Carmine Falcone
So it goes.
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2004
- Messages
- 19,576
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 31
No Country for Old Men. No contest for me. I Should watch The Departed again, but I didn't really like it outside of some particular scenes and performances. For me, the shot of Martin Sheen falling is one of the biggest botches of Scorsese's career. With the cut, there's little sense of surprise for the audience, barely any shock. Infernal Affairs hit that key when the lead detective lands on top of the car to everyone's surprise, Departed just about missed it entirely. I don't know why that specific shot and lead up has irritated me so.![]()
I think the shot of Sheen falling is both extremely beautiful (bordering on poetic dammit!
) and very well placed within the scene. And I would not call the lack of surprise a mistake, Scorsese is conscious enough of the art of cinema to know he is not surprising anyone but Billy with the shot of Sheenan landing on the pavement and that is exactly the point. I would say the shot of Sheenan falling is there to provide that crucial moment of (for lack of a better term) suspense for the audience. I certainly remember (and even relived it on subsequent viewings) that moment of extreme tension, dread and horror I felt in the moment just before Sheen hit the street at DiCaprio's feet. Scorsese obviously felt no need to recreate the moment of surprise from the original film. On topic though: I prefer No Country For Old Men. Firstly because I could print and frame every single shot of that movie and put it up on my wall. One of Deakins' most gorgeously shot movies. Secondly, every single performance is spot-on. The Departed to me, is one of Scorsese's weirdest movies. I think it's even weirder than After Hours. Much of the dialouge is borderline incomprehensible, it seems disjointed and random, especially in any scene with Nicholson. The editing knows has so many absurd little touches such as The speeding up, the overlaid musical tracks, the extremely ****ed-up continuity (even more glaring than usual for Scorsese), Gimme Shelter starting up twice in one scene, the abrupt cutting off of the music in many moments. It's a whackjob of a movie (and I do love it to death).


." I'm also a massive Coenite.