Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Review - No Country for Old Men
Joel and Ethan Coen have rarely taken their material so seriously. This adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's gripping 2005 novel marks the first time the brothers have translated a book for the screen, and the task seems to have fired their creative juices and artistic sensibilities in ways we haven't seen since their masterful Fargo. The Coens find the perfect pitch for McCarthy's story, maintaining the novel's spare and clinical narrative style, and generating a level of tension, which is as surprising from these filmmakers as it is effective. Of course, the Coens still provide us with moments of their trademark deadpan levity – a couple of scenes will make you laugh out loud – but the directors never lose that fine balance, just giving us a cluster of humorous asides which come as a blessed relief amidst the film's pervading sense of fear and fatalism.
No Country for Old Men is set in Texas in the early 1980's. After being hooked by the opening scenes described above, we meet the film's central protagonist Llewelyn Moss (an outstanding Josh Brolin), the archetypal normal guy brought low by one mistake. He is out hunting in the afternoon sun when he comes across a grisly scene, a drugs exchange gone bad, with abandoned cars and dead bodies lying scattered in the dust. He finds a huge stash of heroin in the back of one truck, and some distance away he comes across a case containing over $2 million in cash. He takes the money, and in doing so he unleashes a chain reaction of bloodshed, with a relentless force of evil named Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) hell-bent on tracking him down and retrieving the stash.
Chigurh was a compelling villain on the page and Javier Bardem's embodiment of this character is astonishing. He cuts an unusual figure with his floppy haircut, but he possesses a presence that sends shivers down the spine whenever he appears, and the methodical manner in which he goes about his business – killing his victims with a cold, professional detachment – is incredibly unsettling. In Bardem's hands, this soulless and terrifying psychopath lives up to both Moss's description of him as "the ultimate badass", and Bell's contention that he is almost like a ghost. He acts as the Yang to the Ying of Josh Brolin's essentially decent character, who quickly finds himself out of his depth as the plot escalates, but who is resourceful and intelligent, displaying the instincts of a hunter even when he is the prey.
No Country for Old Men is typically peppered with actors who make a vivid impression in supporting roles. Woody Harrelson appears as a cocky, swaggering bounty hunter; Stephen Root is strong as the businessman behind the drug deal that set these events in motion; and Kelly McDonald turns in an outstanding display as Llewelyn's wife, making her an affecting figure in just a handful of scenes. The Coens have always cast their movies well, though, and No Country for Old Men is more notable for the advancement in other key areas of their work. There's a pensiveness and restraint about their direction here; the film recalls the likes of Blood Simple, Miller's Crossing, Fargo and The Man Who Wasn't There in spirit, but it lacks the layer of irony which those films displayed. It is also one of the rare Coen films which doesn't feel like it is constantly nodding to pictures or genres from a bygone cinematic age; instead, they play McCarthy's narrative with an admirably straight bat, and the result is mesmerising.
The Coens stage a series of sequences in this film which are a wonder to behold. Many of No Country for Old Men's most memorable passages occur during the cat-and-mouse games between Moss and Chigurh – involving much stalking through darkened corridors and adjacent motel rooms – and working in conjunction with the magnificent Roger Deakins (is there a better cinematographer in cinema today?), they craft a series of nerve-jangling set-pieces. Carter Burwell is again credited with the film's musical score; but beyond the end credits I can't remember any music. What I do remember is the frequent, eerie silence – the air thick with tension – and the subtly brilliant sound design: like the ominous hiss emitted by Chigurh's portable gas canister, just before we hear the horrible phud of his bolt-gun claiming another victim. This is simply a flawlessly crafted picture at every level.
But in spite of the peerless craftsmanship on show here, will No Country for Old Men still disappoint many viewers? McCarthy's novel has a habit of omitting key incidents, or giving them just a brief mention, and the story's ending intentionally leaves loose ends dangling and many questions unanswered. His violent tale is a messy one, replete with randomness and ambiguity – that's what allows it to get under the skin so brilliantly – and the Coens have translated it to the screen without trying to embellish or tidy it up in any way. This means we have a situation where the major climactic incident takes place off-screen, where the big face-off we have been anticipating never really occurs, and where the film ends in a quiet, melancholic fashion rather than closing with a bang. It is a picture that refuses to satisfy the audience in a straightforward or conventional manner, but it is easy to imagine this haunting film having a long life beyond the final credits.
This is exactly what the Coen Brothers needed after their clutch of recent disappointing comedies, and while I'm not quite sure yet if it is the best work they have ever done (I'll need a second viewing, which I really can't wait for) it is definitely their most distinctive and mature film to date. In Cormac McCarthy they seem to have found a kindred spirit, a writer whose work allows them to explore themes such as the cruel and random nature of violence, and to lament for old moral certainties being swept away by "the rising of the tide". We feel much of this simply by looking at the weary, defeated demeanour of Tommy Lee Jones, as he surveys the carnage surrounding him with an air of dismay and incomprehension. Rarely have this actor's particular gifts been put to such effective use; and, in a resonant epilogue, his face, voice and body language tell us everything as he recounts an ambiguous dream. He looks for all the world like a man who has borne witness to too much evil; a man who can never forget the terrible things that he has seen.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Review - Eastern Promises
David Cronenberg's new film Eastern Promises opens with two contrasting scenes of bloodshed. The first occurs in a London barbershop, the hapless victim being held down by one man as another slices his throat open with a straight razor. The scene then shifts to elsewhere in the city, as a barefoot young girl staggers into a chemist and asks for help in the few words of English she has, before passing out on the floor with blood dripping from between her legs. This is Tatiana (Sarah-Jeanne Labrosse), a 14 year-old Russian girl who is about to give birth. She is rushed to hospital where the doctors manage to save the child but not the mother, and Anna (Naomi Watts), an English nurse of Russian descent, is left holding the baby. She is also left holding Tatiana's diary, which she found in the dead girl's belongings, but her attempts to get this diary translated lead her into trouble.
Eventually, Anna traces Tatiana's rape back to the Vory V Zakone, a criminal brotherhood headed up by restaurant owner Semyon (Armin Mueller-Stahl) and his son Kirill (Vincent Cassel); but the most interesting character she encounters is the family chauffer Nikolai (Viggo Mortensen), and it is he who gradually becomes the film's central figure. The reuniting of David Cronenberg with Mortensen will undoubtedly prompt many viewers to compare Eastern Promises with the director's brilliant A History of Violence, but such a comparison would be unfair and inappropriate. A History of Violence had a tightly wound narrative which gradually took on extra layers of complexity and ambiguity as it progressed, while Eastern Promises is just a thriller, and not a particularly special one at that.
That's not to say that the film is devoid of special moments – one scene in particular is already being hailed as a classic – but it generally feels pedestrian and unconvincing. Its main flaws lie with the story provided by Steven Knight, the screenwriter behind Stephen Frears' 2002 drama Dirty Pretty Things. The plot unfolds in an oddly conventional and unexciting way, hitting most of the expected beats, and Knight has a tendency to hint at background details, which either have little bearing on the main narrative or are left frustratingly unexplored. Knight also gives the film a fuzzy sense of perspective; Anna's amateur detective work initially appears to be the prime focus of the narrative, but the film then makes Nikolai its main protagonist – leaving Watts somewhat underused – and all the while an ill-advised, cliché-ridden voiceover gives us English excerpts from Tatiana's diary.
This is mediocre stuff, but it's a testament to Cronenberg's level of craftsmanship that he occasionally brings it to life. The film's show-stopping sequence occurs in a Turkish bathhouse, when a naked Nikolai is ambushed by two knife-wielding assassins, and he fights them off in a brutal encounter which is shot and edited with ferocious vigour. It's a trademark Cronenberg vignette; but despite the customary skill with which he directs this picture – and Eastern Promises is classily made throughout – I'm not sure if he was the right man for the job in the first place. Throughout his career Cronenberg has been fascinated with the intimate details of his characters rather than the places they live in – even in A History of Violence he painted the setting in broad strokes, intentionally suggesting a bland and clichéd vision of small town America – but Eastern Promises requires something more than that. The director doesn't make much of his London setting, shooting in dingy backstreets and coming up with a mostly anonymous view of the city; and he doesn't really delve into the culture and rituals of the Vory V Zakone in the way a filmmaker more interested in such things – a Scorsese or Coppola, for example – might have done. Stephen Frears delivered a much more authentic and intriguing vision of immigrant life in London in Dirty Pretty Things, and nothing in Eastern Promises ever feels as immersive, atmospheric or true as Cronenberg's last London-set feature, the superb and sorely undervalued Spider.
The characterisation is a little on the slim side as well, although the actors bring a lot of conviction to the film (perhaps too much, in Vincent Cassel's case). Naomi Watts is fine as the intrepid heroine, but this is one of the least demanding roles she has ever been given (compare this to her knife-edge performance in the forthcoming Funny Games), and her character doesn't really develop beyond a certain point. The ever-reliable Armin Mueller-Stahl brings a sense of understated menace to his acting, but there's nothing understated about the man playing his offspring. As Kirill, Vincent Cassel is usually drunk, shouting, or drunk and shouting (with a loose grasp on his accent), and the homoerotic subtext in his relationship with Nikolai is hardly played at a subtle level.
It's Mortensen who holds the film together, though, and his performance is the best reason to see Eastern Promises. Who could have guessed that this actor would be such a perfect match for this director? His exceptional display in A History of Violence was a quantum leap ahead of anything he had delivered in the past, and he is riveting in a different way here. As Nikolai, Mortensen gives a fantastically controlled, detailed and physical performance; every movement and gesture seems considered and pointed, and he speaks the language as if to the manner born. All of the best moments in the film belong to him: the knife fight, for sure, but also the cold manner in which he chops up a body early in film, the way he extinguishes a cigarette on his tongue, or that chilling "throat cut" gesture he makes at Anna's Russian uncle (Jerzy Skolimowski). Cronenberg's latest picture lacks suspense, excitement and surprises – and the climax is a mess – but Mortensen's Nikolai almost makes it work. He's the only character who feels like he exists beyond the confines of this narrative, and given what we learn about his backstory late in the picture, Eastern Promises ultimately feels like a frustrating prologue to a far more interesting movie.
Monday, October 22, 2007
Review - Rendition and Redacted
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Review - Sicko
Michael Moore's Sicko opens with footage of a man named Adam who is sitting at home and is sewing up a wound in his own leg. We are then introduced to Rick, a likeable character who severed the tips of two of his fingers with an electric saw, and when he arrived at the emergency ward he was given a choice: he could have his middle finger reattached for $60,000, or he could have the ring finger reattached for a mere $12,000. Being a romantic type of guy, Moore jokingly suggests, Rick chose to save his ring finger. These two unfortunate souls are among the millions of Americans who don't have sufficient health insurance, but Moore's film isn't really about them. Instead, Sicko focuses on the vast majority of US citizens who do have insurance, but who are prevented from getting the care they need by a corrupt system; a system that values profit above all else, and a system that smothers those it should be helping in miles of bureaucratic red tape.
Ever since he made his film debut in 1989 with Roger & Me, Michael Moore has become American cinema's agitator-in-chief. He has attacked the country's gun culture in his Oscar-winning Bowling for Columbine, and then he attacked the presidency of George W Bush with Fahrenheit 9/11, a shapeless rant masquerading as a serious documentary. Many people love Moore and his rabble-rousing ways, while others can't stand his blunt style, his preference for cheap shots, and his habit of placing himself at the centre of the story. Most people, I think, are of the opinion that Moore is a character you can love for the issues he tries to raise, while disliking the manner in which he does it. Like all of his films, Sicko is a film driven by a genuine passion and a justifiable anger at the ills of society, but it's no coincidence that this film is at its best when Moore himself takes a back seat.
Instead, many of the Americans who have suffered at the hands of this system are allowed to tell their own stories, a move which proves to be the film's trump card. When Moore advertised on his website for contributors to Sicko he was inundated with emails – over 25,000 in the first week – from people who wanted their voices to be heard, and from this large pool of protest, Moore has been judicious in his choice of anecdotes. Some of the stories in Sicko are so absurd they're almost funny, and the director knows how to milk the laughs from them. One woman recalls her HMO denying payment on an ambulance journey because it wasn't "pre-approved" – when was she supposed approve it, after she regained consciousness in her car? – while another interviewee recounts an incident in which payment for her operation was retroactively denied after an undisclosed yeast infection from some years earlier was discovered.
In an amusing way these stories highlight the ridiculous vagaries of the HMO policies, with the insurance companies searching every claim for a loophole which will allow them to deny payment. From the other side of the fence, Moore speaks to a doctor who testifies to a bonus scheme for those who make the most denials during the course of the year, and a call-centre worker is reduced to tears as she describes the pain of turning away dozens of needy applicants on a daily basis. But the real weight of Sicko's opening half lies in the more tragic stories Moore uncovers. He profiles Larry and Donna, a middle-aged couple who have been almost bankrupted by the cost of their healthcare, and who have been forced to sell up and move into their children's spare room. Moore later interviews a woman whose husband died from cancer of the kidney after being repeatedly denied treatment; and, most shockingly of all, he introduces us to Dawnelle, a mother whose 18 month-old daughter died because the hospital she frantically sought treatment from was not affiliated with her health insurer, and insisted she go elsewhere.
These frank interview pieces are harrowing and deeply moving, and Moore wisely avoids intruding on their grief. The director's style in the opening half of Sicko is so much more restrained and sensitive than we have become used to, perhaps because he realises that the honesty and emotion provided by the people he has spoken to is enough, and to over-egg the pudding would be counterproductive.
However, the usual Moore caveats gradually seep into the picture as Sicko moves into its second hour. After identifying the problem, Moore looks abroad for the solution, heading to Canada, England, France and Cuba to show his fellow Americans how a health system should be run. Moore's aim is to prove that US citizens have nothing to fear from free universal health care, despite repeated warnings to the contrary (in one gem from the archives, Moore produces an audio clip of then-actor Ronald Reagan warning people about the dangers of socialised medicine), but the simplistic manner in which he argues his case is infuriating. Wherever Moore goes he finds nothing but happy patients and contended doctors; the waiting times are short, the government is giving everyone what they want, and the fees are either tiny or non-existent. Much of the claims made in favour of these countries' health services may well be true, but Moore's decision to paint them as near-utopian societies where the system works flawlessly is reductive to the point of being offensive. Many documentarians would produce hard facts and statistics to back up their argument in a case such as this, to offer a compare-and-contrast with the American system, but most of the evidence Moore supplies is anecdotal. He asks one or two people for their opinion and we are expected to take their answers as gospel.
Much of this section of Sicko is hard to swallow. The scenes involving the director walking around an NHS hospital with his face a mask of wide-eyed naïveté are amusing but trite; we don't hear anything about underpaid nurses working 18-hour+ shifts, or the long waiting lists, or the poor levels of hygiene. Certainly, few would dispute that the British system generally works better for the people than the American one, but no system is without its flaws and its compromises, and Moore should at least pay lip service to these considerations. In France he addresses the notion that a universal healthcare plan would result in higher taxes by talking to one middle-class couple who tell him that they're perfectly happy with things the way they are - there you have it, case closed. The lack of a dissenting voice against Moore's own thesis has long been a factor in the director's work, but it's still disappointing to see a filmmaker as intelligent and capable as he is resorting to such lazy journalism and obvious manipulative tricks.
Of course, most people have already heard about the big set-piece with which Moore brings the film to a close, taking a boatload of ill 9/11 rescue workers out to Guantanamo Bay, the one place on US soil which offers its inhabitants free healthcare. It's typically attention-grabbing piece of theatre from Moore, but it's also a stupid stunt which has no relevance to the issue at hand. Moore then takes his 9/11 volunteers to Cuba where they are offered top-notch care and partake in a mawkishly staged love-in with Cuban fire-fighters. Is Moore really holding up Cuba as a paragon of virtue and generosity? Given that country's record on civil liberties and human rights, Moore should know better than to depict it in such glowing and uncritical terms, and everything about these sequences rings resoundingly false. By the time the end credits have rolled on Sicko, the director has again resorted to all of his usual tricks, including a shamelessly self-aggrandising moment when he reveals himself as the benefactor who anonymously wrote a $12,000 cheque to help his biggest critic in a time of need. The subject under discussion here is too important for Moore to make himself the star.
Monday, October 15, 2007
Review - The Counterfeiters (Die Fälscher)
Earlier this year The Lives of Others caused quite a stir with its depiction of life in Stasi-era East Germany, winning an Oscar and near-unanimous critical acclaim, but not everyone was convinced of that picture's merits. I certainly appreciated the film's classy direction and strong performances, but beneath the glossy surface it boiled down to a too-neat morality play which never really caught fire. Austrian director Stefan Ruzowitzky is the latest filmmaker to examine a painful part of German history – the most painful of all, in fact – and The Counterfeiters strikes me as a film which lives up to the promises The Lives of Others made and failed to keep. Ruzowitzky's film is rougher around the edges, and more ambiguous in its approach, and the film is all the better for it.
Saturday, October 13, 2007
Review - Ratatouille
Why can't every film be as good as Ratatouille? Why can't every film be made with such attention to detail, such wit and imagination? A CGI-animated feature like Ratatouille is years in the making, with a huge team of animators constructing the picture frame by frame, so perhaps that's why it feels like such a minutely detailed labour of love – but if that's the case, then why are we subjected to such a torrent of substandard animated movies every single year? The single-word answer to these questions is Pixar, the studio which has produced an unbroken run of technically dazzling and hugely entertaining films since 1995's revolutionary Toy Story (even their weakest efforts in that period, like last year's Cars, have still been perfectly enjoyable); and with their latest picture they have produced a film which represents the very core ideals driving their work.
As he did in The Iron Giant and The Incredibles, Brad Bird uses Ratatouille to explore the themes of identity and destiny, introducing us to characters who are programmed to behave a certain way but who want to find their own path. Brad Bird is a perfect match for Pixar, using the studio's technical brilliance to tell new and adventurous stories which are as thematically rich and emotionally resonant as any live-action fare. Animation is often dismissed as being "just for kids", and even after the boom of the past decade it is rarely afforded the respect given to the more conventional awards-baiting films produced every year; but a great filmmaker is a great filmmaker, regardless of the tools he uses, and the fact that Bird works within the framework of the summer family movie should not denigrate his achievements one bit. "Anyone can cook, but only the fearless can be great," Gusteau advises Remy during the course of the picture, and a similar maxim holds true for cinema: anyone can direct a movie, but only an artist can make a Ratatouille.