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What the Critics Say About LOLA MONTÉS |
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MOVIE REVIEW by Michael Moran |
October 6, 2008 | ||||
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Run, Lola Montes, Run Andrew Sarris declared it “the greatest film of all time” while Pauline Kael called it “disappointing” and “painful to watch.” You’ve got three weeks to make up your own mind about whose side you’re on. Ophuls was famous for his elegant, almost obsessive camera work. James Mason, star of Ophuls' "The Reckless Moment (1949) even wrote a poem about it. Ophuls, in addition to inspiring poetry, also made some of the most individual movie of all time: Letter to an Unknown Woman (1948), which stars an exquisitely masochistic Joan Fontaine and is guaranteed to make you weep; Le Plaisir and Le Ronde, two films that explore the theme of comic and tragic romantic love in elaborately circular plots; and his masterpiece which tells the tragic story of a giddy, brittle, none-too-bright woman whose adulterous love is her doom. Earrings’s virtuoso lyricism makes any other movie look dowdy; it was just released on DVD in a new print and is a must see.
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