Monday, January 31, 2011

Blue Valentine

Blue Valentine
Scenes from a Marriage 

Directed by Derek Cianfrance
With Ryan Gosling, Michelle Lee, Mike Vogel and John Dorman

The most whimsical scene in “Blue Valentine” occurs when Cindy (Michelle Williams) and Dean (Ryan Gosling) do an impromptu song and dance routine together. He plays the ukulele and sings “You Always Hurt the One You Love” while Cindy tap dances. This is the moment when they fall in love.
It also foreshadows what happens down the road in their relationship. When they meet, everything is magic; by the end of the film they can barely tolerate each other.
“Blue Valentine” takes place in two time frames, six years apart. In the first,
Dean and Cindy are falling in love and in the second they can barely tolerate each other.
In the beginning Dean, a high school dropout, works for a moving company. While not ambitious, he has appealing warmth and a childlike playfulness. Dean’s tenderness is reflected as he moves an old man into a nursing facility. He thoughtfully and tenderly sets up the old man’s mementos.
Cindy is a pragmatic person with higher aspirations. She plans to get a medical degree. 
Dean first sees her visiting her beloved grandmother in the nursing home. He begins a campaign, which includes bouquets of flowers, to get her to date him. His sweetness and vulnerability finally appeal to her, and she gives in.
Six years later, Dean’s hair is thinning; he is chain smoking and drinking beer in the morning. He goes to work, now as a house painter, and comes home to continue the beers. He and Cindy are married. There is a daughter, Frankie, upon whom he dotes. He is happy being Mr. Mom, raising Frankie
while Cindy works long hours. 
Cindy, the main income earner, is not so satisfied. She works exhausting hours as a nurse, having given up her aspirations to be a doctor. Cindy asks Dean, “Isn’t there anything you’d like to do with your life?” He replies that he is living his dream.
They argue. She is tired of his flakiness and now finds him unappealing.
He tries to resurrect the marriage. They fight. She becomes humorless, looking at him with cold eyes. She wants out but he does not.
“Blue Valentine” accurately chronicles the pain that destroys a relationship.
 Dean continually screws up by either drinking or losing his temper when all he wants is to repair the troubled relationship. Intimate, raw scenes show Dean and Cindy having sex when they are falling in love and then again when love has been depleted. The contrast is painful to witness.
Director Derek Cianfrance lets us understand and feel the wounds of this marriage. “Blue Valentine” is written so you understand both sides.
Neither Dean nor Cindy is totally at fault. The scenes of the relationship’s beginning are filmed with color and light; later the cinematography has a bluish hue, capturing the sadness and bleakness of the crumbling marriage. Many conversations are improvisational: everything is up close and very real to the viewer.
The performances of Michelle Lee and Ryan Gosling do not feel like acting. Their tears, bitterness, tension and resentment feel like the genuine article.
Both actors gained 15 pounds for the contemporary scenes so they would appear older and more weary than they did in the beginning younger’scenes.
This is no movie for fans of romantic comedies or happy endings. “Blue
Valentine” is a heartfelt and honest story about marital misery. This is an intense drama of depth and sensitivity with extraordinary performances.
It will stay with you for a long time.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Somewhere



“Somewhere”

Directed and written by Sofia Coppola
With Stephen Dorff and Elle Fanning

“Somewhere”
Nowhere Man
A shot of a Lamborghini circling round and round  in an empty desert opens  “Somewhere.” That vision is a metaphor for what follows in Sofia Coppola’s hypnotic new film. The driver, Johnny Marco (Stephen Dorff), is a movie star whose life is heading nowhere—but he is going there in style. This quiet film is about a pampered film star who is reassessing his life. The film examines the emptiness of celebrity.
Johnny lives in the Chateau Marmot, the Hollywood hotel famed for its decadent show business tenants. He may be surrounded by fans and gorgeous women, but psychologically he lives in isolation, having no taste for the excesses of stardom.
When identical twin pole dancers entertain him in his room he nods off. He falls asleep while having sex. He is blasé about the paparazzi. Unshaven, uncombed, he seems to always have a cigarette, a bottle of beer or a drink in his hand.   
He is always polite but also expressionless, aimlessly meandering from press junkets to parties. There seems always to be some kind of party going on, but he doesn’t participate in the fun. He drifts through life.
Women may throw themselves at Johnny, but he only has eyes for one. Chloe (Elle Fanning) is his 11-year-old daughter from his prior marriage. His ex has suddenly left town and asks Johnny to take care of her. Neither parent has made much time for the lovely Chloe but now Johnny has to get off his couch.
Johnny takes Chloe to ice skating practice and is dazzled by her gorgeous performance. They order ice cream from Room Service in the middle of the night. She plays video games on his 50- inch TV screen. In a way, she is teaching him how to live. With Chloe, he is forced to react.
Sofia Coppola both directed and wrote “Somewhere.” Daughter of director Francis Ford Coppola, she knows a thing or  two about Hollywood. Hers is a thoughtful film about the emptiness of celebrity. These themes were covered also in her “Lost in Translation” and “Marie Antoinette.”
Stephen Dorph inhabits Johnny Marco, acting in a very natural, minimalist way. Feelings barely register on his face. Elle Fanning is incandescent as the child who awakens the lost soul of her father. She and Stephen Dorph have terrific screen chemistry.
Nothing much happens in this film. It is filmed in the washed out but golden light of Los Angeles. The camera lingers on scenes much longer than movie viewers are accustomed to. “Somewhere” is a story about Hollywood, but by no means is it a Hollywood film. There is no action and no ‘big” scenes. The slow pace of this film will bore many moviegoers but this timing is intentional and reflects the ennui Johnny feels towards the world.
Incidentally “Somewhere”  won the Golden Lion at the Venice International Film Festival. It is an exquisite meditative story. If you want a traditional story with a well defined beginning, middle and end, see “True Grit,” “The King’s Speech,” “The Fighter” or many others.  “Somewhere” is completely different.

Friday, January 14, 2011

The Fighter


THE FIGHTER


Directed by David O. Russell; Written by Scott Silver, Paul Tamesy and Eric Johnson
With Mark Wahlberg, Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Melissa Leo and Jack McGee
                                                                
                                                           Brotherly Love?
Chances are that you may not have heard of Micky Ward or his half-brother, Dicky Ecklund, but you probably have seen the film “Rocky,” about an underdog boxer who overcomes impossible odds in the ring. The biopic film ‘The Fighter,’ tells the story of a real life Rocky.
Micky Ward (Mark Wahlberg) and his half-brother brother Dicky (Christian Bale) live in the depressed town of Lowell Mass., a stone’s throw from their controlling mother Alice(Melissa Leo). She lives with her seven grown daughters, who are so dominated by her that they seem to cower en masse whenever she is around.
Dicky is an arrogant has-been boxer whose claim to fame is that years ago he knocked down Sugar Ray Leonard during a match. That made him a local hero, but he is also a short-tempered crack cocaine addict with a long police record. He and Alice have decided that the younger Micky, also once a boxer, should go back into the ring.
Laconic Micky couldn’t be more different than his jittery outspoken brother. He is easy going and satisfied with his job working on a road crew. Domineering Alice and his con artist brother convince him to fight again using Dicky as his trainer. 
Meanwhile Micky has a girlfriend, Charlene (Amy Adams), who sees how his family bosses him around. Charlene stands up for Micky, convincing him to drop Dicky as his trainer. The family hates her.
‘The Fighter’ is an absorbing study of this very dysfunctional family. Mom Alice favors Dicky, in denial of his obvious flaws. Micky’s father, George (Jack McGee), sides with Micky, but is diminished by the overbearing Alice.
The film examines the misplaced loyalty that Micky feels for his older brother. The coarse loud-mouthed sisters mimic everything their mother says. There is constant yelling and screaming in the household. This group is one big train wreck of a clan, and, as with a train wreck, you, the viewer, cannot take your eyes off of this group.
Director David Russell has succeeded in getting sensitive character work from his actors. There are many layers to each personality. He also definitely understands working-class family brawling. The scenes of the noisy, unbalanced family are very real. The boxing segments are sweaty, realistic, visceral and filled with the uncertainty that is part of such matches.
Christian Bale is the acting champ in this film. He is jumpy, nearly twitching at times, exuding the cockiness of someone who has not an iota of self-doubt.
Mark Wahlberg’s character is more bland, soft spoken. He underplays his role, creating a passive character who must live among a rough group of people. Amy Adams is terrific as the hardscrabble woman who will fight for her man, no matter what. And you can’t take your eyes off of the pushy outspoken Melissa Leo as Alice. You wish she would back off.
 ‘The Fighter ‘is a hugely satisfying, energetic story of family complexities. It is also happens to be an entertaining feel-good story about someone who beats the odds. And it really

Thursday, January 6, 2011

A Star is Born


"True Grit"
Directed by Joel and Ethan Coen
Based on the novel by Charles Portis
With Jeff Bridges, Hailee Steinfeld, Josh Brolin, Barry Pepper, and Matt Damon

Sometimes an old time Western film is just the kind of escapism you need. If you are one who is hungry for the comfort food of an old time cowboy yarn, get over to the cinema and see “True Grit.”
“True Grit” is nothing new. It was a 1969 Box Office hit starring John Wayne, who won his only Best Actor Oscar for playing Rooster Cogburn in the film. It is faithfully based on the novel of the same title written by Charles Portis and the current version is as much a crowd pleaser as was the Wayne version.
Revenge, plain and simple, is the theme of “True Grit.” Directors Joel and Ethan Coen have recreated the story, adding their own comic touches.
The film opens with a three-way hanging in a dusty old Arkansas town. Among the onlookers is Mattie Ross (Hallie Steinfeld), a determined 14 year old girl who is looking for someone to hunt down the outlaw Tom Cheney (Josh Brolin) who murdered her father. She has decided that the beat up, usually drunk, one-eyed federal marshal Reuben J. “ Rooster” Cogburn (Jeff Bridges) is the man to do it and hires him for the job. He resists, but tenacious Mattie wears him down. Mattie is one very tough cookie. She insists on accompanying him on this pursuit. Mattie wears pigtails, a big hat, and is primly attired in proper feminine garb. Smug La Bouef (Matt Damon) is a Texas Ranger also trailing Cheney to arrest him for the murder of a senator. This unlikely trio starts off together to find their man.
“True Grit” continues with the requisite shootouts, log cabin confrontations, campfire dinners (where beans are eaten from a can), and run-ins with some pretty bad and pretty dirty hombres—some fingers are even chopped off. The trio passes through miles and miles of expansive, often frozen landscapes.
There is nothing profound about “True Grit.” It is a straightforward and traditional tale of retribution. It is also a story of the extraordinary fortitude of a teenage girl. Mattie is courageous, single minded and is able to handle people who are many times her age. Rather than being lost in the sadness of losing her father, fearless Mattie takes up the reins to snare his killer.
The Coen Brothers are masters of storytelling. They have retooled “True Grit”
with trademark touches of their dark comic humor. The characters are nearly cartoonish. Rooster Cogburn staggers, grunts, and is never far from his whisky jug. He is a little too long winded at times and you wish you could better understand his slurred words. Nefarious Tom Cheney is an insane buffoon of a criminal. The bad guys are not only extremely depraved, but also vastly grimy and grubby.
Jeff Bridges is superb as the growling, crotchety has-been marshal who knows he is a mess, but doesn’t care. He won the Academy Award last year for “Crazy Heart,” and he is certain to be nominated best actor again this year. You barely recognize that Matt Damon is the actor playing the taciturn LeBouef. Even his voice is different. But the film really belongs to Hallie Steinfeld. Her character is well written, and she gives a powerful performance of a precocious, level-headed, teenager who is mature beyond her years. You will be seeing a lot more of her in movies yet to be made.
“True Grit” is a character piece that covers familiar territory. Who knew that a film about a stinky old drunk cowboy and a stubborn teen would be box office gold? But it is a lot of fun. Check it out.