UPTON Sinclair's beefy 1927 story of an oil prospector in turn-of-thecentury California is a terrific yarn. But it doesn't bear much superficial resemblance to the film inspired by it: There Will Be Blood, Paul Thomas Anderson's masterpiece with Daniel Day-Lewis as mad oil tycoon Daniel Plainview (here named J Arnold Ross). It's narrated by his son, Bunny, for a start, and majors on the child's creeping sympathy with the socialist labour movement. But Eli Sunday, egomaniac preacher extraordinaire, is present and correct, and you can taste something of the same cracked grandeur found in the film, that massive sweep of landscape and ambition.