Guy Pearce and John Hillcoat Discuss "The Proposition"
SummaryDirector John Hillcoat had a big ambition when he undertook "The Proposition": a Western with a truly Aussie sensibility. "It's the Australian West," he said. "We've tried to reclaim it for ourselves." Back to Article

Jen Yamato
[b]Good stuff![/b]
Powerful words for a powerful movie...especially considering the heat, the winds, the craziness it sounds like they endured during production. Anyone else see it yet? (Senh, what did you think?)
May 6 - 11:23 AM
Senh Duong
First, a disclaimer:
I fell asleep during the first 10 minutes of every film I saw at Sundance, with the exception of one - Steel City, a family drama. And that was my favorite film of the festival. I just couldn't help it. The lack of sleep, walking around in the freezing cold, and then sitting in a warm comfortable seat instantly knocked me out every time.
So anyway, for this screening, I downed a full cup of coffee before it started hoping to get pass the first 10 minutes awake. The result: I woke up 10 minutes later.
I felt disoriented throughout the entire film because I missed the setup. I didn't know the guy Pierce's character was trying to capture was his brother. I missed out on that entire conflict. Throughout the film I was wondering why he was so conflicted - dude, just blow that guy's head up and save your little brother.
Anyway, when the film was over, it reminded me a lot of "History of Violence," which I liked. Both are Westerns with gorey and shocking violence. I like how realistic the cinematography was, with bugs and insects flying around people's faces. I thought the score was unique too. But at the end, I didn't know what to think of it because I slept thru the setup. I'll have to watch it again to give it a fair review.
May 6 - 04:51 PM