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Tuesday January 6th, 2009 22:43
Movie Review: ‘The Fall’ (2008)

Director: Tarsem Singh
Writer(s): Dan Gilroy/Nico Soultanakis/Tarsem Singh

Cast:
Catinca Untaru – Alexandria
Justine Waddell – Evelyn
Lee Pace – Roy Walker
Kim Uylenbroek – Chief Doctor

Preamble:
Tarsem Singh takes a stab at an elaborate fairy tale for adults, while crafting a pretty good character study of storytelling as an organism.

 

Plot Points:
A little girl hospitalized from a fall befriends a movie stuntman hospitalized by an accident on a film set.   The man begins telling the little girl an “epic story” and the line between reality and storytelling is blurred with increasing real world consequences.

 

The Meat:
Tarsem Singh first came into public notice with his 2000 sprawling surrealistic vision ‘The Cell.’  Noticeably heavy on imagery and sparse with dialogue and significant character development, his background as a music video director was painfully obvious. With ‘The Fall’ (presumably his next flick will be ‘The Ill’), he ventures closer towards having storytelling to match his visuals but still falls short in a few areas. 

When 5 year old Alexandria stumbles into Lee Pace’s room of a Los Angeles hospital, he is clearly depressed and embroiled in conflict with his Hollywood employers. To divert his attention, the man (Pace) begins telling the little girl (Alexandria) what he describes as an “epic” story of adventure and love.  Great, natural interaction between them provides some of the best dialogue between a child and adult in recent memory.

 

Alexandria

Alexandria

 

It’s especially fun watching realty bleed into the stories he tells.  A nurse doubles as a princess.  When Alexandria sneezes as a character does as well.    Pace even puts himself into the story as a protagonist, and fills his tale with the kind of clichéd plot devices found in both traditional fairy tales and old films (which are of course old fairy tales by modern movie standards).  His real life rival becomes a despicable villain (the aptly named Governor Odious), so no character development is really needed. The self-referencing works well. 

Most notable is the way turmoil and pain from Pace’s real life bleed into the story, darkening it to a point that is often beyond the little girl’s grasp.  Playfully she repeatedly tries to bring it back to something a little girl wants to hear, which takes his mind out of the shadows for a bit.  It’s an interesting take on the way a child’s imagination is able to rescue not just them from their problems, but others as well.  Her zeal becomes contagious, and art begins to imitate life. When an imaginary Princess is shot by one of Pace’s characters, the little girl yells that “she can’t die”. Pace obliges, returning her to life, but revealing some obsessive feelings of his own for the woman who has just broken his heart in reality.  The mulligan is provided by Pace’s self-centered, possessive fantasy about a ‘golden locket’ no one else could open until it was pierced by his bullet.  Notions like this are not something the little girl can really appreciate, but it seems to be fairly cathartic for Pace when he’s not indulging in huge amounts of morphine.

While the visuals and cinematography are beautiful,  it’s only fair that someone as obsessed with visuals as Singh is be put to the same tests we would a photographer. And frankly, he suffers from the same problems that plagued Hype Williams’ directorial effort in ‘Belly.’  Almost everything in the film is too centered and overly posed.  Very little of the movement seems natural, in a pretty maddening case of not being able to see the forest for the trees.  In addition, Singh’s obsession with male form and musculature leads to many absolutely ridiculous uses of slow motion that serve no purpose other than to make sure we see his work. This is also a problem when — much like Zhang Yimou did in ‘Curse of the Golden Flower’ — Singh forces certain tableau to the forefront when intimacy was probably a better idea.

Find Your Center

Find Your Center

Again..

Again..

One More for the Road

One More for the Road

It all works out pretty well though, because a living breathing fairy tale is as suited for that style as his mindscape was in his previous film. And the question of whether a story belongs to the intended audience (why tell a story to others if you don’t care what they think?), or the creator (it’s an artist’s job to create and let others react) is always a fun one to revisit.


Movie – 7/10
DVD – 5/10

‘The Fall’ Trailer:

Review by Steve Broome
sbroome at coalminds dot com

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In: Movie Reviews, Movies



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Saturday January 3rd, 2009 05:14
Movie Review: Speed Racer (2008)

Director: The Wachowskis
Writer(s) The Wachowskis

Cast:
Emile Hirsch – Speed Racer
Christina Ricci – Trixie
John Goodman – Pops Racer
Susan Sarandon – Mom Racer
Matthew Fox – Racer X

Preamble:
There are some good ideas in Speed Racer. There are plenty of efforts mdae that — taken on their own — are very respectable for their attempts if not the execution. Unfortunately the Wachowskis seem to have forgotten some very basic elements of storytelling amidst all these attempts, and the results are a movie that’s mediocre at best.

At times the colors work perfectly

At times the colors work perfectly


Plot Points:
Speed Racer begins telling story of a young Speed Racer who’s never had any interests other than racing from the time he was a grade school student. With his big brother setting the example as a famous race car driver, he ends up following in his brother’s footsteps despite him leaving both racing and his family under lousy conditions. Determined to be great – but also racing directly against the memory of his deceased brother – he dominates the competition and is eventually offered a chance to race for Royalton Industries, the top company in racing headed by the creepy announcer from ‘V for Vendetta’. The smarmy sales pitch doesn’t win over Speed, and his refusal to race upsets the owner, who then chooses to try and kill him for his refusal. As a side-plot, Racer X (played by Fox) is busy crusading against the criminals who have ruined the game he loves.

The Meat:
It’s a pretty basic setup that presents an odd problem. While I often lament the lack of patient storytelling in modern movies, I’m not sure this plot needed two hours and 15 minutes to execute. It’s especially notable when the main character is so drab. The performance by Emile Hirsch as speed racer, is, well:
/Not campy
/Not completely serious
/Lacking in real weight
/Lacking humor for stretches
/Completely lacking in chemistry with his on-screen girlfriend.
/Laughably bad when he attempts menacing intensity


Hirsch’s Speed Racer exists in a strange, uninteresting, no-man’s land that mirrors the cg background and human actors in the entire movie. You’re never completely attached him, he’s simply a protagonist, not a hero. Is there something inherent in cg-laden movies that causes Phantom Menace-type problems? Like so many shallow video games, the “talky parts” just feel like cut scenes in between boss fights (or in this case races). Part of the problem in this comes from the aforementioned visuals. While it’s fine to dazzle with bright colors at key moments, there aren’t moments of convincing quiet to provide a real emotional build-up to the races. Everything feels to be going at the same speed. Normal conversations should not have existed in the same lane as the races. In fact they shouldn’t have even been on a freeway.

There are some great visuals here, there’s no doubt in that regard. Constant references to manga and anime storytelling devices are made, and quite a few are successful.

Characters make speeches while backed up by montages that illustrate their point.

This works better than a simple flashback

This works better than a simple flashback

Speed lines, that old staple of manga and anime, is transformed into a very well done live version where backgrounds transform in live action and give an interesting escalation to the action. It works although I’m not sure if it holds much interest to those who aren’t old-school anime fans. In this way it’s reminiscent of Ang Lee’s efforts to infuse comic book storytelling into his Hulk adaptation. It looked amazing to me, personally, but how many non-artists really cared?

Speed lines get a live action treatment

Speed lines get a live action treatment

In the end this doesn’t work as well as it should have, but there’s a certain level of respect deserved for a bold attempt and a nice integration of some very good cg. Essentially it IS a live-action anime, which is what a lot of us have wanted to see (imagining what Cameron’s adaptation of Angel Alita is going to be like, etc.). Now the question is ‘should we ever have been anxious to see this?’


Movie – 5/10
DVD – 8/10

‘Speed Racer’ Trailer:

Review by Steve Broome
sbroome at coalminds dot com

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In: Entertainment, Movies



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