Beautiful Work Of Art (by domino1003) |
*****SPOILER ALERT!!!*****Alan Rudolph's "The Moderns" is a wonderful, funny and twisted film set in 1920's Paris, France. The front burner story is a triangle between Nick, his runaway wife and a cold as ice businessman that wants to obtain a higher social status. Nick Keith Carradine and Rachel Linda Fiorentino were married years ago and she bails out of the marriage. Years later, she shows up on the arms of Bertram Stone John Lone . While he deals with her reappearance, he is also talked into making art forgeries by a rather shady behaving gallery owner, Valentin <more> |
A quirky little movie about fakery (by André-7) |
This may not be everyone's cup of tea, but it has a genuine, unpretentious charm to it that I found appealing.Alan Rudolph made this delightful little ode to lies, trickery and delusion on a shoestring budget. The story of a failed painter down on his luck in Paris in the 1920's who accepts a comission to forge a famous impressionist painting. The film questions what is real versus what is perceived or subjective. In a series of criss-crossing subplots and seemingly random encounters Rudolph has fun playing with the trickery of film to made some sly points about the art forms we hold <more> |
Quirky, Fun, Interesting (by dane11) |
Alan Rudolph does not make movies for everyone to see. His movies seem like personal projects that interest him at the time. Some of his movies I haven't been able to get involved in Trixie, Mortal Thoughts, Afterglow but with The Moderns, I was pulled in quickly. The story focuses on Keith Carradine's ex-patriot Nick Hart, a painter who has the ability to duplicate famous works of art with his brush. He's hired to create forgeries by Mademoiselle de Ville Geraldine Chaplin .But the story doesn't stop there. There are other ex-patriots around, including young Ernest <more> |
Rudolph's best! Along with perhaps Choose Me . (by turkam) |
I must admit Alan Rudolph's work is hard to either greatly admire or sternly criticize. He has become one of these directors, like David Cronenberg or Paul Verhooven, that some love and some despise. But, the reality is it is hard to know where such directors stand. I must say that my feeling that Rudolph's films were too much like his mentor Robert Altman's has been changed upon seeing "The Moderns." While I am a huge fan of Altman, it has been hard for me too admire directors that seem too merely imitate him. But, this film is much more surreal than anything that <more> |