
Sunset Blvd (1950, Billy Wilder)
Hot damn, that's one cool shot!
What can I say about Sunset Blvd that hasn't already been said? Probably nothing. So I'll focus on the one most outstanding element of the movie, the writing.
The way that William Holden gets sucked into Norma Desmond's world happens in steps and each step is believable. Another writer would've used some plot device to quickly thrown the two together without laying the framework for how such an odd couple could come to be.
As I watched the movie I kept thinking, 'Wow Wilder really didn't miss any details'. He give us what we need to believe in the story and then builds enough sympathy for Holden to care about his plight...but not too much sympathy as he's already dead at the very start of the film. Same with Norma Desmond, she's brash, she's demanding, she's wacked...And yet in the suicide attempt scene we can see her vulnerability that lurks under a 1/2 pound of makeup.
I dug it.
The way that William Holden gets sucked into Norma Desmond's world happens in steps and each step is believable. Another writer would've used some plot device to quickly thrown the two together without laying the framework for how such an odd couple could come to be.
As I watched the movie I kept thinking, 'Wow Wilder really didn't miss any details'. He give us what we need to believe in the story and then builds enough sympathy for Holden to care about his plight...but not too much sympathy as he's already dead at the very start of the film. Same with Norma Desmond, she's brash, she's demanding, she's wacked...And yet in the suicide attempt scene we can see her vulnerability that lurks under a 1/2 pound of makeup.
I dug it.