Showing posts with label Leonardo DiCaprio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leonardo DiCaprio. Show all posts

6/12/2009

Blu-ray Review: Revolutionary Road (2008)



Now Available on DVD & Blu-ray






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Much to the dismay of audiences and critics alike, it's become "trendy" -- especially during autumn and winter-- to dish up the most unspeakably bleak cinematic portraits imaginable in the quest for award-winning glory via increasingly pretentious and alienating works of over-the-top dysfunctional devastation.

You know the type-- they're films my friend, colleague and local critic Colin Boyd calls "the Laura Linney" in the tradition of movies such as Smart People, Margot at the Wedding, The Savages, Snow Angels, The Squid and the Whale, and The Tracey Fragments that have become so popular (at least with the people making them) that at least a dozen of these roll into theatres every single year.



And given some of the reviews that circulated last December upon the release of Oscar winning director Sam Mendes' Revolutionary Road some of which likened it to anguish and torture, needless to say-- having just taken in one too many dark works all clamoring for Oscar-- I skipped the press screening and waited for disc.



Yet, although the film--which is based on Richard Yates' classic National Book Award nominated 1961 American novel-- journeys headfirst without a map over the course of two hours in a figurative suburban war zone filled with emotional landmines until it arrives at its heartbreaking destination guaranteed to leave you shell-shocked, I must say I was completely engrossed throughout the entire experience.





Fittingly, as revealed in the DreamWorks, BBC Films, and Paramount Vantage Blu-ray's behind-the-scenes featurette, "Lives of Quiet Desperation: The Making of Revolutionary Road," the film was described as "passion project" for Kate Winslet who is no stranger to incisive explorations into the darkest aspects of male-female romantic relationships in her Academy Award nominated turns in films such as Little Children and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.



And while the film is one you must prepare yourself to watch and moreover one that could be quite a dangerous instigator to provoke discontented couples into arguments, it's also one of the most thought-provoking, proactive, painful, yet satisfyingly three dimensional, bizarrely relatable, and articulate works crafted in 2008.



Incredibly brave-- at first the movie begins as though it's a big-budget version of an episode of Matthew Weiner's AMC award-winning original series Mad Men-- yet one set a decade earlier as we encounter the seemingly picture-perfect young couple April (Winslet) and Frank (Leonardo DiCaprio) whom we realize are anything but happy with their lot in life.



Having met at a party when Frank made the aspiring actress April laugh and enchanted her with his tales of being in Paris (albeit in the war), the couple's fire and ice relationship runs as manic and depressive as the moods throughout the most likely bipolar April-- whom we get the sense may have been modeled on both author Yates' dissatisfied aspiring artist mother as well as own Yates' own struggles with bipolar disorder, alcoholism, and nervous breakdowns as revealed in a Blu-ray only extra.



With April fiercely holding onto the belief that she and Frank were secret allies in their fight against conformity and their destiny to share a life that's unlike the others as something special and wonderful-- after she gives birth to two children and they move to suburbia where she's stuck in a gorgeous home with a picture window on Revolutionary Road, she has a hard time accepting her situation as part of the '50s status quo.



While April's emotions run rampant-- she's poised and determined on the outside-- living life as the type of woman who chooses her words carefully in public despite her frequent blow-ups with Frank. Yet, for appearance sake, April tries to be a good neighbor to Kathy Bates (whose son returns from a mental institution and intriguingly seems to be the only one able to see right through the Wheeler facade) as well as a good friend to another couple, subtly relishing in the way her statuesque beauty commands the attention of her best friend's husband.



However while April busily makes an impulsive plan to support her husband until he discovers his true passion by moving them all to Paris, her bright but dissatisfied husband Frank is the more logical one of the two, working at a dull, lifeless job in advertising essentially repeating what he felt was his father's meaningless existence by working at the exact same company.



With a gift for gab and the true ability to charm anyone he meets (especially young secretaries he sleeps with in the city), April sizes up Frank's willingness to ignore his mutual disgust by observing that, "if black could be made into white by talking, you'd be the man for the job."



Still, as hopeless about their relationship and life on Revolutionary Road as she is-- Frank takes April up on her offer and gives in as the two become closer than ever, actively pursuing the idea of revolting against their feeling of being trapped in lives that are too planned out.



Finding the shock of those around them who have succumbed into conformity amusing and not understanding the way that their friends privately judge their decision as unrealistic, juvenile, and in some cases threatening (since they dared to judge the way that most lives were being lived in 1955), things begin improving for the Wheelers until life tempts their decision with a variety of hurdles which they try to ignore until it's much too late.



Effectively, Road's filmmaking team heighten the explosive tension with an overwhelming sense of claustrophobia by mostly filming the Wheelers on location in their home or in tight corners continuously making us see them as caged prisoners-- not so much stuck in suburbia as they are in their own psyches and the realization that they feel like they belong together but have no idea how to make it work. Moreover, in the same turn we discover that they as well have no genuine idea what they actually want out of life themselves together or apart.



Even in a scene that echoes the area of anonymous gray flannel suits as interchangeable men journey into the city day after day to jobs they loathe just to feed their families, the sunlight and open air is framed tight, making DiCaprio simply one of the masses. In fact, visually Mendes (Winslet's husband) only really frees his characters when they take a walk in the woods and throughout he and the talented cinematographer Roger Deakins use as much natural light as possible in an attempt to convey their fragility, confusion, and desperation by depending on tight closeups that reveal flaws which are refreshingly unhidden by makeup or post-production touch-ups.



Overall I feel it's one of those rare and largely misinterpreted films that-- just like Yates' novel may upon first glance be taken as merely "anti-suburban" and as such-- given a viewer who strongly opposes the work, it ultimately reveals more about the individual judging it than the film in a way that perhaps cuts too close to something in their own life.



For, we're defined just as much by what we loathe as what we love and cinema is no exception, but it's much more than just a cynical view of suburbia as it dares to address the attitudes and landscape of both American men and women in what the author always intended to be a political novel. And, as referenced in the production notes--an interview with the now deceased Yates is quoted as he describes his belief that Road is not "anti-suburban" but was written "as an indictment...of a general lust for conformity all over this country...[as] a kind of blind, desperate clinging to safety and security at any price," which he wrote in an attempt to "suggest that the revolutionary road of 1776 had come to something very much like a dead end in the '50s."



While admittedly, given his need to execute this, the Wheelers themselves aren't the easiest characters to warm up to at all yet throughout the film I realized that-- while I didn't approve of them or their actions-- at the very least I could understand them and realize the motivations and emotions behind every decision, thereby making Mendes' film penned by screenwriter Justin Haythe and brilliantly brought to life by the cast seem one hundred percent real and just as meaningful today as it was when Yates' novel first hit the shelves.



Seldom in cinema do you actually feel like you understand a character's wishes and their contradictory actions and even more few and far between are opportunities where we actually get a sense of the characters as real people with thought processes and Revolutionary Road succeeds on all of these levels.



In the end, it's a work that deserved far more awards consideration than it received (aside from Winslet's double Golden Globe accolades for Road and The Reader) and more importantly one that's richly rewarding intellectually despite the fact that it definitely does push a viewer through an emotional battlefield. However, the best thing about Road, aside from realizing that the issues are still there today is that its trip towards the tragic finale is entirely logical given everything that's come before it and not just tacked or executed with the heaviest of paintbrushes a la last year's The Boy in the Striped Pajamas and Snow Angels.



Containing all additional extras on the disc in high definition, the Paramount Home Entertainment release was beautifully transferred to Blu-ray with gorgeous widescreen picture and sound and in fact the sound is so clear that you're quick to learn that composer Thomas Newman's score sounds way too similar to his previous ones for Sam Mendes in American Beauty and Road to Perdition! With stunning quality in the picture that makes all of Deakins' work stand out just as much as it did in Miramax's recent Blu-ray release of No Country for Old Men (which he also shot), we realize just how pitch-perfect the production values were across the board from costuming to art direction. And for this reviewer who failed to RSVP to the theatrical press screening out of fear it was one of those trendy works of dysfunction, I'm happy to report that it was an ideal way to capture the film for the first time at home.


3/01/2009

DVD Review: Body of Lies (2008) -- Single Disc Widescreen Edition



Own It On DVD Or Blu-ray
(Several Editions Available)
2/17/09




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"Information is the bottom line, and the subtext of that could be that you cannot trust anyone, not even your best friend. Turn your back for a second and you will be used. And if you are running an organization that is important to national security, without that attitude you will be weaker and vulnerable. That's the job."
-- Ridley Scott
Body of Lies Official Production Notes



The words weak and vulnerable aren't in director Ridley Scott's vocabulary. One of this generation's most masterful directors and the man behind such groundbreaking films as Alien, Blade Runner, Thelma & Louise, Gladiator, Black Hawk Down, Kingdom of Heaven, and American Gangster
as well as the understated but no less fascinating White Squall, G.I. Jane, Black Rain, Matchstick Men and countless others-- one often forgets just how diverse he can be, moving effortlessly from the mesmerizing set pieces and extraordinary visuals of Gladiator to the more intimate character driven work found in Thelma & Louise or Matchstick Men.

Able to simultaneously engage us in the internal aspects of a character under the most intense of situations-- it's this particular strength that makes his most recent film-- Body of Lies such a highly intelligent yet nerve-wracking experience. A rare film that respects the audience Scott wants to lose in the sweeping scope of his orchestrated shots by making us never forget that despite the breakneck pace that he prefers since to Scott moving "as fast as possible... [is] when you feel you're really alive," there's a major tale of morality and intrigue unfolding before our eyes.


Employing his trademark "four to eight cameras per setup," as the Lies production notes reveal, gives Scott the unparalleled opportunity to keep moving, filming three hundred and sixty degrees of an entire situation so that he needs minimal takes to get things right as actor Leonardo DiCaprio marvels, he'll direct the movements of helicopters and camera-men synchronizing explosions and angles via his walkie talkie, "watching all the different monitors, cutting in his head as he goes."

Further stressing that in his view, Ridley Scott "has a channel into the eyes of the viewer," which makes him "so good at what he does" in seeing "the big picture" while filming is going on-- while the humble DiCaprio may give most of the credit to the lauded award-winning director he was eager to work with for the first time-- Scott's ability to get the very best for Lies was equally reliant on the fine-tuned portrayal of his two leads including not just DiCaprio but his frequent collaborator, Russell Crowe.


Although it turns out the film was a reunion on another level as Crowe and DiCaprio had worked together more than a decade ago on Sam Raimi's The Quick and the Dead before they each became two of the most sought after actors in contemporary filmmaking. And while Crowe had the advantage of a veritable shorthand of direction with Scott who has directed him a handful of times, DiCaprio had the intuitive storytelling advantage of working again with his Oscar winning The Departed screenwriter William Monahan, who penned his second work for Scott following Kingdom of Heaven.

Caught in a complicated and timely web of CIA anti-terror efforts-- DiCaprio plays the undercover agent Roger Ferris-- a multi-talented field man who uses his natural ability to gain insight and get into all the right circles by speaking numerous Arabic dialects to try and bring down one of the most dangerous terrorist heads in Jordan.


Ferris is torn between the ruthless tactics of his CIA superior Ed Hoffman (Russell Crowe) who-- necessarily detached and thousands of miles away in the United States calls the shots at a level Crowe likens to "being able to see seven different chessboards situated on seven different planes, and manipulating all those multiples of seven simultaneously," and the more reserved yet effective head of the Jordanian General Intelligence Department (GID), Hani Salaam (Mark Strong).


While Hani-- as Strong describes-- "prides himself on being able to achieve things in a much more delicate, less obvious way than Hoffman," since "his methods consist very much of not rattling the cage, but gently reeling in the fish," Hoffman warns Ferris not to trust his Jordanian contact or anyone he meets.

The adaptation of the novel by former Wall Street Journal and Washington Post journalist David Ignatius "who covered the CIA and Middle Eastern affairs for ten years," was first read in book galley form by Ridley Scott. And it's because of its strong source work that the film works incredibly well due to its authenticity that rings true throughout in dealing with all sides of the conflict as-- much like Monahan's script for The Departed-- it excels at what DiCaprio argues is his instinctive ability to work "with information and disinformation, and cat-and-mouse dilemmas between characters."

Yet another one of those shamefully overlooked 2008 films from Warner Brothers (along with Pride and Glory, RocknRolla, Towelhead, Kit Kittredge - An American Girl, Appaloosa, and several others)-- Lies didn't draw in the numbers one would expect due to the names attached perhaps because in addition to the fact that it was a slow box office time-- films about the Middle East have repeatedly failed to strike a chord with the audience.


Part of the problem could be since it is so topical yet there's much to learn as DiCaprio notes that while filming Lies, "we became more and more fascinated with how an organization like this operates against an enemy that is extremely difficult to find in a world so unfamiliar to them." And unlike simply the hyper cuts of the nonetheless extraordinary The Bourne Trilogy-- Body of Lies specializes in the gray area between right and wrong as Ferris becomes emotionally involved in the lives of those with whom he comes into contact.

Although most of the criticism centered on Crowe's less than authentic Southern accent which I was fine with-- feeling it fit his character as being a hybrid of genuine Southern and the same type of traditional soldier accent that military men and women (including some of my relatives) have developed following their work--but in my eyes, the one major plot problem featured the would-be romance for DiCaprio's Ferris.


Quite similar to Monahan's role for Vera Farmiga in The Departed--while it fulfills the need for Body of Lies in offering the requisite role for a female lead, it's one that doesn't seem the least bit plausible given DiCaprio's occupation that he could be that naive as to jeopardize a civilian while pursuing her at the same time he's trying to bring down Jordan's version of Bin Laden.

Still, despite this, it's a far superior work to the preachy Don Cheadle vehicle Traitor which you were able to predict within seconds as Lies is incredibly complicated and will possibly require a second viewing just to catch all of the intricate twists and turns and the way that our first impressions of a character evolve throughout the film.

A riveting and solid work that's among the best action based entries of 2008 and one that is more effective than the overly long American Gangster-- hopefully Ridley Scott's tense spy film (which-- much like his produced TNT miniseries The Company delved into a wonderful study of the CIA and the remarkably important part they play in global safety) will garner the audience it should have with its stellar release on DVD and Blu-ray.


Sent the single disc widescreen edition of the title by the kind folks at Warner Brothers-- I'm sorry to report that although I can't judge any of the extras or the Blu-ray quality of other editions, this disc does come with the sole extra feature of a digital download of the film exclusively for PC computers (as it's incompatible with Apple devices) that helps you increase the life of your DVD by boasting a second copy of the film and Lies itself is highly recommended in any form.

Ridley Scott



Leonardo DiCaprio



Russell Crowe


2/17/2009

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