REVIEW: The Other Woman

the-other-woman-2

The Other Woman
Directed by: Nick Cassavetes
Written by: Melissa Stack
Starring: Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann, Kate Upton and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau

The Other Woman’s flaws are large and predictable, but though the movie is slight it is also slightly enjoyable.  It feels like an adult version of the forgettable 2006 teen comedy John Tucker Must Die, where high schoolers who are dating the same dude plot to destroy his life.

Here, two mistresses (Cameron Diaz and Kate Upton) and a wife (Leslie Mann) bond over a plan to take down the charming monster who is deceiving them all (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau).   This is a faux girl power narrative that fails to realize everything its female characters do is a reaction to a male catalyst.  Their lives are virtually non-existent outside of their relationship to Jaime Lannister.

Although Melissa Stack’s script has a few zingers that stick (“Cry on the inside like a winner” comes to mind), director Nick Cassavetes keeps the pacing awkwardly slow.  The first half of the movie is filled with unnecessary scenes that fail to achieve the laughs they’re going for.  This is mostly because Cassavetes, while sometimes adept at creating atmosphere, doesn’t have very good comic timing.

The New Yorker’s Richard Brody also noted this in his review:

In “The Other Woman,” Leslie Mann has an extraordinary showcase and she uses it flamboyantly, with an amazingly inventive range of inflections and line readings. She’s a major comic actor, but Nick Cassavetes does her no favors; his vague framings and ping-pong editing leach the immediacy from her performance.

The contagious energy and charisma of Mann and many of the other performers make the movie bearable, even if their characters mostly come off as a smorgasbord of rom-com caricatures.  It’s an empty confection of wealthy, privileged people attacking each other; its locales, generically sleek renderings of the Bahamas, the Hamptons and New York City, are more the point than a good laugh or a genuine human connection.

Grade: D+

REVIEW: Under the Skin

scarjo2

Under the Skin
Directed by: Jonathan Glazer
Written by: Walter Campbell (screenplay),  Michel Faber (novel)
Starring: Scarlett Johansson 

In Under the Skin, Scarlett Johansson plays a wolf that doesn’t quite know how to wear sheep’s clothing.  She is an alien prowling Glasgow and the surrounding Scottish countryside in a white van, seducing and luring unsuspecting men to their death.

Jonathan Glazer’s third feature, based on Michel Faber’s novel, is a gender inverse on a fairly common horror/thriller premise.  The story is told in long, bleak stretches, the camera accentuating the way the creature attempts to move and act human.  Johansson’s performance is crucial to this strategy.  She nails the way the alien flips an “on” switch to turn a dead-eyed stare into a warm, welcoming woman when she spots prey.  Glazer hints at an eroticism with his camera movement that the actress deliberately pushes away.

The most sexually tinged scenes are the bloodless killings.  ScarJo’s victims, blinded by lust, pursue her into what transforms into a totally black stage.  They each leave a string of clothes as they lurch across it, but the men sink into the floor and become trapped.  The rest of Scotland isn’t much more colorful save for a reliably flashy night club.

Despite the color palette, this is Glazer’s most visually accomplished and altogether thrilling film to date.  When I watched it I had no idea that many of the interactions that the alien has with men were filmed using civilians and a hidden camera.  There is a cool, confident stillness to the images that rejects that often on-the-fly filmmaking aesthetic.  The performances, on the other hand, seem unforced and genuinely spontaneous.

Glazer and screenwriter Walter Campbell capture the alien predator’s bizarre point of view by making it clear that she is trying to fit in but can’t.  The result is an odd uncanny valley effect that Johansson’s star power only enhances.  This is evidenced in fairly standard alien movie scenes, like when she tries to eat human food and vomits it up, but also in her everyday movement and posture.  Under the Skin would be nothing without her blank yet inquisitive stares.

under-the-skin-scarlett-johaasdnsson

The alien eventually begins to unravel during this vague man-harvesting mission.  In one of the most haunting and moving scenes I’ve seen in recent months, she stops to talk to a very deformed, quiet man on a rainy night.  She treats him as she does any of the other victims, but the script lingers on their interaction more.  She asks him if he gets lonely, then grabs his hand and caresses her face and neck with it.  The man’s darting eyes and nervous, muttered reactions are heartbreaking.

After this interaction, she lets the man leave her den, naked and wondering where he is.  He’s eventually collected and (presumably) killed by one of the undeveloped, motorcycle-riding henchmen who (presumably) clean up after her.  After that she wanders and begins trying more and more human things, including eating, riding the bus and sex.  The movie rejects any notion of redemption or change, though. It bounces humanity and their emotions off its central character instead of forcing her to become one of us.

Grade: B

REVIEW: The Unknown Known

unknown known

The Unknown Known
Directed by: Errol Morris
Starring: Donald Rumsfeld and Errol Morris

The latest Errol Morris documentary, about the political life and times of Donald Rumsfeld, is an intentionally infuriating and vague work.  With the former Secretary of Defense’s onslaught of non-answers, excuses, digressions and nervous smirks, Morris depicts a genuine heart of dishonesty and blithe unawareness.

The Unknown Known is not about a documentarian skewering one of the most notorious figures of the George W. Bush years, which is why I think many will be perplexed at how free Rumsfeld is to run away with many of the questions.  The structure of the documentary almost seems to play with that audience expectation, beginning with the 2003 invasion of Iraq and then switching to Rumsfeld’s political career before returning to that post-9/11 time period.

Continue reading

REVIEW: Captain America: The Winter Soldier

Captain America Winter Soldier 2

Captain America: The Winter Soldier
Directed by: Anthony Russo and Joe Russo
Written by: Christopher Maruks and Stephen McFeely (screenplay), Ed Brubaker (story), Joe Simon and Jack Kirby (comic book)
Starring: Chris Evans, Scarlett Johansson, Samuel L. Jackson and Robert Redford

Even with an admittedly heavy case of Marvel fatigue, I enjoyed the second installment in Captain America’s part of the franchise.  There was an edge and spontaneity to both the story and its telling that made it feel like more than just an obligatory stepping stone to another Avengers.  Hell, I enjoyed this one more than The Avengers. 

The Winter Soldier centers on an internal struggle involving mass surveillance and gigantic drones.  None of the characters are who they initially appear to be, except of course the good Captain (Chris Evans).  He is the one consistent element in a story with twists that are often obvious but never obnoxious.  (Spoilers) Yes, a major character who dies didn’t actually die.  Yes, with just seconds left, the world is saved again.

Continue reading

REVIEW: Nymphomaniac

nymphomaniac Nymphomaniac
Directed by: Lars von Trier
Written by: Lars von Trier
Starring: Charlotte Gainsbourg, Stellan Skarsgard, Stacy Martin and Shia LeBeouf

Disclaimer: Plenty of spoilers throughout

In Nymphomaniac, Lars von Trier attempts to out-provoke himself (no simple task) while relentlessly interrogating his reasons for doing it.  Over the span of the movie’s four hours, Joe, the self-described nymphomaniac of the title, tells her painful and sometimes painfully funny story to the analytical virgin Seligman (Stellan Skarsgard), a man who finds her beaten up and unconscious in an alley.  The result is a pseudo-philosophical troll by turns exhilarating and tedious, something von Trier has fittingly labeled “Digressionism.”

Joe, played as a middle-aged woman by Charlotte Gainsbourg and as a young adult by Stacy Martin, seeks to provoke reactions out of Seligman in the same way that the director does from his audience.  Seligman’s often-pompous asides and analogies rarely enhance the meaning of Joe’s tale, and his assumed validity is often as annoying as it is comical.  These scenes function as both a framing device for the narrative and an often ruthless directorial self-critique.

Continue reading