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Julia

Julia (2009)

May. 08,2009
|
7
|
R
| Drama

An alcoholic becomes involved in a fellow A.A. member's plan to kidnap her young son from the boy's wealthy grandfather.

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SnoReptilePlenty
2009/05/08

Memorable, crazy movie

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Rio Hayward
2009/05/09

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

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Ariella Broughton
2009/05/10

It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.

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Ella-May O'Brien
2009/05/11

Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.

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AaronLYM
2009/05/12

I think Tilda Swinton is fabulous in this movie. Her portrayal of Julia is really dramatic and real. During the early stages of the movie, I kind of despised Julia, and found her to be such an unpleasant woman. The way she treats Mitch is truly ungrateful and I think he's wasting his efforts to help her. There are two things which I really liked in this movie. The first thing relates to Julia. Initially, Julia's intention with the kidnapping was purely about the money. She even thought of double crossing Elena. But along the way, I think she found her heart and conscience. The boy helped to change her from a selfish person, to a caring and motherly human being. More importantly, Julia finally cherished life more than what money had to offer. And the second thing I really liked relates to Mitch. Learning from his own past experience, Mitch really cares for Julia and tries to help her in anyway possible. His loyalty as a friend is truly unshakable. Despite all of Julia's heinous acts, he still doesn't give up on her and is willing to overlook her wrongdoings and help her even more. Even towards the end, Mitch still believes that Julia can be a better person and gives her another chance to make things right. I find all this to be really touching. Ultimately, I enjoyed this movie and found it to be a story about soul searching, redemption and friendship.

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Red_Identity
2009/05/13

Lately, I have become a big fan of Tilda Swinton. It started off with her villain stand-out role in The Chronicles of Narnia, then I saw her alongside George Clooney in Michael Clayton, where she stole her scenes. Recently, I saw her in her best work yet, We Need To Talk About Kevin, so it was just a matter of time before I saw Julia, and it's plot interested me.Julia is a pretty straight-forward crime thriller. It has a lot of twists and turns, and it always remains entertaining and intriguing. You want to know what's going to happen to Swinton's character and the boy she is taking for ransom. Julia becomes more and more likable as the film progresses and we stop seeing her as a villain. Swinton does a magnificent job too. I have never seen her play a role like this before, and it's without a doubt her showiest performance, since Julia is the showiest role. Credit has to be given to the way she so casually makes Julia someone we actually root for as the film goes on. Not many actors would have been able to do this, but she does it gracefully, and she gets better as the film goes along because instead of just a cartoon that we first saw in the beginning, we see a woman with fears and real feelings as well. Now, the film isn't perfect... far from it. It feels sort of disjointed. Like I said, Swinton easily slips into another persona, but without any help from the script. Many films make it really believable the way a character slips into different attitudes, but this film doesn't really. Swinton does sort of transition it, but behind her incredible performance, you can easily see that the script expects us to believe the way this character starts acting differently. Too fast, without any real depth and not subtle, or even fitting to the film. Still, t's plausible barely just because of Swinton. The problems still keep arising though, especially when we enter Mexico. I never really have a problem with the way Mexicans are portrayed, since I don't take offense easily, but this rubbed me the wrong way. Their manner of speaking, their actual language. I'm not saying it's completely off the mark, but something about that storyline upset me. Maybe it has to do with the thin characterization, or the execution, or the direction. All I know is that what only kept me watching was finding out all of Julia's story. I am also not one to dismiss endings because they aren't "complete", but here it didn't work well. I wanted it to finish, for it to reveal the fate of this character. This sort of abrupt ending only works specifically for certain powerful films, and since this isn't, it just left me unsatisfied.Overall, worth a watch for Swinton's magnificent performance, and I was actually more entertained than my rating will suggest, but the film is full of flaws within its story. A Breaking Bad story not nearly as engaging or as complicated as it wishes, but still not bad at all and remains a solid film. This feels like the performance Swinton won the Oscar for, just because of how extreme it is.

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jasonb-kohl
2009/05/14

The most striking performance in Tilda Swinton's exciting career. Only poor marketing prevented this from succeeding as the thriller of the year. Swinton plays an alcoholic slut who agrees to help kidnap a child, and ends up with him on an odyssey in Mexico through a thorn thicket of people you do not want to meet. If there's one thing consistent about her behavior, it's how she lies to all of them. (Via Roger Ebert) This is an extremely engaging film. Swinton's performance, the writing, and the relationships between characters are all spectacular. It is surprising and inevitable and truly rewarding. On Ebert's top 10 of 2009 list for a very good reason.

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secondtake
2009/05/15

Julia (2008)A hard edged tale of a woman pushed by her own desperation into crimes over her head. Tilda Swinton lets it rip here, in a vivid, color, cinema-verite style that depends as much on making you uneasy as anything. The characters are so believable, and the sequence of events stumbles along with such perfect inelegance (to say the least), you hate to see it all because what happens is pretty awful. The ground covered is a believable version of what an ordinary person with seemingly good moral structure is driven to by circumstance. In this case, it's about being pushed by her own sorry life to do something that breaks out of it. But it also begins as a curious compassion, a genuine skepticism overwhelmed by the possibilities. By thinking, why not? And of course, why not then becomes all too clear. It's this sense that it could by a stretch happen to you or me (hopefully not, but in theory) that gives the movie its chilling penetration.And the ending, as sensational as it gets, is a logical outcome of where we began, and there is a kind of victory, but it's no Hollywood ending, and that's a huge relief. Rather, it's as if you went along with a woman for the adventure of her life and it's the real thing, nothing held back, including disbelief, fear, violence, and sometimes, thankfully, a glimmer of hope. Very very well made--acting, writing, filming--but not everyone's cup of tea because it is so unsettling.

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