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Megalopolis (film, 2024) by Francis Ford Coppola

5 pointsby getwiththeprog8 months ago

3 comments

iwanttocomment8 months ago
Caught Megalopolis. I&#x27;m confident it&#x27;s intentional, it&#x27;s clearly the film Francis Ford Coppola wanted to make. If at 85 I can spend 100M of my own money on such a wild, ambitious, optimistic, critical, often camp but often very human film, I will have lived my best life.<p>Coppola&#x27;s going out with something big and weird. My respects.
rurban8 months ago
My review: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;boxd.it&#x2F;7pIZox" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;boxd.it&#x2F;7pIZox</a> I disagree with the content
AStonesThrow8 months ago
Unfortunately I was reaching for the brain-bleach after sitting through this, and it was curiosity and intrigue that led me to go pay to see it.<p>Perhaps it was too grand and allegorical for me to follow; perhaps I don&#x27;t share these points of view; but primarily it seemed purposely off-putting: were there any sympathetic protagonists? They all seemed corrupt and evil in their own particular ways, except for the mayor&#x27;s daughter, Julia, who possessed innocence, trust, and devotion.<p>Aubrey Plaza&#x27;s characters, always subversive and antisocial, reached a new climax with this one, so to speak. Is she an actor, or does she only portray herself?<p>&gt; Coppola described LaBeouf as an actor who &quot;deliberately sets up a tension between himself and the director to an extreme degree&quot; and whose &quot;method was so infuriating and illogical, it had me pulling my hair out&quot;, which he compared to the preparations of actor Dennis Hopper for Apocalypse Now.<p>Shia was cool in <i>Indiana Jones</i> but I saw him portray Padre Pio, and I&#x27;ve never met a more hateful, unlikeable priest. Ditto in this one--just a crazy opportunist with too much clout.<p>From a standpoint of technology, I noted the conspicuous absence of computers anywhere, no smartphones in pockets; even the vehicles were old-fashioned, despite a distinctly present-day type scenario, so that kept me in the alternate universe mode. The focus on technology mostly concerned the magic of stopping time and the Megalo substance&#x2F;Macguffin.<p>Cicero was so troubled and conflicted, it&#x27;s difficult to accept that his new Utopia would live up to any promises, and I think that&#x27;s intentional; the final 60 seconds were quite telling. This is as much a tale of humanity and relationships as it is about technology, politics, or empires. (See the Latin motto over the dais at the wedding.)<p>I think anyone without extensive liberal-arts background will be at a loss to catch the references and allusions throughout. The Greco-Roman, Shakespearean and Enlightenment aspects were tremendously evocative, even with my lack of understanding.<p>Other than Julia, I also found Fundi Romaine (Laurence Fishburne) to be compelling, and an element of possible sanity, in a world that&#x27;s undeniably gone stark raving mad.