Another season of the Robert Burns Centre Film Theatre Film Club
started on Monday night with the showing of Sofia Coppola's latest film The
Bling Ring (2013). As with her previous movie Somewhere
(2010) she not only directed but also wrote and co-produced it as well. Our
host for the evening was Film Club regular Alec Barclay and he started his
introduction by telling us a little about the director’s background. 42 year
old Coppola is the only daughter of Francis Ford Coppola who was responsible
for directing such films as The Godfather Trilogy (1972-1990), The
Conversation (1974) and of course one of the top three films of all time
(my words not Alec's) Apocalypse
Now (1979). She started her career by appearing as an infant in seven of
her father’s films. Her directing career started with the 1999 movie The Virgin Suicides, a film that tells
of events surrounding the suicides of five sisters in an upper middle class
suburb of Detroit during the 1970's. Her second feature was the award winning Lost in Translation (2003), which
starred Scarlett Johansson and Bill Murray as an ill matched couple that form a
touching non-sexual relationship after a chance meeting in a Tokyo hotel. She's
followed this with Marie Antoinette
(2006), loosely based on the life of the French Queen leading up to the French
Revolution; it won an Academy Award for Costume Design.
The Bling Ring is based on a
magazine article that appeared in Vanity
Fare, which in turn is based on the true story of a group of seven young
people who between October 2008 and August 2009 burgled the Los Angles homes of
several celebrities including Lindsay Lohan, Orlando Bloom and Megan Fox. The
value of the stolen designer goods and cash was said to be in excess of 3
million dollars. In fact a great deal of the stolen property belonged to the
American Heiress and socialite Paris Hilton who along with Kirsten Dunst appear
in the movie as themselves. These spoilt rich kids track the activities of the
celebrities on line and enter their homes whilst they’re away. Its Sofia
Coppola's knowledge involving the creed of celebrity culture and its effect on
impressionable youngsters that makes this film a stylish take on the world of
the imagined importance of material wealth and instant communication.
Girls have just got to have fun.... |
You really want to dislike these shallow middle class Hollywood
burglars with their know all attitude and swagger, but because the film does
not moralise or criticise the ring members or there ultra opulent victims, and
because of the rich vain of humour that runs right through out the films 90
minutes running time you can’t help but have a sneaking regard for these young
people and as Chris Fujiwara said in his programme notes for the 2013 EIFF 'Coppola creates a detailed and casually
convincing portrait of the social milieu of the informal gang, enabling us to
view them as they see themselves: not as rebels or daring outlaws, but as
normal kids who are merely acting out to the fullest the premises of their
media driven, consumerist culture by taking literally the fantasy of imaginary
intimacy with celebrities'
It certainly would be remiss of me not to mention the young cast
who are excellent especially Katie Chang who plays the so called leader of the
gang Rebecca Ahn, Israel Broussard as the only male member of the gang Marc
Hall and not forgetting Emma Watson (Nicki Moore) who has grown from the 11
year old Hermione Granger in Harry Potter
and the Philosophers Stone (2001) via her part as Lucy the young dresser in
My
Week With Marilyn (2011) into a very beautiful and talented 23 year
old actress. As our host said to me afterwards he was not expecting a great
deal from this film, but what we did get was an enjoyable and amusing slice of the
modern day, middle class American life style.
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