Kundun Movie Review
Kundun Review
"Kundun" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1997
Cast and Crew
Director : Martin ScorseseProducer : Barbara De Fina
Screenwiter : Melissa Mathison
Starring : Tenzin Thuthob Tsarong,Gyurme Tethong,Tulku Jamyang Kunga Tenzin,Tenzin Yeshi Paichang,Tencho Gyalpo,Tsewang Migyur Khangsar
Withdrawal. It has to be withdrawal. This is now Day 2 of my lovely vacation
and here I am thinking about it. No CNN. No printer. No Internet. And, come
to think of it, no cheesy movies. I suppose, having become accustomed to the
bad for so long, I have acceppted them, learned to deal with them, and become
adddicted to the destruction of them in a well thought out review. I suppose
its ironic that the film that makes me want to tear a film apart, that should
make me learn that the bad films, the sufferring, is a part of my life as a
movie critic, should be one focused on Buddhism. And it's also ironic that it
should stir the violence in my blood.
The film I'm talking about is Martin Scorscese's Kundun, the Dhali Lama film of
1997 that was nominated for four academy awards but walked away with none
(sadly). With a cast that no one's heard of it still managed to pull off what
is becomming impossible: make a great film about a religion that is, for the
most part, misunderstood. Make you sympathize with the Tibetans, and hate the
Red Chinese, and, at the same time, illustrate the drama of the Dhali Lama's
early life.
It wasn't bad. No, in fact, the film itself was relaxing to watch, and a
helluva lot better than Seven Years in Tibet, the other Dhali Lama film that
came out at about the same time. Not that it wasn't good to watch: no, sir,
I'm left enjoying almost every frame, the beautiful photography of the film,
the exquisite locations and vistas that it offerred. It wasn't even the
direction and acting in the film: they were fine, too. Dramatic content,
writing, miscellenanous technical aspects that I don't even know why I bothered
to learn the names of them. None of them have serious flaws. None of them
annoy me in any shape, way, or form. What annoys me is that I have become used
to, no, addicted to, the ripping apart in a film in my review.
And that's what I'm missing. I'm not just missing it, I'm aching for it. If I
keep seeing films this good, all the time, with nary a bad film, then I will
cease to function as a critic, lose my creulty and my respect for the great
films, like Kundun, and then I'll really be unable to do my job. I'll be stuck
doing nothing, and be bereft of my moviewatching experience. I suppose its
taught me something, this movie about a religion I hardly know outside of the
cinema: not only is sufferring a part of my life: as a critic, inflicting
sufferring is a part of my life too.
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Review by James Brundage
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