My Blog List
Showing posts with label New Releases. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Releases. Show all posts
Saturday, 12 October 2013
Blue Jasmine
Here's a link to a review I wrote elsewhere for the new Woody Allen film Blue Jasmine, starring Cate Blanchett, Sally Hawkins and Alec Baldwin. Enjoy.
Sunday, 11 August 2013
The World's End
The Cornetto trilogy has sadly come to a
close, nine years after Shaun of the Dead. The World’s End is yet
another riotously intelligent Edgar Wright/Simon Pegg-penned film, relying not
only on simpleton wit and sound comic timing but poignant social allusions to
the golden age of irresponsible youth. Instead of the zombie homage of Shaun
of the Dead or the police action thriller references in Hot Fuzz,
the duo focus on robot-science-fiction and clever aliens. In that sense it’s sort
of a Doctor Who episode only with more drinking and swearing.
Dan King (Pegg) is the immoral cad still
wallowing in the hedonism of his 90s teenage heyday, attempting to get his
tight-knit drinking cronies back together for a pub crawl they failed to
complete in their youth. It’s an attempt to return his life back to those glory
days – and one night in particular. He is a man still yearning for those days:
he sports the same kind of New Romantics look as back then and listens to the
same music (a soundtrack full of 90s gems from the likes of Primal Scream,
Stone Roses and Happy Mondays), and pales in comparison to the successful careers
and families his comrades have since embarked since then. Psychoanalysing the
central character isn’t really the point though. Anyway, he gets them together
(Martin Freeman, Nick Frost, Paddy Considine, Eddie Marsan) and they have a
pint in twelve different pubs around their home town of Newton Haven, finishing
in the eponymous World’s End. But they find that their dreary home has lost its
quirky locations and charisma in the face of the franchise obsessed modern
society, with characterless lookalike pubs caustically mocked. Plus the inhabitants
they had previously known have become alien robots with sloshy blue mechanical
blood (not unlike the white stuff the androids have in the Alien films).
On a serious note, it’s a smart commentary on
how the confining bureaucracies and franchises of our modern internet world
have sucked the life out of towns and replaced it with the kind of vacuous,
safe-for-all-ages grey yawn. On a silly note, it’s a just an excuse to smash robots
and cover ourselves in blue goo and lipstick. The World’s End is also a faithful
portrayal of what growing up in an English village is like – desperately dull.
Underpinned by a typically superb cast, The
World’s End doesn’t immediately seem to possess the cult classic traits of
the others but maybe that’s just a status it will acquire over time. There are some
odd plays – like Frost playing a profession-driven square who is completely
unlike any other of his weirdly foolish characters – but this is still a fine
comedy worthy of its place in the much-loved Cornetto canon.
Saturday, 3 August 2013
Only God Forgives
Initial reaction for the new collaboration
between Danish director Nicolas Winding Refn and American actor Ryan Gosling
was pretty split. Many were strongly put off by excessive violence and the
generous helpings of blood and internal body parts, others found their seedy interpretation of the Thai underworld to be the staggering feat of photography
that it is. Only God Forgives is controversial, not least because the
previous Refn-Gosling combination was the celebrated modern classic Drive.
The latter was more of a mainstream crossover for Winding Refn who is usually
to be found overseeing opaque art house pictures. Though there was always a
focus on luscious aesthetic, it was a feature running parallel to a distinctive
and unambiguous plotline. Only God Forgives is different, chocker block
with grey narrative areas – there are more dream sequences and metaphorical
scenes. Perhaps this was a deliberate artistic direction change for the Dane, a
chance to draw in new audiences and critics with Drive before blowing
them away with the challenging surreality and dark alleyways of malice and wanton
violence on show here.
The story focusses on a pair of expat
American brothers Billy (Tom Burke) and Julian (Gosling) who involve themselves
in the Bangkok criminal underworld, whilst running a local Muay Thai boxing
ring. Billy gets killed (that's not a spoiler - it happens near the start)
bringing their viciously matriarchal mother Crystal (Kristin Scott Thomas) from
America. Julian and Crystal become embroiled with the local policeman
Lieutenant Chang (Vithaya Pansringarm) and his penchant for sword swinging in a
never ending lust for revenge.
Scott Thomas is brilliant as the menacing
and tyrannical Crystal; she glitters in her scheming, revenge obsessed way,
coaxing and manipulating all around her. The relationships she has fostered
with her sons are laced with Freudian nightmare: allusions of incest between
Crystal and Billy are frequent. Julian appears to be outside of that, and the
matriarchal fall guy for all that goes awry. He is a complex character, torn between courting his mother’s approval and the haphazard botched
set of ethics he condemns Billy’s perverse antics with. His composed exterior
bristles with relaxed rationality, yet there is a rage that boils red raw underneath
– he is said to have murdered his father. This duality just about escapes from
another withdrawn Gosling performance in which he again utter very few words.
There’s no doubt that he has perfected that look of his – the esoteric
half-smile and enigmatic far-away look in his eyes on a foundation of threatened
hyper-violence.
Julian seems to have some kind of in-built
equilibrium, a quid pro quo sense that some things must be taken in return for
his criminality – hence the penitent ending. These punishments are meted out by
Chang, the most fascinating character in this picture. He acts as a self-appointed
moral executor in a city bereft of law or justice. Although his carnal judgements
are based on his own idealistic morality, there is too little time given to his
character as a person – only a perfunctory glimpse of a happy home, replete
with wife and daughter. His character is carefully guarded, and seemingly
beyond reproach; it’s a shame because a deeper examination of his psyche might
have a laid a sterner foundation for the limb-hacking carnage he inflicts on
those he deems wrong-doers. Okay so he’s probably supposed to be a kind of anarchic
angel but it’s not a feature expanded upon enough, and so it just looks like
gratuitous violence.
Though there are some character flaws,
this is maliciously seductive: it’s a beautiful looking film, based on
dynamic photography and pulsing electronic music (brilliantly soundtracked by
Cliff Martinez of Drive fame). It renders the film an utterly
captivating watch. Only God Forgives is a neon bleached blitz, sometimes
highly stylised sometimes gritty and difficult – but always with that Refn
aesthetic in mind (though he is significantly influenced by the 60s and 70s Chilean cult filmmaker Alexandro Jodorowsky – to whom OGF is dedicated to – who also
dabbled in the phantasmagoric and surreal). Its look really isn’t that
different from Drive: both take place in dark urban environments, lit
only by the vice and torment of its inhabitants. But this is grislier fare with
more obscure motives and not for the faint of heart, yet it remains wholly
compelling. If anything though, it’s a darker continuation of Drive
rather than a distinct move away from.
Monday, 29 July 2013
A Field in England
The release of Ben Wheatley’s new film AField in England has caused quite a stir in the blogosphere underground.
Unable to fund a proper, full scale PR attack Wheatley and his producer’s
decided on a unique distribution technique: the movie came out simultaneously
in the cinema, VOD (video on demand – iTunes etc), DVD and on television via
the British film channel Film4 (who also funded the production). It is a shrewd
marketing ploy, but self-consciously so – by acknowledging the gimmicky method
Wheatley utilises the attention that has surrounded individuality. A Field
in England has harnessed plenty of the right kind of social media attention
– respectable journalists et cetera. It is the latest development in the quest
to attract attention under the all-conquering mainstream social media, and a
way to commodify that interest.
Of course a strategy such as this needs a
memorable film to follow through on the concept. And Wheatley delivers on that
count: A Field in England is a richly disturbing exercise in cinematic
psychedelia, darkly surreal and incisively acted. It manages to strike at the
contemporary yet remunerate the English Civil War mental-ness it recreates. An
alchemist’s servant Whitehead (Reece Shearsmith) seeks out a rogue apprentice O’Neill
(Michael Smiley) in order to return him and the documents he stole to their
master. The latter’s soldier Cutler (Ryan Pope) coaxes a couple of other motley
men – one an idiot, the other a drunk – to find some treasure in a field. In
truth though the story is but a bi-product of this insight into cinematic
purpose, and thus could have taken place in any time period and made little
difference.
The English Civil War does however furnish
the film with sincere undertones of magic(k) and candid belief in petty
superstitions. It’s a pre-Enlightenment time still dogged by religious
fallacies and fear of the devil, but facilitated and intensified by copious
consummation of the magic mushrooms located on the field that O’Neill seeks his
treasure. There is neither analysis of the war’s politics nor much reference to
it, but that is deliberate. The idea seems to be that the human psyche transcends
the illusory splits of society – political boundaries are intangible and all
men have the same weaknesses. A Field also reveals the
duality between humanity and the nature we reside in. The bounties of nature –
grass, mushrooms – still affect the course of human development, both
individually and collectively. Even the title of the movie is an intertwinement
of that theme: the ‘field’ of the natural; ‘England’ as a notion and product of
human civilisation. But perhaps it might be best to reign back from the
philosophical rut this stream of consciousness is leading me down.
The film is phenomenally interesting, with
plenty of re-watch value; it is undoubtedly challenging though, particularly in respect to its photography. Shot in black and white with a penchant for the
bizarre, A Field is a difficult watch. Particularly the 10 minute psych-out
bit towards the end. It’s a kaleidoscopic montage of mirrored camera effects
and slow motion, soundtracked by jarringly atonal noise. The impact is
withering and fascinating, and remarkably efficient in conveying bewilderment. Wheatley has a talent for capturing that memorable image, the
moments that are symbolic of the tone or theme he is trying to confront: the
image of Whitehead gratuitously gorging himself on those mushrooms or the futile
pulling of the strange rope and the excruciating turning of the stump. And yet
it feels like this mercurial flair is employed just for its own artistic purpose
rather than for any great overriding scholarly statement, as if he’s just doing
it for a laugh. There is always a slightly tongue-in-cheek attitude to his
work, a very English approach.
Thursday, 4 July 2013
A Field In England showing
Just a quick warning for those in the UK - check out the channel Film4 tomorrow evening at 22:45 (GMT) to watch the new Ben Wheatley film A Field In England. I believe it's also streaming on their website at that time as well... but I'm only 50% that that is the case. Guess we'll find out. It should be a really interesting film, made on a tiny budget with a skeleton crew set in one field and directed by a highly intelligent filmmaker. The premise, I believe, is a group of English Civil War soldiers have some existential breakdowns in a field then take some shrooms, and everything goes hyper psychedelic. I am looking forward to this.Review will follow soon.
Thursday, 20 June 2013
The Great Gatsby
Baz Luhrmann is one of those directors
whose l’art pour l’art stylistic modus operandi always splits opinion; when
he took on F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, one of the great American
novels, the result was bound to draw some and repel others. It was never going
to be as loyal to the book as the 1974 adaptation was (directed by Jack
Clayton and written by Francis Ford Coppola), so the sumptuously lavish
outcome should perhaps come as little surprise.
The story deviates only slightly away from
that which is set down in the book; the background is altered however with the
narrator Nick Carraway (Tobey Maguire) noting his experiences down initially to
a psychologist, as a man suffering from the alcoholic and emotional excesses of
a summer spent in Twenties New York City. He recounts the events after his 1922
move to West Egg, and specifically, his dealings with the enigmatic millionaire
Jay Gatsby (Leonardo DiCaprio) and the latter’s tragic romance with Carraway’s
seraphim cousin Daisy Buchanan (Carey Mulligan). DiCaprio’s performance is, as
always, enticing. He furnishes the titular character with an emotional rawness that
seems to course just beneath the courteous façade and yet, crucially, retains that
quintessential Gatsby civility. Nonetheless he is outshone by Joel Edgerton who
plays Daisy’s staunchly conservative husband Tom Buchanan in such a gloriously distasteful
way, fully realising the malicious hypocrisy at the heart of the character.
One of the central tenets of the book – the
emotional emptiness that entails wealth – is finely executed in the film,
though without the subtlety that Fitzgerald conveyed. Cinematic ostentatiousness
is the biggest issue with The Great Gatsby: the visual emblems that
symbolise each character’s essence (Gatsby and that green dock light of jealousy)
are ruthlessly exploited by Luhrmann, wrenched from the delicate background
that Fitzgerald put them in and brusquely thrust into the foreground. By doing
this the film sheds the allure of implication that gave the book such longevity
– the latter is entirely based on the memories and experiences of Carraway, thus
the reader is present at none of the private moments between Gatsby and Daisy. That
Luhrmann fills these voids with his own imagination is controversial, but perhaps
indicative of the difference between the written word and cinema.
Another aspect of the film that has drawn
sharp intakes of breaths is the soundtrack. Produced by Jay-Z and featuring pop
princesses like Beyonce and Lana Del Rey, indie acts The xx and even Bryan
Ferry it initially felt like an over-indulgent exercise in orgiastic celebrity
excess. But no: the music is far less intrusive than at first feared, and
successfully lends the contemporary veneer of relevance that Luhrmann must have
been aiming for when he commissioned the work. It adds an extra layer of unfamiliarity
and foreignness to Gatsby’s hedonistic parties yet allows a modern audience to immediately
tap into the prevailing spirit of decadence. That is perhaps a metaphor for the
picture as a whole: despite The Great Gatsby’s visual opulence it stands accused of holding the audiences hand, not trusting in their intelligence to keep abreast of the complex
themes. It’s a shame but then this is Baz Luhrmann, the same guy who made those
other scintillatingly bloated spectacles Romeo + Juliet (1996) and
Moulin Rouge (2001) – so what were we expecting?
Tuesday, 18 June 2013
Behind The Candelabra
America is not ready for this film. That
was the opinion of the many Hollywood production companies who refused to fund
Steven Soderbergh’s Behind The Candelabra, a biographical picture about
the great entertainer and pianist Liberace – who was, between the Fifties and
Seventies, one of the highest paid entertainers in the world. Despite the
presence of Soderbergh, a reliable director with a history of box office
success, and two high-profile actors, Michael Douglas and Matt Damon, those
companies still considered anything to do with Liberace as ‘too gay’, a damning
indictment of risk averse corporations and the regressive values they perceive Americans
to hold. Based on Scott Thorson’s memoir Behind The Candelabra: My Life With
Liberace, the story – eventually financed by HBO as a television film – delves
into the debauched depths of the relationship between Liberace and Thorson, his
lover and companion. Liberace’s dazzling flamboyance and foppishly camp aesthetic
pioneered the preening on stage persona that musical performers David Bowie, Freddie
Mercury and even Lady Gaga would make more famous. Suffice to say any
actor trying to play Liberace had a large mink coat to fill.
And yet, Douglas fits remarkably snugly
into that coat. Truly his performance as Liberace is brilliant, from the lurid
voice and eccentric narcissism to the piano playing – an aspect of the
character that Douglas learnt himself, without recourse to CGI or a pianist
double. The hours of study that must have gone into the single scene in which
he plays the piano is admirable, and telling of the caliber and dedication of
the actor – particularly in light of his recent health problems. In a recent interview
with Simon Mayo of BBC Radio 5, Douglas stressed that he found the role of
Liberace to be inspirational after his successful battle with throat cancer. It’s
stories and performances like these that usually warrant Academy Award
attention, but unfortunately that will not be forthcoming because of Behind
The Candelabra’s release as a television movie (rendering it ineligible for
the Oscars). But Douglas’ splendour shouldn’t diminish Matt Damon’s portrayal
of Thorson. Damon is an actor who continues to confound with his versatility
and the commendably varied roles he chooses for himself. His Thorson is a malleable
character that shares an absorbing synergy with Douglas’ Liberace – including, amusingly,
a bona fide Brazilian tan line.
Although primarily a drama, Behind
The Candelabra is touching and warm because of the pervading spirit of joviality;
hilariously symbolised by the startlingly memorable appearance of Rob Lowe as
an ersatz plastic surgeon. Still there is a litigious undertone present but because
of the intelligence of Richard LaGravenese’s screenplay the humour doesn’t
detract from the serious message. This was especially prescient at the movie’s premiere
in Cannes, with France debating the fiery topic of gay marriage in the days
leading up to the film festival.
Without being an expert on American
culture or what its citizens think at a grassroots level, it seems that those production
companies have lost out on an absorbingly tasteful insight into an important
piece of twentieth century cultural history: A piece of which America should be
ready for.
by Lewis Fraser
Saturday, 15 June 2013
The Stone Roses: Made of Stone
As Shane Meadows (This Is England)
himself says near the start of The Stone Roses: Made of Stone, the
Mancunian quartet are his favourite band; and that is abundantly clear in the
ensuing 96 minutes of rockumentary. The Stone Roses were a psychedelic rock
band of the late Eighties and early Nineties who released one stunning album then
lost it, becoming completely overwhelmed by incessant popularity, media
pressure and creative inertia. This picture was filmed before and during the
Roses’ long-awaited comeback tour of 2012 that culminated in massive shows at
Heaton Park in Manchester; it’s an affectionate look at a quintessentially
English band and the unique characters contained within – singer Ian Brown,
guitarist John Squire, bassist Mani and volatile drummer Reni.
This film is really about that reunion and
the weeks and months preceding those Heaton Park shows – including the European
warm-up tour and an eventful gig in Amsterdam – and not an exploration into the
bands history like Cameron Crowe’s Pearl Jam Twenty, which the trailer seemed
to imply. A study into the rise and fall of the Roses before their comeback
redemption (or resurrection) would have been fascinating though a narrative arc
like that can feel contrived or inauthentic, something that Meadows was
probably desperate to avoid. There is archive footage and stills of some very
young Browns and Squires, and some of the issues they had with management and
the music press but these segues are supplementary to Made of Stone’s
primary purpose: showing the absorbing backstage scenes from the 2012 shows.
Like Crowe’s homage to Pearl Jam the tone is fawning rather than journalistically
incisive – this is a tribute rather than a documentary – with precious little
time given to the reasons for their original disbandment or whether the issues have
been genuinely resolved. One-on-one interviews were conspicuously absent.
Though the members are notoriously resistant to that kind of exposure, it does
feel like a missed opportunity to really delve into the individuals psyche. Meadows
is loath to really interfere with the fragile internal mechanics of the band –
when the European tour takes a turn for the worse for instance, he pulls back
from his observational role as filmmaker rather than press for details. It’s
understandable that he had no wish to upset the delicate harmony that
precipitated the comeback by heaving up once more some of the hidden ghosts of
yesteryear, but nevertheless it is somewhat frustrating.
For many people – and most of the fans featured
in the film – the Roses are a nostalgia band. Interviews are conducted with
ordinary middle aged people harking back rose-tintedly to the debauched world
of their youth in the early 90s. That may sound like the snooty cynicism of one
brought up in the glossy world of the 00s but it isn’t intended to be. Those
bits are really heartfelt beautiful moments – particularly the shots of the
queue lining up for the free Warrington gig (which included an ecstatic Liam
Gallagher). Those were people who had been waiting decades to see their
favourite band play live again, and the sentimental heft was tangible even to
those far removed, watching in a cinema
one year on – also a testament to the editing and cinematographic skills of
Meadows himself.
Made of Stone ultimately lives or dies on the quality of the music which, because
it’s the Stone Roses, is never going to disappoint. It may be a little light in
some areas – like the length, because it was only 96 minutes long (15 of which
were a Heaton Park live version of song ‘Fool’s Gold’) – but it will be a
winner for fans, just maybe not quite as intriguing as it could have been for
the unconverted.
Monday, 10 June 2013
Star Trek Into Darkness
Star Trek Into Darkness – or Star Trek 2 in lay parlance – is the latest shiny sci-fi to come out from behind JJ Abrams horn-rimmed glasses. As a sequel to the surprisingly adept 2009 reboot it’s another delicious slice of action-thriller pie, this time with even greater scope and ambition. Indeed, critical consensus tells of a riotously vibrant picture pertaining to Abrams and cinematographer Daniel Mindel’s stylish aesthete and bountiful use of unjarring CGI – and any film that relies so resolutely on visual effects and turns out not to be a completely shallow, emotionless sinkhole is an achievement to be praised.
The audience join Kirk, Spock et al half way
through a mission, with the crew trying to defuse an angry volcano without
alerting the indigenous alien tribes to their presence. It’s a thoughtful
beginning: by furnishing the Enterprise with an aura of continuity it feels as
if the plotline of this film is only one of their numerous adventures through
space – the same veneer of authenticity that the TV series used to have in
bucketloads. And then Benedict Cumberbatch appears as ‘John Harrison’, the villain.
Cumberbatch is the latest graduate of the Hollywood school of English bad guys and
proves he is another worthy addition to that fine tradition with disdainful
aplomb, sporting the same stern face and cheekbones that Alan Rickman (Die
Hard, Robin Hood) and Peter Cushing (Star Wars IV) have done so memorably in
the past. Although the Sherlock star steals all the scenes he’s present in, the
origins of his character are so mired in esoteric Trekkie mystique that it’s
difficult for those – like myself – who aren’t familiar with Star Trek canon to
understand why he does the things he does.
A brief attempt is made to explain the
existence of ‘Harrison’, but in truth the relentless pacing doesn’t really
allow for detailed explanations. It rips along from location to location, set
piece to set piece, never at anything less than a manic breakneck speed –
leaving pitifully little time for the half-baked romantic sub-plots to evolve
into anything more than tokenistic segues. There are other elements of the
script that are baffling or frustrating too. Spock (unerringly played by Zachary
Quinto again) undermines the entire thriller/suspense genre by asking his older,
parallel universe self for the cheat codes to defeat ‘Harrison’ – a contrivance
that seems to have been solely motivated to give Leonard Nimoy another cameo
role. But then peculiar plot contortions always seem to accompany scripts
co-written by Damian Lindelof (creator of those head-mangling, thought-wrenching
storylines of TV series Lost), Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman (who, as a duo,
penned the Transformers trilogy).
The relationship that becomes central to both
the central plotline and individual character development is the one between Kirk
(Chris Pine) and Spock, and it’s a feature that is regularly elaborated on
particularly at the end when they realise that there is a great platonic love
between them – and there are some amusing interchanges between human laid-back
languidity and Vulcan conservativeness. The slick nature of their bromance is
symbolic of the film as a whole: a highly polished, technically accomplished
piece of Hollywood fun but not thought provoking nor edgy enough – nothing beyond
the controversial gratuitous Alive Eve underwear scene – to become a real
classic.
Tuesday, 4 June 2013
Post Tenebras Lux
‘Beyond the
Light’ is at times a delicate drama film with some really poignant scenes, and
elsewhere an exercise in baffling surrealism. Carlos Reygadas is considered by many to
be one of the most unpredictable directors around at the moment, and Post Tenebras Lux certainly lives up to that reputation.
Reygadas
himself said in an interview with the New York Times that accompanied the
film’s distribution that Post Tenebras Lux is a semi auto-biographical
work that blurs the boundary between events that actually occurred in his life
and the fantasies he entertained during those experiences. This is an aspect
that simply isn’t at all obvious to any audience member outside of Reygadas’
head – it is neither explored nor explained by any narrative or cinematographic
technique, but left to stew behind a thick allegorical veil. And so what we are
left with is just a groundless juxtaposing stream of sometimes provocative,
sometimes comical images. Naturally this led to some confusion at its premiere
in Cannes last year, and succinctly explains the booing that
accompanied its premiere.
Although
the concept of reality and fantasy can be deliberately hazy in an artistically progressive
way, Post Tenebras Lux jumps from alternate universes and time frames,
completely messing with chronology with no indication of why and what it is supposed
to symbolise – or indeed if it is meant to symbolise anything at all. In many
ways it is an abstract exploration of Reygadas’ creative mind, and how his own
life may have affected, or been affected by, the types of movies he makes. And
that’s fine. But he doesn’t seem entirely convinced that those ideas are in
themselves enough to sustain the film, because many of the scenes actually play
out in a conventional way – the life of a wealthy family and how they communicate
with the poorer local population in pastoral Mexico. There are some very interesting
aspects of social commentary here, but they are hidden beneath the layers of absurdist
psychosis as if the director is intentionally trying to draw his audience’s eye
away from anything that could be construed as substantial. That is a shame
because a study on Mexican rural class divide would have been something far
more appealing to me.
Nevertheless
there are some startlingly brilliant scenes, handled with emotional care and
refined subtlety. The Neil Young/piano bit is certainly one of the most
memorable, saturated with melancholia, sadness and childhood naivety. It’s all
the more touching because Nathalia Acevedo’s (who’s admirable performance is
charged with talent and gumption) cover is so badly sung, choked and garbled on
tears. There are also wads of Malickian and Sokurov-esque cinematographic flair
– and I’m a complete sucker for it. A mesmerising distortion effect is employed
almost throughout the film, smudging the edges of the picture and leaving the
middle untainted, a technique that Reygadas attributes to Impressionist
painters of the late nineteenth century.
This is such a peculiar picture, completely impossible to pin down, perching inconveniently (for the critic at least) between a multitude of different genres – which is in no way a bad thing. It’s filled with so many thematic and stylistic elements, and yet it is such a personal film for Reygadas (his own children feature heavily, and his wife is credited as the films editor) because it makes sense only to him.
To The Wonder
To The Wonder is the latest cinematographic masterpiece of Emmanuel Lebezki and director Terrence Malick, further developing the abstract style that made their Tree Of Life so memorable back in 2011. Let’s make no mistake about it, this is an art film. And it’s an art film that requires considerable patience because of the ubiquity of its style: emotions and character traits are all conveyed with movement and facial expressions only, with minimal dialogue and maximum insinuation. It does raise an interesting question as to what we, the audience, consider a movie to be or even art – if great art is supposed to challenge accepted conventions, then this surely succeeds. Although that kind of thinking is usually dismissed as pretentious twaddle, it is certainly a visionary avenue of filmmaking that Malick is heading down.
The story itself focusses on Neil (Ben Affleck) and his love triangle with Marina (Olga Kurylenko) and Jane (Rachel McAdams). Marina is the playful French sophisticate that Neil meets on his European travels, ultra feminine in profile and laissez-faire in attitude; and Jane, the all-American country gal and Neil’s former beau. He spends the film flitting between the two without ever saying much at all, playing the gruff silent male type. Tensions and passions steadily build up until everything fractures around a sensuous infidelity scene – something that Malick’s style is particularly adept at evoking – between Marina and a rough handyman/carpenter. The central theme is Neil’s personal confusion, a man trying to rediscover his identity. Does he prefer the mystical wintry charms of Paris and Mont Saint-Michel or the sun-kissed horizons of rural and suburban Texas? The loss of identity is a trait shared by Marina after her move to America, and Father Quintana the priest (Javier Bardem), but they are questions that are never truly resolved and all suffer in their own personal maelstroms of loneliness. The character of Quintana, and the whole religious element in this film, seems conspicuous by its incongruity amongst the tender folds of romantic drama that unfolds in every other scene. As good an actor as Bardem certainly is, his scenes do rather distract from the central plotline and elongate the film unnecessarily – this frustrates. Indeed there could be heard, so the story goes, titters of laughter at the film’s premier showing at Venice when Quintana first appeared.
In truth though there is something cold about To The Wonder, an emotional vacuum that isn’t present in The Tree Of Life. The same visual techniques are used, perfected even, but the trail of filmic metaphor breadcrumbs that Malick leaves for his audience to collect are simply not as vivid or as interesting as they were in the picture of 2011. For example: The Tree Of Life puts love in the context of the formation of planets, waterfalls and the universe; To The Wonder sees Olga Kurylenko moodily flouncing around in a forest tediously touched by autumn, or a generic field of long grass. There’s no contest there surely. By the final few scenes, the conjunction between emotion and nature becomes tiresome – YouTube is screaming out for some bright spark to mercilessly parody Malick’s directorial use of body language – and after almost two hours it can become a little trying. Despite the grievances Terrence Malick’s enigmatic persona and mercurial artistic talent will always draw the critical eye; and in this period of uncharacteristically Malickian productivity (two further projects are expected in the next couple of years, which compares favourably to the 20 year wait from Days of Heaven to The Thin Red Line) the question of how he will develop his style will soon be answered.
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