Artikelzustand:
4.74.7 von 5 Sternen
39 Produktbewertungen
  • 5Sterne

    30Bewertungen
  • 4Sterne

    7Bewertungen
  • 3Sterne

    1Bewertung
  • 2Sterne

    0Bewertung
  • 1Stern

    1Bewertung

Good value100% stimmen zu

Entertaining100% stimmen zu

Engaging characters90% stimmen zu

37 Rezensionen

von

One Writer's Power Over One Mass Murderer

In 1959 Truman Capote (Philip Seymour Hoffman) was a columnist for the New Yorker magazine. One day he read a newspaper article about a mass murder in small town Kansas. The multiple murder intrigued Capote. So he asked his editor at the New Yorker magazine, then William Shawn (Bob Balaban), to allow him to write a longer article about the evolving mass murder case.

Truman Capote felt the true story should be made into one as provocative as fiction. The Kansas mass murder was so inexplicably brutal. It occurred in a town of people where it was a strain to even imagine a mass murder could happen there. After his editor agreed, Capote ventured to the town taking with him a close friend Harper Lee (Catherine Keener)--novelist of "To Kill a Mockingbird."

Capote's (gay) difference was accentuated in Kansas. However, with finesse and intellect he earned the trust of Alvin Dewey (Chris Cooper), the Kansas Bureau of Investigation agent who was working the murder case of the Clutter family. In short, Capote's New Yorker magazine article turned out to be a full-length book. It's this unforgettable 1960's book's invention and the influence researching and writing it had on Truman Capote that inspires this dramatic true story film.

Interestingly, Capote also familiarized himself with the murderers of the Clutter family: Dick Hickock (Mark Pellegrino) and Perry Smith (Clifton Collins Jr.). Surprisingly, Capote found out he was more like Smith than he ever expected to learn or admit. Capote and Smith became "friends," never realizing Smith would still be alive (rather than executed) before the nonfiction text was published. Therefore, the author was forced to contend with the morality of his text. Capote's research and writing would play a role in Smith's execution and the literary creation of how Smith would be marked in readers' memories. Ths bolder issue is the power of one writer's life over one murderer's death, plus many readers' impressions of the murderer.

Capote co-stars Bruce Greenwood (Capote's long term gay lover Jack Dunphy) and Amy Ryan (Mary Dewey, investigator Alvin Dewey's wife, one of Capote's confidantes). It's one of the better stories about a writer I've seen.
Vollständige Rezension lesen...

von

Truman Capote INHABITS Philip Seymour Hoffman

I was bowled over by Philip Seymour Hoffman's portrayal of Capote. He was masterful and had every detail of Truman Capote's quirky mannerisms and fine nuances. He truly deserved his Oscar for this role!

The film covers the seven-year period of Capote's life when he was researching and writing "In Cold Blood."

Clifton Collins, Jr. is thoroughly convincing as the disturbed young murderer, Perry Smith, while Chris Cooper plays the role of Alvin Dewey (the Kansas Bureau of Investigation agent who was primarily responsible for breaking the case) with a certain remoteness and sharp eye on Capote's motives.

Catherine Keener is fascinating as Capote's dear friend Harper Lee (whose own novel, "To Kill a Mockingbird," is soon to hit the market) as she accompanies Capote on some of his research trips to Kansas and lends him an ear back in NYC.

Like actor Chris Cooper, this film struck close to me personally as we were both children and teens during this seven-year period and lived in the Kansas City area. We both well remember when the Clutter family was murdered in their farmhouse in rural Kansas, all the news coverage, the capture of the murderers, their trial, appeals, and eventual execution.
Vollständige Rezension lesen...

von

Cold souls

Capote, the movie, takes us to the dark side of the American story in more ways than one. It’s a tale about the way narcissism can poison relationships and twist values. It deals with the causes and aftermath of a terrible, multiple murder but it also questions the pursuit of fame and success. It tells us: "Be careful what you wish for".

Born in Alabama in 1924, Truman Capote, wanted fame and success more than most and he achieved it early. He has been described as the most perfect writer of his generation. But as an extravagant gay man, Capote was fascinated for public attention long before the concept of celebrity was part of the American culture.

On Nov. 16, 1959, Truman Capote noticed an article in a newspaper about a Kansas family who were killed. Immediately, he telephoned the editor of The New Yorker, where he held a weekly column, wondering if he would be interested in an article about the murders. Later in his life, Capote said that if he had known what would happen as a result of this impulse, he would not have stopped in the little town in Kansas, but would have run away "like a bat out of hell".

At first, Capote thought the story would be about how a small community was dealing with the tragedy. That’s until two men, Perry Smith and Richard Hickock, are arrested and charged with the crime. As Capote gets to know them, he's consumed by a story that would make him rich and famous, but eventually destroy him. His non-fiction novel, In Cold Blood, became a best seller and inspired a movie, but Capote was emotionally devastated by the experience and it’s been said that it haunted him to his death.

Sort of an alternate angle on In Cold Blood, Capote chronicles the unlikely friendship between writer and murderer. Capote and Smith shared a sense of defiance and loneliness, but as the film progresses, the relationship grows one-sided, and Capote's attitude toward Smith changes from empathetic and compassionate to exploitative and manipulative.

In that respect, the film is also about the tricky ethics of journalism and the way in which Capote the writer was eventually swallowed up by Capote the celebrity. That second Truman Capote is the one who still lingers in the public imagination, and Hoffman does a superb job at revealing the lonely man behind the extroverted public persona. What an extraordinary performance.

Isn’t the point of a good movie when you walk out of the theater and can’t stop thinking about it? For me, it was disturbing, I’m still thinking about it and I’d recommend to anyone who actually likes a movie with substance to see it. I’ll see it again. I know that already.
Vollständige Rezension lesen...

von

Makes Me Want to Read The Book

Philip Seymour Hoffman's performance was so good as was Clifton Collins Jr. as Perry that I now may read the book. These two actors formed a convincing bond in this film about Truman Copote's book In Cold Blood. The first crime was the murders of a family of four in Kansas in 1959 by Perry Smith and Dick Hickock. The second crime was how Capote used these men to further his writing career by pretending to befriend them and getting them appeals only to let them hang in the end so he could finish his book. The film clearly showed Capote as a man who would do anything to make his book a success.Vollständige Rezension lesen...

von

Deserves all the praise it's received

I didn’t even know what this movie was about when I saw it, but I wanted to see what all of the hype was about. After I watched the extras with the real Truman Capote, I could understand why Philip Seymour Hoffman received so much praise. He did a great job imitating Capote even down to the pauses he took in his speech.

As for the story itself, I thought it was done from an interesting perspective. Though I hadn’t recognized his name, I had read Capote’s book, IN COLD BLOOD. To see a movie, not about the book but about the writer as he’s writing the book, was different. I liked it and feel that it deserves all the press it has received.
Vollständige Rezension lesen...

von

Stunning portrayal...

One of the best films of 2006. It's a well-crafted film with solid direction with thoughtful and patient pacing and a deceptively smooth script. But, most notable, is one of the best performances I've ever seen.

Philip Seymour Hoffman is absolutely riveting as Truman Capote. He manages to make a beautifully nuanced performance painting a wonderfully complex picture of the small man who was larger than life. If for no other reason, and there are plenty, this film is worth watching solely to enjoy Hoffman's work.
Vollständige Rezension lesen...

von

"Capote" says it all!!!

Philip Seymour Hoffman did an unbelievably wonderful job playing Truman Capote. I enjoyed this movie and will be watching it again. Thank you.

Bestätigter Kauf:  Ja | Artikelzustand: neu | Verkauft von: yourmomlovesmedia

von

Riveting, superb acting & script, not a feel good movie

This movie covers the seven-year period when Capote wrote his groundbreaking nonfiction novel IN COLD BLOOD. In 1959, Capote reads of a horrific family killing in Holcomb, Kansas; he travels to the location and meets the killers and knows he has to tell the story.

Riveting. True story. Superb acting & script. Fantastic film editing. This movie has such a unique feel to it. Strong images and killings so it is not for children, but the images are not done in your typical Hollywood glorified violence fassion they are handled in a way that is necessary for the story.

This movie is worthy of all the awards it received. It is not a feel good movie, but it is one that I highly recommend.

If this review helps you please vote & let me know. I'll write other reviews if I am helping people make good buying choices. Thanks!
Vollständige Rezension lesen...

von

Capote

Having read "In Cold Blood" many, many years ago, I purchased this DVD out of a desire to get a better picture of Truman Capote than what I had witnessed in interviews in the years before his death. Hoffman was brilliant as Capote. This movie shows Capote as a very emotional, compassionate and naive man. His brilliance and talents were immersed in his totally narcissistic personality. He could grieve, feel sorrow, acquire and keep friends only as they pertained to and served him personally. His genteel yet flamboyant manners drew people to him in spite of his homosexuality in a time when this was not even remotely an acceptable lifestyle. This is a don't miss movie!Vollständige Rezension lesen...

von

Capote

Hoffman is simply remarkable in the role; he truly disappears into the part. Hoffman is doing so much more than a mere imitation of the man, he becomes Capote as much as any actor ever became anybody. He captures every aspect of the writer, not only the effete socialite who was eager for the attention and praise of his high-society friends, but also the more thoughtful and less public side of Capote.Vollständige Rezension lesen...

Warum ist diese Rezension nicht zulässig?