With outstanding performances by Garfield and Ogata and powerful direction by one of the best auteurs in Hollywood, Martin Scorsese's Silence is a beautifully poignant epic masterpiece that perfectly depicts the importance of religion and how far you’ll go to maintain your beliefs. Silence Review
This is quite easily my favorite thing he's done since Goodfellas (disclosure, I've not seen Cape Fear, The Aviator, Bringing Out The Dead or Kundun). It's amazing to see him do something that's so stylistically restrained, especially coming off The Wolf of Wall Street. The depiction of guilt and religion doesn't really exist in this form anymore. In this regard, it really calls back to what many European directors were doing when tackling the subject of religion in the 50s (Bergman is a big one coming to mind here, but it also doesn't feel like a Bergman film). The Reverse Shot piece up there does an excellent job tying the film to Scorsese's body of work, mainly what the film shares with Taxi Driver.
That is pretty high praise. From the Oscar release date to the subject material, I thought it was going to be one of his more anonymous works, but now I can't wait to see it.
I'm bummed my theater didn't get this yet. Hopefully it can keep getting some buzz and open everywhere (though I've heard shockingly little of this, some of my friends didn't even know Scorcese had a new movie out)
It's weird how little noise is being made about there being a new Scorsese film. Given it's not his typical content though, I can see this ending up with a more devoted, cultish following like Age of Innocence or Last Temptation of Christ.
There hasn't been as much marketing. The cast is A-list, but won't draw huge audiences like Leo. The subject material doesn't exactly seem like it'd appeal to wide audiences either. Judging by the trailer, this seems much more subdued and less flashy than his past few films.
This is finally releasing here on Thursday. Still waiting on 20th Century Women, Paterson, and Elle, among others.
My biggest still to see are this, Paterson, 20th Century Women, and Toni Erdmann. I think after I've seen all those I'll be set.
finally starting showing at a small local theatre here this week, hopefully i can check it out later this week or weekend.
This mysteriously disappeared from my local theater's list of upcoming films. Hard to imagine a Scorsese film not being around to see easily, though.
Seeing it tomorrow night. Been reading Richard Schickel's Conversations With Scorsese, just a fantastic read on film and Scorsese's relationship with it
Pretty salty that my theater got 5 new movies this week and Silence wasn't one of them. But Bye Bye Man and Monster Trucks it is!
maybe you can confirm that The Bye Bye Man exists and I haven't been laughing at the title for 2 months for naught
We got a poster and hung it up well over a year ago. When we took it down, I thought I was right in assuming it was a prank. But apparently it's real and it's coming out now. And our company assumes it'll make more money than a Scorsese movie, apparently.
I feel a lot of the same hesitation. It does not really seem that interesting at all, even if all the feedback makes it seem great.
The colors just make it look so dreary. Again, I am expecting good things because of the reception but Scorsese's best films have always popped with imagery.