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Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > Writing > The Inner Life Of Martin Frost (2007/New Yorker Films DVD)

The Inner Life Of Martin Frost (2007/New Yorker Films DVD)

 

Picture: C     Sound: D/C+     Extras: C-     Film: C-

 

 

So many films have tried to get inside the mind of a writer that it has almost become its own cycle.  Most films have been bad, but sometimes we see the writer losing their mind (Naked Lunch) or even becoming a killer (The Shining, Basic Instinct).  Paul Auster’s The Inner Life Of Martin Frost (2007) is about the title character (David Thewlis) and the sudden guest (Irene Jacob) he finds in his house, his guest bed.

 

As he tries to understand where she came from and who she is, he continues to explore himself and get on with his writing, the reason he is not home, only to meet another figure (Michael Imperioli) who has some odd suggestions of his own.  Odd, sometimes interesting and predictable in the long run, the film does not necessarily become muddy or bogged down by anything, but it rarely goes anywhere new and despite the talent involved, never takes off.  Others seem to have enjoyed it, but don’t expect much if you need to catch it.

 

The anamorphically enhanced 1.85 X 1 image is softer than expected, though it is hard to tell if it is just a PAL/NTSC issue, but color is off, there is haloing and no shot is ever as sharp as it could be.  The Dolby Digital 5.1 has a very bad mix, with poor dialogue and lopsided soundfield, making the 2.0 option much preferred.  Who knows what happened on that, but it is not good.  The only extras are a making of featurette and trailers for this and a few other New Yorker releases.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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