“Gravity” is the sort of film Hollywood should be making all the time and just isn’t. Visual effects are prevalent in the movies these days but too often are a crutch, a cover-up for narrative deficiency, or merely showing off for their own sake. Director Alfonso Cuaron, working in perfect harmony with cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki, has crafted an occasionally transcendent little piece of Cinematic Experience in which the effects mix seamlessly with the story he’s telling because the story he’s telling very much is the visual effects. Yet even though “Gravity” is propelled very much by those visual effects, it remains Hollywood to its core by also relying on good old fashioned Star Power.
The story of “Gravity” is deceptively – well, maybe that make that glaringly – simple, and that simple story is contrasted against the jaw-dropping camera trickery at work throughout. Its opening is a virtually uninterrupted twenty minute shot that glides and winds its way through the earthly orbit where astronauts Kowalski (George Clooney), the old pro, and Stone (Sandra Bullock), the specialist tasked to assist with a bit of Hubble repair on this first trip to space. Alas, back on earth the distant voice of mission control (Ed Harris, thus echoing Gene Kranz of “Apollo 13”) indicates a Russian attempt to shoot down their own satellite has gone awry. Debris hurtles toward our defenseless spacewalking astronauts. Communications are cut. Their shuttle is smashed to smithereens and their fellow NASA men and women lost. They are on their own in space, short on precious oxygen and looking for a way home.
Anymore movies of this ilk seek to address the plight of humanity, to be about our world and its present ills, to function as commentary as it goes about kicking ass. "Gravity", however, is much, much less “2001” than it is Spielberg’s “Duel” or Rodrigo Cortes’ “Buried”, a sorta real-time thriller that proves Murphy’s Law applies even in space. Which is not to suggest it lacks thematic ambition. It does not, and that is also, I fear, where perhaps the film partially miscalculates.
As established, “Gravity” is first, foremost and throughout a story being told visually, and yet when Cuaron and his son Jonas, with whom he wrote the screenplay, turn to theme they do so through either awkwardly wordy passages or images that have not earned their supposed weight. The latter is tied directly to the end, which feels less spiritually uplifting than it wants to be because of the former. Stone is saddled with a tragic, and tragically thin, backstory, yearning to illuminate effects of isolation both on the Earth and above it. And thus, Cuaron’s film shoehorns in monologues and helpings of characterization that distinctly feel as manufactured as his set pieces feel effortless. One scene meant as Stone’s turning point to the drive for home is so jarring and frustrating you’ll know it’s a fake straight away.
It’s weird, and it’s weird because “Gravity” is so regal in the way it looks that nothing Cuaron could have these characters say would live up to what they and we see. Earth can be a lonely place, after all, but never more so then when the entire planet itself is right in front of you…..so close, so far.
That we still find ourselves tethered to emotion and not just sensation is a testament to Ms. Bullock, who has chopped her hair and significantly dialed down the every-woman charm she oozes in such abundance. She seems more terse and withdrawn and impatient with Clooney’s glibness in the face of doom. As such, “Gravity” emerges less than some sort of metaphorical rebirth than a closed-off woman opening up to the battling back, fight and (space) flight. Her moments of weakness are as winning as her moments of strength, and that duality is what prevents me from betting onboard with the attitude of the finale.
For all the soundless explosions and zero gravity spins and dips that caused my weak-willed stomach to order my eyes shut, the shot I will remember most involves Stone floating wordlessly in a space station airlock moments after surviving another frenzied ordeal. She closes her own eyes and just…..floats. Physically re-grouping, mentally re-charging, preparing to forge on. It is open to symbolic interpretation, but I will go with a more literal reading. Even when you’re all alone in space, sometimes you just need a moment to yourself.
Showing posts with label Gravity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gravity. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 09, 2013
Gravity
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Alfonso Cuaron,
George Clooney,
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Gravity,
Sandra Bullock
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
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".
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.”
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".
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
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
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
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".
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.
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