To: atomicpossum
That film has some ardent fans among film buffs. Look at this Dave Kehr blurb:
"King Vidor turned Ayn Rand's preposterous "philosophical" novel into one of his finest and most personal films (1949), mainly by pushing the phallic imagery so hard that it surpasses Rand's rightist diatribes and even camp ("I wish I'd never seen your skyscraper!"), entering some uncharted dimension where melodrama and metaphysics exist side by side. The images have a dynamism, a spatial tension, that comes partly from Frank Lloyd Wright (whose life Rand appropriated for her novel) and partly from Eisenstein, yet the pattern of their deployment is Vidor's own: the emotions rise and fall in broad, operatic movements that are unmistakably sexual and irresistibly involving."
7 posted on
02/02/2005 11:20:12 AM PST by
Borges
To: Borges
"I wish I'd never seen your skyscraper!"
Women I've dated say that to me all the time -- now I know what they're talking about, except I'm not an architect...
18 posted on
02/02/2005 11:48:25 AM PST by
durasell
(Friends are so alarming, My lover's never charming...)
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