Showing posts with label Juno Temple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juno Temple. Show all posts

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Far From the Madding Crowd



**Spoiler Alert**

Director: Thomas Vinterberg/Starring: Carey Mulligan, Matthias Schoenaerts, Michael Sheen, Tom Sturridge and Juno Temple

With costume dramas, one never knows what one will get. Will the film be a dry, airless Merchant/Ivory production or will it be a visually sumptuous delight, like Ang Lee's Sense and Sensibility? It's nearly impossible to predict. But with a talented director like Thomas Vinterberg (Celebration, The Hunt) behind the camera, one can be sure the adaptation will be anything but two hours of stilted dialogue and ladies with bonnets resting daintily on their silky curls.

Given the fact the film is an interpretation of Thomas Hardy's classic novel, we have a good idea of what we will see. But as it's heroine, Bathsheba Everdene (an excellent Carey Mulligan) is keen to express in the film; "It is my intention to astonish you all." One could just as easily believe the mission statement belongs to Vinterberg. In sharing his heroine's resolution; his Far From the Madding Crowd achieves nothing less. Though other versions of Hardy's novel have found their way to the screen, Vinterberg's makes its own statement, visually and dramatically.

Set in rural England in the 1870s', the story's main persona--Bathsheba, inherits a manor; replete with a considerable staff. Bathsheba is hardly a typical landowner for the times, as we see when she attends an auction to sell the bounty of her farm. The exclusively male buyers and sellers look askance at Bathsheba; almost insulted by a woman's presence. But Bathsheba is no shrinking flower nor anyone's patsy; she proves to be a shrewd business person, as one buyer discovers.

We also meet Gabriel Oak (the limitless Matthias Schoenaerts), a hard-working farmer whose property abuts Bathsheba's. Gabriel meets his comely neighbor one day while tending to his vast flock of sheep and is instantly smitten. He wastes little time proposing marriage to her in his forthright manner, which startles Bathsheba. Though she isn't immune to Gabriel's rugged handsomeness, she is quick to assert her staunch independence which comes with an aversion to marriage. In a coquettish moment, she tells Gabriel that he lacks the means to tame her. Dejected, Gabriel walks away.

Not soon after, Gabriel experiences a devastating loss when one of his dogs drives his entire flock off a cliff before he can intervene. An image of golden, morning sunlight bathing a beach littered with sheep carcasses is a fascinating juxtaposition of beauty and grisly death.

Unable to recover financially from his loss, Gabriel is forced to sell his property, leaving him with little choice but to earn a wage on another farm. That he finds himself a shepherd on Bathsheba's estate is one of the story's bitter ironies.

But Gabriel isn't the only landowner who succumbs to Bathsheba's charms, for a William Boldwood (Michael Sheen, terrific as always), whose sprawling estate betrays considerable bounty, also wastes little time proposing marriage. Like Gabriel, William's offer of comfort and prosperity is countered by Bathsheba's articulated disdain for marriage.

Though Bathsheba seems steadfast in her determination to be unwed, a young, handsome soldier named Francis Troy (Tom Sturridge) changes her mind. Startling Bathsheba one night in the forest, he immediately makes his attraction known, causing her to shrink from his advances. But in the days ahead, his good looks and seductive power overcome her, which make marriage inevitable. Gabriel, ever the friend, warns her about Francis; knowing something of his past. Thoroughly charmed by the young soldier, Bathsheba dismisses his reservations.

Earlier in the story, we watched as Francis' wedding to a young beauty named Fanny Robin (Juno Temple) was aborted when the bride inadvertently arrived at the wrong church. Believing himself to be rejected, Francis leaves the church in humiliation and heartbreak. Knowing this, it is easy to regard Bathsheba's marriage to Francis with trepidation.

Gabriel's warning proves to be prophetic, for Francis becomes the most undesirable husband. Showing little but contempt for farm-life and frittering Bathsheba's income on gambling, Francis' life becomes one of dissipation and idleness. But a chance meeting in town with his erstwhile fiance, Fanny Robbin, reawakens his passion for the young woman. Fanny tells Francis the baby she carries is his, which spurs him to action. He promises to help rescue her from the loathsome mendicant's life in which she finds herself. In promising Fanny money to relieve her direly stressed condition, Francis runs afoul of Bathsheba, who questions his need for more money.

As Bathsheba's marriage deteriorates, Francis disappears, leaving everyone to think the worst. Believing Bathsheba to be eligible, Boldwood throws an elaborate party to renew his courtship but his hopes are dashed when Bathsheba reiterates her desire not to marry him. Outside the party, Bathsheba discovers a figure emerging from the darkness, which we see is Francis. Unchastened by his disappearance, his aggressive demands of Bathsheba lead to a violent confrontation that prompts a despondent Boldwood to take desperate action, with catastrophic consequences.

I fell into Vinterberg's story and kept falling. He did astonish and in many ways. Beautiful camera work, performances from several very fine actors and a masterful use of color made Vinterberg's film a fully imagined and aesthetically realized work.

I found Mulligan to be a superb Bathsheba. Mulligan has the kind of face that would drown in innocence if not for fiercely intelligent eyes to counter the onslaught. Bathsheba is at once aware of herself and her unique position of privilege in a male-dominated society but is also naive when it comes to matters of the heart, as her terrible relationship with Francis attests. Mulligan captures this contradiction beautifully.

Schoenaerts is quickly becoming one of cinema's premier actors. In the past few years, I've seen him in wildly divergent roles: as a pugilist in Rust and Bone, as the heavy in last year's The Drop and now as the Job-like Gabriel Oak. What is particularly astonishing about Schoenaerts is his ability to affect accents without a trace of his native Belgian in his voice.

Does Bathsheba maintain her independence after battling for its preservation for so long? Does Hardy and hence, Vinterberg, fail her by having her become love's prey? Does she betray her ideals? Though the story finds a happy ending, I couldn't help but think so, as I'm sure other movie-goers will as well.

I doubt Far From the Madding Crowd will make much of a splash, but I found it absorbing and nicely done. I was glad to be spared the Masterpiece Theater treatment; its cinematic value was very conspicuous. See it while you can in a theater before the T.V. screen denigrates everything that gives it distinction.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Maleficent



**Spoiler Alert**

Director: Robert Stromberg Starring: Anjelina Jolie, Elle Fanning, Sharlto Copley, Imelda Staunton, Lesley Manville, Juno Temple, and Sam Riley

Maleficent, the former nether-hellion from Cinderella, is back but with a character make-over that is both sympathetic and more nuanced. She is also now an anti-heroine and I found myself cheering her on and frowning at the wrongs visited upon her.

Starring a well-cast Anjelina Jolie in the title role, Maleficent is a fairy in a nature-friendly kingdom that is the very incarnation of utopian perfection. Almost adjacent to the kingdom is another; inhabited by humans and ruled by King Henry (Kenneth Cranham) who is determined to destroy everything Maleficent and her kind call home. Tangling this development is Maleficent's love for a human prince named Stefan (Sharlto Copley), who once reciprocated her love.

Maleficent's kingdom suffers an unprovoked attack but the humans are no match for the fairy Queen and the formidable creatures she can summon; including tree-like entities who resemble Tolkien's Ents. Maleficent can also vent her fury on the humans with frightening wings that can cause powerful gusts and batter humans senselessly. The attack is repelled but King Henry on his deathbed promises the crown to whomever can slay Maleficent; a task Stefan undertakes but with reluctance and reservation.

Stefan returns to Maleficent, downplaying his role in the attack and in doing so, charms her. As she slumbers, Stefan slices her wings from her body, which severely diminishes her power in literal and figurative ways.

In presenting the wings to the king, Stefan secures the crown and adding grievous insult to ignominious injury, marries another woman who bears him a beautiful daughter named Aurora. On the day she is to receive magical gifts from three fairies Flittle (Lesley Manville), Knotgrass (Imelda Staunton) and Thistletwit (Juno Temple), Maleficent arrives to curse the child (you know how) and vex King Stefan in the process.

The fairies hide Aurora in the forest but Maleficent's raven/humanoid assistant Diaval (Sam Riley) is able to locate the princess-protection program, thereby allowing the Queen access to the baby. But in a refreshing departure from the conventional story, Maleficent guides rather than menaces Aurora, becoming a maternal figure of sorts. It is King Stefan, in this story, who is the nemesis and baddie. The film leads to a showdown between the adversaries, which is yet another departure from the Cinderella story we all know.

I really liked Anjelina Jolie is this role, which she wears like a comfortable, sexy, cashmere coat. She relishes the mannerisms and her otherworldly facial beauty almost steals the show. Her characteristic high cheekbones are accentuated by prosthetics, which lend her face a sinister beauty while her false-color contacts only mesmerize.
I've tired of her recent roles where she plays CIA-like operatives who can leap from bridges and run up walls to deliver bad-ass kicks. Maleficent is a welcome change for Jolie and she performs beautifully. The supporting cast are quite terrific also: Manville, Staunton and Temple bring bumbling humor to the fairy roles while Sam Riley--always the dark, brooding, edgy presence in other films--has the opportunity to shine in a lighter, more amusing role as Maleficent's factotum. Elle Fanning is the precious innocent, who contrasts nicely with Anjelina Jolie's demonic appearance.

In Cinderella, women are either threatening or frivolous or passive things in need of true love's kiss but this 21st century revisionist take will have none of that. Maleficent is the misunderstood and wronged party and it isn't her rage and thirst for vengeance that threatens the peace but King Stefan. It seems entirely natural that Maleficent would take Aurora under her wing (if you forgive the expression) and guide her rather than dispatch her with a spindle from a spinning wheel.

We root for Maleficent now. It will be nigh impossible to watch Cinderella again without pulling for the woman who was heretofore known as the story's antagonist. Maleficent is a pleasant surprise. It is hardly earth-shaking but it is fun to watch and much of the credit for that goes to Anjelina Jolie, who seduces us with her beauty and wields power the way she wields her wings; with judicial authority and feminine resolve.