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Movie Review

'There Will Be Blood'

David Coley

Issue date: 1/28/08 Section: Culture
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"I'm going to bury you underground." "I'm gonna come inside your house, wherever you're sleeping and I'm gonna cut your throat." "I told you I was going to eat you!" From these words, we can clearly see that Daniel Plainview means business.

That business is oil, the oil industry of the early 1900s, in fact. But to boil "There Will Be Blood" down to just another epic film depicting some bygone era would be a gross misunderstanding.

The film is as emotional and reflective as director P.T. Anderson's other great films, "Magnolia" and "Punch-Drunk Love." But combined with that is an indictment of capitalism as relevant today as it's ever been.

At the center of it all is the oilman Plainview, played by Daniel Day-Lewis, who is simultaneously a family man, a community leader, a criminal and a monster.

He starts out scratching in the dirt for silver and gold but eventually builds up an oil empire across the Southwest. His son, H.W. Plainview is always at his side, at first. Besides him, however, Plainview keeps all people at a distance. As he confides to one person, "I look at people and I see nothing worth liking."

To watch Day-Lewis make the transformation from grizzled prospector to refined entrepreneur to the end result in the film's final harrowing moments, which I will say little about, is one of the greatest cinematic experiences of the last few years.

He delivers no wrong choices, no missteps; indeed it is as flawless a performance as I've ever seen.

This character is shown to us through the skillful lens of Anderson's epic vision. Few directors know how to move the camera as well as he does, and the cinematography is always engaging and engrossing.

Anderson knows how to use both short and long cuts to great effect, so brisk montage is coupled with lengthy meditation to craft not just an interesting story, but an experience all its own.

There are so many other elements of the film that I could go on and on about. There's Anderson's script, based on Upton Sinclair's "Oil!," that is filled with dialogue that will be remembered for years to come.
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