' ' Cinema Romantico: Captain Phillips
Showing posts with label Captain Phillips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Captain Phillips. Show all posts

Friday, February 28, 2014

Motifs in Cinema '13: Failure

"Motifs in Cinema is a discourse across film blogs, assessing the way in which various thematic elements have been used in the 2013 cinematic landscape. How does a common theme vary in use from a comedy to a drama? Are filmmakers working from a similar canvas when they assess the issue of death or the dynamics of revenge? Like most things, a film begins with an idea – Motifs in Cinema assesses how various themes emanating from a single idea change when utilised by varying artists." - Andrew K.  

Be sure to check out all the other entries on the many more 2013 motifs at Andrew's site, Encore's World of Film & TV.
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Maybe it's because of the two ton of issues facing the nation where I make my home, the two ton of issues facing us on a global scale or merely the baggage I bring all on my own (which is considerable), but I have found myself pontificating the notion of failure - and its hair-trigger - a lot lately. A multitude of places in our world seem braced at national and social and economic tipping points, as if we are a geopolitical landmass, rumbling and ready to splinter and drift off to who-knows-where.


Llewyn Davis, an ungrateful folk-singing sourpuss, and the world he inhabits of Greenwich Village in the early 1960’s are at a tipping point he either does not recognize or will not admit to. His singing partner may have realized it or admitted to it, which may be why he threw himself off the George Washington Bridge, but then maybe he just suffered from depression. Maybe Llewyn suffers from depression, or maybe he’s just a dick, his surliness providing a perfect answer to the question Jack Black posed way back when in “High Fidelity”: “Is it better to burn out than to fade away?”

He mythologizes himself in his own mind, fancying himself as the ultimate starving artist rather than homeless, deriding his former girlfriend’s attempts at eking out an actual life beyond the stage as “a little careerist” which is, in turn, “a little square.” In the story as he might tell it, he’s the hero, holding out and not giving in, adhering to the purity of what he does, though at one point he dismisses his own music as his “job” which seems to betray what he really thinks. He seems to sense the world shifting beneath his feet and rather than readjusting, he lashes out, convinced his failure is fate’s ploy while all the signs of a new path go unheeded. And even when he finally does sort of acknowledge his failure and reluctantly determines to re-enlist as a merchant marine in the square quest for something new, he fails, failing to have his merchant license as required. Eventually he winds up tossed out in the alley, not so much surrendering to a brave new world as telling it “au revoir” as it passes him by in the night.


If Llewyn was an emblem of the radical shift between the fifties and sixties, his artistic wayfaring soul sister, Frances Halladay, is a emblematic of a different era. It’s not failure, per se, that Frances experiences as much as casual fuck-ups and reckless frivolity. She doesn’t really do what she does, as she puts it, and this led some critics to view the film as nothing much more than a series of scattershot vignettes. I saw it more as a series of wholly un-tactical withdrawals and spastic counterattacks. (She can’t afford to move to Tribeca with her friend. She retreats to crashing with friends in an effort to conserve funds. She counterattacks by booking a trip to Paris on a credit card.) Still, she seems so light on her black Converse-clad feet, dancing her way across New York City sidewalks, chatting in that extraordinary livewire Greta Gerwig-ese, that occasionally you might forget the fecklessness with which she approaches adulthood and that future failure is possible if she doesn’t find focus. A.O. Scott termed the film “a bedtime story”, which is spot-on, implying that as the economy burns and the job market ebbs and flows, the youth of America can tuck themselves in by watching “Frances Ha” and having pleasant dreams where ultimately the sweet smell of success is served by your friendly neighborhood barista.


Failure, though, which Frances doesn’t and can’t understand, at least not yet, is often not an all-at-once proposition. It’s a long fade-out, and Woodrow T. Grant’s fade-out is nearing its end. Bruce Dern’s performance in “Nebraska”, his face paralyzed throughout in a sort of weary perplexity, never makes it quite clear that the character is aware of its top billing in its own farcical tragedy. He is a Midwestern Ponce de Leon and a random sweepstakes notice which he misunderstands as having granted him a million dollars is his Fountain of Youth. It’s all a myth, of course, and Woody concluding his episodic journey by wearing a Prize Winner hat is the cruelest irony. Ultimately his good-willed son (Will Forte) makes a couple concessions to provide his father a moment in a version of the limelight. These concluding moments, however, strike a strange tone, precisely because they are, in a way, as false and unearned as the million dollars. If failures are meant to yield lessons, it's legitimate to wonder what Woody has learned. It's possible he has learned nothing.


These failures, however, are not just limited to America. They are global. “Captain Phillips” was heavily involved in telling the tale of the real-life man who gave the film its name, obviously, and it opens with a fairly obvious sequence of Phillips and his wife lamenting the economically unstable into which their children are venturing. But this instability pales compared to the instability facing the Somali pirate who hijacks Phillips’ ship, Muse (Barkhad Abdi), subtly wresting the film from its primary character. With success in his society almost exclusively reliant on violence with no fallback plan, his demeanor is as resigned as desperate. He knows that his wayward attempt to hold Phillips hostage and ask for ransom is likely to end in failure, but he also knows that failing to push forward in that attempt will result in failure too – failure in the form of death. The film’s claustrophobic third act might well be a demonstration of American military might, as has been claimed, but I read it much more as Muse’s out-of-options swan song. Abdi is so frighteningly relaxed in these late-film sequences, fully aware he was born under the sign of failure. All he’s doing is running himself into the ground.


Elsewhere in the Indian Ocean, “All Is Lost”, J.C. Chandor’s sterling cinematic experience of Robert Redford & The Sea, opens with a halting, pointed voiceover by its star. “I tried,” he says. “I think you would all agree that I tried. To be true, to be strong, to be kind, to love, to be right. But I wasn't. And I know you knew this. In each of your ways.” We don’t know who he’s talking to, of course, and we never find out, and that’s fine because the overriding point is clear – whomever he’s writing, he’s admitting he failed them. And that’s an interesting tack for the film to take – to place the failure front and center. The film is about a man braving the elements, to be sure, matter-of-factly facing each setback as it comes, but I saw it as so much more. Apologies for momentarily getting religulous but a Corinthians verse came to mind: “The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.” This is a man slowly, perhaps even unwittingly, casting off the failure of his old life bit by bit until, in a closing moment of arresting glow, the new has come.


Then again, most of us aren’t like Robert Redford. Most of us more like Gary King (Simon Pegg) of “The World’s End.” Not so much the obnoxiousness, lunacy and alcoholism, perhaps, as the lingering regret, the moment in our past we are so sure if we just got one chance to do over would make our lives everything we originally wanted them to be. In Gary’s case, he has fixated on The Golden Mile, an epic pub crawl he and his best friends never finished, and he will stop at nothing to reconvene them all in middle age to right this wrong and recalibrate his life. The others present themselves as having grown up and moved on and while this is true to a degree, their facades mask their own fears of failure, and their re-attempt at winning the Golden Mile will bring all those fears to a head as they find themselves face to face with failing themselves, the pub crawl and the world.

In its own hyperkinetic, Cornetto-inflicted way, “The World’s End” ultimately presents its heroes an opportunity to wash away their pasts (and their presents), for the old to pass away and the new – a warm, welcoming new – to come, for their failure to be rendered . Their reaction to this rare opportunity initially wreaks of liquid heroism, but there is something both deeper and simpler. Failure and Success, Success and Failure, this is what makes them (us) whole.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Captain Phillips

For obvious reasons the title of this film is required to be "Captain Phillips." That is because its base material is the book recounting the real life Richard Phillips' excruciating trials at sea in 2009 when his container ship the Maersk Alabama was boarded by four armed Somali pirates which resulted in him being taken hostage aboard his ship's own lifeboat and a dramatic standoff with the US Navy. Thus, Captain Richard Phillips, played by Tom Hanks in a performance driven by behavior and reaction, with a full blooming Boston accent as a kicker, is front and center. Ultimately, however, "Captain Phillips" is very much about another Captain, even if the other Captain has bestowed himself the title with no real qualifications other than machine-gun intimidation.


The film opens with Phillips and his wife (Catherine Keener, a single scene walk-off) in a minivan on the way to the airport discussing their sons' futures and, in turn, the changing world and its scary economy. We've seen this sorta thing before, sure, but then director Paul Greengrass does an interesting thing and cuts to the coast of Somalia where Muse (Barkhad Abdi, standing up to Hanks in character and acting) is enlisting only a precious few squabbling applicants to join him in rickety motorboats to invade a passing ship to hold for ransom. It is a scene straight out of Depression-era America, desperate men clamoring for paying tasks down on the dock. By no means is this meant to excuse the actions of the pirates, merely to paint perspective, that the requisite clock-ticking thrill-ride to come is not ethically delineated in picture perfect slices nor simply about patriotic heroics. To borrow a term Captain Phillips himself uses in the film, this is real world.

At sea, Phillips is shown to be level-headed but also a taskmaster, telling his men to enjoy their coffee even though the spin Hanks puts on the words each time betrays the fact he'd rather they put aside their coffee and get back to work. There has been rumination (and a lawsuit) regarding the real life Phillips' altruism, whether he had steered his ship into waters he should not have, à la Steve Zissou. That is something none of us outside of the actual event can know, even if we puff our chests and presume to, but I would argue this initial illustration of Phillips hints that he might very well do just such a thing while simultaneously still making crew safety a priority. A juxtaposition, they call it. But let's move on.

"Captain Phillips" was directed by Paul Greengrass, an Englishman who has sort of become the consummate re-teller of harrowing real-life drama (this completes a very unofficial trilogy coupled with "Bloody Sunday" and "United 93"). But his un-frilly, all-momentum approach can also be found in his more pulpy pieces, like the excellent "Bourne Supremacy", and here he demonstrates his unique ability to maintain both narrative hold and a sense of surrounding amid his many quick cuts and full-out freneticism.

As the pace picks up and the pirates board, we never lose our place in the story nor the place of the various men - good or bad - as they traipse around the endless deck of containers and through the darkened bowels of the ship. (Funniest line of the film? "Captain, the Maritime Emergency Line isn't answering." Fear not, American ship captains!) It is also in these moments, as Muse ignores with disgust an offer of $30,000 in the ship's safe and demands more hostages for more ransom, that Phillips proves himself to be graceful and clever under pressure, routinely placing the safety of his men first and his safety last. Muse proves himself to be alternately hotheaded and icy cool, both smarter than might you think and as foolish as you might expect, eventually wandering right into a trap but maintaining a serenity worthy of his Captain counterpart.


This is all quite tense, but it is when the four pirates abscond with Captain Phillips in the lifeboat and make for the Somali coast in a lethargic getaway that the film finds its most frightening and revealing level of tautness. The United States Navy, of course, becomes involved, with warships and SEAL units deployed, and a hostage negotiator brought in whose negotiations merely mask the real intent - prevent Phillips from reaching Somalia by any means necessary.

It's an extraordinary counterbalance - the claustrophobia of the five men in the lifeboat and the immense global scope taking place in the water just outside. The fact that you know precisely how this all turns out might have worked to subtract suspense, but instead fuels the strain felt by the men in those close quarters. Hanks does admirable acting here, maintaining his wits, but non-verbally communicating how his life is in peril not just from his captors but in the looming rescue attempt of those on his side.

This too is when Abdi is at his best. His cohorts come apart but he seems almost contentedly resigned, understanding that either his warlord commander kills him, the US Navy kills him or he makes it to America via an orange jumpsuit. These are his only options. Maybe these were the only options all his life. He and Hanks have a late exchange that is given away in the trailers but upon seeing it here with the whole weight of the preceding two hours heaped on their back, they reach a plain of truth that no righteous jibber-jabber can wash away.

That is why I desperately wish Greengrass had cut the last shot of the film, pulling back across the Indian Ocean, allowing for one final glimpse of the lifeboat and the warships. Perhaps he wanted to re-underline the true enormity of what took place, but the real enormity is seen in the two prior scenes. Two men, two reactions.

Survival. That's all it is. That's all any of this is.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

The Cinema Romantico Fall/Winter Movie Power Rankings

This is normally the time in the season when Cinema Romantico sits down for a discussion with movie e-zine Film de Cinema (founder: Jiff Ramsey). Unfortunately the discussion has been cancelled this year on account of Cinema Romantico losing its hearing somewhere around the second hour of “Man of Steel.” Our utmost apologies, but we simply could not hear the questions being posed by Film de Cinema which led to all sorts of complications.

Instead we have taken the time to compile a "helpful" list of 10 upcoming movies. These are not the 10 most anticipated movies of fall and winter but the 10 movies we here at Cinema Romantico are most anticipating. We have included a few reasons why as well as a prediction regarding what may happen upon seeing them.

The Cinema Romantico Fall/Winter Movie Power Rankings

10. Machete Kills

Why I'm Excited To See It: Lady Gaga.

Prediction: Lady Gaga is only in it for 30 seconds which prompts me to curse the movie gods who promptly reply “You predicted she was only going to be in it for 30 seconds, you moron, don’t blame us.” 

9. Romeo & Juliet

Why I'm Excited To See It: Because Sofia Coppola filmed it in black & white in her own house. Wait, what? Sofia Coppola DIDN’T film it in black & white in her own house? Sofia Coppola isn’t even INVOLVED in it? Never mind!

9. The Monuments Men

Why I’m Excited To See It: George Clooney & friends protect monuments from Nazis. Which I imagine was the entire pitch meeting. George Clooney: "So I've got this idea where me and Damon and Murray and Blanchett and Dujardin protect monuments from Nazis." Studio Mogul: "Jonathan, bring me my green light!"

Prediction: We see a shot of The Eiffel Tower within the first six-and-a-half minutes.

8. All Is Lost

Why I’m Excited To See It: Robert Redford braves the elements alone in a boat.

Prediction: Most of the time Robert Redford’s hair still looks like he just stepped out of a Beverly Hills salon.

7. The Counselor

Why I'm Excited To See It: Cormac McCarthy wrote a screenplay. Also, Javier Bardem & Cameron Diaz: Power Couple for the Twenty-Tens.

Prediction: it is to "No Country For Old Men" as "Get Shorty" is to "Jackie Brown".

6. Grace Of Monaco

Why I’m Excited To See It: It’s funny, isn’t it? I whine and moan and stomp my feet about I’ve had it up to HERE with biopics and I’m boycotting biopics and this and that and what-have-you and then…….along comes Nicole Kidman as Grace Kelly in a biopic and magically I’m all like “Biopics are the best!”

Prediction: Nicole Kidman wins Best Actress which leads to all sorts of Kidman backlash on account of her, uh, cosmetic work which leads to all sorts of Cinema Romantico articles with titles like “Why Nicole Kidman Can Still Act Everyone’s Ass Off Even If Her Forehead Doesn’t Move” which leads to Kidman haters stealing my lunch money which leads to me popping the air in the tires of the Kidman haters’ cars which leads to Kidman haters egging my house which leads to me smashing the mailboxes of the Kidman haters, etc. 

5. Captain Phillips

Why I’m Excited To See It: it's Paul Greengrass, master of the real-life, real-time thriller with emotional heft, recounting a real-life, real-time thriller with emotional heft.

Prediction: the real Captain Phillips leaves the premiere and says “It was really good but, man, that camerawork made me more seasick than the Indian Ocean.”


4. American Hustle 

Why I'm Excited To See It: they are not simply Getting The ("Silver Linings Playbook") Band Back Together, they are Getting The Band Back Together and adding several new kick-ass members.

Prediction: Dy-no-mite.


3. Gravity 

Why I'm Excited To See It: Have you seen the trailer? I mean, really!

Prediction: 95% of the film's reviews include the word "expectations".

2. Labor Day

Why I’m Excited To See It: Because I've long felt Josh Brolin should be a star's star and now he goes toe-to-toe, mano-a-womano with Kate the Great. You wanna be the best you gotta act with the best, right? Show us what you got, Brolin.

Prediction: oh, I don’t know, only ART and HUMANITY at its APEX.

1. Blood Ties

Why I'm Excited To See It: Because the trailer gets my rocks off, man. I love that trailer. That trailer walks tall. Also, Billy Crudup.

Prediction: It's not actually released in America until 2014.