Posts Tagged ‘misunderstanding’

Ruby Blue

Ruby Blue

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

[potential spoiler warning: this turned into one of my rare reviews where I talk a lot about the plot…]

There have been many movies made about relationships between older men and younger girls – going way back to the French Sundays & Cybele (and I’m sure even further back), through Digging to China, The Professional, to Lawn Dogs and of course the two adaptations of Lolita – and they’ve rarely been unworthy of note, so I’ve been meaning to watch this one – ostensibly about an elderly British man who befriends a little girl, ultimately to the suspicion of the neighbourhood – ever since I first heard about it. This is a subject that’s never not worth revisiting – because it’s a problem that not only won’t go away but seems to get ever worse. As far as I’m aware this is the first of these kinds of movies to be set in modern Britain, with positive intentions toward the subject matter – and that in itself for now actually makes it more pressing than any of the other titles previously mentioned.

The movie doesn’t rush into its story at all, feeling more like Gran Torino or, closer to home, Harry Brown, as it starts than any of those more romantic, poetic movies. Bob Hoskins plays what initially amounts to a grumpy old man who, as the movie opens, sees his wife die as an ambulance is too busy dealing with drunks in the city. Hoodies and youths seem to be on every corner and Hoskins doesn’t hold back from telling them what he thinks of their loitering, littering, etc. He keeps racing pigeons and it’s while he’s tending to them that 8 year old Florrie runs into his back garden.

It’s impressive how the movie builds to its drama from here. Nobody bats an eye at first at this old man looking after a little girl who only recently moved into the neighbourhood for an hour or two. Her mother actually directly invokes the P-word on their first meeting, joking, after he objects to being left with her (“I don’t know what to do with kids!” etc), “Oh come on, you’re not a peedie, are ya?” In this way the movie sort of serves as a microcosm of a much longer timescale, with this initial phase going back to the early 90s or even late 80s when people did trust more this way. I hope this doesn’t make me sound like I have a bleak view of the world – I’m sure there are still communities where every stranger (particularly of the male persuasion) isn’t regarded with suspicion, but they’re certainly few and far between… the picture painted later in the movie, something resembling Salem in the 1600s, feels much more familiar…

As Hoskins’ character lets himself go hygienically, devoid of wife (I won’t go off on one about this typically male portrayal; it’s believable in this case), another new neighbour, a French woman, begins to insinuate herself into his life, bringing him home-cooked food and company but really just desperate for the company herself. Hoskins befriends one of the neighbourhood teenagers, too, seeing a spark of humanity in the boy that he can nurture if only he can keep him away from his drunken friends. Soon his whole house and garden is buzzing with these disparate characters, a picture of community in action, prompting bewilderment from Hoskins estranged son – who knows him only as the grumpy recluse we first saw – when he pops home to collect the last of his things (wanting nothing more to do with his grumpy dad since mother died).

You can probably guess what happens from here – such happiness never holding up when strangers and children are involved. The P word begins to be uttered less jokingly and people start to believe what even characters on the sidelines imply. It’s finally when Florrie herself asks her mother what that word means, having heard it all over the shop, that even this rare, smart, parent – suddenly stricken with that awful fear face we see wherever there are mothers, children, and strange men – says, “I think I’ve been a very silly mummy…” I don’t think I’ve seen the power that word has in today’s society represented so perfectly as it is here. I didn’t mention Salem before to be funny – it does seem that once the P word is used to describe an already even slightly suspicious person it has as little chance of being taken back today as an accusation of witchcraft back then. Once the word is spray-painted on the front of Hoskins’ house, once the pack mentality of the neighbourhood sees it, it’s just so many dominoes waiting to fall…

The final act of the movie is as admirable as it is awkward. It impressively doesn’t go down some of the more obvious paths, say, a TV movie with the same subject matter might go. One of the friends of the boy Hoskins befriends plants what we can only assume is child pornography on his computer and tips the police off about it. I don’t know how accurate the scene of his arrest is as far as what would actually happen in the same situation in real life, but they actually let him go to the pub while they search the house… they take the computer away, and, seeing when the material was downloaded combined with the information that Hoskins was in France with his pigeons at that time, don’t even make the slightest suggestion that he had anything to do with it. Another scene has them interview the rowdy mother of Florrie’s best friend. She has that dramatic way with language implying all manner of untruths about Hoskins but using those words that one usually sees have the police arrest the first creepy looking man they see, but they flatly tell her, “sorry, but that doesn’t give us anything to go on…”

There is one moment towards the end which is (if you’ll pardon the spoiler-ish pun) so ballsy and frankly absurd that it almost threatens to take down the movie entirely. It relates to the French neighbour who Hoskins ultimately falls in love with, and I’ll say no more than that. It is startling how an initially wtf reveal in this storyline actually turns into something quite wonderful (not to mention garnering one of the movie’s biggest laughs – yes, bizarrely, there are laughs in this movie… an awkward, yet again admirable, number and variety of them…) as it resolves itself. As I said, the bare bones of this story – the man/little girl relationship – has been done many times and it’s to this movie’s credit how much flavour it adds, with bursts of French music, the pigeon keeping, and this random little storyline.

I was surprised to find mostly positive reviews among the few I could find when I searched after the credits rolled on this one. It’s a subject matter most people have firmly made up their minds about and the approach here is frequently so awkward it’s easy to label as plain ridiculous – most particularly in that wtf reveal of the French neighbour’s subplot. There are many lovely good characters with great actors behind them but the bad characters tend to be sort of embarrassingly two dimensional – hoodies and chavs plain and true. But the movie has some seriously good intentions that I can’t ignore because they’re something I care deeply about. There is a massive problem when it comes to friendships between adults and children that is not talked about nearly enough and it ruins lives constantly and increasingly. This movie like so many doesn’t really offer a solution but it does show perfectly exactly how and where the misunderstandings happen… I recommend it completely.



Sundays and Cybele aka Les dimanches de Ville d’Avray

Sundays and Cybele aka Les dimanches de Ville d’Avray

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

It’s a long time since a movie so quickly became what I’m sure will ultimately be one of my permanent all-time faves, and this one has been sitting in my must-see queue for far too long, almost a year which is crazy considering how long and how badly I wanted to see it following various recommendations.

To me, this is one of the best versions, if not the best version, of the “Lolita story”. I have to explain what that means to me because I know some would be quick to disagree because of all the controversy about the “original” Lolita and direct adaptations thereof. I use Lolita as a shorthand for any story that has this complicated type of relationship between an older man and younger girl… some are sexual, some are not, but they all bring something to the table of what I think one of the most important discussions to be had, and Sundays and Cybele brings heaps to that table.

The movie’s closest recent relative is probably John Duigan’s Lawn Dogs, which bears the same unique quality as Sundays in that the relationship concerned is immediately made somewhat more “appropriate” by the older man being a kind of child himself, a victim of the horrors of war resulting in amnesia. He comes across Cybele (whose name is never actually given until a crucial moment at the end; one could argue the French original title would probably make the whole thing more poignant) sort of accidentally but the nature of his attraction is immediately clear… there’s nothing lecherous here whatsoever, just a lonely man who finds happiness in a beautiful child’s face and then finds that she needs him too. Of course, as in life, not everyone sees it that way.

There is a beauty to the second act, which mostly concerns the man’s regular Sunday meetings with Cybele, which I haven’t seen in a long time and is hard to put into words. As they walk along the river in what seems to be a constantly thickening haze, sometimes seen in the reflection of concentric circles on the water surface (“We’re in our home now,” Cybele says over this image), I lost myself in this movie as I have in few others, and truly didn’t want it to end. Though the movie takes a tragic turn, it’s these earlier, happier scenes that will stay with me, like the best kind of summer romance movies, you almost feel like you had an affair with Cybele too, and no matter where the movie ends, nothing can take those moments away. Cybele not only refuses to tell anybody else her real name at the movie’s emotional climax, but denies the name given to her previously by the orphanage, leaving us the viewers as the only ones left who really “knew her”. Like I say it’s a rare film that breaks through the screen and touches me so powerfully.



Changeling

Changeling

Monday, January 12th, 2009

“I am going to tell you what happened, and I am going to keep on telling you here, every night, until someone does something about it.”

Number one: Okay, I called 2008 too early. Number two: I think it’s time I officially declare Clint Eastwood the greatest film maker of all time. I start wondering just how many more times I’m going to say this now, but I always seem to get surprised: Clint Eastwood genuinely gets better every year, and between this and Gran Torino, I’m honestly more in awe than ever. I didn’t expect much from this movie at all and its mostly due to the presence of Angelina Jolie, who has become one of those performers who with every film since Girl, Interrupted made me a fan of hers has simply become too tainted by her public persona for me to fall for any of her acting. Within mere minutes here, all that doubt was put entirely to bed – she’s every bit phenomenal as people have been saying, and then some.

It does flag and, yes, even stretches belief a little too far towards the end, even despite the “a true story” title at the start. We’re not given enough of the Canadian boy’s story, I think (at least, not soon enough), and it’s too massive a turn for it to come out of nowhere as it does. The movie’s tone veers wildly between the likes of L.A. Confidential and Silence of the Lambs (it even passes briefly through Girl, Interrupted) but Eastwood has that way of cutting out all the fat and keeping you hooked all the way. The music is typical Eastwood, literally just a smattering of themes that in any other movie would be considered overplayed, but the two main ones here just haunted me more every time they came on. It’s a chilling, painful thing to watch and I’m far less likely to see it again any time soon than Gran Torino … but it still restores my faith in movies just when I’d given up on the past year almost entirely.



Mr. Bean’s Holiday

Mr. Bean’s Holiday

Monday, March 24th, 2008

“Oui! Oui! Bean! Sabine! Russ! Cannes!”

LOL :-D

I don’t think there’s much to add to the first review of this but to say that the whole spectrum between the bad and the good parts of this widened exponentially for me on a second viewing. When it’s unfunny, it’s really pretty excruciating – the restaurant scene at the start, the “amuse the boy” scene on the train shortly thereafter, and the “falling asleep at the wheel” scene towards the end being amongst the most painful; but when it soars, like pretty much from the scene where Bean wakes in the middle of the movie set, the yellow mini approaching, and thereon to the end with him walking down to the beach – yes, even the sing-a-long – I found it even more joyful and beautiful than I did before.

I think the one disappointment most people will have over the movie is that, like the first movie in fact, it’s not just straight-up laughs like the TV show, and because of how bold they’ve been in doing it the same way (it only just struck me this time how many subtitles there are given this was a total Easter holidays movie last year for kids), there are unavoidably moments where it feels awkward (there are even moments like this in Mel Smith’s only slightly better first movie). If you come to it just wanting to smile at France, though, you really can’t go wrong. The boy’s tooo cute when he dresses as a girl too (sorry but I have to say these things sometimes – ok, all the time – lol) :)

May 16th, 2007:

I was sort of desperate to like this not only because I loved, really loved, Mel Smith’s Bean, but also ‘cos I’ve been informed my favourite cousin Fiona laughed her way all the way through this new installment over the Easter holidays. The reviews weren’t too promising, though …

The movie couldn’t begin better, it’s almost like it’s trying to win me over – Bean stops over and gets led astray in Paris and we get quite a nice video tour of the place – but after an excruciating restaurant scene (in which at least two old gags from the TV series threaten to resurface, and some business with mussels ends up just being plain unpleasant), I honestly thought I was going to go the way of Mark Kermode and wind up really being let down by the rest. But then Bean meets the boy, and there’s a scene on a train platform where he starts to mimic Bean, and what can I say, it just won me over in about 30 seconds.

Sure, you can look at the set-up and in this horrible world we live etc and say, ooh, creepy. Alternatively, you can see a simple-minded, foolish but harmless man and a young boy who ultimately thinks the world of him running around France getting in hijinks. I think there’s something really almost classical here, and if it doesn’t fit in with your dark view of the world, it’s a real shame I think. Rowan Atkinson and the kid work beyond adorably together, Howard Goodall’s music and Steve Bendelack’s direction really lift the whole thing and you can’t help coming out in the end feeling warm and fuzzy inside. Keep watching after the credits, too, btw, there’s a little bit of added cuteness.

Yes, the humour tires towards the end, but as with Bean, there is really more to this than the laughs. There’s this real sense of the camera trying to find the humanity in Bean, and when it finds it, it’s always kind of startling how easy it was. He’s a beautiful character when dealt with correctly, and this movie really didn’t let me down like I thought it would. The more I think about it, the more I want to see it again.



It Was An Accident

It Was An Accident

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

Watched for Nicola Stapleton of course, on which note I wasn’t disappointed, of course, but this has a really interesting selection of other people in its cast – Chiwetel Ejiofor and Thandie Newton stand out like a sore thumb with all they’ve achieved since, but there’s also Hugh Quarshie, one of the best things in the BBC’s “Holby City”. I found it a decent enough Brit flick about a guy who just can’t catch a break.



Atonement

Atonement

Thursday, December 27th, 2007

I don’t know if it’s much of a secret but I really neither wanted nor expected to like this much. Though I liked Enduring Love, another Ian McEwan adaptation, and I love James McAvoy, my hatred of the kind of praise this movie has received – not to mention Ikea Knightley – completely outweighed the positives.

Within minutes, however, I was fairly hooked – those typewriter clicks on the score, the pace of the whole thing. On the technical side, this is certainly watchable stuff, even if the pace of its opening isn’t quite kept up after the first 10 minutes. But though I was impressed by how much it exceeded my expectations, it all comes down to one thing for me, something I’m sure must be conveyed better in the novel unless all of its readers are just the types that are easy to please – and that’s that I just don’t believe for a second that a child in the 30s (especially one we’ve seen using a typewriter which even explains the letter) would be given so much credence over such a delicate, even today almost unspeakable matter. I mean, if ever there was a time when children were meant to be seen and not heard it was then. And by extension, I don’t really see the need for the period setting except to have some lovely war and costume scenes for Oscar (before you say it, I know it’s adapted from a novel … but still …)

Though I realise it would screw up the time passed thing of the ending, were it set today, I’d buy it easier. Even if the “c” word has lost its power to shock today, and I don’t believe it has at all (just try saying it to 10 strangers, I dare you) – if a child points their finger at a young man today and accuses them of anything, that man is basically f**ked, not to put too fine a point on it.

But I digress … it doesn’t matter because the next thing we know, McAvoy is in France in a soldier’s uniform talking French, and the movie gets better from there on out.

Any film that contains The Tracking Shot (yes, it’s impossible to write about this movie without mentioning it) earns itself an immediate 4 stars in my book. It is that good that it’s worth watching 2 hours for 10 minutes, even if the rest of the movie doesn’t come even close to the beauty and skill on display in those minutes. Overall it kept me wanting to know where exactly it was going in the end, and though that ending is too jarring to be as effective as it wants to be, I’m pleased to say this was much better than expected, so much so that I really won’t mind how many nominations it gets next month for the Oscars … yes, that includes Keira, for whom maybe another apology may be required (but not today).



Desperado

Desperado

Monday, March 8th, 2004

This is El Mariachi remade for Hollywood. Rodriguez wanted to continue his originally planned trilogy rather than simply remake his first movie (he’d planned to make three Mariachi movies before even thinking of being noticed by any bigshots… funny how things change) but I think with Desperado he got a little of both. While Desperado is pretty much the same again only bigger, slicker, and with better music, it does purport to being a continuation of the story that began with El Mariachi: this is the Mariachi’s revenge for the girl he lost in Part One. But it’s still a case of, “There’s a bad guy after me, and he has lots of henchmen, and I’m going to shoot them, and then him, and, hey, I can replace the girl on the way too!” (with apologies to Robert Rodriguez: you know I love your work really!) The difference is, this time, the Mariachi is after them too – in Part One, he’s just trying to survive.

There’s something about Desperado on this viewing that made me think Tarantino may have had more of a hand in it than just his acting turn (more of which in a second). The dialogue is too good for Rodriguez (again, apologies to Rodriguez: you know I love your work). Having now seen the Spy Kids Trilogy and Once Upon a Time in Mexico, I have to say that dialogue is not Rodriguez’s strong point… not that it’s actually a point at all, to him it’s all about story and fun. The dialogue in Desperado is not only the best in any of his movies, it’s some of the best in all movies (“You know – it’s easier to pull the trigger than play guitar. Easier to destroy than create. They kill the woman I love. They ruined my life…”). And it really rings of Tarantino. But maybe it’s just ‘cos they were hanging out more back then (they became buddies when both their debuts, El Mariachi and Reservoir Dogs, were luvvies of the year in movie land). There’s also a lot more swearing than in any of his other movies – not that it bothers me, but again it sets off Tarantino bells. Like the “real” budget of Mariachi, this is another question I’d love to know the answer to, who else contributed to the script?

Tarantino has a great bit part in the movie. He is really good at physical comedy and I wouldn’t mind seeing him act more (I’ll have to get Little Nicky some time soon). The business he does when entering the “backroom” of Tarasco Bar, walking through the dirty toilet, is hilarious, and his telling of the pissing joke at the same bar is just too descriptive for words (coupled with Rodriguez’s editing, even funnier).

Overall, this is everything that’s missing from El Mariachi – slickly shot like a Michael Bay movie, sun bouncing off everything, every sweaty face looking too beautiful for sweaty, music that plays from song to song so lazily it’s perfect (note how “Strange Face of Love” by Tito & Tarantula plays from the middle of a gunfight across a scene change, builds with the ending of a whole sequence, and ends on a scene transition… one of the best soundtrack moments ever), great actors really slumming it in a movie like this (the work between Banderas and Hayek is probably the best acting in all Rodriguez’s work to date) and genuine big explosions (plus real machine guns: in Part One Rodriguez had guns that only fired one shot!) But all this money means that the one thing that made El Mariachi great is lost… an undefinable thing, really… you’ll know, I’m sure, when you see them. Mercifully, Rodriguez broke past this studio phase and is now free to continue seeking imperfection with whatever budget he desires. This is still probably the most “complete” film in the Mariachi series though.