Monthly Archives: September 2015

  • Up

    Pete Docter (2009)

    I liked the idea of wearing 3-D glasses (for the first time) and sitting in Screen 1 of the Richmond Odeon when it was approaching full (for nearly the first time).  I liked the idea more than the actual experience, and the same goes for the film itself.  There was still plenty to enjoy, though.  The increasing flow of traffic to and from the confectionery kiosk and therefore the toilets (this wasn’t just the kids) began to get on my nerves but watching Up was a welcome reminder that, when an audience of children giggles daftly, it’s infectious.  (When grown-ups do the same it brings out the reactionary in me.)  And although I may not have followed the plot in every detail, I stayed mostly sure of what was going in – a relief after the sustained incomprehensibility of Pixar’s last feature, WALL-E.   Written by Pete Docter and Bob Peterson, Up is an absorbing mixture of beautiful design, cheerfully brutal pyrotechnical action and persistent themes of loss and disappointment.

    There’s no point my trying to describe the construction of the computer-animated figures, except to say that, animal and human, they carry on a rich Disney tradition – we can read characters as soon as we see them and still be amazed by their ability to change mood and expression.   No surprises that I was most taken by the loss-and-disappointment department of the story.  To expand slightly:  the elements of bereavement, ambition-cum-obsession, lack of fulfilment, and disillusionment.  What amounts to a prologue describes the life together of Carl Fredricksen and his sweetheart Ellie, drawn together by their shared enthusiasm for the exploits of the adventurer Charles Muntz.  (We first see Carl as a child in a cinema watching – in a pair of what look very like 3-D glasses – newsreel footage of Muntz’s latest exploits.)  It’s the 1930s and Muntz has more than a forename in common with Charles Lindbergh:  his vehicle for adventurous exploration – an airship – is the ‘Spirit of Adventure’.  The Fredricksens, who can’t have children, enjoy a happy marriage – Carl sells toy balloons, Ellie is a zookeeper – without realising their ambition of following in the footsteps of Muntz by going to Paradise Falls in South America.

    Ellie dies.  Carl, who misses her desperately, is then threatened with the loss of the house they’ve always shared.  His violent resistance to the developers, who’ve already demolished all the neighbouring houses, lands him in court.  There looks to be no way out for Carl other than ‘Sunset Oaks’, an old people’s home.   On the morning that two of its staff arrive to take him to the home, Carl asks them to wait a minute and, in that minute, his house takes off – carried aloft by a multi-coloured cloud of Carl’s balloons, which he’s used to create an improvised airship, and by the spirit of adventure that he’s stubbornly determined to put into practice.  Carl is joined on his journey to Paradise Falls by Russell, a smilingly resilient ‘Wilderness Explorer’ scout, looking to earn his final merit badge (for ‘Assisting the Elderly’); a ménage(rie) à quatre develops in South America when they’re joined by one of Muntz’s dogs, Dug, and Kevin, a living (female) member of a species of bird that the explorer has spent his life trying to track down.  By this point, Up has shifted into a more conventional, action-packed journey and escapades – but without losing sight of the old man’s widowerhood.  Carl keeps invoking Ellie; the contents of their house and eventually the house itself have to be jettisoned along the way.

    In his exploring heyday, Muntz became a controversial figure:  he brought back from Paradise Falls the skeleton of a great bird and was accused of faking it.   He’s spent decades back there, obsessively determined at all costs to find a live specimen and vindicate himself. (Paradise Falls must have a Shangri-La climate:  Muntz has to be well into his second century by this stage but of course we ignore that.)    One of the most striking features of Up is that this obsession has curdled to the extent that Muntz – the Fredricksens’ lifelong hero – becomes, when Carl finally meets him, the villain of the piece, because of his monomania for capturing Kevin.  Moses-like, Carl never himself sets foot in the promised land of Paradise Falls but that’s where his unmoored house – home being where the heart is – comes to rest.  Pete Docter doesn’t push these darker elements so that they obstruct the sentimental optimism of the story.  The spirit of adventure is a rejection of the limits of old age.  The childless Fredricksen finds the son he never had in Russell and eventually agrees to be Dug’s new master.  Even so, it’s hard, for an adult anyway, to ignore the dark side; I wonder how kids receive it.  The airborne house and the eventual return home – with a renewed appreciation of it – aren’t the only elements that bring to mind The Wizard of Oz.  So does the fallibility of the person whom the protagonist thought so highly of.

    The violence is still too much for me and, because the characters have more substance than in traditional ‘flat’ animation, the bumps and blows that they’re dealt seem more hurtingly real.  Still, the story is well shaped so that the slam-bang stuff never gets to seem relentless.  Fredricksen is stocky and the engaging Russell is nearly round but skinny people get a raw deal here:  the developer ‘suit’ that Carl yells at is lean and hungry; it’s his hooked, cadaverous appearance that reveals that Muntz has turned bad.  The voices are really good – particularly Edward Asner as the curmudgeonly but sensitive Carl and Christopher Plummer as Muntz; the vocals from Muntz’s dogs, controlled by electronics in their collars, are funny too.    There’s a jolly score by Michael Giacchino.  When the house first takes to the air, the launch and the brightly-coloured balloons raise your spirits in a way that recalls the emotional lift-off of the corresponding moment in ET – but which, for me, doesn’t emulate that moment.  This is simply because, brilliantly designed though the figures in Up are, the story doesn’t feature actual human beings.  The themes and shape of Up are more satisfying to me as I write about them than they were as I was watching.  With the unique exception of Waltz with Bashir, I just can’t get that involved with animated film.

    11 October 2009

     

  • The Bitter Tea of General Yen

    Frank Capra (1933)

    An unusual Capra film and an unusual commercial failure for him:  the two things are surely not unrelated.  Adapted by Edward E Paramore Jr from a novel by Grace Zaring Stone, the movie has racial implications that must have discomfited audiences.  It’s the tale of a tense, reciprocated passion between a Chinese warlord and the Christian New Englander he abducts; although that basic scenario may sound comically melodramatic, Capra treats it seriously and the performances of Barbara Stanwyck and Nils Asther in the title role are intense and complex.   Besides, the material was dynamically contemporary:  the Chinese Civil War, which is the setting for the narrative, had begun in 1927 and was still going on (the novel was published only a few months before the film was released).  I was struck from the start by the fluency of the staging and the acting:  a house full of missionaries in Shanghai is awaiting the arrival of Megan Davis, who’s travelled from America for her marriage to one of their number, Robert Strike.  These early sequences are striking both for the vivid naturalness of the playing and especially for the chilling anecdote told by an elderly bishop (Emmett Corrigan), who explains why he feels his life’s work in China has been futile:

    ‘I was telling the story of the crucifixion to a group of Mongolian bandits. I thought I was really getting to them. They kept moving closer and closer and they seemed so intent. A few days later, a group of travellers were captured in the desert by these bandits – they crucified them. I had misunderstood their reaction to my story. That, my friends, is the nature of Chinamen.’

    When the bland, well-scrubbed Strike (Gavin Gordon) learns there are orphans to rescue in the war zone, he postpones the marriage ceremony.  His dauntless fiancée insists on going with him:  this is how Yen – whom she’s encountered briefly and accidentally on her arrival in Shanghai and who is already smitten with her – takes possession of Megan.   She is from ‘one of the finest old New England families’, according to the hostess of the wedding-that-never-happens (or is never seen to happen:  it’s nicely ambiguous at the end as to whether Megan is returning to marry Strike or to start a completely new life – even if the emotional imperative of the story dictates the latter).  Barbara Stanwyck isn’t obvious casting as a would-be Christian missionary.  She doesn’t embody the fusion of social and religious superiority that Katharine Hepburn would have exuded – but Stanwyck’s sensuality makes Megan a more surprising as well as an ungovernable presence:  you see why the General is besotted.  (According to the BFI programme note, Stanwyck had recently ended an affair with Capra so that Yen’s thwarted infatuation with Megan had a resonance for the director and his leading lady.)   Stanwyck gives herself to the role in what seems a remarkably modern, unself-conscious way.

    As Yen, who as his financial adviser (Walter Connolly) says, loses ‘His land, his army, his life’ as a result of his love for Megan, Nils Asther may not be convincingly Chinese, but he is convincingly exotic and his quiet, careful voice and relentless, increasingly anguished watchfulness are compelling.   The film is dramatically lit by Joseph Walker (there was an unfortunate technical hitch in NFT1 which made for a short intermission between the penultimate and last reels).  And Capra orchestrates, with great aplomb, a variety of elements:  emotionally charged and sustained exchanges between the two principals; crowd scenes indoors and outdoors; occasional bursts of warfare; a remarkable dream sequence which shows us Megan’s ambivalence towards the General (the aspects of racial fear and sexual attraction that ambivalence contains).  With Toshia Mori as Yen’s concubine.

    1 November 2010

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