There’s a transcendent sequence in the middle of Ryan Coogler’s Sinners where the power of blues music blows apart the boundaries between space and time. A 1930s’ speakeasy concert starts with a few chords on an inherited guitar and then suddenly, with a fluid camera move, is layered with inspirations past and present until ghosts and premonitions share the same space as the roof is set ablaze. It’s as bold and earnest and symbolically rich a gesture as any sequence a Hollywood genre picture has ever given us. It’s also the highest high in a high-powered movie—a musical and muscular and confident piece of craft. Coogler gives us a historical dark fantasy Deep South vampire musical and plays fair with each component part as he makes them a coherent whole. It’s a film that flows with The Blues, a heartfelt yowl of pain so potent it summons the supernatural. It’s also a film that moves with an urgent craftsmanship that propels its images and ideas forward to populist crowd-pleasing effect. Coogler has long been one of our most promising young directors. His based-on-a-true-story Sundance debut Fruitvale Station is a warm, intimate real-life tragedy. His following franchise efforts somehow center that same intimacy, with Creed finding new nuanced character studies stepping out of the shadow of Stallone’s Rocky, and his Black Panthers tackling messy sociopolitical and moving interpersonal concerns within the slam-bang explosions of CG expected from such entries. So of course Sinners shares the recognizable thematic preoccupations of a Coogler picture. It’s about legacy, lineage, protecting one’s community with a tension between insularity and inspiration, fraught family dynamics, grief, manipulation, and the light of mortal goodness in the depths of immortal darkness. And it displays these themes in massive, iconographic shots in filmic IMAX frames—a deeply satisfying crackling warmth imbuing its story with the personal touch—set to a crunchy, textured, regional score from the reliably excellent, and surprising, Ludwig Goransson.
It’s a visually and sonically enveloping blockbuster, suggesting an enormous world beyond its margins while balancing the genuine emotionality of characters’ earnest communications with the outsized metaphors of supernatural invasion. The first half of the picture follows twin gangsters (Coogler’s regular star Michael B. Jordan in a neat dual role) returned to their rural hometown from a stint in the Chicago mob wars. They’ve escaped with enough money and booze to build their own juke joint on the outskirts of sharecropper’s cotton acres. We watch as they set out recruiting people who’ll help them with their grand opening—an innocent cousin (Miles Caton), an ex-wife (Wunmi Mosaku), a bouncer (Omar Miller), a drunk pianist (Delroy Lindo), bartenders (Li Jun Li and Yao), and some attractive partiers (Hailee Steinfeld and Jayme Lawson). Their business is intended to be a refuge from Jim Crow oppression and hard work in the fields. But their solidarity is threatened by the vampire (Jack O’Connell) who hears the call of their music and demands to be let in. Coogler frames the conflict in eerie slow building to spasms of violence. In its melancholic final moments, quiet after the loud catharsis, we see
a young man, changed by his experiences of that fateful night, fully
embodying a memorable observation of Bram Stoker's Dracula: "No man knows till he has suffered from the night how sweet and dear to his heart and eye the morning can be." The movie’s moral seriousness and storytelling seduction are clearly in conversation with others of its blood-sucking genre—Kathryn Bigelow’s Near Dark’s roving rural vampires and John Carpenter’s Vampires’ pseudo-mythic realism, and Robert Rodriguez’s From Dusk Till Dawn’s giddy fang reveals. But it’s all Coogler in its crackling synthesis that’s a hugely satisfying popcorn experience and an honest expression of his thematic and stylistic concerns. It uses the tropes well, and has a tense escalation from the logic of their clever deployment, cutting on actions, and cross-cutting with a teasing sense of build and release that matches its emotional skill. To see it is to see one of our best young filmmakers step fully into his power.
Showing posts with label Hailee Steinfeld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hailee Steinfeld. Show all posts
Monday, April 21, 2025
Friday, June 2, 2023
Great Power: SPIDER-MAN: ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE
Plunging head first into the tangled webs of superhero canon, Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse tells, improbably, the best superhero story the big screen has seen in ages. It does so by turning around and directly confronting the very nature of its telling. It features one of its antagonists sounding a lot like one of those whiny fandoms that complains about every deviation from the formula, and every divergence from the previously established canon. This guy gives a serious, glowering monologue in which he lays out the idea that certain characters simply must die, because that’s the way these stories are supposed to go. They die in every story, in every timeline, to serve the same purpose. In our world, that satisfies the conservative fanboy in the audience, and, indeed, a middling serving of cameos and connections is enough to keep the whole machinery of these franchises turning. But this group of filmmakers, including screenwriters Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (The LEGO Movie) and co-director Kemp Powers (Soul) among dozens of talented collaborators, are thinking beyond that here. What Across the Spider-Verse does by placing this idea at the center of its conflict is stirring stuff—and the kind of bold, inventive, imaginative storytelling that these sorts of stories are supposed to be about in the first place.This clever eruption of animation and excitement builds beautifully off the distinctive pleasures of its predecessor, Into the Spider-Verse, that introduced us to dimension-hopping Spider-Men through the eyes of Miles Morales (Shameik Moore), a Brooklyn teenager bit by a radioactive spider. So far, so familiar to the Peter Parkers we’ve known, albeit with a cool cultural specificity that is a modern-day, teenaged, half-Black, half-Puerto Rican New Yorker. But because his special spider fell through a hole between parallel universes, it immediately involved him meeting a selection of alternate Spideys—a Peter Parker (Jake Johnson), an anthropomorphic pig, a Japanese mech suit, and so on, including a crush-worthy spider-powered Gwen Stacy (Hailee Steinfeld). That movie had its instantly lovable and sympathetic hero in Miles—as at home in his sleek form-fitting black suit as he is in Nikes and a hoodie—fitted in a stylish animated world that had a fluid hand-drawn-over-CG aesthetic complete with comic book affectations like faded overlapped multi-dot colors and zippy split-screen and text boxes with narration and onomatopoetic emphasis. The Spider-people from other worlds came trailing their own distinct styles—jagged CG and jumpy anime and inky black and white and so on. The sequel starts with Miles alone in his own universe, where he has plenty of quotidian Spidey troubles juggling school, family, and his secret identity. Soon enough, though, a seemingly dopey villain—voice with blasĂ© nefariousness by Jason Schwartzman—opens damaging portals between universes, and it all tumbles into potential chaos again. The story quickly bests the original vision in two directions at once—digging deeper into Miles’ world and inner life, while exploding out in a dazzling variety, swirling with inventive style and cultural melange as a secret inter-dimensional squad (led by Oscar Isaac and Issa Rae) senses trouble in the multiverse.
The result is a movie that’s a non-stop visual delight surrounding its sympathetic core. Each new world feels pulled from a different designer. There’s a scratchy parchment renaissance character, a Brit punk Spidey sketched on rumpled paper and traveling via collage, stiff-armed Hanna-Barbera style vintage beings, brief glimpses of stop-motion and even live-action worlds, and, my favorites, a dazzlingly detailed Indian metropolis and a world where wet watercolor backgrounds drip expressionistically as characters try not to cry. But at the center of it is one kid, trying his best to do right for his family, his friends, his crush, and his city. And isn’t that so authentically Spider-Man? There’s genuine capital-R Romance here, in all the outsized adolescent emotions that this particular superhero has always done so well. Think about the best moments in any previous Spider-Man movie. It’s not the action, per se. It’s the beats between, where characters really matter, and the stakes are built, not out of the world ending, but about a particular person’s place in the world. This movie knows that deeply—allowing for long scenes to breathe and accumulate real investment in the relationships on display in voice performances that are universally warm and committed. For all its wild and creative action—and there’s more here in even the first sequence than we get in most full length spectacles of this size—there’s the beating heart yearning for connections. Every twist and complication as the story expands and explodes earns its weight from this source—a boy who wants to make his parents proud, impress the girl, and save, not the world, but his world. This is Spider-Man storytelling at its finest, including a great cliffhanger that left me eager for the next issue.
The result is a movie that’s a non-stop visual delight surrounding its sympathetic core. Each new world feels pulled from a different designer. There’s a scratchy parchment renaissance character, a Brit punk Spidey sketched on rumpled paper and traveling via collage, stiff-armed Hanna-Barbera style vintage beings, brief glimpses of stop-motion and even live-action worlds, and, my favorites, a dazzlingly detailed Indian metropolis and a world where wet watercolor backgrounds drip expressionistically as characters try not to cry. But at the center of it is one kid, trying his best to do right for his family, his friends, his crush, and his city. And isn’t that so authentically Spider-Man? There’s genuine capital-R Romance here, in all the outsized adolescent emotions that this particular superhero has always done so well. Think about the best moments in any previous Spider-Man movie. It’s not the action, per se. It’s the beats between, where characters really matter, and the stakes are built, not out of the world ending, but about a particular person’s place in the world. This movie knows that deeply—allowing for long scenes to breathe and accumulate real investment in the relationships on display in voice performances that are universally warm and committed. For all its wild and creative action—and there’s more here in even the first sequence than we get in most full length spectacles of this size—there’s the beating heart yearning for connections. Every twist and complication as the story expands and explodes earns its weight from this source—a boy who wants to make his parents proud, impress the girl, and save, not the world, but his world. This is Spider-Man storytelling at its finest, including a great cliffhanger that left me eager for the next issue.
Sunday, November 20, 2016
Teen Life: THE EDGE OF SEVENTEEN
It’s hard being a teen. Brining in hormones transforming a
person from child to adult heightens emotional stakes. Every decision seems to
weigh heavily on the future, relationships feel like they have life and death consequences,
urges can lead to reckless decisions. Caterpillars are lucky no one can see
them inside the cocoon. For us unlucky humans, we grow into new bodies, new
thoughts, and new behaviors with gangly guesswork. Part of Nadine’s problem in The Edge of Seventeen is thinking she’s
the only one hit hard by teenage changes. She compares herself to her handsome
older brother – popular, sporty, fit, charming – and comes up short. She’s
awkward, disheveled, with bouts of acne. And she has only one friend, the same
one since second grade when they bonded over – metaphor alert! – a caterpillar
they plan to raise together only to suffocate a few hours later. All these
years later, and Nadine is sure she’ll be like that caterpillar: snuffed out in
one way or another before she can flower into the confident young adult she
doubts she’ll ever be.
Hailee Steinfeld stars, and it’s her best role since her
debut in the Coen’s True Grit. She
has a perfect face to play this exasperated young woman coming apart at the
seams. She has a sympathetic openness cutting easily into sharp edges of pain
and meanness. She’s able to send her dark eyes flitting between beleaguered and
bitter, humble and harried, open fumbling flirtations, deep pain, and howling
rage. She always struggled with feelings of isolation and loneliness, but now,
in the years following her father’s death, she’s been lost in a fog of
depression as well. Snark is her primary coping mechanism, throwing up a layer
of derision, eye rolling, and mean quips to protect herself from further
emotional damage. She affects an attitude of carelessness, because it’d hurt
more if people knew she cared. But then her only friend (Haley Lu Richardson)
starts dating her brother (Blake Jenner), and she finds herself adrift, no one
to turn to. Her mother (Kyra Sedgwick) is too busy, and too lost in her own
problems, to connect. Even her favorite teacher (Woody Harrelson) has only
deeply sarcastic rebuttals to her flawed attempts to ask for advice.
As writer-director Kelly Fremon Craig unfolds the warm and
prickly comic teen drama around Nadine, she captures an authentic adolescent
attitude of perpetual crisis. We’re joining the lead’s life at a moment of
snowballing emotional pain, which has its roots in sadness of the past, but
escalates now at the brink of adulthood. She’s all-too-aware of her struggles,
and in fear that no one cares. She thinks she’s the only person with problems
this bad, even though her mom’s weak advice is to remember that everyone’s as
empty as she is. (“They’re all just better at pretending.”) A low-key, dead-on
portrayal of high school depression and angst, the movie proceeds in funny
bantering exchanges between characters as Nadine huffs and sulks through her
latest dramas. She’s witty, perceptive, intelligent, but the sort that leads a
teen to pull back from peers, explaining away her self-imposed exile through self-loathing
masking a feeling of superiority. (In one deeply sad moment, she confesses, “I
just realized I have to spend the rest of my life with me.”) This feels far
more real and raw than the usual teen movie constructions, and lets the comedy
fall easily into cutting spikes of sadness.
There’s a feeling of honesty permeating the film’s
decisions. Craig knows how to duck and weave in the teen comedy formula, when
to fulfill expectations and when to subvert them. Jokes land hard, then
emotions hit harder, because it marries the sharp comic timing of a Mean Girls or Easy A with the more nuanced emotional dexterity and direct
dramatic appeal of, say, a James L. Brooks film. (He was a producer here.) It
starts on the level of wardrobe, with Steinfeld wearing believably haphazard
adorable rumpled teen wardrobe: baggy sweatshirts, cute clashing patterns,
eccentric layering. She’s an understandable relatable teenage girl,
recognizable in her look and convincing in the psychology driving her. She’s
clearly suffering, and there’s no easy answer to any of her problems. Some will
fade with age and maturity. Others will take a little more work. And Craig’s
screenplay is wise about allowing her to come to realizations on her own terms,
without expecting an easy solution to end the film on an artificial
happily-ever-after.
This isn’t a smartest-teen-in-the-room movie. It’s sweet and
sour, candid and heartbreaking, often very funny, but true to the way real
teenagers talk. And it surrounds Nadine with a whole family unhappy in their
own ways, complicating what might appear at first glance to be standard stock
types with smart casting and clever writing. We first see the brittle mom, cool
brother, torn friend, cute crush (both the Good Guy (Hayden Szeto) and Bad Boy
(Alexander Calvert) varieties), and cranky teacher as the best possible version
of what you’d expect from their apparent narrative function, tangential to our
lead’s world. But soon they’re complicated with compassionate, empathetic
nuance. It’s a lot like Kenneth Lonergan’s Margaret
in that way, another movie about a girl who learns that she has an effect
on others, too. They’re not just figures in her life. She’s in theirs. This new
awareness is the dawning of maturity, and though it’s not easy to get there,
it’s fulfilling to make even one more step in the right direction.
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Spy Who Came In From the High School: BARELY LETHAL
In no way does Barely
Lethal work. It is a failure on every level, an insult to the intelligence
of anyone who’d see it.
Mere minutes into the runtime, the inconsistencies, inadequacies, and imbecilities
began piling up. It is completely devoid of interest, which hurts all the more
because its concept is marginally clever and has the right cast to make it
work. It’s a mashup between a high school comedy and a spy movie, with young
people Hailee Steinfeld (True Grit),
Sophie Turner (Game of Thrones), Dove
Cameron (Liv and Maddie), and adults
including Samuel L. Jackson, Jessica Alba, and Rachael Harris. Doesn’t that
sound like a fun time? You can imagine how it could be sold. It’s Mean Girls meets Kingsman! It’s Spy Kids
meets The Guest! If only.
The plot concerns a secret school for orphan girls where
they’re trained as spies and sent on missions. It’s a skimpily populated
program, seemingly run out of an empty warehouse. And how many operations do we
see? Well, one girl steals a briefcase. Later, they catch a villain by flying
overhead and lassoing her. That’s it. The expectations are apparently so strenuous,
though, our lead (Steinfeld) fakes her own death and enrolls in high school as
a foreign exchange student. She binge-watches classic teen comedies to prep, so
obviously she makes wacky mistakes! Whoopsy-daisy. It’s also a mistake to show
us clips from Clueless and the like
right at the top, knowing how terrible the next 80 minutes will be. It reminds
us of better options.
Anyway, the young woman discovers high school stress is
totally hard, what with weird teachers, awkward flirting, and petty jealousies. (Nothing you haven't seen in high school comedies before.) The movie’s one funny observation is that secret agent business is easier than
12th grade. Alas, first-time feature screenwriter John D’Arco and director Kyle
Newman (of Taylor Swift’s “Style” video) develop their concept in the most
routine way possible, with some low-rent farce, then a few horribly shot,
awkwardly edited, phony baloney action beats. The girl’s employer (Jackson,
seemingly the only person running the organization) soon discovers her
whereabouts. Then, there’s a perfunctory showdown with the villain, who Alba
plays like a bored soccer mom in what’s probably the funniest and most
consistent performance in the ensemble. She gets that this whole thing is dumb
with a capital Duh. Everyone else is as bored as I was. Jackson gives the most
lifeless line readings of his career. He could’ve been shooting his scenes on
an idle corner of Avengers green
screen during lunch breaks.
Forced frivolity abounds in sequences indifferently dumped
onto the screen. The kids are enthusiastic enough, but given such mealy mush to
speak it’s a wonder they got through a single take without gargling. The
writing is overeager straining comedy. It’s a blur of lines tilting towards
self-conscious references and over-articulated dirtiness. It's grating. Late in the movie, one girl brags about
her figure saying, “It’s P90X, bitch!” To which her rival replies, “More like P90X-tra
large, bitch!” First of all, it’s not funny. Second of all, it’s inaccurate.
Third of all, it’s repetitive. And why can’t even a terrible movie like this
one take its great, potentially clever, concept and run with it instead of
devolving into pathetically limp body-shaming snark? Yeesh.
Oh, this is so incompetent. Nothing works. Nothing hangs
together. It lacks a coherent point of view, or even narrative momentum. It’s a
weak jumble of overlit, lazily blocked, haphazardly cut scenes. There’s no
pulse, no imagination, no joy. Best-case scenario, this was a bigger picture scaled
down to fit a tiny budget. Too bad that only revealed the lack of ingenuity and
creativity all the more. There aren’t thousands of extras or slick CGI, or even
good old resourcefulness, to mask its bankrupt nature. I cringed with
second-hand embarrassment for a talented cast paid to work on a project so far
beneath them I hoped they didn’t get vertigo.
Friday, May 15, 2015
Sing It On Again: PITCH PERFECT 2
Pitch Perfect 2
has a winning sense of pleasant reunion. The sequel to the surprise hit a
capella college comedy from a few years ago carries with it a delight to be
back. Surely no one expected that sloppy but likable little comedy to do well
enough to support a follow up, but here we are. It returns to the world of the
Barton Bellas, an all-female a capella group made up of unlikely misfits last
seen winning the national title. Picking up three years later, Becca (Anna
Kendrick), Chloe (Brittany Snow), Fat Amy (Rebel Wilson), and the rest (Ester
Dean, Hana Mae Lee, Alexis Knapp, Chrissie Fit) are on the verge of graduating,
but find their final year off to a bad start with an embarrassing performance in which one of
their members accidentally moons the Obamas. This gets them kicked out of the
world of a capella, setting up another underdog scenario to be overcome by
winning the World Championship to get reinstated. Once again, the young women
must learn to work together and create a great routine, all the while dealing
with their individual eccentricities.
Luckily, screenwriter Kay Cannon isn’t content to repeat the
structure of the first movie. In fact, she seems to realize generic let’s-put-on-a-show
and campus comedy plotlines were holding the otherwise amiable predecessor
back. She knows for an encore the audience just wants to hang out with likable
performers doing their shtick in between good music. The result is a movie
that’s looser, longer, sillier, with more music and funnier lines. It’s the rare
comedy sequel that’s actually an across-the-board improvement instead of a safe
repeat of a known formula. The need to win the big championship is a climactic
goal, but everything leading up to it is simply excuses for pleasant banter, funny
supporting roles, silly gags, cameos, and fun musical numbers, featuring everything
from Beyoncé and Miley Cyrus to Sir Mix-a-Lot and Kris Kross.
Making her
directorial debut, Elizabeth Banks (who also, with John Michael Higgins,
returns as a color commentator) moves the proceedings with a good pace and fine
eye for smooth pop filmmaking. It’s episodic, with plenty of digressions
including romances (Skylar Astin and Adam DeVine make appearances) and
professional concerns (Keegan-Michael Key shows up as a record producer). But
it never drags as the bright, bouncy, colorful, and consistently amusing movie
zips along on slick competence providing good-natured, high-spirited,
undemanding entertainment. We see a series of misadventures, from clashes with
the terrifyingly perfect German group Das Sound Machine to a new freshman
recruit (Hailee Steinfeld) struggling to fit in, and an underground a capella
battle held in a rich fan’s basement (featuring everyone from Reggie Watts to
John Hodgman to a few Green Bay Packers).
It could be scattered, but there’s a nice emotional
throughline involving female friendships and the group’s importance to its
members that gets a heartwarming payoff in their final performance. Along the
way, Banks and her cast find funny bits of business in every scene. Whether
we’re with Snoop Dogg recording a Christmas album or camping in the woods on a
team-building exercise, it’s enjoyable enough to be worth the detour. It’s only
a matter of time before Wilson crashes in with a loopy one-liner, Kendrick gets
a flustered retort, or one of the supporting players pipes in with a goofy
barb. The movie plays to everyone’s strength in that way, before drawing all
the voices together in beautiful harmony for ensemble numbers that really sing.
They work well together, and as a result it’s fun to be around them no matter
where the plot takes them. With a favorable hit-to-miss joke ratio, this is a
big crowd-pleasing comedy that’s essentially nice and easy to like.
Sunday, July 13, 2014
One Hit Wonder: BEGIN AGAIN
Late in Begin Again,
a songwriter talks to her rock star ex-boyfriend and boils down the
trouble with their failed relationship to a matter of production on a track off
of his debut album. She disappointedly tells him that he’s turned what she
wrote as a simple ballad into an overproduced piece of arena rock. Her song,
she says, has been “buried in the mix.” She may as well be talking about the
movie, which has at its core a small, sweet nugget of an idea and proceeds to
thoroughly bury it under treacly artifice. It’s a movie about creative
inspiration, about how the act of creating music helps its creators work
through issues in their personal lives and find friendships and purpose through
producing something beautiful to share with the world. Too bad, then, that a
movie about the magic of creativity shows so little imagination.
To make matters worse, writer-director John Carney made a
movie that did all of the above, that cut straight to the heart of the matter
and moved people with its beautiful simplicity and great music. It was 2007’s Once, a Dublin street singer Brief Encounter, a lovely little
bittersweet romantic musical. Its leads, musicians Glen Hansard and Markéta
Irglová, poured their hearts out into open performances that ache with pain and
transcendence as their musically inclined characters form meaningful
connections through song. They won a well-deserved Best Original Song Oscar for
their efforts. It’s a movie that made a virtue out of its limited resources by
creating deeply felt characters living simple lives made better by letting them
become the fuel for their artistic endeavors.
Now here’s Carney’s Begin
Again, which plays similar notes, but ends up with little worth listening
to. There’s a shyly talented young singer/songwriter (Keira Knightley) who
reluctantly performs a song in a New York dive bar at which her friend (James
Corden) is playing a gig. An alcoholic record producer (Mark Ruffalo) freshly
fired from his indie label hears her. He approaches her and demands to help her
record an album. She eventually gives in. Since his former colleague (Yasiin
Bey, the artist formerly known as Mos Def) won’t bankroll the project, the two
of them set out to recruit some session musicians willing to work for nothing
and then find authenticity by recording her songs on the street – and in an
alley, on top of a skyscraper, in the subway, and all manner of “real” New York
locales. It’s a straightforward idea. The montages of the band coming together
have a pleasant charge and the leads are charming. But the movie lets them
down.
This simple concept is loaded up with emotional baggage
straight out of the Hollywood melodrama bargain bin. Ruffalo has an ex-wife (Catherine
Keener) who he still loves, and a distant teenage daughter (Hailee Steinfeld)
who wears clingy shirts and tight short shorts because (as actually stated out loud in a movie in 2014) she needs a father
figure more present and encouraging in her life. Knightley has that rocker ex (Adam Levine of Maroon
5) and a flashback charting their relationship. We also meet several flat,
largely superfluous, side characters including a successful musician of some
sort who is played by Cee Lo Green. You’d think he’d have a song or two, but
no. He’s here for a scene and a half of exposition and that’s it. (I guess the
movie can claim it has half of the judges from NBC’s singing competition The Voice.) There’s no sense that any of
these characters have weight. They talk about their backstories and their
feelings, but they don’t wear them. The cast is made up of fine actors (and
Adam Levine). To the extent that it works at all – and it does, for a minute or
two here and there – it’s because of them, but they can’t sell such thin
material all on their own.
It’s shot with an earnest, up-tempo glossiness, and it’s
watchably amiable. But the movie is simply unconvincing. There’s a scene in
which two people listen to a song on headphones in the middle of a crowded
nightclub. How could they possibly hear it? Later, a woman reads the back of a
CD’s case while listening to the music on an iPod. Two industry professionals
call Stevie Wonder and Frank Sinatra “guilty pleasures.” The dramatic
resolution of the making-an-album plotline plays out as a credit cookie and is
a self-flattering ode to the magical hit-making power of the Internet. These
small, bungled details pile up and distract. But at least being so phony helps
throw its sappy triteness into stark relief. The more it insists on the
creative powers of its characters, the less awareness it shows. It’s a
reductive sort of movie that claims to be about inspiration while having none
of it.
At one point, a character tells Ruffalo, “this isn’t Jerry Maguire,” which only goes to
remind the audience how skilled Cameron Crowe is at blending music and drama
into something transcendent, a skill Carney had with Once but is lacking here. Still, the songs,
written by Carney and collaborators, are mostly nice and inoffensive to the ear.
The ensemble has chops (or fakes them well enough) and the songs are at worst
the kind of pleasant guitar-and-piano fare you’d hear as background noise in a
Starbucks. The least of the lyrics are overly stretching in a moody
middle-schooler sort of way. A low-light: “Yesterday I saw a lion kiss a deer /
Turn the page and maybe we’ll find a brand new ending / When we’re dancing in
our tears.” Yeezus, that’s bad. At least the melodies and arrangements go down
easy, and Knightley’s enough of a charmer to disguise those words on first
listen. In such a flimsy dramedy, the songs are never more than welcome distraction
to the grinding gears of plot mechanics. They’re just more missed opportunities
in a film that proves lightning rarely strikes twice.
Friday, November 1, 2013
Bored Game: ENDER'S GAME
Ender’s Game
recalls sci-fi movies of days gone by in which the future entails wearing
matching jumpsuits, walking through glowing grey corridors, staring intently at
touchscreens, and gravely contemplating strategy. Based on the novel of the
same name by virulent homophobe (that’s putting it mildly and has little to no
bearing on the content of the story, but needs to be said nonetheless) Orson
Scott Card, the story takes place far in the future, some fifty years after
aliens attacked our planet and were beaten back by man’s superior military
might. Now young people are picked to enter Battle School, recruited and
trained to eventually become military leaders who will take the battle back to
the alien’s home world, where a preemptive strike will hopefully wipe out any
chance of further conflict. There’s a tricky moral dilemma at the center of the
narrative, but it’s underplayed here in a film that’s quickly obviously a
self-serious Starship Troopers for
dummies.
Our hero is one Ender Wiggins (Hugo’s Asa Butterfield), a boy we’re told early and often is the
best there is. Scowling adults in military garb (Harrison Ford, Viola Davis,
Nonso Anozie) are constantly talking with each other, marveling at how
remarkable a student Ender is, how promising his abilities are, and how much of
their hope for mankind rests on his shoulders. Ender bids a tearful goodbye to
his beloved sister (Abigail Breslin) and is shipped off to Battle School, an
orbiting space station with a nifty zero-gravity bubble in the middle, where
the bulk of the film is given over to watching his classmates and him train,
take classes, exercise, and learn to behave like the child army they’re to
become. He meets kids who like him (Hailee Steinfeld, Aramis Knight) and kids who
don’t like him (Moises Arias, Conor Carroll). But, as we know, Ender’s far and
away the best student. Why? I don’t know, but all the characters keep saying
it.
Maybe it’s not so obvious on the page, but on screen it’s
clear that Ender is a terrible protagonist. I don’t mean that as a value
judgment. It’s merely an assessment of my level of interest. He’s a scrawny,
stoic kid blandly marched up the level of command, told every step of the
promotional ladder that he’s something like a genius. He knows it, too. He’s
just so vacant that when he takes strong stances – mouthing off to Ford or
threatening to quit the program – it’s hard to tell where his character stops
and his plot function begins. It’s a movie that values telling us about
characters over letting the characters be. You could assemble a remarkable
cast, and indeed the filmmakers have, but they can’t do much with material that
involves characters telling each other about each other. By the time Ben
Kingsley shows up covered in Maori tattoos and speaking in an Australian
accent, it’s no surprise that he’s nothing more than yet another plot point.
The adaptation is written and directed by South African
director Gavin Hood who won a Best Foreign Film Oscar for his modest Tsotsi in 2005 before going on to take
the blame for the mess that became X-Men
Origins: Wolverine. (The less said about that the better.) He’s bad at
drawing connections between these characters. It’s not easy to see why we
should care about relationships and supporting characters beyond the fact that
they’re our main characters, played by likable actors and cute kids, and have
hung around the plot for long enough to generate some familiarity. The visuals
around them, though, are nice enough. Hood keeps things sleek and steady, making
it an atypical production that would rather you see the action than feel the
chaos. It’s a good choice. Even as my mind drifted during long scenes of
exposition and flatly stated themes, it’s a film that always looks good, like
something I would’ve totally loved when I was a 12-year-old.
The film was co-financed by visual effects company Digital
Domain, the people responsible for such wonderments of effects work as Titanic, Pirates of the Caribbean, Apollo
13, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and Tron Legacy, just to name a few. When Ender’s Game breaks away from the largely confined corridors of the
Battle School, a place I took to thinking as Boring Space Hogwarts, the
spaceships are generic sci-fi designs done up nicely. The climax, which
involves hundreds of ships spiraling and swarming in deep space, is exciting
and involving, which makes the dramas of kids and commanders in the dénouement
resonate with a bit of a kick. Suddenly there’s meaning, and a real filmic
charge, out of something we’ve seen acted out instead of having simply been
told. That the story has indistinct politics and a fuzzy point of view allows
the story to have its whiz-bang lightshow climax and make us feel bad about it too. Would that the whole film were as exciting as its final moments.
Sunday, October 13, 2013
True Love Never Did Run Smooth: ROMEO AND JULIET
A Shakespeare adaptation has an inescapable feeling of
repetition. That’s not a bad thing, necessarily, provided those behind the
scenes know how to make the text work for them. The main question becomes
whether the new production works. In the case of Romeo and Juliet, there are two scenes that are absolutely crucial
to making a worthy retelling. The first is the balcony scene, the moment where
the audience needs to fully understand the attraction between the star-crossed
lovers. The second crucial scene is the finale, the result of bits of
coincidence that create the conditions for the tragic conclusion and must seem
to flow naturally, reaching a poetic climax of heartbreak. In the newest big
screen adaptation of the play, these scenes worked for me. My heart swelled when Romeo
calls up to Juliet and they speak hushed infatuation. My eyes were a tad wet
when the tale terminates in woe. With those moments locked down, the film can’t
be all bad. The center’s too strong. That Shakespeare knew what he was doing.
This adaptation is a solid work that tells the well-known
story with an earnest and heartfelt approach, tremblingly scored, capably
performed. It was filmed on location in Italy with a cast dashing and gorgeous
in period-piece appropriate clothing, speaking in Masterpiece Theater accents. The immortal narrative of two
households, both alike in dignity, where ancient grudge leads to civil blood
making civil hands unclean, has its inherent interest and power intact. Julian
Fellowes, screenwriter of Gosford Park
and creator of Downton Abbey, wrote
the script, which stays true to the tone and shape of Shakespeare’s original
play. It is not, however, an adaptation of total fealty to the Bard’s text.
It’s not simply a matter of abridgment or subtly shifted emphasis. Some scenes
are invented; lines are reworked and reworded. It’s distinctly Romeo and Juliet, but shifted ever so
slightly away from the language on the page.
But that makes it sound like a calamity, a gross
modernization, and it’s not that. Much of the original text’s most famous
passages – “Wherefore art thou?” – remain nearly verbatim, while the rest of
the film proceeds with not disastrously rewritten lines that remain true to the
essence of the play. And, though Fellowes is talented, he is not Shakespeare.
Still, the new dialogue clangs not to these ears, even if it’s not exactly at
the same level. The original narrative is so strong, not to mention unscathed,
and the production so dedicated to the feeling and tone of the text that it
moves with a resonance that rings true to the play’s spirit, if not always its
linguistic specifics. The cast finds the dialogue easily tripping off their
tongues, smoothly and with great feeling.
In the leads are Douglas Booth, new to me, and Hailee
Steinfeld, the remarkable young woman who stole the show in the Coen brothers’ True Grit. They make a very pretty Romeo
and Juliet, she with her youthful open countenance and emotive eyes, he with
prominent cheekbones and male-model smolder. But they don’t only look the part.
There’s a fresh-faced adolescent impulsive obsession in their romance, a
quivering discovery that vibrates on a tastefully melodramatic level. We don’t
have to believe it is True Love, only that Romeo and Juliet think it is. As
Taylor Swift once sang, “When you’re fifteen and somebody tells you they love
you, you’re going to believe them.”
Filling out the supporting cast are plenty of character
actors doing good work with classic roles, from Homeland’s Damian Lewis as Lord Capulet to Let Me In’s Kodi Smit-McPhee as Benvolio, frequent Mike Leigh
collaborator Lesley Manville as Nurse, and Stellan SkarsgĂĄrd as the Prince of
Verona. Best of all is Paul Giamatti’s Friar Laurence, who in this telling
takes on a terrific twinkle in his eye, is tickled by his plan to help wed, and
later reunite, the lovers, and is fantastically distraught when it all goes
wrong. As the characters go through the paces, the movie rushes along, finding sometimes-awkward
transitions. A cut from a covert wedding to Ed Westwick’s Tybalt scowling while
practicing his sword skills is a tad laughable. But in general, the film does
the play justice.
The cinematography by David Tattersall is handsome; the
costumes are appealing. It’s not exactly a lavish production – a bush in the
balcony scene is a bit of conspicuous fakery – but it’s largely nicely done. Director
Carlo Carlei, a relative unknown here in the States having worked mainly in
Italian TV, is the least interesting aspect of the film. He’s no George Cukor
or Franco Zeffirelli or Baz Luhrmann, far better directors who brought (wildly dissimilar)
cinematic styles to their versions of Romeo
and Juliet. For better and worse, Carlei brings only the stuffy,
undistracted gloss that you’d find in any blandly proficient prestige project. The
best that can be said is that he stays out of the way. This is Fellowes’
project through and through, and even he plays second fiddle to Shakespeare.
This is Romeo and Juliet and all that
implies. My heart swelled. My eyes got wet. Because the film gets the most important aspects
right, it works.
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