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A Potpourri of Vestiges: The Master (2012): American filmmaker ...

The Master (2012): American filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson's hypnotic masterpiece

A Potpourri of Vestiges Review

Featured in?IMDb?Critic?Reviews?

Our Rating: 9.0

IMDb Ratings: 7.7

Genre:?Drama

Cast:?Philip Seymour Hoffman, Joaquin Phoenix, Amy Adams

Country:?USA
Language: English

Runtime: 144 min

Color:?Color


The Master is the latest film by American filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson. The movie comes after a gap of five years following Anderson?s highly successful outing in There Will Be Blood (2007). The Master stars Joaquin Phoenix, Philip Seymour Hoffman, and Amy Adams in pivotal roles. Anderson is one of the few commercial filmmakers alive today who write their own screenplays. And perhaps that?s the reason why he has not been very prolific as a filmmaker?yielding only once every 4-5 years. The Master also marks the return of Joaquin Phoenix from a self-imposed acting break. The movie presents the tale of Freddie Quell (Joaquin Phoenix)?a WWII Naval veteran on the brink of a mental breakdown. Freddie belongs to the dying breed of war veterans which finds it hard to adjust to the sanities of a post-war civilized world. ?The excruciating pain and mental trauma that a soldier experiences during a war is irreversible and often enough to drive him crazy.

Freddie has had a troubled past but the war has broken him completely. Freddie?s pitiful, perverted mental state can be best described by the two bizarre scenes presented at the beginning of the film. In the first one, Freddie is shown masturbating in front of a sand sculpture of a woman which he perversely seems to use as a substitute for a love doll. In the second one, Freddie is shown imbibing a certain fluid (most likely gasoline) directly from the fuel tank of a Navy vessel. Apparently, Freddie is dipsomaniac with a morbid liking for dangerous cocktail drinks which he prepares by mixing alcohol with toxic substances like paint thinner. After being relieved from the US Navy, Freddie gets the job of a photographer at a local joint, but is soon fired after he, in a drunken state, assaults one of the customers. Freddie subsequently finds a job on a cabbage farm where a worker dies after drinking a lethal doze of one of his cocktail drinks. After being chased off the farm by a mob of seething workers, Freddie stows away on the private yacht of Lancaster Dodd aka ?The Master? (Philip Seymour Hoffman) Dodd is the charismatic leader of a philosophical movement called ?The Cause? and is popular among his disciples by the sobriquet ?The Master?. His controversial metaphysical theories have divided the society into two factions: a very large section which is completely opposed to his ideas and a very small section which hails him as a visionary. Dodd?s enigmatic character is based on L. Ron Hubbard?the American pulp fiction author and the controversial founder of the Church of Scientology. Like Hubbard, Dodd is also a polymath. In one of the scenes in the movie, Dodd introduces himself to Quell, ?I am a writer, a doctor, a nuclear physicist and a theoretical philosopher, but above all, I am a man, a hopelessly inquisitive man, just like you.? Lancaster Dodd likes spending his time in his yacht cruising as it allows him to remain close to his clique of adherents and disciples?which also includes his wife, son, daughter, and son-in-law?far away from the intellectually inferior majority that dare question his credibility. Dodd develops an instant liking for Quell and allows him to stay on his yacht. He also develops a taste for Quell?s brand of toxic booze and even asks him to prepare a larger quantity of it the next time around. Dodd also begins to apply a method called ?processing? to help treat Quell. Dodd describes it as some kind of reverse hypnosis that treats the patients by purging the worries hidden deep inside the subconscious. Over the course of time Quell grows exceedingly fond of ?The Master? and his methods. For the second time in his life (after his stint in the US Navy), Quell sees a cause worth fighting for. He begins to show a kind of jingoistic fervor for ?The Cause?. Anyone who dares to oppose ?The Master? and his preaching will have to first deal with him. What follows is a hypnotic journey of self-realization which will either consume Quell or will make him the true master of his fate. The Master is a multifaceted work of cinema that can be enjoyed at so many levels. The Master has a sense of randomness attached to it that makes it a very difficult film to interpret. It may appear to have several interweaved layers to one viewer, and yet appear completely hollow to another?depending purely on the viewer?s understanding and interpretation. Cinema, like Literature, is a powerful medium that can be used to explore an array of different subjects simultaneously. In The Master, Paul Thomas Anderson uses the medium in a manner it?s seldom been used in recent times in American cinema. He makes a commendable attempt at tackling spirituality, metaphysics, empiricism, existentialism and nihilism, all in one go?a remarkable feat that Terrence Malick had achieved in his Palme d?Or winning film The Tree of Life (2011). If Malick?s was the work of an artist working at the height of his creative mastery then Anderson?s surely is the work of an upcoming artist toiling hard to reach that level of mastery. The Master works well on both the technical and emotional fronts?another rarity for an American film. The movie?s cinematography, music and editing are all topnotch, and complement each other really well. The acting is awe-inspiring to say the least and is quite easily one of the strongest points of the movie. Also, there's enough room for character development. Joaquin Phoenix is electrifying in the role of a lifetime. He takes great pains in conjuring up his self-loathing, verminous, reclusive alter ego as he himself gets lot in the role. The attention that he seems to have paid to perfect Freddie?s distorted mannerisms, and the nuances and subtleties needed to play such a complex part is nothing short of exemplary. While some may find it a wee bit over-the-top,?Phoenix?s performance is by far the best of the year and even overshadows Daniel Day-Lewis? sublime portrayal in Steven Spielberg?s biopic,?Lincoln (2012). Philip Seymour Hoffman is outstanding in the role of Lancaster Dodd and steals each and every scene he is a part of. Anderson elicits strong performances from the supporting cast especially Amy Adams who is an absolute treat to watch as Dodd?s demanding wife, Peggy. Overall, The Master is an endlessly fascinating work of cinema that may require multiple viewings to grasp its deeper meanings. The Master is undoubtedly the best film to have come out of the English-speaking world in the year 2012. It reaffirms Anderson's position as one of the best US directors alive; he looks all set to join the likes of Malick. Anderson?s imaginative direction in The Master reminds one of the singular styles of two of the greatest American filmmakers, Orson Welles and?Stanley Kubrick. Perhaps, their legacy has finally found a worthy successor. It?s a real shame that the Academy yet again failed to identify a cinematic gem. The fact that the movie has not been nominated in the Best Picture category only substantiates the ineptness of the Academy in segregating topnotch cinema from the heaps of mediocrity. The Master, like most of Anderson?s movies, is not meant for everyone. A casual viewer is ought to be disappointed, for he may find it drab and utterly boring. But, The Master will most definitely succeed in satisfying the deepest cravings of an intelligent viewer. The Master with its air of randomness and lack of purpose offers enough food for thought for the intelligent audience to ruminate long after it is over. Highly recommended!

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