Friday, November 16, 2012

Everything Must Go

"I'm no different than any of you. I just don't hide in my house."
 
 
What do you do when you reach rock bottom? I am not talking about oh I had a bad day rock bottom; I am talking about lost your job, wife left you, your things are on the front lawn, and you have resorted back to drinking rock bottom. How about sitting on a chair on your lawn and not leave? That is exactly what Will Ferrell does in the 2010 movie Everything Must Go.
Ferrell plays Nick who is an alcoholic whose wife leaves him with everything on in lawn on the same day that he loses his job. Nick cannot handle what is happening to him and decides to not leave the comfort of his front lawn. It is determined that Nick can only stay on his front lawn for a total of 5 days and if he is having a yard sale. Ferrell befriends a neighborhood kid to help him organize his things in exchange for baseball lessons. A young woman moves across the street and befriends Nick as well. As he begins to sink lower and lower, he starts to actually sell of his belongings and feel better about things.
This movie was based on the short story by Raymond Carver, "Why Don't You Dance". I have never read the short story, but I felt that the movie was really lacking in a lot of spots. It was your basic story about not being able to truly start over until you have shed everything that has ever held you back. Nick was supposed to be a baseball star back in high school. You never learn why he doesn't  play anymore and IF he still loves the game. When the neighborhood boy asks him to teach him, he is reluctant at first but then agrees. He gives him one lesson, and then it is never explored again.
The same goes for when Nick is looking through his high school year book. He comes across something that one of his old classmates wrote to him. He tracks her down to ask her about it, and then doesn't even remember what she talks to him about. That entire scene is never references again. I actually just forgot about it until I started writing this review.
The film only gives you tiny bits and pieces of things. It failed to really elaborate on anything, and because of that you don't really feel a connection to any of the characters. This is always the problem when adapting a short story into a full length movie. Sometimes it is hard to fill in the holes that a short story may have and still keep the integrity of your story alive.
I think that one of the things that this film tried to explore was the idea of hiding behind your curtians so to speak. Everything hides things about themselves, and Nick had left his entire life on his lawn, literally. He didn't hide his drinking problem or the fact that his wife has thrown him out of the house. Nick actually says this to his new neighbor at one point. If this was what they where trying to go for, I love that idea, but it still fell short.
I did find Will Ferrell's performance in this movie to be very good. I am so used to seeing him as Frank the Tank! I thought that he really took this serious role and did it justice. There may be more to this actor than he has been able to show us through his career. I would love to be able to see him do more roles like this one.
This is really not a movie that I would recommend unless you would like to see Ferrell do something different. I didn't feel that there was anything special here or that set it apart from other "starting over" movies. So unless you've hit rock bottom with your movie choices, I would avoid this one.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Buried 2010

 
"I'm buried in a box. I'm buried in a box"
 
 

 
You open your eyes and it is blacker than the blackest night. You can't see your own hand in front of your face. Your hand hits the ceiling, but there is something wrong because the ceiling is only a few inches above your head. You try to stick out your arm and hit the wall which is only a few inches to the side of you. It is then that you realize it is difficult to breathe. A sinking feeling hits your stomach when you begin to succumb to the fact that your greatest nightmare is coming true....you've been buried alive.
Written by Chris Sparling and directed by Rodrigo Cortes, Buried is about Paul, played by Ryan Reynolds,  is  an American truck driver in Iraq. He is captured by some angry Iraqi civilians and buried alive in a simple wooden coffin. All Paul finds when he awakes in the coffin is a lighter and a cell phone. That's it, nothing more....no really.... 
This is an extremely dangerous types of movie to make. Especially in this day and age. The entire movie never leaves the coffin. This is difficult for both director and actor. Reynolds is the entire movie. I have never been the biggest fan of Reynolds. I have only ever seen him in comedic roles. I thought that he did a very good job portraying a man who is trying to do everything he can to get out of a seemingly hopeless situation. He went through such a wide range of emotions and really made the viewer feel like they where there with him. As he begins to feel hopeless, the audience begins to feel hopeless. When he feels like he is getting somewhere, the audience wants to jump for joy. You are trapped with him.
Directing this film must have been a nightmare. All that you have to work with is a small box and nothing more. There are not many camera angles, and how do you go about lighting? It is the desire of every director to make a movie that is true to the story they are telling, so how do you stay true to a movie about a man in a coffin without any light?
Cortes did a great job of using the light of the lighter and the cell phone only. There where many times that the viewer was left with a blank screen and only had the sounds to go on. This is where true suspense comes in. You can't see...There is nowhere to go....what do you do? This is where the art of moving making is at it's best. Keeping the audience on edge with as little information as possible. THIS was the movie technique that my movie idol, Alfred Hitchcock perfected. I think that he would have been proud.
I was very concerned at the beginning of the movie when I realized the entire thing was going to take place in just the coffin. I couldn't see how they where going to be able to fill 95 minutes with enough interesting events to keep my occupied. When I am wrong, I'm wrong and I am willing to admit it. Apparently there are a lot of things that can happen in a coffin in 95 minutes when you are trying to get yourself rescued.
There is something that has been missing for me with many of the modern day films that are out there. There is a sense that all that these films are striving to do is to see who can throw in the greatest special effect, who can shock with the goriest scene, or what movie can push the sex boundaries. Sometimes simple is better. That is where 2010's Buried comes in. Watch it. It made me very uncomfortable watching it, and there where times when i felt like I couldn't breathe myself. THAT is good movie making.