Most Popular
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Ambush at Channel 5: One TV type gets a dose of her own hidden-camera-style investigation and finds it "uncool"
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Sex Edition
Our second-annual issue dedicated to all things sex.
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A college drop-out abandons a lucrative tech career for a life of inner-city poverty and hopes to save an urban school district from oblivion
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How Not to Be a Rap Star
Flying high on Ecstasy, Grey Goose and his own hype, Paul Mussan blew through 100 G's in six months.
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Kansas Citys Corona Cantina #1 still has some problems to work out, but well raise a few bottles to the concept
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Ambush at Channel 5: One TV type gets a dose of her own hidden-camera-style investigation and finds it "uncool" (21)
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Kansas Citys Corona Cantina #1 still has some problems to work out, but well raise a few bottles to the concept (15)
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Booty Crawl (10)
We find our nemesis and a lot of booze during a Waldo bar hop.
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No one feels sorry for Councilman Terry Riley as much as Terry Riley (7)
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China Syndrome (7)
For a real immigration debate, just look at what happened when the Chinese invaded Mexico.
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Body of War
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Semi-Pro
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Be Kind Rewind
Michel Gondry attempts to celebrate DIY filmmaking but comes up short, stale and flat.
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The Gang's in Town
In Bruges, Martin McDonagh's sightseeing hit-men flick, isn't much of a trip.
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This Year's Oscar-Nominated Shorts Could Be More Animated
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Daily Briefs: Thinkofthechildren; Stolen Monkeys; Emanuel Cleaver is Very Delicate
10:10AM 03/10/08 -
Daily Briefs: Be Terrified For Your Kids; Funkhouser's Ambitions; Obama -- Now Even Blacker!
09:30AM 03/07/08 -
Daily Briefs: Terrorists, Abortionists and Atheists
11:54AM 03/06/08 -
Michael Bublé Musicans Tonight at River Market Brewery
02:22PM 03/07/08 -
Bad News for a Local Musician at the News Room
01:58PM 03/07/08 -
Local Guy Interviews (ex)Sex Pistol Glen Matlock
10:05AM 03/07/08
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Recent Articles By J. HOBERMAN
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Harlem Knight
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Making Good
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Saying Goodbye To Two Giants of Cinema
Ingmar Bergman (1918-2007); Michelangelo Antonioni (1913-2007)
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Man Down
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Dr. Feelgood
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Book of Rife
That Darren Aronofsky sure is ambitious. Too bad his movie makes no sense.
By J. HOBERMAN
Published: November 23, 2006Solemn, flashy and exasperating, The Fountain adapted by Darren Aronofsky from his own graphic novel should really be called The Shpritz. The premise is lachrymose, the sets are clammy, and the metaphysics are all wet. The screen is awash in spiraling nebulae and misty points of light, with the soundtrack supplying appropriately moist oohs and aahs.
The Fountain is an exercise in pulp mysticism, overflowing with ponderous enigma, universal patterns and eternal recurrences. It touches all its bases in its first few minutes. An opening invocation of Genesis and a close-up of a golden cross segue to a crib from the sacred text, Raiders of the Lost Ark: A fiery Spanish conquistador (Hugh Jackman) is trapped by a horde of growling natives in a jungle cul-de-sac; he escapes by climbing a sacred pyramid to go mano a mano with their flaming high priest. There's a cosmic cut in the film. Jackman, now a bald astronaut, wakes up screaming across the snow-globe universe.
Not nearly as pleasurably tacky as such a description might make it sound, Aronofsky's historical phantasmagoria jumps among action in three times. There's the 16th-century derring-do in which Rachel Weisz's glamorous Queen Isabella sends Jackman's conquistador to find the Tree of Life and bring back the Sap of Immortality. There's a present-day melodrama in which Weisz appears as the free-spirited Izze, dying of brain cancer while her renegade medical-researcher spouse, Tom (Jackman), races against time to find a cure. Adding to the mystery, Izze is writing a novel called The Fountain that is actually the conquistador story and which she begs her husband to complete. (The movie's most impressive special effect is this leather-bound tome written entirely in longhand without a single erasure or correction.) Finally, and least explicably, there's Tom's 26th-century astral projection.
These avatars gaze at the Mayan death star, sit beneath the world-tree Yggdrasill and make love in a cozy bathtub. Weisz, the auteur's own inamorata, is accorded many close-ups. She's able to carry them, smiling bravely through the tears and claptrap. For his part, Jackman plays Dr. Tom at his most Wolverineish a grizzled, brooding, ungracious loner given to petulant explosions.
What The Fountain lacks in coherence, it makes up for in ambition. Aronofsky has aspired to make not only the most strenuously far-out movie of the 21st century but also the greatest love story ever told. Part fairy tale, part weepie, part frustrated bodice ripper and part film loop in which beatific Izze invites distracted Tom for a walk (and is grouchily turned down) six times, The Fountain is a movie that prefers celestial whiteouts to prosaic fades and, when it comes to visual emphasis, prizes the overhead zoom above all. It's as busy as the hotel lobby that seemingly served as the decorating model for Tom's lab. By the time the hero's 26th-century self levitates through the deliquescing layers of cosmic onion to the golden birth canal, Izze's injunction to "finish it" has taken on a new, and not particularly occult, meaning.








