Oh right, like we're going to talk about politics.
But yes, I've been thinking (something I tend to do a lot). I don't know where to put this, but I think this crowd seems thoughtful and smart, and this relates to the films as well. So here it goes.
Obviously when Upton Sinclair, Cormac McCarthy, and Ian McEwan wrote their respective books, they didn't have the Bush administration in mind (I'd say McEwan probably didn't even think about the US at the time). Still, the great thing about art and literature is that we can all take it and relate and associate with our lives and reality, and they're so universal that you can apply their themes to anything, including current affairs and politics. These three Oscar nominated films - No Country for Old Men, There Will Be Blood, and Atonement - are all "thinking person's films." Not to mention they're all adapted from best-selling novels. Their meanings, to me, go deeper than the surface story. And that got me thinking...
The stories, even if they were written years ago (Oil, for example, was published in 1927), tend to have a strong relevance to our world today — and it may be more pertinent as they are made by contemporary artists in the year 2007, when we're are deep in a war, a state of paranoia, and a volatile world economy. So where am I going with this?
First, in There Will Be Blood, the themes of oil, capitalism, greed, ambition, corruption and moral degeneration/spiritual dishonesty seem to really strike a chord with me about the current time. You may say, "Dude, those things happen all the time since the beginning of civilization." Still, I can't help but think about how it all relates to the current world, and if Paul Thomas Anderson is making an allegory of sorts.



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