Vietnam War Movie #9
(ok, it’s not really a Vietnam War movie...it’s a movie ABOUT a Vietnam War movie).
Synopsis: Bungle
in the jungle.
Blurb From the VHS
Jacket: “Featuring dramatic, never-before-seen on-the-set footage and
recent interviews with the director, cast and crew, ‘HEARTS OF DARKNESS’
provides a fascinating glimpse into the madness and the magic behind the scenes
of this epic production as it spiralled out of control and turned into a filmmaking
nightmare.”
What Did I Learn?:
If you have a finished movie script, and you’ve mortgaged your home and all of
your possessions, you might not want to re-cast your leading role mid-way
through, write entirely new scenes late into the night, or allow your actors to
improvise that crucial, last confrontation because you don’t exactly know how
to end the fucking film.
You Might Like This
Movie If: You believe there’s nothing better than a low-budget documentary about the work of Francis Ford Coppola. (This clip is awful, by the way)
Really?: 1) So
wait – Eleanor Coppola recorded her husband without his knowledge, and she didn’t
think that might have been creepy or unethical? 2) Hmm...so Apocalypse Now is
running way over-time and over-budget and FFC is concerned about the
temperature of the wine, and even prepared to fly in real Frenchmen from France
during the rubber plantation scene?
Rating: Documentaries
about movie-making are often hit-or-miss; anything related to the making of
Star Wars soon devolves into “blue screens” and special effects. At their
worst, such “documentaries” become marketing videos like Secrets of the Back to the Future Trilogy, or the Star Trek 25th Anniversary Special. Hearts of Darkness is
more akin to The Kid Stays in the Picture:
it’s an interesting, and often unflattering look Francis Ford Coppola making of
a masterpiece. If you enjoy movies, it makes for a fascinating companion piece
to Apocalypse Now. 8/10 stars.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0102015/
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