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Movie review: ‘The Master’ (VIDEO)

Anderson’s gorgeous, challenging ‘Master’

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This sets up one of the film’s most riveting scenes: Dodd records Freddie answering a series of questions (“informal processing,” he calls it) that begins with the mundane and becomes increasingly probing. The repetition, and the rapid-fire give-and-take that starts out calmly and builds to a crescendo, has a mesmerizing musicality and it reveals painful, personal truths.

As Freddie insinuates himself within the highest echelons of The Cause and Dodd’s own family, Peggy mistrusts him more and more. Adams has the least-showy part among the three leads but in some ways, she might just give the most impressive performance of all. Slowly, steadily, she reveals Peggy as the true brains and muscle of the operation. It’s frightening, and it demonstrates yet another facet of Adams’ great versatility.

Dodd’s Cause aims to provide a path for a post-war America seeking direction, a sense of comfort and community for those who have figuratively (and, in Freddie’s case, literally) been at sea. Or at least that’s the gruel he’s spoon-feeding the mixed-up masses. Anderson, in typically daring fashion, has no interest in assuaging anyone. And so although he’s given us a rare jewel box of a film from a visual standpoint, the open-endedness it depicts ultimately resembles ordinary, everyday life.

"The Master"
3 1/2 stars
Who's in it: Philip Seymour Hoffman, Joaquin Phoenix, Amy Adams
What it's about: A Naval veteran arrives home from war unsettled and uncertain of his future, until he is tantalized by The Cause and its charismatic leader.
Rated R for sexual content, graphic nudity and language.
Running time: 2 hours, 17 minutes

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