REVIEW: Noah

NOAH

Noah
Directed by: Darren Aronofsky
Written by: Darren Aronofsky and Ari Handel
Starring: Russell Crowe, Jennifer Connelly, Emma Watson and Ray Winstone

Noah is a baffling movie on many levels, but rarely is it very interesting.  Director Darren Aronofsky’s artistic sensibility either got lost in the material or the studio put too many restrictions for him to really run wild with it.  The end result is an often absurdly straightforward installment of White People Reenact the Bible (with giant rock monster angels).

To the movie’s credit, Aronofsky makes no effort to subdue the torment a man like Noah (Russell Crowe) both faces and inflicts when tasked with keeping animals and his family alive while everyone else on Earth drowns.  Crowe gives it his all as well, though he and the rest of the cast (except Anthony Hopkins) play the material with a self-seriousness that is often suffocating.  When the movie was allowed to breathe visually, like in a couple of time-lapse tracking shots that follow animals as they fly and slither, it was briefly exhilarating.

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Short Takes: 300: Rise of an Empire, RoboCop, The Wind Rises

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300: Rise of an Empire- An unnecessary sequel to an unnecessary graphic novel adaptation. 300: Rise of an Empire didn’t have a lot to live up to and was much better off for it.  How many macho action flicks feature a female character who is so in control and more fully clothed than male eye candy?

Eva Green’s villainous military commander aside, this is the same slow-motion bloodbath that the original was.  The movie’s visual tint doesn’t save the bland, uninspired action sequences and the relentlessly stupid dialogue and story. Had they followed through on the (dare I say?) feminist undertones of Green’s character and given her an actual arc, this may have been a much more interesting movie. Grade: D+

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BEST PICTURE NOMINEE: American Hustle

Christian Bale;Jeremy Renner;Bradley Cooper

American Hustle
Directed by: David O. Russell
Written by: Eric Singer & David O. Russell
Starring: Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence

Two cartoonishly ’70s-looking men stand in an art gallery gazing at a Rembrandt painting, or at least what one of them thinks is a Rembrandt painting.  The other guy, a con man played by Christian Bale, explains with his thick Brooklyn accent that it’s a fake.

“The guy who made this was so good, that it’s real to everybody.  Now, who’s the master: the painter or the forger?” he asks.

It’s as if director David O. Russell is speaking through Irving Rosenfeld (Bale) at this moment, pondering the question a little too sincerely.  American Hustle, his sleek and contagiously energetic latest endeavor, is also somewhat of a forgery. It’s being released nationwide the week before The Wolf of Wall Street, and I’m curious to see which one is more widely praised, the original Scorsese or this loving knockoff.

The frantic voice-over, the constant bombardment of tracking shots mixed with sporadic cutting, the amazing use of rock music- all of the staples from Scorsese’s signature crime films are here.  With his previous two features, The Fighter and last year’s Silver Linings Playbook, Russell tackled two very different genres (boxing movie and romantic comedy) in his own consistently thrilling and fresh way.  Although American Hustle is a much more complicated and sleek film, it feels like a step backward of sorts simply because its stylistic influence is blatant and overused.

It even plays rough and rowdy with history and the time period the same way that Scorsese does in movies like Goodfellas. Turning the Abscam corruption sting case from the late ’70s and early ’80s into such a wildly funny and drugged-out con job makes it decidedly less self-serious then a true life government operation movie like, say, Argo.  It barely shows the congressmen caught up in the mob corruption, but rather the push and pull of the government agents and the criminals they enlist (entrap) to help them.

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Everyone in this movie is stupid in their own way, except maybe Amy Adams’ character, who is just unlucky.  She is the one who takes the fraudulent money from an FBI agent (Bradley Cooper), which in turn pulls Rosenfeld, her lover, in to help fry bigger fish.

Rosenfeld is a repulsive slob in the beginning of the movie, and is only sympathetic when it becomes clear to him that everyone is just as crooked as him.  The government “good guys” are basically running a post-Watergate publicity stunt and one of the “bad guys,” Camden, New Jersey mayor Carmine Polito (Jeremy Renner), has a dimwitted, illegal way of trying to jump-start a sluggish economy.  As it becomes clear that everyone in the movie is, in their way, conning someone, Rosenfeld starts to feel the burn as the net they are casting continues to widen and involve much bigger fish.

He is matched blow for blow in hairdo grotesqueness by Cooper’s agent Richie DiMaso, a perversely ambitious hothead and drug addict.  Both of these performances feel slimy, and both actors capture the disingenuous core of each of the men.  Russell has a way of bottling a unique kind of lightning from this very diverse group of performers, which in addition to Adams and Renner also includes an explosive turn by Jennifer Lawrence.  As Rosenfeld’s wife, she reveals herself to be the biggest manipulator of the bunch even though she has no initial involvement in the caper.

That is the point Russell seems to be getting at.  Tacking a grandiose and vague title like American Hustle onto the story means he’s showing us that all Americans are hustlers, whether they’re in front of the camera, behind it or watching the final product in a theater.  The movie is almost aggressively sloppy, diluting this simple theme well past two hours.  Even when it’s redundant it’s never dull, though as far as self-conscious Scorsese knockoffs go, I’m still partial to Boogie Nights.

Grade: C

BEST PICTURE NOMINEE: 12 Years a Slave

TWELVE YEARS A SLAVE

12 Years a Slave
Directed by: Steve McQueen
Written by: John Ridley (screenplay), Solomon Northup (memoir)
Starring: Chiwetel Ejiofer, Michael Fassbender, Lupita Nyong’o and Sarah Paulson

Connecting 12 Years a Slave immediately to its Oscar buzz because of when a studio chose to release it would be a disservice to it.  To put it simply, this is the most powerful film about American slavery that I’ve ever seen, and diminishing that accomplishment by asking if the white male establishment of the Academy can handle it enough to award it with anything is at the bottom of my list.

Steve McQueen’s previous two features, Hunger and Shame, were visually brilliant, but at times lacking a crucial human element.  This was especially true of Shame, whose miserabalism was supposed to be its own profound reward but ultimately registered as empty.  There is obviously a great deal of suffering in 12 Years a Slave, but also an intense humanity.

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