Sometimes a Great Notion

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Paul Newman makes his directorial debut in the sweeping saga Sometimes a Great Notion. Based on the best-selling novel about a two-fisted Oregon lumber family, the story focuses on a family that bucks their close-knit timber community in order to deliver a shipment of logs in defiance of a strike. In the process, one man is killed, the family patriarch Henry (Henry Fonda) is injured, and the eldest son Hank (Paul Newman) almost loses his wife (Lee Remick) to his half brother (Michael Sarrazin). Filled with complex characters and issues that still resonate today, Sometimes a Great Notion is an intense portrait of life set against the backdrop of logging. (official distributor synopsis)

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D.Moore 

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English A hilarious drama about stubborn lumberjacks who didn't budge an inch, who lost everything because of it, but their honor remained. Paul Newman is excellent both as an actor and director, Henry Fonda needs no elaboration, the pace of the film is slow, but the characters grow on the viewer thanks to it, and the ending is all the more heartbreaking. ()

gudaulin 

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English Under this uncertain title is a film that allows us to trace how the approach to film material changes in different environments and over time. Today, the same film would probably contain an environmental appeal. Shots of deforested hills, with the remains of former proud forest giants sadly reaching toward the sky, chainsaws and heavy machinery, which complete the work of destruction in a place where virgin nature and impenetrable jungle were not long ago, all contribute to the environmental perspective and condemnation of industrial civilization. In the film, giant logs fall to the ground and an unpleasant feeling arises from the clearings, but Paul Newman evidently pays tribute to the hard and dangerous masculine work of lumberjacks, which exacts a cruel toll. The beginning of the 70s simply did not take some things into account. European cinema would portray a group of lumberjacks in an unfavorable light as selfish strikebreakers who disrupt the principle of solidarity, while the American film comes across as a defense of traditional American individualism, perseverance, determination, and the ability to cope with adversity. In addition to taking place in a significantly atypical environment for American cinema, the film also offers top-notch acting, masculine characters, and a star-studded cast. Overall impression: 80%. ()

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Lima 

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English A sensitive take on a literary classic that unfolds slowly and you have to find your way to the characters, but as the narrative draws to a close, it grows in emotional intensity. You won't forget the drowning scene for the rest of your life, and the final fuck off is such a sweet, ironic icing that Paul Newman only confirms his status as someone few could match. ()

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