Rating:
***/*****, or 7/10
Lyrical
and poetic attempt at an epic chronicle of a man aging backwards by
David Fincher (Se7en (1995), Fight Club (1999)), who is
obviously less at home in the fantasy genre than he is doing
thrillers. Nevertheless, the film looks fabulous and stars an array
of wonderful actors, chief among them Brad Pitt as the protagonist
Benjamin Button who is suffering from this strangest of afflictions
and the stunning Cate Blanchett as Daisy, the woman he keeps on
loving all his life despite the obstacles time throws at their
passion that keep them from forming a natural relationship. Born as a
wrinkled and frail baby suffering from all the symptoms of old age,
Benjamin is discarded by his disgusted father and left at a home for
the elderly where he is raised by caretaker Queenie (Taraji P.
Henson, who was Oscar nominated for her contribution). Growing up
amongst the old folks, Benjamin isn't suspected to last long but
surprises everybody by getting younger and younger, eventually
leaving home to explore the world, which results in a voyage through
the 20th century similar to Forrest Gump (except
not going for comedy, undoubtedly for the best), having the naive and
ever positive Benjamin participate in WW II and witness the space
race of the Sixties among other situations. Traveling the globe, he
never loses contact with the love of his life and finally settles
with Daisy when both reach middle age (the only moment of temporal
equality for them both), after which they produce a child, only for
Benjamin to realize his grotesque condition means he could never be a
true father figure for his new born daughter. A sense of lust for
life and adventure goes hand in hand with an unshakeable feeling of
tragedy and melancholy when The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
steers towards a dramatic ending that doesn't entirely successfully balance a bittersweet note with blatant sentimentality.
The film is also an homage to the city of New Orleans which witnesses
the beginning and end of Benjamin and his caring for Daisy: however,
Fincher's decision to have the story be told by an aging Daisy on her
death bed in a New Orleans hospital threatened by hurricane Katrina
keeps on hindering the plot at various turns and adds an uneasy link
with recent history the movie had better done without, also to keep
the running time in check instead of letting it run rampant to 166
minutes, with many of the last act's moments losing pace and dragging
on needlessly, thus making a potential masterpiece end up as just a
curious case itself.
Starring:
Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Julia Ormond
Directed
by David Fincher
USA: The
Kennedy/Marshall Company, 2008
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