilliant and bitchy in the films meatiest role) turns from being a distressed subject to savvy conniver in the sexual power play that ensues – shades of Polanski’s Knife in the Water and Cul-De-Sac clearly evident in the way seemingly normal relationships disintegrate. The isolated island setting also harks back to memories of both those films but also the residential confinement of Repulsion and The Tenant. Even the premise of an investigative quest based on a book are a reminder of Polanski’s The Ninth Gate, with this film coming off as being an improved version of it. The allusions to former British Prime Minister Tony Blair are both obvious and intentional but there is something of Polanski himself in the character of Lang. Ostracized, relentlessly pursued by media hounds who’ve turned him into their whipping boy and scapegoat, confined to a remote location away from home, the director must have seen the obvious parallels with himself in him but despite this, he doesn’t show Lang any sympathy. If anything, the director’s trademark cruelty engulfs Lang most severely.

Only someone with the remarkable, precise directorial capabilities of Polanski could make even an innocuous house worker look sinister and here he drenches the films entire mood and look in beautifully muted greys. With this film, he reminds us that not all modern auteurs need be burdened by the pursuit of awards recognition or the need to evolve their craft and turn into entertainers in an effort to remain watchable. The screenplay, based on Robert Harris’ novel of the same name and co-written by Polanski himself, is first rate, exhibiting an ear for dialogue and sharp, sometimes acerbic wit. Together, they make the viewer persistently uneasy, promising (and delivering) on something being fiendish awry – the climax involving a long, hypnotic tracking shot and the very final scene of the film are particularly memorable. In a good film, no event or dialogue is ever unnecessary; in Ghost Writer, every frame is purposeful. The pent up suspense is decidedly old school with none of the superficial shock thrills we’ve come to expect from contemporary cinema, the film being all the more effective because of this, though unsophisticated viewers will find ways to describe this as being sluggish. Even the score by Alexandre Desplat hits all the right notes. Ghost Writer has been called Hitchcockian, but I think its time to set the record straight; this film is absolutely and unashamedly Polanskian, for there is no better way to describe it.

Rating: 5/5
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« Reply #4 on: June 06, 2010, 01:54:AM »

Loved your comment on the house worker. Are you talking about the lady who plays the chef? I found her looks and the way she operates suspicious and sinister too but that was all because of the mood that Ploanski creates.
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« Reply #5 on: June 06, 2010, 09:03:AM »

Loved your comment on the house worker. Are you talking about the lady who plays the chef? I found her looks and the way she operates suspicious and sinister too but that was all because of the mood that Ploanski creates.

Yes, she's the one. It was done very tactfully. I was never distracted by her i.e. when the film ended, I didn't feel I needed to question her motives or why she was that way, I just knew that, because the film was from the Ghost's perspective, we were lead to see like her this way. They say Polanski's films are about terror and fear without blood and this film is such a good example of that fact.
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« Reply #6 on: June 06, 2010, 10:54:AM »

was it censored? i know this got very good reviews and i'll be the first to check it out when it comes out here but the problem is the trailer makes it look like another thriller like State of Play or something...
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« Reply #7 on: June 06, 2010, 11:06:AM »

Nothing Polanski makes can ever be "another" something. It has some commonality to other political thrillers but its a genre convention. The film is uniquely the perspective of its director and writers. There was one quick nudity cut, though the version shown here and in the US has had its cuss words dubbed post production to let it remain PG-13 (UK version has a lot more F-bombs being dropped and is probably rated 18).
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Narrative is the poison of cinema...There’s nothing more beautiful than elusiveness in cinema.
theoddball
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« Reply #8 on: June 06, 2010, 12:49:PM »

Fizz,

Anything by Polanski is compulsory watching. I'd booked tickets to watch this tonight, so your review's timing was spot on. Can hardly wait!

Note: this is one of your most excellent reviews in quite a while. Great job!
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« Reply #9 on: June 06, 2010, 01:02:PM »

Note: this is one of your most excellent reviews in quite a while. Great job!

Fizz's last review before this was of Shrek 4, which was excellent.
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theoddball
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« Reply #10 on: June 07, 2010, 12:52:AM »

A brilliant film. Impeccably written and directed, with a superb central performance by McGregor. This is Polanski in top form. One of the most intriguing thrillers I've watched in a very long time.

5/5
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« Reply #11 on: June 07, 2010, 09:28:AM »

I have a feeling this could be one of those rare films that everyone in the WM gang equally appreciates it. Really, this is one of Polanski's best films.
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« Reply #12 on: June 07, 2010, 01:38:PM »

I have a feeling this could be one of those rare films that everyone in the WM gang equally appreciates it. Really, this is one of Polanski's best films.

I was intrigued all along, but nothing peak my interest like a well-thought, well-written Fizz review and a united endorsement from the WM gang.
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« Reply #13 on: June 23, 2010, 09:27:PM »

http://www.dvdactive.com/news/releases/the-ghost-writer.html

lol, look at the ad,the guy who did this is a retarded.

first,it mentions it's "$15 million in domestic box office" as if $15 million is unbeatable.second, look at what it's mentioned under the name of Pierce Brosnan!  Grin
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"There's this whole school of thought that movies are always so great when you're 10 or 12 years old, and the reality of it is, when you're 10 or 12 years old, you've only seen 100 stories. By the time you get to be 25, you've seen 3,000. You've seen every permutation of every dramatic arc. And when somebody takes that and stands it on its head, that can be exciting." David Fincher
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« Reply #14 on: June 23, 2010, 10:04:PM »

http://www.dvdactive.com/news/releases/the-ghost-writer.html

lol, look at the ad,the guy who did this is a retarded.

first,it mentions it's "$15 million in domestic box office" as if $15 million is unbeatable.second, look at what it's mentioned under the name of Pierce Brosnan!  Grin

That is retarded. Everything about it that is.
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WearetheMovies Forum :: Dubai's Finest Film Discussion Community  |  Movies  |  Sunset Boulevard  |  The Ghost Writer (Polanski, 2010)
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