
Of the many movies I saw over the last three weeks , four stood out as outstanding . Casablanca , Enemy at the gates , The scent of a woman and No country for old men . Each of these made me want to see it again , made me pause to ponder and reflect on life . Each tugged at my heart in a very compelling and different way .
Casablanca is an outstanding love story . Desire , pathos and love are depicted sensitively and the few memorable lines from the movie - Play it sam ; We'll always have Paris ; Its the beginning of a beautiful friendship ; Frankly my dear , I give a damn - have been etched in cinema folklore over many years . Humphrey Bogart is terrific as the chain-smoking , rustic lover while beautiful and confused Ingrid Bergman wanting the good life , looks quite stunning . Quite a few hindi movies have explored this loved and lost theme , but I guess they take the ' suffer or sacrifice ' route rather than etch out a character as strong and self-consuming as Bogart . The black and white movie uses shadows and light quite effectively . Absolutely a nine on ten .
Enemy at the gates was one of the movies I saw amongst many war movies together - The longest day , The windtalkers , Platoon , The thin red line , Dirty dozen , Black Hawk Down and The battle for britain . But EATG stood out as gripping and brilliant . There are probably fewer movies with the crucial Russian - German war as a backdrop so it makes it additionally interesting to see a part of this history . Ed Harris and Jude Law's singular conflict interspersed with lovely Rachel Weiss and cunning Ralph Fiennes turned out to be quite a gripping tale . Told only from the point of the sniper Jude Law , it grips you from the first scene to the last . A small scene of german Ed Harris being stripped off his rank for failing to nab Jude is moving , but it generates no sympathy for his character . The love making scene in the bunker amidst many sleeping soldiers is shot very well . You want them to make love and be together inspite of the impossibilities , so there is an sense of fulfillment when the scene comes on .The whiteness of her skin in the filthy green and dirt background with passionate love-making , makes it quite an endearing moment . Jude Law is brilliant and gets the audience on his side from the first scene . A nine on ten .
Al Pacino is Al Pacino . His blind colonel act in The scent of a woman is starkly memorable for being intense and moving . Fun movie to watch , especially the plot of wanting to spend a weekend in NewYork pursuing his unfinished dreams - driving a ferrari , meeting his estranged brothers family , doing the tango , living in the most expensive suite in the most expensive hotel in New York before blowing his brains out . Liked the tango scene the best . Surely an eight on ten .
Saw Coen bros No country for old men twice . I mean the DVD guy didn't pick it up so got an extra day . What a thriller . Had'nt heard of the spanish actor Zavier Barden before this movie . His potrayal of Anton , the hellish guy obsessed with getting his money back was quite stunning . The intriguing part of the movie is that while there is a chase - the sheriff ( Tommy Lee Jones ) is after Zavier , the killer , who is after Josh who has picked up the drug-deal-gone-awry millions of dollars - none of the three meet each other in the movie . They get close , cross each other and get within a breath but don't meet . The texan countryside is awesome and shows how tough it is to be a cop in that terrain . The guns are deadly and each killing is credibly different . You really want Josh to run with the money - guess thats the connect with the key character . There are some unnecessary conversations , though , that distract you as you try and connect the story with those conversations , including the one that the movie ends with . But the chase itself is gripping and polishes off the killings as character defining , so none of them looks gory or out of place . It won 4 deserving oscars . An eight on ten definitely.