Shailene
Woodley and . . . well, you know . . . . (from Fox Searchlight Pictures)
When
Elizabeth and I attended a showing of The
Descendants at the Piedmont Theater triplex the other night, we found the
theatre it was playing in thanks to the mini-marquee by the door, signed with eloquent
simplicity:
CLOONEY
Well
hell, who needs a title when we live in a George Clooney world? From here on,
all new George Clooney movies need only be titled Clooney and we'll be lining the block!
Joking
aside, The Descendants (a Best
Picture contender for this year’s Oscars, which I’ve sworn not to watch) is a pretty
good movie--but not a great one, a surprise considering it’s from director
Alexander Payne.
I’ve loved
every single one of Payne’s movies, starting with the uproarious and
transgressive Citizen Ruth, the
classic Election, the heartbreaking Bergmanesque
comedy About Schmidt, and the runaway
cockeyed wine-country romance Sideways. Alexander
Payne seemed incapable of writing a bad line or shooting a bad frame.
But of
course, we all trip sooner or later. With this genuine auteur (a label I don’t toss around freely), the misstep came a little
later, and it’s a perfectly forgivable one for a movie still worth seeing.
The Descendants is about the troubles in paradise faced by
Matt King (Clooney), lawyer and sole trustee to his family’s huge fortune,
including a parcel of 25,000 pristine acres of Hawaiian wonderland held by
Matt’s family for over a hundred years. The trust is now legally bound to sell
off the land. You can hear the saliva running as developers circle about, threatening
to flood the landscape with another dozen golf courses. What, we wonder, will
Matt do?
Matt
has other problems, serious ones. Just before the story begins, his wife
Elizabeth is plunged into a permanent coma following a boating accident. As a
result, Matt is forced to switch abruptly from “backup parent” to actual father
to his two daughters, 10-year-old Scottie and 17-year-old Alex, each one an
armful. Matt’s totally at sea where parenting is concerned, and becomes further
unhinged when Alex tells him Elizabeth was having an affair and planning to divorce
him.
The Descendants stumbles at the outset with a
long voice-over narration by Matt that threatens to walk us through the film’s themes
and how we’re supposed to feel. It’s as though Payne as both co-writer and
director, lost confidence in his filmmaking skills. (I sometimes wonder if voice-overs
are added as an anxious final touch; they rarely seem a good idea; see Woody
Allen’s Vicky Christina Barcelona.)
Eventually
though, the story finds its groove and for the rest of the way, The Descendants is an entertaining,
absorbing domestic comedy-drama. Sometimes it stumbles into credibility
problems as Matt perilously maneuvers the minefields of love and death, family
and legacy. Many scenes sting with real emotion and bitter humor while others stray
into sitcom territory.
Like
other Payne’s films it’s peopled with colorful oddballs, including Elizabeth’s brusque
but deluded and worshipful father (Robert Forster), and the wife (Judy Greer) of
Elizabeth’s lover whose flailing attempt at face-to-face forgiveness to Elizabeth only
uncovers her own rage in a sequence both funny and sad.
The
oddest ball in this Hawaii is Sid (Nick Krause), Alex’s numb-nuts, tag-along slacker
friend. Sid’s only skill is saying the worst possible thing at the worst
possible moment; he’s a paragon of surfer-dude cluelessness. For much of the
way, Sid is uproarious comic relief until near the end when this magnificent
doofus suddenly makes one of those Hollywood character arcs to become a wise
sage from whom Matt seeks advice one lonely dawn. Ridiculous.
Clooney
is, almost needless to say, wonderful, as his handsome and now-craggy face
captures all the subtle edges and shades of this confused, troubled man and he’s
pulled from love to rage and back again. He is truly one the best actors we
have and gets better as he gets older.
Standing
shoulder to shoulder with him is Shailene Woodley who portrays Alex’s welter of
conflicting emotions toward both her parents: one minute their devoted
daughter, the next minute their resentful opponent and hitting her mark every
time.
Scored
throughout with Hawaiian music, this film’s central point is that paradise is not
always a paradise to those who live in it day to day, even for its most privileged
citizens. Life, with its disappointments, corruption, betrayals, and accidents,
keeps happening, even in paradise. People are still people and life is still
life. And, in a particular sense, Hawaii is just another place in the world.
I sense
this idea is the reason for the muted colors of the cinematography (in the
print I saw), as though The Descendants
were trying to keep us from watching it like a Travel Channel show. Stay long
enough and the bloom will fade, if only slightly
It’s a proof
of Alexander Payne’s artistry that he ends the movie with Matt and his daughters
not sitting on a golden beach watching the sun set over a turquoise ocean (a
Lifetime movie cliché), but indoors, sprawled together on the living room couch
watching March of the Penguins. They
could as well be a family living in director Payne’s native Nebraska.
-----------------------------------------------------------
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Actor
Uwe Kockische as Commissario Brunetti
“Ach du
lieber!” I muttered the first time I watched Donna Leon/Commissario Brunetti on MHZ’s criminally addictive International Mystery series. “The
Germans are at it again!”
This
time a small army of them has infiltrated Venice, Italy, taken over the city’s
police department and now are investigating crimes and arresting the perps, all
right under the noses of the Venetians, without their awareness, assistance, approval,
or even disapproval. And they all speak perfect hoch Deutsch (though they’ve picked up a few Italian words, such as
“basta” and “commissario”).
OK, I'm
kidding! Now I’ll try to explain: The “Donna Leon” of the title is the author
of a well-regarded series of police procedural novels set in Venice featuring
police detective (“Commissario”) Guido Brunetti. For reasons I’m unable to
determine, Ms. Leon does not allow her books to be translated into Italian.
Further,
when it came around to producing films based on the novels, a German production
company stepped in and stocked the series entirely with Germans from lead actor
Uwe Kockische, as Brunetti, down to the grips and prop guys. Not even an
Italian around to man the honey wagon, from what I can see.
If you
can wrestle past the cognitive dissonance of supposedly native Italian characters speaking eloquent German, Commissario Brunetti is a good show, as are most of MHZ’s mystery
series. Each film is well written, directed and eloquently photographed, with
excellent performances by an appealing cast, including the attractively scruffy
Kockische; Michael Degan as Panetta, Brunetti’s vain, lazy, and incompetent
superior; and Karl Fischer as his frumpy sidekick Sergeant Vianello.
Of
course, the best performance of all is given by the city of Venice, the mystery
lurking in its canals and endless, shadowy mazes a perfect complement to the
mysteries its characters struggle with. From whatever angle you view Venice, it
never seems the same.
Brunetti shares the best qualities of other
MHZ mystery series: deliberate pacing, attention to detail of both characters
and their environments, a willingness to linger and savor the worlds they live
in.
Still, even
after decades of tolerating WWII Nazi movies cast with non-German actors barking
“Ve haf vays of making you talk!”, I can’t quite get my poor head around German
actors, no matter how good, playing everyday Italians. A similar problem arose
last year with the PBS Mystery series
Zen, this one featuring an entirely British
cast playing Italian cops in Rome. It feels like the 19th century
all over, as though Italy were being carved up by European powers once again.
Commissario Brunetti (like Zen) never rings true, never rings Italian. It lacks the homegrown spice
of the other International Mystery series,
all of which draw their cast and crew from the nations they’re set in,
including another good German series Scene
of the Crime and the captivating Inspector
Montalbano¸ which is set in sunny Sicily and feels Sicilian to its core.
Commissario Brunetti, for all its professionalism
and good intentions, is just too darned
. . . German.
(re-edited 2/27/12)
(re-edited 2/27/12)
Copyright
2012 by Thomas Burchfield
Thomas Burchfield has recently completed his 1920s gangster thriller Butchertown. He can be friended on Facebook, followed on Twitter, and read at Goodreads. You can also join his e-mail list via tbdeluxe [at] sbcglobal [dot] net. He lives in Northern California with his wife, Elizabeth.
4 comments:
Excellent film analysis. Burchfield is better than reading Rotten Toms.
Thanks, John, but I'd guess moviegoers find Rotten Toms is a little more efficient.
The big problem with the Brunetti series (and to a lesser extent, Zen) is that the actors remain very un-Italian in their body language. They do nothing with their hands, unlike Italians, whose active hands and body are part of their language. (Did you notice, by the way, that Brunetti and his family are played by different actors after the first four episodes. Further disconcerting.)
--Marty Jukovsky
Thanks for chiming in, Marty! You're absolutely right. The actors, while good actors, don't embody the cultural tics of the characters they're playing. I noticed the change in casting, but don't know the story behind it.
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