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The Company You Keep (2012)
* - I'd plant a bomb in my own house before I'd watch this again | 0 votes |
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Frayed Knot Sep 21 2013 08:10 PM |
When a 1960's radical decides to turn herself in for past crimes committed, it sets off a chain reaction involving others in her one-time circle, the FBI, and a reporter for an Albany, NY newspaper.
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Vic Sage Oct 02 2013 08:14 AM Re: The Company You Keep (2012) |
so out of the loop am i that i never even heard of this one, and with this cast i'd have given it a shot.
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Mets – Willets Point Oct 02 2013 08:16 AM Re: The Company You Keep (2012) |
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A slightly more interesting subset of the greater list of "Movies about Baby Boomer Navel-gazing."
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Vic Sage Oct 02 2013 10:55 AM Re: The Company You Keep (2012) |
There are the films from the period: WILD IN THE STREETS (68), THE ACTIVIST (69), MEDIUM COOL (69), RPM (70), GETTING STRAIGHT (70), STRAWBERRY STATEMENT (70) and ZABRISKIE POINT (71), and you can also include HAIR (79), which came out later but was very much a work of the 60s.
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Edgy MD Oct 02 2013 12:07 PM Re: The Company You Keep (2012) |
Kevin Costner films tend to be filled thematically with sorting out the meaning of our radical youth --- Field of Dreams speaking specifically about Baby Boomer radicalism, but also Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves and Dances with Wolfies..
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Mets – Willets Point Oct 02 2013 02:02 PM Re: The Company You Keep (2012) |
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He also plays the stiff in The Big Chill.
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Frayed Knot Oct 02 2013 02:49 PM Re: The Company You Keep (2012) |
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This was the one that I thought of as most similar (helped by the fact that I haven't seen a good chunk of the others you mentioned). The main difference here is that the movies were made a quarter century apart and therefore the protagonists are considerably older and their pasts further into the rear view. Hirsch and Lahti are among the few age-appropriate actors who Redford did not use; possibly because it might have been confusing to the audience as to whether they were in reprised roles. Redford is also trying to make a point about press coverage in this one, a point that can only work if the small city (Albany, NY) reporter keeps beating the FBI to the clues, which, of course, he does. There's also a mystery aspect to this as part of what the reporter (LaBoeuf) uncovers is a secret involving a few of the leads that has nothing specific to do with their past crimes. It's not a bad movie and has some good performances in the interactions of these past radicals--some still believers, some who have moved on, some who didn't particularly get along way back when--even if in fairly small doses (so many stars, so little time). But the whole mystery/over-reaching press angle is kind of clumsily handled and not all that shocking by the time they get around to it.
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Edgy MD Oct 02 2013 06:24 PM Re: The Company You Keep (2012) |
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Redford seems to get confused about how old he is. In The Natural, he was supposed to be at the end of a typical baseball life --- 35-37 or so. He would have been about 47 at the time of filming. In Legal Eagles, he was a big comer as the youngest DA in his city's history, when he actually would have been about 49. He's developing now an adaption of A Walk in the Woods, a book Bill Bryson wrote about walking the Appalachian Trail in 1997, at the age of 46. Redford is 77. He originally wanted to cast Paul Newman as Katz, Bryson's contemporary, school chum, and walking companion. Newman, of course, is 88 and dead at the present time.
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Frayed Knot Oct 02 2013 07:17 PM Re: The Company You Keep (2012) |
In this flick Redford's 77 y/o butt plays someone who would be 60-ish now that it's some 40 years after his character's college age crimes.
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Frayed Knot Oct 05 2013 07:06 PM Re: The Company You Keep (2012) |
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Apparently it's going to be the now 72-y/o Nick Nolte to play opposite Redford in AWitW - so i gather there's going to be no attempt to recreate the book as it was written. I guess they just substitute old and bucket list for out of shape and getting reacquainted and run from there. Nolte and Redford had a scene or two together in 'The Company You Keep' and I was thinking as I was watching the two on the screen that we are a long time removed from the day when those two were as big as any two blond heartthrobs that Hollywood had, like back when 'RICH MAN, POOR MAN', 'THE DEEP' and 'NORTH DALLAS FORTY' more or less coincided with 'ALL THE PRESIDENTS MEN', 'BRUBAKER', and 'THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR' [1976-1980]
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