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In “There will be Blood,” Paul Thomas Anderson told the
story of America’s greatest gifts -- capitalism and religious freedom –- gone
mad. “The Master” does not rise to such heights, but it never could have. It also
follows two men -– again representing one idea -– at odds. Joaquin Phoenix plays Freddie
Quells, a World War II vet who is violent, perverted, alcoholic, immature, and
a drifter, until he literally stumbles onto the yacht of a man close in age, but
light years beyond Freddie’s mental reach. Lancaster Dodd (Philip Seymour
Hoffman) is a scientist, writer, philosopher, and cult leader of a trillions-year-old
self-help religion known as The Cause. (Scientology? Maybe.) Dodd has a family and scores of admirers. Quells wants it all, to be Dodd, but can’t
recognize that impossibility. It is clear that Quell stopped maturing at 13. He’s
all awkward male poses and farts, a hormonal teenager. Dodd sees Quell as a pet
project, and Quell pings-pongs, loving and loathing Dodd as others point out
the man’s fakery. Yet, Dodd is convinced of his own powers. So, who truly is the
better man? Like “Blood,” Anderson offers few answers, but provides another
riveting, fascinating, and endlessly debatable story. A