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THERE WILL BE BLOOD 3 STARS – Thought Provoking What does it take to make you happy? Most people would list either family, financial
security,
a
job
that
brings
fulfillment,
or
love. “There Will Be Blood,” reminds us that we can
pay
a
steep
price
if
we
are
trying
to
achieve
a
self-centered
happiness. Based loosely on the book “Oil” by Upton Sinclair, this story
follows
the
life
of
Daniel
Plainview
(Daniel
Day-Lewis)
from
his
days
as
a
young
prospector
in
Texas
to
his
final
days
as
a
rich
oilman
in
California. Like many men who came out west to make their
fortune,
Daniel
had
planted
himself
in
the
right
place
at
the
right
time,
securing
early
tracks
of
land
where
oil
was
about
to
become
big
in
Texas. Set in the period of the 1890’s and the early
20th
century,
Plainview
is
a
prototype
for
every
common
man
that
wants
to
strike
it
rich
“out
west.” Daniel is a loner, who only rations his affections to his son,
H.
W.
Plainview
(Dillon
Freasier).
We
do
not
really
know
what
happened
to
H.W.’s
mother,
but
H.W.
is
the
only
place
in
Daniel’s
life
where
his
soul
is
touched
in
a
positive
way. Otherwise, Daniel Plainview has little use
for
other
people,
and
his
ultimate
desire
is
to
be
rich
enough
to
get
away
from
everyone. With the shrewdness of a prospector, Daniel combs the hills
of
the
southwest
looking
for
the
right
geological
conditions
that
would
indicate
that
oil
could
be
beneath
the
surface
of
what
often
seems
like
useless
land.
This
search
ultimately
leads
him
into
an
unlikely
and
unholy
alliance
with
the
Sunday
family. Daniel despises the simple-mindedness of this
subsistence
farming
clan,
but
he
wants
the
land
upon
which
they
sit. With promises of wealth, he takes advantage
of
their
situation
and
proceeds
to
make
himself
rich
while
never
really
sharing
the
proceeds
with
the
Sunday
family. It is in this relationship where the moral lessons of the film
are
learned.
Eli
Sunday
(Paul
Dano),
the
sanctimonious
son
of
the
owner
of
the
land,
fashions
himself
as
a
modern
day
Christian
prophet,
physically
and
spiritually
healing
sinners
through
a
blend
of
Scripture
verses
and
tent
revival
theatrics. Eli sees a chance for his personal success
to
be
elevated
through
the
prestige
and
funding
of
Plainview’s
oil
royalties. He wants to build a church with Plainview’s
money.
With
an
outward
capacity
to
preach
and
hold
the
attention
of
the
town’s
folk,
there
is
a
corruption
of
Eli’s
inner
soul
by
his
love
of
attention
and
his
ego-driven
desire
to
a
great
man
of
God
in
the
eyes
of
his
community
and
family. Daniel Plainview despised Eli’s flimflam spirituality, but
he
needed
Eli’s
help
to
achieve
his
financial
success. Daniel’s biggest business deal is to build
an
oil
line
from
central
California
to
the
northern
Santa
Barbara
coast,
thus
saving
millions
of
dollars
of
transportation
costs. Ironically, the reluctant owner of the land across which he must
travel
happens
to
be
a
stanch
member
and
supporter
of
Eli
Sunday’s
church. With the ease of serpent, Daniel slithers into
Eli’s
church
and
becomes
a
“saved
soul”
and
a
financial
supporter
of
the
church.
With
everyone’s
temporal
needs
in
place,
Daniel
goes
on
to
become
the
multi-millionaire
loner
that
he
always
desired
to
be. Like many people of wealth, Daniel is faced with the fact that
money
doesn’t
buy
you
happiness.
Early
in
his
career,
his
young
son,
H.W.,
lost
his
hearing
in
an
accident
in
the
oil
fields.
Despite
Daniel’s
mistrust
of
Eli
Sunday,
he
is
even
more
frustrated
by
the
fact
that
Eli
preaches
a
good
line
about
physical
healing,
but
he
can’t
really
heal
the
hearing
of
the
only
person
that
means
something
to
him. Here is the one thing in his life that money
can’t
buy. “There Will Be Blood”
exemplifies
the
answer
to
the
Biblical
question:
“What
does
it
profit
a
man
to
gain
the
whole
world,
if
it
costs
him
his
soul?” Daniel Plainview’s frustration darkens his
hatred
for
Eli
Sunday
to
a
depth
that
ultimately
it
leads
him
to
the
point
of
destruction.
In
the
end,
there
is
a
shattering
of
everyone’s
lives
by
greed,
duplicity,
hypocrisy,
vengeance,
and
envy. ________________ Cinema In Focus is a social and spiritual movie commentary.
Hal
Conklin
is
former
mayor
of
Santa
Barbara
and
Denny
Wayman
is
pastor
of
the
Free
Methodist
Church.
For
more
reviews:
http://www.cinemainfocus.com.
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