Showing posts with label Noah Baumbach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noah Baumbach. Show all posts

Saturday, March 27, 2010

The Intersection of Hollywood and Greenberg


Club Silencio should be back up and running this week. Traveling cross country and arriving in Hollywood with no internet to speak of beside Starbucks wi-fi brewed next to the passed out homeless and production types telling me they've, "penned something very Chekov, but more avant garde." I have truly arrived.


In the meantime share mine and Roger Greenberg's disdain for commercialized coffee over at Film Experience, where I express some thoughts on Noah Baumbach's latest. It's more of a review than a self-addressed letter of outrage - as is Greenberg's style - and it helps that the film is a sweetly sour treat not deserving of the criticism. It's also the perfect film to see upon arriving in L.A., embittered by traffic whilst warmed by the sun. I'm as aimless as Greenberg and just as unmotivated. And I don't even know where to begin on building a doghouse.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Mass for Cinephile Shut Ins: Part Two


Let us commune over all this vague pre-publicity so as to garner faith and hope for a bright cinematic future. Let us also pass invalid judgment.

This is Part Two.


Mark Walhberg survives the ring
and director David O. Russell.


directed by: David O. Russell
written by: Paul Attanasio, Lewis Colick
starring: Mark Wahlberg, Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Melissa Leo

Basically: An Irish boxer tries for the title of world lightweight champion by using his half-brother, a fighter and criminal, to underperform him in matches.

And We Should Care Because: Other than the bountiful possibilities for behind-the-scenes bouts between Bale and O. Russell? Well it's a notable difference in material from O. Russell's last success, I Heart Huckabees, but could find itself more in the vein of his genre-melding Three Kings. While Mark Wahlberg may have struggled with the dramatic punch of The Lovely Bones, hopefully he has no trouble punching the lovely bones of Christian Bale for this drama. The sideline female stars are also worth the attention, as was this project once being attached to director Darren Aronofsky, who would still find his success in the ring with The Wrestler.

Status: Mild Intrigue


Tony Leung for the block.


directed and written by: Wong Kar Wai
starring: Tony Leung, Gong Li, Zhang Ziyi, Chen Chang, Brigitte Lin

Basically: The life and times of Bruce Lee.

And We Should Care Because: One should never doubt this auteur's potential for arresting output, even after being slightly soured by My Blueberry Nights. Wong Kar Wai also doesn't seem to be a filmmaker who'd be easily swayed by the conventions that the biopic genre so often favors. Instead it leaves plenty of room for the on-the-spot innovation and character play that have served the director's most distinctive works (Chungking Express, In the Mood for Love). Along with many of his favorite collaborators and legends of Chinese cinema (as actors and inspiration), we can hope it has the force of As Tears Go By with the flourish of 2046. If anyone can make ass kicking look sumptuous and sexy, it's Wong Kar Wai and a smokin' (probably chain smokin' ) Tony Leung.

Status: Can't Miss


Ben Stiller flirts with disaster and Greta Gerwig.

directed and written by: Noah Baumbach
starring: Ben Stiller, Greta Gerwig, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Chris Messina, Rhys Ifans

Basically: Aimless Roger Greenberg housesits for his brother and soon finds inspiration and direction in his brother's assistant.

And We Should Care Because: Noah Baumbach's scaldingly funny scripts often seem an acquired taste, but the attachment of Ben Stiller should bring about a different crowd to his wonderfully acidic wit. Greta Gerwig, who has been charming under-the-radar in films like Baghead and The House of the Devil, stars as Stiller's love interest, and she has the realistic deadpan quality that Baumbach seems to look for. Also on board is the immensely underrated Jennifer Jason Leigh, who resonated remarkably in her husband's last feature, the likewise underrated Margot at the Wedding. See the trailer here.

Status: Curious


Sylvain Chomet has something up his sleeve.


directed by: Sylvain Chomet
written by: Sylvain Chomet, Jacques Tati

Basically: A traveling illusionist must conjure and come clean about his tricks to a young, adoring fan.

And We Should Care Because: Animated marvel The Triplets of Belleville was Sylvain Chomet's last effort, and should prepare us for the more literal magic this time around. The aim to craft a film of such charm and mesmerizing atmosphere without the aid of dialogue seems to be in keeping with this new project. Look forward to something funny, feeling and unapologetically French.

Status: Can't Miss


Christopher Nolan defies expectation and gravity.

directed and written by: Christopher Nolan
starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Marion Cotillard, Ellen Page

Basically: A story of a CEO's blackmail and the architecture of the mind.

And We Should Care Because: Remember Sammy Jankis? Well we should all remember that Christopher Nolan's a champ at creating thrillers with scale that don't forsake character and some sort of emotional crux. The hush hush nature of the script seems justified by the advanced footage, which displays a gravity distorting thriller akin to The Matrix, full of stunts and surreal spectacle. With the scope of The Dark Knight and the mindplay of Memento, Nolan looks to do fanboys proud.

Status: Can't Miss


Pass on the chips. And your seed.

directed by: Lisa Cholodenko
written by: Stuart Blumberg, Lisa Cholodenko
starring: Julianne Moore, Mark Ruffalo, Annette Benning

Basically: Lesbian parents struggle with their biological sperm donor when their child turns 18.

And We Should Care Because: Of course the kids are all right. Who better to be your lesbian moms than Julianne Moore and Annette Bening? Director Lisa Cholodenko (High Art, Laurel Canyon) always give her actresses room to delve (think Patricia Clarkson and Frances McDormand), and she's working with two masters of their craft. Advanced word at Sundance hailed its award-worthy performances and effortless emotional backing. Timing couldn't be better given the family-focused content and its relevance in the marriage equality debate. Also notable that Julianne Moore finally plays a decent mother to her kids after years of avoiding, abandoning and fucking them (Boogie Nights, Far From Heaven, The Hours, Savage Grace, etc.).

Status: Can't Miss


Part One here. Part Three SOON.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Defensive Cinema #3: Margot at the Wedding (2007)


Defensive Cinema is a series devoted to films seemingly dismissed by the greater population. And me getting all defensive like and telling you why my opinions hold more water than yours.

"Margot tried to murder me when we were girls. She put me on a baking sheet, sprinkled me with paprika and put me in the oven."
-Pauline

Margot at the Wedding is a film about what it means to be a family. That includes selling them out for your novel, contemplating their abandonment on a bus, and trying to sabotage their happiest day.

Noah Baumbach's sour little saga is the antithesis of what we usually consider a "family film." Unlike Dan in Real Life, another 2007 film about ties that bind, Margot (Nicole Kidman) and her bloodline don't engage in talent shows and morale-boosting morning workouts. The sisters in Margot at the Wedding get their heartiest laughs from a relative's rape by a horse trainer. It's one of the film's meager moments of warmth and it's cold as ice. But there's more truth, humor and psychological horror in these fractured bonds than anything inside that formulaic fluff labeled "Real Life." Margot's ties may be toxic but their roots are grounded in reality. Sometimes family is there to pick you up, and sometimes they're there to really put you down.

Truthfully Margot's greatest talent, outside of being a "fiction" writer, is the art of the insult: seldom-subtle attempts to bring about her own misery and shortcomings in everyone around her. If only they gave the Booker Prize for that...

Margot on a good day:
"If you keep telling him he's like everyone else he's going to wonder why he isn't."
"He's not ugly, he's just completely unattractive."

Bitterness nibbles away and consumes Margot's daily life, and by effect, those of her loved ones - in particular her confused and attached son, Claude (Zane Pais), and free-spirited but floundering sister, Pauline (Jennifer Jason Leigh). When she hears of Pauline's impending vows to Malcolm (Jack Black), an unemployed oaf she's known but a year, Margot's abhorrent agenda is set in motion. Her plan to attend her sister's wedding becomes a cover for her to promote her latest book, start up anew with an old flame, and attempt to detach from her son. All that and she doesn't even bring a gift...

"We're supporting her."

This is a character piece first and foremost - a bruising, scathing, warts and all look at people you'd rather not be related to in real (too real) life. Writer/director Noah Baumbach has pulled prickly truths out of family dysfunction in the past with his heralded The Squid and the Whale, but Margot's story has its own brand of caustic wit. Like Squid it's funny while it scalds. But Margot is a more daring venture for Baumbach because it hardly feigns an interest in audience sympathy, and its muted visuals, while appropriate, are hardly a feast for the eyes. The script is wonderfully woven out of minor moments and somehow it still manages to cut away all the excess; plenty of nuance but it always goes unpronounced. You'd almost have to see the film twice to fully appreciate Baumbach's inventive and organic approach - the way scenes end abruptly, beginnings and endings blur, and those minuscule tidbits carry the bulk of dramatic and comic weight.

Beyond that it's a stage for really superb actors to dig into some fascinating, flawed characters. Jennifer Jason Leigh is such an underused actress, and it could be due to being so close to her husband's script during its development that she gives this part its refreshingly lived-in quality. It's natural and effortless, and one of Leigh's best performances in years.

Of course the highlight, not surprisingly, is Nicole Kidman. It's a showcase of her ability to fully commit to a part - even if her character needs to be committed. Every beat of judgment and venom is masterfully undercut with an unknowing frailty. Likewise, Kidman's "showcase" scene is a subtle knockout. A humdrum Q&A session at her reading turns into her brutal public shaming when she's confronted by the assertion that her treacherous lead character is merely Margot in disguise. She becomes embarrassed, exposed, and then ducks for cover. As delivered by Kidman it's simultaneously funny, odd and wincingly painful; basically Margot at the Wedding in a monologue.


"Why do you assume that -- I mean we all take from life...
I had to have our refrigerator repaired the other day, at our apartment in Manhattan, and uhh... I was alone with this guy - I think he was Puerto Rican. He was, um, sent over by Whirlpool, who I think it is makes our fridge... Umm... Although he did say he worked for an independent organization that Whirlpool subcontracts... I think he was retarded. There was an anger in him, and uh... suddenly... suddenly I became afraid for my life. I called, um... Jim, at NYU, and I asked him to come home -- I think it was Frigidaire that made our fridge... I'm going to need to take a moment here."


Seeing as Margot at the Wedding is a film about family, it's appropriate then that at the film's center is the family tree - which Margot attempts climbing and gets stuck, which has roots that are rotting the property, and which threatens to topple over during Pauline's special day. But I guess that's what you get when all your family has to sow are seeds of resentment.


You can watch this movie at iReel.com.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Life Lessons: Margot at the Wedding (2007)



Claude:
Did she poop in her pants?

Margot: It happens to everyone, not just babies. It'll happen to you too someday.

Monday, February 18, 2008

Best of 2007: The Top 10


The Esteemed
Top 5

Already two months into 2008, and it's still a challenging task. Here are the five films that really left an indelible impression on me. Note: I still haven't seen The Hottie and the Nottie, so things could change...

1) There Will Be Blood

I feel the same way about church, and mine served donuts!


The first shot of the film- a harsh landscape accompanied by eerie orchestral strings- could just as easily be the surface of the moon, mimicking the ominous discovery of the Monolith in 2001: A Space Odyssey. To Daniel Plainview it might as well be the moon; he'd be just as willing to pillage and plunder, if it meant his own well-being of course. In those first glimmers of this monumental character study, blood is coursing through Daniel's veins like the oil beneath his feet, and there's no clue as to if or when he'll ever find solace in his success. Then again, that title certainly doesn't bode well.

Daniel Day Lewis provides Plainview, and the whole of the film, with a furious lifeforce; an energy and pull to a sinister and greedy soul. There's an extreme sense of exhilaration in watching a consummate actor dig into the recesses of such a truly dark being and have so much fun with it. Paul Thomas Anderson's work carries the vision, scope and personal signature that has already made him a reputable auteur. Anderson's fifth film is of a remarkably different breed for the young master, whose Boogie Nights, Magnolia and Punch-Drunk Love are already audacious modern classics with his singular voice at their center. With There Will Be Blood, the clashing of oil, greed, religion and human misery are startlingly relevant and serve to further Anderson's playing field. If he continues on his delirious hot streak, he'll be just as infamous as Stanley Kubrick, or his mentor Robert Altman.

2) Once

What's Czech for "withholding"?


It's a musical drama so light on its feet and so effortlessly touching that it picks you up and leaves you feeling inspired, even if you're still in tears. Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova make a startling romantic pair, especially given that they're first time performers and their on-screen romance is relegated primarily to the beautiful music they create together. It's a rare treat in musicals when the songs actually linger past the runtime, and part of that comes from the incalculable chemistry within these sequences; as if the songs really are being stripped from these character's insides before our very eyes.

Credit should go to John Carney, whose subtle control and economy of scenes can so easily go unnoticed. Given it's pared down nature, it's uncompromising, heartbreaking ending, and its invigorating low-budget aesthetic, there's truly something to be said for the strengths of this offbeat musical. Unlike studio venture Hairspray, or Dreamgirls the year before, the magic comes not in the precise choreography, stunt casting or A-to-Z plotting, but in the simple, transcendent power of song.

3) Eastern Promises

And Tweety Bird's on the left cheek...


Who knew the Russian sex trade and bathhouse knife fights were too mainstream? That's a claim many have leveled against David Cronenberg's latest thriller, which fails to acknowledge the closeness to his fascinations and barely scratches the surface of a film built upon layers. Eastern Promises constructs another small-scale thriller with unexpected emotional heft, not unlike A History of Violence, wherein characters' motivations mutate and identities dissolve. The plot itself is relatively simple, but the implications and undercurrents are anything but.

Viggo Mortensen once again carries the weight of the film, transforming this time into a Russian mobster with a secret; using each sigh and inflection as sharp detail and signifier of his experiences, much like the tell-all tattoos adorning his body. The intrigue of this character, alongside the melancholy narration of a deceased 14-year-old Russian mother, makes for a dark and essential entry in Cronenberg's filmography. The ending leaves many threads open, but it's not to the fault of its otherwise tightly-wound script. Instead it allows the characters a promise of a new life, once again without any guarantees.

4) Lust, Caution

She did it all for the jewelry.


One of Ang Lee's most detailed and dazzling juggling acts masquerades as a simple espionage tale, but quickly weaves into a stirring collage of identity, performance, and tragic romance. Like Lee's earlier films, these characters are all carrying the burden of repressed longing, wanton lust, and the desire to transcend their beginnings, but there's a strangely unique flavor this time around. Tang Wei gives a stunning, undervalued debut that takes into accounts all aspects of "performance" as Wong Chia Chi, a burgeoning actress who finds herself part of the resistance in a spy game to seduce and destroy the corrupt Mr. Yee, played by the always captivating Tony Leung.

The complexity of the relationships, the scope of its revolutionary story, and the combined sensuality and danger make for an extravagant think piece. It haunted me long after seeing it, not unlike Lee's Brokeback Mountain, largely because it leaves so much undefined and yet oddly finite. This is as unlikely a romance as I've ever seen and I almost hesitate to call it one, with the "controversial" sex scenes serving as surprising development of character and narrative intrigue. It all leads to that crucial scene where each deception and heartfelt emotion collide with a single line of dialogue, leaving everything forever changed.

5) Grindhouse

Shake it while you got it!


Easily one of the most fun times at the movies this year, with Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez throwing us back to the days of drive-in, bad ass bombshells and all. With the missing reels, uproarious faux trailers, editing flubs and scratched reels, it's easy enough to understand why some audience members weren't in on the joke. Thus it died an unfortunate death at the box office, but I say it's all the more appropriate. This is cult cinema, meant to kiss the celluloid ghosts of underground gods like Russ Meyer and Roger Corman. Granted it's all made flashy and well cast for these director's devoted fans, but the inspiration and fanboy love positively bleeds off the screen.

Rodriguez's Planet Terror is the more slapdash, excessive of the two, and probably the less authentic in terms of the grindhouse vibe. Cherry Darling, a go-go girl with a machine gun leg, is already iconic, and this is brainless fun from start to finish. It's George Romero meets John Carpenter meets Rodriguez's own sensibilities, and it doesn't take itself seriously for a second. Tarantino's viciously enjoyable Death Proof uses it's extensive dialogue and character build to play on conventions and invoke the aura of both the slasher and chase film, all the while forming its own unique blend. It pulls a great feminist reversal and some smart modern tricks so as to not to make it merely an homage picture, and Tarantino films scenes with such unforgettable flourish and intensity. If only more filmmakers credited their inspirations with as much love and go-for-the-gut affection.


The Remaining Top 10:

(6) Margot at the Wedding

Don't even bother complimenting her hat.


A bruising study of treacherous characters and fractured families, with a uniquely sour streak from Noah Baumbach. Nicole Kidman scalds as an emotional vampire, and Jennifer Jason Leigh makes a refreshingly lived-in return.

(7)
I'm Not There

Musical chameleon or shape shifter?


A mutating, ambiguous, and bold biopic that discards convention for the absolute essence of an unknowable icon. It's free flowing, inventive work from the always intelligent Todd Haynes.

(8) 2 Days in Paris


Woody Allen finds Adam Goldberg a tad neurotic.


A funny farce in which neuroses give way to a couple's true nature. Julie Delpy shines again, furthering her immense range of talents with a sharp naturalism and cross-culture perceptiveness.

(9) Away from Her

Uh-oh, someone forgot to make reservations for the ski lodge...


A poetic, elegant and unexpected story of life beyond memories. Sarah Polley's assured debut tinges with heartbreak, renewal, love and loss, and Julie Christie is a fragile wonder.

(10) (tie) Knocked Up / 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days

Seth Rogen's baby or Mr. Bebe? Abstinence, kids.


2007 was certainly the year of the pregnancy (Juno and Inside included), each with a uniquely different approach. One is light Hollywood fare that refuses to confront real issues, but makes up for that with a sharp ensemble, big laughs and plenty of heart. The other is harsh Romanian arthouse fare that pushes buttons and cleverly holds its focus to the point of sheer discomfort.