Tag Archive: Gus Van Sant


AFTERLIFE written, directed by and starring Ricky Gervais

(A Netflix Original, 2019)

Screen shot 2019-03-11 at 18.59.48Yesterday, I blogged about Gus Van Sant’s flawed attempt to deal with complicated issues of guilt and grief in ‘The Sea of Trees’.

In that movie, the death of the lead character’s wife drives the leading male into a narcissistic flirtation with suicide until he finds some vague spiritual redemption. This kind of cop-out is all too often the way these stories go.

God’s reputation for moving in mysterious ways allows scriptwriters to sidestep the less palatable, but all too probable, conclusion that when this mortal coil is cut there is no heaven or hell, no all-knowing deity. …. nothing.

These too infrequently voiced non-beliefs are squarely addressed in the unlikely form of a new comedy vehicle for Ricky Gervais. Since Gervais has been outspoken advocate of atheism, it is with a knowing sense of irony that he should choose to call his six part series on Netflix ‘Afterlife’. Continue reading

The Sea Of Trees directed by Gus Van Sant (USA, 2015)
sea

This movie bombed at the box office, was universally mauled by the critics and booed at the Cannes Film Festival. There have been other failures in Gus Van Sant’s otherwise illustrious career but nothing on such a disastrous scale. I will include spoilers in an attempt to identify what went so horribly wrong.
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THUMBSUCKER BLUES

THUMBSUCKER directed by Mike Mills (2005).

Is this a thumb I see before me?

Having thoroughly enjoyed the movie Beginners, I wanted to see Mike Mills’ debut for my own compare and contrast motives.

The thumb sucker of the title is a bright but painfully shy teenager named Justin Cobb (Lou Taylor Pucci). After a series of mishaps, the school authorities diagnose him as suffering from attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and Justin starts taking the drug Ritalin.

Under this stimulation/medication he is able to read Moby Dick straight through and become a prize-winning member of the school’s debating class. The problem is that this also turns him into a precocious smart-ass so that a teacher who starts by being enthusiastic and supportive and ends by concluding “In my professional opinion you’ve become a monster”. Continue reading