Forgive me for my rather unfriendly retitling of Terrence Malick's latest, To the Wonder; I really had no choice. Coming less than two years after his last film, The Tree of Life in all its Palme D'Or, thrice Oscar-nominated art house success glory, it's at first jarring just to settle into this new found prolific era for the famously reclusive filmmaker who used to enchant and startle the cinematic culture with a film once every decade or so. Whatever is the impetus for his unexpected productivity (he's got a few more projects on the ways as well), To the Wonder feels nothing more than a highly stylized and mighty pointy middle finger to...well I'm not sure to whom exactly, but it's pointed for sure. A love story between two aimless archetypal figures played by glamorous movie stars is the focal point for To the Wonder, but the mostly montage of a film plays like a gorgeously lit Instagram profile recapping the joys and sorrows of a summertime fling. That may appear harsh considering the high minded frame from which Malick is coming from and his impossibly idyllic imagery, but the drama, the backbone, the pulse, the spark of To the Wonder is so elusive that Mr. Malick, either consciously or not, refuses to share it with the audience.
We start in Paris as Olga Kurylenko, a former Bond girl and last year one of the Seven Psychopaths, plays girl and lover to Ben Affleck, former matinee idol turned awards-bait golden boy. They are in harmonic bliss as blandly nondescript narration whispers greeting card displays of affection along with foreshadowing of future unhappiness. Forget all that-- they're in love. Kurylenko, in a performance or pantomime of exhausting physicality, dances and prances and skips and jumps on beds and scampers about in fits of joy and sadness. She has a young daughter who is equally in awe of her mother's new American friend and a similarly balletic composure. Affleck is stoic, cool and reserved, delivering his six or so lines of dialogue with a plain, simple disposition as he paces and broods and makes googly eyes at his pretty lover.
The action (as well as the prancing) moves to Kansas as Affleck takes the two lovely French ladies back home, and for a stretch To the Wonder plays like lost scenes of idealized Americana left over from the finished cut of The Tree of Life. Nothing much happens, or matters, incidentally, but the camera moves so swiftly and gingerly, seemingly as in awe with the possibilities of burgeoning love as the two movie stars appear to be. Instead of drama, To the Wonder offers circumstance, as the lovely French ladies are sent back to Paris as their visas are about to expire...and the American brooder takes up a fling with another beautiful woman-- a rancher played by Rachel McAdams. There's a reconciliation, of course (along with more prancing), but that's when the nagging asides of To the Wonder pitter-patter to a continual stench of nothingness. It's important to note the glamor of the movie stars as they appear in so perfectly coiffed and remarkably beautiful in contrast to the regular (and one assumes, non-professional) supporting passerbys. Kurylenko, Affleck and McAdams are magazine chic.
Meanwhile, Javier Bardem plays a local priest who pops by occasionally to offer sullen and disillusioning takes on society as a whole. This may be the literal interpretation that Malick has ever expressed in his continual takes on faith and the divine, but more importantly, the only small nugget of substance that seemingly can be gathered in To the Wonder is the conceit that the longing and suffering of its characters comes from a disbelief or lack of faith in the almighty himself. While as an exploratory means of art that may be all well and good, but Malick drags his heels in the mud in the final stretch of To the Wonder which plays more so as a preachy advertisement than a thread of dramatic stitching.
It goes almost without saying that the camera work is astonishing. To the Wonder reconnects Malick with his go-to lenser Emmanuel Lubezki, whose visceral setups and expert frame work are art gallery-worthy, or at the least, screen savor worthy. However, even despite the beauty To the Wonder manages to film, there's a hollow, shallow emptiness to the entire movie. There's nothing to cling to, either by way of nostalgia or novelty, and for the first time in his career, Malick seems to have, perhaps, been swayed by the decades of being heralded a filmmaking genius, and offers little more than post card ready snapshots shot to the ether ready to raved and lavished upon. F
Showing posts with label TO THE WONDER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TO THE WONDER. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Weekend Box Office
Baseball is still our national pastime as evident by the over-performing success of the Jackie Robinson story with Brian Helgeland's 42. It was also a bad weekend for long in the tooth franchises as Dimension Films' Scary Movie 5 debuted with less than half of the opening weekend total of the previous installment which came out back in the stone age of 2006. Regardless, 2013 is still fairly meh. G.I. Joe: Retaliation meanwhile became the fourth film of 2013 to break $100 million, while Ryan Gosling's The Place Beyond the Pines proved a successful expansion showing up in the top ten in less than 500 screens.
Lower down the roster:
What did you see this weekend?
- 42- $27.2 million
- Scary Movie 5- $15.1 million
- The Croods- $13.2 million / $142.5 million
- G.I. Joe: Retaliation- $10.8 million / $102.4 million
- Evil Dead- $9.5 million / $41.5 million
- Jurassic Park 3-D- $8.8 million / $31.9 million
- Olympus Has Fallen- $7.2 million / $81.8 million
- Oz: The Great & Powerful- $4.9 million / $219.4 million
- Tyler Perry's Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage Counselor- $4.5 million / 45.4 million
- The Place Beyond the Pines- $4.0 million / $5.4 million
Lower down the roster:
- Trance- Danny Boyle's mindbender expanding to nearly the same level as The Place Beyond the Pines in its second week of limited release but with only a fraction of the success. More to come on my thoughts soon. It's earned $1.1 million in two weeks.
- The Company You Keep- Robert Redford's film starring every actor of a certain age may well be a low key success story as it earned a $7,000+ per-screen average in its second week of limited release, and so far has earned $400,000.
- The Sapphires-The film that Weinstein famously snatched up at last years Cannes Film Festival only to dump in the spring with little fanfare has earned $700,000 in four weeks of very limited release.
- No- The spectacular Chilean film which was nominated for the Foreign Language Academy Award has earned $1.1 million in nine weeks of limited release-- a solid number for a foreign entry. YAY! A must see.
- Disconnect- The technology-dependent ensemble drama starring Jason Bateman and Hope Davis was the limited winner of the weekend earning $8,000 on fifteen screens for an okay take of $130,000+.
- To the Wonder- Terrence Malick's latest earned $7,000 on seventeen screens with a take of $130,000. A far cry from the wall set by The Tree of Life's $93,000 per-screen average two years ago, but that film had a major push from distributor Fox Searchlight, a Palme D'Or and Brad Pitt. To the Wonder has mixed reviews and a lesser than push from Magnolia Pictures. The film was, however, the top independent download on iTunes.
What did you see this weekend?
Labels:
42,
BOX OFFICE,
NO,
SCARY MOVIE 5,
TO THE WONDER,
TRANCE
Friday, March 8, 2013
Just When You Thought it Was Safe to Go Back to a Crappy Art House Theater!
What on earth is happening to Terrence Malick? Less than two years after the ponderous art house experiment The Tree of Life (my initial thoughts here) won him the Palme D'Or at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival and earned three Academy Awards nominations (including a director nomination for Malick), he's returned with his latest, and it's already been screened at festivals (notably, last falls Venice Film Festival) and has a distributor (Magnolia Pictures) and a stateside release date (April 13th.) I'm confused and boggled and nearly dumbstruck, and not just in the sense that I'm still kind of reeling over The Tree of Life and it's metaphysical whatsits. First a bit of trivia-- Malick, in his fabled forty career has only released five motion pictures so far and is known and prone to take his time; for a new Malick entry to be ready a mere two years after last one was released and thusly heralded the masterpiece, as it would be, in many corners of the cinematic universe, is unheard of--- craziness. The steadiest he's ever worked before was between his brilliant debut Badlands (1973) and his follow-up, Days of Heaven, which made its way to theaters five years later.
What's to speak of his new found productivity, and as The Tree of Life professed...is it a good thing? So comes To the Wonder, a romantic spiritual something or other starring new-crowned Oscar king of the world Ben Affleck, Olga Kurylenko, Rachel McAdams and Javier Bardem. Some things in the canon of Malick's wonder never change as Rachel Weisz, Michael Sheen, Amanda Peet, Barry Pepper and Tree of Life alum Jessica Chastain all filmed roles that were eventually cut-- a business as usual affair when working for the reclusive artiste (Jim Caviezel famously thought he was the headliner of The Thin Red Line before realizing his part was all but vanished from the final product-- legend states he found out at the films premiere.) But regardless of productivity, To the Wonder as crackled down into trailer format looks more of the same hopelessly beautiful lost art sans narrative that The Tree of Life wrought. Sure, ace cinematography Emmanuel Lubezki is back, and he is any filmmaker's best asset, but will To the Wonder dither away with the same sheen of art house pornography?
The story as described by IMDb states To the Wonder is:
After visiting Mont Saint-Michel, Marina and Neil come to Oklahoma, where problems arise. Marina meets a priest and fellow exile, who is struggling with his vocation, while Neil renews his ties with a childhood friend, Jane.
Early reviews suggest that in the wake of The Tree of Life, perhaps Malick may have lost some of his magic:
Todd McCarthy, Hollywood Reporter
However accomplished Malick's technique might be in some ways, this mostly comes off, especially in the laborious second hour, as visual doodling without focused thematic goals.
Richard Corliss, Time Magazine
A ramble through the ecstasies of the natural world as experienced or ignored by little people on a giant, gorgeous planet.
A bigger question from me is, will there be dinosaurs?
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Venice Film Festival
The awards seasons has officially begun with the Venice International Film Festival unveiling the winners, as the Telluride Film Festival and Toronto Film Festival continue to unleash and distinguish the haves vs. the havenots. Paul Thomas Anderson's greatly anticipated Scientology-soaked feature The Master makes huge strides toward eventual Oscar-dom, winning two prizes at Venice, while failing to take the top award. Michael Mann headed the jury. the winners:
Golden Lion: Pieta, directed by Kim Ki-duk
Silver Lion (Best Director): Paul Thomas Anderson, The Master
Special Jury Prize: Paradise: Faith, directed by Ulrich Seidl
Best Actor: Philip Seymour Hoffman and Joaquin Phoenix, The Master
Wonder what the Academy will do with the possibility of both being considering leading actor-- usually one gets downsized to supporting, however the monumental-ness of the performances\performers seems a crime to do so in this case.
Best Actress: Hadas Yaron, Fill the Void
Best Screenplay: Something in the Air- Olivier Assayas
Technical Achievement Award: It Was the Son- Daniele Cipri
Best Young Actor: Fabrizio Falco, It Was the Son and Dormant Beauty
The other main attraction out of Venice was the latest by Terrence Malick, To the Wonder, starring Javier Bardem, Ben Affleck, Rachel McAdams and Olga Kurylenko, a mere fourteen months after The Tree of Life opened in theaters. The reviews were mixed as many argued that the film was even less accessible and free of dialogue than the former. The film is still awaiting a distributor, however one can at the very least except that the religiously-scoped love story is scrumptiously filmed...cinematographer\poet Emmanuel Lubezki filmed this one as well.
Golden Lion: Pieta, directed by Kim Ki-duk
Silver Lion (Best Director): Paul Thomas Anderson, The Master
Special Jury Prize: Paradise: Faith, directed by Ulrich Seidl
Best Actor: Philip Seymour Hoffman and Joaquin Phoenix, The Master
Wonder what the Academy will do with the possibility of both being considering leading actor-- usually one gets downsized to supporting, however the monumental-ness of the performances\performers seems a crime to do so in this case.
Best Actress: Hadas Yaron, Fill the Void
Best Screenplay: Something in the Air- Olivier Assayas
Technical Achievement Award: It Was the Son- Daniele Cipri
Best Young Actor: Fabrizio Falco, It Was the Son and Dormant Beauty
The other main attraction out of Venice was the latest by Terrence Malick, To the Wonder, starring Javier Bardem, Ben Affleck, Rachel McAdams and Olga Kurylenko, a mere fourteen months after The Tree of Life opened in theaters. The reviews were mixed as many argued that the film was even less accessible and free of dialogue than the former. The film is still awaiting a distributor, however one can at the very least except that the religiously-scoped love story is scrumptiously filmed...cinematographer\poet Emmanuel Lubezki filmed this one as well.
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