Posts tonen met het label Helena Bonham Carter. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label Helena Bonham Carter. Alle posts tonen
vrijdag 9 juni 2017
Today's Review: Howards End
Tussen alle ophef die momenteel heerst in het EYE Filmmuseum rond het Scorsese-retrospectief en het Cinema Erotica-evenement zou je het bijna over het hoofd zien, maar er verschijnt deze maand ook een 'reguliere' klassieker in een glanzend nieuw jasje. Howards End verjaart anno 2017 voor alweer de 25ste keer, wat reden genoeg is voor EYE om een fraai gerestaureerde kopie in roulatie te brengen. Geen slechte keus, want de door James Ivory weelderig geregisseerde registratie van een bikkelharde klassenstrijd die sluimert onder typisch Engelse deftigheid mag zich nog steeds scharen onder de fraaiste Britse kostuumdrama's.
Liefhebbers zullen Ivory herkennen als de man die in de jaren tachtig en negentig van de vorige eeuw een specialisatie voor het kostuumdrama ontwikkelde en de ene na de andere geslaagde toevoeging aan het genre regisseerde. Het werk van schrijver en landgenoot E.M. Forster vormde daarbij een dankbare bron, die met Howards End leidde tot Ivory's beste werk. Het meeslepende romantische drama bleek goed voor negen Oscarnominaties, waarvan er drie verzilverd werden. Desondanks is de algemene kennis over Ivory's klassieker, zo niet zijn hele oeuvre, sterk naar de achtergrond verplaatst. Tijd om Ivory's goede oude tijd weer eens te doen herleven, dachten ze bij EYE ongetwijfeld.
In Howards End neemt Ivory ons mee terug naar het Edwardiaanse tijdperk, zo rond de eeuwwisseling. Een tijdperk vol verandering en sociale onrust, waar de regisseur meermaals dankbaar gebruik van maakte in zijn werk, waarin de standenstrijd een doorlopend thema vormt. Dat geschil wordt in deze film belicht vanuit het standpunt van twee families, de welgestelde Wilcoxes en de ruimdenkende Schlegels uit de middenklasse. Inzet is het Howards End uit de titel, een schitterend landhuis dat toebehoort aan de stervende Ruth Wilcox. De oude vrouw sluit in haar laatste maanden een onwaarschijnlijke vriendschap met de vrijgevochten Margaret Schlegel (de rol waarvoor Emma Thompson terecht haar Oscar verdiende) en schenkt haar op haar doodsbed het huis. Dit tot woede van haar familie, die al het bewijs van de overdracht vernietigt. Maar het lot neemt een frappante wending als de weduwnaar Henry Wilcox Margaret tot ieders verrassing ten huwelijk vraagt. Een onwaarschijnlijk verbond tussen een conservatieve oudere zakenman en een intellectuele jongere dame, goed voor dramatische dynamiek en sociaal vuurwerk tussen de diverse maatschappelijke standen.
EYE heeft puik werk verricht met het oppoetsen van Howards End, want de wereld van de overdadig formele Britse high society spettert als nooit tevoren van het scherm. Toch is de beeldkwaliteit niet zo gladjes scherp als bij sommige digitale verfraaiingsbeurten in 4K. De soms wat merkwaardige scèneovergangen zijn gebleven en de film heeft visueel de onmiskenbare esthetiek van de vroege jaren negentig behouden. Howards End mag gerust zijn leeftijd verraden. Dat was hoe dan ook onvermijdelijk als we de jongere versies van de crème de la crème van de Britse acteerwereld met groot genoegen terugzien. De jeugdige Emma Thompson en Helena Bonham Carter schitteren wederom als de vooruitstrevende zusters Schlegel, die zich in een haat-liefdeverhouding geplaatst zien met de onwrikbare zakenman Henry, waarvoor Anthony Hopkins heerlijk heen en weer schmiert tussen vilein en sympathiek. Dat alles in een onweerstaanbare setting vol bruisende jurken en stijlvolle maatpakken, weelderige sets en de mooiste vroege automobielen ooit op het witte doek. Maar feitelijk slechts allemaal decor in Ivory's vertelling van een conflict tussen de lagere standen en de rijke klasse, die van geen wijken wil weten ondanks de voortschrijdende modernisering. Zelfs niet in een letterlijk verstandshuwelijk.
Zo theatraal als Howards End worden kostuumdrama's vandaag de dag amper nog gemaakt. Of het moet voor de televisie zijn, met vergelijkbare waar als Downton Abbey, dat Ivory's werk meer dan waarschijnlijk als inspiratiebron benutte. Maar in de bioscoop lijken 'period films' die in vrijwel elke zin een 'heavens' of een 'jolly' laten vallen helaas hoe langer hoe meer een uitstervende soort. Dat is jammer in een wereld waarin de verschillen tussen arm en rijk, tussen progressief en conservatief en tussen ruimdenkende en beperkte wereldbeelden met de dag weer meer aan de orde lijken te zijn. Hoewel een zekere mate van oubolligheid Howards End niet ontzegd kan worden, blijkt maar weer dat Ivory's standenstrijd nog lang niet tot een einde is gekomen. Een Ivory-retrospectief is misschien ook niet zo'n slecht idee.
Labels:
Anthony Hopkins,
british,
classic,
costume piece,
drama,
emma thompson,
Helena Bonham Carter,
history,
Howards End. EYE,
james ivory,
re-release,
social drama,
vanessa redgrave
zondag 13 mei 2012
Dark shadows loom over Tim Burton
Dark
Shadows:
Rating: ***/*****, or 6/10
Sometimes a good notion backfires,
despite the right ingredients being present. In the case of Dark
Shadows, Tim Burton's latest, the main problem is these
ingredients have become stale and somewhat hard to swallow. Burton
presents us with yet another one of his specialty dishes, a typically
off-beat Gothic horror comedy, but it tastes old and mushy because it
offers little surprises. Burton's dark and brooding yet also
satirical and good spirited style has finally come to the point where
it feels it has reached its expiration date, after already
disappointing us two years ago with Alice in Wonderland. The
situation is all the more grave considering the letdown revolves
around a project Burton claims to have great affinity for, namely his
re-imagining of the classic cult TV show Dark Shadows, which
ran for well over a whopping 1,200 episodes from 1966 till 1971. The
strange supernatural occurrences of the Collins family, involving
vampires, werewolves, witches and the likes, sounds exactly like
Burton's cup of tea, and therein lies part of the problem, since
Burton apparently has become predictable, allowing his style to
dictate his projects for him.
Dark Shadows sees the eighth
collaboration between Burton and his personal muse Johnny Depp (for
those of you who must know, the previous joint ventures, in
chronological order of succession, were Edward Scissorhands
(1990), Ed Wood (1994), Sleepy Hollow (1999), Charlie
and the Chocolate Factory (2005), Corpse Bride (2005),
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) and the
above mentioned Alice in Wonderland (2010)), which also comes
as no surprise, since the film has a wonderfully bizarre character
uncomfortable with his life and the people around him for a
protagonist, and Depp has shown to excel at playing such characters,
usually to the delight of the audience. The role of vampire Barnabas
Collins, who has spend nearly 200 years buried in a coffin and
finally awakens in 1972, setting off in an attempt to restore his
family's position, as such seems tailor made for Depp. After Barnabas
and his family have been cursed by a witch who strongly loved the
decent man he used to be, the bloodsucker finds himself locked away
into the grave for two centuries, only to be accidentally awakened by
a construction crew. Barnabas returns to his former home, the grand
Collinwood Manor from which his father used to run a fishing empire
along the Maine coast, only to find it in a state of decay with his
family decimated to a number of only four, the family fortune
seemingly lost. He takes it upon himself to protect his remaining
relatives from the forces that have plagued them for centuries, and
vows to return the family business to its former glory. Alas,
Angelique, the witch that turned Barnabas vampire so long ago (played
by a deliciously vile Eva Green, who energetically throws herself
into the role and obviously likes the bitchy character a lot) has
since expanded her ambitions from mere witchcraft to the realm of
economics, having taken over the Collins' family business, making her
a successful businesswoman and respected pillar of the community, so
the witch and the vampire find themselves at odds once more as the
latter tries to win back what was once his.
In this
struggle, Barnabas is backed by the Collins matriarch Elizabeth
(Michelle Pfeiffer, a woman of stature who's not afraid to make
sleazy deals to keep her family together), despised by her teen
daughter Carolyn (Chloë Grace Moretz nails this grumpy character
perfectly, and fortunately happens to be her exact age as a bonus),
distrusted by Elizabeth's brother Roger (Johnny Lee Miller playing
the family scumbag successfully) and revered by Roger's son David
(the young newcomer Gulliver McGrath), a boy who sees his dead
mother's ghost. Thrown into this mix are the groundskeeper Willie
(Jackie Earle Haley, ever creepy), David's new private teacher Vicky
(the beautiful Bella Heathcote playing the girl with the biggest
secret of the bunch) and the family psychiatrist and regular drunk
Dr. Hoffman, in which we recognize Burton's other muse, his fiancé
Helena Bonham Carter, who co-starred in six of his films before this
one, making us wonder just who Burton actually loves more, Depp or
the woman he means to marry. At least Barnabas does not stand alone,
but every member of his entourage has demons all their own, some
merely psychological, others all too real, adding to his existing
troubles. Plus he also has to deal with the strange new world of the
1970s, its technological advancements (like cars and televsion sets)
and cultural changes (including women's lib and youth subcultures)
alike, which turns out to be encompassing the film's most memorable
and hilarious moments, but unfortunately these get underexposed in
favour of the rather bland family story line and the battle against
the wicked witch.
Depp once again does his usual thing,
portraying Barnabas as a soul out of time who must come to terms with
a much changed world and unite his family against the evil witch that
has sought to destroy them, but it's less than a stellar piece of
acting simply because it all feels so familiar, as if we've seen this
performance often before, with only slight variations every time.
Fortunately Depp is not the only character in this film, though of
course he is supposed to be the biggest draw for the general
audience. Dark Shadows is seemingly blessed with a host of
characters, each with his or her own issues and secrets. Warning!
Here be spoilers! However, herein lies yet another problem,
since the film's plot comes with so many characters most of them do
not get a good chance to shine and remain poorly underdeveloped,
despite personal afflictions that haunt them and have impact on the
whole family struggle for survival. For one thing, Carolyn turns out
to be a werewolf, but this is revealed only in the climactic end
battle with Angelique, at which point it's too late in the film to be
of narrative use other than to provide some more creature action and
plot confusion. Similarly, Vicky is supposedly the reincarnation of
Barnabas' dead wife Josette, but the exact how-and-why to this
remains severely underexplained, though it does force a romantic
subplot on the movie's overall story, and even a love triangle of
sorts, since Barnabas still feels enough for his tormenter Angelique
to give into her seductions, resulting into a wild night of carnal
pleasure. Similarly, David talks to his dead mother, Roger plans to
run off with the family treasure Barnabas has exposed and Dr. Hoffman
infuses herself with Barnabas' blood in a scheme to live forever.
Each character comes with story baggage, much of which just won't fit
in the luggage compartment of the train that is Dark Shadows
as it moves onward to its destination, and many things get left
behind along the way.
This is all the more disappointing
considering the actors do a good job portraying their characters and
we would have liked to have seen them be put to more satisfying use:
it would not have been a bad idea if Burton and screenwriter Seth
Grahame-Smith – who wrote the novel Abraham Lincoln: Vampire
Hunter, the movie adapatation of which will reach theatres in
August of this year, so 2012 isn't done with vampire movies just yet
– would have scrapped a few of these subplots and twists in favour
of the overall feel of a coherent story line. The subplots may have
been moments of tease designed to be fleshed out in a potential Dark
Shadows sequel, but on their own they don't work to the advantage
of this movie on own. Also, the many characters and their separate
plot lines make it seem we've watched a compilation of the first 200
episodes of the original television show.
Despite the many downsides to the film,
most of which result in a messy overall plot, there's also things to
enjoy in Dark Shadows. The film knows many a comical note,
mainly in the moments Barnabas is faced with the vast differences
between his own era and the swinging Seventies. So he's confronted by
a huge McDonald's logo at the site of his resurrection, he mistakes
his own grand-grand-etc. niece for a 'lady of the evening' due to her
loose way of dressing, and he sits down for a philosophical debate
about love with a group of hippies, which he brutally kills
afterwards in his physical need for human blood (he's a vampire after
all). Also of great joy are the soapy love/hate moments between him
and Angelique, culminating in a passionate night of love making that
does not stay confined to the bed but takes place all over the room,
including the walls and the ceiling, after which Barnabas remarks
this was 'a regrettable turn of events' as they sit in a totally
wrecked room at the end of their sexual outburst. It's moments like
these that provide for the most entertaining part of the film, and
certainly the most memorable, considering the rest of the film proves
all too forgetful afterwards. Unfortunately, they only make the film
half decent, instead of actually good, a level the movie sadly does
not reach, also in part to the unsatisfactory way the film seems to
deliver its message that family should stick together no matter how
odd some of its members are. If that's so, how come Roger ran off
with the money, the house got burned down and the locals think the
Collins family is just a bunch of sinister freaks? Sure, the evil has
been vanquished, but it's a far cry from a happy end to conclude this
motion picture with.
After seven projects working with the
same director, usually in the same genre and the same visual style,
the fact is the combination Burton/Depp has really gotten worn out
and stale, indicating both men should probably take a long break from
each other and meet some new people to escape the dreary routine
they've succumbed to. Though Burton has used a grotesque style all
his own that made him Hollywood's leading auteur, by now it
has proven to be a huge 'been there, done that', resulting in
disappointing films that only see a continuation of his style instead
of some form of improvement upon it. Turning to a new genre
altogether could be a solution to the routine Burton seems stuck in.
Obviously, the director himself feels differently, since he's not
done with family oriented Gothic horror this year: come October his
latest stop motion piece Frankenweenie will be released. It
may use a different format, but seems overall typically Burtonesque.
At least it doesn't star Johnny Depp, maybe that will prove to be
enough of a change this time...
And watch the trailer here:
maandag 7 mei 2012
Corpse Bride
Rating:
****/*****, or 8/10
Tim
Burton's love for traditional stop motion animation, already evident
in The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993), is further displayed
in Corpse Bride, which also sees his fifth collaboration with
his muse Johnny Depp (and the third with his lover Helena Bonham
Carter). A young man (Depp) is forced to wed a woman (Emily Watson)
by both their obnoxious greedy parents, though the pair carries
genuine affections for one another. When practicing his vows alone in
the dark woods, he accidentally places his ring around a female
corpse's finger, after which he finds himself married to this woman
(Carter) in the afterlife. Though it's a far more cheerful and colorful place than the one he just left behind, he wants to return
to the world of the living to finish the marriage before his bride is
suckered into marrying a ruthless impostor out for her money.
Meanwhile the corpse bride herself has some unfinished business up
above. Applying his typical dark Gothic visual style to every aspect
of the animation process, the movie is first and foremost a
celebration of life, love and (the unavoidability of) death (which
makes it ironic the movie is done with puppets instead of real
actors, save for the voice work). Why be gloomy over death when you
can't escape it anyway? Stop worrying about it and learn to love life
instead! Such life lessons are most effectively, and wonderfully
devoid of cheesiness, delivered via a series of swinging songs,
courtesy of Burton's regular composer Danny Elfman (11th
collaboration) which provide the most fun in this delightful movie.
However, the off-beat look to the animation and a decent number of
visual and dialogue gags also make for a great time to be had by
young and old alike. Burton would return to stop motion for
Frankenweenie (2012).
Starring:
Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Emily Watson
Directed
by Tim Burton and Mike Johnson
USA/UK:
Warner Bros., 2005
maandag 19 maart 2012
Big Fish
Rating:
****/*****, or 8/10
Delightful
tragicomedy like only Tim Burton can give us, regarding a man (Albert
Finney) who spends his entire life telling tall tales, to such an
extent his son (Billy Crudup) can't separate fiction from reality,
much to his chagrin. In search for the truth the son meets a variety
of characters from his father's life, while the audience is treated
to a wide array of very amusing and charming stories about the man's
past, from his birth and his youth, the first time he falls in love
as a young man (played with apparent enthusiasm by a vigorous Ewan
McGregor), his days in the army and as a janitor at a circus to his
dying days where he is fondly remembered by those he has touched in
his eventful life. A wonderful ode to life, Burton mixes his oddball
Gothic visual style with a decidedly positive attitude to the very
nature of human existence, effectively relaying his carpe diem
message of 'don't worry about anything and just enjoy life one day at
a time'. In the end, the son and the viewer learn that the tales make
the man, and it doesn't really matter what's true and what's not.
Both visually and story wise, this is one of Burton's finest
achievements – despite (or because of?) the absence of Johnny Depp
– as well as a very fun but poignant film in general. Plus, it
contains an always useful and welcome guide to conquering the girl of
your dreams' heart.
Starring:
Ewan McGregor, Albert Finney, Helena Bonham Carter
Directed
by Tim Burton
USA:
Columbia Pictures, 2003
woensdag 1 februari 2012
Alice in Wonderland
Rating ***/*****, or 7/10
Lavish
and wonderfully bizarre looking reimagination of the classic novel by
Lewis Caroll, directed by Tim Burton, who unfortunately chooses style
over substance a bit too much. As we could have expected from Burton,
it all looks fabulous and has a fantastic cast, but this semi-sequel
to the original story feels a bit sloppy and jumbled together. Alice
(the credibly overwhelmed but also naturally dreamy enough to
go-along-with-it-all Mia Wasikowska) revisits Wonderland and gets
caught up in a battle for supremacy over this grotesque realm between
the vicious Red Queen (Helena Bonham Carter, obviously having the
time of her life with a really big head) and the peaceful White Queen
(a pixie-esque Anne Hathaway), in which she is aided by the Mad
Hatter (Johnny Depp is sufficiently crazy enough to pull this role
off). The original series of random weird encounters between Alice
and Wonderland's inhabitants is now strung together by an all too
typical battle between good and evil. Plus, the Mad Hatter's role has
been enlarged a lot so Depp gets enough screen time to warrant his
face being on all the marketing materials, which undermines the very
title 'Alice in Wonderland'. Still, enjoyable flick anyhow.
Starring:
Mia Wasikowska, Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter
Directed
by Tim Burton
USA: Walt
Disney Pictures, 2010
Abonneren op:
Posts (Atom)







