Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Boyhood Review

1.5 Stars
 
Director Richard Linklater's 12 year project has concluded in the Oscar-nominated film Boyhood.  Linklater has previously directed A Scanner Darkly, The Bad News Bears, School of Rock, Before Sunrise and Dazed and Confused.  This is Linklater's first time being nominated for Best Picture and Best Director; it's his 3rd time being nominated for Best Writing.  His previous 2 nominations were for Before Midnight and Before Sunset, which he co-wrote with Ethan Hawke who has also starred in many of his films.  Hawke also stars in Boyhood as Mason's father.  His performance has also earned him a Best Supporting Actor nomination.  This is Hawke's 2nd acting Oscar nomination.  He was previously nominated for his role in Training Day.  Though neither Hawke nor Linklater have won an Oscar, Boyhood did earn the Golden Globe award for Best Director.  In fact, Boyhood has been nominated for 6 Academy Awards.  Patricia Arquette has been nominated for her performance as Mason's mother, and the film is also in the running for Best Original Screenplay and Best Editing.  
Boyhood is the literal coming-of-age story about a boy named Mason (Ellar Coltrane) as he grows from a 6 year old boy into an 18 year old man.  The reason I say literal is because Linklater filmed Coltrane, Arquette and Hawke for days at a time over the 12 year period.  We are allowed to witness Mason and his family not only go through things a normal growing boy would experience (love, divorce, step-parents, sibling rivalry, birthdays, graduations), but we also get to actually watch the family grow and age in this unique cinematic accomplishment.
After watching the preview, I was hoping that the "12 years in the making" thing wasn't just a gimmick and that there was actually a movie worth all the hype waiting behind the title.  I didn't go in with high hopes and only predicted 3.0 stars, but I was honestly disappointed.   Boyhood is nominated for Best Writing, but it felt at times like a re-run of Saved By The Bell or an after school special.   The dialogue didn't feel real.  It felt forced and staged like a high school play.  The film is also nominated for Best Editing, but I found it difficult at times to keep track of time passing throughout the movie.  There didn't seem to be any consistency as to when time passed or how much time has passed.  And it often took a minute to realize time has passed and then to have to figure out who the new characters are. Boyhood is over 2 and a half hours long, but I could have done with about an hour less of this movie that bored me for most of it.  I'm giving it 1.5 stars as being barely worth renting and definitely not being a movie I would ever own.  I give kudos to Linklater for the ambitious project, but Tim Burton's Nightmare Before Christmas took over 3 years to make with only filming seconds a day due to meticulous and innovative stop-motion animation.  Burton's film is still gaining new fans over 20 years later and is now both a Christmas and Halloween classic.  I don't think the gimmick of Boyhood will sustain it for long.  So, what movie will be on my mind next?  We shall see.

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Boyhood Preview

Director Richard Linklater's 12 year project has concluded in the Oscar-nominated film Boyhood.  Linklater has previously directed A Scanner Darkly, The Bad News Bears, School of Rock, Before Sunrise and Dazed and Confused.  This is Linklater's first time being nominated for Best Picture and Best Director; it's his 3rd time being nominated for Best Writing.  His previous 2 nominations were for Before Midnight and Before Sunset, which he co-wrote with Ethan Hawke who has also starred in many of his films.  Hawke also stars in Boyhood as Mason's father.  His performance has also earned him a Best Supporting Actor nomination.  This is Hawke's 2nd acting Oscar nomination.  He was previously nominated for his role in Training Day.  Though neither Hawke nor Linklater have won an Oscar, Boyhood did earn the Golden Globe award for Best Director.  In fact, Boyhood has been nominated for 6 Academy Awards.  Patricia Arquette has been nominated for her performance as Mason's mother, and the film is also in the running for Best Original Screenplay and Best Editing.  

Boyhood is the literal coming-of-age story about a boy named Mason (Ellar Coltrane) as he grows from a 6 year old boy into an 18 year old man.  The reason I say literal is because Linklater filmed Coltrane, Arquette and Hawke for days at a time over the 12 year period.  We are allowed to witness Mason and his family not only go through things a normal growing boy would experience (love, divorce, step-parents, sibling rivalry, birthdays, graduations), but we also get to actually watch the family grow and age in this unique cinematic accomplishment.

There have been "coming-of-age" movies since they first started making movies.  It's not a new idea.  But usually it's about a teen or a pre-teen and what they go through in school, or with a love interest, or a family drama.  But these movies usually just limit themselves to a day in the life, or maybe a year.   It's about losing a bit of innocence or naivety, it's about having to grow up in a sense when solid, beautiful, vibrant colors all of a sudden have darker hues to them.  We've also seen movies that have spanned periods of time.  Mr. Holland's Opus spans 30 years, but their son is played by 3 different actors throughout the movie.  The Butler spans about 60 years, but uses different actors and lots of special effects make-up to achieve aging.  This is the first movie to cover this large of a time period using all the same actors to portray the same main characters throughout.  That being said, that's really all that looks unique about Boyhood.  It looks like it will have moments that make you laugh, make you sad, and make you reminisce, but all of the good ones do that as well.  I'm hoping the "12 years in the making" thing isn't just a gimmick and that there is actually a movie worth all the hype and nominations waiting behind the title.  I'm not going in with high hopes.  I'm predicting 3.0 stars.  I think it will be enjoyable.  I think it will be something I'd watch again when it's on TV, but nothing about the preview makes me immediately think this will be a movie I own in my home collection.  Am I right?  We shall see.

The Grand Budapest Hotel Review

3.0 Stars
 
The Grand Budapest Hotel is the latest creation from comedic genius Wes Anderson.  Anderson is also responsible for giving us the quirky and brilliantly written Moonrise Kingdom, Fantastic Mr. Fox, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, The Royal Tenenbaums, and Rushmore.  Anderson is up for 3 Oscars this year for The Grand Budapest Hotel: Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Writing.  Anderson was nominated for Best Writing for Moonrise Kingdom, Best Animated Feature Film for Fantastic Mr. Fox and for Best Writing for The Royal Tenenbaums, though he has yet to win an Oscar.
The Grand Budapest Hotel is the story of a famous concierge named M. Gustave H (Ralph Fiennes) at a luxurious hotel in the fictional Republic of Zubrowka and takes place between the first and second World Wars.  It is also the story of his protege Zero Moustafa (Tony Revolori), the Lobby Boy who eventually took over the hotel.

Anderson has assembled some of his band of merry men that you would see in many of his films: Bill Murray, Owen Wilson and Jason Schwartzman.  And, like many of his films, some of Hollywood's best talent have come out to take part in the merriment: F. Murray Abraham, Ralph Fiennes, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe, Jeff Goldblum and Edward Norton to name a few.  Another common trait of an Anderson masterpiece is to take what would normally be a dramatic topic and turn it on it's head with some smart and well-written comedy.  He's already tackled grief, loss, abandonment, sibling rivalry and other hard-hitting themes.  In The Grand Budapest Hotel, he adds murder to the list.
The preview is a very accurate representation of what you get in the full movie.  Even if you didn't see the preview, you have a pretty good idea of what to expect if you have seen any other Wes Anderson movie.  The dialogue is fantastic.  The settings are gorgeous.  The characters are ridiculous but somehow believable.  The story is actually about the Lobby Boy Zero (Tony Revolori and F. Murray Abraham) who comes to own The Grand Budapest Hotel and how he was mentored by the best concierge in the business, M. Gustave H. (Ralph Fiennes).  Gustave is the most accommodating concierge around, especially to older, blonde, wealthy women who return regularly for his . . . services, to put it delicately.  One of his regulars was murdered and Gustave is their primary suspect.  This movie has everything: it's a love story, it's a murder mystery, it's a prison escape, and it's hilarious.  However, I'm giving it 3.0 stars.  I thought it worth the money in the theatres.  I'll probably watch it again when it's on TV, but it most likely won't make it to my home collection and I don't see this winning Best Picture.  Perhaps for Best Original Screenplay, but not Best Picture.  So, what Oscar-nominated movie will be on my mind next?  We shall see.