Showing posts with label TONY KUSHNER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TONY KUSHNER. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2013

For Your Consideration: Last Pleas

We are but ten short days away from the 85th Academy Awards and in the true thick of it all.  Final ballots are due back by Tuesday, and as we reach the finality of this nutty year in the awards landscape, all the stops are going out in order to make sense of, what truly feels like the most open Oscar race in some time, if perhaps ever.  And while personally, we all grasp the category and finalist that we want to trump and champion for, the one race, in my eyes, that I find the most compelling, the most to pin down and the most irritating comes in that for Best Adapted Screenplay.  The nominees are:


  • Argo- Chris Terrio
  • Beasts of the Southern Wild- Lucy Alibar & Benh Zeitlin
  • Life of Pi- Chris Magee
  • Lincoln- Tony Kushner
  • Silver Linings Playbook- David O. Russell

A fairly strong line-up with the race whittled down to three potentials-- Argo, Lincoln and Silver Linings Playbook.  However, in my view, nothing tops Kushner's achievement in taking Lincoln and turning into a great American play of politics, all in the guise of a dressed up biopic.  His language is something akin to great poetry and it's fortunate that the actors in Lincoln are capable and bold and grand enough to make it appear as light as they do.  Aside from that, I believe it's the strength of Kushner's great American work that forced director Steven Spielberg to be at his most restrained, forcing the power of the language and the content to be front and center.  The accomplishment, depth, understanding and the power to not just rip away at rusty co-webs in cementing Lincoln as a reverent, but also timeless creation is truly a testament to Kushner, one of the great Americans writers of our time, but that his work is also by extension, funny and witty and not all in any way a chore, or viewed as homework should be all but enough for the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences to all but hand him the Oscar.

Of course, it's not as simple as that, as the politics of Oscar campaigning are nearly as ruthless and cutthroat (not to mention as costly) as that of a gubernatorial race.  And this is where things get a little tricky.  As Best Adapted Screenplay seems to hew closely to this years Best Picture race, of which Argo by now must be valued as the unstoppable machine due to its circuitous post-Oscar nomination stumble and quick rebound with the PGA, DGA and at BAFTA.  That leaves the at first if only paper frontrunner Lincoln relegated to also-ran status, with perhaps Best Actor being that films only true thing.  The question behind this is that Argo, a certified winners circle crown member at this stage, can't possibly just be honored with Best Picture, something else will have to follow.  Chris Terrio's tight and economical script seems the easiest second get, coupled with what's assured to be an easy Writers Guild get come this Saturday, which would follow the near guild sweep, as well as last weekend's USC Scripter win for Argo.  The reasoning behind this: well Kushner will already be honored by the WGA this weekend with the Paul Selvin Award, which in my view, can be seen as a make-up honor by a branch that foresees an Argo victory ahead.  But Kushner's so good-- he can't possibly just leave empty handed-- not from writers at least.

There's another wild card, a slipperier one, that might stand in way of a Lincoln victory with Adapted Screenplay.  That comes in the flakier form of Silver Linings Playbook, which surprisingly took home the prize at the BAFTAs last weekend.  While questionable in some corners, it's absolutely true that the film is loved, and in nearly the same token as Argo, appears as one of the films of 2012 in which most can agree upon as well-liked-- sometimes more important than being loved.  While the campaign for Silver Linings, upon a last stand for the Weinstein Company, has pulled out the stops trying to trump the film as not the lightweight romantic comedy in which it is, but a avid, heart warmer about mental illness.  This feels a bit thorny, even if it's been orchestrated by the master of Oscar campaigners, but still, I wonder if all this last minute trumping might go towards a Silver Linings favor in a few categories come ten days from now.

So what is left of Lincoln...I plea for the members of the Academy to do the right thing here and remember the great American treasure that not only is Tony Kushner, but in his tremendous achievement for Lincoln, which will stand the test of time regardless of what ever occurs on February, 24th.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Lincoln

It's 1865, and president Abraham Lincoln is set to start his second presidential term.  Times are tenuous as the nation is divided and a key piece of legislation is being bitterly fought through the House-- sound familiar?  There's a unflinching link to Lincoln that succinctly provides the connective tissue from our past to our present, a sense that the game of American politics as we see it today in our 21st century lives was really no different at all in action to how it was as the Civil War was waging on.  That master writer Tony Kushner, the extraordinary Pulitzer Prize winning playwright of Angels in America, and the screenwriter of Lincoln, based in part on the book Teams of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin, showcases and finesses this connection with such a lightness, a nimble seeming charm is the secret, the key and the way into Lincoln, a grand stage play of the American political system dressed up as an epic cinematic biography film from director Steven Spielberg.  And that Spielberg, a filmmaker enshrined into the American subconscious just as Lincoln is in marble memorial form, so gently recedes his striking and majestic film to rest mostly in Kushner's text and the superior group of actors he has assembled feels in it of itself a greater triumph.  The lack of Spielberg DNA in Lincoln frees the film, one which would far too easily could have fallen wayside by expectation or pedigree alone, and showcases one of the most fragile, restrained and mature pieces of work he has ever completed.

The smartest choice in Lincoln is that in settles in on a brief moment in time with Honest Abe-- the quintessential time period wherein President Lincoln is trying to enact the thirteenth amendment which would abolish slavery and hopefully end this grisly war.  Spielberg, Kushner (who also scripted Munich) and team wisely rid themselves of the tired and inelegant birth to death biopic formula and distill a sense of humanity within the confines of his greatest action.  The searing image through and through in Lincoln is Daniel Day-Lewis, who creates, embodies and imbues something almost supernatural in Lincoln.  Never speaking in more than hushed whispers, but commanding and searing with authority, Day-Lewis (himself enshrined to obligatory greatest actor of our generation laurels) paints a portrait that's uniquely fascinating and altogether unexpected.  Lincoln was a tall man, and Day-Lewis paints an imposing figure, but a fragile one, and a non-threatening one-- his walk is slightly crooked, his posture slightly hunched-- he paints a man with warmth and dignity but rids him of unsightly great man status.  Speaking in wistful and colloquial cadences while biting on Kushner's nearly poetic prose, there's an uncommon intelligence to Day-Lewis' Lincoln, but also a slight cunning, a manipulator of sorts-- he was a lawyer, and a politician, of course, before he was a heroic noble figure in American history.  That Day-Lewis so ably, commandingly and bewitchingly clears the cobwebs from such a part, eschews the easier, if less dignified, shades of outright nobility and inhabits a real world Lincoln is not just Lincoln's greatest thrill, but also perhaps all of cinema.

That's a big part of the spark of Lincoln, Spielberg just lets his actors act, trusting the rhythms of Kushner's words to further the drama.  A film with something ridiculous, like 140 speaking parts, and a cavalcade of actors, ranging from movie stars to a veritable who's who of characters, there's thought, that had Lincoln played to the Disneyland portrait of history, say like Spielberg's own War Horse, the film might have been like a period drama version of It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, World.  Instead, where given space, breathing room-- some might complain too much in a film nearly two-and-a-half-hours long-- where the differing acting styles and ranges in mood feel nearly perfectly intact, much like a Congress itself, which anyone whose watched a news channel recently is filled with characters, some mighty and some cartoon-ish.  It fits right then that Lincoln would provide space for a grand Tommy Lee Jones portrait of Thaddeus Stephens, a Republican House member with a willful charm and personal reasons for moving forward with the amendment, or a more caricatured rumination of the opposition from Lee Pace as a Democrat House member, or blisteringly entertaining minstrel show displayed by three lobbyist, portrayed by John Hawkes, Tim Blake Nelson and an awesome James Spader.  These characters are also a part of our American political system, and Lincoln is a grand testament to politics before character study, which makes the shadings of not only Lincoln himself, but his countrymen all the more compelling and emotional as Kushner and company always keep the momentum rolling.

Just as the political machinations take the central stage and great actors big and small provide nuggets of insight and intelligence from characters that range from low ranking Congressmen to people like Ulysses S. Grant (Mad Men's Jared Harris- excellent), we still see bits and notches of the personal life of Lincoln.  Whether in hearty political or personal debates with wife Mary Todd (Sally Field), a woman famously not as in control of her emotions as her husband, but equally wizened and well versed, or in dialogues of tension with eldest son Robert (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), or even in smaller, simpler scenes of the family man and president carrying his younger son off to bed, there's a seemingly un-Spielbergian display of restraint on display.  Field's histrionics are quietly overshadowed by Day-Lewis' passivity, and create a lovely balance and nuance that belies the actors noticeable age difference. 

There's only a few glaring instances where the sentimentalist in Spielberg takes over the cool reserves of Kushner's poetry, and only then are when Lincoln start to show it's seams.  The most glaring offensive occurs toward the end, when (spoiler alert!) we take a visit to Ford's Theater.  Naturally, the obligatory John Williams orchestrations provide their own emotional beats, despite how ill-fitting from time to time.

That being aside this is still a monumental film.  Expressive and filmed in a nearly painterly fashion that not just fits the times but is nearly expressionistic.  Spielberg's longtime collaborator Janusz Kaminski, the Oscar winning cinematographer of Schindler's List and Saving Private Ryan frames Lincoln mostly in shrouds of darkness with thin traces of light to capture the scenes.  It's illuminating but also quite beautiful, and while Lincoln doesn't provide the nicer brand of visual eye candy that Spielberg touches usually acquire, his work is perhaps his best yet.  Same goes for Rick Carter's production design that mixes elegance with muddiness, perfectly capturing the period and tone.

History will forever fully enshrine Abraham Lincoln as the great emancipator and less famously, as vampire hunter, but Spielberg, Kushner and Day-Lewis will undoubtedly be immortalized themselves for telling his tale with such uncommon dignity, humor and artistry.  A-

Thursday, September 13, 2012

"Lincoln" trailer


It's been quite some time since I've been enchanted by a film by Steven Spielberg, however watching a new trailer, featuring that tag line still carries the weight of enchantment from childhood.  Even so, the first true glimpse of Lincoln, the second great Abe film of 2012-- this only likely sans vampires, raises a few alert bells.  Sure, it features a dynamo cast-- with an ever grizzled Daniel Day-Lewis front and center (and sure to be an Oscar contender; damned the actual quality of the final product.)  In fact, perhaps that my biggest peeve-- that this film can only be okay in order to receive tremendous end of year plaudits, simply by its pedigree-- look no further than last year's painfully sincere War Horse (and its 6 Oscar nominations) for more support to that thesis.  At the very least, the written by Tony Kushner back line, while lacking in childhood sentiment, adds artistic cred.  Fingers crossed November 17th!!!!

 
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