The film is largely in black-and-white, yet the result, far from seeming gloomy, has the pertness and the simplicity of a cutout. I found it, if anything, too simple. The faces are no more than tapered ovals, which makes some of the characters hard to distinguish, and I was left with the nagging, if ungallant, impression that I had been flipping through a wipe-clean board book entitled “Miffy and Friends Play with Islamic Fundamentalism.”
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Anthony Lane's wit
He can make me laugh, that Anthony Lane. See this example from this week, reviewing a French animated feature in the New Yorker:
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The November 26 issue is possibly the best all year, with several pages devoted to classic New Yorker comics, a hilarious article on driving in China, a bemusing piece about Barack Obama and the befuddling arcane process of getting a nomination in the Democratic primaries, a great two-page fold out artwork, as well as a cute Anthony Lane review of the latest Bob Dylan movie. (And he delivers a neat one liner on a Stephen King film, 'The Mist').
Worth getting at a good magazine store, possibly 'Magnation' at Elizabeth St in Melbourne, while you're here...!
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