Look Through The Window
November 25, 2015
D: Lenny Abrahamson. DP: Danny Cohen. W: Emma Donoghue. Starring: Brie Larson/Jacob Tremblay/Joan Allen/William H. Macy/Tom McCamus/Sean Bridgers. (NOTE: based on Donoghue’s book of the same name)
This year’s Oscar race will be a dense one in the best actress category. Between Saoirse Ronan’s performance in Brooklyn, Cate Blanchett’s performance in Carol, and this performance from Brie Larson it will be a competitive year. This is frankly, exciting! With television becoming the hot place for pithy and complex female roles it is great to see cinema stepping up again. Of course, all the leads are white actresses, but the racial imbalances of Hollywood deserves its own post (or you can simply look at The Hollywood Reporter‘s recent ridiculous justifications for this).
Room is based on Emma Donoghue’s novel with her also penning the screenplay. The novel is told from the perspective of five year old Jack, played in the film by Jacob Tremblay, as he lives in a singular room with his Ma (Larson). Naming all the things around him, he’s nurtured to believe this trap is all that exists. After his birthday Ma decides Jack is old enough to be told about the outside that lies beyond Room and the basic details of her kidnapping by Old Nick (Sean Bridgers). This leads to Ma and Jack’s escape plan for getting out of Room.
Donoghue’s script partially replicates this point of view as Jack provides voice-over, lending the audience to understand his wonder at the world and ignorance of it. As he climbs into the wardrobe to sleep and hide from Old Nick during his visits you feel the breath of the novel in the film. The snips and changes to the story work and the second chapter of the pair’s new life allows for great exploration of Ma’s mental state and family chemistry. Larson is given more to work with than the novel, which helps balance her adult trauma with her son’s.
Larson has been steadily working since she played Toni Collette’s daughter on the Showtime series United States of Tara created by Diablo Cody. Her starring role in the indie hit Short Term 12 was memorable and she’s been popping up in supporting roles in films like Trainwreck, Don Jon, and The Spectacular Now. Here she can truly shine handling Ma’s frustrations with her seclusion and repeated violations while also creating a safe space for Jack. Her generic looks allow Ma to remind you of any girl at university you might have known. Larson is all things at once, but with the pure subtly that allows the devastating circumstances of the story to ring true. She is well supported by Joan Allen who does a heart wrenching turn as Ma’s own mother.
I cannot rave enough about Tremblay as Jack who captures your attention from start to finish. He performs little and lives it all. A tracking shot over a truck as he attempts his escape will have you barely breathing for minutes. The camera aligns itself with Jack, not showing things his Ma shields him from. This works to build palpable tension and menace that director Lenny Abrahamson skilfully paces. Known for Frank and What Richard Did, he and cinematographer Danny Cohen build a sense of space and intimacy without merely using intense close-ups on their actors. Their atmosphere allows pain to live no matter the space it is confined to. The film is not trauma as spectacle, but rather as experience of character. Credit must also be give to Stephen Rennicks for the score, its placement lacks sentimentality only amplifying not indulging the emotional register of scenes.
Room has been on the festival circuit and will only reach UK cinemas at the end of January, but releases today in the US. A sure contender this award season it is simply a beautifully made film that joins the ranks of recent superb film adaptations. Hopefully the success of these lower budget films continues and we will see more films like this and less of the typical three act studio trauma sprawls of late.
A Room of One’s Own
October 8, 2015
I have delved back into reading a large stack of adaptations that are coming our way. I started with The Martian moved onto Brooklyn and am now reading Room. Written from the perspective of a five year old living in a solidarity room with his mum, the new film has already gotten acclaim from the Toronto film festival. Starring Brie Larson, a tremendous young actress, I am eager to see how Emma Donoghue adapts her own work. The film will be released in October in the US, but won’t make it to the UK until January.
Room
Shameless Truths
August 19, 2015
D: Judd Apatow. DP: Jody Lee Lipps. W: Amy Schumer. Starring: Amy Schumer/Bill Hader/Colin Quinn/Brie Larson/Tilda Swinton/Vanessa Bayer/LeBron James/Mike Birbiglia/Evan Brinkman/Randall Parl/Ezra Miller/Jon Glaser.
If you don’t know who Amy Schumer is at this point you might need to move to a new rock to live under. Whether or not you have seen her three years running comedy central show or any of her stand up specials, you will at least have seen her on a magazine cover or sadly express her condolences to the families of the two women killed in Lafayette, LA in a screening of this film. I do not want to dwell on the shooting as it’s painful being from Louisiana myself, safe to say she handled it with aplomb.
Regardless the Schumer penned first time acting film Trainwreck is the sort of modernistic romantic comedy you can enjoy. Rather than soapy clean rom coms like Something Borrowed or struggling adult ones like How Do You Know, Trainwreck barrels ahead with a lead who is messy and complex. The film follows Schumer as Amy in a period of her life where her ill father (Colin Quinn) is moved into a nursing home by her and her sister Kim (Brie Larson). At different places in their life with Kim married and stepmother, Amy struggles to deal with her father and a job at a men’s magazine where she is not writing work she’s really proud of. On an assignment to interview successful sports doctor Aaron Conners (Bill Hader) she grabs drinks with him and sleeps with him and he actually calls her again.
Schumer has publicly said she did not write the film for her to star rather for Judd Apatow to direct. This is in fact his first directorial effort on a script he did not write himself. But what Schumer is able to do is balance a touching journey with her ill father and different sister with practical 30-something trails of dating and workplace slumps. Hitting a lot of typical romantic comedy beats Schumer in voiceover makes fun of them yet uses them to expose her character’s decision to not have expectations or work through much in relationships. Rather than say Mindy Kaling’s interpretation of rom coms, here they are something to work against.
Trainwreck is similar in tone to Bridesmaids in its open humor about sex, with Schumer’s own twist on the female perspective. Schumer does well enough though her performance is derivative of her standup and her own persona. Yet she has excellent chemistry with SNL veteran Hader who is well cast here. The couple’s connection seems authentic and despite the film’s adherence to some rom com rules they seem to connect realistically. Quinn is touching as Amy’s father, but the steal away is probably Tilda Swinton as Amy’s magazine boss whose tight one liners are all the better coming from Swinton. Brie Larson is still one of my favorite young actresses out there, just see Short Term 12, just do it now.
Ultimately, Trainwreck packs most of its laughs in the first two acts and has maybe a few too many I love NY style shots. Also, the cameos border on Apatow ridiculous levels towards the end, which is frankly too much with Aaron’s already annoying friendship with basketball super star LeBron James. It’s a good first feature for a strong female voice and one that lets herself be a little bit messy and work through it. It might not be for everyone, but it’s different and shameless and that’s a great way to be.