Tag Archives: Inception

Rocks Fall, Everyone Might Die

Whiy yes, I did just completely forget to post a film review last Thursday. Well done me. Schedule resuming normally this week. Also, spoiler-phobes, be warned that the end of several films (including Toy Story 3) are discussed below.

When an artist, or a viewer, knows that a film will be the last in a series, they suddenly have license to raise the stakes in a way they couldn’t before. One of the biggest reasons it’s hard to create stakes in an ongoing series is a certain reluctance on the part of the creators to either put major characters in enough jeopardy that the audience believes they’re actually in danger, or to invest in more than one or two characters in the first place. The former problem is one that Western comic books often face; the latter is closer to a James Bond scenario, where supporting players come and go and are largely interchangeable.

Stakes, however, are about more than the logical knowledge that a character might or might not die. And Pixar used this knowledge, more than anything else, to create a terrifying sequence in Toy Story 3. Even though it’s the end of the series, and so one or two characters might be lost, I doubt anyone would really believe that the movie would kill all of the main characters at a go outside the context of the shot.  As the toys head toward incineration, a small part of your brain knows something will stop it. But when you trust a filmmaker, as an audience member, you also trust that bad things could really happen. (I could not get over the fact that Disney’s The Princess and the Frog actually killed its comic relief.)

For my generation, I don’t think things were ever the same, movie-wise, after Mufasa’s death. All bets were off, at that point, and it was the first time many of us lucky to have our parents imagined what it would be like to lose one of them.

This is not to say that killing or threatening to kill beloved characters is the only way to create stakes. In Inception, it’s established very early that killing someone in a dream just wakes them up. Though pain is on the table, there’s a safety net in place. But by the introduction of limbo, Christopher Nolan cleverly removes that safety net without violating the premise. Your body can’t die in a dream, but go too deeply, and the mind can get trapped. It’s terrifying, and at the same time supports the greater story he’s trying to tell.

Stakes can go awry, however. Danny Boyle’s Sunshine is 2/3 of an excellent movie, but the last act disintegrates.  In part, I feel it’s because it veers away from why it’s so important for the characters to be where they are in the first place. It’s not just their own lives they’re fighting for, but the survival of the planet. The points at which the film is most grounded are those where their struggle is reset in this context; when it’s veers too close to a locked-room horror movie, it gets silly.

Sometimes the first film in a series can have good stakes because it isn’t clear that it’s going to be a series. Obviously, Harry won’t die in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone; even if you haven’t read the books, that’s going to be apparent. In the first Matrix movie, on the other hand, it wasn’t evident that any character was or wasn’t safe, and it gave the film’s dangers an added sense of urgency. As with Inception, a world with different rules is still made one with very real and dangerous consequences.

In film, then, as in many story telling media, stakes are the foundation of, and grow out of, solid storytelling technique. Characters must stand at risk of losing something, as concrete as the screenwriters’ clichéd “glass of water” or as intangible as their lover’s affection. There’s a special sort of intensity, however, that comes from the danger of death, either for oneself or someone else. The climax of The Dark Knight has to do, at first blush, with the lives of a great many strangers. In the end, it boils down to the life of Gordon’s son.  By tracking who stands to lose what, you can see where the weight of the film’s emotion falls.

That said, film as a visual medium also has to consider artistic perspectives when making these choices, consistent with the film’s style and tone. The lighting, in the example of Toy Story 3, is a large and memorable part of the scene. Music can be helpful too, though it can risk veering into narm territory if it’s too over-the-top or directly manipulative. There’s a line between drama and melodrama, after all.

Watching a bunch of toys, however, bravely take each other’s hands as they stare death in the face is moving because we’ve invested in the characters, because the threat is real, and because the world of the film allows for the possibility that they might be right in believing they won’t make it.  The film takes the threat seriously, so the audience can too. It develops characters (it’s meaningful that Buzz starts it, and Woody finishes) and it also serves as an emotional punch that the plot has developed toward, not simply a twist for shock’s sake.

Pixar is so successful because it gets these sort of fundamentals right. A lot of Hollywood offerings could stand to take notes.

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Oscar Nominees 2010

I don’t know if it was just a better year for movies or if the frontrunners were just obvious earlier, but this year’s nominations seem both predictable and hard to quibble with. The Academy, for the most part, seems to have acknowledged well-made films, if not much off the beaten track. I have seen five of the ten Best Picture nominees so far, and have Winter’s Bone downloaded from Amazon previously. That leaves me four to get myself to before the show – I might actually be able to do that.

As I’ve gotten older, and learned more and more about the Academy, I am less mentally on board with the Oscars. They’re petty, and based on popularity, and all the other complaints that get trotted out every year. Sure. (And they have terrible taste in music: Best Song is almost always a travesty.)

But emotionally, I can’t quite let them go. Part is nostalgia; my father and I both love film, and he and I used to pick apart the nominations and then watch the show together, while largely ignoring the SAG Awards, the BAFTAs, the Golden Globes, etc. These award shows were always firmly in the “useful in as far as they help you predict the Oscars” category for me as a child.

And I have to say, I love the schmaltz, to a point. I grew up in the golden Billy Crystal years (his Titanic send-up to the tune of the Gilligan’s Island theme will always be timeless to me). And though the post-Crystal hosts have been uneven, seeing everyone dressed to the nines, seeing the little montages interspersed throughout the evening, the occasional Adrien-Brody-kisses-Halle-Berry moment… they’re all fun, and as long as I have the distance to treat them that way, I try not to get too bent out of shape.

(My father, to this day can’t watch The Sound of Music without angrily commenting that Doctor Zhivago was ROBBED.)

So while everyone and their mom knows that Hailee Steinfeld was in no way a supporting actress, or that all but one of the Best Actor slots were basically locked even before the nominations were announced, or that Natalie Portman is an all but sure thing, I can’t quit the Oscars altogether. Partly because it’s a link back to movie history, even if the Hollywood machine, political side of it, and partly because I am still at heart one of the little girls practicing her acceptance speech with a shampoo bottle. (Though after last year, I felt less self-conscious about the fact that my imaginary award changed from actress to director when I was 15 or so.)

Comments on the Best Picture nominees I’ve seen: reviews for True Grit and Black Swan are up.

Inception was my personal favorite film last year, but I don’t know that it was the best, necessarily; also, given the type of film it is, it has no shot at winning. It is nice, though, to see it get a nomination, and I think this year showed nicely that there were ten films worth recognizing.

Toy Story 3 was an excellent, heart-wrenching film, and while the Toy Story franchise is not necessarily my favorite part of Pixar, it’s hard to find flaws with it. Again, not going to win, but we’ll see how many years in a row Pixar gets a nomination. (And an easy lock for Best Animated Feature.)

The Kids Are All Right struck me as a movie with some phenomenal acting, but that would have been critically unremarkable if not for the genders of the three leads. I’m not saying it was a bad film, because it wasn’t, and I quite liked both Annette Benning and Mark Ruffalo in it, but the screenplay was a bit “eh” to me. I am all for more mainstream, loving depictions of non-heterosexual, cis-gendered couples in which their sexuality is not a huge deal; I just don’t expect the movie to be patted on the back for that alone.

I am very much looking forward to Winter’s Bone. More word on that once I watch it.

And, finally, on a side note, I was glad to see the Coens get an unexpected nod for Direction, even if I do mourn that it probably knocked Chris Nolan out. Both True Grit and Inception were so-well directed it seems a crime to ignore either.

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Top Movies of 2010

The title of this entry might be slightly misleading. I’m in no position to evaluate the top ten movies released this year. However, I can give you my list of favorites that I, myself, watched for the first time.  These are in a rough order of how much I liked them, rather than which is “best.”

10. The Secret of Kells

A beautiful animated film with a sweet, enchanting story, The Secret of Kells won me over almost right away. The art would have been enough to make the film a pleasure by itself, but the voice acting and the screenplay were also top-notch.

IMDB | Trailer

9.  Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, part 1

It’s more a chapter than a stand-alone film, but I think it’s one of the best in the series. The cinematography and the acting have come leaps and bounds, and it leaves you exhausted and impatient for the finale.

IMDB | Trailer

8. Shutter Island

Scorsese tackles noir/horror with panache. It may not be his best work ever, but it is still an excellent film. Great performances (Patricia Clarkson was a standout in a tiny role, and Mark Ruffalo is fantastic) and I would love to see it again.

IMDB | Trailer

7. Inglourious Basterds

Tarantino is a polarizing artist, but I tend to like him. I don’t know if this is his best work, but it is very solid. The opening sequence will, I think, become a classic example of how to film suspense.  The meta conceit of the film premiere worked for me, and I think that the idea of this sort of fake history is terribly interesting to see in execution.

IMDB | Trailer

6. The Hurt Locker

The Best Picture winner of last year deserved it, in my opinion. It was a tough film to watch, but beautifully made. The film’s thesis was a bit heavy-handed, but it was a master class in creating an effective character. Well worthwhile.

IMDB | Trailer

5.  The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus

A weirdly liner film, considering Terry Gilliam, but I very much enjoyed it. The visuals are beautiful, and it had a nice fairytale feel to it. It being Heath Ledger’s last film, it has a strange overlay to it, but the execution is good. Andrew Garfield is a standout, and Tom Waits is perfectly cast as the devil.

IMDB | Trailer

4. Easy A

This was the year’s biggest surprise for me. I went into it mildly skeptical, when a friend wanted to see it. But I completely fell in love. I generally don’t like high school films, but Emma Stone is completely disarming, her family is perfect (I want them to adopt me), and it’s intelligently constructed. Yes, it’s a fantasy, but it treats its characters like flawed but complex human beings, even if some of them are (theoretically) 17. I loved it.

IMDB | Trailer

3.  Brick

I had meant to see Brick forever, but it took until this year for me to sit down and do so.  That’s a shame, because it’s a skillfully constructed movie that both exemplifies its tropes and rises above them. Another on the list to re-watch, the plot is wound so tightly that watching it the first time, I couldn’t even really pay much attention to the filming or the craft except in brief patches. Great noir.

IMDB | Trailer

2. Moon

The best sci fi movie I’ve seen in ages, and one of the best films generally, Moon has all the punch of a Ray Bradbury story. Sam Rockwell gives a standout performance, and the movie deftly copes with anxieties about identity, purpose, and sacrifice. Kevin Spacey also does some great vocal work. For a stark, minimalistic production, the filming is perfect, and the film boasts a screenplay I wish I’d written. Highly recommended.

IMDB | Trailer

1. Inception

I just rewatched Inception, and it gets even better on subsequent reviews. Thoughtful, plotty, fun and yet moving, Inception is everything I want in a summer blockbuster and more. A friend gave me a new layer of things to consider, and now I need to watch it yet again to consider them. I loved it.

IMDB| Trailer

Honorable Mentions: Dr. No, The Shop Around the Corner, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Sherlock Holmes, Love Actually

Worst Movie I saw in 2010: The Last Airbender. Not even close.

Best Movie I haven’t yet seen, as best I can tell: Toy Story 3. Yes, I know. I will see it soon.

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