Showing posts with label The Descendants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Descendants. Show all posts
Friday, December 13, 2013
Feeling Right At Home With The Authentic Tone Of Alexander Payne's NEBRASKA
Opening today at an art house near me:
NEBRASKA (Dir. Alexander Payne, 2013)
At one point in this excellent film, I was reminded of a bit that I saw late night talk show host/comedian Craig Ferguson do last month at the Carolina Theatre about how you can get away with saying practically anything cruel by saying “I’m not judging, I’m just being honest.”
As Bruce Dern’s long suffering wife, June Squibb is reminiscing out loud in a cemetery about folks she used to know in the film’s fictional small town of Hawthorne, Nebraska. In the mist of her blunt takedowns of the not so dearly departed she remarks of her husband’s sister: “I liked Rose, but my god, she was a slut!”
Comic actor Will Forte (Saturday Night Live, MACGRUBER), as Dern and Squibb’s son, snaps “Mom, come on,” but Squibb simply states “I’m just telling the truth” and continues her trash talking walk through the headstones.
It’s a fitting line, for NEBRASKA, Alexander Payne’s follow-up to his much more commercial George Clooney vehicle THE DESCENDANTS isn’t judging its characters, it’s being honest about them. Its simple premise of Dern’s protagonist Woody Grant erroneously thinking he’s won a million dollars sweepstakes because of a piece of junk mail hawking magazine subscriptions superbly sets up a bunch of bluntly funny scenes, made all the more sharper by being shot in black and white.
Working with first time screenwriter Bob Nelson’s words, Payne gives us a road movie in the vein of ABOUT SCHMIDT (my personal favorite Payne), which bleeds through in such moments as Dern revisiting locations from his youth (the auto shop he used to co-own, his former watering hole, etc.). Shades of Nicholson’s Schmidt walking into The Tires Plus store that stands on the site of his childhood home for sure.
Despite the protests of mother Squibb (another SCHMIDT factor as she was the wife in that too) Forte opts to drive his ornery out-of-it father from their Billings, Montana home to the lottery office in Lincoln, Nebraska. They stop in Hawthorne for a family reunion, which includes a terrific turn by Bob Odenkirk (Mr. Show, Breaking Bad) as Forte’s older newscaster brother, the soft spoken Rance Howard (a great grizzled character actor who’s been in everything from The Andy Griffith Show to Seinfeld) as Dern’s brother, and Mary Louise Wilson (another recognizable longtime veteran of the big and small screen) as Howard’s wife.
A slimy Stacy Keach as Dern’s former auto mechanic partner makes it well known that he wants a cut of Dern’s winnings, as do ne-er-do-well nephews Devin Natray and Tim Driscoll, who have some of the film’s funniest moments especially in a scene where they mock Forte for how long it took him to drive the 750 miles from home to Hawthorne (Driscoll: “Two goddamn days from Billings!”).
It's a career best for Dern, once one of New Hollywood's shining lights of '70s cinema, who definitely deserves an Oscar nomination for his role as the ole codger drunkard, but Squibb steals large chunks of the movie with her fearless bluster. A scene in which she tells off the folks, “vultures” she calls them, clamoring for their cut of Dern's supposed winnings with a resounding f-bomb alone should get her a nomination nod from the Academy.
It's also great to see another side of Forte, as a somewhat beaten down smalltime stereo salesman dealing with a recent break up with his girlfriend of two years (Missy Doty). Forte's effective everyman embarking on a trip to bond with his father, and for a change of scenery resonates beautifully.
Speaking of scenery, the wide lonely spaces of the spare Midwestern settings that surround these sad characters look stunning through the lens of cinematographer Phedon Papamichael, who also shot Payne's SIDEWAYS and THE DESCENDANTS. Anyone's who's traveled across country through the empty terrains of America will get the ambience Payne is going for.
I felt right at home with the authentic tone of NEBRASKA. It has more genuine laughs than most comedies, and more heartfelt humanity than most dramas. It's a near perfect piece of major Payne that makes most of its indie competition this year look pretty shallow. And you know, I'm not judging - I'm just telling the truth.
More later...
Friday, February 24, 2012
Hey Kids - Funtime Oscar Picks 2012!
So everybody is saying THE ARTIST will win Best Picture at the 84th Academy Awards this Sunday night.
I'm going with that too, but not to just go with the flow - it really feels like it's going to win.
Unfortunately I don't have that feeling with most of my other predictions, some of which I are personal preferences instead of calculated guesses (*cough* Michelle Williams). As always I'm really hoping there will be some surprises (*cough* Gary Oldman).
Here's my picks:
1. BEST PICTURE: THE ARTIST
More later...
I'm going with that too, but not to just go with the flow - it really feels like it's going to win.
Unfortunately I don't have that feeling with most of my other predictions, some of which I are personal preferences instead of calculated guesses (*cough* Michelle Williams). As always I'm really hoping there will be some surprises (*cough* Gary Oldman).
Here's my picks:
1. BEST PICTURE: THE ARTIST
2. BEST DIRECTOR: Michel Hazanavicius (THE ARTIST)
3. BEST ACTOR: George Clooney (THE DESCENDANTS)
4. BEST ACTRESS: Michelle Williams (MY WEEK WITH MARILYN)
5. BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer (THE BEGINNERS)
6. BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Octavia Spencer (THE HELP)
And the rest:
7. ART DIRECTION: HUGO (Dante Ferretti)
8. CINEMATOGRAPHY: THE TREE OF LIFE (Emmanuel Lubezki)
9. COSTUME DESIGN: THE ARTIST (Mark Bridges)
10. DOCUMENTARY FEATURE: PARADISE LOST 3: PURGATORY
11. DOCUMENTARY SHORT: THE TSUNAMI AND THE CHERRY BLOSSOM
12. FILM EDITING: HUGO (Thelma Schoonmaker)
13. MAKEUP: THE IRON LADY (Mark Coulier and J. Roy Helland)
14. VISUAL EFFECTS: RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES (Joe Letteri, Dan Lemmon, R. Christopher White, and Daniel Barrett)
15. ORIGINAL SCORE: THE ARTIST (Ludovic Bource)
16. ORIGINAL SONG: “Man or Muppet” (Bret McKenzie) (THE MUPPETS)
17. ANIMATED SHORT: THE FANTASTIC FLYING BOOKS OF MR. MORRIS LESSMORE
18. LIVE ACTION SHORT: RAJU
19. SOUND EDITING: WAR HORSE (Richard Hymns and Gary Rydstrom)
20. SOUND MIXING: HUGO (Tom Fleischman and John Midgley)
21. ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (Woody Allen)
22. ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: THE DESCENDANTS (Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, and Jim Rash)
23. ANIMATED FEATURE FILM: RANGO
24. BEST FOREIGN FILM: A SEPARATION
We'll see how many I get wrong on Sunday night.
4. BEST ACTRESS: Michelle Williams (MY WEEK WITH MARILYN)
5. BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Christopher Plummer (THE BEGINNERS)
6. BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Octavia Spencer (THE HELP)
And the rest:
7. ART DIRECTION: HUGO (Dante Ferretti)
8. CINEMATOGRAPHY: THE TREE OF LIFE (Emmanuel Lubezki)
9. COSTUME DESIGN: THE ARTIST (Mark Bridges)
10. DOCUMENTARY FEATURE: PARADISE LOST 3: PURGATORY
11. DOCUMENTARY SHORT: THE TSUNAMI AND THE CHERRY BLOSSOM
12. FILM EDITING: HUGO (Thelma Schoonmaker)
13. MAKEUP: THE IRON LADY (Mark Coulier and J. Roy Helland)
14. VISUAL EFFECTS: RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES (Joe Letteri, Dan Lemmon, R. Christopher White, and Daniel Barrett)
15. ORIGINAL SCORE: THE ARTIST (Ludovic Bource)
16. ORIGINAL SONG: “Man or Muppet” (Bret McKenzie) (THE MUPPETS)
17. ANIMATED SHORT: THE FANTASTIC FLYING BOOKS OF MR. MORRIS LESSMORE
18. LIVE ACTION SHORT: RAJU
19. SOUND EDITING: WAR HORSE (Richard Hymns and Gary Rydstrom)
20. SOUND MIXING: HUGO (Tom Fleischman and John Midgley)
21. ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (Woody Allen)
22. ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: THE DESCENDANTS (Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, and Jim Rash)
23. ANIMATED FEATURE FILM: RANGO
24. BEST FOREIGN FILM: A SEPARATION
We'll see how many I get wrong on Sunday night.
More later...
Labels:
George Clooney,
Hugo,
The Artist,
The Descendants,
The Help,
The Oscars,
The Tree of Life
Friday, December 09, 2011
THE DESCENDANTS: Quaffable, But Far From Transcendent
THE DESCENDANTS (Dir. Alexander Payne, 2011)
From school teacher Matthew Broderick’s scheming to have an ill-fated affair in ELECTION, to Paul Giamatti’s reacting to news that his book has being rejected by yet another publisher by swigging the spit bowl at a public wine tasting in SIDEWAYS, Payne has nailed some hilariously pathetic behavior.
Which is why I kept waiting for Payne’s latest protagonist, a well-to-do lawyer in Hawaii played by George Clooney, to lose his cool. Oddly, except for some doofish running in flip-flops, and darting behind bushes, Clooney mostly keeps it in check.
Clooney’s wife is in a coma after a boating accident, he’s responsible for handling the sale of the 25,000 acres of Kaua’I island land his family owns, and his 2 daughters (the rebellious Shailene Woodley and the foul mouthed Amara Miller) are more than a handful.
There’s also that Woodley, home from private school, tells her befuddled father that “mom was cheating on you.”
With all that I expected more of a breakdown than a simple sobbing at a creek, but Clooney shows admirable restraint, only allowing his emotions to flow at appropriate points. Even when confronting the dorky real estate agent who his wife was seeing on the side, Clooney does teeter on the edge of desperate goofiness, yet still saves face.
Clooney narrates us through the tropical world where businessmen look like beach bums, as he tolerates Woodley’s druggie boyfriend (Nick Krause, who gets way too much screen-time), and the meddling members of his family (including the gruff as ever Robert Forester, and the easy going Beau Bridges).
Like with his last 3 films, Payne has adapted a contemporary novel, this time Kaui Hart Hemmings’ 2007 book of the same name, and changed crucial details to make it his own.
It has a lot going for it in its execution, Clooney’s performance, and the lushness of Hawaii is as strikingly shot by cinematographer Phedon Papamichael as the wine country he shot in SIDEWAYS was (no ‘70s-style split screen action though this time), but THE DESCENDANTS is not as sharp or vital as Payne’s previous work *, because of a padded story-line which makes its premise lose power over the course of its nearly 2 hour running time.
There’s also the difficulty of fully feeling sorry for or relating to Clooney’s character. Despite how much of a schlub they try to make him, he’s still George Clooney in all his charms, and it feels too pat that all he and his daughters need to do to heal their pain is to sit together on a sofa, eat ice cream, and watch MARCH OF THE PENGUINS. As comforting a notion as that may be to some people.
In Payne’s most popular film SIDEWAYS, protagonist Giamatti appraises one wine as being “quaffable, but far from transcendent.”
Ditto for THE DESCENDANTS.
* My personal favorite of Payne’s films is ABOUT SCHMIDT (2002) starring Jack Nicholson. Definitely see that if you haven’t already before, (or instead of) THE DESCENDANTS.
More later...
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