Showing posts with label miguel arteta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miguel arteta. Show all posts

Sunday, March 18, 2018

Beatriz at Dinner




Directed by Miguel Arteta and written by Mike White, Beatriz at Dinner is the story of a Mexican-American massage therapist who is unexpectedly invited to dinner by one of her clients where she finds herself dealing with an arrogant dinner guest. The film is a look into a dinner party filled with rich white people and a lone working-class Mexican-American who finds herself at a dinner where it eventually starts to unravel due to her presence. Starring Salma Hayek, Connie Britton, David Warshofsky, Chloe Sevigny, Jay Duplass, Amy Landecker, and John Lithgow. Beatriz at Dinner is an eerie yet somber film from Miguel Arteta.

What happens when a massage therapist finds herself being a guest at a dinner party where the man who is the center of attention happens to be one of the most evil men living on Earth? That is pretty much what the film is about as it explores a day in the life of this woman named Beatriz (Salma Hayek) who spends the day doing work at a massage therapy center in helping cancer patients as she also has a rich client in Kathy (Connie Britton). Mike White’s screenplay doesn’t just explore Beatriz’s day as she copes with loss of a goat who was killed by her neighbor but also a day that feels very typical until she is asked to see Kathy who is preparing for a dinner party with her husband Grant (David Warshofsky). Beatriz’s relationship with Kathy and Grant has much to do with the fact that Beatriz had helped their daughter with her battle with cancer. Due to the fact that Beatriz’s car couldn’t start, Kathy invites Beatriz to stay for dinner where Beatriz spends much of the film being this observer as the guests at the dinner party are all white.

The guest of honor at this dinner party is the real estate mogul Doug Strutt (John Lithgow) who is this unconventional antagonist who seems to take pleasure in the money he makes as well as be arrogant in his accomplishments. Yet, Beatriz is curious over a connection she has with him as Strutt is accompanied by his wife Jeana (Amy Landecker) while a couple in Shannon (Chloe Sevigny) and Alex (Jay Duplass) are also guests at the party. Beatriz would observe everything that goes on while also telling about how she met Grant and Kathy through their daughter only to be interrupted by Strutt who would ask questions about her status in America. The dinner would eventually intensify with Kathy stuck in the middle wanting to protect Beatriz yet is aware that Strutt is the reason she and Grant are living a life of luxury as they really don’t know anything else.

Miguel Arteta’s direction doesn’t really bear much of a visual style other than recurring images of Mexico as well as Beatriz’s dead goat and ocean waves as it play into the sense of longing and loss that looms Beatriz during the course of the day. While there are some wide shots in the film including the way Arteta would frame some of the characters in a scene inside Kathy and Grant’s home as a way to show how detached everyone else is to Beatriz’s life and Beatriz herself. It’s also the way Arteta would use close-ups and medium shots to play into Beatriz’s own observation of this party as well as the guests who don’t know her at all as they find her interesting but are concerned about their own lives and what’s going to happen. Yet, with Strutt being the center of attention talking about his accomplishments and ultra-conservative views on the world. Beatriz would eventually find herself becoming more disgusted with him and who he is as a human being.

Arteta’s approach to the suspense and drama is restrained as well as it play into Beatriz being this outsider who would realize more of her connection to Strutt and his actions towards the world. There are these brief moments of intense moments of confrontation but it is all about the status quo as there’s elements of realism that Beatriz has to deal with as it relates to who she is and the ways of the world. Despite the things Strutt says and his actions about what he does, there is still an air of defiance and dignity in Beatriz in how Arteta would frame her as it does play into her place in the world. Overall, Arteta crafts a riveting and understated film about a Mexican-American massage therapist being a guest in a dinner party with one of the vilest men in the world.

Cinematographer Wyatt Garfield does excellent work with the film’s cinematography for the usage of low-key lights for the scenes in the daytime as well as the look for the scenes at night including its interior/exterior setting. Editor Jay Deuby does fantastic work with the editing as it does have bit of styles in the usage of the recurring flashbacks in some stylized transitions as well as some rhythmic cuts to play into the drama. Production designer Ashley Fenton and set decorator Madelaine Frezza do amazing work with the look of Kathy and Grant’s home in how lavish it is as well as the look of their daughter’s room. Costume designer Christina Blackaller does wonderful work with the costumes as it play into the ordinary look of Beatriz to the more posh look of Kathy and her friends.

Visual effects supervisors George Loucas and Scott Mitchell do nice work with the visual effects as it is largely minimal for some exterior set dressing including images that Beatriz would see. The sound work of Dan Snow is superb for its low-key atmosphere in the dinner scenes as well as how Beatriz would observe guests outside the house as she is listening to their conversations. The film’s music by Mark Mothersbaugh is terrific for its low-key approach to the music with its mixture of ambient, soft keyboard-based music, and somber orchestral music to play into the melancholia while music supervisor Margaret Yen provides a low-key soundtrack filled with kitsch music played in the background as well as an ambient piece by Brian Eno.

The casting by Joanna Colbert and Meredith Tucker is amazing as it features a few small roles from John Early as Grant and Kathy’s servant and Enrique Castillo as a tow truck driver. Jay Duplass and Chloe Sevigny are superb in their respective roles as the couple Alex and Shannon with the former being someone who likes to drink and do immature things while the latter is a snobbish woman who believes she has a lot to offer. Amy Landecker is fantastic as Strutt’s wife Jeana as a woman who doesn’t really know much about the world as well as being ignorant about everything she has. David Warshofsky is excellent as Kathy’s husband Grant who isn’t keen on having Beatriz at the dinner party but reluctantly gives in since Beatriz did a lot for his daughter.

Connie Britton is brilliant as Kathy as a woman who is kind of Beatriz though she’s is torn in her loyalty to Strutt for the lifestyle he’s brought to her and Grant as well as what Beatriz meant to her as it’s a tricky performance from Britton who could’ve been a one-dimensional character but shows there’s still an air of humanity despite her ignorance of what Beatriz is going through. John Lithgow is incredible as Doug Strutt as it’s a performance that just oozes this air of inhumanity, arrogance, and disdain as someone who is proud of what he’s done with little regard for what other people think and whom he’s hurt as it is one of Lithgow’s great performances. Finally, there’s Salma Hayek in a phenomenal performance as the titular character as a Mexican-American massage therapist who becomes an unexpected dinner guest as she deals with the other guests including Strutt whom she would despise as the night goes on as it’s a restrained performance from Hayek that shows a woman who’s endured so much loss and heartache as it’s Hayek in one of her defining performances.

Beatriz at Dinner is a sensational film from Miguel Arteta that features top-notch performances from Salma Hayek and John Lithgow. Featuring a compelling script by Mike White, a superb ensemble supporting cast, and a look into a world that is toxic with the person at the center of attention mirrors a certain figure who is probably the most hated individual of the 21st Century so far. In the end, Beatriz at Dinner is a spectacular film from Miguel Arteta.

Miguel Arteta Films: (Star Maps) – (Chuck & Buck) – (The Good Girl) – (Youth in Revolt) – Cedar Rapids - (Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day) – (Duck Butter)

© thevoid99 2018

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Cedar Rapids



Directed by Miguel Arteta and written by Phil Johnston, Cedar Rapids is the story of a naïve insurance salesman who becomes a last-minute replacement to attend a regional conference to win a prestigious prize. At the conference, he befriends a wild bunch of insurance agents where they reveal about the dark world of the insurance business. Starring Ed Helms, John C. Reilly, Anne Heche, Isaiah Whitlock Jr., Alia Shawkat, Kurtwood Smith, Stephen Root, and Sigourney Weaver. Cedar Rapids is a heartwarming yet very funny comedy from Miguel Arteta.

Tim Lippe (Ed Helms) is an insurance agent from a small town who holds an idealism about taking care of his customers and earning their trust. While he’s also having an affair with his former schoolteacher Macy Vanderhei (Sigourney Weaver), Tim lives a comfortable yet sheltered life. When a fellow agent named Roger Lemke (Thomas Lennon) had suddenly died, Tim’s boss Bill Krogstad needs Tim to go to Cedar Rapids, Iowa for a regional conference to make presentation for ASMI president Orrin Helgesson (Kurtwood Smith) in hopes for another award for the company. Tim goes to Cedar Rapids where he shares a room with the kind African-American agent Ronald Wilkes (Isaiah Whitlock Jr.) and the more brash Dean Ziegler (John C. Reilly) whom Krogstad wants Tim to stay away from.

Tim also meets Joan Ostrowski-Fox (Anne Heche) as he learns about the rough-and-tumble world of the insurance game. While getting to know Ronald, Dean, and Joan, Tim also befriends a young prostitute named Bree (Alia Shawkat) as he and Joan win a scavenger hunt as they would join Ronald and Dean for drinks and partying. Yet, the party gets a little out of control with Tim after sleeping with the already-married Joan as Tim finds himself trouble with Orrin as he is set to make a big presentation for the Four Diamonds award. Joan would reveal some dark secrets to Tim about Lemke and how he won the awards as Tim refuses to believe what Joan says.

With Dean giving him some advice, Tim would do something to win over Orrin where he realizes what he had done. After going to a rowdy party with Bree, Tim learns what Krogstad is going to do forcing Tim to make some big moves with the help from his new friends.

The film is a comedy about a small town insurance agent whose idealism is tested when he becomes a last-minute replacement for another agent at a very prestigious regional conference. There, he would explore some of the dark secrets of the insurance game along with some people who share his ideals despite their much looser personalities. The film is a coming-of-age story of sorts of a how a young man who learns about what to do in the insurance game though he is someone that just wants to do good for those in his small town and make sure they can trust him. Phil Johnston’s screenplay does play to a bit of formula but its big success is in fleshing out the characters as well as developing them. Notably the Tim Lippe character as it’s his story that is told with some bawdy humor but also some intriguing insight into the world of the insurance business.

Miguel Arteta’s direction is superb as a lot of the presentation is straightforward yet engaging. From the way he shoots a lot of the interiors of the hotel early on to the way he presents some of the film’s humorous moments. The latter of which is done with a lot of improvisation as well as getting the actors set for the frame. The way the actors are directed in their approach to the frame as well as giving them relaxed and lively performance is among one of Arteta’s strengths as a filmmaker. He’s not afraid to put them in uncomfortable situations or tense moments while finding some way to make sure the humor comes off naturally. Overall, Arteta creates a very solid and witty film about a man coming of age in the insurance business world.

Cinematographer Chuy Chavez does a nice job with the film‘s very colorful cinematography that is filled with stylish lighting set-ups for many of the film‘s interior settings while utilizing more naturalistic shots for the film‘s day and nighttime exterior settings where a lot of it is shot in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Editor Erick Kassick does a very good job with the editing by utilizing some rhythmic cuts for some of the film‘s humorous moments including a wonderful montage scene late in the film. Production designer Doug J. Meerdink, along with set decorator Jeanette Scott and art director Rob Simons, does a brilliant job with the look of the hotel suite interiors to complement the new world that Tim Lippe steps in.

Costume designer Hope Hanafin does terrific work with the costumes from the suits the men wear to the more stylish business suit that Joan wears. Sound editor Andrew DeCristofaro does a fine job with the sound work to play up a few key scenes such as a talent contest where Tim steals the show as well as the raucous party scene where Tim parties with Bree. The film’s score by Christophe Beck is excellent for its very playful and melodic-driven score led by jazzy piano riffs and soothing string arrangements to emphasize the film‘s light-hearted humor. Music supervisor Margaret Yen provides a very fun score that is a mixture of folk, indie rock, classic rock, and pop music to play up the world that Tim Lippe ventures into.

The casting by Joanna Colbert, Richard Mento, and Meredith Tucker is incredible for the ensemble that is created as it includes Thomas Lennon as Tim‘s fellow agent Roger Lemke, Mike O‘Malley as the smug top agent Mike Pyle, and Rob Coddroy as a mean guy Tim meets at a party. Alia Shawkat is terrific as young hooker Bree who befriends Tim as she calls him “Butterscotch”. Kurtwood Smith is excellent as ASMI president Orrin Helgesson who claims to be about everything the contest is about only for Tim to discover something devious about him. Stephen Root is superb as Tim’s greedy boss Bill Krogstad who becomes desperate to win the Two Diamonds award while finding some way to make sure Tim succeeds in his mission. Sigourney Weaver is wonderful as Tim’s older girlfriend Macy whom he adores and always go to her for advice as Weaver brings a great maternal instinct to the character while still being very sexy.

Isaiah Whitlock Jr. is great as the film’s straight-man Ronald Wilkes as he shows Tim the ropes about the conference while proving that he can loosen up and be threatening in his own way. Anne Heche is amazing as the very fun Joan Ostrowski-Fox who helps Tim deal with his new surroundings while revealing some secrets about the ASMI conference as it’s Heche giving out one of her best performances of her career. John C. Reilly is phenomenal as Dean Ziegler as Reilly brings a lot of energy to his character that might be a brash blow-hard but there’s also a lot of heart to his character who does care for clients and friends. Finally, there’s Ed Helms in a winning performance as the naïve Tim Lippe where Helms brings a wide-eyed innocence and enthusiasm to his character. Even as Helms gets a chance to be funny while proving to be a solid dramatic actor as it proves that there’s more to Helms than being the crazed partier in the Hangover movies.

Cedar Rapids is a fun and enjoyable comedy from Miguel Arteta. Featuring dynamic performances from Ed Helms, John C. Reilly, Anne Heche, and Isaiah Whitlock Jr., it’s a film that is very smart as well as providing enough amusing and compelling moments to keep its audience entertained. Notably as it’s comedy that doesn’t try to rely on cheap gags in order to create characters and situations audiences can relate to. In the end, Cedar Rapids is a fantastic film from Miguel Arteta.

Miguel Arteta Films: (Star Maps) - (Chuck & Buck) - (The Good Girl) - (Youth in Revolt) - Beatriz at Dinner

© thevoid99 2012