Review of Woody Allen’s latest movie “Blue Jasmine” Part 9

I have spent alot of time talking about Woody Allen films on this blog and looking at his worldview. He has a hopelessmeaningless, nihilistic worldview that believes we are going to turn to dust and there is no afterlife. Even though he has this view he has taken the opportunity to look at the weaknesses of his own secular view. I salute him for doing that. That is why I have returned to his work over and over and presented my own Christian worldview as an alternative.

My interest in Woody Allen is so great that I have a “Woody Wednesday” on my blog www.thedailyhatch.org every week. Also I have done over 30 posts on the historical characters mentioned in his film “Midnight in Paris.” (Salvador Dali, Ernest Hemingway,T.S.Elliot,  Cole Porter,Paul Gauguin,  Luis Bunuel, and Pablo Picasso were just a few of the characters.)

Today we are looking at a review of Woody Allen’s latest movie Blue Jasmine.

Blue Jasmine – Official Trailer (HD) Cate Blanchett, Alec Baldwin

Published on Jun 7, 2013

http://www.joblo.com – “Blue Jasmine” – Official Trailer 

A New York housewife struggles through a life crisis.

Director: Woody Allen

Writer: Woody Allen

Stars: Cate Blanchett, Alec Baldwin, Peter Sarsgaard, Louis C.K.

In theaters: July 26, 2013

_____________________________

Blue Jasmine

Cate Blanchett, Louis C.K.

Directed by Woody Allen
July 25, 2013

Want to see great acting, from comic to tragic and every electrifying stop in between? See Cate Blanchett in Blue Jasmine. Woody Allen, in rare form, puts Blanchett front and center in this hommage to Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, spinning hilarious but mostly harsh truths about love in the time of financial cholera. That’d be now.

Blanchett plays Jasmine, who fancies herself the glamorous type, much like Blanche DuBois in Streetcar. Jasmine is married to Hal (Alec Baldwin), a Bernie Madoff-like financier who puts Jasmine in two chic pumpkin shells, one on Park Avenue, the other in the Hamptons, places where she’s morally blind to his misdeeds. Until, well, she isn’t blind anymore.

Talking to herself and gobbling Xanax with a vodka chaser, Jasmine is melting down. She flees to the cramped San Francisco apartment of Ginger (Sally Hawkins is the definition of wonderful), the adopted sister Jasmine had dismissed as a loser.

After Blue Jasmine, Andrew Dice Clay Looking for More Acting Challenges

Allen deftly uses flashbacks to fill us in on the backstories. Remember Stanley Kowalski, the crude cave man Marlon Brando created in Streetcar? Ginger has two of them. First is Augie (a shockingly effective Andrew Dice Clay), Ginger’s ex-husband and father of her two sons. Then there’s Chili (the ever-superb Bobby Cannavale), her new boyfriend cut from the animal mold. In Streetcar, Blanche tells her sister, “Don’t hang back with the brutes.” Jasmine doesn’t utter those words. She doesn’t have to: Blanchett’s eyes say it all. Both women look for a savior. Ginger dates up with the seemingly sympathetic Al (Louis C.K., nailing every nuance). Jasmine reaches out to Dwight (the excellent Peter Sarsgaard), a diplomat with a political agenda for which Jasmine is well suited – until her past looms. Allen sends out each laugh about money and class with a sting in its tail.

Blanchett, who has played Blanche in Streetcar onstage, is the film’s glory. She is miraculous at finding the bruised heart of this bullying elitist. If her struggle doesn’t win respect, it does earn our empathy. The sight of Jasmine – lost, alone and unable to conjure magic out of unyielding reality – is devastating. This is Blanchett triumphant, and not to be missed.

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/movies/reviews/blue-jasmine-20130725#ixzz2aXBbwWdj
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

Related posts:

I love the movie “Midnight in Paris” by Woody Allen and I have done over 30 posts on the historical characters mentioned in the film. Take a look below:

“Midnight in Paris” one of Woody Allen’s biggest movie hits in recent years, July 18, 2011 – 6:00 am

(Part 32, Jean-Paul Sartre)July 10, 2011 – 5:53 am

 (Part 29, Pablo Picasso) July 7, 2011 – 4:33 am

(Part 28,Van Gogh) July 6, 2011 – 4:03 am

(Part 27, Man Ray) July 5, 2011 – 4:49 am

(Part 26,James Joyce) July 4, 2011 – 5:55 am

(Part 25, T.S.Elliot) July 3, 2011 – 4:46 am

(Part 24, Djuna Barnes) July 2, 2011 – 7:28 am

(Part 23,Adriana, fictional mistress of Picasso) July 1, 2011 – 12:28 am

(Part 22, Silvia Beach and the Shakespeare and Company Bookstore) June 30, 2011 – 12:58 am

(Part 21,Versailles and the French Revolution) June 29, 2011 – 5:34 am

(Part 16, Josephine Baker) June 24, 2011 – 5:18 am

(Part 15, Luis Bunuel) June 23, 2011 – 5:37 am

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