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There Will Be Blood (2007)

Release Date:
Wednesday, December 26, 2007

MPAA Rating:
R

Rating Reason:
For some violence

Genre:
Drama

Starring:
Daniel Day-Lewis, Paul Dano, Ciaran Hinds, Kevin J. O'Connor

Written By:
Paul Thomas Anderson

Director:
Paul Thomas Anderson

Synopsis:
A sprawling epic about family, greed, corruption, and the pursuit of the American dream. Set in the booming West coast oil fields at the turn of the 20th century,

There Will Be Blood (2007) | Review

Spilling Blood and Spilling Oil
Elisabeth Leitch

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If ever there was a movie that was also a force of nature, There Will Be Blood would be that movie. To watch it is to slowly be surrounded by dark clouds and thrashing winds. To meet its characters is to come face to face with some of the most destructive elements of all creation. And to witness it take its course is to realize that greed and selfishness are just as dangerous as any other storm we could imagine.

At the center of its story is Daniel Plainview, a self-proclaimed oil man who is set on making it rich in oil. Upon first glance, Daniel could be a good businessman, a determined entrepreneur, and a driven worker. To the towns and families he meets with about oil discoveries, he presents himself as a family man, a community leader, and a philanthropist. But as his story unfolds, Daniel shows us that even though he is no stranger to hard work, everything he does he does for himself and himself alone.

“I have a competition in me,” says Daniel. “I want no one else to succeed.”

And unfortunately for Daniel and everyone he encounters, this greedy and selfish truth almost demands the destruction of everyone it touches. If Daniel could manage it, he wouldn’t have anything to do with anyone. But since he can’t, he just uses others for what he needs, gives people as little as he can to get what he wants, and does whatever needs to be done to keep anyone from getting what he has.

But as much as Daniel tries to keep people exactly where he wants them, they don’t always stay. His son is injured and loses his value as an effortless prop to promote Daniel’s family-friendly façade. Men who once only wanted to work for Daniel seek connections of friendship and brotherhood that Daniel has no intention of fulfilling. And in a world where there will always be more than just one entrepreneur, other men also seek success for themselves.

Meet Eli Sunday, pastor of the Church of the Third Revelation in Little Boston, California. If there were TV in the early 1900s, he would have been a televangelist. And although Eli is not an oil man, in Daniel’s eyes the teenaged preacher is just as much a rival and competitor as anyone else.

When Eli asks to bless the well in its opening ceremony, Daniel offers the blessing himself. When Eli invites Daniel and his workers to join his congregation, Daniel rejects the offer. When Eli demands that Daniel honor his promises, Daniel beats him up. And only when Daniel can find no way around it does he give Eli what he wants, and only then to be able to get what he needs.

But more than just two men in competition with each other, Eli and Daniel become almost intrinsic parts of each other’s intersecting lives. If Daniel is an oil man, Eli is a man of holy water. And as the story unfolds, the tale we see is not all that dissimilar from the meeting of oil and water.

Almost a character in and of itself, oil is all over There Will Be Blood. It may be seen as the key to riches and success, but every time it shows up it is black and sinister. Bubbling up from underground, it is as if it is coming up from hell. Its blackness contrasted with the clarity of Eli’s healing water almost stamps it as evil. One several occasions, oil catches fire and further cements its relationship with the evil and deadly fires of hell. And while Eli uses holy water to heal and cleanse people of sin through baptism, immersion in or a shower with oil almost always connects to death, injury, or a turn towards some sort of darker path.

But even though oil and water do not mix, the unfortunate truth is that oil can pollute, contaminate, and destroy even the most pristine of waters, towns, and people. And in There Will Be Blood, its story reveals that the greed and selfishness it embodies can too. No matter how noble the missions and pursuits we each take on in our lives, the ugly reality is that any cause can be misdirected and made false simply by making it all about ourselves.

After watching There Will Be Blood, I have to say it is both a great movie and a movie I wish I had not seen. Both Daniel Day-Lewis and Paul Dano give extraordinary performances that bring the full force of greed, drive, and twisted passion to each of their very distinct characters. Through names, scenes, and shots, the movie puts forth brilliant symbolism, imagery, and biblical references that emphasize its themes and drive them far deeper than is comfortable. Bleak visuals of barren landscapes, black pools of oil, and deep holes in the earth pull us even further into its world of darkness and desolation. And beginning its wail even before the movie starts, There Will Be Blood’s dissonant soundtrack almost becomes an eerie voiceover for the entire movie, a score that sounds like it was performed by tornado alarms and air raid sirens, makes you want to crawl under seat, and leaves you on edge even hours after its sound has faded away.

A tale of greed, selfishness, and destruction, There Will Be Blood is a dark and ominous warning from its subterranean beginning to its unsettling and bizarre end. In the flawed and selfish world we inhabit, it shows us that there will be greed, there will be vengeance, and there will be blood. But the reality it never addresses is what would happen if blood was offered in sacrifice to others instead of shed in vengeance and lost in selfish pursuits. What would happen if instead of seeking to right our lives and our world through taking the blood of others and the loss of our own, we realized that the only blood we need was already given to us long ago by Jesus Christ? Maybe, just maybe, we might realize that there doesn’t need to be blood anymore.


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