General Duke Posted October 22, 2010 Carlos (2010) Director: Olivier Assayas 3 Time Out rating Average user rating No reviews Movie review From Time Out London Continuing a pattern of switching between subdued ensemble dramas (‘Summer Hours’, ‘Late August, Early September’) and balls-out ‘global’ techno-thrillers (‘Demonlover’, ‘Boarding Gate’), French director Olivier Assayas returns with a hulking, seething, intermittently sublime, five-and-a-half hour film in which he manages to draw together elements from both of these distinct styles. ‘Carlos’ is the lightly fictionalised biopic of Ilich Ramírez Sánchez, known to the world – but not in this film! – as Carlos the Jackal, and it comes across as the mother of all New Yorker profiles writ loud and large on the screen. Central to the film is a passionate, technically complex (he’s fluent in half a dozen languages) performance from Venezuelan actor Edgar Ramirez who feels like the perfect, paunchy mouthpiece for Carlos’s fervent, if flawed, gunboat Marxism. Covering the period between his joining the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) in 1970 and his capture in Sudan in 1994 (as he was being treated for a varicose vein on one of his testicles), the film works best when it presents information visually rather than with swathes of ideological discourse. The highlight is a masterly rendering of Carlos’s raid on an OPEC meeting in Vienna in 1975 for which Assayas orchestrates detail in such a way that it speaks about the politics, fears, tactics and ambitions of all involved. Elsewhere, small episodes – such as the gun-toting capture of Baader-Meinhof wildcat Gabriele Kröcher-Tiedemann – feel like they’ve been included purely for the sake of thoroughness. Assayas doesn’t try to reflect too audaciously on Carlos ‘the man’, though he does paint him as someone whose single-minded focus on political goals was partly fuelled by raging sexual desire. (NB: The film is also screening in a more compact 158-minute version.) Author: David Jenkins 2010-10-19 11:38:07 Time Out London Issue 2096: October 21 – 27m 2010 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted October 22, 2010 Guardian Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Archdemos Posted October 22, 2010 wow over 5hrs, just downloaded it and hope to watch it when im on annual leave. can't wait:) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Malika Posted October 22, 2010 ^Downloaded it from? sheherazade quote: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Originally posted by Malika: Jac,I read the day of the jackal as a teenager and I grew to have a special fascination with Carlos the jackal. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OMG, you deviant, so did I! I'd forgotten all about him until now. LOL - Sheh,five hrs of reviving teenagehood crush! - Shall we set a date to watch it? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted October 22, 2010 You had a crush on this dude? [i am joking, dont take my head off] Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Malika Posted October 22, 2010 ^In my imagination at that time,he looked different You know how a book can transfer you from your world to another world - his world was exciting,hence the fascination with the said man..lol Horta is he still alive? - Last I knew he was still in jail,married his lawyer and became a muslim. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted October 22, 2010 ^^^He is still alive serving a life sentence in France, is sick with Diebetes. That pic he is older and in captivity so it was not from those days.. The film looks interesting... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Chimera Posted October 23, 2010 I read Day of the Jackal years back, I don't remember Carlos featuring in it. He is mentioned though in the Bourne series. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites