Showing posts with label AMY ADAMS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AMY ADAMS. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Golden Globe Winners

FILM
PICTURE (Drama): Boyhood
PICTURE (Musical or Comedy): The Grand Budapest Hotel
DIRECTOR: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
ACTOR (Drama): Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything
ACTRESS (Drama): Julianne Moore, Still Alice
ACTOR (Musical or Comedy): Michael Keaton, Birdman
ACTRESS (Musical or Comedy): Amy Adams, Big Eyes
SUPPORTING ACTOR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
SCREENPLAY: Birdman Alejandro González Iñárritu, Alexander Dinelaris, Nicolás Giacobone, Armando Bo
ANIMATED FILM: How to Train Your Dragon 2
FOREIGN FILM: Leviathan
SCORE: The Theory of Everything- Jóhann Jóhannson
SONG: "Glory," Selma- Common, John Legend



TELEVISION
 
DRAMA: The Affair
ACTOR (Drama): Kevin Spacey, House of Cards
ACTRESS (Drama): Ruth Wilson, The Affair
COMEDY: Transparent
ACTOR (Comedy): Jeffrey Tambor, Transparent
ACTRESS (Comedy): Gina Rodriguez, Jane the Virgin
MOVIE/LIMITED SERIES: Fargo
ACTOR (Movie/Limited Series): Billy Bob Thornton, Fargo
ACTRESS (Movie/Limited Series): Maggie Gyllenhaal, The Invisible Woman
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Matt Bomer, The Normal Heart
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Joanne Froggatt, Downton Abbey 

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Man of Steel

There's a sweaty, pulsating sense of pressure that permeates through every frame of Man of Steel, Zack Synder's exhausting reboot of the long in distress Superman movie franchise.  So strenuous and aggressive is the entire enterprise, the only summation that can truthfully be felt is an urgent sense of nerves.  That sounds about right, especially in the light of the difficulties that the powers that be at Warner Bros. and D.C. Comics have had in building and re-building their distinctive canon of characters to the screen, what with all the false starts, misguided behind the scenes decisions, and the general nerviness of an undertaking something so big, noisy and expensive.  After all, the superhero cinematic landscape has undergone a drastic coming of age since the 1978 Richard Donner Superman first took flight, ushering in an era of comic book extravaganzas.  The movies have gotten bigger, grander and grittier, distilling real world terrors with their iconography.  There's a quivering notion walking into Man of Steel on whether there's still a place for Superman in this landscape after all, is he, the beloved grandfather of them all still relevant in a post- 9/11 superhero climate?

Man of Steel hasn't quite successfully answered that question, but for a movie that's as utterly watchable as it frustrating, one that for every satisfying moment or performance or tiny nook to cling to fails to satisfy as a whole, it does try in earnest to alter the cinematic impression of it's iconic character, now celebrating his seventy-fifth year of preserving truth, justice and the American way.  With Christopher Nolan serving as maestro after his unqualified success at rebuilding Batman from the flamboyant throes of self-parody, and with a screenplay by David S. Goyer, the intention is that Man of Steel will, of course, rear Superman out of the dusty cob-webs of his past and flesh out the character and the broader universe that contains him-- you know, and show up all those Marvel guys and their billion dollar success stories.

The result is frantic, over-bloated and sadly, under-nourished.  That pressure culminates in a lot of movie, one of excess and such over-the-top massive-ness, that the ingredient that's forgotten is the fun, the thrilling lure and unabashed glee of popcorn entertainment exciting the senses and taking flight.  Instead it's more of a connect-the-dots action film where point A leads to nothing more than grandly executed bits of explosive point B nonsense.  It's all a bit of a shame, for the smaller moments (what few there are to begin with) of Man of Steel are capably performed that given just a bit more time to properly jell or the tiniest hint of subtlety, this Superman may have been given a chance to soar emotionally just as does through the air so adroitly.  Instead the film is distinctly mechanical, a bit cold, and ironically, while trying to distill more of a sense of a real world to surround the man and superman reverts itself into something all the more shallow and cartoonish by forgetting the most valuable thing any film needs: a beating heart.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Trouble With the Curve

The opening sequence of Trouble With the Curve is of Clint Eastwood pleading with his penis, which may incite the church giggles from anyone who saw his jarring speech at the RNC this year.  This film stretches as much of the same, Clint is a crank, an old man at odds with everyone and everything.  He also reminds us, unlike at the convention, why he is an American treasure in every nook and cranny-- it's his no-nonsense demeanor that has made him such a formidable filmmaker and raise-all-hell as a performer that sparks.  Herein Robert Lorenz (an assistant director to Clint for many a moon) directs a pleasingly connect-the-dots formula film about baseball and family and casts him in a role that he can surely play in his sleep, but charms, seemingly without any effort at all.  Clint has little trouble with the curve, but the film has a bit of trouble with the familiar.  Part father\daughter melodrama, part man of a certain age yarn, part romantic comedy, and part anti-Moneyball baseball ode, Trouble With the Curve charts genre after genre and, while soft and smooth, can't quite manage to carry the weight of either, despite spirited performances and gently manufactured bits of emotional strife.

Eastwood plays Gus, a scout for the Atlanta Braves, and once a dominant force before computers and numbers, along with the pressures of his age started taking over his job.  He can hear a good swing, a good thing since his sight is going, and connect to the heart of player before he reaches first base.  He's also kind of a louse as a father; he's long suffering daughter Mickey (Amy Adams), a prominent attorney, can attest, long ago feeling abandoned when all she wanted was a front row baseball game seat with her pop.  With Gus' health a more concerning factor, Mickey reluctantly travels along with dad to scout a new, seemingly ace player, and demons from the past start to come to surface.  Adams is radiant in, again, a role that likely came fairly easy to her.  She charms and banters and bitters with Eastwood with ease, and the two of them create a nicely calibrated pitter-patter, back and forth of dig, resentment and need for acceptance that feels as organic as the dialogue does arch.  What stands in the way is both of their characters stubbornness and the scripts incessant need to keep things running past its course.  Fellow baseball connoisseur Johnny (Justin Timberlake) complicates things only in his desire to romance Mickey.

What fits like a glove is the brittle rapport between Eastwood and Adams.  What separates the film from being a bona-fide crowd-pleaser, from the middling loft down the middle piece of cheese it is is the earnest, familiar tracks from director Lorenz and first time screenwriter Randy Brown, that hone down everything in such a succinct way, that it may well have been a Lifetime movie of the week.  B-

Thursday, September 20, 2012

The Master

The aloof, unsettling start to Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master sets the stage for a challenging, thoroughly absorbing, continually confounding piece of work.  A collection of shots, mostly centered around a garrulous Joaquin Phoenix, gorgeously photographed showing a man, clearly distraught, constantly boozed, staggering around-- a beach, a naval ship-- lack a formal cohesive center, while filmed under the utmost control.  The staggering craftsmanship at hand in The Master is easy to appreciate-- it showcases a filmmaker at the top of his artistic stride, perhaps even furthering the beautifully chilly vistas of There Will Be Blood, it's the narrative leaps and characters and themes that boggle, shake and leave the film with a quizzical sense of unrelenting questioning.  While The Master made early headlines and media controversy as that Paul Thomas Anderson film that was inspired by the origins of Scientology, it's clear that was a mere stepping stone for a more thoughtful, thought-provoking, ever challenging and heady piece of work that delves into the nature of a seemingly powerless man overtaken by a seemingly powerful one.  Only those duels are constantly at odds, and ever changing.  With serious thematic material like religion, cults and a distillation of the American Dream circa early 1950s as backdrop, The Master may be the most difficult American film in recent years to tackle, yet my mind still drifts back to the opening shots-- beautiful, absorbing and intriguingly and falsely innocent (and filmed in luscious 70mm by Mihai Malaimare, Jr.)

We later learn that Phoenix's character is Freddie Quell, a veteran of World War II, struggling to acclimate back into civilian.  He's soused and unpredictable, a condition that likely began far before the wounds of war accentuated his behavior.  He finds work as a department store photographer, only seemingly interested in gathering materials for his homemade tonics and chasing the skirts that come his way.  This beast of a performance is nearly breathtaking because of the constantly hunched over, ever longing physicality that Phoenix brings to Freddie.  A man whose incapable of sitting still, and with every mumbling line reading may spark an animated bust of laughter or an unplanned fight, he's all id-- all action and reaction with zero thought or control over his actions.  It's the deftest and most thoroughly unattainable piece of acting in his career, and a redemptive reminder of his scope and depth as an actor.  He distills a strong sense that he's in need of something.

He finds that something after drunkenly crashing a cruise ship.  Belonging to Lancaster Dodd (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a grandiose intellectual sort of man, who sees something else in Freddie.  The leader and master of a newly founded group entitled The Cause, Lancaster is drawn to this 'scoundrel' either as project or protector.  The bulk and beauty of The Master is the interplay between Phoenix and Hoffman who square off against one another in a series of rattling sequences, showcasing the complexity and continual one-ups-mans-ship of their characters.  They quietly start to bond as master and protege engage in the first of a series of "processing," a powerfully filmed and acted scene Lancaster begins to shake Freddie and build a hold over him.  However, the id of Freddie is unpredictable and the animal instincts that Lancaster is forever trying to destroy, come out in dangerous showcases of loyalty.  After a while it begins to ask the question as to who exactly has the upper hand here.  The first quiver in Lancaster comes at a Cause party that is rattled by a skeptic, which merely prompts Freddie to beat the man up as a sign of respect.

Hoffman opposes Phoenix's naturalism by expressing a formal theatricality to his performance.  And while that dichotomy is sometimes a bit jarring-- nearly in the same vein as Daniel Day-Lewis' grand Daniel Plainview in There Will Be Blood-- it works because his Lancaster is nearly a staged performer in his own right, aggressively trying to seduce and charm his following.  It also creates a further, if intentional, barrier in truly understanding his Lancaster.  He, just as the ever expansive film, becomes more at arms reach as it continues.  This continues with his Peggy (Amy Adams), a similarly hard to crack character introduced as dowdy long suffering wife, only to be questioned as the film goes on as a figure more menacing below the surface-- all Anderson hints at is distorted through contemptuous reactionary close-ups and isolated line readings.  To be sure, there's far more interest in Freddie and Lancaster as they duel and wage verbal warfare upon each other.  Lancaster's "processing" of Freddie becomes more intense and controlling as a sense of his loyalty starts to waver; Freddie still longing connection to something argues and writhes while trying to remain dutiful.  All the while, Jonny Greenwood's aggressively unsettling and cinematically enriching score roars in the background.

The aching challenge of The Master, and it's near refusal to offer emotional peace keeping, will engage as often as it repels, but the powerful scope and ambitious nature of Anderson's film will endure.  Even with its flaws, the film prevails because of its insurmountable scope and bravura in craft and technique.  This is film that requires conversation, debate and patience.  As artful as it is pretentious, and as oblique as it is bewitching.  Sorting through the lines of exactly Anderson is trying to say, and more importantly, not saying, make The Master worthy of whatever its cinematic legacy will become.  A-  

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

The Fighter



One of the great unknowns of Oscar season 2010 comes in the form of David O. Russell's The Fighter.  Here's the solid looking trailer starring Mark Wahlberg, Christian Bale, Amy Adams and Melissa Leo.  On the plus, in terms of commercial hit status, and potential awardage is what looks like an emotional, gripping boxing tale; Oscar has a fondness for the sport (Million Dollar Baby, Rocky.)

The main deterrent seems to come in the form of Mr. Russell, whose reputation as a hotheaded director might detract many members of the Academy (tis a popularity contest!) from voting for him.  Yet again, if the film works, it might demonstrate an unseen maturity from the talented, if dubious filmmaker.  The Fighter seems like the first film Russell has ever made that might have a stronger emotional core than anything else; I Heart Huckabees, Three Kings and Flirting with Disaster are strong, clever stories, but lack heart.

Aside from Russell derision, there might be truth in his madness-- he's shown adept at coaxing nice performances from actors (for instance, Wahlberg showed such strong soul and comedy in I Heart Huckabees, that it really should have gotten more notice.)  Christian Bale might have the best shot for a nomination.  You might notice he shed his "Batman" figure yet again to scary limits, and since supporting actress is looking fairly slight this year, if Adams and Leo deliver (or at least have a clip worthy scene) they might factor in as well.

Friday, July 16, 2010

(Please) Try, Just a Little Bit Harder


I typically don't choose to write about movies that aren't made yet for the obvious reason that one really doesn't know anything what will happen.  Also because so many times, the movies themselves don't even get made in the end.  But after doing light online reading, something came up interesting-- the long-gestating biography film of Janis Joplin.  Movieline does a fine job revisiting various projects and the seemingly endless casting choices, which range from the interesting like Melissa Etheridge. Lily Taylor and Pink, to the maudlin like Renee Zellweger, to the absurb, like Vanessa Hudgens.  The newest member to that list, which according to producers Wyck Godfrey (The Twilight Saga), will get made under the direction of Fernando Mierelles, is Amy Adams.

I'm not particularly a biopic lover by any stretch of the imagination (I like the eventive ones for sure like Kinsey and I'm Not There, and a few of the reverent ones, like Milk, but the greatest hits of life story typically don't satisfy- tangent), but I'm kind of psyched about this, if it gets made at all.  Mierelles is a superbly capable filmmaker, wonderful at setting mood and tone (as evident in City of God and The Constant Gardener), and as long as his visual palette doesn't go into overload (Blindness), it might just work.  He's never made a bad movie (though many think Blindness is a dud, I think it's a misjudged misfire), and seems very good with actors-- Rachel Weisz did win the Oscar for Gardener.

The question of Adams is a bit trickier but I think it could work, especially if the she can let go of her adorable cuteness.  Enchanted proved she can carry a tune; I don't know if that translates into rock, but could you imagine Zellweger.  I'll be willing to bet if she pulls it off she'll win the Oscar.  Think about-- pretty girl de-glamed, biopic, singing, drugs, death-- on top of the fact that the Academy already has an affinity for her, as evident by nominations from Junebug and Doubt; if the performance is there, slam dunk!

I'm getting ahead of myself, but as a fan of Joplin, I hope this works.  The great raspy, throaty singer deserves it.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...