Hey there guys and dolls!
So, you know I like my films with a bit of bite to them. Getting emotionally swept away and not giving too much thought to its lack of depth or inconsistencies are well and good on some nights, but... Well first of all when Luc Besson does it, it just upsets me.
My Mom always says I should make a bit more of a "thing" of the movies that disappoint me and not just concentrate on the ones I liked. And while I can respect its good qualities Lucy hit so many of my wrong buttons so... Yeah, I thought it was as good a place to start as any...
scroll down and see what you think... And do let me know if you disagree!
happy viewing
Essie
Essie Speaks - mostly about movies - but also of books, countries, life. Mostly movies though :) (Updated every weekend - sunday night latest ^-^)P.S. ALL THE MATERIAL ON THIS SITE IS COPYRIGHTED AND MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT PERMISSION OF ITS WRITER - AND THAT WOULD BE ME!
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28 Ekim 2014 Salı
"LUCY" THE NEXT, "NEXT GENERATION" HUMAN...
When I began
bemoaning my utter disappointment upon watching Lucy, I was met with loud
protests from my male friends. I was amused by their argument : “Did you watch
it on a small screen? Well that would be it then. It’s an action film, you’re
supposed to watch it in cinema!”. I do realize that action as a genre is
supposed to be heavily visual. You know, don’t ask too many questions. Enjoy
the spectacular fight scenes and the big explosions. OK fair enough, the genre
has its fans, and I am just as capable of appreciating a good explosion as the
next man. But when putting Lucy into this context, two questions spring to
mind. Firstly, since when have “pretty action sequences” been a legitimate
saving grace if the rest of a film has gone awry? Secondly, my main point would
be that Lucy is actually trying to be more than that. It’s just… You know…
Failing.
The story
of Lucy is told quickly enough. “Baddies” have discovered a new drug. Oh the
kids are going to love it! It is the synthetic form of a hormone produced naturally
by pregnant women and induces growth. Lucy is the typical “innocent stander by”
roped into a dastardly situation. She, along with a few other randoms, are
chosen by what looks suspiciously like the Yakuza (but we are in Taipei so
possibly not) to be the couriers of this drug to European capitals. The thing
is, Lucy’s trip goes horribly wrong, the packet she is carrying in her abdomen
bursts and the drug starts seeping into her body, which in turn allows her to
unlock the “unused” parts of her brain. This… Well… It has unexpected results…
Now, here’s
my argument as to Lucy trying to be more than just an action movie. I mean,
before I get into it let me underline this, the action sequences are nothing
short of stunning. I am not; as you may know by now, the biggest fan of one
single hero steamrolling every single opponent without so much as breaking a
sweat but… You know. Let’s not get lost in details. It’s a genre, and in its
own way its very well done – it’s just not to my own personal taste. But come on. This is Luc Besson we are talking
about. Since when has he been into making “just” action films?
From pretty
much the get-go we are surrounded by hints that the film is trying to ground
itself very firmly in science. The action in the film interspersed with what
appear to be stock images from a David Attenborough documentary that “cleverly”
parallel the action. You know, we cut from Lucy just before she is attacked in
some way to a group of deer grazing in the Savannah, then she is attacked and
we see a lion attacking the group of deer. That kind of thing. Rather too much of it at that – but ok, you have to be
blind to see what the film is trying to do, we are grounding ourselves in
natural history, disenchantment of the world and all that jazz, humans are
animals, predators in fact, and we should not “separate” ourselves from it by
pretending any “mystic” side. Okey dokey. Then we get a looong explanation of
the whole “humans only a limited percentage of their brain… Let’s imagine what
would happen if we could use it all” theory. The saving grace of the whole “lecture”
(both as a filmic device and in the actual storyline) is that it is delivered
by Morgan Freeman. By that time, of course Lucy is now rampaging around the
globe, able to control electronic devices from a distance (I’m still not
exactly sure how that conversation between her and the doctor from Taipei to
Paris actually worked on a technical level but ok, moving on) and her aim is to
get to the Professor so she can pass on the “information” she has gained to the
next generation just like any other mammal. OK HERE COME THE SPOILERS. Then she
spectacularly kills all the baddies, she reaches 100% brain capacity, this
makes her immune to the concepts of space and time and we finally see that she
is tantamount to becoming God, as she sends a last message to the cop who has
rather ineffectually being “assisting her” (he at least has the good grace to
point out that he is not being much help) “I am everywhere”. Yeah, so she
becomes God. It’s a wonderful atheist / humanist parable of how God is a
construct of our own minds and if humans would only unleash their own
capabilities they would be the only God they would ever need… There is even a
slightly Nietschean rant in the film about how men limit themselves from realizing
their true potential etc , just in case you missed the actual point of the film.
To make a
complete aside for two seconds, in an age where we are seriously debating
uploading our consciousness onto computers this is definitely a matter to be
discussed. I mean the concept isn’t even new, think of Ghost in the Shell,
think of Neon Genesis Evangelion – the Japanese, true to form, saw this coming
20 years ago. My point is that Lucy tries to clunk a very complex ontological
concept onto a very flashy action movie packed with clichés and add it weight
with a mock- David Attenborough documentary. Oh and to get this whole thing
across in 80 minutes. Err… Yeah.
And if you
thought that our final “God” is a woman is some kind of saving grace, think
again. Lucy is pretty much the only speaking female part in the film (her
flatmate hardly counts, she is only on for 2 minutes and has about 20 lines,
almost all, incidentally about her date the previous night so yeah. It barely
passes the Bechdel test because Lucy ends up giving her some advice about her
health – but does it count if the other party doesn’t respond? Weigh in here
someone… ). We barely get to know her anyway, apart from one conversation with her mother and the mention of exams, so she is some form of student... So yeah, she is the only woman literally surrounded by male
gangsters, academics and police officers and she can only “outsmart” them by
becoming less and less human and decidedly less feminine. So her whole
empowerment actually amounts to beautiful blonde beating up a bunch of guys
which, I believe, is considered a fun night out in some circles…
We have had quite a few ones about
computer-human hybrids and how we as humans would cope with consciousness levels amped up infinitely, haven’t we? There
are clues in this film that it is possibly meant as tongue in cheek, ranging
from the very fact that Morgan Freeman’s iconic voice is used to lecture us to
the fact that the secrets of the universe actually end up on a USB stick… I
dunno, maybe I’m taking this a tad too seriously… But… I mean lay aside the
pretty action sequences… You do see what I mean, don’t you? Go on… I know you
do…
25 Ekim 2014 Cumartesi
ESSIE SPEAKS OF QT
The more trivia-minded amongst you will have noted that last week marked the 22nd anniversary of the release of Reservoir Dogs. You may have thought the lack of activity on this blog was a sign of my having forgotten this. You were mistaken.
I have been gushing as happily as ever about how great I think Reservoir Dogs is, and I thought I'd post the links here in case you wanted to check them out!
Here is my take in Top 5 Reservoir Dogs Moments
Aaand here's some Reservoir Dogs Trivia you may not have heard before!
Do feel free to tell me what you make of them! My Twitter is just at the bottom of the page :)
happy viewing,
Essie
I have been gushing as happily as ever about how great I think Reservoir Dogs is, and I thought I'd post the links here in case you wanted to check them out!
Here is my take in Top 5 Reservoir Dogs Moments
Aaand here's some Reservoir Dogs Trivia you may not have heard before!
Do feel free to tell me what you make of them! My Twitter is just at the bottom of the page :)
happy viewing,
Essie
21 Ekim 2014 Salı
ESSIE SPEAKS OF AMOUR
Ah love... Life would not be worth living without it. In every season, at ever time of life, love is one of the greatest things that brings warmth and cheer to our lives.
And indeed, while love may provide warmth and shelter from the cold - physical and metaphorical - in the autumn... What happens in the autumn of our lives?
Scroll down to find out Michael Hanneke's answer but be warned... It is not for the faint hearted.
happy viewings!
Essie
THE MANY FACES OF "AMOUR"
Those of
you who know me in real life know, I have quite a number of nonagenarians in my
family. So it may be said of me that I think of old age and the things it will
bring a tiny bit more than the average 30 year old. We tend to put it off, live
as if we will be young forever and old age, if we think of it all, is a
slightly more romantic vision of growing old with our significant other (if we
have been lucky enough to have found them) happily sharing memories of youth
and going through life a bit slowly perhaps, but gracefully, hand in hand. We
very well may be lucky enough to have such a blessed autumn in our lives.
Reality, however, as Amour not so very gently reminds us, is often much, much
less sugar coated than this.
Meet
Georges and Anne. They are retired music teachers in their eighties. They both
enjoy a healthy interest in music and culture and their bond of love is as
strong as the first day they have met. They have one adult daughter who has a
family of her own in the UK who they keep in touch with. All in all they are
preparing to end their years peacefully and together. Their peaceful world
however is shattered when quite out of the blue Anne has a severe stroke. The
condition claims first her body – rendering her an invalid – and then her mind
leaving Georges quite alone. Georges is now left with the mere shadow of what
his wife used to be and has to come to terms with becoming her carer. He also
needs to cope with one of the severest tests their love has received.
Michael
Haneke presents us with a typically unflinching and unforgiving stare at old
age. Anyone who has at some point had to care for elderly relatives will
testify to the realism of the depiction. Veteran actors like Emmanuelle Riva
and Jean Louis Trintignant skillfully show us the horrifyingly sudden way
Anne’s mind unravels and Georges’ trauma, confusion but above all undying love
for his companion of so many years. It is no coincidence that the characters
are music teachers – the contrast between Anne before the stroke – an able and
knowledgeable housewife but also clearly a very capable music teacher who has
raised musicians of world renown in her time – to Anne post the stroke towards
the end of the film, inarticulate, screaming wordlessly like a baby, unable to
tell Georges what is wrong and unable to understand what he or her daughter
says to her. Quite apart from being incredibly difficult to watch, it is a
stark reminder that it may be our very own future; Anne is peacefully having
breakfast when the stroke strikes and has no previous symptoms whatsoever. Or
indeed we might end up as Georges, left with only the shell of our loved one;
trying to accept that for all intents and purposes the person we fell in love
with has died.
And of
course the way Amour is filmed is as big a factor in its message as what the
story actually tells us. The camera is often static and placed at a
“respectable” distance that is often beneficial for us, the viewer to take in
the house as it changes from Anne and Georges’ home to a house that needs to
accommodate an invalid and all of her needs. The sedate and minimal movements
of the camera match Georges very well as he presents a relatively calm and
almost matter of fact exterior to his daughter, the carer and even us the
viewer, while it is the tiniest cracks that show his real emotions boiling up
all the way up to the breath-taking finale which I will not spoil for any of
you.
Another
interesting point is that the film takes place almost exclusively within the
confines of Georges and Anne’s home. This is actually a very effective mirror
of life in old age. In developing countries especially it is true that a lot of
older people enjoy quite active lives, for one reason of another it is very
easy for an octogenarian to become housebound. So we get a real taste of what
old age may be like, but contrariwise we also bear witness to the ever-changing
universe that can exist within four walls. This means of course that details of
the film that take place outside the four walls get missed – we must use our
heads to follow the story, although the effort will not be so great. We even
miss some things that happen within the same house, but hey, that’s a pretty
realistic depiction of real life as well…
Amour is,
in short, a wonderfully sensitive and insightful look at the “happily ever
after” of love. It shows us what happens after the sun we previously happily
walked into with our other half has truly set. It is an incredibly sad film but
not a hopeless one. Love, Amour tells us, doesn’t really die in events like
this, It merely changes form…
14 Ekim 2014 Salı
ESSIE SPEAKS OF A DISAPPOINTING FAIRY TALE
Now, we spoke of actual fairies last week. This week we are on to metaphorical fairies. Or fairy tales.
This was most definitely one I was interested to see because it seemed to have so much going for it. I mean it's a true story and a proper "behind the scenes" moment in a quite well known period in history. It should have us riveted, and yet... And yet...
You'll have to scroll down to find out "and yet" what... Comment or tweet me or something with what you made of the movie people - I'm always interested in a chat about movies and I'd love to hear from y'all!
happy viewing!
Essie
This was most definitely one I was interested to see because it seemed to have so much going for it. I mean it's a true story and a proper "behind the scenes" moment in a quite well known period in history. It should have us riveted, and yet... And yet...
You'll have to scroll down to find out "and yet" what... Comment or tweet me or something with what you made of the movie people - I'm always interested in a chat about movies and I'd love to hear from y'all!
happy viewing!
Essie
BEHIND THE SCENES OF A FAIRY TALE : "GRACE OF MONACO"
I decided
to see this one (again on a plane) because I was rather bemused by the overall
“mediocre” reviews of it. It was set as an extravaganza after all, opening the
Cannes Film Festival no less, a clearly opulent, highly visual film about a
modern fairy tale; the story of Grace Kelly, who left the glamour of Tinsel
town to be the Princess of Monaco.
However,
the fairy tale, we quickly learn, is not all it seems. Grace misses Hollywood
and her old world, Rainier ( Tim
Roth) is distant and increasingly stressed about Monaco’s increasingly tense
relationship with De Gaule era France and no matter how hard Grace tries, she
can’t seem to get it right, every single thing she says and does seems to be
wrong. When Hitchcock offers her the leading part in his latest film, Marnie,
Grace reaches crisis point. She has the perfect opportunity to return to the
stage – but with a crisis brewing in Monaco and her new family to consider…
Which way will Grace turn?
I mean we
have the advantage of hindsight here, we all know she stayed with Rainier,
never acted again and was her Serene Highness the Princess of Monaco for the
rest of her life. And herein lies the problem with this film. There is no real
crisis, because most, if not all of us know what Grace decided to do. The
interest of the film lies – or would lie – in portraying her psychological
process in getting there. It offers an interesting opportunity to look into the
mind of a woman forced to choose between her career and her family. What we end
up with, between Grace’s wise father figure Father Tucker, the elocution
lessons and the French lessons (complete with the now rather stale parody of
Americans being unable to pronounce foreign languages) something akin to the
Princess Diaries, or, you know, all those tweenage films about regular girls
learning to be princesses. And on the other hand, I mean come on. The dilemma
is between being a famous actress or an actual princess. It’s not exactly an
easy dilemma to sympathize with.
The second
point, which I actually read in another review is that the same is valid for
the Monaco deal. It is, of course, absolutely tragic for any country to lose
its sovereignty but at the end of the day, in real terms, they would simply
become French citizens and lose some tax privileges. It’s bad. But it’s not
exactly being put to the sword either. And just as it was in the case of
Grace’s story, we actually know what happened. Monaco still exists. The end. In
fact the whole “danger” is largely economic, the long discussions (and the
explanations thereof, as given to Grace who plays the role of the Everyman) are
basically a lot of men in tuxedos round a board room table. Again, very hard to
sympathize with.
In both
crises typical Hollywood tricks are used to heighten emotion, extreme close ups
of faces (and eyes and mouths quite a few times), tense music, suitable
sequences of both Nicole Kidman and Tim Roth looking tortured…. But in
the end, the moment you take a step back, there is no real “crisis” there, not
for us. I would have found a much more deeply psychological behind the scenes
angle a lot more interesting.
It’s a
shame really, because there is a really
good opportunity there, something akin to what we discussed concerning CallasForever – an actress, playing an actress, playing a part. Or rather learning to
play a part. I mean we do get hints at that, I rather liked the vignettes of
Grace Kelly rehearsing Marnie in front of her bedroom mirror. I do wonder how
Kidman approached that; did she do it the way she herself would play Marnie or
try and figure out how Grace Kelly would do it? Both maybe? But I mean even
that is marred slightly, there comes a moment when Father Tucker holds Grace’s
hands earnestly and says – as deep down we knew he would : “Grace, learning to
be the Princes is the role of a lifetime”.
I mean
yeah, the film is beautiful, opulent… But for all that, it falls short on the way
the story is told. I know the whole idea is the “backstory” of a typical fairy
tale being exposed, but if the fairy tale is typical, this doesn’t mean the way
we tell it has to be as well… So I’m afraid I have to say yes, I totally see
why so many people just turned around and said it was just… “Meh”… I feel sadly
obliged to join their ranks…
7 Ekim 2014 Salı
ESSIE SPEAKS OF OLD THINGS AND NEW
Ah yes, that old classic. A new twist on an old tale.
This week we take a look at Maleficient - the long awaited "behind the scenes" Sleeping Beauty story.
Incidentally, I did yell you about my second new home, Critics Associated? I'm sure I did. If you head over to the website and you will find myself and many other writers holding forth about films, festivals and other cinematic fare. This week was all about the Raindance Film Festival for me - but you need to head over to the website to hear more about that :)
But of course that is not to say Essie Speaks will stop in any way, shape or form - oh no! We shall continue unabated. Pray scroll down for this weeks' fare!
happy viewing,
Essie
This week we take a look at Maleficient - the long awaited "behind the scenes" Sleeping Beauty story.
Incidentally, I did yell you about my second new home, Critics Associated? I'm sure I did. If you head over to the website and you will find myself and many other writers holding forth about films, festivals and other cinematic fare. This week was all about the Raindance Film Festival for me - but you need to head over to the website to hear more about that :)
But of course that is not to say Essie Speaks will stop in any way, shape or form - oh no! We shall continue unabated. Pray scroll down for this weeks' fare!
happy viewing,
Essie
THE LONG AWAITED STORY OF A VERY BAD FAIRY... "MALEFICIENT"
What a sensation
this one caused when the trailer first hit the web. It came in with a whole
wave of “backstories” for fairy tales although we can sit down and argue how
good of a job the various Snow White variations did. So Maleficient is the
story of Sleeping Beauty. But of course, true to form, it’s the story of “what
really happened”. Starring a particularly striking looking Angelina Jolie, among
other things, Disney has done a good job of bringing a new angle to a very
classic fairy tale.
Maleficient
(Angelina Jolie) was not always an evil fairy. She was, once, young and strong
and good. So good in fact that she became the protector of the fairy folk. However,
like most of us, she had an Achilles heel. Her heart belonged to someone else,
a human boy called Stefan, to be precise. The fairy folk are different from
humans in many ways and do not understand the lust for power and riches, but
Stefan is ambitious. In fact more ambitious than most. In time, Stefan’s
political ambition turns him against Maleficient. Love turns to hate and so
begins a supernatural war between the lovers that spans decades and draws the
lives of other innocents into its midst… Has Maleficient’s heart turned to
stone? Or is there a spark of good left in her to allow her to put things
right?
I mean ok,
as far as the storyline goes this is a pretty bog standard Disney film. I mean
all the questions in the previous paragraph are, as we all know, rhetorical. We
all know what’s basically going to happen in the end. But I still love the way
Disney frames and ends it. Maleficient (and here comes a spoiler) actually holds
the key to Aurora’s cure, and quite easily pushes aside the “love interest”,
Phillip, proving that the only true love that is possible in this life, comes
from our families. This is, of course, in part a response to the success of
Brave with its play on the bond between mother and daughter. I mean, of course,
Aurora is the daughter Stefan and Maleficient SHOULD have had (incidentally,
was it me, or was it slightly unfair the way Stefan’s queen was so summarily
gotten rid of without us having so much as learnt her name?). And if we had any
other doubts left, Aurora has taken to calling Maleficient Godmother (which is
almost Mother anyway), so there we are. Of course the other twist in the tail
of this tale is that, in the same way that Prince Charming turns out to
definitively NOT be the answer to Aurora’s problems (the film rather cynically
stresses “there is no such thing as true love” throughout), Stefan who actually
should be the one we sympathise with, in a way, becomes the unadulterated
villain, so much so that we don’t really feel that upset when he falls to his
death at the end. But I can’t help but wonder – if it’s about parental love,
would a kiss from Stefan woken her up too? Hmm… I think I may have found a
loophole.
Angelina
Jolie is, it has to be said, rather magnificent as Maleficient. Of course she
is a story book villain for quite a bit of the film and the effect does rely a
bit on the visual. But we do see glimmers of her actual talent here and there,
so it is not just built on posturing and posing. And of course, apart from
giving us the rather liberating message that a woman’s salvation does not only
come through finding a man (incidentally, there is something about
Maleficient’s turning good being parallel with her regaining her wings that
begs an analogy of women finding their own feet, love giving you wings and the
like but the exact wording escapes me), there is another message in there. An
important one in our divisive times. Namely, that no one is actually completely
black. We are all grey. Some are a darker grey than others, but we all have
streaks of white along with the black in us and in life, these are the streaks
one should aim for. This is why you can, in life, find the most unexpected
people become your friends through the most unlikely circumstances, much like
the case of Maleficient.
Incidentally
there is a wonderful cast of side characters in this one too, I was so happy to
see Sam Riley (who I just LOVED in Control) as Diaval, the voice of Maleficient’s
conscience (and also her servant but let’s not get lost in details) and the
trio of pixies led by Imelda Staunton also provide a good giggle.
I can
safely say that Maleficient is the perfect combo of serious food for thought
and family friendly fun. I mean heck, I watched this on a plane, with no
“excuses” in the shape of kids around and I loved it J
1 Ekim 2014 Çarşamba
ESSIE SEES THINGS THROUGH THE EYES OF A CHILD
We're always in such a hurry, aren't we? One really forgets how much of a routine one gets stuck into. We forget to look around and basically live off by heart - while actually whatever we are doing is just one of millions of alternatives. One of millions of ways to look at the world, to act, to think...
The best ones to remind us of this truth are kids. They haven't learnt and accepted the rules yet. They still add in their own interpretations. And the ways they see our world can be quite extraordinary.
Here are two rather extraordinary works of art, one film and one book, that will challenge the way you look at the world and remind you there is more than one way to see even the most basic things.
happy viewing people!
Essie
The best ones to remind us of this truth are kids. They haven't learnt and accepted the rules yet. They still add in their own interpretations. And the ways they see our world can be quite extraordinary.
Here are two rather extraordinary works of art, one film and one book, that will challenge the way you look at the world and remind you there is more than one way to see even the most basic things.
happy viewing people!
Essie
BECAUSE YOU CAN'T CONTAIN THE "BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD"
I took one look
at the trailer for this one and said to myself “Hah. Terrance Malik fan.” This,
to be fair, is what most reviewers of the film seem to have thought when
watching Beasts of the Southern Wild. But don’t get me wrong, this is not a bad
thing. In fact it’s one of the things that pushed me to watching this film. Beasts
of the Southern Wild is a wonderfully surreal and – dare I say it - slightly
steampunk fairy tale taking place right in the middle of the modern world.
Hushpuppy (Quvenzhane
Wallis) is a six year old girl living in a southern bayou called Bathtub with
her father Wink (Dwight Henry). Hers is a rather unconventional life, she goes
to school and is taught by Miss Bathsheba who uses her tattoos to tell the
children about aurochs and warns them about the melting ice caps. Six year old Hushpuppy
has a “house” of her own close to her father’s where she lives with her own
things and what remains of her mother’s stuff – her mother “swam away” when
Hushpuppy was born – and goes over to her father’s house to eat. So there she
lives, in an unconventional world bolstered by her very vivid imagination. But
when disaster strikes in the shape of Wink’s failing health and the great flood
(Hurricane Katrina), Hushpuppy’s disorganised but happy world comes crashing
down. To survive (mentally and in fact physically) Hushpuppy has to grow up
very, very quickly indeed.
This is
wonderful lyrical story of a completely alternative way of interpreting the
world. The perspective of a child, a child who has not been given the hard and
fast rules the rest of society has adapted as “the right way” to do things. Do
you remember those days? It was quite a long time ago for most of us, so most
of us forget pretty quickly, but there was a time when you believed in things
that you know think was “childish nonsense”. It could be the tooth fairy, it
could be , like me, that when you got into an elevator the elevator was static
and the building moved around it (I’ve said this before, I was rather a strange
child). Director Benh Zeitlin does this by creating a completely alternative
universe in the bayou. The people who live there do not have nearly as many
possessions as the folks on the other side of the levee but they have one thing
money cannot buy – community. Hushpuppy’s family is not limited to her father, it
is the whole community, all her neighbours. The alternative lifestyle is
reinforced by the slightly Steampunk looking surroundings; the ramshackle huts
made out of disparate construction materials cobbled together, farm animals
running practically wild… It’s as close to living in a magical land a person
can get to in our modern times… It is fascinating to see, through the eyes of a
child, how this perspective copes when the harsh realities of disease and
destruction come crashing into this world. Be it Wink’s refusal to come to
terms with his illness (we are never told exactly what but it is some kind of
blood disorder) or the community coping with the devastating aftermath of the
hurricane, it is not just a matter of physical survival; it is a matter of
whether the happiness and philosophy of the community will survive. It is easy
to put bitterness and hopelessness instead of courage and a sense of
togetherness. Even more important is how little Hushpuppy is going to cope with
this transition because in all probability it will colour her approach to life
for the rest of her days.
For her
performance in this film young actress Quvenzhane Wallis deserves nothing short
of a standing ovation. This film is her first role as an actress and we have
since seen her in films such as 12 years a Slave. Facially and vocally she ably
conveys a very complex set of emotions and thoughts that some adult actors may
well have struggled with. Dwight Henry is also a strong performer as her father
Wink, who obstinately raises his daughter his own way, with an obstinacy and
passion that borders on the violent.
The one
thing I feel didn’t quite fit into the film are, sadly, the aurochs. They have
been compared to the dinosaurs in Terrance Malik’s Tree of Life, and who knows,
that may well be the source of their inspiration. They are, basically physical
representations (I say physical but needless to say the only exist in
Hushpuppy’s mind) of her fears, the difficulties the future will bring and the
uncertainty. Although the end sequence with them is designed to bring a rise of
emotion in us, to me it felt forced. The same emotion could equally be conveyed
(and I personally thought it was) during (SPOILER ALERT) Wink’s funeral, right
at the end of the film. I think they felt a little clumsy in what was otherwise
a very emotional and delicate film.
Beasts of
the Southern Wild is a real experience to watch. The silences and surrealism is
not for everyone but if you just look past the surface of these it’s a truly beautiful
and complex film. Definitely one not to miss.
A UNIVERSE CONTAINED BY FOUR WALLS... "ROOM"
I despair
at myself sometimes. I really do. It is probably the main reason the stories of
my purchasing cheap books or DVDs makes it to the blog so often. ``Buy one get
one for 1 pound`` the sticker on Room proudly proclaims. I remember very
clearly, this is the ``one for 1 pound`` I chose on one particular shopping
spree. I was in two minds about buying it although the subject matter did
intrigue me; I worried whether it would prove too ``heavy`` a read as the story
is one of the darkest ones I have yet to come across. The other danger was, of
course, that it would be made too sensational, almost flippant, and that would
have made me angry too. But at the end of the day, as I told myself, ``it`s
only a pound``. It turned out to be one of the best pounds I spent this year.
Room is
five year old Jack`s world. It is the only world he has ever known. It is where
he and his mother live, eat, bathe, sleep and play. His mother is called Ma.
She has no other name. There is a television in the Room with many different
things on it but they`re just TV they`re not real. So they cannot ask for
things like puppies, ice cream or chocolate for Sunday treat. Other children and
people they see on the television aren`t real either, the only other real
person (except Jack and Ma) is Old Nick (as Jack calls him) who bring supplies
and sometimes stays the night. But today is Jack`s fifth birthday, it means he
is all grown up now, and it may well be time to learn that there is a little
bit more to his little world than he initially thought…
You may
have gotten a sinking feeling in your gut as you read my version of the blurb,
that means you`re pretty much on the right track. Excuse the spoilers, but yes,
this is the story of a young woman who was kidnapped and held in a ``room`` in
a garden shed for years and who gave birth to a child as a result of rape. The
plot twist is that we read the entire story not from her perspective, but from
the perspective of Jack, her son. Through Jack`s stories and interpretations,
we begin to understand how Ma has made this world up for Jack and has done
everything in her limited power to keep the outside world at bay – for the sake
of her own sanity and Jack`s. But more importantly, we admire their resilience
as Ma has not quite given up hope of escape… And when, in the end, she and Jack
break free, a whole new world is opened up to them.
I think I
honestly found the second half of the book a lot more striking than the first.
I mean don`t get me wrong, the first half has its merits by the boatload, I
marveled at how the little alternative universe was formed within the four
walls of the Room. Ma clearly trying to keep Jack stimulated without awakening
his curiosity about what could lie beyond the walls and Jack, with the naiveté
specific to young children, accepts this universe without question. For this
reason, it is fascinating to analyze Jack`s thoughts and reaction when he is
brought face to face with the real world. In her ``how and why`` section at the
back of the book writer Emma Donoghue explains that her own son, four at the
time the book was written, was a great inspiration along with the main source
of Jack`s ``voice`` as Jack speaks with several (small but noticeable)
grammatical errors and uses quite a few invented words. It is in part this
dedication that has made the character of Jack so real. This and no doubt close
observation of how children see and interpret the world as they discover it.
Donoghue
also points out that Jack and Ma`s captivity can also be seen as an
illumination of the human condition on many levels. One does not necessarily
have to be physically trapped in a room to feel trapped by a situation or a
relationship. And if we are trapped by a relationship or situation, it is quite
common for the brain to form coping mechanisms of various kinds. We may not
exactly believe that ice cream is not real but we form new, and sometimes
erroneous beliefs about other people, relationships, the way the world works…
And the more entrenched we become in our beliefs, the harder it is for us to
shake free until one day, like Jack facing the real world, we are faced with
something or someone who shakes up our belief system… Then begins the painful
process of adaptation. But hopefully, we end up in a better place than where we
began, and all the pain and struggle was worth it.
Room is
about all of this, but above all, it is about the indomitable human spirit.
That part of us that refuses to give up even under the darkest of
circumstances. For this reason, I think Room isn`t nearly as dark as it may
very well have been. You will laugh and you will cry as you read it… But you
definitely won`t regret your purchase.