Showing posts with label Robbie Ryan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robbie Ryan. Show all posts

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Bird


 





















Director Andrea Arnold

Arnold with Jason Buda and Nykiya Adams


Arnold with her lead cast at Cannes


Cinematographer Robbie Ryan
    
















 

 

 

BIRD                          B+                                                                                                        Great Britain  USA  France  Germany  (119 mi)  2024  d: Andrea Arnold

This is the next century
Where the universal’s free
You can find it anywhere
Yes, the future has been sold

Every night we’re gone
And to karaoke songs
How we like to sing along
Though the words are wrong

It really, really, really could happen
Yes, it really, really, really could happen
When the days they seem to fall through you
Well, just let them go

No one here is alone
Satellites in every home
Yes, the universal’s here
Here for everyone

Every paper that you read
Says tomorrow is your lucky day
Well, here’s your lucky day

It really, really, really could happen
Yes, it really, really, really could happen
If the days they seem to fall through you
Well, just let them go

The Universal by English alternative rock band Blur, 1995, inspired by Alex and his Droogs from Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange (1971), Blur - The Universal (Official Video), Full HD (Digitally ... YouTube (3:55)

From the director of social realist films like RED ROAD (2006), FISH TANK (2009), and American Honey (2016), each of which won the Cannes Jury Prize (3rd Place), winning an Academy Award with her short film WASP (2003), converting to an overly abstract, experimental style in both Wuthering Heights (Arnold) (2011) and Cow (2021), this is a return to form for Arnold, an adrenaline-laced, kitchen sink exposé of a British underclass in the north Kent region (the same area where Arnold grew up) that feels like FISH TANK on steroids, where this is an aggressive, in-your-face assault to the senses, almost as if time and the film speed itself was sped up.  The raucous music adds an underlying layer of unbridled punk ferociousness, while the abstract, psychologically fractured style is unique, minimizing narrative form, instead creating a hallucinogenic atmosphere of drug-induced ferocity balanced against the internal world of a coming-of-age 12-year old Bailey (newcomer Nykiya Adams), who is vulnerable yet resilient, mature beyond her years, navigating her way through a suffocating atmosphere and a seemingly endless series of labyrinthean challenges, an extension of the young female protagonists in both FISH TANK and AMERICAN HONEY, where the creative sound design is phenomenal, making this one of the best edited films of the year, where you never really know where this is going.  As is Arnold’s style, rarely working with established actors, she allows an unknown lead character to literally carry the film, and Adams is electrifying, onscreen for nearly the entire film, yet this film defies expectations, adding surreal elements that simply alter the landscape, creating tonal shifts that are as wildly expressive as the furious post-punk of the Irish rock band Fontaines DC, where a punctuating opening song Too Real asks “Is it too real for ya?,” BIRD | Official Clip | In Theaters Now YouTube (1:36), a theme that permeates through every frame of the film, challenging viewers at every turn, upending any idea of what we’ve seen before, creating something entirely new, a brash expression of the new world order.  Bailey, who is black, straddles two families, one that is white, living with Barry Keoghan playing Bug, a mostly shirtless, perpetually loud and chaotic father to Bailey, literally adorned with insect tattoos, and her equally troubled older half-brother Hunter (Jason Buda), a family marked by dysfunction and hopelessness, and one that is black, as her mother, Peyton (Jasmine Jobson), lives in a decrepit drug house with three younger siblings on the other side of town, where the brazen abuse of her terrifying boyfriend Skate (James Nelson-Joyce, the nastiest piece of work in any Arnold film) and the paralyzing fear he generates, especially towards the children, adds a brutal dimension of extreme psychological harm in a tumultuously exploding world.  Bug, who doesn’t look much older than his kids (a father at 14), is a troublemaking knucklehead and drug dealer who doesn’t really concern himself with parenting in any real sense, as his virtually unemployable, irresponsible life is so out of control in their graffiti-strewn neighborhood that his constant diversions and distractions allow them to pretty much run their own lives, where in this world unsupervised children are the norm.  Featuring an extraordinary selection of music, Bird by Andrea Arnold (Soundtrack), so integral to the enveloping atmosphere, where Bug seems to have a particular affection for singing along with Blur - The Universal (Later... with Jools Holland 1995) - Full ... YouTube (4:01), a dystopian song that oozes a fake optimism, synonymous with an elated sense of Britpop promise in the 90’s that was subsequently crushed under a wave of conservatism, yet when he makes a surprise announcement that he’s going to get married, introducing Kayleigh (Frankie Box), who is a complete stranger, and Kayleigh’s baby daughter into their lives, Bailey is thoroughly disgusted by the idea, as their lives are already complicated enough.  “There’s no place like home” this isn’t.    

In an article for The Guardian in 2021, We are animals. We need to connect to the millions of non- ..., Arnold wrote:

Whenever I have felt troubled or lost or overwhelmed with life I have always sought nature.  It has always grounded me and put me in touch with myself again.  No one taught me this.  It came quite naturally.  Like some innate knowledge.  Partly I think because I had a very free childhood.  My mum had me very young, at 16, and three siblings followed by the time she was 22.  My dad was only a few years older.  I never saw him that much in my early years and he was gone completely by the time I was 10.

So, unsupervised most of the time, I lived a fantastically wild life.  I grew up in north Kent on an estate surrounded by liminal wilderness.  From early, I would spend entire days roaming wherever the fancy took me.  Between estates and chalk pits and deserted old industrial spaces and woods and motorways.  Out of this grew a deep love of insects and birds and animals and plants.  Stray estate dogs, the Traveller ponies chained by the motorway, the fish and frogs in the water-filled bomb site, wild strawberries on the banks of the chalk pits.  I can conjure up these places vividly now.  The smells and sounds and feels and colours.             

At Cannes the film won the Carrosse d’Or, or Golden Coach Award, bestowed by the Society of French Directors showcasing “innovative qualities, courage and independent-mindedness,” joining a distinguished group of past winners including Martin Scorsese, Werner Herzog, Jia Zhangke, Jane Campion, Jim Jarmusch, Kelly Reichardt, and Clint Eastwood, with Arnold tearfully indicating it was the toughest shoot of her career, and the most painful, with many more challenges than usual, making it particularly difficult to find the film she envisioned from the footage she shot, which may explain the kaleidoscopic editing structure that continually keeps viewers on edge.  Yet this also may be the most cinematic film she’s ever made, as Arnold fearlessly refuses to be pigeonholed as a social realist, capturing the extremes of the fantastical with the unending challenges of living in a world that is literally crumbling under your feet.  What’s different about this working class exposé is that nobody is actually working, or even going to school, leaving them precariously vulnerable to the violence that is seemingly everywhere, with no love in sight, where an escape from reality is a necessity, opening up a crack of light in an area otherwise consumed by rampant poverty and social decay.  Bailey is a sensitive and rebellious girl who lives in Gravesend, a Kent neighborhood mentioned in several Charles Dickens novels characterized by apartment blocks covered in graffiti and dysfunctional families, who doesn’t even have a bed, just a sleeping bag that she curls up in, spending much of her time alone, or sometimes with a group of young thugs in the area who view themselves as the “protectors,” targeting domestic abuse offenders with their own extremely violent, vigilante justice style brand of retribution.  But her life changes when she meets Bird (Franz Rogowski), a mysterious wanderer who appears out of nowhere doing a twirl for her camera dressed in a kilt in search of his birth parents he has never known, and while she’s initially wary, keeping her distance, she ultimately decides to help him in his search, as he seems to have a special connection with children, eventually making a deeply profound personal connection, where he takes on the role of her guardian angel.  Her innocence stands in stark contrast to the shadowy underworld dealings of her manic father, who spends a good amount of time attempting to persuade a Colorado River toad to secrete a slimy hallucinogenic substance, something he thinks will make him a fortune, or at least pay for his wedding, but this only seems to happen when he plays “sincere,” old-style “Dad music” that he hates, hilariously turning to Coldplay’s rendition of Coldplay - Yellow (Official Video) YouTube (4:32), which seems to work like a charm.  Bailey has a habit of filming what she sees on her phone, including the flight of birds, butterflies, horses, or disturbing moments of violence, as well as her initial meeting with Bird, all of which comprise a personal journal, like diary entries that document her evolving life, projecting her videos on the walls of her room at night, though sometimes they just run through her mind, showing us the world through her eyes.  Captured through a dizzyingly frenetic handheld camera, reflective of the emotional inner instability of these lives, so fragile against the eruptive violence that surrounds them, yet there is poetry to be found in the wretched ugliness of life on the poorest margins of society, where there are flashes of mysterious and dreamy moments, like the camera pointing upwards to the sky, or seeing Bird continually standing atop a high-rise building, recalling the reckless impulsiveness and daredevil games of the alienated high school youth in Toshiaki Toyoda’s Blue Spring (Aoi haru) (2001) or the angels perched atop the ledges of skyscrapers high above the city in Wim Wenders’ Wings of Desire (Der Himmel über Berlin) (1987).   

With references to Vittorio De Sica’s MIRACLE IN MILAN (1951), where protagonists escape the misery of postwar ruins by broomstick, a neo-realist fable that no one complained about, by the way, ranked 3rd on Cahiers du Cinéma’s Top 10 Films of the Year List in 1951, or more overtly Ken Loach’s KES (1969), as both realistically portray, with poetic elements, the daily lives of teenagers who take refuge from their harsh reality through a friendship with birds, this film depicts a turbulent transition from childhood to womanhood, struggling with everyday problems, where nothing is remotely straightforward, continually taking strange detours along the way, becoming, in essence, a metamorphosis in action, where the ideas just keep coming.  Despite her tender age in a time of transition, Bailey has to deal with much greater conflicts and responsibilities, where we are literally lured into her child’s-eye view of the world, showing the brutality of forgotten environments that children are forced to live in, where there is seemingly no place for them, as the entire system has failed them, suggesting they are able to dream of freedom (“It really, really, really could happen”) beyond the squalor that surrounds them.  Shot on 16mm by Arnold regular Robbie Ryan, who also works with Ken Loach and Yorgos Lanthimos, this rich and layered film is most of all an exhilarating experience, easily her most “out there” film, as the audacity of the “what the fuck” factor screams originality, skillfully told with striking empathy and ingenuity, where some have criticized elements of CGI magical realism mixed in, something never seen before in an Andrea Arnold film, but they feel more like surreal moments, as the transformations are completely in character, initially manifested with relative subtlety until the film explodes with the full force of unleashed creativity, where viewers need to keep an open mind on the power of cinematic suggestion.  Having the courage to make outrageous narrative choices leads the film on unexpected paths, like the perilous side journeys Odysseus takes in The Odyssey, while also grasping a child’s state of grace and wonder that recalls Benh Zeitlin’s 2012 Top Ten Films of the Year: #1 Beasts of the Southern Wild (2012), as otherwise this might be mired in miserablism or poverty porn, yet this feels elevated and empowering, completely grounded in a grim reality, yet it’s so much more rewarding, both bleak and hopeful all at once, literally transcending the material, as there’s a surprise in nearly every shot.  Arnold seems to specialize in stories of neglected and endangered girls on the verge of becoming young women while living in brutal or inhospitable environments, yet this adds another layer, namely Bailey’s fascination with birds, while she also may be queer, or at least leaning in that direction, showing an aversion to girly things, where her self-absorbed father is just too oblivious to notice, or care.  Yet one of the featured aspects of the film is a parallel curiosity about parenting, as Bird is as interested in his journey of discovery about his missing parents as Bailey is with unlocking the buried secrets of hers, leading to a powerfully dynamic and emotionally riveting conclusion, with these revelations beautifully interwoven into the film, where one of the questions this film asks is whether we can ever really be free of the trauma that shaped our lives.  The raw, unforgiving world of Arnold’s movies and the struggles of these young girls to survive are brutally honest observations that are overwhelmingly truthful and sincere, embracing life’s imperfections, accentuating class disparity and familial neglect while offering resilience in the face of adversity, tenderness in the face of chaos, where the poetic excursions are like an epiphany that only add, not detract, from the film’s overall impact, as it simply refuses to end in tragedy, and continues to play out over the end credits.  Difficult, experimental, and ambiguous, yet exquisite.    

Thursday, November 7, 2019

Sorry We Missed You









Director Ken Loach

















SORRY WE MISSED YOU             B-                   
Great Britain France  Belgium  (100 mi)  2019  d: Ken Loach

Not making the same mistake as the theatrical release of I, Daniel Blake (2016) which was NOT subtitled, leaving plenty of missed dialogue, though it was subtitled at Cannes when it won the Palme d’Or for the second time in Loach’s career after previously winning for The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006).  While the subtitling was extremely helpful, this is probably the most by-the-numbers Ken Loach film ever seen, easily the most predictable, where the outcome is known within the first few minutes of the film, so despite some tender moments, any emotional connection with the story may be lacking, as you’ve heard it and seen it before.  While it’s an attempt to be a blistering indictment of an economic system doomed to fail, an examination of the 2008 financial crisis in Great Britain, as experienced by a debt-ridden family, where the working class gets short-changed by temporary positions and a part-time living wage, Loach never connects this particular example to the system overall, as much of this is simply too individualized to the specific circumstances of this largely dysfunctional family, despite their best efforts, offering no way out, mired instead in a downbeat portrait of misery porn.  Shot on 16mm by Robbie Ryan, who also works with Andrea Arnold, Ricky (Kris Hitchen) is a middle-aged father recently out of work, an everyman losing his construction job and his home to the economic crash, while his warmhearted wife Abbie (Debbie Honeywood) is a nurse providing in-home care, visiting dozens of elderly or disabled people every day, providing meals, baths, clean-ups when needed, and “tuck-ins,” which is really just spending a little one-on-one with lonely people who have no one else, where her golden rule is “Treat them like your mum.”  They have a 15-year old teenage son Seb (Rhys Stone) who exhibits artistic talent, but displays it rebelliously through graffiti signing, which gets him in trouble with the law, while 12-year old Liza Jane (Katie Proctor) has all the smarts, excelling in school.  When one of his friends urges him to sign on with a big delivery company that resembles Amazon, with the promise of free same-day, one-day, and two-day shipping, he explores the options of becoming a self-employed contractor.  Lured by the wonders of a life of autonomy and financial stability, he gets the message straight from the hard-nosed depot boss, Gavin Maloney (Ross Brewster), buying into the sales pitch, “You don’t get hired here, you come on board.  We call it on-boarding…You don’t work for us, you work with us,” or so goes the sloganistic sales pitch to get you to sign your life away on the dotted line and with it all your inalienable rights.  It’s an opportunity to become “the master of your own destiny,” a franchise owner, freed from wage slavery, where you can work your own hours and be your own boss, as everything here “is your choice.”  Or so they would have you believe, clearly glorifying the job in its most glowing terms.        

What Ricky quickly discovers is that the devil is in the details, mindboggling in its complexity, as he needs a van, which they can rent at an exorbitant daily rate, or lease, but requires a £1,000 deposit, which they don’t have, until Ricky gets the bright idea to sell his wife’s car, which she needs to make her rounds, already overstretched as is, where you don’t get paid for all the time lost waiting for public transportation, which really slows her down, streamlining the time available to spend with each client, basically forcing her to work longer hours into the night.  Nonetheless, Ricky is obsessed with the opportunity, quickly discovering he has all the responsibilities of an employee, but none of the privileges, as in reality, he’s signed over all his rights, allowing him to be ruthlessly exploited by the company, deprived of any of the rights and protections that ordinary workers enjoy, like mandatory breaks where you can use a lavatory (drivers have to bring plastic pee bottles with them) or an 8-hour day subject to overtime, even protections if you’re injured on the job.  Here there are tickets and fines incurred that are simply associated with driving, with an additional hundreds of pounds lost in penalties if he’s late or can’t show up, subject to a draconian penalty process that may even get him ousted from the program, while he’s responsible for lost parcels, even if he gets robbed.  More importantly, his time is monitored on the handheld tracking device drivers carry with them, called “a gun,” so employers know exactly where they are at all hours of the day.  These devices also include built-in delivery targets to meet which are strictly enforced.  In no time, both Ricky and Abbie are working 14-hour days, six days a week, with no overtime pay, often returning home well after dinner, or when their kids should be or are already in bed, so the kids are essentially raising themselves, as every waking hour is devoured by work.  The problem with this completely filled work schedule where you’re already stretched to the limits is you’re doomed if you need a day off for any reason, be it an injury, a broken window, a family funeral, police arrests, a court appearance, school meetings or events, doctor appointments, or just getting sick, as there’s no wiggle room for any of the kinds of things that happen in the real world, things that are bound to happen, which simply send them into a downward spiral before pushing them into crisis mode where all hell breaks loose. 

Resembling the trials and tribulations of Job or the endless futility of Sisyphus, this family is tested like no other, becoming a rather monotonous journey into a minefield of continuous turmoil, where there’s simply no saving grace, or anything resembling hope.  Grim realities set in as Seb runs into trouble with authorities, seen receiving a lecture from a stern policeman who comes across as one of the good guys, yet their son only grows more aloof, missing school, while spending reckless hours away from home at night, completely unaccounted for, where his parents are clueless where he’s gone, becoming more of a problem than they have time for.  Arguments at home end up as scream fests, which only upset Liza Jane, who can’t sleep anymore, filled with pent-up anxieties from being home alone all the time, faced with grown-up responsibilities.  As Ricky attempts to negotiate some time off to deal with some of these family issues, Maloney, who boasts that he is ”patron saint of nasty bastards,” is a brick wall of resistance, obsessed only with meeting delivery targets, where even catastrophic circumstances leave him immune to sympathy, as he’s a company man through and through.  With accumulating debt, and a tragic accident that leaves him among the walking wounded, Ricky refuses to cut the cord, even faced with the realization that he’s basically a slave to the company, little more than owned property.  So what we have is the intractable company man and the tireless worker who continues putting himself in harm’s way as he views work as his only salvation, even as he’s driving full-speed into a brick wall.  With two working parents, if you’re not allowed time off to care for troubled family members, when you know you have children with disturbing emotional episodes, you’re probably in the wrong job.  Knowing that at the outset, the story is set up to fail, with predictable results.  The much bigger mistake made is the patriarchal bullying, allowing the father to make all the decisions (more and more an unsympathetic figure), as if we’re still living in the 1950’s.  The best “family” decision was obviously not made early on, which they come to regret, with the husband telling the wife what to do in order to meet his own needs, quickly sending them down a sinkhole of debt and unending problems, where they lost any flexibility to address family issues at home, which oftentimes supersedes financial needs.  Sometimes you need to be there for kids during episodic growing pains, as otherwise it can get worse, becoming a more permanent affliction, but this family simply couldn’t adjust to their own internal dysfunction, and it cost them, making this as much an indictment of this specific family and the poor decisions they made as opposed to the inflexible economic system that would not budge when they needed a break.  Viewers certainly get the point, as it’s drilled into them from the outset, where despite an affectionately compelling performance by Debbie Honeywood who constantly puts her client’s needs before her own, this is sadly one of Loach’s weaker films, predetermined and overly fatalistic, feeling mechanically overwritten, offering plenty of punishment to fit the crime.