The Master, (and P)-- once more, bustin' outta the fifties.

Smoke Teff smoketeff at gmail.com
Mon May 1 01:07:34 CDT 2017


Appreciate your continued enthusiasm for this movie, Mark. Like a lot of PTA movies, for some reason, I am dragged in somewhat reluctantly but leave kind of astonished. 

I went with some friends to see it at this place I liked outside Syracuse called the Manlius Art Cinema. 

I found the movie totally spellbinding, which is exactly what I ask out of a movie. The scene with the pacing in particular. I'm hard pressed to give too much evidence better than the fact of the IV movie at the moment but I think you're right that Pynchon's work seems genetically integral to PTA's. In a way that is maybe more overt than with other directors I can think of, at least any who are as interesting and gifted as he is, of whom there aren't that many I can think of... (and among those getting the financial resources and broad attention PTA is...he will be one very important way Pynchon's spirit survives and spreads. 

> On Apr 30, 2017, at 2:43 PM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> One major theme (outta Pynchon),  I think,  can be stated this way:
> 
> The Master is mostly about that post-war charisma--Hoffman as Master---that Pynchon 
> warned about at the end of GR. 
> 
> A--and, all that "connected in history" together between Phoenix and Hoffman might be
> Anderson's take on paranoia (outta GR).....
> 
> And all of Phoenix's self-destructiveness and cluelessness, his self-dammed erotic drive--- is--tentatively anyway?--overcome  in the last scene. ??                                                                                                                                                                                                                  
> 
> 
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