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Hopeful escapes

by The Editor
January 16, 2020
in Life Style
0
Hopeful escapes

There have been several movie adaptations of the classic Louisa May Alcott novel. The latest, Little Women (PG, 135 minutes, opens today, 4 stars ), brings a jolt of energy to a story set in 19th-century Massachusetts, making it spring to life in a way that sets the standard for period drama.

Told as snapshots in the life of the March family, the story opens with the March sisters and their mother "Marmee" (Laura Dern) already living in "genteel poverty" – the women are not exactly starving, nor are they ready to give up their housekeeper. Yet they cannot afford to pass up any chance of improving their lot, whether it be by cosying up to wealthier relatives or by marriage.

Much credit for this work's vibrancy goes to director and screenwriter Greta Gerwig. She makes every line and scene count.

When Jo March, played by Saoirse Ronan, goes dancing with Laurie (Timothee Chalamet), for example, what might be a throwaway set-up for another film-maker is a "go big or go home" moment for Gerwig, who seizes on it as both a visual experience to be enjoyed and an investment in the relationship of the two characters that will pay off later.

That holistic approach to storytelling – that it is not just dialogue, but also the other senses that convey emotion and propel the story – sets this work apart from other film versions of the 1868 novel.

This film is sweet, without being cute, and just clear-eyed enough about the realities of life for a certain class of women without turning it into a statement about historical gender inequality.

Gerwig recuts the chronology too, so that events of the past might be seen as honeyed reverie if it is a happy moment remembered in the present time, or made more bearable by an uplifting coda, if tragic.

The time-hopping adds layers of emotion not available in the text, especially when it becomes apparent that the story comes from the point of view of Jo, who in the first scene is introduced as a starving writer willing to embellish a point or two if it will get her published.

Ronan's Oscar nomination for Best Actress is richly deserved, as is this film's entry into the Best Picture list, but where is Gerwig's Best Director nomination? Her work here is superior to that of, say, Todd Phillips (Joker) or Quentin Tarantino (Once Upon A Time…In Hollywood), both of whom are nominated directors, so her snubbing once again proves Hollywood is a clique.

The Peanut Butter Falcon (PG13,97 minutes, opens today, 3 stars) is a rambling, ramshackle comedy-drama that like the makeshift boat at the centre of the film, should not float, but does so anyway.

The story turns its minuses into pluses because it never gives in to irony. Every moment feels authentic, even if some of them rely on broad Southern stereotypes.

Zack Gottsagen, an actor with Down syndrome, is Zak, a young man obsessed with escaping the retirement home in which he has been housed, so that he can train at the Florida wrestling school of his idol. Slipping through the gates, he meets Tyler, a fisherman with a troubled past played by Shia LaBeouf. Hot on their trail is Eleanor (Dakota Johnson), Zak's guardian.

The pair run, swim, paddle and sail their way through the swampy heat of the South, having adventures which change the course of Zak, Eleanor and Tyler's lives.

This is a work that comes with the usual lesson about what the handicapped can teach the able-bodied about following one's dreams, but film-makers Tyler Nilson and Michael Schwartz breathe new life into that old theme by never buffing away the film's improvised rawness.

Its odd beats and eccentric set-ups play out in full. Not all of it works, but the production makes a convincing and entertaining argument for including actors with Read More – Source

straitstimes

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There have been several movie adaptations of the classic Louisa May Alcott novel. The latest, Little Women (PG, 135 minutes, opens today, 4 stars ), brings a jolt of energy to a story set in 19th-century Massachusetts, making it spring to life in a way that sets the standard for period drama.

Told as snapshots in the life of the March family, the story opens with the March sisters and their mother "Marmee" (Laura Dern) already living in "genteel poverty" – the women are not exactly starving, nor are they ready to give up their housekeeper. Yet they cannot afford to pass up any chance of improving their lot, whether it be by cosying up to wealthier relatives or by marriage.

Much credit for this work's vibrancy goes to director and screenwriter Greta Gerwig. She makes every line and scene count.

When Jo March, played by Saoirse Ronan, goes dancing with Laurie (Timothee Chalamet), for example, what might be a throwaway set-up for another film-maker is a "go big or go home" moment for Gerwig, who seizes on it as both a visual experience to be enjoyed and an investment in the relationship of the two characters that will pay off later.

That holistic approach to storytelling – that it is not just dialogue, but also the other senses that convey emotion and propel the story – sets this work apart from other film versions of the 1868 novel.

This film is sweet, without being cute, and just clear-eyed enough about the realities of life for a certain class of women without turning it into a statement about historical gender inequality.

Gerwig recuts the chronology too, so that events of the past might be seen as honeyed reverie if it is a happy moment remembered in the present time, or made more bearable by an uplifting coda, if tragic.

The time-hopping adds layers of emotion not available in the text, especially when it becomes apparent that the story comes from the point of view of Jo, who in the first scene is introduced as a starving writer willing to embellish a point or two if it will get her published.

Ronan's Oscar nomination for Best Actress is richly deserved, as is this film's entry into the Best Picture list, but where is Gerwig's Best Director nomination? Her work here is superior to that of, say, Todd Phillips (Joker) or Quentin Tarantino (Once Upon A Time…In Hollywood), both of whom are nominated directors, so her snubbing once again proves Hollywood is a clique.

The Peanut Butter Falcon (PG13,97 minutes, opens today, 3 stars) is a rambling, ramshackle comedy-drama that like the makeshift boat at the centre of the film, should not float, but does so anyway.

The story turns its minuses into pluses because it never gives in to irony. Every moment feels authentic, even if some of them rely on broad Southern stereotypes.

Zack Gottsagen, an actor with Down syndrome, is Zak, a young man obsessed with escaping the retirement home in which he has been housed, so that he can train at the Florida wrestling school of his idol. Slipping through the gates, he meets Tyler, a fisherman with a troubled past played by Shia LaBeouf. Hot on their trail is Eleanor (Dakota Johnson), Zak's guardian.

The pair run, swim, paddle and sail their way through the swampy heat of the South, having adventures which change the course of Zak, Eleanor and Tyler's lives.

This is a work that comes with the usual lesson about what the handicapped can teach the able-bodied about following one's dreams, but film-makers Tyler Nilson and Michael Schwartz breathe new life into that old theme by never buffing away the film's improvised rawness.

Its odd beats and eccentric set-ups play out in full. Not all of it works, but the production makes a convincing and entertaining argument for including actors with Read More – Source

straitstimes

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Berlin (dpa) – The Federal Government is responding to the challenges of an increasingly unstable world order by means of a “policy...

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