Daily Archives: Tuesday, July 19, 2016

  • Wuthering Heights

    Andrea Arnold (2011)

    ‘Love is a force of nature’, announces the poster – hardly an original choice of tag line for the latest screen version of Emily Brontë, even if it were not identical to Brokeback Mountain’s only six years ago.  Yet Andrea Arnold’s approach to the material is ‘radical’.  The swarthy gipsyish Heathcliff of the novel is now a man of colour.  At one point, he rails at the Linton family as ‘fucking cunts’.  In the first scene, he’s banging his head against a wall and a floor. When the adolescent Catherine and Heathcliff are out on the moors together, she’s in trousers more than once. No doubt research-has-shown teenage girls really did sometimes wear trousers outdoors in the mid-nineteenth century.  Arnold evidently wants a non-verbal Wuthering Heights but she and her co-writer Olivia Hetreed can’t find a way of achieving that in the central part of the story, when Heathcliff returns to Wuthering Heights a rich man, and it’s here that the film’s inadequacies are fully exposed.  Arnold’s depiction of the adolescence of Cathy and Heathcliff does at least work on its own terms, even if those terms are uninteresting.  She makes things ‘real’ by stressing the relentless arduousness of lives in this time and place – the cold, inhospitable house, the mud, the lousy weather – as if a more nuanced treatment would amount to tame compromise.  (There’s no music except for the odd fragment of song.)  If Cary Fukunaga’s Jane Eyre is shot in mostly natural light, the interiors of this Wuthering Heights go one better – natural darkness.   A lot of the time I couldn’t see what was going on inside the eponymous house but I could soon guess it was something grim:   Arnold replaces the novel’s emotional violence with physical violence.  I lost count of the number of times Heathcliff was whipped or beaten by the malignant Hindley.

    The director is back in her comfort zone once Catherine has died:  Heathcliff can climb onto her deathbed and just about have  sex with her and, in her grave, scrabble with his nails on the coffin lid, and try to beat his brains out (that opening sequence turns out to be a flash forward to this point in the story).  But the intervening section, although it contains more yelling and fisticuffs than you’re used to in Wuthering Heights, is mostly dramatised in a less unfamiliar way.  (When Catherine, now married to Edgar Linton and mistress of Thrushcross Grange, sits drinking tea with Heathcliff and her husband in the drawing room, there is even a caged bird in evidence …)  As a result, there are more words:  we see and even more hear the acting limitations of Kaya Scodelario and James Howson as the young adult Catherine and Heathcliff.   According to Wikipedia, Natalie Portman and Abbie Cornish were lined up for Cathy at different stages in the development of this production; Michael Fassbender was in the frame for Heathcliff.  It’s consistent with Arnold’s approach that she ended up with less familiar names:  someone we’ve never or hardly seen before can bring an intense reality to a character that it’s harder for a better-known actor to achieve, and this approach paid off for Arnold both in Red Road and Fish Tank (where she also had Fassbender).  But it’s a pointless exercise if the fresh faces are merely trying and failing to sound like proper actors, as Scodelario and, especially, Howson are doing.  I resent the film’s implication that its take on Emily Brontë is more challenging, does something more difficult than a traditional adaptation of Wuthering Heights could do.  It serves Arnold right that her two leads – and others in the cast – demonstrate so clearly how hard it is to speak lines convincingly.  Lee Shaw as Hindley and Simone Jackson as Nelly Dean aren’t up to much either, although Oliver Milburn and Nichola Burley as the Lintons and Paul Hilton as Mr Earnshaw acquit themselves relatively well.  (The only actor I knew was Steve Evets, in the small part of the servant Joseph.)

    Robbie Ryan’s cinematography is being greatly praised and many of the outdoor sequences are remarkable to look at:  unless the lighting is even more skilful than it appears, it must have taken the crew ages to wait for mists, sunsets and louring skies as perfectly apt as those we see.   There are fine human images too:  Shannon Beer and Solomon Glave, who play the teenage Catherine and Heathcliff, are natural camera subjects in a way their older counterparts never manage to be.  It’s no surprise that Arnold reprises, as a memory of the bereaved Heathcliff, the shot of Beer’s face, dappled with the mud that Heathcliff daubed over Cathy as they rolled around on the moor.  Arnold is better at remembering good shots than she is at sustaining themes.  When Heathcliff returns in his fine clothes, Hindley, now in straitened circumstances, on one occasion calls him, as he always did before, a ‘nigger’ but the abuse now lacks force and merely underlines the abuser’s powerlessness.  No one at Thrushcross Grange registers any surprise, let alone resentment, that a black man has made good.   Andrea Arnold appears to be interested in Heathcliff’s ethnicity only for as long as the opportunities are there to subject him to horribly cruel treatment.  On that subject:  Arnold’s Wuthering Heights presents several examples of nature-red-in-tooth-and-claw but there’s one moment I found more troubling than any of these.  Hindley’s young son takes a pup and hangs it by its collar in the yard, and the wriggling dog yelps.   This may be one of the year’s finest bits of CGI trompe l’oeil.   But if this is a real dog in distress I hope the credits (I didn’t stay for them all) don’t claim that no animals were harmed in the making of this film.

    13 November 2011

  • World War Z

    Marc Forster (2013)

    Gerry Lane, who used to work for the UN but is now a house husband, drives his wife and daughters to work and school in Philadelphia.  The Lanes are stuck in a traffic jam but there’s more going on here than the rush hour:  the city is under attack from zombies, in great number.  I was taken by the bits from this traffic jam sequence in the trailer for World War Z.  Edward Lawrenson and David Denby both commended the movie, Denby reckoning it much superior to other digitised apocalypse blockbusters he’d seen recently.  Not my sort of film, as Sally repeatedly says, but I thought I should try top of the range.  That scene in the Philadelphia thoroughfare is well staged.  What has preceded it is good too – a montage of clips from various television channels that morning (the diet of images is recognisable although their effect is definitely ominous), breakfast at the Lanes’ home.  But that street sequence is less than ten minutes into the movie and what happens from this point onwards seems to happen in a desperate rush.  There is a rationale for that:  the first zombie attack appears to be quite unexpected and, it quickly emerges, has been replicated around the globe with devastating consequences in many major cities.  There’s no time for the Lanes to reflect on how this terrifying new world came about:  they just have to survive.  But you sense too that never-taking-your-foot-off-the-gas is de rigueur for film-makers working in this genre:  you can’t afford (it obviously is a financial imperative) to let the audience get bored.  So the human scenes in World War Z are perfunctory and if a person dominates a scene the actor concerned seems to be doing too much and not to know their place.   (I admit that this struck me in a sequence featuring James Badge Dale and the odds are that he was doing too much anyway.)

    Once Gerry Lane agrees, for the sake of humanity, to return to the UN (which he left in controversial circumstances), the movie embarks on an international tour, although its ports of call are not as A-list as the $190m budget for World War Z might suggest – South Korea, Israel, Wales.  There’s a big zombie attack in each place.  The one in Jerusalem is the most striking, where a miles-high protective wall was built shortly before the invasion began.  The hordes of zombies scrabbling up and pouring over the wall into what had been a safe zone is a startling image – although partly, I think, because the Jewish connection unfortunately links it in your mind to newsreel of mounds of corpses in Nazi concentration camps.  It wasn’t clear to me how Israeli security agencies could have been slack enough to be taken unawares by this particular zombie onslaught since they’d been smart enough to build the wall in good time.  I didn’t get either why, when they built the wall, they didn’t tip the wink to their American allies but I’m sure there was plenty of plotting in World War Z that I misunderstood.   Much of the dialogue is hard to make out although things improve in the relative quiet of the WHO facility nestling under Welsh mountains.

    The  housing estate in Wales through which Gerry and a female Israeli soldier head towards the WHO labs was of course the closest to my experience:  if the film were really strong I think that’s where it would have had most power for me.  In fact, it seemed nearly comical that the story had touched down in a British suburban street – because the two people walking down the street were the only two survivors of a plane crash and the only two people who meant anything to the audience and whose survival therefore mattered.  That’s how old Hollywood the movie is:  it’s only superficially modern, with its God’s-eye view shots of CGI insect-sized humanity and its larger visual scheme and movement.  Perhaps the difference between the zombie menace here and in Hollywood movies of a different era is that the threat in World War Z isn’t a paranoid political metaphor – its context is rather the fear of apocalypse in an era of global terrorism and environmental unease.   Although the picture’s conclusion is hopeful rather than triumphant, its reassuring message seems to be that the threat can be overcome by a combination of science and American heroism.  It also makes clear that a sequel is on the cards if the film pays its way (and it has done):  Gerry opines that ‘This isn’t the end. Not even close.’

    Brad Pitt is a big advantage to World War Z.  Seeing what he could do in Moneyball has changed my mind about him:  he’s not a great actor but I look forward to watching him now.  In that early scene when Gerry’s making breakfast, Pitt is very good at showing that he loves his family but misses his job.  (As in Moneyball, he interacts well with children.)  Gerry’s wife is played by Mireille Enos, who leaves me cold; she has a solemn, condescending quality which is arguably an expression of the character but which I think, after seeing Enos in Gangster Squad too, may be a quality in the actress.  She comes over as a cross between Julianne Moore and Orla Guerin – not a winning combination.  The cast also includes Daniella Kertesz as the aforementioned Israeli soldier, Fana Mokoena as the UN Deputy Secretary-General and David Morse as a disgraced former CIA operative.   The appearance of Peter Capaldi in the WHO lab reinforces the temptation to laugh during this episode although when Gerry’s plan to save humanity is shown to work (he’s sussed that the zombies don’t attack people who are already sick or injured), Capaldi’s reaction delivers a bit of human impact.  Marco Beltrami’s score includes a rather effective Tubular Bells-like refrain.  I wonder if Marc Forster, when he made Finding Neverland in 2004, expected to follow up with James Bond (Quantum of Solace) and zombie movies.

    14 July 2013

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