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THERE WILL BE
BLOOD
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As he explains to another character, everyone to him is competition, and that paranoia, paired with a local wannabe minister who seeks to undermine every inch of power and hold Plainview has on the community he seizes gives him a horrific direction down a devious path of ruin, and murder. Daniel Day Lewis is absolutely mesmerizing, just absolutely commanding the screen and garnering emotions of hatred, and sympathy while Anderson paints different shades of the man as a tragic figure and villain all at once. Lewis gives some of the best monologues of the film and makes Plainview one of the best Quixotic characters of modern film with immense shades of Charles Foster Kane, while Anderson constantly keeps him among the black ooze he makes his living on, and the barren wastelands for which he scrounges in. He’s always a menacing presence on film and that’s thanks to Lewis who can make his grin under his thick mustache seem a shifty weapon among his associates, but he is a man who is never rich enough, and that often makes him his own worst enemy. One of the richer plot elements involves Eli’s son suffering a horrible accident that may just seal his fate and decide his life with his father and his oil. Among Daniel’s constant obstacles are Eli Sunday another two faced slithery animal who is a self-entitled profit placing himself above Plainview, but can never quite realize that he and his nemesis are one and the same, both playing on vulnerability and both seeking insurmountable gain from misery. Paul Dano pleased in “Little Miss Sunshine,” but Anderson gives him the role of his career as Dano is often a despicable inch worm butting heads with Lewis on a constant basis, and Dano gives a fantastic performance. Anderson’s drama is a beautiful combination of incredible cinematography, plays on morals and a stern statement about oil and the search for the American dream and easily losing or selling your soul in a land of blood shed and depravity.
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