Yes, No, Maybe So: "J. Edgar"
Tuesday, September 20, 2011 at 10:15AM
NATHANIEL R in Armie Hammer, Clint Eastwood, Dame Judi Dench, J Edgar, Leonardo DiCaprio, Naomi Watts, Oscars (11), Yes No Maybe So

That vibration you're feeling on the ground, that telltale rippling disturbance in your glass, is the clomping arrival of one of 2011's (presumed) Oscar behemoths, Clint Eastwood's biopic of FBI man J Edgar Hoover called J Edgar [official site].

Don't wilt like a little flower. Be strong."

Which means we have to get down to our yes, no, maybe so breakdown of things that make us want to buy a ticket, run away screaming, or mull it over before committing. As a founding member of the oft reviled and totally misunderstood* 'Clint Eastwood is Overrated Club' I realize my breakdown will already be broken for some. But I do approach each trailer with as open a mind as I can muster given my general leanings. In this case everyone knows (and I'd never deny) that I vew cradle-to-grave biopics as the mustiest of all film genres; they aren't inherently cinematic with their staccato 'greatest hits' survey of life since movies are always strongest when they capture something seismic in miniature about a character, story, time, or theme that suggests rather than illustrates a major life beyond two hours.

YES

Is that legal?"

 

The trailer in question and more commentary after the jump

NO

It's time this generation learned the difference between a hero and a villain."

 

 

MAYBE SO

He most so conduct himself as to eliminate even the slightest possibility of his criticism as to his conduct."

 

 

Related: Oscar Predictions

I am less interested after seeing the trailer which I was not at all expecting. I thought I might enjoy the period feel or see interesting performance beats or something. Maybe you'll feel differently? You'll tell me either way in the comments, won't you, where you fall with the Yes, No, Maybe So?

*Calling someone "Overrated" should never be interpreted as "they're not talented". Overrated, an admittedly too generic and lazy term that we should all stop using (sorry), merely suggests a disconnect between proportions of praise to the talent in question.

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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