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The Last Tycoon Streaming

Mercredi, juin 23rd, 2010
The Last Tycoon Streaming. The Last Tycoon Streaming.

Movie Title: The Last Tycoon
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The Last Tycoon is available for streaming or downloading.

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“The Last Tycoon” is a thinly veiled retelling of the life of movie mogul Irving Thalberg. Thalberg made an astounding slew of motion pictures during his short rein as a producer and studio head in the 30’s. DeNiro’s Monroe Stahr is a mysterious, shocked individual who literally lives only for the movies he’s making. It seems his racy with the conceal makes him unable to communicate with the living all around him.

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Writer Harold Pinter’s dialog rhythms only enhances the impression that Stahr is in this world but not of it. Ultimately Stahr’s intense devotion to appearance dove tails nicely with the themes examined in the book. Pinter fleshes out Fitzgerald’s unfinished new nicely although the film has an unfinished quality as well.

As directed by Hollywood and Broadway primitive Elia Kazan (On The Waterfront, East of Eden, A Streecar Named Desire), The Last Tycoon isn’t an easy film to like; many of the characters seem vapid and self serving. In the character of Stahr we have a protagonist who isn’t really “there” at all. Which is precisely Kazan and Pinter’s point; The Last Tycoon is how image overwhelms substance but can’t become a substitute for living.

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Kazan’s direction brings many of these characters to life providing a unusual peer into the Hollywood studio system at its prime. Kazan and Pinter provide a consuming and disquieting glance into the American life of the glamorous and mighty of Hollywood during its heyday. It’s a dim and tragic myth which Kazan manages to inject with unexcited power.

The transfer is very nice although there are a few analog and digital artifacts. The compression artifacts are minimal, however and probably won’t be noticeable to most viewers.

There aren’t any extras provided. With the cast, writer and director alive to you would examine there to be something in Paramount’s vaults that could be included as an extra. There’s no audio commentary. Since Kazan was alive fair prior to the release of this film (September 2003) on DVD, I would have understanding he might have been asked to provide a commentary after all this was his last film. Additionally, it was produced by legendary independent producer Sam Spiegel with music by Maurice Jarre so from a historical perspective it’s a fairly famous mainstream film. The Last Tycoon was the last gasp from a generation of film makers and, as such, deserved better.

While not a showcase like Kazan’s earliest motion pictures (he peaked as a film director in the 50’s with On The Waterfront and a handful of other classic films), The Last Tycoon manages to consume the demolish of an era and a tragic life in its all too brief 123 minutes with elegance and power.

The Last Tycoon is one of the last vestiges of traditional Hollywood merging with unique Hollywood. Adapted from the unfinished new by F. Scott Fitzgerald, it is an effective tribute to a time when the movie industry was in its infancy. As a fan of the modern book I can’t determine whether my familiarity with it made me more inclined to like the film or not. I’ve decided that it did, but I can survey where other Fitzgerald fans would believe otherwise.

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Robert DeNiro stars as Monroe Stahr, a thinly veiled depiction of film pioneer Irving Thalberg, who is burdened by his overwhelming residence as a studio production head, by the loss of his movie star wife, and by his venerable heart. While DeNiro’s portrayal is the centerpiece of the film, there are several other elements enthusiastic which lend an extra aura of prestige. Directed by Elia Kazan, the film is technically competent, but, as it is based on a work which its unique author left incomplete, the ending is a bit forced and contrived. You can say that they had to arrive up with an ending without the resource of the author to invent it seamless. To lend additional sparkle, there are appearances by a multitude of stars such as Tony Curtis, Robert Mitchum, Ray Milland, and Theresa Russell who vie for cover time on the periphery of the main station line tantalizing Stahr’s encounter and subsequent infatuation with an extra, played by Ingrid Boulting, who is his monotonous wife’s twin. Mitchum in particular does a nice job as the studio boss, but all of them feel underused. If you’re going to save these people in a film, they should have something to sink their teeth into.

Kazan captures the spirit of the time and dwelling well, but the pacing is unimaginative - sometimes interminable - and sometimes confusing. It doesn’t seem to have that crackle that Kazan’s previous films had, and perhaps the director recognized this and subsequently retired.

While The Last Tycoon represents Elia Kazan’s last directorial danger, it is also famous for featuring the only joint mask appearance to date of Robert DeNiro and Jack Nicholson.
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