Friday, December 24, 2010
Somewhere
"Somewhere"
Starring: Stephen Dorff, Elle Fanning
Directed by: Sofia Coppla
USA/2010
97 minutes
At a key moment in the film Somewhere, just when we think privileged A-list actor Johnny Marco will have a breakthrough with another human being, the noise of his helicopter mutes his most honest and heartfelt gesture in the film. Writer/director Sofia Coppola's fourth film, Somewhere will be compared by most to her second and most successful film Lost in Translation, which won her an original screenplay Oscar. With this new film, which is perhaps her least accessible, Coppola tells the story of Johnny Marco, played by Stephen Dorff. Not the most privileged actor, Dorff's resume as an actor doesn't feature any eye-opening roles, but here he shows incredible range here as a star caught in his own bubble of boredom and loneliness.
If there is to be some kind of narrative to be plucked from the film's relaxed manner, it's the arc of Dorff's character. He's a man with no country, a true loner. Coppola opens her film with a steady shot of what seems to be some sort of run down race track. We watch for 3 or 4 minutes as someone in a black Ferrari does laps around the track. A man gets out, and it's Johnny, looking off in the forever distance of isolation. By starting her film in this manner, Coppola immediately informs us that this will be something different.
In Lost in Translation, Coppola created mood by shooting most of the film in a upscale Japanese hotel where her protagonists could wander around for hours. Most of the film took place at night, and Coppola was able to showcase the beautiful and semi-exotic nightlife. She does the same here, but this time the setting is the famous Chateau Marmont, a sort of showbiz mecca for stars. Johnny seems to be in the middle of two films, and most of the Somewhere consists of his daily nothingness in the hotel. Johnny's life is littered with pills, alcohol, cigarettes, and a daughter. The enchanting Elle Fanning plays Cleo, an 11 year old who looks up to Johnny, but is old enough to be weary of his shortcomings. When Fanning suddenly arrives in the film, it doesn't throw off Johnny's nature as much as we may think, but it becomes clear that Coppola also won't give into audience expectations of Somewhere morphing into a different film.
Johnny is not a bad parent outside of the fact that he doesn't see Cleo that much. When she's dropped off at his place, her mother Layla has a disconnect with Johnny that hints that their marriage ended badly. Coppola, however doesn't delve into these notions with dialogue. Most of the emotional states of Johnny and Cleo aren't verbalized, Coppla hints at them through looks, gestures, and the relationship between the two. The film was shot by Harris Savides, and his framing, rather than the sparse dialogue, tells the story of these characters. In one scene, Johnny is floating in a raft in the hotel pool, the shot lingers until he drifts outside of it. Scenes like those are what makeup the texture of the film. All of the small slice-of-life moments throughout Somewhere work together in a uniquely cohesive manner.
Coppola is a wizard when it comes to mood and feeling. She clearly loves her actors, and gives them space to be natural. She paints a portrait of cross-generational need that has never felt so intimate, the young Elle Fanning conveys lifetimes worth of disappointment, joy, and love with her innocent and heartbreaking gaze. While some will be bored to death with Somewhere, it's truly something that evolves and invites to soak in its atmosphere. Those who are patient and stick with the film will be enlightened by the end, just like Johnny.
Grade: 4.5/5
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
The Fighter
"The Fighter"
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Melissa Leo, Jack McGee
Directed by: David O. Russell
USA/2010
115 minutes
Examining The Fighter up close reveals that the film isn't one thing in particular, but has the feel and unbalance of several different films. The caliber of the actors and the pure energy of their performances save the film from just being another mid-level sports film. It feels as though the boxing genre has been done to hell; The Fighter tries to come in from a different angle and floor its audience, but the full impact isn't necessarily felt throughout the film.
The true life story of boxer Micky Ward has been a passion project for those involved in the film for several years. Actors Mark Wahlberg and Christian Bale play the true life brother duo that serve as the foundation of the film and its themes of family unity and co-dependence. You won't meet a set of characters this crazy and over-the-top all year. There is Micky, (Wahlberg) a divorced father who has little interest in anything outside of boxing and his family. He comes from a blue-collar neighborhood in Lowell, Massachusetts where he and his family have lived for years. There is Dicky Eklund, played by the chameleon like actor Christian Bale, who lost a ton of weight to portray as Dicky as the crack addict he was. Dicky trains Micky, and is still living off of his one past glory of defeating Sugar Ray Leonard. There is Alice Ward, played by the reliable Melissa Leo, who reeks of 90's nostalgia with her bouffant hair due and her 7 blonde daughters from hell. Then, there is Charlene, the sexy working class outsider who tends bar and is the only known who seems to know what's best for Micky.
It's easy to tell how this story will go, but that's expected with most boxing films. O'Russell creates mood early on by making us comfortable with this small neighborhood and the people who live in it. His musical cues, and montages of Dicky and Micky feel forced, but work at other times. This feeling of un-balanced material throughout the film is what plagues it the most. Part of the problem the film has, is that most of the actors seem to be acting as if their all in their own separate movie. The film works best when it's operating in quiet moments. After being stood up by Micky, Charlene arrives at his house unaware that he had lost a fight the previous night to a guy that outweighed him by 20 lbs. She tends to his beaten face and then finally understands who he is by an answer that he gives her. "Everybody said I could beat him," Micky says, Charlene asks who everybody is. Micky's response, "my mother and my brother."
The narrative is quite simple. Micky's quest for success as a fighter is constantly being halted by the shortcomings of his family. Dicky's drug addiction is known, but is mostly swept under the rug by Leo's character Alice. Not only does Micky have to worry about Dicky, but has to please his overbearing and annoying mother. Leo walks a fine line between playing the hell out of her character and overacting. As for Bale's portrayal of Dicky, it works for the most part, but there are several instances where it comes across as cartoonish. When the film presents emotional moments, it's hard to commit Dicky's cause for redemption. He's unlikable, but Bale is such a force that you can't help but feel for the guy. The father, George Ward, played by Jack McGee is level headed and is interested in Micky's best interest, but is usually overshadowed by Alice's plight. My favorite performance in the film comes from Charlene. Amy Adams has never played a character this thick skinned in her whole career. The character of Charlene is not only the most likable, but the one that attempts to save Micky from the bad influences of Dicky and Alice. Wahlberg is fine in his role, but at times we wish his character had the smarts to leave his family for better things.
The Fighter attains all its charm and spirit from the true events that inspired the film. If only O'Russell's script could have handled the highs and lows of Dicky and Micky with more intimacy, the film could've been something more. Take for instance the scene in which Dicky is in prison watching an HBO documentary based on his life with crack. It's easily supposed to be one of the more emotional parts of the film, but since Dicky doesn't feel completely authentic to us, the scene cannot resonate like it should. There are many parts like this, and for that I blame O'Russell for the film's messy nature.
Harping back to the idea of The Fighter feeling like 3 films stuffed into one, it's an obvious identity crisis that the film has, but we forgive in the end due to the richness of this ensemble cast. We follow Dicky's addiction and recovery, the relationship between Micky and Charlene, the tug of war between the family members and Charlene, the actual fighting, etc. I haven't seen so much raw energy in any other film this year, and that's what ultimately saves it. Bale, Leo, and Adams are all being considered for awards, and it's easy to see why.
As the film goes on, we become more comfortable with the style and the way O'Russell is telling this story. Sure, there are glaring flaws, but the most important aspect is making a film that does its true characters justice. During the credits of the film, we meet the real Micky and Dicky, and we understand a little bit more about Bale's performance from the detail of his mannerisms. In a way, The Fighter is named after Dicky, possibly named after the family unit that pushed each other to the brink of insanity over Micky's career. This is what the film is about, and we overlook its flaws to find something human that the whole cast has tapped into.
Grade: 3.5/5
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Black Swan
"Black Swan"
Starring: Natalie Portman, Mila Kunis, Vincent Cassel, Barbara Hershey, Winona Ryder
Directed by: Darren Aronofsky
USA/2010
108 minutes
One can easily view Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan as a companion piece to the director's 2008 film The Wrestler. In the case of the former, Aronofsky gets to tell the same story, but with a completely different style and aesthetic all of his own. Aronofsky's films are comprised of addicts and obsessives. Math, drugs, the quest for immortality, wrestling, and now ballet. With Black Swan, the director has added another success to his resume, and in the process, has made a star out of Natalie Portman.
Nina Sayers (Portman) knows ballet and nothing else. Her room is decorated in pink and littered with stuffed animals as if she were still eight years old. She lives with her overbearing mother Erica (Hershey) in a small New York City apartment. The two have an understanding of Nina's drive and goals, but something is a little off. Nina seeks perfection in the cutthroat world of New York ballet, while her mother lives her life through her daughter. The dynamic of the two are one of the many that Black Swan displays.
As the film opens, the new ballet season is underway, and it's in Nina best interest to capture the attention of the artistic director Thomas Leroy, played by Vincent Cassel. Leroy's take on Swan Lake will be without prime ballerina Beth Macintyre, (Ryder) as he looks to cast someone new. Early on we can tell Nina has caught his eye, and why shouldn't she? She seems to be the best dancer in the company, but Leroy demands nuance, and sensuality. Nina is perfect in the role as the white swan, but the it's a duel role and Nina must inhibit the much darker black swan as well to get the role. Leroy is famous for demanding much and sleeping with his stars, something that Nina isn't used to. In one scene between the two, Leroy asks Nina to go home and touch herself. The genius of his character is that we aren't sure whether he's a full blown creep, or just pushing Nina off-balance in order for her to become something else, something organic and dangerous. Aronofsky informs the audience early that this film will be something different. Their is a sense of dread from the start, and we know that the young Nina will soon be put through the ringer to get the part.
The film plays out in a somewhat predictable and melodramatic manner, but the way that Aronofsky is able to sidestep the usual "backstage" cliches is welcoming. Lily, played by the up-and-coming, yet experienced Mila Kunis is sexy, loose, and everything that Nina is not. The dynamic between the two is everything you'd expect, but Kunis and Portman play off each other in an incredible manner. Their rivalry is not so much based out of competition, but in the notion that Lily is a different animal than Nina; a sexual being, a true woman.
The fabric of Black Swan examines duality, sexuality, competitiveness, and female identity. More than anything, Aronofsky is intrigued with the idea of a performer pushing their body to the brink of destruction. In The Wrestler, this idea of self mutilation was on full display as the protagonist Randy "The Ram" performed stubbornly past his prime as an athlete. Black Swan is different in terms of Nina being young, ambitious, and on her way to success. The two protagonists share common bonds; Nina seeks perfection, as Randy sought out fame and notoriety.
The film was shot by Matthew Libatique; his use of handheld is an interesting choice for a film with so much movement. In this case, the handheld works wonderfully to evoke the madness and absurdity throughout. Aronofsky has been clearly influenced by other films, and with Black Swan, he performs a high-wire act by effortless infusing different genres together. Aronofsky's framing is absolutely exquisite; the layers of detail tracing Nina's coming-of-age through drastic changes is successfully achieved here.
Their are touches of Polanski, Cronenberg, Argento, and even Lynch. Nina's psyche is tested, and not since Ellen Burstyn in Requeim for a Dream has Aronofsky featured such a dominant and fractured female protagonist. The world of Black Swan is filled with dopplegangers, mirrors, and doubles, all figuring into Nina's struggle to transform herself. We're not sure what is real and what is fake in the film, we just marvel at the recklessness of Aronofsky and Portman, and their roles as artist and performer.
Grade: 4.5/5
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Handicapping the Oscars
Everything other than True Grit has been seen by everyone in the blog world, and so far, the race looks to be boiling down to The Social Network and The King's Speech. With roughly 3 months until the big night, studios will now start the campaigning and last ditch efforts to get their film seen by as many voters and critics as possible. Screeners for their films will be unleashed, and the most important questions is what film will critics avoid altogether? It will be a shame if they're turned off by Black Swan, which may turn out to be a critic's darling. The Academy tends to scoff at weirder Oscar buzz pictures, even though critics may praise them. A film like Mulholland Drive was a prime example when it came out in 2001.
Best Picture (the 10)
Locks:
The Social Network
The King's Speech
127 Hours
Black Swan
The Kids Are All Right
Inception
Toy Story 3
Next in line
True Grit
The Fighter
Rabbit Hole
Blue Valentine
Get Low
Another Year
The Town
Best Director
Darren Aronofsky (Black Swan)
Tom Hooper (The King's Speech)
David Fincher (The Social Network)
Christopher Nolan (Inception)
Danny Boyle (127 Hours)
Next in line
Joel and Ethan Coen (True Grit)
Lisa Cholodenko (The Kids Are All Right)
Debra Granik (Winter's Bone)
Best Actor
Colin Firth (The King's Speech)
James Franco (127 Hours)
Jesse Eisenberg (The Social Network)
Ryan Gosling (Blue Valentine)
Jeff Bridges (True Grit)
Next in line
Robert Duvall (Get Low)
Javier Bardem (Biutiful)
Best Actress
Annette Bening (The Kids Are All Right)
Natalie Portman (Black Swan)
Jennifer Lawrence (Winter's Bone)
Michelle Williams (Blue Valentine)
Nicole Kidman (Rabbit Hole)
Next in line
Tilda Swinton (I Am Love)
Julianne Moore (The Kids Are All Right)
Leslie Manville (Another Year)
Best Supporting Actor
Geoffrey Rush (The King's Speech)
Christian Bale (The Fighter)
Andrew Garfield (The Social Network)
Matt Damon (True Grit)
Mark Ruffalo (The Kids Are All Right)
Next in line
Justin Timberlake (The Social Network)
Bill Murray (Get Low)
Michael Douglass (Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps)
Sam Rockwell (Conviction)
Sean Penn (Fair Game)
Best Supporting Actress
Sissy Spacek (Get Low)
Melissa Leo (The Fighter)
Amy Adams (The Fighter)
Barbara Hershey (Black Swan)
Helena BonhamCarter (The King's Speech)
Next in line
Jackie Weaver (Animal Kingdom)
Haliee Steinfeld (True Grit)
Next in line
True Grit
The Fighter
Rabbit Hole
Blue Valentine
Get Low
Another Year
The Town
Best Director
Darren Aronofsky (Black Swan)
Tom Hooper (The King's Speech)
David Fincher (The Social Network)
Christopher Nolan (Inception)
Danny Boyle (127 Hours)
Next in line
Joel and Ethan Coen (True Grit)
Lisa Cholodenko (The Kids Are All Right)
Debra Granik (Winter's Bone)
Best Actor
Colin Firth (The King's Speech)
James Franco (127 Hours)
Jesse Eisenberg (The Social Network)
Ryan Gosling (Blue Valentine)
Jeff Bridges (True Grit)
Next in line
Robert Duvall (Get Low)
Javier Bardem (Biutiful)
Best Actress
Annette Bening (The Kids Are All Right)
Natalie Portman (Black Swan)
Jennifer Lawrence (Winter's Bone)
Michelle Williams (Blue Valentine)
Nicole Kidman (Rabbit Hole)
Next in line
Tilda Swinton (I Am Love)
Julianne Moore (The Kids Are All Right)
Leslie Manville (Another Year)
Best Supporting Actor
Geoffrey Rush (The King's Speech)
Christian Bale (The Fighter)
Andrew Garfield (The Social Network)
Matt Damon (True Grit)
Mark Ruffalo (The Kids Are All Right)
Next in line
Justin Timberlake (The Social Network)
Bill Murray (Get Low)
Michael Douglass (Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps)
Sam Rockwell (Conviction)
Sean Penn (Fair Game)
Best Supporting Actress
Sissy Spacek (Get Low)
Melissa Leo (The Fighter)
Amy Adams (The Fighter)
Barbara Hershey (Black Swan)
Helena BonhamCarter (The King's Speech)
Next in line
Jackie Weaver (Animal Kingdom)
Haliee Steinfeld (True Grit)
Monday, November 29, 2010
127 Hours
"127 Hours"
Starring: James Franco, Kata Mara, Amber Tamblyn, Clemence Poesy
Directed by: Danny Boyle
USA/2010
94 minutes
2010 has been a year of great collaborations, and Danny Boyle and James Franco can now add their names into the mix. Boyle, the exciting director that is often praised for his exuberant visual style, turns out to be a more than suitable choice to tell the story of Aron Ralston, who at the age of 28, had to cut off his own arm after being trapped under a boulder.
Mixing excitement with anguish, Boyle's newest film starts as a jolt of adrenaline, and what follows is a draining myriad of terror, frustration, regret, and survival. James Franco happens to be the catalyst for Boyle's signature storytelling. Appearing in almost every shot, it's Franco who makes us care about the true life Ralston. Franco has won audiences over before, but his charm and carefree spirit is what translates into the vivid portrayal of Ralston. Who would have thought that the stoner from Pineapple Express could play a true life climber who cut off his own arm?
As the film starts, we're quickly introduced to the adventurous Aron and his craving and admiration for the outdoors. Think of him as a version of Christopher McCandless from Into the Wild, but without all of the romanticism and self-righteousness running through his veins. Ralston is a mountain climber canyoneering alone near Moab, Utah when we first meet him. Boyle opens the picture with many split screen shots, some displaying the hustle and bustle of the busy city life that Ralston doesn't seem to be interested in. What the film doesn't do is hammer home Ralston's beliefs; he's essentially an island unto himself, not arrogant, but a self-doer, this is all we need to know.
Ralston comes into contact with two female climbers who seem to be lost. They're drawn into Ralston's free spirit and knowledge of the area. He's the kind of guy who gets his high's from giving them a detour where all three dive into crystal blue water that is shot beautifully by ace cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle. The three say goodbye, and Ralston is off to face his ultimate challenge.
Once Ralston get's trapped under a boulder, it's the ultimate quest for survival as his will to live is set against life threating odds. Ralston has limited resources, but makes the best out of him. He has little water, limited food, and a video camera to record of all his activity in case he doesn't survive. The 80 minutes after Ralston comes into contact with the two hikers could've come across as episodic, but the script by Boyle and Simon Beaufoy is relentless in graphing the highs and lows of Ralston's struggle.
It's important for us to care for Ralston and his cause, and the film offers little slivers of his past to paint a picture of what kind of person he is. He seems to have a nice home life, with two loving parents, and a younger sister. When things looks bleak, Ralston stages a faux-gameshow on his camera that serves as a humbling experience. For a guy who seems to have few problems in his life, he fails to mention to anyone where he went that weekend. Could it have gotten him saved earlier? Maybe.
The scene that has been spotlighted as the most shocking and gruesome scene of 2010 might be just that. We're waiting for it the whole movie, and when it arrives, it's as if nothing could've prepared us. As Ralston cuts off his arm, the tension is ratcheted up and we've now become Ralston in that moment. Boyle's musical cues are present throughout the film, but in this scene the atmosphere and tension suits the moment quite well, it's a unique blend of horror and liberation.
Franco provides an excellent physical performance as Ralston. He's in the same spot for the entire film, and although Boyle can manipulate shots to make it look as real as possible, Franco's sense of regret, comedic timing, and strength is what matters here. There's no telling how accurate the script is, but my guess is that it's pretty close to Ralston's true life experience. Boyle does his best to tone down the sentiment, but when it does arrive in the late stages of the film, we buy it.
I feel as if 127 Hours is one of Boyle's most accomplished works. My taste didn't warm to his last two efforts, but 127 Hours is something primal, dangerous, and intoxicating. It's hard to turn away from the near perfect blend of performance and style that the film provides.
Grade: 4/5
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Carlos
"Carlos"
Starring: Edgar Ramirez, Alexander Beyer, Anna Thalbach, Susanne Wuest
Directed by: Olivier Assayas
330 minutes
2010/France
Olivier Assayas' "Carlos," is an in depth and sprawling look into the life of one of the world's most notorious terrorists. It tells the story of Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, who for two decades weaved his way through the complexities of international politics of the period. The film tries to put together who Carlos was by showcasing his various multi-layered identities. The man ultimately engaged his body and soul into a never ending struggle for his beliefs, and this film charts his rise and fall.
While "Carlos" has been broken down into different versions, the 330 minute version from Cannes is the one that I saw. Broken down into three parts for French TV, "Carlos" was screened on the Sundance channel at the beginning of October over three nights. The epic film is not only swiftly directed by Assayas, but includes a vast array of journalistic and factual insight that tries to create the most realistic version of Carlos possible.
With it's globe-trotting nature, and quick pacing, "Carlos" is some blend of "Munich," and "Zodiac." Names, dates, and times are all throw together creating a frenzy of 'who's who' in the global terror racket. While much of the breakneck pacing of "Carlos" is presented in the first few hours, the rest of "Carlos" is able to slow itself down and tell us more about the man. His political ties are always contradicting, making his persona even more of an enigma. Edgar Ramirez plays Carlos with the right dose of sex appeal, charm, and rage. Ramirez speaks six languages in the film, and obviously went through drastic weight changes to play the controversial figure. One can't help but draw comparisons between the complexity of Ramriez' work here, and the work of Benicio Del Toro in "Che."
The only downfall of "Carlos" is its inability to stimulate emotion from its audience. While most of it is based on thrills, some may shrug it off in its dire attempt to resonate. It resonated for me, mostly because of Ramirez' performance and the fearless filmmaking on Assayas' behalf. The film works in one sitting, or broken down into multiple viewings. The scope of the narrative is so dense, but endlessly intrigues with its array of violence, locales, and characters.
Grade: 4/5
Friday, October 29, 2010
Never Let Me Go
"Never Let Me Go"
Starring: Carey Mulligan, Andrew Garfield, Keira Knightley, Charlotte Rampling, Sally Hawkins
Directed by: Mark Romanek
103 minutes
2010/UK
Having not read the novel Never Let Me Go, it's hard to determine how much detail and depth from the novel was left out of the film. Having said that, I will go on and say that "Never Let Me Go" is a film that doesn't hold its audiences hand, and audiences looking for easy answers and conclusions will be fairly disappointed, save for a final voice-over by a lead character that basically spells out the themes of the film for its viewer.
The film takes place in an alternate and cold reality where things aren't quite normal. We learn that a medical breakthrough in 1952 provided cures for once incurable diseases. In 1967, the human life expectancy surpassed 100 years. Thinking back on it now, if the world of the film was as realized as Cuaron's "Children of Men," I think it would have impacted me more. The tricky part resides in the fact that Romanek's shot selection and mood are both on target throughout. Our primal insight and perspective into this world is from the viewpoint of three kids who attend an upscale boarding school called Hailsham. The kids are Kathy, Tommy, and Ruth, each played by Mulligan, Garfield, and Knightley. Hailsham is no normal school, the kids are clearly under the watchful supervision of the school superiors, the main one being Miss Emily, played by Charlotte Rampling. She informs them early that they must take care of themselves in the best and most fully realized way. The kids have a notion instilled in them of what their future path will be; this path comprises the rest of the narrative.
The film is sectioned off into three parts. The first is the days of Hailsham, where Kathy, Tommy, and Ruth all come into close friendship and young romance with each other. Together they experience friendship, love, betrayal and regret. The film takes a turn when Miss Lucy (Hawkins) informs the kids out of pity of their true fate. *** Spoilers**** The kids are basically clones designed to grow into middle age and donate their organs off. After they donate through three stages, also called 'completion,' they die. The harsh and stark truth of this reveal is a heartbreaking moment in the film, especially as its viewed and understood by the kids at Hailsham. The narrative then immediately jumps into the future where the three kids are young adults living in cottages awaiting their first donation.
The problem the narrative possesses is that it doesn't give the viewer enough time with these characters before the end rolls around. Yes, we're supposed to have cared for them way before the end, but as each section of the film was presented, I felt more disconnect and detached, and that is a problem. The days at Hailsham are perhaps the most intriguing and heartbreaking, but most of the narrative occurs after this. After we've left the school, the romance between Tommy and Ruth is on full display. Kathy is isolated from them on a sort of emotional level, but all three are bound by their past and dreadful fate.
The doners are all basically looked down upon by older people they come across, something that the script doesn't delve too much into throughout the film. We view awkward but realistic scenes of the trio and their two other friends at a restaurant, Tommy, Ruth, and Kathy have no idea what to do when a waitress hovers over them awaiting their order. They're completely out of touch and out of place in the world they live in, and it's obvious. They watch late night television and laugh at things they don't understand. The interesting thing is how Tommy, Ruth, and Kathy's dynamic with one another morphs and changes throughout the film. It's not a clichéd love triangle, but a fear of being alone that the three share.
The script by Alex Garland is a major problem. The three main actors do a great job and the emotions are there for them to display, but it just doesn't reach us like it should. I'm not sure if this is due to the coldness of the world they live in, or that the narrative is harshly rushed. I wanted more time with these characters, as their dynamic, while heavily complex and fragile, isn't fully realized like it should be. We start in Hailsham, go to the cottages, then straight to the last section titled completion. The film is under two hours, and it's possible that Romanek wanted us to feel what time quickly slipping away like the characters did. I would have liked another 45 minutes or an hour for this story to take form.
As I mentioned earlier, we're not dialed in to all the details of the characters' reality. We know they don't have much time and that they can choose to be a carer before they donate, a carer looks after and supports other doners, Kathy is a carer. Mulligan gives the most restrained performance in the film, she accepts the given scenario and tries to make the best of it. Her character Kathy is unlike Tommy and Ruth in the way that she doesn't look for solutions and answers. Garfield's Tommy is heartbreaking in his efforts to prolong life and seek out rumors he's heard of life extensions given to those who are in love. Ruth is an angrier, but more accepting version of Tommy. She's the first to donate and the final image of her character is the perhaps the most haunting in the film.
"Never Let Me Go" is ultimately a puzzling effort from Romanek. How can so much proposed emotion along with amazing performances go unnoticed and consequently not even enhance one's opinion on the film? It's unfair to call this project a disappointment , but I'm willing to offer it another chance to see if I truly missed something. The directing and the performances are there, the story just isn't. The blending of sci-fi and brute drama is an intriguing idea, but "Never Let Me Go" fails to encompass any consistency between the two, resulting in a unfortunate head scratcher.
Grade: 3/5
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Let Me In
"Let Me In"
Starring: Kodi Smit-McPhee, Chloe Moretz, Richard Jenkins, Elias Koteas
Directed by: Matt Reeves
115 minutes
2010/USA
The similarities between "Let Me In," and its Swedish predecessor "Let the Right One In," are immediately evident. With a slightly different take on the material, and with Americanized sensibilities, "Let Me In," struck me as the better film.
It takes place in the Reagan 80s', where the country is exposed to a fear- like atmosphere, and one of moral judgment. This film's setting is in Los Alamos, New Mexico, where a bullied young boy named Owen (Smit-McPhee) is isolated amongst his peers, and disconnected from his father. Owen, played by Kody Smit-McPhee, who also played the young boy in "The Road," is a suitable choice for this role. Not only for his fragile frame, but for his sincere ability to make us care. He and his mother live together in an apartment complex where not much happens. Owen plays in the courtyard most nights, while his mother is busy dealing with her divorce. She doesn't recognize how awful he is treated at school, he's abused by kids much bigger than him, but of the same age.
As the film opens, we observe a cop's investigation into several grisly murders in the town. The cop is played by Elias Koteas, one of the best character actors out there. There is a hospital scene in the beginning that serves as the crucial framework of the picture. The scene appears twice, the second time being more telling and effective. The level of intrigue and curiosity is displayed to full effect as we watch Koteas' character observe the horror of the supernatural throughout the film.
It's a story about love and loneliness. A young girl named Abby and her father/guardian move into Owen's complex. Owen observes Abby walking through the snow with no shoes at first glance. She's a stoic and pale little thing, but the young actress nails it. Abby is played by Chloe Moretz, who also played the younger sister in "(500) Days of Summer." The girl and Owen become friends, but she warns him it can't last due to what she really is. In this film the relationship with her father, played by Richard Jenkins, goes much more in depth in terms of finding humanity than in the original. Jenkins gives a quiet, but rather crucial performance. Their dynamic is based upon him finding human blood for her.
Reeves brings his own visual style to the film, though gradually separating the his visual look from the 2008 version. Both settings of each film are fully intact, as much of the bonding between Abby and Owen take place in the courtyard during the winter. The best sequence in the film involves the father inside of a car, and contains a wonderful and difficult POV shot on Reeves' behalf. The 80's trademark of this film isn't overbearing, but is welcome in its attempt to mix the most innocence of pop songs with violent and disturbing murder sequences. Michael Giacchino's chilling score also contributes to the suspense and gripping nature of the story.
As the narrative moves along at a pace I really admired, the story's shape and texture becomes much more sympathetic and bleak. There is definitely more bloodshed in this version, but American audiences will have no problem enjoying that quality. Reeves stays loyal to the original's mood, it's more of a coming of age art house horror film than an all out gore fest. While some may say this remake was unnecessary, I really enjoyed the performances and the cautious directing by Reeves. Even if you've seen the original, you haven't seen "Let Me In."
Grade: 3.5/5
Friday, October 1, 2010
The Social Network
"The Social Network"
Starring: Jesse Eisenberg, Andrew Garfield, Justin Timberlake, Armie Hammer, Max Minghella, Rooney Mara
Directed by: David Fincher
120 minutes
2010/USA
A common thread running through David Fincher's films are obsessive characters that are often driven to succeed or come out on top due to their various social and cultural surroundings. In "Zodiac," the investigation into the notorious 70s' serial killer not only took the lives of those murdered, but of the men dedicated to solving the mystery. Again in "Fight Club," Fincher examined a fractured man and his attempts to not conform to a lifestyle of numbing complacency. In "Seven," serial killer John Doe leads two detectives through a maze of eye-opening events that force them to see the bleak nature of the world.
"The Social Network," is another achievement for director David Fincher. Having come off the success of "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," Fincher's is going for something less complicated here in terms of aesthetic and approach, but just as grandiose. His collaboration with writer Aaron Sorkin is one of the great stories of the year, as both of their styles appropriately come together for this film.
This film chronicles another obsessive, the true life Mark Zuckberg, who at the age of 23 became the world's youngest billionaire. The film starts in Harvard circa 2003 where Zuckerberg has just been dumped by his girlfriend Erica Albright, played by Rooney Mara. Their conversation at a bar ranges from friendly chit-chat, and then escalates into rapid verbal attacks from both parties. His insecurity and his need for social acceptance into prestigious Harvard clubs is what propel his life into further betrayal, lawsuits, and wealth as his invention. spreads like wildfire. It didn't start because of a girl, but due to a generation waiting to breakout and change the world.
Zuckerberg is played by Jesse Eisenberg, criticized by detractors as being a clone of the Michael Cera school of acting, Eisenberg proves in this film that he's more than a one note actor, and actually far more dynamic than Cera. The film follows the chronology of events through the eyes of the key players that were involved in Facebook's startup. Zuckerberg is essentially a genius, but stands without any firm relationship, other than to his friend Eduardo Saverin, who is played by the very talented Andrew Garfield. Zuckerberg's anger stemming from his breakup causes him to blog about her, while also hacking into the Harvard networks and setting up a page that pits Harvard females against each other in a battle of who's more attractive. These early scenes are what establish the mood and angst that the rest of the film delves further into. It's all basically child's play for Zuckerberg, whose ignorant deeds are praised and scolded throughout campus. We learn early on what makes Zuckberg tick, he's some blend of uber nerd combined with mild human disdain.
Zuckberg's actions get the attention of three other Harvard students. Their are Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, world class rowers that come from money, they're both played by Armie Hammer. The twins and their friend played by Max Minghella have started an idea for social networking for Harvard students. They need Mark for the technical aspects, such as writing code for the site. Mark swears his allegiance but expands the idea into his own creation, Facebook. Mark's betrayal leads to lawsuits and fierce deposition scenes that inter-cut Mark's rise to stardom. When the character of Napster creator Shawn Parker (Timberlake) enters the picture, the dynamic between Zuckberg and Saverin becomes more intense and tragic. Timberlake does strong work here, as Parker has already had his success and knows the value of Zuckerberg's creation. He's essentially the devil in the form of a 20 something sex symbol, nudging Mark's ideas toward a dark path. He proclaims to Mark, "This is our time," this is perhaps the truest and most identifiable trait of the generation that started Napster, MySpace, and Facebook.
The way that Sorkin displays the betrayal of these characters and Zuckerberg's rise to power is poetic.The film's narrative structure is most similar to "Rashoman," the 1950s' Kurosawa film, which shows events from multiple perspectives. "The Social Network," mirrors the same style, cutting between past, present, and future. The style of the narrative along with the exceptional script by veteran Aaron Sorkin is what gives the film its nonstop juice. It's easy to imagine the film being an average procedural, but in Sorkin's hands it encompasses the tone of a thriller with its breakneck pacing and wit. All of the characters talk fast, most notably Zuckerberg, who's bitterness toward others for not being on par with his genius is something to behold, thus showing the why casting Eisenberg was the obvious choice.
Fincher's ability to shoot these different settings with intimacy and urgency is what stands out in all of his films. The distinct look of his framing and photography is always identifiable. His use of dark and washed out palette's has always extenuated the harsh settings of his previous film, but in "The Social Network," Fincher is suggesting that Internet hacking, college culture, and betrayal are all on par with the themes of his past films.
The score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross supplements the material as well. It's consistently effective in its mood. This is the best ensemble of the year so far. Andrew Garfield, who will play the next Spider-Man, particularly stands out as the betrayed friend and CFO of Facebook. In a way, we as the audience are him, the human connection to a story that is mostly filled with cold, but interesting souls who changed the way we interact and live today.
Grade: 4/5
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
"Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps"
Starring: Michael Douglas, Shia LaBeouf, Josh Brolin, Carey Mulligan, Frank Langella, Susan Sarando
Directed by: Oliver Stone
133 minutes
As Oliver Stone revisits his 1987 film "Wall Street," he encompasses in this sequel the same primal urgency and dog eat dog regard with this updated, more stylish version. For my money, Money Never Sleeps is tad better than its predecessor, but that isn't to say it doesn't have its fair share of flaws and shortcomings. The original "Wall Street," was a film that spoke to a time and generation, this sequel is more about the generation gap living through the same business as in the first film, as well as a reminder of what has already come before us.
With the return of Michael Douglas' Oscar winning character Gordon Gekko in this installment, much attention is paid to the upcoming generation of stock broker. This time, it's in the younger mold of Jake Moore, who is played by Shia LaBeouf in probably his most adult role to date. Moore is an upcoming broker, similar to Charlie Sheen's Bud Foxx from the 1987 version. Moore is seeing Gekko's daughter Winnie, played by Mulligan, who has kept all the bitter memories of her father intact to still hold a grudge. One of the subplots of the film is the dynamic between Moore, Winnie, and Gordon, as Moore juggles relationships with both characters.
The narrative is troubling as Stone fills this puppy to the brim with excess plot. The ramifications of the screenplay written by Allan Loeb and Stephen Schiff is one of the things that hinders the film. As it opens, Douglas' Gekko is let out of prison a month after 9/11. We flash-forward to 2008 where the global economy is on the eve of destruction. It's here where Stone wants to make his commentaries and analysis known. He teams the old corporate raider of Gekko with the ambitious Jake Moore, and pits them against successful billionaire Bretton James, played by Josh Brolin. We learn in this installment that Bretton was the main reason Gekko was put behind bars. Brolin is the villain of the film, though lacking the devilish charm of the old Gekko, he is pretty good here. Another subplot emerges involving the death of Jake's longtime mentor and friend Louis Zabel, played by Frank Langella, who was no stranger to Bretton's wrecking ball of ambition and greed.
I particularly enjoyed the first 45 minutes of this film, it was fresh, stylish and interesting to share the company of what seemed to be a reformed Gekko seeking solace and redemption with his daughter. Their dynamic is a little soft, but Douglas and Mulligan share a key scene that probably hit close to home with Douglas and his own personal life. Most of the time we're watching Gordon adapt to his new surroundings, he's got a rented apartment, no friends, but his own buried motive that doesn't thrust the film into new territory. It arrives late and plunges us further into an already long runtime and yet another subplot.
New York is glamorized with multiple montages and establishing shots, a mood that is much different from the one that's present in the realm of the characters. Stone's editing style here is much different from what we're usually privy to from him. He uses a lot of split screens, graphics, and quick techniques showing the new age of the market and those involved. Jake Moore is at the center of this universe, and Stone tries to convey the changing times through his generation. Bretton's generation is those who sit in dark rooms discussing change and how to strong arm other companies. The dynamic between Bretton and Jake isn't as played out as Douglas' and Sheen's in the first installment, but it mirrors the rival between old and young, new school versus old school.
The muddled scope and Stone's lack of resolution also downgrades the picture. Stone is trying to say something, but all of his sub plots and partial unfulfilled character arcs block the main narrative from reaching its destination. As the film nears its end, Gekko's persona remains intact, except he's given birth to the hint of a remorseful quality, other than that, we haven't learned much else.
Grade: 3/5
Monday, September 20, 2010
The Town
"The Town"
Starring: Ben Affleck, Rebecca Hall, Jeremy Renner, John Hamm, Titus Welliver, Chris Cooper, Pete Postlethwaite, Blake Lively
Directed by: Ben Affleck
123 minutes
The layout of Ben Affleck's new film "The Town," is quite simple. It's a genre film, more specifically, a "one last job," film, where the final heist of the protagonist will be his last before he settles down and leaves his life of crime. The problem with this familiar trope is that the guidelines and dynamics of the narrative are laid out in front of us. For the film to work, the stakes must be high, and we better care about the characters.
It's a gritty and violent cops- and- robbers story set in Charlestown, the bank robbery capital of America. The most notorious crew is led by Doug MacRay, played by Affleck, who has learned the criminal lifestyle from his imprisoned father Stephen, played by Chris Cooper. Doug's partner and lifelong friend is Jem, played by Jeremy Renner, who some will recognize from last year's best picture winner "The Hurt Locker." Jem plays the crew's loose cannon, a hothead who tries to justify any violence he partakes in. Doug, Jem, and the two other guys rounding out the crew get their jobs from a florist played by Pete Postlethwaite, a veteran of the business who worked with Doug's father. It's a town where crime is passed down through the generations, and where no other profession is even thought of.
It's all very standard and evident how things will unravel. During the opening of the film, the guys target a bank, a guard signals an alarm, and an innocent employee is taken hostage just for caution. The employee is Claire, played by the beautiful Rebecca Hall. She ends being let go, but is taken in for questioning by Special Agent Adam Frawley of the FBI, Frawley is played by "Mad Men's," Jon Hamm. Doug and Jem debate whether she could identity them, so Doug follows her around and the two end up forming a relationship.
The rest of the film consists of the cat and mouse games between the FBI and Doug's crew, and the non existent chemistry between Doug and Claire that were supposed to care about. Claire is intrigued by Doug for reasons that go unknown. We get a few scenes of them talking, some give the hint where we may learn more about their characters, but the moment never comes. Affleck is more interested in ensuring the pace of the film and providing the false impression of character depth with these scenes. Claire is always charming and is an obvious catch for a guy like Doug, who has little depth outside of questions he has about his mother's past fate.
While the screenplay by Peter Craig and Ben Affleck isn't as strong as the script for Affleck's directorial effort "Gone Baby Gone," this film is better directed. Action scenes sizzle with intensity and danger as Affleck knows how to stage and frame set pieces, perhaps taking a page out of Michael Mann's "Heat," with the multiple shootout scenes. The acting is also pretty good, while everyone does their part, it's mainly Renner that sticks out, his fiery nature and tone is unsettling, making him unpredictable in any scene. Jon Hamm isn't given much beyond his "by the book" character arc, still, Hamm does just fine. There is also Blake Lively, who plays Jem's sister Krista. Lifelong drug addict and past interest to Doug, it's Krista who is like a younger version of Amy Ryan's character from "Gone Baby Gone," there is little for her to do here as she clings to Doug as the gettin' gets late.
"The Town," succeeds and gently succumbs to its familiar slate of narrative devices. It's obvious that Affleck wants to tell a familiar story with an assured hand, but as the film goes on, one wonders if the script will take any chances because we're hoping we haven't pinpointed the fate of the characters so early. It will be interesting to see where Affleck goes from here, he's comfortable with filming in settings comparable to Scorsese in the 70's, but Scorsese's projects were much more dynamic than Affleck's first two efforts.
The characters that make up "The Town," are worthy of our attention, but certainly not for more than two hours. There are far worse things out there right now at the box office, and if you're in the mood for a decent little action/thriller, the "Town," will hold you over until the heavy hitters of the fall and winter film season arrive.
Grade: 3/5
Thursday, September 2, 2010
The American
"The American"
Starring: George Clooney, Irina Bjorklund, Johan Leysen, Paolo Bonacelli, Violante Placido
Directed by: Anton Corbijn
105 minutes
Throughout much of "The American," George Clooney's persona is stripped down to a minimal shadow, a vessel of regret, ambiguity, and stillness. In fact, much of director Anton Corbijn's second film is a throwback to 70's thrillers. It's more finely tuned and executed as an art house project rather than its marketed spy thriller mold. Corbijn, who made his name as a Dutch photographer is much more enticed by mood and atmosphere than plot. Corbin's debut film "Control," was a moody piece that chronicled the doomed last days of Joy Division's Ian Curtis. The film caught the eye of many, and made Coribijn a name to watch. This film, which is set in multiple gorgeous locales, is a another great canvas for the artist to flesh out his palette. Corbijn's sensual photography is essential to the film's beauty and a contrast to its protagonists' sins.
Make no mistake, the main attraction is Clooney. His fragmented, but quiet and stirring soul of an assassin is the primary reason the film holds. Clooney plays Jack, a thin, neatly looking gun- for- hire who is mercilessly devoted to his work. In terms of a character study, picture a Michael Mann film, but without the style and gun blazing. Jack can't separate himself from his work, he's a loner who can't do much else, nor wants to. Clooney's Jack is haunted by events that start the film, and serve as his nightmarish reminder of who he is throughout.
He has few contacts, one is his boss Pavel, an older man who looks to have lived two lifetimes. His relationship to Jack is simple, he explains the next mark, and it's Jack whom obliges. This time, Jack is told to lay low in the Italian countryside while waiting for directions on a last job. Jack spends much time alone in cafe's and bars feeling the weight and uncertainty of his predicament. His other contacts are both female, one is a precise marksmen whom Jack is building a gun for. They recognize each other as animals of the same game, one is looking to be healed, the other could care less of anything but the job. Jack's primary interest outside his work lies in a prostitute named Clara (Placido), a woman whom Jack will only give business to. They have little in common, but she's slowly drawn into his frenzy of guilt, she can make him whole again.
The film was adapted by Rowan Joffe from a book by Martin Booth. While the plot of the film is shoestring thin, it's of course what most detractors will complain off. If one can allow themselves to be thrust into the films mood and atmosphere, the film will increasingly drawn you in. It's the deliberate pacing, and quiet paranoia that slowly ratchets up the tension. Jack ends up meeting a priest that has taken slight interest in him, perhaps Jack is different from other tourists in the eye of the priest. They talk about simple things, sometimes Jack says nothing, sometimes he offers a little more. The priest serves no great purpose, just an observer to a lost man.
I imagine some will grow frustrated while viewing "The American," I for one was enthralled. Some will say the trailers' promises weren't kept, but the vision of Corbijn and the acting of Clooney is what remains un-compromised. Those looking for a action packed thriller should turn elsewhere for satisfaction. "The American," has arrived in a month of cinematic bottom feeders. With Corbijn's artful eye and Clooney's uncanny acting range, this is a film to seek out.
Grade: 3.5/5
Monday, August 2, 2010
The Kids Are All Right
"The Kids Are All Right"
Starring: Annette Benning, Juliane Moore, Mark Ruffalo, Mia Wasikowska, Josh Hutcherson
Directed by: Lisa Cholodenko
106 minutes
The latest indie that faired well and garnered attention during its Sundance film festival run is a film of good intention, but strives for too little. It's about a modern day lesbian couple living in LA, both parenting two adolescent teens who wish to seek out their birth father. A-listers were cast in the pivotal roles of the film. Annette Benning plays Nic, an ambitious doctor to Juliane Moore's somewhat misguided Jules, they play the believable off beat couple. It's no secret that Benning is older than Moore, but they're age difference is of only two years. They work well together as the film quickly establishes that they're a well off couple.
The kids are played by Mia Wasikowska, the same girl who starred in "Alice in Wonderland," here she is a soon to be college freshman, littered with all the anxiety and hormones a normal girl of her age possesses. Her younger brother, played by Josh Hutcherson skateboards, snorts pills, and gets into trouble with his unbalanced best friend, much to his "mom's" dismay. The two kids seek out their father Paul, played by the excellent Mark Ruffalo. Paul never graduated college and now runs a successful restaurant. He's drawn to the willingness of the kids attempt to seek him out, and it looks for a while a healthy relationship could be established.
Nic wears the pants in the family, she overlooks and corrects Jul at any desirable moment, Cholodenko's believes this serves as a fresh and intriguing dynamic among the couple. The film actually puckers up anytime Ruffalo is one screen, he's always easy on the eye, and his look and style matched with his honest eyes make him intriguing even if he's a tad underwritten. The triangle of the three adults is unquestionably the backbone of the film, if only Cholodenko's screenplay could have offered more insight rather than the usual jousting of sexes, "The Kids Are All Right," could have been worthy of its adult cast.
Now, movies are movies, and once Paul meets Nic and Jules, something happens that throws off the balance of this newly formed semi-family. One of the problems with the film is that it prides itself upon being real and honest, but the motivations and actions of certain characters rubbed me the wrong way in which I felt cheated. This isn't to say that whatever takes places can't happen, it certainly can, but from what we know about the characters and their universe, I wasn't pleased with what occurred.
Due to the actions of the adults, the children begin to rebel in their own ways. Confrontations arise, arguments ensue, and you can basically tell where the film is headed. When the end comes around, it's been a hard and rigorous journey for the characters to reach the end point and beginning of a new future, I wasn't interested or fulfilled when those moments came. Lessons are learned, and the films' message of love, friendship, and family having no clear definition is stamped on the film like it was run through an indie film assembly line with 100 movies concentrating on the same theme.
I'm reminded of a film which also starred Mark Ruffalo called "You Can Count on Me," here is a film where the characters flaws and actions are played out more realistically and with subtlety. The audience feels for these characters at the end. I prefer that film much more than "The Kids Are All Right."
In the end, the modesty of the writing, directing, and the performances is enough to not dislike the film, but to shrug it off once the credits start rolling. I imagine it will charm audiences who think that a film about two lesbians is something of risk these days.
Grade: 2.5/5
Sunday, August 1, 2010
I Am Love
" I Am Love"
Starring: Tilda Swinton, Flavio Parenti, Edoardo Gabbrielinni, Alba Rohrwacher, Pippo Delbono
Directed by: Luca Guadagnino
120 minutes
The nagging truth about "I Am Love," is that it would rather exist as a rapturous and elegiac postcard, rather than a film containing raw feelings and emotion. But see, the filmmaker Luca Guadagnino tries to have it both ways, and near the end of the film, "I Am Love," nearly suffocates under its own melodramatic intake.
This is not your average love story, there are moments where I was reminded of other films, but the beauty of "I Am Love," is that it contains its own tragic and intense identity which propels it past the tired familiarity one might feel with a film of lesser surprise. The film, shot by Yorick Le Saux is exquisite, we're following a wealthy family and all its inhabitants, but the shots feel just as wealthy as the family.
The family is the Recchi's, the patriarch of the family is about to retire, and looks to name successors to the family's massive industrial company. We first meet these luxurious faces as they eat dinner, and await the announcement of the heir to the company. The Recchi's live in Milan, but the daughter in law of the head of the family is originally from Russia, this is Emma, played by the gorgeous Tilda Swinton. Emma and her husband Tancredi (Delbono) have two children. One is the handsome Edoardo (Parenti) and the other Elisabetta (Rohrwacher), now a student in Paris. This is the kind of family always surrounded by glamor and global intrigue. They're the perfect little unit, but something is about to change all that. Swinton's Emma is the showcase of the film, her character is perfectly comfortable with her role in the family and seems content to be involved in the lives of her kids. She seems distant from her husband, and is looking for an experience, if any, to sweep her away.
There are other significant characters as well. Edodardo has a friend named Antonio (Gabrielinni), who concocts exotic and passionate dishes for parties and dinners that the Recchi's host. Antonio and Edodardo have intentions of opening their own restaurant. Early in the fillm, Antonio catches Emma's eye, we know from this moment that Emma's life has changed forever. Continually seduced by his looks and culinary love, Emma and Antonio embark on a romantic affair that could threaten to isolate from her family and her once comfortable life.
" I Am Love," moves along at a decent pace throughout, we are exposed to Emma's vulnerability and hopes for true, passionate love, Antonio offers this. The film contains dozens of gorgeous shots, kudos to Le Saux for taking beautiful advantage of the locales and sights. It's a film so gorgeous, that it could exist as a silent film and carry the same impact. One can't forget the overwhelming and sometimes draining score by John Adams, it's used to accompany Emma and Antonio's intimate affair, but as times it drowns out the beauty of Le Saux's photography.
Swinton's performance in general is what keeps us intrigued. Her effortless portrayal of basic emotions combined with her telling gestures and exotic look is how she has made her name. Swinton could easily grab an Oscar nomination for her work here. Aside from her character, there are few worth caring about in this picture. Swinton's Emma gets the full treatment in Guadagnino's screenplay, the rest are off to the side admirably representing their roles, but adding no additional insight or intrigue.
Late in the film, a plot twist occurs that may have some viewers rolling their eyes in utter disbelief. It's a nearly preposterous event that sends the film in another direction. Loaded with melodrama in the last third, "I Am Love," fails to keep its identity intact, and by the end we're left wondering if we care at all about the fates of the main characters.
Grade: 3/5
Thursday, July 29, 2010
The Ghost Writer
"The Ghost Writer"
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Pierce Brosnan, Olivia Williams, Kim Cattrall
Directed by: Roman Polanski
128 minutes
There is something admirable and perhaps elegant about Polanski's latest film, "The Ghost Writer." Having missed out on it during its early 2010 release, I'm now starting to catch up on some of the titles I missed during the first quarter of the year, "The Ghost Writer," is indeed one of the hidden gems of early 2010. The screenwriter of the film, Richard Harris, is in fact the person who wrote the book the film is adapted from. I imagine much wasn't lost in translation.
The story is stuff we've seen before, a ghost writer, played by McGregor finds himself way in over his head once he starts to re-write the memoirs for a former British Prime Minister played by Brosnan. The film plays best as a political thriller, but has the feel of a 70's film plagued with government and social paranoia. McGregor, who fits perfectly into these kinds of roles, rather than a miscast action star, turns in respectable work alongside his supporting cast. Before the ghost was assigned the job, an old and loyal friend of Lang's was assigned with writing the memoirs, his fate, which we learn early, provides the ghost with the job.
The film takes place on the Prime Minister Stephen Lang's isolated and remote estate in the US. This is where the ghost writer will draw out crucial information from Lang and try to put together a coherent memoir that Lang and his wife Ruth (Williams) will be proud of. Back in London, there is a watchful and focused eye on the assignment, as the ghost's editors are pushing for a 2 week deadline. Lang isn't exactly the beacon of honesty and integrity as he might think, he's currently under investigation for war crimes during his past stint in office. This act is one of the many that propel the story, and turn an ordinary narrative into something more.
As the film progresses, the ghost starts to uncover little secrets and tidbits about Lang's past that cause him to question what he's actually caught up in. The best thing about "The Ghost Writer," and its tiny little world of mystery and deceit is how Polanski manages to make a very adult film, one where guns aren't fired, but one where adults talk, and conversation, albeit some exposition serves as the groundwork for the film. Polanski's direction is tight and assured, and the cast are always reliable. Olivia Williams as Lang's mysterious wife is especially good, and has been singled out my some other critics as well for her performance. Kim Cattrall also shows up, while her accent may not be top notch, she actually holds her own with these veterans. Tom Wilkinson has a couple scenes, but he always delivers.
"The Ghost Writer," is nothing great, but simply a welcoming entry into Polanski's filmography. It has the right whit, dark humor, and angst about itself which keeps it chugging along when not much is happening. The last shot of the film fits perfectly into everything that we've seen prior to it, and is a fitting coda to a film Hitchcock would have been proud of.
Grade: 3.5/5
Friday, July 23, 2010
The Runaways
"The Runaways"
Starring: Kristen Stewart, Dakota Fanning, Michael Shannon
Directed by: Floria Sigismondi
106 minutes
Raw in its appeal and style as a coming of age story of two lost rockers searching for identity is "The Runaways." A miscalculated effort that relies on a mediocre script and two less than stellar performances from Kristen Stewart and her counterpart Dakota Fanning.
Stewart as Joan Jett and Fanning as Cherie Currie don't quite fit into their respective roles. Stewart's performance feels more natural, and unlike Fanning, is believable with her line delivery and signature ticks. Fanning may still be caught up in the films she grew up making, rather than running with this material, her performance stalls the film. The film, written and directed by Floria Sigismondi has an MTV approach which lacks any resonance or most importantly, any nostalgic take away which should this type of film should strive for. It would have been interesting to see a more minimal approach, much like Anton Corbijn's film "Control," which chronicled the doomed rocker Ian Curtis.
We start in 1975 where rock is dominated by the likes of Bowie and others, a time where a female rock band can be exploited by any ambitious brain in the business. Enter Kim Fowley, played by the genius Michael Shannon, who literally holds this film together. Fowley is an eccentric record producer who knows all the angels and is the one who pairs Jett and Currie together. Shannon's presence alone steals scenes, he brings what every role calls for, and while his character's arc is overly repetitive, Shannon has no problem stealing this film from his female counterparts.
The script inevitably plays it safe, there are no surprises to be had. We watch the rise, the downfall, and the happy moment of semi-redemption at the end. There are times in the film where Fowley barks orders to the band to be more nasty, unforgiving, and manly while performing. If only Sigismondi got these pep talks, "The Runaways," could have become more than its final result, something that the real life Jett and Currie would probably shrug off and move on with their day.
Grade: 2.5/5
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Inception
"Inception"
Starring: Leonardo Dicaprio, Joseph Gordon Levitt, Ellen Page, Cillian Murphy, Tom Hardy, Ken Watanabe, Marion Cotilliard, Tom Berenger, Dileep Rao
Directed by: Christopher Nolan
146 minutes
After two proper viewings of this Summer's already most talked about film, which as I'm writing this, has only been out for four days, I'm ready to relay images and ideas into words. Most of the critics and bloggers who have already written and posted their reviews have taken a great liking to the film. Some, believe it's a mishmash of ideas gone completely astray. There seems to be no middle ground in terms of the general reactions of viewers, you're either really involved in what the film as to offer, or you can't invest yourself into the world Christopher Nolan has created.
At its heart, "Inception" is a heist film, some detractors have reacted negatively to the film following some of the tropes and themes of that specific genre, Peter Travers from Rolling Stone proclaimed the film as "James Bond meets The Matrix." It has some scenes reminiscent of a Bond film, and some of the same cinematic laws as "The Matrix," but "Inception" is its own beast, and Nolan's own original and daring creation.
At the beginning of the film, we are quickly introduced to Dom Cobb (Dicaprio) and his work. By the looks and feel, the film takes place sometime in the near future where Corporate espionage is at the forefront of global business market. Key players are looking to gain a leg up on competition and will do anything to come out successful.
Cobb is a master extractor, the best in the business at entering into people's subconscious and learning their secrets, he trades this information to the assumed highest bidder seeking the information. For reasons the film goes on to explain later, Cobb has been extradited from the states where his two young children yearn for him. An ambitious businessman named Saito (Watanabe) comes to Cobb with an offer that will wipe his records clean if the proposed job is executed. Saito proposes inception to Cobb, which entails breaking into someones mind and planting an idea that the subject will think they developed themselves. The subject is Robert Fischer, heir to a powerful company that Saito wants diminished. Revealing anymore about the job would be a disservice.
The first act of the film is where detractors are picking at to find flaws. Many complain of excessive exposition that spoon feeds the audience. Sure, there is a way to tell the audience less, but the screenplay doesn't go completely out of the way to guide audiences. As the film moves along, its layers rapidly reveal themselves. The exposition gently introduces the viewer to the laws and rules of the films universe.
Cobb develops a team that will perform this mission. Some of the young faces include Ariadne (Page), a brilliant architect, Arthur (Gordon Levitt), the stone faced point man to Cobb, Eames, (Hardy) a master forger, and Yusef, (Rao) a master chemist. The team must infiltrate Fischer's mind and plant the idea in a limited time frame for the mission to work.
The execution of the films many scenes is what makes "Inception" a better than average heist film mixed with some heavy sci-fi themes. Nolan is able to bend back the top of a skyline as the architect Ariadne would imagine it. Trains running through busy streets, a zero gravity fight in a hotel hallway that steals the show. But, Nolan has much to learn in regards to shooting action. Taking a look back at other action scenes that Nolan has constructed, even in "The Dark Knight," their is no clear cohesion or unity within the shot, it's hard to process who is where, and what is going on. This rears its head again in this film, some shootout scenes are hard to decipher, but there are only one or two that stick out.
Not only does the film plays with dreams, but also with memory. There is a key subplot involving Cobb and his wife Mal (Cotilliard) that gives the film its emotional identity. Some critics have called the film cold, but this particular relationship and the arc that it provides is always interesting and works well. Cotilliard's unstable Mal is given little screen time, but is a true presence in the film.
Their are some other key actors cast in the film, with little screentime they're used properly to round out the cast. Michael Caine plays Cobb's understanding father in law, Tom Berenger shows up as a counselor to Robert Fischer, and Pete Postlethwaite plays Robert's father Maurice. Mostly all of the cast are on their game here, each has little back story, but with the films aggressive pacing it would have slowed the adrenaline shot the film provides. There is much more to say, but the film is all about going in fresh and adapting to its tone and nature. Many secrets await the unknowing viewers and their eager curiosity. With a film like this, many are seeing it just to keep up with the conversation.
"Inception" is nowhere near a perfect film, but its positives outweigh its obvious, but well intentioned flaws in a strong way. Christopher Nolan has always crafted stories where the main players are obsessives looking to find redemption, with "Inception," Dom Cobb is no different, and its an extreme pleasure following his team and their mission inside of this maze filled frenzy where anything and everything are possible, the true essence of cinema.
Grade: 4/5
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
"The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo"
Starring: Michael Nyqvist, Noomi Rapace
Directed by: Niels Arden Oplev
152 minutes
While "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," is the first film in the "Millennium Trilogy," I couldn't possibly imagine viewing the next two installments with any sort of excitement or curiosity. This first installment, based off the best selling book of the same name introduces its viewer into a cold, wintry setting, where Gothic hackers, tainted journalists, and powerful families all face off in a dull and hollow procedural. The tone and style of the film is appropriately dark, but the gratuitous violence and rape don't propel the story forward or serve any purpose, it's just there to shock. While the good acting is the last line of defense from the film becoming totally forgettable , none of the key characters have interesting back stories, arcs, or traits worth caring about. "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," tries to be shocking, powerful, and surprising, but it can get out of its own way. With two more sequels slated to round out the trilogy, one can only imagine if the dragon girl and her plight will somehow seem relevant or even a little bit involving, I'm guessing not.
Grade: 2/5
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Exit Through the Gift Shop
"Exit Through the Gift Shop"
Starring: Banksy, Thierry Guetta
Narrated by: Rhys Ifans
Directed by: Banksy
87 minutes
The beauty of the film "Exit Through the Gift Shop" is how no one knows who the films joke is on, or even if there is a joke. The documentary starts by examining an eccentric French shopkeeper named Thierry Guetta. Obsessed with videotaping everything, Guetta gets involved with the lesser known counter culture of graffiti artists. Fascinated by their work, Guetta follows around several well known underground artists as they perform their work.
Becoming more and more involved in the scene, Guetta decides he'll make a documentary with the hundreds and hundreds of hours he has saved. His ultimate goal is to track down the infamous artist known as "Banksy." The film grows rather intriguing as Bansky happens to contact Guetta, after this interaction and subsequent friendship, the film grows from examining one man's obsession with the underground art world to an outrageous comedy, where the tables are turned on Guetta, as Banksy himself makes a documentary on Guetta.
That is the basic outline for the film, going any further and revealing the certain surprises and nuances would be a disservice to viewers who know little of the film. Thierry Guetta is the vessel who immediately gets the audience interested in the world of these underground artists. As the film opens, Guetta is a normal, identifiable guy with a family and an unusual passion, his journey over the years is an odd and hilarious head-shaker. One who doesn't have particular interest or knowledge on the culture will be intrigued in no time as the film informs, entertains, and ultimately makes us ponder the value and meaning of art, and whether beauty is truly in the eye of the beholder
The film grows even more fascinating after it concludes, the viewer is left wondering whether whey they just saw is real, or an elaborate hoax by the filmmaker and others involved. "Exit Through the Gift Shop," can't be missed for its perplexing nature and satirical tone.
Grade: 4.5/5
Monday, July 5, 2010
A Single Man
"A Single Man"
Starring: Colin Firth, Julianne Moore, Matthew Goode, Nicholas Hoult
Directed by: Tom Ford
99 minutes
Tom Ford's "A Single Man" is a polished character study of a grieving college professors attempt to get through a single day with the death of his gay partner lingering in his mind. The professor is played by the likable Colin Firth, a 1950's model for education, with his scholarly look, and English accent, George feels useless to the world without Jim, played by Matthew Goode.
As the film opens, Firth's character George explains how waking up was never his thing, now, waking up with the past memories of his former lover is wearing on him. He packs a handgun in his briefcase and plans on offing himself before the days end. His senses are heightened as he notices things he never did before, like the distinct scent of perfume on a woman, or the glistening body of a shirtless male in gym class, well, he probably has noticed that before.
Ford's eye for the bold and the beautiful is laid on thick in most of the scenes, but this isn't a burden. "A Single Man," contains beautiful photography which elevates the film past its somewhat pedestrian narrative. It isn't nearly as engaging as it ought to be, and its third act slows when it should already have its viewer invested. It's not that I don't like the film, I admire Firth's brave and forthcoming performance, but it isn't something I would re-visit anytime soon.
The film does do a good job of showing the pressures of a gay man in the 1950's, this, along with small hints of Cold War hysteria, add to the particular time period of the film. As I mentioned before, Firth is quite good, and his Oscar nomination was rightly deserved. Firth maintains the balance of the film, without him, or even with another lead actor, the film could have gone astray . Julianne Moore plays George's past love and long time friend Charly, a chain smoking and glamorous Brit who lives next door to George. Moore's character has little to do but drink and smoke, she's involved in only a couple of scenes, and brings little to the narrative.
"A Single Man" is not a great film, or even a very good one, it's Tom Ford's vision through and through and that is something to admire. Ford's willingness to make films that define him won't go unnoticed, but hopefully upon his next attempt, he tries a little harder to engage his audience past a foreseeable character arc, and a clunky narrative.
Grade: 3/5
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Dogtooth
"Dogtooth"
Starring: Christos Stergioglou, Michele Valley, Aggeliki Papoulia, Mary Tsoni, Hristos Passalis
"Dogtooth" has the slight hint of Michael Haneke film, but its own identity and weirdness. It tells the shockingly bizarre, yet bleakly funny story of three teenagers living under the strict rule of their parents in an isolated country estate. The kids, who don't have names, live in the most guarded, and protected manner, you would think the film was taking place on another planet. For all we know, it is. Each day they're taught vocabulary by a voice recording. The words that they're taught are words that extended past the family construct, for instance, sea means armchair, zombie means flower, etc.
The father is the only one that is allowed to leave the house, he works or perhaps owns some manufacturing plant that pays for his modern day house and accompanying pool. His wife isn't treated with the same tyrannical disservice as the kids, she's just as guilty as her husband, but plays dumb in front of the children.
The film develops and moves with danger and horror on its horizon, most of it very profane and vulgar, but it's certainly called for and not abused. Once a female security guard enters the household to provide sexual favors for the son, all hell breaks loose, and the family's balance is heavily thrown off course.
Many will be turned off by the films nature and tone. This is foreign art-house cinema at its best, and most jaw-dropping, a true stunner, with guts and laughs to spare.
Grade: 4/5
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Toy Story 3
"Toy Story 3"
Starring: Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Joan Cusack, Ned Beatty, Don Rickels, Michael Keaton
The magic and allure of Pixar films have never been at a more palpable high. Coming off a best picture nomination with "Up," the studio is widely known to produce the best, most consistent films, that can appeal to every demographic. In quite possibly the worst Summer for popcorn flicks in over 5 years, "Toy Story 3," arrives and manages to produce true escapism, Pixar has saved the day once again.
The last installment of the series was way back in 1999, we last left our characters as they were thrown into the misfortunes of a toy collector and his obsession with Woody. Now, the lifetime owner of the toys, Andy, is grown up and ready for college. As the film opens, Woody and company hatch a last ditch effort to attempt to make themselves not so forgettable in the eyes of Andy. Their best bet and lonely future may reside in the attic, a fitting place for the past remains of a growing boy.
Tom Hanks and Tim Allen reprise their roles as the voices of Woody and Buzz Lightyear, whom fought for most popular toy supremacy in the first installment. Now, along with the rest of the gang, they're shipped off to Sunny Side Daycare Center, which seems like the afterlife for once popular toys. Upon arrival, it seems like not such a bad place after all, in fact, Andy's toys will always have a place where they're noticed and played with. Of course, Woody has other plans after their first go around with the kids doesn't go so well.
The genius of the film is that it takes its time to remind us why we loved the first two installments. It doesn't dwell on past jokes, but re-introduces us to the dynamic identities and humor of each of Andy's toys. We all know Woody is heroic, Buzz is a half-witted but lovable goof, Rex is eager, Slink is loyal, Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head are cynics, Hamm is sarcastic, etc. The beauty is in the writing and the implementation of new jokes and scenarios for these characters.
Once the toys move to Sunny Side, some new and interesting toys are introduced. The main ones include Lotso, the overstuffed pink bear and patriarch of Sunny Side who has a tortured past. Ken, the lanky dreamboat doll voiced by Michael Keaton, whose character the writers must have had the most pleasure writing, and Big Baby, a large doll who does Lotso's dirty work. Lotso appears friendly at first glance , but has other plans for the new toys, placing them second in the pecking order of Sunny Side.
The film turns into a prison break thriller, pitting Andy's toys against the tyrant Lotso and his toys. Can Woody get all of his friends home safely before Andy leaves for college? The film is a nicely paced nostalgic journey spanning 15 years and ending on a breathtaking high note. Only Pixar could have done it, the charm and overall success of the film could earn itself a Best Picture nomination in what is already a fairly weak year for film.
Friday, June 4, 2010
Tetro
"Tetro"
Starring: Vincent Gallo, Alden Enrenreich, Maribel Verdu,
Francis Ford Coppola's "Tetro" is a nice return to form for the 71 year old director, whose last film, "Youth Without Youth" was dismissed by most critics. "Tetro" combines melodrama, family secrets, confessions, sibling rivalry, sins of the father, and many other themes into it's 127 run-time. Coppola, has gone back to his UCLA roots to write this original work which indicates more than a personal account for him.
The film centers on two brothers, Bennie, played by the charismatic and boyish Alden Enrenreich, a near twin to Leonardo Dicaprio, and Tetro played by Vincent Gallo. The film starts as Bennie flees to Buenos Aires to seek out his long lost brother who he hasn't seen in years. Bennie arrives at Tetro's door seeking answers to his brothers present and past. Tetro lives with his wife Miranda (Verdu) whom takes an immediate innocent liking to Bennie; Tetro disapproves of Bennie's visit altogether as Bennie starts asking questions.
"Tetro" is shot in beautiful black and white, which adds to the mystery and puzzle of the film. It's a straightforward narrative, with revealing flashbacks sprinkled throughout to shed light on Tetro's past. The brothers don't have much in common, except they like unnerving each other, especially Bennie, whom turns Tetro's life upside down with his arrival in Buenos Aires. Coppola gets to the bare roots of family betrayal, tragedy, and melodrama, but takes his time telling this familiar yet textured story.
The story of the two brother derives from a fractured lineage, much of which is unknown to the innocent Bennie. Gallo portrays Tetro with tortured eyes and a broken soul, but it's hard for the viewer to sometimes sympathize with his cold nature. But, it's Enrenreich who is the stand out here. His natural looks combined with his acting talent mark him as an actor to look out for. His Bennie would not exist without Tetro, and vise versa. They're two souls marked by past digressions, can they escape and land on higher ground? This is what Coppola asks throughout.
Coppola also enjoys the idea of life imitating art, this is perhaps the underlying theme of "Tetro," which feels like Coppola's most autobiographical work. It's a true return for him, and we're happy to have him back making honest and heartfelt material.
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