In A House of Dynamite, director Kathryn Bigelow brings the procedural precision of her War on Terror films The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty to a hypothetical doomsday scenario. In tensely believable scenes of people staring at monitors and tapping on keyboards and frantically setting up phone calls, we see a scarily workaday picture of how the end might arrive. As the movie begins, a nuclear warhead of unknown origin has been launched toward America. The whole security apparatus springs into action, tracking the object, attempting to intercept it, tracing its origin, planning potential retaliation, and, finally, bracing for the worst. It’s a vision of competence in the face of the inexplicable and cataclysmic, contingencies planned for since the Cold War suddenly defrosted and put to use. Bigelow marshals a large cast of talented, dependable actors whose very presence denotes professionalism. We check in at the White House Situation Room with Rebecca Ferguson and Jason Clarke, in the oval office with Idris Elba, with high-ranking officer Tracy Letts and cabinet official Jared Harris, and at FEMA with Moses Ingram. The cast expands as the options narrow. There’s something uniquely suspenseful about watching people who we believe to be thoroughly knowledgable and totally capable growing frightened as the implications settle into their faces.
Bigelow has such a firm grasp of tone to keep things tense and tenable that it is a shame it doesn’t add up to more. She here deploys the typical modern signifiers of Hollywood verisimilitude: handheld camera, spontaneous movement, tumbling jargon. The actors are all crisp and clear. It’s all pleasingly convincing on the surface, although the political context of its release in this turbulent 2025 has with it a kind of disbelief or alternate reality feeling. I watched these rooms of professionals calmly and reasonably and thoughtfully respond to a crisis with the awareness that rooms like these don’t look like this now. Imagine the current president, and cabinet officials, and advisors in this situation and the cold sweat induced by the premise grows even colder. That said, the movie is ultimately a disappointment, not for this disjunction alone, but for the movie’s ultimate lack of a conclusion. The movie is three first acts in search of ending. Noah Oppenheim's screenplay takes us to a cataclysmic climactic point and then doubles back to show us a different perspective and then goes back again a third time. We never get past that moment of peak suspense, and each trip through the same beats is actually diminishing returns, never meaningfully adding to the scenario since many actors and key lines repeat anyway. Then the intention to leave us in doubt certainly plays a part in drawing out a political statement about the dangers of nuclear proliferation, but it’s all The Day Of with nary a hint toward The Day After, which gives the movie a big deflating lack of impact or release. It’s a lot of expert suspense with nothing in the end to say about its ideas.
Showing posts with label Noah Oppenheim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noah Oppenheim. Show all posts
Saturday, October 25, 2025
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Mourning in America: JACKIE
Jackie puts a
First Lady first, letting her story be the central narrative. When it comes to
a reenactment of the Kennedy assassination, an event as thoroughly picked over
as any in history, it does some good to approach it from an atypical angle.
Here we get not a stations-of-the-cross rehearsal of the 1963 trip to Dallas
that ended with shots into a limousine ending the life of America’s president,
but a tumultuous swarm of swirling memory, impression, and emotion from the
woman sitting beside him. She’s trying to put her life back together, protect
her late husband’s legacy, keep her children safe, and come to grips with her
traumatic experience. Her personal tragedy is also the nation’s. Her private
grief must be matched by a public performance thereof. The shock, the pain, the
deep horrifying psychological wound torn open the instant her husband slumped
forward, bloody and dead, into her lap is her only constant. Her fear of what
it means for her and her family’s future – where will they live? what will she
do? how will they move on? – is matched only by the eerie insecurity hanging
heavily in the air during every conversation and every decision she must now
have and make.
When the film begins, it has been a week since the
assassination. A reporter (Billy Crudup) arrives at Jackie Kennedy’s home for
an interview. She wants her feelings respectfully and accurately presented to
the world, an intimate expression after the overwhelming pomp of the state
funeral. This is the impetus for screenwriter Noah Oppenheim (whose day job is
head producer of the Today show) to
unload a stream-of-consciousness memory kaleidoscope built out of a recreated
TV special and glimpses of happy times – dinners, dances, concerts in the White
House – before settling into a more routine procedural recounting of the raw,
ragged days of deliberations and depression immediately following JFK’s death.
Taken together, it adds up to history unfolding like a dream, a nightmare, a
daze. Is this really happening? The characters seem to hold this unspoken
question behind their eyes. Assistants (Greta Gerwig, Richard E. Grant, Max
Casella), Bobby Kennedy (Peter Sarsgaard), and a priest (John Hurt) circle with
comforting gestures and painful to-do lists. A new President (John Carroll
Lynch) and First Lady (Beth Grant) wait in the wings. Everyone is in a
suspended state of shock and grief, and yet the world must continue spinning.
While the screenplay is occasionally too obvious – characters
uttering expository or nakedly thematic pronouncements at each other – the
filmmaking scrapes away many usual ticks and tricks of a period piece wax
museum movie. Instead, Pablo Larraín, a Chilean director whose sharply
entertaining political docudrama No
showed his ability to find humanity in historical excitement, has filmed Jackie in such a way as to bring out the
immediacy. This is an emotionally experiential film, with a hushed sound
design, a haunting minimalist under-the-skin Mica Levi score, and pale funereal
film stock. The camera floats and swerves behind Jackie, her impeccable
wardrobe and styling holding together a public persona that’s been made
instantly fragile. In tense conversations planning the funeral – it shares with
Stephen Frears’ The Queen a similar
sense of outsized importance on the symbolism of properly performed civic grief
– she’s only just holding in her storm of emotions. For her colleagues, for her
children, for her country, she must always make the next best move.
This sense of competing loyalties pervades the film. Who can
imagine being forced to live the worst week of your life with the nation
hanging on your every move? “Nothing’s mine to keep,” Jackie admits,
heartbreakingly, discussing the furnishings of the White House, but you can
feel the fresh absence of her husband in the line. In fact, the film’s best
move is allowing JFK to not be a character in the film. He’s glimpsed here and
there, but it is his lack of presence that becomes his presence. He is gone,
and that fact hangs heavily over the film. (I was all set to praise the film
for refusing to show the assassination itself, instead relying on a close-up
monologue explaining the event and an evocative shot racing behind the car as
it speeds away from the fateful Plaza. And then it shows it, like a poison-pill
reveal near the end. That troubles me, and I remain unsure as to what extent
it’s supposed to be a jolt, and how much it is meant to fulfill a sick
expectation of witnessing the head ripped open in a flash.) Jackie asks the
driver of the hearse, “Do you remember James Garfield?” When he says he
doesn’t, she sets herself to the task of making sure her husband doesn’t suffer
that fate, to be snuffed out of the history books twice over.
Tasked with holding this whole endeavor together shot by
shot is Natalie Portman, who takes on the role of Jackie with all the careful
seriousness and empathetic precision you could ask. It’s a calculated
performance, carefully poised, a soft-touch impersonation despite the weight of
every choice making itself known in each frame. Portman affects a wispy moneyed
East Coast rasp, sliding each line of dialogue out of a placid countenance with
pained effort and grim hoarseness. She’s playing a woman of recognizable look
and sound, now rattled, but barely wanting to show it. To do so she’s exerting
tremendous effort. This is one of those rare performances where the exertion
and the decision-making process of the actor in question are transparently
evident, but in a way that aligns with – mirroring and bolstering – the
character’s struggle to play the role she wants to project to the world. It’s
an interesting collaboration between director, writer, and star in evoking an
imagined torment of a historical figure’s bleakest days. They, and she, aren’t
hiding behind grand ceremony and symbolism, but using it to find some small sense
of understandable emotion on which to cling.
Friday, March 18, 2016
Diversion: THE DIVERGENT SERIES: ALLEGIANT
Blandly proficient brand extension, The Divergent Series: Allegiant was presumably made because they’d
already made two of them and there was one more book in the YA series by
Veronica Roth. The predecessors didn’t flop, so why not? It even splits that final
book in two, pushing the back half to another film to be released next year
sometime. Hey, Harry Potter, Twilight, and The Hunger Games did it. Since The
Divergent Series was already an
amalgamated knockoff of every other teen-centric genre franchise, why not copy
them right down to the money-grabbing two-part finale? The trouble is it’s not
nearly as imaginative or interesting as its inspirations. A calculating lack of
passion bleeds into every frame of the film, in which a talented cast and crew
are here mostly because they’ve already signed the contracts, enacting a
remarkably uneventful story somehow swollen to 121 empty minutes.
As the movie starts, the previous movies’ routine teen
dystopia, a crumbling far-future Chicago, once made up of a populace divided
into temperament- and talent-based factions, has collapsed. The very special
person at the center of the collapse is Tris (Shailene Woodley), who fought off
mean Kate Winslet’s efforts to take over the city. Now, though, a new leader
(Naomi Watts) is determined to reshape the populace under her control,
installing puppet courts and whipping her followers into a frenzy with wild
prejudice and violent impulses. “You’ve incited a mob. I hope you can control
it,” says her son, who also happens to be Tris’s lover (Theo James). Together
the tough lovebirds – along with returning cast members Ansel Elgort, Miles
Teller, Zoë Kravitz, and Maggie Q – decide to flee the deteriorating society
and jump over the gigantic wall into the wild unknown, leaving poor Octavia
Spencer behind to deal with the trouble they started.
Considering that each of these movies so far has ended by
intimating that we were going over that wall, it’s about time. Once they get
there they find a muddy red desert where in our world is Lake Michigan. They
wander around just long enough to give Elgort the chance to stare dumbly at a
bubbly puddle and utter the following line: “This hole looks radioactive, or it
was some time in the last 200 years.” I wrote that down immediately, relishing
its pulpy sci-fi nonsense. Anyway, the teens end up getting taken to a gleaming
grey-and-white futurist building which a man in a suit (Jeff Daniels) tells
them was once O’Hare International Airport. Why that should be a detail worth
telling to these future kids is beyond me. They don’t know what that is. In
this future world it’s the home of a militarized band of scientists who confess
that Chicago and its factions are really their experiment to see if they can
undo humanity’s downfall: customized genes. It’s not exactly the most
thrillingly examined idea.
It all turns out to be a nefarious set-up by which
genetically perfect people want to keep the damaged dopes locked away in city-sized
labs. Obviously Tris won’t have any of this and, after well over an hour spent
wandering around this dully-developed new location, finally decides to do
something about it. Screenwriters Noah Oppenheim, Adam Cooper, and Bill Collage
glumly hit all the expected bits of a film like this in a creakingly mercenary,
sparsely developed plot. The arc of each of these Divergents is identical. An evil adult has bland middle-management
style and a plan to wipe out her or his inferiors, while Tris slowly learns
that she’s not only special and the only one who can save the world, but she’s
even more perfect than she’d last been told. This all happens while pretty
people stomp around anonymous sets – warehouses, mostly – and interact with flavorless
effects, trading clunking dialogue and staring at each other with what I can
only assume is a mixture of boredom and brooding.
Director Robert Schwentke returns from the last time, still
happy to merely keep things brightly lit and occasionally move the camera in
surprising ways. He finds a few interesting images, throwing in some unexpected
split focus diopter shots early on, filming a decontamination room in inky
silhouettes, and visualizing the effects of a memory-wiping mist by making a
man’s recollections float next to him while slowly burning away. But mostly he
just dutifully watches what has to be one of the most bored casts I’ve ever
seen sleepwalk through endless exposition and fuzzy motivation. During a scene
in which the teens catch a ride to future-O’Hare in glowing bubbles, Teller
gapes at a CGI spire and gasps the least convincing “gadzooks” you’ll ever
hear. (Really.) Later a pro forma dogfight of sorts is accompanied by
lackluster shouts and screams from the leads, sounding like completely
nonplussed theme park patrons trying to whip up their enthusiasm for an
underwhelming roller coaster’s dips and swerves. There’s so little going on here,
just charismatic performers resigning themselves to the lifeless nonsense
around them.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


