Showing posts with label Kirsten Dunst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kirsten Dunst. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 July 2014

The Two Faces of January.


Patricia Highsmith was an American novelist and short story writer that was best known for crime fiction and had many of her novels adapted for the cinema these included what was probable her best-known character Tom Ripley. To this end two of the story’s were adapted, the first, and to my mind the best, was in 1960 and starred Alain Delon, in his first mayor role, as Ripley in Rene Clement’s Plein Soleil. Another version of her 1955 novel The Talented Mr Ripley was made in 1999 by the late Anthony Minghella and featured Mat Damon and the 1974 novel Ripley’s Game was also adapted twice, first in 1977 by Wim Wenders as Der Amerikanische Freund starring Dennis Hopper as Ripley and then again in 2002 by Liliana Cavani (best known for The Night Porter 1974) with John Malkovich in the lead part.
 
Collette Macfarland.
The latest adaptation is based on a less well known 1964 novel which has the same name as this new movie The Two Faces of January (2014). Its directed by Hossein Amin whose first feature this is and normally would be better known as a screenwriter for films that include the award winning Drive (2011) and the 2013 Japanese-American fantasy action 47 Ronin.
 
Chester Macfarland.
The story is set in 1962; a rich and attractive couple are staying in one of Athens top hotels. While Chester Macfarland (Viggo Mortensen) and his younger wife Collette (Kirsten Dunst) are out taking in the sites they meet Rydal Keener (Oscar Isaac) an American, Greek speaking tour guide. Chester suspects that he is ‘scamming’ young female tourists while showing them around the city! Impressed by the couples obvious wealth, Rydal sees’ his chance of not only making some money from these American tourists but also he is attracted to Colette! But all is not what it seems when Rydal gets involved in moving an unconscious man who its claimed attacked Chester. With events taking an ever-sinister turn we are never sure who we can trust and the threesome end up in a battle of wits than can only lead to disaster.  
 
Rydal Keener.
Amin’s old-fashioned melodramatic thriller is unmistakably similar to Highsmith’s other adapted stories with its element of middle class criminality, its good-looking well-dressed protagonists and the classy Mediterranean locations. In this case DOP Marcel Zyskind takes us on glorious travelogue of Crete, Athens and Istanbul. All three of the leads in the film carry the story with some panache, although the film is a health hazard as pointed out by the BBFC when it warned that there are ‘scenes of smoking’ a warning that certainly does not underestimate the power of passive smoking!  You will probably notice in the credits Anthony Minghella has been thanked and his son Max was the Executive Producer of this pleasantly watchable film.



                                                                                                          



Monday, 30 January 2012

Melancholia.


Add caption

Following Lars von Triers Nazi gaffe at the Cannes Film Festival I suppose we should, by rights, boycott his work but that’s the equivalent of cutting your nose off to spite your face! How can you ignore the Danish filmmaker who can produce such movies as Breaking the Waves (1996), The Idiots (1998) Dancer in the Dark (2000), Dogville (2003) and of course Antichrist (2009) a truly haunting film that gave Charlotte Gainsbourg a Best Actress Award. Its terrifyingly beautiful prologue is one of the best opening sequences of any film since Once Upon a Time in the West (1968). Shot in slow motion black and white, a married couple make passionate love in the bathroom of their fourth floor apartment. Their young son Nic opens the gate of his cot; see’s his parents as he passes the open bathroom door, climbs on to a table beside an open window knocking over three figurines marked Grief, Pain and Despair. Its snowing as he falls from the window to his death accompanied by his woollen rabbit. The complete scene is in silence except for the aria from Handel’s pastoral opera Rinaldo and now von Trier gives us another memorable imaginative opening piece.

Melancholia (2011), is probably the directors most ambitious mainstream feature film to date, it has a full seven minutes long opening sequence which includes a planet colliding with, and destroying earth. There are strange slowed down images that resemble holograms including Kirsten Dunst striding in her wedding dress with creepers dragging at her feet, Charlotte Gainsbourg carrying her son across a golf course that appears as a quagmire both against a nightscape gorgeously lit by the moon and the afore mentioned planet. The films narrative is divided into two sections each one dealing with one of two sisters, Justin played by Dunst and Clair portrayed by Gainsbourg. The first deals with Justin’s farcical wedding day and introduces us to her dysfunctional friends and family including her mother and father played by Charlotte Rampling and John Hurt. As the elaborate celebrations, organised by her sister, disintegrates Justin descends in an ever-deeper melancholic depression. The second segment focuses on Clair who along with her husband (Kiefer Sutherland) and their young son Leo (Cameron Spur) administers a very large Country House Hotel with full size golf coarse and some very luxurious grounds. Clair is forced to allow Justine to stay at their hotel when her sister’s mental state deteriorates; all the while the strange blue planet called Melancholia gets ever closer to earth, the same planet we see in the prologue. Strangely Justine deals with the impending catastrophe and the acceptance of death far better than her sister, declaring that life on earth is evil anyway!

Justin and Clair.
The most beautiful scene in this movie occurs in this section and involves Justin who goes out at night to take a closer look at the approaching planet, removes her clothes and lays on the bank a small stream, naked, this scene is so wonderfully lit with a tremendous blue glow, the true work of a cinematic genius.

This co-production between Denmark, Sweden and France is in English not von Trier’s native Danish and was shot on location in Vastra Gotaland Southern Sweden.
As with most of his work this hypnotic movie does not fit an American or British filmmaking template, more akin with the Ingmar Bergman’s school of filmmaking. David Thomson said in an article in the Guardian newspaper and I paraphrase, von Trier is here to trouble us, not to entertain us, and this latest offering does just that. It’s not a film you either like or dislike, it’s a film that you admire and marvel at. 

Melancholia.