Showing posts with label Paul Thomas Anderson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Thomas Anderson. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Phantom Thread

The past twelve months have been busy and I have been involved in various other projects which have been time-consuming. The Film Club has continued and has gone from strength to strength, but I have been remiss in posting copies of the notes I produce on to this blog.

Over the next weeks I intend to get back to where we are now as we have just started our 2019-2020 season.

So to start with I am posting this almost a year late... Nonetheless the film was superb and I have subsequently bought the soundtrack which I listen to regularly.


Phantom Thread



USA 2017        130 minutes

Director:          Paul Thomas Anderson

Starring:            Daniel Day-Lewis, Lesley Manville and Vicky Krieps

  

“Paul Thomas Anderson’s best film since Punch-Drunk Love is another cracked romance with a masochistic streak and a strong fairy-tale underpinning. Set in post-war London, amid the insular world of 50s haute couture, Phantom Thread is an oedipal gothic romance, a tale of lost mothers and broken spells, with secret messages (“never cursed”) sewn into its gorgeously cinematic cloth. A swooning score, crisp visuals and paper-cut-sharp performances combine to conjure a poisoned rose of a movie, inviting you to prick your finger on its thorns and succumb to its weird, dark magic.”



Mark Kermode



Awards and Nominations

  • Won Oscar for Best Costume Design plus Oscar nominations for Best Actor (Daniel Day-Lewis), Best Supporting Actress (Lesley Manville), Best Film, Best Director and Best Soundtrack
  • Won BAFTA for Best Costume Design plus BAFTA nominations for Best Actor (Daniel Day-Lewis), Best Supporting Actress (Lesley Manville) and Best Soundtrack
  • A further 46 wins and 85 nominations


In 1950s London designer Reynolds Woodcock (Daniel Day-Lewis) and his sister Cyril (Lesley Manville) are at the centre of the British fashion industry of the period. Woodcock designs dresses for royalty movie stars, heiresses and debutants, and has had relationships with a string of women who have passed in and out of his life, but when he meets Alma (Vicky Krieps), a young waitress who becomes both his muse and his lover, he discovers that she has the potential to disrupt his entire carefully managed life.

Phantom Thread is the first feature film that Anderson has directed that is set outside of his native USA and his screenplay is an original story, although the character of Woodcock is loosely based on the British designed Charles James. The style of the film reflects the work that Alfred Hitchcock and Powell and Pressburger made during the period in which it is set and composer Jonny Greenwood, who has scored all of Anderson’s films since There Will Be Blood, reinforces the period feel with his soundtrack that has echoes of David Lean’s British films of the 1940s, especially Richard Addinsell’s work for The Passionate Friends (1949) and the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto that figures so memorably in Brief Encounter (1945).


Anderson started making films using a Betamax video camera at the age of 12. He spent two terms studying English at University before dropping out to begin his career as a production assistant on TV. He subsequently decided to make a short film as his “college”; the resulting short was successfully screened at the Sundance Film Festival and he later expanded it into Hard Eight (1996) his first full length feature. Anderson’s breakthrough film which won him both critical and commercial success was Boogie Nights (1997) set in the world of porn in the 1970s and 1980s. In 2007 he directed the critically acclaimed historical drama There Will Be Blood which among its many awards and nominations won Oscars for Daniel Day-Lewis in the leading role and Best Cinematography as well as being named as the best film of the current century by several critics.

Here's a link to the trailer: