Magnolia (1999)
The first time I watched Magnolia was on a double VHS. I had never even heard of it. I remember sitting through the opening sequence, which is probably the best prologue in cinema, and being unable to breathe. PTA wastes no time setting up the theme of the movie: we are bombarded with three separate set pieces knifing our guts with the reality of the randomness of life and massive coincidence that is our existence. He achieves this with the caress of a gentle paintbrush, smoothing over the horrors that be, with ease and beauty. Then the DP closes the lens, (a faux cut to black) and our singer/storyteller confronts us with a cover of "One", and as the song crescendos we have our opening title, which for me, felt like my first orgasm. It's an explosion of sound, color, movement, and collage. All of the incoherent layers upon layers of maps and song notes should be a blundering mess, but instead are a lyrical transcendence. It perfectly illustrates that, while everything is essentially chaos, there is a beautiful symmetry to to it all, if you stop long enough to smell the flowers. The movie could have ended right there, with this enormously radiant punctuation following our trio of mini movies. Fortunately we are blessed with several more hours of film perfection, which in turn, changed me.
I was no longer just a fan of film, but an inspired artist and cinephile. Everything in my life, including the partner I chose, needed to be equally drenched in the medium of cinema. For several years after this initial viewing, the little girl that was obsessed with Beetlejuice that was still in me would put in my Magnolia DVD and watch just That Moment over and over again to feel that complete bodily takeover that so few pieces of art of any medium have ever come close to doing.
- Babes

















































































