Showing posts with label julia ormond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label julia ormond. Show all posts
Monday, July 10, 2017
Tour de Pharmacy
Directed by Jake Szymanski and teleplay by Murray Miller from a story by Miller and Andy Samberg, Tour de Pharmacy is the story of the infamous 1982 Tour de France in which five of its top contenders did whatever it took to win while raising awareness of steroid use. Told in a documentary style, the film chronicles the notorious event as well as the people who were involved in that race as it is narrated by Jon Hamm. Starring Andy Samberg, Orlando Bloom, Freddie Highmore, John Cena, Daveed Diggs, Jeff Goldblum, Julia Ormond, Dolph Lundgren, Danny Glover, James Marsden, Will Forte, Maya Rudolph, Kevin Bacon, Phylicia Rashad, J.J. Abrams, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Mike Tyson, Joe Buck, Chris Webber, and Lance Armstrong. Tour de Pharmacy is a wild and outrageous film from Jake Szymanski.
In the 1982 Tour de France, one of the most notorious cycling races occurred as many of the riders participating in the event were all taking some kind of drugs in which five of them were able to continue as this documentary on these five racers are profiled in this film as four of them talk about the race. The film is a mockumentary about a fictional moment in racing as it’s told in a documentary style similar to what HBO sports does as well as ESPN’s 30 for 30 series. The film follow the events in the 1982 Tour de France in which many of its participants paid the then-UCI president Ditmer Klerken (Kevin Bacon) $50,000 in exchange to not be tested as Klerken would use the money to pay off his massive credit card debts. Among those that didn’t pay Klerken were the five riders who would be able to continue the race till the end as the ones who did pay Klerken were all disqualified.
Among these five participants who would continue the race are the American cyclist Slim Robinson (Daveed Robinson/Danny Glover), the Nigerian cyclist Marty Haas (Andy Samberg/Jeff Goldblum), the Austrian cyclist Gustav Ditters (John Cena/Dolph Lundgren), the French cyclist Adrian Baton (Freddie Highmore/Julia Ormond), and the Italian cyclist JuJu Peppi (Orlando Bloom). Four of them would talk about the event that happened many years ago as Baton was really a woman disguised as a man so she can participate in the Tour de France as she was also on some drugs. Murray Miller’s script doesn’t just go into this back-and-forth narrative of the riders talking about the event but also the event itself as it also features commentary from an anti-doping agency head in Stu Ruckman (Nathan Fielder) as well as filmmaker J.J. Abrams and boxing legend Mike Tyson. The latter of which reveals his own original aspirations to be a cyclist until someone stole his bike and he beat the shit out of the guy.
Jake Szymanski’s direction definitely owe a lot to not just the documentary style of most documentary sport films but also has elements of French New Wave to play into France’s own coverage of the sport but also 1980s television. Notably as Szymanski uses some grainy video footage of the race which was covered by the BBC and its reporter Rex Honeycutt (James Marsden) as many of the compositions in the film are straightforward. The present-day scenes with the older bikers and some of the people interviewed including an anonymous racer (Lance Armstrong) as that interview is played for laughs in trying to conceal the identity of this racer. The film also play into some of the outrageous moments as it’s narrated by Jon Hamm that include a few animated sequences including one story about red blood cells that is created by a controversial animator in Victoria Young (Phylicia Rashad). Szymanski’s direction becomes more outrageous as the story goes on whether it’s Ditters on roid-rage or Peppi having to urinate while riding. It all plays into craziness of what goes on in the Tour de France. Overall, Szymanski creates an over-the-top yet exhilarating film about one of the most notorious races in the history of Tour de France.
Cinematographer Craig Kief does excellent work with the film’s cinematography from the clear and stylish look of the present-day interviews to the grainy VHS look of the race itself. Editors Michael Giambra, Daniel Reitzenstein, and Bijan Shams do amazing work with the editing with its usage of jump-cuts for the French coverage as well as some of the more straightforward elements in the interviews. Production designer Almira Corey, with set decorator Izzy Ross and art director Jen Dunlap, does fantastic work with the look of the set for the interviews as well as a massage room for the five riders to be in. Costume designer Romy Itzigsohn does some nice work with the look of the spandex costumes of the riders as well as the clothes they wear when they’re older.
The hair/makeup work of Annie Cardea, K.T. Chandler, Megan Nicholl, and Adina Sullivan do brilliant work with the look of the characters from the fake-drawn mustache of the young Baton to the crazy hairstyles of some of the characters including Peppi’s blond goatee. Visual effects supervisor Daniel Barone does terrific work with some of the visual effects in some of the photos as well as the look of the VHS footage. Sound designer Ken Cain does superb work with the sound in the way some of the fighting is presented as well as the VHS tapes. The film’s music by Gregory James Jenkins is wonderful as it play into the period of cheesy music that often accompany sporting events during the 1980s.
The casting by Susie Farris is great as it feature appearances from Joe Buck, Mike Tyson, filmmaker J.J. Abrams, and basketball legend Chris Webber as themselves talking about the event while Lance Armstrong is hilarious as the anonymous racer who talks about all of the things that happened at Tour de France that involves doping. Other notable small roles include Phylicia Rashad as the controversial animator Victoria Young, Maya Rudolph as a cycling magazine editor who lusts for cyclists, Will Forte as a French policeman who accidentally injects himself with amphetamines, and Kevin Bacon in a terrific performance as the former UCI president Ditmer Klerken who would waste all of his money on things that would amass into a big credit card debt. Nathan Fielder is fantastic as an anti-doping agency head who reveal what effects the drugs would do while Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje is superb as Hass’ childhood neighbor who really hates Hass. James Marsden is excellent as the BBC reporter Rex Honeycutt as the man covering the event as well as doing what he can to interview the cyclists during the race.
Daveed Diggs and Danny Glover are brilliant in their respective roles as the younger and older version of Slim Robinson as the nephew of Jackie Robinson who was eager to become the first black cyclist to compete at Tour de France with Diggs being quite brash while Glover is more reserved yet both are very funny. Dolph Lundgren and John Cena are amazing in their respective roles as the younger and older version of Gustav Ditters with Lundgren as a more calm yet enjoyable approach as the older Ditters yet it is Cena who is a fucking riot as the overly-excited and roid-rage version of Ditters who would also use a mysterious substance. Freddie Highmore and Julia Ormond are marvelous in their respective roles as the younger/older version of Adrian Baton with Highmore as a young woman pretending to be a man with a drawn mustache and fake boobs while Ormond is just very straightforward as Adrianna Baton though where she’s interviewed is very surprising.
Andy Samberg/Jeff Goldblum are remarkable in their respective roles as the younger and older version of Marty Hass with Samberg as this very outrageous young version who is trying to prove that he’s a true African when he’s really hated by actual Africans while Goldblum is just funny in how laid-back he is. Finally, there’s Orlando Bloom in a hilarious performance as Juju Peppi as the Italian cyclist who is considered the best as he is willing to do whatever he can to win as Bloom just play him for laughs and delivers in every way.
Tour de Pharmacy is a phenomenal film from Jake Szymanski. Not only is it a hilarious mockumentary short about the world of doping in cycling but also play into the things that are just shocking but in a very funny way. In the end, Tour de Pharmacy is a sensational from Jake Szymanski.
Related: 7 Days in Hell
© thevoid99 2017
Labels:
andy samberg,
danny glover,
daveed diggs,
dolph lundgren,
freddie highmore,
jake szymanski,
james marsden,
jeff goldblum,
john cena,
julia ormond,
kevin bacon,
nathan fielder,
orlando bloom,
phylicia rashad
Friday, March 28, 2014
The East (2013 film)
Directed by Zal Batmanglij and written by Batmanglij and Brit Marling, The East is the story about a young woman hired by a private intelligence firm to infiltrate a group of underground eco-terrorists. The film is an exploration into the world of anarchists where a young woman tries to see what they’re about and whether they’re doing something that is very noble. Starring Brit Marling, Alexander Skarsgard, Ellen Page, Toby Kebbell, and Patricia Clarkson. The East is a chilling yet gripping film from Zal Batmanglij.
The film is a suspense-thriller where a young woman who works for this private intelligence firm is hired to infiltrate an underground eco-terrorist group that has been attacking many corporations who have been known for their corruption. Upon infiltrating this group known as the East, Jane (Brit Marling) finds herself drawn to their cause as she realizes that their intention is to hurt these leaders and face the consequences of their actions. For Jane in her Sarah alias, she falls for the leader Benji (Alexander Skarsgard) as she learns more about his background as well as his associates in Izzy (Ellen Page) and Doc (Toby Kebbell). Particularly their motivations into being part of this group as Jane would report everything to her supervisor Sharon (Patricia Clarkson) but find herself in conflict with everything else she’s doing.
The film’s screenplay not only explores the conflicts that Jane/Sarah would deal with but also the sense of danger she is going into as she knows she’s getting too close to targeting Benji and the East. Yet, she realizes that the people they’re after are individuals who are responsible for ecological disasters that have killed or harmed innocent people through chemicals and such. Especially as Benji, Izzy, and Doc have been affected in some way over what has happened by these corporations as Jane becomes confused in helping them or helping Sharon who knows exactly what Jane is going through which adds an ambiguity to her character as she isn’t presented as a typical antagonist.
Zal Batmanglij’s direction is quite entrancing in the way he presents some of the attacks the East does where it’s very underground and secretive though their intention is to never kill anyone but rather hurt them. Much of the direction involve some hand-held shots as well as scenes where it adds to some of the elements of suspense where it’s shot around Shreveport, Louisiana to play into a world that is low-key but also has cities and such where Jane can go back to. Some of the compositions involve close-ups and medium shots where Batmanglij plays into the drama and suspense that includes a chilling moment in the film’s second act which involves Izzy and her motivations as it becomes a key turning point for Jane possibly wanting to help the East more. Overall, Batmanglij creates a very compelling and intoxicating film about an undercover agent who goes into deep into the world of an underground eco-terrorist group.
Cinematographer Roman Vasynov does excellent work with the film‘s cinematography from the usage of low-key lights for some of the scenes at night to some of the more natural setting in some of the forest scenes that is contrast to the lighting in the building that Jane works at. Editors Andrew Weisblum and Bill Pankow do amazing work with the editing with its usage of montages for the film‘s opening sequence to other array of stylish cuts to play into the film‘s suspense and drama. Production designer Alex DiGerlando, with set decorator Cynthia Slagter and art director Nikki Black, does superb work with the set pieces from the ruined house the East lives in to the more polished office and homes that Jane lives in when she‘s not undercover.
Costume designer Jenny Gering does nice work with the costumes from the polished clothes the East wears when they go undercover to the more ragged look when they‘re back at their secret home. Sound editor Andrew DeCristofaro does terrific work with the sound from the atmosphere of some of the antics the gang do to the quietness of the forest locations and where Jane lives. The film’s music by Halli Cauthery, with score themes by Harry Gregson-Williams, is wonderful for its mixture of electronic music and orchestral music to play into the film‘s suspense and drama.
The casting by Ronna Kress includes some notable small roles from Hillary Baack as a deaf-member of the East that Jane/Sarah befriends, Aldis Hodge as an aggressive member of the East, Han Soto as Sharon’s assistant, Jason Ritter as Jane’s husband, and Julia Ormond in a superb performance as a corporate official who deals with the same side effects that she’s been given during an attack by the East. Toby Kebbell is excellent as a doctor named Doc who deals with his illness as well as give reasons into why he became ill and his thirst for vengeance. Shiloh Fernandez is pretty terrible as the East member Luca as he looks like he just got out of a emo concert with too much eyeliner as he sometimes over acts in some intense scenes or looks like he’s about to take a shit.
Patricia Clarkson is amazing as Jane’s boss Sharon who keeps tabs on what Jane does while offering advice about getting to close and such. Ellen Page is fantastic as Izzy as this young woman who is wary about Jane joining the group only to have moment in the second half which reveals her reasons for being in the East. Alexander Skarsgard is brilliant as the leader of the East in Benji as a man who is determined to bring down corporations as there’s more to him than just some ragged, charismatic leader as Skarsgard brings this sense of humility and brooding persona to his role. Finally, there’s Brit Marling in an incredible performance as Jane/Sarah as an undercover agent trying to join the East and see what they’re up to as she becomes conflicted in doing her job as well as helping the East as it’s a role that is very understated yet engaging from Marling.
The East is a fantastic film from Zal Batmanglij that features remarkable performances from Brit Marling, Alexander Skarsgard, Ellen Page, and Patricia Clarkson. While it does have some conventional elements that is expected in a suspense-thriller, the film does offer some key insight into the world of eco-terrorism and their motives while adding some human elements into the story. In the end, The East is an extraordinarily powerful film from Zal Batmanglij.
Zal Batmanglij Films: (The Recordist) - Sound of My Voice
© thevoid99 2014
Monday, November 28, 2011
My Week with Marilyn
Based on the novels The Prince, the Showgirl and Me and My Week with Marilyn by Colin Clark, My Week with Marilyn is the story of a film assistant who spends a week with Marilyn Monroe during the production of the film The Prince and the Showgirl. Directed by Simon Curtis and screenplay by Adrian Hodges, the film explores one man’s infatuation with the iconic beauty as he sees her dealing with personal issues as well as trying to make a movie with the likes of Laurence Olivier. Starring Michelle Williams as Marilyn Monroe, the film also stars Eddie Redmayne, Kenneth Branagh, Julia Ormond, Emma Watson, Dougray Scott, Derek Jacobi, Toby Jones, Zoe Wanamaker, and Judi Dench as Dame Sybil Thorndike. My Week with Marilyn is a wonderful film about one man’s experience with one of the cinema’s most iconic stars.
It’s 1956 as Colin Clark (Eddie Redmayne) is hoping for a job interview to work in a film production headed by Sir Laurence Olivier (Kenneth Branagh). Colin knows Olivier through a party held by his rich parents as he gets the job as Olivier’s assistant as well as the third assistant director a new project Olivier is directing and starring in along with Dame Sybil Thorndike and Marilyn Monroe. With Monroe arriving with her third husband/playwright Arthur Miller (Dougray Scott) and her acting coach Paula Strasberg (Zoe Wanamaker), excitement is in the air as Olivier and his wife Vivien Leigh (Julia Ormond) greet Monroe and Miller.
With Colin working on set as he meets a costume girl named Lucy (Emma Watson), Colin watches the production unfold where it eventually becomes a disaster due to Marilyn’s erratic behavior. While Colin’s job also has to fetch Marilyn and check up on her, he gets more than he bargains for when she takes an interest in him. Colin would end up spending a lot of his time with Marilyn as she gets to relax while he takes her to places. Eventually, Marilyn would manage to perform well though the time Colin would have with Marilyn wouldn’t last following an illness. With the production taking shape and wrapping, Colin reflects on the brief moment he had with Marilyn Monroe.
The film is about a young man’s time with Marilyn Monroe in the shape of one entire week where he would get to know the real Marilyn through all of her flaws and insecurities. While this young man would also go into deep of Marilyn’s life and why she was difficult to work with. Largely because she was a student of method acting as opposed to the more theatrical training that Laurence Olivier had. For Colin Clark, he is in the middle of watching something where times are changing as the old guards like Olivier, Vivien Leigh, and Sybil Thorndike are on their way out while Marilyn is to become the new thing.
While Adrian Hodges’ script is a bit uneven due to the differing narratives that surrounds the film about Olivier’s difficulty with Marilyn’s approach to acting as well as this young man’s infatuation with the iconic beauty. Still, they do manage to coexist as it’s told from the perspective of Colin Clark as he watches a film being made as he has to deal with all sorts of people including Marilyn’s producer Milton H. Greene (Dominic Cooper) who had his affair with Marilyn. While there’s a lot of people warning this young man not to get too close, Clark does get close only to realize that it will include trouble. For Clark, the week he spends with Monroe and getting to know her while watching how a film is made would provide an experience unlike anything that most people would give for. Though the story is really more of a dramatic interpretation of what really happened rather than the actual truth. Hodges does manage to create a story that is exciting about one man’s time with Marilyn Monroe.
Simon Curtis’ direction is quite straightforward yet it’s also very engaging as he opens the film with Clark watching Marilyn Monroe perform on screen as he is enamored by her. The rest of the film is very intriguing for how a film was made at the time while showing what Olivier is trying to deal with as well as Marilyn dealing with her own issues. Curtis manages to create a wonderful sense of intimacy for the way that film is made while going for a sense of style in scenes where Marilyn and Colin walk around the park all by themselves. Overall, Curtis manages to create a film that is entertaining and dramatic in this brief moment in the life of Marilyn Monroe.
Cinematographer Ben Smithard does an excellent job with the film‘s photography where he does some amazing work in recreating some of the film footage of The Prince and the Showgirl to complement the Technicolor photography of Jack Cardiff. For the rest of the film, the look is very stylish while having a gorgeous air to the scenes of Marilyn and Oliver walking around in the park as Smithard’s work is noteworthy. Editor Adam Recht does a nice job with the editing as there’s some playful rhythmic cuts to play up the energy of getting ready on set while the pacing of the film is very leisured so that the audience can have time to see what goes on.
Production designer Donal Woods, along with set decorator Judy Farr and art director Charmian Adams, does a brilliant job with the set pieces created such as the studio and staging for the film sets scene as well as opening dance number that is full of pizzaz and all of that good stuff. Costume designer Jill Taylor does a fantastic job with the costumes created such as the casual late 50s clothing that a lot of the cast wears including the lavish dresses that Marilyn wears for the film she‘s making. Sound editor Nick Lowe does a stellar job with the sound work such as the hollow intimacy of a film set to the sparse world of the house and places that Marilyn surrounds herself in.
The film’s score by Conrad Pope and Alexandre Desplat is wonderful with Pope providing some jazzy pieces for the film with Desplat providing a more piano-driven theme for some of dramatic moments of the film. Music supervisors Maggie Rodford and Dana Sano provide a terrific soundtrack filled with jazz music of the times including the songs that Marilyn Monroe sang in some of her films.
The casting by Deborah Aquila, Nina Gold, and Tricia Wood is great as it features notable small appearances from Philip Jackson as Marilyn’s chauffeur/caretaker, Toby Jones as a brash publicist, Richard Clifford as character actor Richard Wattis, Derek Jacobi as Colin’s godfather who gives Marilyn a tour of a castle, and Dougray Scott as Marilyn’s third husband in famed playwright Arthur Miller. Other noteworthy performances include Dominic Cooper as the slimy Milton H. Greene, Zoe Wanamaker as the very controlling but humorous Paula Strasberg, Julia Ormond as the legendary Vivien Leigh who is dealing with aging, and Emma Watson in a small but charming performance as the costume girl Lucy that Colin briefly dates.
Judi Dench is wonderful as Dame Sybil Thorndike whose kindness and generosity brings a sense of warmth that was needed while being very funny in the way she snipes at Olivier and giving support towards Marilyn. Kenneth Branagh is superb Sir Laurence Olivier as he deals with his own issues over the fact that he’s one his way out while being very charming in how he greets Marilyn while being frustrated over her behavior. Eddie Redmayne is excellent as Colin Clark, the young assistant who watches over Marilyn while being enamored by her as he becomes an unlikely companion of hers. Particularly as Redmayne gets to play the observer while his scenes with Michelle Williams are a joy to watch in the way he gets to be the guy she needed for a while.
Finally, there’s Michelle Williams in what is truly a radiant and mesmerizing performance as the iconic star Marilyn Monroe. While Williams doesn’t really have the body of Monroe as she had to employ a body double for nude scenes. Williams does manage to bring in a sparkling enthusiasm in playing the iconic figure with a great sense of charm and wit while managing to showcase the insecurities and anguish that she goes through in trying to win over her peers and dealing with her persona. It’s a towering performance for the young actress in filling the shoes of someone as big as Marilyn Monroe. Yet, Michelle Williams manages to bring her back to life and reminding everyone that there was a whole lot more to Monroe than being some iconic sex symbol.
My Week with Marilyn is stellar and enchanting film from Simon Curtis featuring a spellbinding performance from Michelle Williams. Featuring a wonderful supporting cast that includes Eddie Redmayne, Kenneth Branagh, Judi Dench, Julia Ormond, and Emma Watson. The film is an intriguing look into a brief period of Marilyn Monroe’s life from the perspective of a young man who got to hang out with her for a week. Notably as it brings insight into the troubled production of The Prince & the Showgirl which will probably have more people see this film that Monroe and Sir Laurence Olivier tried to create. In the end, My Week with Marilyn is a dazzling film from Simon Curtis.
© thevoid99 2011
Friday, June 10, 2011
INLAND EMPIRE
Originally Written and Posted at Epinions.com on 10/13/07.
2001's Mulholland Drive brought David Lynch his most acclaimed and successful film to date that included Best Director nomination at the Oscars and sharing the Best Director prize at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival with Joel Coen for The Man Who Wasn't There. Following the film's success, Lynch took a break to work on various, experimental side projects, supervising the releases of his films on DVD, and other ventures. During this time as digital filmmaking was the new thing, Lynch took notice as his he used digital video for a few of short, experimental projects. The result of the experiments gave Lynch the idea for his next feature-film which was a return to his love of experimental films in the 2006 film INLAND EMPIRE.
Written, directed, produced, shot, edited, and sound designed by David Lynch, INLAND EMPIRE is a three-hour experimental film that emphasizes Lynch's love for the unconventional while doing the film entirely on digital video. Yet, the film Lynch describes is that it's about a woman who is in trouble. The main plot though is about an actress who is working on a film in Europe whose perception of reality is altered into a different world. Shot in parts in Los Angeles to culminate a film trilogy that began with 1997's Lost Highway and 2001's Mulholland Drive, the film conveys the eerie world of Los Angeles, which has become Lynch's adopted home. The film also marks a long-awaited reunion between Lynch and actress Laura Dern who starred in 1986's Blue Velvet and 1990's Wild at Heart as she plays the film's leading role.
With an all-star cast that includes Lynch regulars Justin Theroux, Grace Zabriskie, Harry Dean Stanton, Laura Harring, Diane Ladd, and the voices of Naomi Watts, Laura Harring, and Scott Coffey from Lynch's Rabbits project. The cast also includes appearances from William H. Macy, Julia Ormond, Nastassjia Kinski, Jordan Ladd, Ben Harper, and Jeremy Irons. INLAND EMPIRE is a strange, surreal, eerie film from David Lynch.
When a neighbor (Grace Zabriskie) decides to meet with actress Nikki Grace (Laura Dern), Grace reluctantly invites her where the neighbor says some strange, cryptic things that would haunt Grace. After years of not getting big projects or any material that she would love to work on, Grace finally gets a big film part working with a guy named Devon (Justin Theroux) and under the direction of a man named Kingsley (Jeremy Irons). Though Nikki and Devon managed to be great friends, Devon receives warning to not embark on an affair, particularly due to Nikki's Polish husband. When rehearsals for their new film begins, Kingsley along with his assistant Freddy (Harry Dean Stanton) reveal that the film they're making is a remake of an unfinished film.
Rehearsals go fine until Nikki sees someone as she and Devon eventually learn about mysterious things concerning the original, unfinished film. Things start to go well during rehearsal as Nikki plays a woman named Sue and Devon plays a man named Billy. Yet, as filming progressed, the world of reality and fiction start to blur where Nikki begins an affair with Devon but in the name of their characters. Suddenly, Nikki notices that she starts to see things in her character Sue. Then one day when Nikki goes grocery shopping, she finds a symbol and enters a door where she's taken to a strange, dark reality. Suddenly, she's Sue as she finds herself in parts of Poland and another part of Los Angeles where she's now living in an apartment with prostitutes.
Sitting in the apartment, she also finds herself having conversations with a man named Mr. K (Erik Crary) as the conversations get stranger and stranger. Eventually, living with the hookers start to take its toll as they often break into choreographed dance numbers where she finds herself stuck in the world. Finally, she finds Billy and have a confrontation with his wife (Julia Ormond) as the world starts to get stranger. Now a hooker, Sue tries to find out about the young woman (Karolina Gruszka) who is watching her from the TV where suddenly, Nikki would return to enter strange worlds including a sitcom called Rabbits while trying to save the life of this young woman.
The film's plot line is simple which is about a woman in trouble. Yet, the plot line isn't simple as it seems. Even from a mind as surreal and loose as David Lynch. The film starts off with a black-and-white shot of record playing and a crying young woman watching Lynch's 2002 online sitcom Rabbits. A lot of these things plus subplots involving Eastern European crime world are thrown in to break from the film's main plot. Yet, the result is Lynch definitely rallying against convention. Whether's it's a traditional film narrative, satire, or anything that's traditional with any kind of films. Lynch is basically throwing away all of these ideas.
Serving as the writer, director, producer, editor, cinematographer, sound designer, and music composer along with cues by Krzysztof Penderecki. The film is definitely Lynch taking control of everything with additional contribution from cinematographer Peter Deming on lighting cues and George Koran on digital coloring. More importantly, Lynch abandons the idea of shooting on film and replacing it with digital video. A lot of the interiors Lynch shoots is almost in a Dogme 95-like fashion where it's all hand-held and in natural lighting most of the time. It's also very stylized through his eerie direction. While the look does have a grainy film on the film's exterior sequences, they work to convey the atmosphere Lynch is conveying. Even as he's improvising along the way since he did the film without a completed script and things are made up along the way.
That sense of improvisation and spontaneity really adds a fresh style to the film though it's Lynch experimenting. Not everything Lynch does work as the pacing at times tends to lag. Even in a film that is three hours where it tests the audience patience. Things get repetitive and meanders a bit. Yet, it's part of what Lynch is trying to do with the film because of his themes of reality versus fiction. In many ways, Lynch is going back further to the days of his debut film Eraserhead 30 years before to return to his love of experimentation. Even through its grainy, digital photography and stylized, ominous editing, and eerie sound design with help from sound editor Ronald Eng. Lynch is definitely trying to create new things that audiences who want to see something new will enjoy.
Despite these experiments and Lynch being unconventional, the film still has a story and the story about a woman in trouble is definitely told. Though the narrative is told in an unconventional manner, the main story of Nikki/Sue entering into a strange world to understand. Yet, the audience is also being played on whether she's in a film within a film or is she in a different reality. It will confuse people but the elements of horror and mystery manages to make the whole experience into an incredible yet strange journey.
The film also has a parallel story of this young Polish woman in trouble as she is held by Polish crime lords while forced to watch things like the Rabbits sitcom and is playing what may be the observer. A lot of things Lynch is saying isn't easy to interpret and is definitely a mind-bender. Yet, the result of what Lynch is trying to do and how to present things through his loose script and eerie, surreal direction proves that he's still got something to say and is managing to challenge himself as a storyteller.
Helping Lynch with his presentation is set decorator Melanie Rein and a team of art directors to bring different looks of Los Angeles from the posh world that Nikki lives to the decayed world that Sue lives in. Costume designers Karen Baird and Heidi Bivens brings a unique look from the varied clothes of the hookers to the posh-like clothing of Nikki/Sue. Lynch's score is mostly electronic driven to convey the sense of horror and suspense. The music of Krzysztof Penderecki also adds some suspense with his orchestral score that also features music from Nina Simone, Little Eva, and Etta James to add quirkiness to the film's soundtrack.
The film's cast is very unique and diverse with several cameo appearances from Lynch regulars like Diane Ladd as a talk-show host, Grace Zabriskie as a neighbor, Harry Dean Stanton as Kingsley's assistant Freddy, Laura Harring, Scott Coffey, and Naomi Watts appearing as voices in the Rabbits sitcom with Harring appearing at the end of the film. Other cameos include William H. Macy as an announcer, Mary Steenburgen as a visitor, Terry Crews as a homeless man, Ben Harper as a musician, Nastassjia Kinski as a friend at the end of the film, and Jordan Ladd as one of the hookers who does a dance routine in front of Sue. Karolina Gruszka is great as a crying young woman who is in trouble while Polish actors Jan Hencz and Krzysztof Majchrzak are great as Polish mob members with Peter J. Lucas as Nikki's troublesome husband. Julia Ormond is great as Billy's troubled wife Doris, Cameron Daddo as Devon’s manager, and Erik Crary as the eerie Mr. K.
Jeremy Irons is great as film director Kingsley Stewart, a director who hopes to do a remake justice while trying not to be cursed. Irons is perfect in the role of the director as he tries to make sure Nikki is in acting mode where as if she's fully in character. It's a great performance from Irons who rarely gives a bad performance. Lynch regular Justin Theroux is in excellent form as Devon Berk, an actor who is very friendly with Nikki and wants to maintain his professionalism. In the role of Billy Side, Theroux sports a Southern accent and acts like a man in love and is very desperate about his love for both Sue and Doris.
Laura Dern gives what has to be one of her greatest performances to date. Dern manages to be very charming and likeable in the role while delving into darker material. When she's Nikki, she carries the sense of optimism as an actress who's been out of the spotlight for a while and is given a chance to shine again. In the role of Sue, she has to dig deeper into figuring out what world she's in while wondering if everything she's seeing is real. Dern has to delve into other acting genres for the performance and it works in every level whether it's mystery or horror. It's a very complex, superb performance from Laura Dern who is being overlooked nowadays among her acting peers.
While INLAND EMPIRE isn't a great film that one would expect from David Lynch. The film is still an experience that is unparalleled with most feature films. Fans of Lynch's more experimental side will no doubt enjoy his new feature film as well as his attempts to break the rules. Fans of Laura Dern will also enjoy this for her brave, complex performance. Anyone who wants to be challenged by unconventional filmmaking should see this film. Yet, for a mainstream audience, this film is not for them. With its three-hour running time, pacing issues, and such, it's a film that they won't necessarily enjoy. In the end, INLAND EMPIRE is a surreal yet provocative film from David Lynch and company.
David Lynch Films: Eraserhead - The Elephant Man - Dune - Blue Velvet - Wild at Heart - Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me - Lost Highway - The Straight Story - Mulholland Dr.
The Short Films of David Lynch Pt. 1 - The Short Films of David Lynch Pt. 2 - The Music Videos of David Lynch
The Auteurs #50: David Lynch: Pt. 1 - Pt. 2 - Pt. 3 - Pt. 4
The Short Films of David Lynch Pt. 1 - The Short Films of David Lynch Pt. 2 - The Music Videos of David Lynch
The Auteurs #50: David Lynch: Pt. 1 - Pt. 2 - Pt. 3 - Pt. 4
© thevoid99 2011
Labels:
david lynch,
diane ladd,
grace zabriskie,
harry dean stanton,
jeremy irons,
julia ormond,
justin theroux,
laura dern,
scott coffey,
william h. macy
Thursday, May 19, 2011
2011 Cannes Marathon: Che (Expanded Criterion DVD Review)
Originally Written and Posted at Epinions.com on 2/7/09 w/ Additional Edits & New Content.
(Best Actor Prize Winner to Benicio del Toro at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival)
Revolutionary, killer, soldier, assassin, idealist, icon, and leader. Yet, Ernesto "Che" Guevara is a man that is beloved for his revolutionary ideals and guerilla tactics as he tried to help Third World countries fight oppression. He's also vilified for killing innocent people for his cause during the Cuban Revolution from the late 1950s to the early 1960s. Still, Che Guevara remains an icon, whether people like it or not, as he's on various t-shirts and people following his ideals. At the same time, he's been an interesting figure that's been celebrated with various film versions about him and his life. More recently, Walter Salles' 2004 film The Motorcycle Diaries was about Guevara's early life in his motorcycle journey with a friend that would impact his idealism and oppression of the world.
With various other film versions about Che Guevara told, one filmmaker decides to create an epic version about Che Guevara's triumphs in the Cuba Revolution and the failure of Bolivia that would lead to his death in 1967. A project that was years in the making, it would be a project created by actor Benicio del Toro and producer Laura Bickford that included the involvement of the acclaimed yet reclusive director Terrence Malick, who had been in Bolivia in 1966 as a journalist working on a story about Guevara. Yet when Malick chose to drop out of the project to work on The New World, del Toro turned to Steven Soderbergh whom he had worked with in 2000's Traffic. Soderbergh, del Toro, and Laura Bickford immediately worked on the project with screenwriters Peter Buchman and Benjamin van der Veen. The result would be a two-part, four-hour plus project simply entitled Che.
Directed and shot by Steven Soderbergh, Che tells the life-story of Che Guevara in two different part and stories in his life. In the first part entitled The Argentine written by Peter Buchman, it tells the story of Che's arrival to Cuba, his meeting with Fidel Castro, the Cuban Revolution, and his speech at the United Nations in 1965. The second part entitled Guerilla written by Buchman and Benjamin A. van der Veen tells the story of Guevara's arrival in Bolivia to start a revolution where he would face failure and his own demise. An epic tale that chronicle a man's rise and fall as well as the history of the Cuban Revolution and Guevara's attempt to revolutionize other Third World countries. It is a compelling yet provocative film that strays away from the conventions of film bio-pics. With Benicio del Toro in the role of Che Guevara, the film stars an all-star cast including Catalina Sandino Moreno, Franka Potente, Victor Rasuk, Rodrigo Santoro, Demian Bichir, Lou Diamond Phillips, Edgar Ramirez, Santiago Cabrera, Roberto Luis Santana, and Julia Ormond. Che is truly a mesmerizing and entrancing masterpiece from Steven Soderbergh.
The Argentine
It's Mexico in 1955 as Ernesto Guevara, an Argentinian doctor is at a dinner party held by Raul Castro (Rodrigo Santoro). Arriving to the party is Raul's older brother Fidel (Demian Bichir) who is trying to plan a revolution to overthrow Flugencio Batista to free Cuba. Nearly a year later, Ernesto and the Castro brothers would take a leaky boat trip from Mexico to Cuba as part of 82 people and soldiers to start the revolution. Only 12 would end up surviving. Joining them are Camilo Cienfuegos (Santiago Cabrera), Juan Almeida (Roberto Luis Santana), Vilo (Jorge Perugorria), Vaquerito (Unax Ugalde), Esteban (Jose Caro), and Celia Sanchez (Elvira Minguez) among others. With Ernesto leading one group of troops with the Castro brothers each taking some soldiers, Ernesto hopes that if peasants join them. They also learn have to read and write in order to improve themselves as part of the revolution.
Things wouldn't start easy as Ernesto deals with his asthma attacks during walks through the Cuban jungles as he and men fight off Batista's forces. Though the victories are small and Fidel making deals with landowners to help them fight Batista much to Ernesto's chagrin. After recruiting more people including a couple of young brothers in Rogelio (Victor Rasuk) and Enrique Acevedo (Jorge Armando) plus Pombo (Othello Rensoli), Lalo Sardinas (Luis Gonzaga Hernandez), and Ciro Redondo Garcia (Edgar Ramirez). Ernesto's job was to train new recruits as he and Camilo would help the Castro brothers with more small victories after another. With peasants helping them, a young thief named Aleida March (Catalina Sandino Moreno) joins the cause as she helps Ernesto collect money and become his guide to cities.
After the successful victory of Santa Clara that would lead to the eventual surrender and departure of Batista, the Cuban Revolution succeeds. In 1964, Guevara arrives to New York City amidst protest and anger from some Cubans as he's interviewed by Lisa Howard (Julia Ormond). Despite meeting Eugene McCarthy (Jon de Vries) and defending the Cuban Revolution in front of the delegates in the United Nations while battling several ambassadors of other Latin American countries. Che Guevara succeeds in telling his ideas of the Cuban Revolution to the world.
Guerilla
It's 1965 as Fidel Castro announces that Che Guevara has resigned from his post for the Cuban government in hopes to spread the revolution that gave Cuba hope to South America. A year later following his failed attempts in Congo and Venezuela, Guevara gains a new look and identity for his next attempt to bring revolution to Bolivia. With Fidel's help to transport Guevara to Bolivia, Che leaves behind his wife Aleida and their four children as he plans his next adventure. With help from his old friends Pombo, Vilo, and Tuma (Norman Santiago) plus fellow revolutionary Tania (Franka Potente), Guevara under the name Ramon plans to overthrow President Rene Barrientos (Joaquim de Almeida) over the hardships facing peasants and miners.
Gaining a rag tag group of peasants and rebels to help, they take part in Guevara's Latin American revolution. With Tania being the messenger to the outside world, they attempt to get help from Bolivia's Communist party leader Mario Monje (Lou Diamond Phillips) who is convinced that the revolution will fail. With Regis Debray (Marc-Andre Grondin) being the contact to Castro, things start to move slow and with little organization. With Tania stuck in the jungle and her jeep investigated, she joins Vilo's team to continue the revolution as the groups are splintered in different locations. After an attack on Bolivian troops, Barrientos turns to the U.S. for help as several agents including Alejandro Ramirez (Yul Vazquez) to help combat against the rebels. Things get troubling following a visit from a journalist (Mark Umbers) as it leads to the capture of Regis Debray and another associate. With things crumbling, soldiers sick, some leaving to give information to the government, and the CIA training Bolivian soldiers, Guevara tries to maintain hope for the Bolivian revolution. Yet, as he also faces health issues with his asthma, the loss of some troops, and the increasing battalion of the Bolivian soldiers. Guevara goes for one last shot at fighting to death where he would meet his demise.
The bio-pic genre often follows a certain formula about historical figures or sometimes controversial figures. The big question in bio-pics is where to begin and how to end it. For a film about Che Guevara, it couldn't be told in a traditional bio-pic narrative. Even as there are many versions told about Che Guevara through various mediums with the most recent and successful being The Motorcycle Diaries about the young Che Guevara's South American journey. With that part of the story already covered, what is there to tell about Guevara? By basing his story and source from various stories including two of Che's books including Reminiscences of the Cuban Revolutionary War and The Bolivian Diary as the two main sources.
For The Argentine section, the film is more plot-driven as it's told back and forth from Guevara's 1964 interviews with Lisa Howard and his visit to New York City and to his first meeting with Fidel Castro and the Cuban Revolution. With Guevara talking with a translator speaking for him, he tells his experiences about being a soldier in the revolutionary while doing things for the revolution. While screenwriter Peter Buchman doesn't stray from the fact that Guevara is a controversial figure whether people agree with his politics or not. It reveals what drove the Cubans to revolt against Batista and his dictatorship since he was implanted by the U.S. government. At the same time, it showed that Guevara did kill Cubans for what he believes is for the Revolution.
While it never follows the period of what happened after Batista's departure from the country and before Guevara's arrival to New York City in 1964. That's because it's an entirely different story that's more about Fidel Castro and the Revolution rather than Che Guevara. When The Argentine ends, it ends where it sort of began in Mexico with Castro's conversation with Guevara about the Revolution. It would lead to Guerilla, a section that is less plot-driven and more loose in the storytelling by Peter Buchman and Benjamin A. van der Veen. It follows Che's attempts to kick-start a revolution in Bolivia yet things are much harder. Just as The Argentine chronicle's Che's rise, Guerilla chronicles his fall. Che becomes more ragged as the story is told as things become bleaker and troubling.
The script for Guerilla would reveal that unlike the revolution in Cuba, Bolivia is an entirely different world where the peasants aren't sure if they wanted Che Guevara around them. At the same time, unlike Batista's forces who are really paid soldiers who were unprepared for the guerilla tactics of the Cuban Revolution. The Bolivian government turn to the U.S. and CIA. for help. Just as Guevara thought he can still beat the soldiers, it wouldn't be enough as the soldiers are more prepared. Plus, the location and atmosphere is very different. At the same time, the soldiers that Guevara is training and leading aren't sure what they're fighting with some leaving and others selling out to the authorities. Therefore, the section of Guerilla reveals Che's failures and whatever hope he had been clinging to right to the end. Overall, the screenplay that Peter Buchman and Benjamin A. van der Veen is truly brilliant in its emphasis on history and study of a complex yet controversial figure.
The direction of Steven Soderbergh is truly brilliant in its varied styles of filmmaking and presentation to each section of the film. In forgoing the traditional approach to telling the story, Soderbergh creates a different look and feel to the approach of the film in its different section. Also serving as the film's cinematographer under his Peter Andrews alias, Soderbergh takes advantage of giving the film a different look and feel. Therefore, the film is presented in different styles and looks along with different aspect ratios for each section to give a presentation that is unlike most bio-pics.
For The Argentine, the 2:35:1 aspect ratio brings a wide scope to the film as it reveals Cuba played by the jungles of Mexico and Puerto along with several town locations in those countries. The look of the jungle in its green look meshed with blue and yellow depending on the mood of the jungle and time is beautiful to look at. With some hand-held camera to capture the endurance of the journey and some of the battle scenes. Soderbergh's direction for those scenes is mostly straightforward as he mostly goes for wide coverage on what he wants to present. For the New York City portion, it's in black-and-white and with grainy 16mm camera footage to give the film a distinctive, 1960s New York look with some hand-held shots and lighting layers to explore the different world Guevara is in.
In Guerilla, the 1:85:1 aspect ratio gives the film a flatter look where things are bigger but not much coverage is captured. While the look of the film starts out clearer and colorful in its opening scenes in Cuba and the cities in Bolivia. By the time it's in the jungle, things become very different. The hand-held work is shakier, the cinematography is grayer to exemplify the bleak mood of the film. At the same time, the camera is more engaging in the way it captures the battle scenes and its energy, the point-of-view shots of soldiers fighting, and Spain being Bolivia which is truly more rugged than Cuba. It's as if the audience are right in the battle dead center in Bolivia. While they were also in the battles in Cuba, it's Bolivia where things become more in your face. At the same time, Soderbergh goes for more close-ups and shots to give the film a kind of claustrophobic feel as things are closing in on Che.
In this unconventional approach to the direction and storytelling. Steven Soderbergh really proves his masterful technique as a director while playing around with the conventions of the bio-pic. By focusing on three key events of Che Guevara and his impact on the Cuban Revolution and what he meant for some people that admired him and for those that hate him. It's clear that he's telling the story of a man who is driven to succeed at all costs. Even if it will kill him for the sake of his own beliefs while wanting to give hope to people who are repressed by their own governments. While Soderbergh chose to remain neutral in what people might say about Che Guevara. The film does succeed in what it wanted to which was to tell the story of a man who gave voice to those that didn't have a voice. Overall, Steven Soderbergh steps up his game as not just as a director but as a storyteller.
Editor Pablo Zumarraga does superb work with the film's editing in varied cutting styles to exemplify the tone of each section. For The Argentine, taking the section's structure in moving back and forth with smooth transitions, jump-cuts, and other cutting styles to give it a unique rhythm but also a pacing style that's more meditative. While the pacing is slow in some respects, it's because it displays the four years that went on from Guevara's first meeting with Castro to the victory of Santa Clara. In Guerilla, the rhythm of the film is looser thus giving the film a more leisurely pace that isn't too slow. In the use of jump cuts and other techniques for a fluid, energetic pacing in terms of the fighting scenes that are more intense than the ones in The Argentine. The cutting is more swift and engaging as Zumarraga goes for the intensity and looseness of that section. Overall, Pablo Zumarraga does amazing work in playing up to the film's varied styles as well as taking the challenge to cut a film that's nearly four-and-a-half hours.
Production designer Antxon Gomez along with set decorator Pilar Revuelta do amazing work in the recreation of the shelters, bases, and such for both sections of the film. With Clara Notari and Laia Colet as the art directors for The Argentine and Juan Pedro de Gaspar for Guerilla. The look of the film is very distinctive where The Argentine has a look where the furniture and housings are more well-put to display the unity of the Revolution. The city locations of Mexico and Puerto Rico as Cuba also works in several scenes, notably the Battle of Santa Clara where there's debris and a great scene involving a train. In Guerilla where it's shot mostly in the forest of Spain, the design for the shelters are more rugged and not as put together to display the troubles that would come for Che and his followers. At the same time, the locations of the houses are much older as it displays the different world between Cuba and Bolivia. The design of the production is truly fascinating in displaying the world and locations in its different atmosphere.
Costume designer Bina Daigler does excellent work in the costumes with the more put-together, intimidating look of the guerillas in The Argentine where it feels and looks like an army that's ready to fight despite their lack of proper resources. In Guerilla, it's more ragged with holes and loose clothing to display the troubles that is going on as Daigler's work is worth noting. Sound editors Larry Blake and Gabriel Guiterrez do brilliant work in the sound work that goes on for both sections. In The Argentine, it's more layered to display its atmosphere of the jungles and cities that the rebels fight on with sounds of planes, guns, and tanks that goes on. During the New York section, it's a bit more raw and intimate in the scenes where Guevara talks to the United Nations. For Guerilla, the sound is a bit more quieter but discomforting given the foreboding tone of that section. During the scenes of battle, it's more rattling and crisp to exemplify its tone as there's an intimacy but also rather discomforting to hear. The sound work in the film is truly magnificent in its wide approach to the film's sound.
The music of Alberto Iglesias is truly rich with soundtrack pieces of samba music to complement the world of Cuba in The Argentine while going for a more epic-like feel with somber arrangements in some of the film's dramatic scenes. For the battle sequences, there's an intensity to the score with sweeping arrangements by Iglesias while the music in the New York sequence are intimate but with large arrangements for the dramatic intensity of the film. In Guerilla, Iglesias goes for sparse arrangements and instrumentation for the tone of that section. With eerie, haunting bells and acoustic guitars, the score is easily more minimalist as it has this sense of chill that goes on. Overall, Iglesia's work is phenomenal in the diversity of the score and its presentation.
The casting by Mary Vernieu, J.C. Cantu, and Rodrigo Bellott are brilliant in its assembly of small roles and casting for the variety of film roles that are played throughout the entirety of the film. In The Argentine, there's some memorable small performances from people like Elvira Minguez as Celia Sanchez, Unax Ugalde as Vaquerito, Alfredo de Quesada as a farmer named Israel Pardo, Roberto Urbina as Israel's brother Guile, Jose Caro as Esteban, Mateo Gomez as a Cuban diplomat in the New York scenes, Bryan Huffman as Cuervo, Jon de Vries as Senator Eugene McCarthy, Jorge Armando as Enrique Acevedo, Carlito Ruiz Ruiz as Albertico, and Guillermo Ruiz as a Commandant from Santa Clara.
In Guerilla, small performances from Juan Carlos Vellido as a defeated major, Stephen Casmier as a U.S. captain, Mark Umbers as journalist George Roth, and as soldiers, Pablo Duran, Juan Salinas, Lorenzo Areil Munoz, Cristian Mercado, Diego Ortiz, and Ruben Salinas. Another small yet memorable performance from Guerilla as a German priest is a cameo appearance from one of Steven Soderbergh's regular and most famous actors.
In more memorable roles from The Argentine, there's Edgar Ramirez as one of the Revolution founders in Ciro Redondo Garcia, Victor Rasuk as young soldier Rogelio Acevedo, Santiago Cabrera as the more rambunctious Camilo Cienfuegos, Oscar Issac as Che's translator, Roberto Luis Santana as Juan Almeida, Bruno Bichir as Colonel Rojas, and Julia Ormond as journalist Lisa Howard who interviews Che for a series of interviews. In Guerilla, there's Joaquim de Almeida as the ruthless President Rene Barrientos, Lou Diamond Phillips as Communist party leader Mario Monje, Marc -Andre Grondin as Castro's French friend Regis Debray, Carlos Bardem as one of Che's loyal soldiers in Moises Guevara, and Franka Potente as Tania, the contact to the outside world who ends joining them in the guerilla fighting.
Appearing in both sections are Yul Vasquez as Alejandro Ramirez, an anti-Castro Cuban wanting to go after Che as he appears in the New York section and later as a CIA agent. Othello Rensoli as Pombo, Norman Santiago as Tuma, Armando Riesco as Benigno, and Jorge Perugorria as Joaquin are each memorable as loyal soldiers who fought for the Revolution and help Che in their attempt to free Bolivia. Rodrigo Santoro is excellent as Raul Castro who is the more likeable Castro brother. Demian Bichir is great as Fidel Castro, the man leading the Revolution as he helps Che in refining his political stance while helping him with the revolution in Bolivia by giving him a disguise and such. Catalina Sandino Moreno is wonderful as Aleida, the woman who would become his wife as she becomes his guide to the cities while helping him in the battles as she becomes the unlikely partner he would have in his life.
Finally, there's Benicio del Toro in what has to be a performance for the ages. Serving as one of the producers for the project, del Toro is truly the heart and soul of the film as he brings Che Guevara to life. As Che Guevara, we see a man who is about to embark on a life-changing journey while presenting challenges that a man of his character and physical disability with his asthma to keep going. What del Toro does is build a man who starts out as an ordinary doctor into an unlikely leader who is almost God-like where he's loved by some but also hated by others as he commands the screen with an intimidating presence. He allows Che to be humorous, accessible, and charming but also ruthless, dangerous, and uncaring at times.
By the time Che is in Bolivia, we see someone ready to embark on a new journey as the iconic man is seen pretending to be ordinary but then becomes the superhero of sorts that is revered by many. Yet, as he is in Bolivia, del Toro displays Che as a man that becomes human as he's forced to face new challenges that are overwhelming while trying to keep his head high. We see that despite these challenges and obstacles he faces, del Toro maintains Che's fighting spirit right to the end as he gives Che a send-off that is true to the man himself. It is truly a performance that can be described in so many words while it also proves that among his generation of actors, Benicio del Toro is truly one of those actors who will take on a role full-tilt and ready to go as it's his greatest performance to date.
***The Following 2 Paragraphs is an Overview of the Roadshow Experience***
For the film's release, it's presented in different theatrical styles. A regular release for the first part one week and the second part in the week after. Then there's the roadshow presentation. The roadshow presentation is a special film presentation for long films where audiences might have to pay double the average ticket price. Audiences are given programs that feature the film credits as once the film plays, there's no trailers and no credits. Just the film as it is. For a film like Che which has a running time of nearly four-and-a-half hours, each section begins with a location map. The Argentine begins with a map of Cuba and its sections while Guerilla displays South America and its varied countries. When The Argentine ends as it cuts to a black screen comes the Intermission display. The intermission lasts 15 minutes which gives the audience time to use the bathroom, get some food, or engage in conversations with the audience. It's an experience in today's film culture that is rare as audiences are more interested in something quick and to the point.
A film like Che is impossible to market to a wide audience for several reasons. It's a film that's four-and-a-half hours long with a fifteen-minute intermission. There are no credits before or after the film. It's in Spanish which includes subtitles. Plus, it's about a controversial figure that not everyone will want to see for political and personal reasons. Yet, Steven Soderbergh, Benicio del Toro, and producer Laura Bickford do deserve credit for taking a film that is ambitious and not straying to conventions in creating a compelling portrait of a figure as controversial as Che Guevara. Whether anyone agree or not with Guevara's politics, it does reveal that Che Guevara is an interesting personality who was giving a voice for the oppressed.
***Additional DVD Content Written on 4/28/11-5/16/11***
The 2009 Region 1 3-Disc DVD set for Che is definitely one of the key releases from the Criterion Collection. Supervised by its director Steven Soderbergh, the three-disc set includes the two-part film in 2 discs while the third includes various special features. The disc for the first part of the film is presented in a 2:39:1 widescreen aspect ratio while the second part is presented in a 1:78:1 widescreen aspect ratio as both films are altered a bit for its DVD presentation. Both parts are presented with 5.1 Dolby Digital Surround Sound.
Both the first and second disc each feature a commentary track from Jon Lee Anderson, the author of the book Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life. Anderson, who was also a chief consultant in the film, provided a largely historical context to his commentary talking about Guevara and the Cuban Revolution. For the first part, he mostly talked about Guevara’s early life just after his journey that was chronicled in The Motorcycle Diaries. Notably Guevara’s journey from South America to Central America that eventually led to his meeting with Fidel Castro in Mexico.
Anderson also has some criticism towards the first part of the film over a few key events missed upon Che’s arrival and before the battle of Sierra Maestra. Anderson also touched upon Che’s relationships with Fidel Castro, fellow comrades, and his second wife Almeida March who helped out in the Revolution. Anderson also talks about Che’s visit in New York City where he discusses the tension between Cuba and the U.S. Particularly as he felt that Che was the last revolutionary of his kind while the revolutions that followed in the U.S. ended up being more superficial. Anderson talks about Lisa Howard’s fascination with Guevara while bringing some historical insights over Cuba’s feelings towards the U.S. that dates back to the early 20th Century.
In the second part of the film, Anderson talks about the chaos of the Bolivia campaign along with insights into why it failed. Some said that Che succeeded in Cuba because he had the help of Fidel Castro. Without Fidel being able to help him, Che was going to have a hard time trying to do something in Bolivia despite the group of people he had who had worked with him on previous campaigns. Anderson also reveals that the failure of the Bolivia campaign was much more complicated due to a variety of reasons relating to issues between Castro and Mario Monje, the Communist Party leader in Bolivia who was really a weasel.
Anderson talks about a lot of what happened in Bolivia and reasons why Che chose the country for the campaign mainly due to its history as Bolivia had a lot of struggle with leadership and such. Yet, it was much more complicated due to the fact that there was a group of people that were suspicious about having Che in Bolivia. There was also tension between the Bolivians and Cubans during the campaign because neither got a chance to know each other and there was no time. Particularly as there was a resentment of sorts of the way the Cubans ran things where Anderson said that the previous failures Che had in prior campaigns including the Congo were replicated. There’s also a discussion of the survivors of the Bolivian campaign where one of them along with Regis DeBray said things that Anderson felt was an attempt to revise history. Anderson’s overall commentary is quite relaxed as the historical insights he provides are very illuminating. The only other feature in the first disc is a theatrical trailer for the film.
The third disc features many special features about the film’s production as well as its historical context and the use of the RED Digital Camera. The 50-minute Making “Che” documentary features interviews with director Steven Soderbergh, producer Laura Bickford, screenwriters Ben Van Der Veen and Peter Buchman, and its star Benicio del Toro. The documentary chronicles the 10 years that was spent to develop the project as Soderbergh was involved early but left due to various projects. Even as they briefly discussed Terrence Malick’s involvement as he covered some of the Bolivian campaign in 1966 during his time as a journalist. Soderbergh eventually came back once Malick dropped out due to the financing issues that was plaguing the project as he brought in Peter Buchman to help with the script.
This would lead to further development as it came to the realization that a bio-pic of Che Guevara can’t be some conventional film as Soderbergh and del Toro were able to shoot scenes in the United Nations in early 2006 before its renovation. Soderbergh discusses that in order for the film to work, they would have to create something that is authentic and factual without being criticized for historical inaccuracy. Despite having no U.S. financial backing and having to leave stuff out for the film including Guevara’s time in Havana ordering executions and his period in the Congo. They went for three specific periods as a two-part film. For the production, the material for the first part was shot last as it proved to be harder due to the approach of the story as Soderbergh was using the film with the RED Digital Camera that he had been following for years in its development.
The film was completed three days before its premiere at Cannes as Soderbergh knew this was the film to be shown at Cannes. Yet, by the time it was ready to be shown for the festival. Five U.S. independent distributors went bust and there only two left at that time. Even worse was that the film’s release in the U.S. would be extremely difficult at a climate that is very disposable with movies which led to Soderbergh releasing it as a road-show so a new generation of filmgoers can experience. The overall documentary is an extraordinary piece about the difficulties about making the film as well as the big risk to release it in a very commercial-driven film climate.
The 23-minute interviews with people who knew Che such as the Acevedo brothers and Ricardo Alarcon as they each talk about their own experiences about the 26th of July Movement and Guevara while Urbano and Pombo talks about Bolivia. The Acevedo brothers recall their first meeting with Che to be one of disappointment though they realized his intentions as they also were grateful for him to make education an important factor. Alarcon talks about the period of the Revolution as well as the Battle of Santa Clara as he believes that the military in Cuba were devising a coup against Batista at the time. Urbano talks about the organization of the Bolivian campaign and how Che had disguised himself. Pombo talks about the last days of the campaign and how they tried to regroup and evade the Bolivian army. It’s another piece that insightful from the men who knew Che.
The 12 minute piece with historians Mario Mencia Cobas and Herberto N. Acosta. Cobas discusses the events that led to the 26th of July Movement all the way to Castro and Guevara’s arrival to Cuba and the battle of Sierre Maestra. Acosta talks about the first meeting between Castro and Guevara and the organization of their own plans to start a revolution in Cuba as well as their relationship. Acosta concludes the piece about the battles leading to Santa Clara as it was clear that the small victories would be the starting point as a victory in Santa Clara would be crucial for the Revolution to come to Havana. It’s an intriguing yet mesmerizing piece about some fascinating historical events.
The 26-minute End of a Revolution documentary by Brian Moser made in 1968 for British television is about Bolivia after Che Guevara’s death. It covers the harsh conditions that miners are dealing with including low pay and poor housing along with their own discontent towards the government. There’s interviews with Bolivia’s then-president Rene Barrientos along with Regis DeBray who was on trial at the time he was interviewed where he would be sentenced to 30 years though was released in 1970. It’s an engaging short documentary that recalls the history of Bolivia’s revolutions that they’ve faced for many years along with the small impact Guevara had in the miners who supported his revolution.
The 33-minute “Che” and the Digital Cinema Revolution featurette is about the RED Camera that was used for the film. Featuring interviews with Soderbergh, first camera assistant Steve Meizler, RED Camera developer Deanan Dasilva, first assistant editor Nat Jencks, and RED Code Chef Rob Lohman. They all discuss the evolution of the RED Camera as well as the reasons why Soderbergh wanted to use it so he can get the best new digital camera to capture available light. Yet, developing it proved to be difficult as by the time production was starting. Soderbergh and crew only got the prototypes that would heat up because of weather as they had to put ice packs to cool them. During the shoot in Spain for the second part, it was very difficult to clean them inside because there was no sensors between the lens and glass in the camera.
By the time they went to shoot the first part in Mexico and Puerto Rico, it got better as they knew what to do while cutting the film made it easier and immediate. Yet, in order to store the footage that was captured on film. They had to store them in 8GB flash cards where they bought 237 of those 8GB flash cards that totals to 2 TB of material. Then they had to put them in hard drives and backing hard drives for the post-production. Yet, that was tough due to trying to sync audio and video while transferring it to film. Soderbergh also revealed that another reason he wanted to use the RED One camera was its size as he hoped it would be smaller than film cameras. The camera with its equipment nearly weighed 20 pounds as it’s a great featurette about the advantages and disadvantages of the RED One camera.
The deleted scenes feature more than twenty minutes of content cut from the original film that features optional commentary tracks by Steven Soderbergh. From the fifteen-and-a-half minutes of material cut in part one are 10 scenes. The first is a short scene of men finding food on their trail that’s thrown away while the second is Che and Camillo having a conversation. The third is an encounter with Che and scared enemy soldiers who have a message from Castro. The fourth is where a group of men led by Ciro and Vilo meet a peasant woman whom they buy some food from her. The fifth deleted scene is where a man named Polo lead Che to a house he had been to nine years ago where Che makes some suggestions. The sixth scene is a short scene of soldiers listening to music on the radio much to the chagrin of Che.
The seventh scene is Che and Fidel’s reaction to the news over Frank Pais’ death as they figure out what to do about his work and such. The eighth scene is a short piece where Che talks to troops about the enemy who are definitely afraid while the ninth is a long scene over the death of a soldier by an officer as Che and Fidel have a trial. The last is a short scene is where Victor Bordon meets Che and joins him. Soderbergh’s commentary reveal that while a lot of the material are great stand alone scenes. He cut them for various reasons including pacing or the fact that there’s one too many scenes of this and such. He also revealed that in the first part, seven to eight minutes of deleted were shown in its premiere at Cannes.
Five-and-a-half minutes of deleted material from the second part of the film feature four scenes. The first is Che talking to soldiers about the importance of the mission while the second is a scene about a failed attack on a truck because of a mistake made by Che. The third is about Benigno’s return from the main camp where he found supplies and documents much to everyone’s relief that is followed by a final deleted scene where soldiers filled water in everyone’s canteens that concludes with a prank towards Che. Soderbergh revealed that the scenes were cut due to pacing issues as well as reasons over the portrayal of Che. The last scene was something Soderbergh heard about that he decided to shoot it even though it wasn’t going to make it into the final cut.
In the booklet that accompanies the DVD is an essay from film critic Amy Taubin entitled Why Che? Taubin’s essay talks about Soderbergh’s prolific career as well as the reasons into why he wanted to make a film about Che Guevara. Taubin says that the film in comparison to other epic bio-pics is a very different one since it has no political agenda or any kind of romanticism. Instead, it’s a film that is very unconventional which is why its initial reaction at Cannes was mixed. Taubin’s essay is an insightful yet engaging piece that talks about the film’s brilliance as well Soderbergh’s fearlessness into making an unconventional film. The DVD also includes a small poster of the DVD cover as it’s another superb DVD set from the Criterion Collection.
***End of DVD Content***
Che is a sprawling film from Steven Soderbergh that features a towering performance from Benicio del Toro. With a great supporting cast plus amazing technical work, locations, and diverse presentations to the film itself. It is a film that is truly one of a kind in an age where filmmakers either go for money-making blockbusters or tailor-made Oscar films. Soderbergh does neither but create a film that captures the life of a man who is both iconic and hated. For Steven Soderbergh, this film truly puts him in the list of the elite directors like Stanley Kubrick, Orson Welles, and Federico Fellini among others. For Benicio del Toro, this is the performance of a lifetime as he gives something that will never be displayed on film for many years to come. In the end, Che is a film that truly lives up to the man himself in all of his glory and failures into a story that is truly unforgettable.
Steven Soderbergh Films: sex, lies, & videotape - Kafka - King of the Hill - The Underneath - Gray's Anatomy - Schizopolis - Out of Sight - The Limey - Erin Brockovich - Traffic - Ocean's Eleven - Full Frontal - Solaris (2002 film) - Eros-Equilibrium - Ocean's Twelve - Bubble - The Good German - Ocean's Thirteen - The Girlfriend Experience - The Informant! - And Everything is Going Fine - Contagion - Haywire - Magic Mike - Side Effects - Behind the Candelabra - Logan Lucky - (Unsane) - (High Flying Bird)
The Auteurs #39: Steven Soderbergh Pt. 1 - Pt. 2
The Auteurs #39: Steven Soderbergh Pt. 1 - Pt. 2
© thevoid99 2011
Labels:
benicio del toro,
catalina sandino moreno,
demian bichir,
edgar ramirez,
franka potente,
joaquim de almeida,
julia ormond,
lou diamond phillips,
rodrigo santoro,
steven soderbergh
Friday, October 01, 2010
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Originally Written and Posted at Epinions.com on 12/25/08
The short story of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Curious Case of Benjamin Button told the story of a man born with a body of an aging elderly. When he grows, his has the mind of whatever age he's in while he starts to look younger. The story is one of the most intriguing tales by Fitzgerald that an adaptation for a film project took years to create with several screenwriters including Charlie Kaufman and directors like Ron Howard and Gary Ross attached to the project. When the project finally found a director that will stick to the project, it seemed that it would finally be made though it would be in the hands of David Fincher. The man behind such provocative films like Se7en, The Game, and Fight Club. Yet, 2007's Zodiac about the Zodiac killings of the late 1960s marked a change of pace for Fincher that him the ideal director for the film version of F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story.
Directed by David Fincher, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button tells the story of a man born as an elderly as he's under the care of people in New Orleans during World War I. Over the years, he ages backwards while falling in love with the woman he met when she was just a child as he lives throughout the world. Screenplay by Eric Roth, who wrote the adapted screenplay for Forrest Gump, the film version is different from F. Scott Fitzgerald's version as the time frame is set from the time of World War I to August 2005 when Hurricane Katrina arrived. With an all-star cast that included longtime Fincher cohorts Brad Pitt and Elias Koteas plus Cate Blanchett, Tilda Swinton, Julia Ormond, Taraji P. Henson, Jared Harris, Mahershalalhashbaz Ali, Phyllis Somerville, Elle Fanning, Madisen Beaty, and Jason Flemyng. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is a majestic film from David Fincher and company.
It's August 2005 as Hurricane Katrina is approaching New Orleans. An ailing woman named Daisy (Cate Blanchett) is in a hospital bed with her daughter Caroline (Julia Ormond) by her side. Daisy tells Caroline a story about a man named Gateau, a blind clockmaker who created a clock that would run backwards that he unveiled one day to Teddy Roosevelt (Ed Metzger). Daisy asks Caroline to read a diary found in a suitcase which is about a man named Benjamin Button (Brad Pitt). Caroline reads Button's diary as he was born the day World War I ended. Yet, Benjamin's mother (Joeanna Sayler) died due to complications of childbirth as her husband Thomas (Jason Flemyng) listened to her final words. Yet when he sees the baby, he's in shock over the baby's grotesque look only to take it away and leave in to outer staircases of a retirement home run by a woman named Queenie (Taraji P. Henson).
Queenie takes in the baby despite his grotesque nature as she names him Benjamin. With help from her boyfriend and caretaker Tizzy (Mahershalalhashbaz Ali), Benjamin was in the care of various elders where he learned about the world despite looking old. Around the time he was seven, Benjamin finally got to walk with help from a preacher (Lance E. Nichols) while a Creole man named Ngunda Oti (Rampai Mohadi) took him on a tour of New Orleans. Then one day, Benjamin meets a young girl named Daisy (Elle Fanning) whom he befriends as she's visiting her grandmother (Phyllis Somerville). After learning piano lessons from Mrs. Maple (Edith Ivey), he also gets a first-hand lesson about death. When he starts to look and feel younger despite his old appearance, Benjamin notices that Queenie is starting to focus on her own daughter.
At 17, Benjamin meets a tugboat captain named Mike (Jared Harris) who gives him a job as Benjamin becomes entranced by adventure. It would be around the same time Benjamin would meet Thomas Button though Thomas wouldn't reveal his true identity yet. When Daisy (Madisen Beaty) visits again, she is amazed at the world Benjamin is starting to live in while she has dreams of being a ballerina. When Benjamin decides to leave home to work with Mike as a member of a tugboat crew, he writes Daisy many letters until his stop at Russia where he meets the wife of a British diplomat named Elizabeth Abbott (Tilda Swinton). The two first engage in late night conversations that proved to be fulfilling as Abbott once tried to swim across oceans. Yet, their conversations would lead into a secret affair only to end quickly as she leaves Russia.
When World War II begins for the U.S., Mike and his crew decide to serve for the Navy with Benjamin joining along. Returning home to New Orleans once the war ended, Queenie is glad to see him as he continued to work at the retirement home. When Daisy makes a visit, Benjamin is amazed at the new world and career she's in though it overwhelms him. Another encounter with Thomas Button revealed some truths as Benjamin becomes confused only to learn more about Thomas. When Benjamin goes to New York City to surprise Daisy, she is surprised by his visit while Benjamin gets a closer look into her new world including a boyfriend named David (Adrian Armas). For Benjamin, it's too much as he leaves Daisy behind to venture a world of his own. When Daisy gets injured in Paris in an accident, Benjamin visits but Daisy feels ashamed.
After having some time of his own, Daisy re-enters Benjamin's life where the two finally reach the point where they're nearing the same age. Just as life was going blissful for them, Daisy's news that she's pregnant starts to worry Benjamin. After the birth of their child, Benjamin who is aware that he's about to become younger makes a fateful decision that would impact the life of Daisy and their child.
While F. Scott's Fitzgerald's original short story is set in a different time and place. The concept of a man aging backwards does create an idea that is unique. While screenwriter Eric Roth and story adapter Robin Swicord created some major changes that differentiates from the original short story. Their approach does work in setting the story in early 1900s New Orleans to New Orleans 2005 just Hurricane Katrina is set to approach. Yet, not everything works with Eric Roth's screenplay despite its unique structure, character study, and time frame. There's a couple of big flaws in the script though it often depends on what the audience wants. One is that the script is predictable in connecting the dots to what is about to happen and a few surprises that aren't really surprises. Yet, it depends on how the audience can handle that approach to the plot which isn't really Roth's fault or the story. It's just that it creates a lack of suspense or the fact that it isn't surprising.
The other major flaw with the script and story is its relation to Forrest Gump. There's many similarities to the famed novel by Winston Groom and its 1994 film adaptation that was scripted by Eric Roth. Both films have a protagonist embarking on adventures through their own simple, curious commentary. Both are chasing women who live in different worlds while having a maternal figure that can impact their lives. Both characters meet unique characters along the way while living through different eras. Yet unlike Forrest Gump, Benjamin Button isn't a simpleton. Instead, Button is someone who is more aware of the world despite the fact that he's reversely aging. Button is someone trying to live to the fullest where the story is helped by its structure. The first act is about Benjamin as a child, meeting Daisy, and setting on his own adventure. The second act is about his encounter with Elizabeth, the war, and coping with Daisy's new life.
Then there's the third act which begins with Daisy's return and the new life they live in. Once there's a child coming, the audience knows what's coming. Unlike the character of Jenny in Forrest Gump who lived recklessly through certain trends and without any clear goals.
The character of Daisy comes to full effect in the third act in how she's trying to cope with Benjamin becoming younger knowing what would happen. Yet, it's all told with voice-over narration by Benjamin as Daisy's daughter Caroline reads it. While the script had those flaws, Roth's approach in moving the story back and forth from Benjamin's time to the final moments of Daisy's life works in creating a subplot about Daisy's relationship with Caroline. Though audiences do know what's coming where despite its flaws. The script and story definitely is wonderful.
The direction of David Fincher is truly remarkable and majestic. Fincher takes new heights to his direction where he presents the film in various locations, notably New Orleans. When the film progresses, Fincher shows New Orleans in its beauty from the early 20th century to the time just before Hurricane Katrina was about to hit. Every time a certain period is shown, Fincher does it with a majestic style to keep the story moving forward while creating an atmosphere for the period. There's parts of the film where Fincher takes a certain period and adds grainy scratches to the camera work to emphasize the atmosphere of that time. Notably the story about Gateau and his clock which plays a very important part of the film.
Fincher's direction definitely takes him places he hadn't been to like romance and drama while creating a sense of excitement in the film's World War II scene where the tugboat known as Chelsea faces off against a submarine. While Fincher does use CGI-based visual effects for some parts of the film, it's done wisely without looking very fake in its emphasis to create atmosphere for a location or a certain era. In the dramatic approach, there is the idea of sentimentality but it's earned because of what is going to happen. Instead of having to draw out the ending, he creates a slow momentum in having the audience expect the outcome. The overall result of David Fincher's direction is truly spectacular and magical as it's definitely some of his best work as a director.
Cinematographer Claudio Miranda does an amazing job with the film's unique visuals with the sepia-like colors in some of the film's nighttime, interior settings to the period, colorful pallette of the exteriors in Paris, New York, and New Orleans. Miranda's work in the daytime exterior shots of New Orleans without much tints in the colors work in creating a period and atmosphere through Fincher's direction as it's definitely gorgeous in its look. Editors Kirk Baxter and Angus Wall do great work with the editing in the film's Gateau sequence in a scene play in rewind while using swift, smooth cuts on a commentary by Benjamin Button about how fate plays into the world. With its transition cuts, slow-motion cutting, and rewinds. The editing is definitely phenomenal. The visual effects work of Eric Barba and company is great in the creation of a few key moments in the scenes like the stormy sky in a shot at the Gulf beach, a shot of a rocket, a hummingbird, and other visual effects that work very effectively.
Production designer Donald Graham Burt along with set decorator Victor J. Zolfo and a team of art directors do an amazing job in the recreation of the period look of New Orleans through the ages. With its look of the homes that Benjamin visits and lives in to the duplex he and Daisy stays in. The art direction is phenomenal in every location and setting to create an atmosphere to the time. Costume designer Jacqueline West does a brilliant job with the look of the costumes including the ballet leotards and dresses that Cate Blanchett wears to the period clothes that everyone else wears throughout each time. Makeup artists Carla Brenholtz and Stacey Herbert do an amazing job in having the young model actors look like an older version of Brad Pitt while giving Pitt a look of an elderly where one had him look like Marlon Brando. Cate Blanchett's makeup by Elaine L. Offers work to show her aging look in the film's third act is also great in how her character ages while Benjamin looks younger.
Sound editor Ren Klyce does an excellent job in the sound work, notably the battle scene and sea sequences. The sound is also great in its location settings and atmosphere while in the 2005 scene. Carries a sense of foreboding of what is to come. The music of Alexandre Desplat is definitely rich and majestic with somber pieces, flourishing arrangements, and Desplat's tingling melodies. The score is definitely amazing without being heavy handed or playing up to its sentimentality as it's a lovely score. The soundtrack also includes various music pieces of a certain time period including a wonderful use of a live version of the Beatles' Twist And Shout performed on the Ed Sullivan show.
The casting by Laray Mayfield is phenomenal with a lot of small yet memorable characters that have scene-stealing moments like Ted Manson as a man who had been hit by lightning seven times, Paula Gray as an opera singer, Ed Metzger as Teddy Roosevelt, Donna DuPlantier as Gateau's wife, Jacob Tolano as Gateau's son, Joeanna Sayler as Benjamin's mother, Patrick Thomas O'Brien as a doctor, Lance E. Nichols as a preacher, Yasmine Abriel as a prostitute, Rus Blackwell as Daisy's husband in the third act, Adrian Armas as Daisy's boyfriend in the New York City scenes, and Edith Ivey as the woman who teaches Benjamin how to play piano though Benjamin doesn't remember her name. Other small roles from Don Creech, Joshua DesRoches, Christopher Maxwell, Richmond Arquette, Josh Stewart, and Myrton Running Wolf as crew members of the Chelsea tug boat stand out as well as Phyllis Somerville as Daisy's grandmother.
Rampai Mohadi is excellent in a standout role as a Creole man who introduces Benjamin to New Orleans while Mahershalalhashbaz Ali is very good as Tizzy, the caretaker who teaches Benjamin a few useful skills in life. In the role of the young versions of Daisy, Elle Fanning is wonderfully delightful to watch as the seven-year old Daisy while Madisen Beaty is also great as 10-year old Daisy. For the physical roles of Benjamin Button meshed with Brad Pitt's facial makeup and voice, Peter Donald Badalamenti II as the 10-year old Benjamin, Robert Towers as teenage Benjamin, and Tom Everett as the 17-year old Benjamin are excellent in their physicality. Child actors Spencer Daniels and Chandler Canterbury are also good in their respective roles as the 12-year old and 8-year old versions of Benjamin. Jason Flemyng is very good as Benjamin's father Thomas who is curious about the man who is son while dealing with the regrets he had over abandoning him. Elias Koteas is brilliant in his small role as Gateau, the clockmaker who creates a clock that runs backwards.
Julia Ormond is wonderful as Caroline, Daisy's daughter who reads the diary of Benjamin Button as she tries to contend with her mother's past and the things she never knew about. Jared Harris is delightful to watch as Captain Mike, the tattooed tugboat captain who brings adventures to Benjamin as Harris' performance is fun to watch. Tilda Swinton is great in a small yet brilliant supporting role as Elizabeth Abbott, a wife of a British diplomat who shares great conversations with him as she gives Benjamin a taste of real love. Taraji P. Henson is amazing in a real break-out performance as Queenie, Benjamin's adoptive mother who has some funny lines and comments as she brings a real true maternal quality to the role. While it's a character that could've been played as a cliche, Henson's fiery, charismatic performance is full of life and wit as it shows that she's definitely becoming a real actress after such stellar performances in Craig Brewer's Hustle & Flow and Kasi Lemmons' Talk to Me.
Cate Blanchett delivers a graceful yet wondrous performance as Daisy, the woman who becomes Benjamin's dear close friend and lover as she is amazed by his reversed aging while dealing with how out of place he is. Blanchett's beauty and exuberance is wonderful as she develops from a woman with dreams to a woman becoming content except when she has to deal with Benjamin's approach to childhood. It's a great performance from the Australian actress who continues to morph into any type of role without playing the same character twice. Finally, there's Brad Pitt in what has to be one of his best performances to date. Though it doesn't top the subtlety that he displayed in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford a year earlier. Pitt sells the curiosity and wonderment of the title character while managing to make himself look young and dreamy while doing it with such maturity and restraint. It's a testament to what Brad Pitt can do as an actor where 10-15 years ago, many claim he couldn't act. The performance Pitt gives in this film proves that he's come along way from being a 90s heartthrob.
While not a perfect film, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is certainly one of the year's best films from David Fincher. Thanks to Eric Roth's unique screenplay, amazing technical work, and a brilliant cast led by Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett. It's definitely the right film to see during the holidays in its display of majestic imagery and atmosphere. Along with brilliant supporting work from Taraji P. Henson, Tilda Swinton, Jared Harris, and Julia Ormond, it's a film that is dazzling to watch from start to finish as David Fincher takes a new maturity to his work as a director. In the end, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is a magical film that is likely to sweep the viewer into a great, majestic journey from David Fincher.
David Fincher Films: Alien 3 - Se7en - The Game - Fight Club - Panic Room - Zodiac - The Social Network - The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - Gone Girl
Related: The 15 Essential Videos of David Fincher - The Auteurs #61: David Fincher
Related: The 15 Essential Videos of David Fincher - The Auteurs #61: David Fincher
© thevoid99 2010
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)





