Showing posts with label Melanie Lynskey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Melanie Lynskey. Show all posts

Sunday, October 13, 2019

Seeking a Friend for the End of the World





Director Lorene Scafaria (middle) with actors Steve Carell and Keira Knightley





SEEKING A FRIEND FOR THE END OF THE WORLD            C                    
USA  Singapore  Malaysia  Indonesia  (101 mi)  2012  ‘Scope d:  Lorene Scafaria

Another end of the world, apocalyptic fantasia, which are all the rage nowadays, usually offering *a big setting* to cover up for surprisingly banal human interest stories, and this one written and directed by Lorene Scafaria, is no exception.  Certainly one problem is that the risks that used to represent indie films, both in subject matter and casting choices, have been replaced by standard, Hollywood formats that are simply cheaper and less expensive to make.  Fewer risks means more conventionally safe choices, like the casting decisions to star the ever downbeat Steve Carell, once again playing a somewhat embittered, anti-social character with few friends, and Keira Knightley as the more gregarious, overly friendly neighbor, where the two bump into one another with only a matter of days left on earth, as an approaching asteroid is expected to collide, all but guaranteeing the end of life on earth.  But this bit of news is treated comically, where Carell’s wife runs out of the car upon hearing the news, as she can’t wait another second to leave him.  Television news updates remind us of the planet’s impending doom, where airports, railways, and other needed services quickly shut down, where rioters and looters fill the streets, causing mayhem, but Carell barely flinches, continuing to lead his miserablist life exactly as he did before.  Where’s the fun in that?  While there may be a few scenes that reach for some dramatic moment, Carell and Knightley barely scratch the surface in delivering any degree of emotional complexity.  And therein lies the problem, if the stars of the film are known entities, where the audience sees them in another familiar role where they continue to play themselves, it’s hard to believe them as anyone else, which this storyline most desperately needs.  Fresh faces would have helped, but the film would likely have remained unfunded without the Hollywood star power. 

There are quirky moments of clever writing, where inventive set-ups or unexpectedly off-beat characters might have energized the film, like the sequence at Friendly’s Restaurant, still open for business while everything else is closed, where the loosey-goosey atmosphere of exotic drinks, affectionately friendly wait staff, open pot smoking, and an everpresent conga line turns into a delightful end of the world orgy sequence, which really only gets started when our more straight-laced couple flees the scene in disgust.  One can imagine Thomas Hayden Church in the role, and he would not be running out the door.  It is precisely this mainstream element of moral conservatism that ruins the movie, as the film itself, and especially Carell, take themselves so seriously that it is nearly entirely personality free.  So the film isn’t half as much fun as it was originally intended to be.  Failing miserably is an early party sequence where Carell’s friends try to hook him up with an attractive girl, Melanie Lynskey, but he’s too self-absorbed to notice or care.  Instead, the focus becomes how absurdly ridiculous the party is itself, where since it’s the end of the world, people break out into shooting heroin, “Oh, I want to do heroin to Radiohead.”  In an out of the blue moment, Carell finds Knightley crying outside his windowsill, where she throws her arms around him when he asks if everything is all right, where he offers temporary consolation for her break-up with a dumbheaded boyfriend.  But as the streets rage out of control with more services shutting down, Carell grows ever more reclusive and morose, as he literally has nobody, which is a depressing way to spend your final days.  What alters this tailspin is Knightley actually giving him several months worth of misdirected mail, one of which is a plea to see him from an old high school girlfriend.  This sets into motion a new chain of events, as this gives him a targeted goal, along with Knightley who misses her family.

Leaving the flaming streets behind, Carell and Knightley embark on a road trip together, but of course, as there’s no gas stations open, they don’t get very far.  Not to worry, as William Peterson, in a hilarious cameo, stops to pick them up in his truck, telling them the entire story of his life en route, which takes a sudden unexpected turn that is among the best moments of the film.  The rest is a series of what are supposed to be kooky or eccentric moments together, where they get arrested by a zealously over-ambitious officer (Bob Stephenson), run into an over-controlling survivalist (Derek Luke), and then go on a house hunting chase where they continually seek out people in upscale mansions or expensive estates which, if no one is at home, they can use as their short-term living quarters.  This bit of pretense is not lost on the audience, as while the world is coming to an end, where water and electric power are in short supply, these two are living in an aristocratic style of luxury, showing little to no regard to the actual day to day horrors of staying alive, where people around them are likely already dying in droves, but instead they’re lost in a dreamworld about how to spend their final days, as if planning a vacation, wondering how they might want to fill their final hours, checking off activities as if they were passengers on a cruise ship.  While the director tries to keep it personal, where the story is and has always been between these two people, using the dire apocalyptic surroundings simply for a diversion, the lack of spark between the two leads never adds up.  This script itself likely attracted this cast, as it’s not without merit, while the cinematographer is David Gordon Green’s longtime friend Tim Orr, so there’s plenty to like, but the direction itself never rises to the occasion, maintaining its position as an occasionally offbeat, but overly predictable mainstream Hollywood movie disguised as an indie film.   

Monday, April 16, 2018

Heavenly Creatures








Director Peter Jackson












HEAVENLY CREATURES             A                    
New Zealand  Great Britain  Germany  (108 mi)  1994  ‘Scope  d:  Peter Jackson

Orson Welles?  Aaugh!  The most hideous man alive!    

There’s something desperately exciting about bodies on stretchers.   —Juliet (Kate Winslet)

The happy event is to take place tomorrow afternoon.  Next time I write in this diary mother will be dead.  How odd, yet how pleasing. 
—Pauline (Melanie Lynskey)

This still remains Peter Jackson’s chilling masterpiece, his most thrillingly inventive work, one that melds all of his many talents together in this brilliantly edited film, which is a mesmerizing portrait of two dizzyingly adolescent girls who are so disconnected and estranged from the world that they bond in an obsessively infatuating friendship that includes writing a novel together, where the world they write about intersects in their real lives, where the two find it hard to tell the two worlds apart, relying totally and exclusively on the friendship and love of the other, at the expense of all else, as their fragile connection to reality soon loses its hinges.  Based on a real life event, Jackson brings it to life through the recreated script obtained from the meticulous diary entries of one of the characters (Pauline), where her exact words are used as much as possible.  This is the film that introduces Kate Winslet to the world as Juliet, and she is in every sense of the word superb, as her free-wheeling independence and fertile imagination is what lays open the groundwork for the repressed, darker side of Pauline (Melanie Lynskey) to find expression in the real world.  One of the best uses of opera music, so synonymous with emotional excess, in any film of recollection, as it so perfectly expresses that fractured schism, that hole in reality, in this case featuring the extraordinary talents of legendary tenor Mario Lanza as the ultimate image of male sexuality, but not in any real sense, only in a fantasized dream world, while Orson Welles, on the other hand, is despised by Juliet, calling him “It” and also “the most hideous man alive,” where her detestation of Welles comes alive in a shadowy THIRD MAN (1949) sequence, Heavenly Creatures (9/11) Movie CLIP - Running From ... - YouTube (2:42), where the two girls are racing against their own internally fantasized images of evil, escaping from him, escaping from themselves, escaping from reality until they end up naked in each other’s arms, perhaps the only salvation either one will ever feel over the course of their entire lives. 

Strangely enough, the film is based on a true story, as in real life, Juliet grew up to become British mystery novelist Anne Perry.  Opening brilliantly with the subversively dry Buñuelian tone used in a travel documentary on Christchurch, New Zealand in the early 1950’s, a city where only Copenhagen is more renowned for bicycling, creating an optimistic and positively sun-drenched view of the city which is quickly interrupted by two young girls running and shrieking hysterically through the woods all covered in blood, which leads to the opening title sequence.  Pauline is perfectly miserable in her world with large scars running down one leg, where her parents run a boarding home, so unwanted strangers are always entering and exiting her life at will.  She seems to have a constant frown on her face, never smiling, looking like the eternal grouch, where in her class portrait, she’s easy to pick out as the only one not smiling.  The lovely Juliet enters during the middle of the school year, an English girl who’s spent much of her life traveling, who’s been brought to New Zealand for health purposes, as she’s had a history of spots on her lung.  Both girls have spent many months in hospital beds relying upon little more than their own imaginations to help them recuperate.  But Pauline fancies Juliet’s moxie, as she’s not afraid to stand up to the ultra strict and conservative teachers while remaining perfectly capable of defending her point of view.  Pauline on the other hand simply seethes with anguish most of the time.   

As the only two girls who are excused from gym class, the two read and invent stories together, becoming inseparable, where in one of many Mario Lanza montage sequences, their lives are a whirlwind of dreamlike happiness, interrupting Juliet’s parents in their living room, playing a Mario Lanza record, dancing together out of the room and out of the house, Heavenly Creatures ~ The Donkey Serenade scene HQ  (3:50), and after another quick cut to the gym class, find themselves on a rollicking bicycle ride down a country road when a car forces Pauline off her bike, where the two end up in the woods ripping their clothes off, actually ending with a quick kiss.  In yet another, they are building a giant sandcastle by the sea when the camera swoops in through the castle entranceway and enters a fairytale fantasy world of Borovnia, eventually leading to the 4th world, an idyllic paradise of unparalleled beauty and enchantment.  It is here that Pauline and Juliet meet with their imaginary friends, where the intensity of their happiness leads to a kind of intimate closeness that begins to worry their parents, where another ultra conservative family chosen therapist has a close up on his mouth as he slowly enunciates the word with exaggerated perfection for the parents as it rolls off his lips — homosexuality.  So to the film’s credit, it doesn’t shy way from this subject, but it’s also not the focal point of the film, as neither of these teenage girls seems to have much of an active sex life.  Instead, the film teeters on their fragile hold on reality, where both have hugely depressing parental issues where neither feels appreciated or loved, and only in the protected arms of one another do they feel liberated and safe from the boring conformist existence that surrounds them.    

Jackson does a simply exquisite job blending the fantasy and the real, finding an inner tension from that tenuous grasp on reality, while relishing in some brilliantly colorful fantasy sequences that are as visually bold and inventive as anything he’s ever done over his entire career.  Winslet and Lynskey are both amazing, and Jackson provides an illuminating dream world to surround them that blends seamlessly into their real lives, where they enter and exit at will, a beautiful mix of ecstacy and anguish as the turbulent world around them grows ever grimmer.  An attempt to keep them apart by overly strict parents only motivates them to do the unthinkable in an attempt to free themselves from imposed restraints.  The use of Nabucco’s “Humming Chorus” Giacomo Puccini: "Coro a bocca chiusa" (Humming Chorus) - YouTube (3:14) is stunning, one of the more intimately ethereal works in all of opera, feeling like one of the more exquisite death marches ever portrayed onscreen, which couldn’t be more eerie and unbelievably haunting.  The tenderness is the key, and that superbly holds the entire film together.  Written by Jackson and his real-life spouse, Frances Walsh, it’s a brilliantly written story, perhaps Jackson’s most luminously photographed film by Alun Bollinger, perfectly acted, including the measured performance from Pauline’s overworked, working class mother, uncomfortable at times and hauntingly edgy, while dazzling the audience at other moments with a sublime grasp of cinematic ecstacy and pure joy.  The film is simply oozing with inventiveness, making this a remarkable experience that holds up better than anything else this multi-talented director has ever done, perfectly mixing a near documentary realism with a hallucination tinged phantasmagorical fantasy world that is never less than enchanting.