Showing posts with label Cynthia Nixon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cynthia Nixon. Show all posts

5/01/2009

Movie Review: Lymelife (2008)








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As Mena Suvari’s Angela informs Lester (Kevin Spacey) in the events leading up to the unexpected yet inevitable gunshot near the conclusion of Allan Ball’s screenplay for Sam Mendes’ American Beauty, “I don’t think there’s anything worse than being ordinary.”



And for movies set in the undeniably ordinary yet endlessly dysfunctional location of American suburbia, this seems to be a recurring theme. Typically we’re presented with characters not unlike ourselves, relatives, friends, and neighbors who keep busy with projects, affairs, and overcrowded schedules-- essentially running to avoid standing still, keeping the noise going so they won't be left in silence, and ultimately trying to create a different version of themselves than the one they see in the mirror.

In Lymelife-- the feature filmmaking debut from screenwriter turned director Derick Martini (which he penned along with his brother and fellow collaborator on the charming ‘90s indie Smiling Fish and Goat on Fire)-- we’re presented with a highly personal film inspired by their own childhood experiences. And—similar to Beauty, a bullet is fired in the finale but the Martinis take a much more intimate approach to their storytelling than Ball and Mendes’ satirical contemporary Oscar winner.





Presented by executive producer Martin Scorsese and co-produced as well by its A-list star Alec Baldwin (along with his talented brother William), this film made by two brothers that stars two brothers (the supremely gifted Kieran and Rory Culkin), utilizes a plot-line that involves two brothers but busies itself in its tale of two families whose lives are intertwined in several ways, residing next door to one another in 1979 Long Island.

Setting the stage for the justification of the title, its role as a metaphor, and the mood of the piece-- the film opens as radio commentators discuss the fear, ignorance, and hysteria surrounding the high incidence of Lyme disease carried by the ticks of deer that share the same space as our ensemble cast of characters. Shortly thereafter we’re presented with Rory Culkin’s sensitive, awkward, fifteen-year-old central protagonist Scott Bartlett who—despite trying to give himself countless pep talks in the mirror to toughen himself up or say the things he really wants to say to others—is hindered by the actions of his loving but over-protective mother, Brenda (Jill Hennessy).



Securing Scott’s clothing with duct tape before he leaves the house and making sure he wears a suit on the day of a school picture without realizing it’s precisely the equivalent of a “kick me” sign for a particular bullying classmate-- sadly Hennessy’s own insecurities and frustrations that the home is the only thing within her control go unnoticed by her adolescent son who looks up to his ultra macho, real estate developer father, Mickey (Alec Baldwin).



Unaware of the growing wedge in his parents’ relationship, like most teens, Scott has enough on his plate with overactive hormones that are all aimed in the direction of his beautiful sixteen year old neighbor Adrianna Bragg (Emma Roberts).



Exuding confidence, Adrianna is the type of girl who pretends she’s oblivious to the effect she has on the local boys but secretly uses it as currency, having Scott wrapped around her finger as she seems flirtatious one minute and then shrugs him off with the dismissal that he’s like a younger brother.



However, much like the rest of the characters, we realize that it’s a façade and Adrianna is only portraying a girl who has it altogether as her home life rivals Scott’s for the prize of most dysfunctional in the film as her psychologically emasculated, clinically depressed Lyme disease afflicted father Charlie (Timothy Hutton) spends his days out of work and either staring vacuously in dark rooms or wandering in the woods with a rifle trying to get revenge on any deer he can find, even if they’re only drawn on a paper target.



With the power struggle definitely shifted in a relationship that’s more maternal than romantic as his now bread-winning wife Melissa (Cynthia Nixon) chides him not to forget to take his medication and offers to give him rides into the city to look for work—Charlie stays numb when he catches his wife in the act of having an affair with Scott’s father who also happens to be her boss.

Although he’s as unwilling to face reality as his neighbor, Charlie is the opposite of Brenda who puts on a good front and tries to control everything else to avoid dealing with her smug husband who surprises her with a birthday present that they will be moving into an ultra-modern cookie-cutter designed planned community he’s narcissistically named “Bartlettown.”



With Scott siding with his father, it’s only fitting—as is the case in most families as children seem to pick a parent and align themselves like a suburban version of The Art of War-- that he gets a wake-up call and a foil with the arrival of his scene-stealing older brother (both in the film and in real life) Kieran Culkin’s Jimmy who returns from basic military training shortly before he must journey to the Falkland Islands.



Easily the odd man out as the heroic, confrontational, and assured Jimmy sides with his mother as they recall the good old days living in Queens (in an area free of deer ticks), Scott is the last one to realize what’s really been going on right under his nose as slowly his family and neighbors he assumed he knew so well begin to drop their suburban armor of perfect clothes and makeup until he sees them fully-- flaws and all.

While initially I feared going in—especially considering the endless comparisons to Ang Lee’s The Ice Storm that flooded most reviews following its screening at both the Sundance and Toronto Film Festival (where it earned its director an award)—that the last thing we needed was another family dysfunction piece, the Martini brothers’ character-driven work remains sharp and compelling throughout.



Filled with allegories and metaphors ranging from the idea that Lyme disease is a scapegoat for the disease of dissatisfaction lurking into the lives of our characters and Mickey’s literal vocation to try and build an American dream with little perfect homes to hide the imperfections that live within them—it’s a surprisingly authentic and intelligent film that benefits from the command of its dynamic cast.



Clocking in at only a little over ninety minutes—while at times the characters seem as though they’re under-written (most notably in the case of Nixon)—I was riveted by how much the actors brought to even the tiniest scenes whether it was by witnessing Hutton be truly challenged by a role for the first time in years as an alternately enraged yet exhausted man but far more so by yet another dynamic turn by Kieran Culkin.

Having blown me away with his work in Igby Goes Down, Culkin’s absolutely mesmerizing turn in this film is an obvious high-point for as soon as he saunters into frame, it’s elevated from the limitations and clichés of its origin as another dissatisfying slice of Americana that’s hard to digest. He does this instinctively with his buoyant and fascinating portrayal as the only cast member and character who has what it takes to fully call his father out in a scene that manages to top two impressively written ones featuring Hennessy and Hutton respectively.





Par for the course for a man who memorably said “I don’t play God, I am God,” in Malice, Alec Baldwin manages to easily slide into his role but adds some nice depth and pathos to his character which is vastly more admirable when you realize that the award-winning 30 Rock star pulled seven-day work weeks, committed to both his day job on Tina Fey’s sitcom and Derick Martini’s low-budget film.



Committed to the project for four years (along with both Culkins, Nixon, and Hutton) that the Martinis initially developed with Kieran in mind for Scott when the project first began at the 2001 Filmmakers Lab at Sundance – this labor of love for all involved shines through in its highly polished finished product that has been slowly opening across the states in select theatres and cities since its positive film festival reception in 2008.

While others have noted that the Falkland conflict may have been used as a ‘70s substitute for our current wars in one of the film’s many allegories--watching it recently in screener form, I also couldn’t overlook the fact that it also feels incredibly contemporary in that ironically the main framework for the piece surrounds a frantic fear of a baffling disease the likes of which we’re seeing now with the Swine Flu not to mention the idea that Hutton’s character is out of work and driven to depression.

So ultimately, it seems that these repeated variables remind us that although decades change, the dysfunction stays the same as nobody wants to be considered ordinary, yet we’re still fearful about what will happen if we stray too far outside our comfort zone of little plastic houses. And this is especially true when we’re uncertain who or what we fear more—the animals with ticks, the men with rifles, or the possibility of failure that makes the fleeting shot at success seem all the more daunting.



Yet, rest assured, success is what has been achieved in this smart indie and I commend all involved for the willingness to take a risk in ensuring that this particular cinematic journey has finally arrived. And just like Kieran Culkin’s Jimmy Bartlet does in the film, it’s here like a fresh burst of energy in a tired month of run-of-the-mill studio pictures that try to present us with interchangeable plot-lines and characters that seem about as daring as a typical house in a planned community like Bartlettown.

9/24/2008

New on DVD for the Week of 9/21






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Samantha Who? Season 1

Sex and the City: The Movie


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6/03/2008

Sex and the City




Director:
Michael Patrick King

The poster says it all—a glamour shot of a contemplative, wised-up, possibly battle scarred Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) against a night background. She’s come a long way from the tutu, wandering through the sunlit streets in a toss between a ballerina’s grace and a tigress on the prowl. That was until cynical reality hit her in the form of a splashed puddle from a bus in the beginning of the television show’s timeless credit sequence that set up the sophisticated, randy, melancholy, witty and beloved award winning HBO series for its astronomically successful six season run. Yet in transferring the tale of single former love and sex columnist Carrie Bradshaw and her three best friends to the big screen, it’s evident fairly early on that the focus has changed considerably.

While it was always fixated on Carrie, there was never a shortage of compelling plots concerning the rest of the Manhattan quartet to elevate the series into a multilayered tapestry of humor, intellectuality and poignant truths. However, that’s quickly forgotten on the big screen as Carrie becomes not only the predictable leading lady but her cohorts are given so little to work with that they become as uninspired and clichéd as countless best friends in the romantic comedy genre, just there to offer a shoulder to cry on, try and deliver a well-timed joke, but never forget their place to stand in the background like a bridesmaid, never upstaging the bride on her big day.

Thus it’s only fitting that the film’s bride-like character becomes a bride as we check in with Carrie, five years after she went to Paris and got accidentally slapped by Petrovsky before the dashing, comical Big (Chris Noth) showed up, sold the key line, “I’m clocking this foreigner,” until Carrie tripped him in the hallway and they ended up falling on the floor and for one another (AGAIN) in a terrific series finale that’s quickly become one of the shows’ most memorable episodes. Now happily committed to Big whom we learn is really named John James Preston (after King’s favorite director Preston Sturges, creator of unforgettable comedies and also intriguingly the first kiss-proof lipstick which is no doubt a SATC staple), Carrie and the wealthy playboy decide unceremoniously in a nearly business mindset to wed before moving into their own corner of “real estate heaven,” namely, a breathtaking penthouse where the view is only outdone by the jaw-dropping, flatteringly lit, and highly organized racquetball court sized walk-in closet.

Obviously, Manolo Blahnik loving Carrie seems less intrigued by the prospect of a ring than the closet and before long, her wealthy, prim dark haired Grace Kelly like princess friend Charlotte (Kristin Davis) is lending Carrie her best gay friend Anthony (Mario Cantone) to plan the big day. While Charlotte is just as we left her, living a life of uneventful domestic bliss married to the good-natured Harry Goldenblatt (Evan Handler) complete with adorable puppies and a cute adopted Chinese daughter who, along with Harry and the puppies seem merely decorative, the tough-as-nails, heart attack waiting to happen, successful law film partner Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) is stretching herself too thin in her married life to her own puppy dog husband Steve Brady (David Eigenberg) and son. When a predictable wrench is thrown into her marriage after the unhappily ignored Steve acts out on his dissatisfaction, Miranda is even less thrilled than we’d expect to be involved with Carrie’s nuptials but it’s Carrie’s maid of honor, the show’s saucy vixen cougar Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall) who coupled with countless frogs until she met her far younger, wart free, golden boy prince Smith (the dishy Jason Lewis), who we’re most stunned to see. Now living a largely hapless existence as a miserable stay-at-home manager to her actor lover in Los Angeles, Samantha is tirelessly devoted to her man yet finds her old urges haven’t disappeared with age when she begins obsessing about her lothario manwhore neighbor.

Rushing off to New York every chance she gets, Samantha and the girls pick up where they left off, yet instead of the fast-paced screwball laughs to which we’d grown accustomed, the sour tone of the Sex and the City movie is shockingly melancholic and while they’ve necessarily replaced the sex and single scene obsession of the show given their relationship status and maturity, by filling an exhaustive 145 minutes with endless fashion shows and product placements and using an uninspired Cinderella theme in lieu of the rampant feminism, it’s a more materialistic and less soulful version of Sex than one could possibly imagine. And even when writer/director Michael Patrick King tries to pen the required daring one-liner or raunchy hook-up, the execution feels sexless, clinical, cool and overwhelmingly tired, making me think that if the script itself had been a man, none of the foursome would have let him get past the first date.

With Carrie’s trio relegated to backup singers as Charlotte is prone to shrieking hysteria in virtually every scene, Miranda has grown even less cheerful, and Samantha is in desperate need of a hug, it pales in comparison to the six inventive seasons of the series. Although it was always a chicken soup show, making one feel better after a horrible date, breakup, or day at the office, and as a woman, I’m infinitely grateful for not only its existence but also that Hollywood actually released a film starring four women over the age of forty, in addition to Carrie, Miranda, Charlotte, and Samantha, SATC’s dedicated fans deserve something much richer, vital and rewarding than what in the end feels about as deep as one of the latest new age self-help books such as The Secret, that hilariously Samantha Jones throws into the sand. Too bad it couldn’t have been the script! Needless to say, skip this and go back to your bookshelves to dust off the old DVD box sets.