Friday, July 30, 2010

Creation



For as long as Darwin has been controversial I'm surprised it took so long to make a film about him, other than documentaries.

Charles Darwin has hit a wall while writing, "Origin of the Species" He is being pushed onward by friends and supporters, and as they push on him, his marriage continues to fall apart as does his fragile psyche. As he tries to write he is haunted by the memories of his daughter who had recently died.

Its hard to explain all that happens in the story because it is simply his descent into a form of madness. He is distraught over the death of his daughter Annie who out of his children is the most like him, and understands the natural world much like he had come to. As he remembers how things went wrong with his daughter his grasp of reality is slipping though his fingers. There are several scenes where he is hallucinating, as well as some very interesting dream sequences.

What I was really impressed by is when Darwin starts to focus on something and it shows how things really work, example: He watches a rat running through a field, it goes into some long grass where there is what is left of a cows skull, we go inside it in a very David Fincher style and see the maggots growing, as time goes by quickly they eat and then are eaten by a bird. The bird accidentally knocks its chick out of the nest and it dies on the ground, alone. It is then eaten.

The classic view of the natural order is the Biblical one where a lion is lying down with a lamb, not only a representation of the natural order but also the religious implications that arise in the New Testament. Jesus is referred to as both a lion and a lamb in the Bible and in other scriptures. As well as he is God, but yet the son of God, etc. So how could he be both the lion and the lamb? This misguided view of nature is deeply ingrained through religion, and is wrong. The world is brutal and unforgiving, and everything is a struggle merely to survive the next day and pass on the genes.

In this we find the conflict going on in Darwin's brain. He wants to believe in God, but he is also a man of science. As he sees truths and facts and reports on them he is essentially refuting the accepted way that things came to be that is described in the Bible. He cant ignore them, they are facts, but he also cant openly believe in them because it goes against so much of what he wants to believe in.

If his daughter died, and there is no God, then where did she go? His wife Emma takes comfort that she will see Annie again, while Darwin is struggling to believe that and has to see her in his waking dreams. Much of his troubles arise from the fact that he married his first cousin, there were things that were wrong with some of his kids that might have been genetic, caused by breeding to close in the family. So it is ironic that he is coming up with the idea that shows how mistaken he was by marrying his cousin, in essence he is removing his genes from the pool by having kids that wont survive. Hes committing his own natural selection.

The cinematography was carefully planned and it showed. Bettany and real life wife as well as movie wife Connelly were terrific in their roles. I wish that Connelly had a bigger part and that we got to know her better. So much of it seemed like they were at odds simply because she wouldn't listen to him, and it was more complex than that. I wish we could have gotten a better handle on her like we do in the end of the film so we could appreciate her more.

I'm disappointed that this wasn't shown in the states, it is British made and went all over but didn't show here. Simply because ignorant people worked hard to get them to not release it here because of the implications of Darwin's ideas. The thing is though is that it is about a mans redemption and acceptance of the way life is, it is in no way at odds with religion. Considering all the stuff that they make here this should have been able to play.

Overall I really enjoyed it, it is not a controversial film by any stretch, and if Ray Charles can get a bio-pic then why not Charles Darwin who was a million times more important than Ray Charles ever will be, no offense Ray, but so is life. It was very well made, and had some really inventive moments. 7/10 stars.

Starring: Paul Bettany, Jennifer Connelly, Martha West, Benedict Cumberbatch, Jeremy Northam

Director: Jon Amiel

Thursday, July 29, 2010

A Serious Man


I have to give it to the Coen brothers, they always bring something new to the table, while still keeping it familiar.

Larry Gopnik has problems, a lot of them. His wife wants a divorce, his job is on the line, he's got South Korean people wanting to sue, or bribe him...and on and on it goes. As he tries to look for answers he keeps coming up empty handed without anyone able to give him a straight or acceptable answer. When it comes to the plot there isn't to much more I can say, it really is just a series of bad things happening to Larry over and over again, with seemingly no end in sight.

In that way this is a very Jewish film, there are many references to that within the film, besides it having almost all its characters as Jews there is also the obvious correlation between Larry and Job of the Bible. Larry is essentially a good man, so why is he punished so? The same goes for Job, he does nothing to anger God, he just happened to be favored, and when Lucifer called that to God's attention, that perhaps he wouldn't be so loving of God if he took it all away. The difference comes about towards the end, Job breaks down and curses God, Larry on the other hand never actually turns to God, I don't think he even believes in God.

Larry is a professor at a near by University, and he teaches math, the kind of stuff that goes right over my head, he thinks the world can all be explained with math. So when these things happen to him with no answer to "why?" he is dumbstruck. When counseled by the Rabbis at his temple he gets the Jewish answer from years of wisdom, "there is no answer to your questions, you just have to go with it" This film asks the questions that Jews must ask themselves always and have been since they were first persecuted which was, well pretty much right away, and has been non stop through today.

The Rabbis are willing to accept that there is a way of life of the Jew, and that part of that involves being tormented and torn down, its something that makes us what we are. Even when given a sign by presumably God, there might not be a reason for it that we can ever understand.

Roger Deakins shot this, like he has done with the Coen brothers for many of their films and it reads as such. There is a certain simplicity to the way he shoots things, and by that I mean he makes it look simple and easy, but it is anything but. He is one of the current masters and shows it in his work always. Something I loved about this film was the parallels they make aside from the Biblical ones. Such as when two characters are driving their cars, at the same time, across town and we continue to cut between the two, one we see gets into an accident, but everyone is fine, while the other car seems to get to its destination without a problem, we only find out later that they didn't get there, they were also in a crash and died. Funny way to show things happening and to essentially trick the audience over and over again.

There are also several dreams that take place in the film that trick you for a moment. All I could do after finding out it was a dream was smile and laugh a little, that's what the Coen's do best, make me chuckle uncomfortably a little while deep down I'm laughing hard. Lots of people wont see this as a comedy, much like "Fargo" is a comedy, even if that evades most people.

The way this ends was one of the best I've seen in a while, or should I say non-ending. You can basically figure out the rest for yourself, even if you'd prefer the filmmakers to finish it for you. The film like the story of it leaves you with no answers just like it began, merely questions. They purposely don't give you answers because like the question of "Why?" for the Jews, there is no answer that will ever suffice. Why does this have to happen to us? It just does, the story never ends, it just keeps going, there is no happy ending. Dark, yes, a comedy...yes, and a funny one at that. Its hard for me to recommend it though, its not for most people, it will feel like you wasted an hour and forty minutes if you are the kind of person who doesn't like the Coen brothers.

For someone who gets them and likes them this is a good addition to their film repertoire. 7/10 stars. It could have gotten more stars if I had been given an answer, sorry, but I wanted one.

Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick, Aaron Wolff

Directors: Joel Coen, Ethan Coen

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

A Single Man


This film is a very valiant attempt to take a novel and make it work on screen. They do a lot in terms of color and sounds to fully bring about a very novel feeling.

George is a professor at a college in Los Angeles, a few months earlier his long time lover of 16 years died in a car accident. As the time the film takes place in is the early sixties homosexuality was frowned upon. George wasn't invited to the funeral (family only) He goes about his day in the film, and as we watch we start to realize he plans on this being his last. he's getting all his ducks in a row and he plans on killing himself.

Much of what we experience on screen is simply trying to turn what we would have read in the novel into something tangible: The smell of a dog, the sounds of an empty house. These things are easy to imagine while you read, but to watch them is very different. In that sense they were truly successful, they worked hard on picking just the right color, the right angle and timing of everything in the film. In that way it is a novel, along the lines of "The Hours" it goes slow, chooses its words carefully.

George is a man who loves life, and its accentuated by explosions of color on screen when we see something he lusts for or is interested in. All else seems to literally pale in comparison. But even for all that he loves life he is in pain every day without his partner. The music fits perfectly with every scene, in fact it felt like most of the narrative is pushed along by the music, it seems that the music is the driving force behind everything that happens. The cinematography in that same sense is perfectly planned and works its way though the story and pushes it along. They described this as a stream on consciousness narrative, and I don't exactly disagree with that, but its a lot more than that. It is truly how a mind works, it's the little things in George's life that sets him off on a look at the past.

Little things like him telling his close friend Charley (a woman) that he is going to forget the past, totally and forever, is interpreted by her as one thing when he is in fact talking about his own death that he plans on very soon. I imagine this story being a loaf of bread soaked in scotch and sadness, there is a reality to this film that hits me in a very real place.

Colin Firth is always a pleasure to watch, and it's no wonder that he was up for an Oscar for this role. Julianne Moore was also very good, although not in it nearly enough to fully appreciate her. Tom Ford, the director, seems to be a force to be trifled with, this is his FIRST movie, ever, very impressive.

I very much liked this movie, I loved it. The trailer gave me an impression of what this film was about, and it was sort of a lie, but then again the trailer was just images and music, no actual words, which by the way is a great way to make a trailer. Even though this film isn't quite as out there as some other "gay or lesbian" interest movies I think it fits the way life is more than those others do, for gay or straight people. 8/10 stars.

Starring: Colin Firth, Julianne Moore, Nicholas Hoult, Matthew Goode

Director: Tom Ford


Monday, July 26, 2010

The Matador


Two fighters enter, and only one can leave. That is the basic idea behind bullfighting, both are in the fight for their lives, and the winner is almost always man.

David Fandila is a bull fighter in Spain, and is the next up and comer. With only 6 or 7 good years of bull fighting, he is in the pressure cooker of getting his life long dream accomplished. The dream being that he wants to fight, and kill 100 or more bulls within one bull fighting season. He would be only the 13th to do so in the centuries old tradition.

Tradition: They like to throw this word around, as if that makes what they are doing okay. David explains that turkeys are raised to be slaughtered and eaten for Christmas, so why not fight bulls? They at least have the opportunity to defend themselves, and the thing is, is that he has a point. But they don't tell you the full story. The Matador takes on the bull only after it as been antagonized to the point of foaming at the mouth, and then he further injures it by sticking sword like weapons into its spine to weaken it. The animals are bleeding profusely. If something goes wrong for the Matador then 10 other people run out to protect him from being gored. I don't see anyone helping the bull. Once the bull is weakened and injured, only then will the Matador try and kill it with a sword into the heart. They try for the clean kill and to end the suffering of the animal and for that I am happy, but its only after they cause the suffering.

David sees the bulls as most do in the bullfighting community, he is dancing with the brutal and pure nature of the natural world, and in that way it is beautiful. He truly does dance with the bulls, but in that same note, the bull is not dancing, it is desperate to stay alive, which it almost certainly will not. At any point David can turn around and walk away, the bull doesn't have that option.

David is an admirable young man, at 21 he is already chasing and nearly succeeding at his dream. He works hard and has given up much of what makes being 21 a fun age. Although I feel even more sorry for his brother, who gave up being on the national ski team of Spain to be David's "assistant"

The soundtrack is incredible and really makes the fights a spectacle to behold. It's well shot and well edited, its slick enough that you can merely pay attention to the story and not be bothered by poor production values while not being so flashy that it takes away from the film as a whole.

No matter what way you slice it, this is a brutal and savage "sport" When you see blood pouring out of the mouth of one of these animals as they just try and stay on their feet, the ballet, and the art of it all melts away and you see it for what it truly is: People wanting to see blood. As a documentary it is very interesting, and I would highly recommend it, but it is difficult to watch as an animal lover. 8/10 stars.

Starring: David Fandila

Directors: Stephen Higgins, Nina Gilden Seavey