REVIEW

Movie Review: There Will Be Blood

Written by Gerald Wright
Published December 26, 2007

In the tradition of such great epic films such as Giant, Citizen Kane, and Elmer Gantry comes this unforgettable cinematic marvel, a turn of the century character study of an oil magnate, an evangelical preacher, and the people they influenced. Based on the 1927 novel Oil by Upton Sinclair, this film depicts the early years of the oil industry in America.

The story takes a journey into the life of a small-time gold, silver, and copper prospector named Daniel Plainview (Daniel Day-Lewis). As he economically elevates himself from the depleting ore deposits to the plentiful supply of petroleum, he finds an abandoned baby boy and makes him his ward. Plainview names the boy H.W. (Dillon Freasier) and teaches him everything he knows about the oil business as time goes by. The hard-working Plainview does not have a problem taking risks in his ventures, because some of the drillings come up dry and he loses money. This only motivates him to make a success of his life as an oil tycoon by any means possible. 

The film shows the hardships in this new industry when oil derricks come up empty. The multi-talented Day-Lewis turns in a praiseworthy performance as a selfish, self-driven, degenerate man set on becoming a tycoon. He projects a character who is very deceitful and clever. Ten-year-old Dillon Freasier, who plays H.W., is a pivotal character in this film. The role required a special 10-year-old who could portray a young man in a child's body in the early 1900s. In real life, young Freasier is a rodeo enthusiast who competes in roping horses and has won numerous ribbons in competition. Evidently his confidence around older people made the transition to film very easy.

Another actor who gives a fantastic, Elmer Gantry-type performance is Paul Dano. He portrays Paul/Eli Sunday, a charismatic, self-proclaimed "fire and brimstone" preacher who entices his small town neighbors to lease their land for a pulpit and a large sum of money to Plainview for oil drilling, which turns their quiet little community into a "boom town". This ultimately gives the preacher wealth and a national pulpit to preach from. Dano's character has many dimensions and his performance is nothing less than great.

Connecting the plot of starving dirt farmers who are holy rollers, ambitious oil men getting rich on the backs of the poor, and a father bonding with his son make this a powerful period piece. The cinemotography is good. At certain times in the film, the landscape is bright and enhances the California sunsets, and in other scenes at the oil rigs, the lighting is dusky gray and sooty, which intensifies the anxiety of the dialogue.

The fact that this movie is two and a half hours long really does not make a difference. I felt it needed the length to show the different characters' growth from the years of 1900 to the climatic time in history of the 1929 stock market crash, and to bring closure to all the elements of the plot. This is not your regular Saturday afternoon movie, but a dramatic retro-style film.

This edgy and complex film is a great work of art.

Directed by: Paul Thomas Anderson
Running time: 158 minutes
Release date December 26, 2007 (limited) & January 2008 (wide)
Genre: Drama and Adaptation
Distributor: Paramount Vantage
MPAA Rating: R

Additional film reviews by Gerald Wright on Rotten Tomatoes, HDFEST, and Film Showcase.
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Movie Review: There Will Be Blood
Published: December 26, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Drama, Video: Historical
Writer: Gerald Wright
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