�������������� ������������������ ��������:
�� ������������ ������ ���� ����������:
Paul Thomas Anderson Reveals Secrets of Stoner Odyssey ‘Inherent Vice’
Inherent Vice, sort of
Joaquin Phoenix mesmerizes in Paul Thomas Anderson���s adaptation of the psychedelic Thomas Pynchon novel
Stellar cast performances can���t keep the film from being dull.
Vice and Virtue: Inherent’s a good trip
Joaquin Phoenix gets stoned in ���Inherent Vice���
A Look at ���Inherent Vice���
���Inherent Vice��� film is true to its novel equivalent while still maintaining cinematic qualities
Soooo many elements appear in Paul Thomas Anderson���s Inherent Vice, an adaptation of the Thomas Pynchon novel of the same name. Noir mystery? Yes. Stoner comedy? Sure. An array of amusing one-off characters? Definitely. 1970 period look at the dying of LA hippie culture with a dash of class conflict thrown in? Seems so.
Thomas Pynchon���s convoluted plotting is rendered cinematically by Paul Thomas Anderson in this mind-warping, often chic and frequently hilarious neo-noir.
�������� “������������������������ ����������������������” ��������������������. ����������, ��������������, ���� ������������������ ������ ������������������. ������ �������� �� �������������� ������������ ���������� ���������������� �� ������������ ������������������������ ������������������ ������������������ �� ������ ���������������� ������������. �� �������� �������������� ���������� �������� ���������� ������������ �������������� �� �������� ������������������ ����������
Trippy mystery gets lost (albeit pleasantly) in a fog of drugs and weirdness
Joaquin Phoenix plays detective in drug-fueled L.A.
‘Inherent Vice’ an engrossing fever dream
Vices needed to follow new movie
���Inherent Vice��� Joaquin Phoenix Continues to Challenge Himself, P.T. Anderson Still Matters as They Both Strive for Greatness
Now comes Paul Thomas Anderson���s film adaptation, which tries to squeeze Pynchon���s rambling series of druggy digressions into a two and a half hour timeframe.
Joaquin Phoenix plays pothead private eye in hippie-era whodunit
Inherent Vice is mostly a bittersweetly satiric rumination on the end of a counterculture
Comedy meets mystery in convoluted, underachieving ���Inherent Vice���
It���s been recommended by other critics who like the film to see it twice. And in this case I agree. Not to just fully appreciate it but because there will be some things you might have missed and maybe you���ll get a whole different experience along the way. Inherent Vice may be a departure from the usual detective style but it���s at least unique enough to check out.
Based on the novel by Thomas Pynchon, Inherent Vice is Writer-Director Paul Thomas Anderson���s strangest film yet. Like Anderson���s other films, it���s a spectacular piece of work, but damned if I can figure out what the hell it���s about.
It seems new characters and scenarios are being thrown at us in every scene, as Doc readily accepts new cases and new leads ��� only there really is no case, even though he spends most of the movie looking into things.
After the film festival premiere of Inherent Vice, one reviewer stated that the film was formatted as a stoner comedy and he couldn���t understand what was happening. ���A stoner comedy with an incomprehensible plot?��� I remember thinking. ���That sounds like an adaptation of a Thomas Pynchon novel to me.���
���Inherent Vice,��� artfully captures mania, confusion of its time
I’m sitting through the first half hour of “Inherent Vice” and nothing is making sense. Then I remember ��� it’s directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.
I���ve heard some people call Inherent Vice an endurance test, and they���ve hit the nail on the head. Even with great acting and a nice period vibe, the movie can���t overcome its weak storytelling, something I could���ve scarcely imagined saying about a Paul Thomas Anderson film a few weeks ago.
PTA���s Vivacious ���Vice���
Paul Thomas Anderson has been threatening to go rogue for a while now.
�������� ���� ������������ ������������������ ����������������: Everybody Must Get Stoned- Inherent Vice (2014)
HERE���S WHY YOU HATED ���INHERENT VICE��� (AND WHY YOU MIGHT NEED TO SEE IT AGAIN)
���� �������� �� ������-������ ������������������ – ����������������, �������������������� �������� “�������������������� ����������”:
���������� ���� ������������������������ ������������ �������������������� �������������� “������������������ ���������� ����������”:
�������������� �� �������������������� ��������������: Every Thomas Pynchon Novel, Briefly Ranked – �������������������������� �� ������������������ ����������
������ ������, ���������� �������������������� ������������ �������������������� “����������”
�� ������ “������������������”: ‘Mortdecai’ Behind-the-Scenes Featurette with Johnny Depp
�� ������ �������������� �������������������� ���� �������� ������������, �������������� ����������������������
�� ������ ���������� ���������������� ������������ “������������ �� ������������” �������� ��������������. ����, �� �������� ���� ��������. ���������� ������������������������, ������ ��������������, �������� ���� ���� ����������
Filed under:
pyncholalia,
talking animals