fpw Wrote:This has a Robert Altman feel and was obviously influenced by Nashville and its successors. It's about racism in America but there's no KKK or Black Panther characters. It's more about shadings. (Probably a bad choice of term, but better than saying there was no black and white.) The acting is superb, with Ludacris the biggest surprise. He's a natural and nailed his part through the heart. (Of course it didn't hurt that he had the best lines.)
The only time I hit the FF button was when the "acting" scenes ran too long. And too many of them did. The actors want opportunities to strut their chops. But my thumb thought a number of what should have been straightforward scenes about relationships and such ran longer than they should -- okay, we know you're a good father and we know you love your daughter, now get off the screen. Sort of like writers who fall in love with the sound of their own words and ramble on about wallpaper patterns and waving meadows of grass. My thumb screamed "We know! We know!" and jumped on the button.
I've said more than I intended. Better quit now.
FF= 1.5
And another filmmaker it borrows [heavily] from is Paul Anderson with the particular song and montage used towards the end - just as Anderson used in Magnolia (a film one can love or hate - with me being a lover).
In fact, it's not just the montage sequence that steals from him, but the song utilized is almost the spitting image of the one Amy Mann did for Magnolia.
A most blatant form of "flattery." :-)
p.s. One of my ONLY complaints of the brilliant Crash is the somewhat unrealistic dialogue delivered by Ludacris. It was a little too scripted and not very "real" for the streets. But the film, overall, is near flawless to me. (Great score by Isham as well.)