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December 13, 2011 By iluvcinema 11 Comments

Tuesday’s Overlooked Film: Away We Go (2009)

This week’s pick in the ongoing series from Todd at Sweet Freedom is Away We Go the 2009 comedy drama starring Maya Rudolph and John Krasinski, as an expectant couple who take to the road in search of a home to call their own. Away We Go is directed by Academy Award™-winning director Sam Mendes.

© Focus Features

Burt (Krasinski) and Verona (Rudolph) are expecting a baby, the joy of which they plan on sharing with Burt’s parents (Catherine O’ Hara and Jeff Daniels), who live nearby. This plan is turned on its head when his parents announce that they are moving thousands of miles away. As a result, the couple decides to plot out an itinerary that will take them across the United States (and Canada). At the end of the journey, they will decide which of the many places that they visit will be there new home.

Not all goes as planned; each place reveals to them a side of their friends and families that makes them question if they want to raise their daughter around these individuals. Their trip is interrupted by an emergency call from Burt’s brother in Florida, whose wife has left him and their daughter. This experience leads our couple to take stock and come to a definite decision about their future home.

At this point of the journey, they finally ‘arrive,’ realizing that home is not necessarily a place, but rather a state of being, so that no matter where they ‘are,’ with each other and baby to be will be ‘home.’

Focus Features

I found this movie equally funny and poignant at times. As with most ‘road’ movies, the physical journey acts as metaphor for an emotional or spiritual quest. It is no different here in Away We Go. But what moved me about this this film is that through the main and supporting characters we get to hear some of the real joy and pain that are a natural part of finding and maintaining relationships and family. I really feel like the director Sam Mendes was making a very personal picture and making his own statement about these issues.

Aside from the leads (who were awesome) I would be remiss of me not to mention some of my favorite supporting performances, … but then I would be listing everyone in the cast! For me this was that kind of movie. Yeah some of the couples they met may have been a bit caricatured, but what else would one expect in a road movie?

Away We Go was written by husband/wife team Dave Eggers and Vendela Vida and features original music from Scottish singer/songwriter Alexi Murdoch.

Filed Under: Overlooked Films Tagged With: away we go, john krasinski, maya rudolph, sam mendes

December 6, 2011 By iluvcinema 4 Comments

Tuesday’s Overlooked Film: Enchantment (1949)

This week’s selection is romantic and sappy (sorry, folks). But sometimes you need a proper romantic weepie about star-crossed lovers to carry you away …

Enchantment (1949), is set in World War II London although through a series of flashbacks we are introduced to the story’s main protagonists (David Niven and Teresa Wright). The plot is a little bit of a challenge to explain but not because of its complexity. The construction means that it vacillates between the present and the past in its various acts. So, for a plot synopsis, I defer to the TCM Movie Database. However I will try to encapsulate the plot as I remember (in brief) below.

At the start of the film, we are at the height of ‘The Blitz” in present-day London. Sir Roland Dane’s (David Niven) American grandniece Grizel (Evelyn Keyes) has paid her uncle a visit; she is seeking lodgings as there is a housing shortage in the city. Prior to her arrival, Sir Roland (‘Rollo’) had been reminiscing about the lost love of his life, Lark (Teresa Wright). Now we have full on flashback action …

… at which time we discover that Lark was an orphan who came to live with the Dane family as their ward. As time passes, they grow up and, in typical Cinderella fashion, Lark is treated with grave indifference by Rollo’s family, especially Rollo’s sister, Selina (played by Jayne Meadows); all except for Rollo, that is. He has fallen in love with Lark and vice versa. Of course the family will have none of this and Selina devises a scheme that will separate the lovers forever. The plot works – sort of. Upon Rollo’s realization of his sister’s meddling, he leaves the house, swearing to never return so long as his sister lives.

The sequences of the past are interspersed with the scenes of the present day in which Rollo’s niece meets a handsome young pilot named Pax Masterson (Farley Granger), who by sheer coincide, is has ties to the past tale of lost love. I will leave it to you the audience to figure out his relationship to the House of Dane, or you can go about reading the synopsis I provided. But let’s just say that while the loves of the past are gone and never to return, there is a glimmer of redemption to be had in the present.

The story of a love long lost dominates the narrative; the present-day romance left me a little ‘meh.’ Also, shifting timelines may prove too much for some, but I say just go with it. And while I really like David Niven as a screen presence, he may have been a little too old for the role of the adult Rollo.

This is by no means a perfect film, but it is pure romantic melodrama and the leads are lovely and talented enough to keep you engaged.

The Past and the Present (left to right: David Niven, Teresa Wright, Evelyn Keyes and Farley Granger)

 

Filed Under: Overlooked Films Tagged With: david niven, enchantment, evelyn keyes, farley granger, teresa wright

November 29, 2011 By iluvcinema 7 Comments

Tuesday’s Overlooked Films: Center Stage (2000) and The Company (2003)

This week’s selection started out as one film but has morphed into TWO selections. This week also comes with the following caveat: I love to dance and to watch it on film.

The first film I am discussing is Center Stage from 2000. The film was directed by Nicholas Hynter (History Boys, Madness of King George, The Crucible). The cast consists mostly of unknown actors with the exception of some of the supporting players, including Peter Gallagher, Donna Murphy and Debra Monk. This film also served as a pre-fame Zoe Saldana’s first big screen role.

The other distinction that the majority of the cast share is that they are either ballet dancers or, in the case of Saldana, a dancer with ballet training.

To put the plot in a nutshell, we are given an inside glimpse of the trials and tribulations of a group of young dancers at the fictitious American Ballet Academy in New York City. We have the ingenue (Amanda Schull), the dancer with the talent but with too much attitude (Saldana) and the young prodigy driven by a pushy stage mother (Pratt). You even have the “rebellious” dance instructor who just cannot be confined by the rules of the academy and who eventually breaks away and starts his own company.

Due to the acting inexperience of the central cast – notably Schull (whose story is one of the front burners), this is a film that one can find easy to dismiss. Also as a piece of storytelling, it reads more like a soap or after-school special than a motion picture. But for me, this film is all about the dancing. In my own life, I never amounted to much in the world of dance, aside from the compulsory ballet/tap/jazz/modern performances of my youth. But that never diminished my love of dance as a piece of performance – especially the ballet.

At nearly two hours of film, this may be more than many of you can bear but if you are someone who likes to dance or watch dance performances, I suggest you give this film a chance.


My second selection is Robert Altman’s 2003 film The Company, which stars Neve Campbell, Malcom McDowell, and James Franco. In The Company, we again have a film where the principal star (Campbell) does her own dancing. All the other members of the company are actual member of the Joffrey Ballet in Chicago. There are no fictitious elements surrounding the company of dancers; we are watching the “real” Joffrey Ballet in action.

This was a passion project for Campbell, who spent the earlier part of her career studying as a ballet dancer in Canada.

There is no plot construct as such in The Company, except for a minor sub-plot of the burgeoning relationship between Campbell and Franco. The film mostly focuses itself at looking at the world of the Joffrey Ballet and the blood, sweat and tears (literally) that is involved in being a part of this team of world-class dancers. In this way,  The Company reads kind of like a documentary, sans narration. We are merely observers caught up in the action.

The Company also clocks in at under two hours and given its pace and non-linear narrative, many viewers may tire of it before the film’s closing sequences. But it is in my opinion, a lovely story and of the two films I have discussed this week, the one that has more universal viewing appeal.

Filed Under: Overlooked Films Tagged With: center stage, neve campbell, nicholas hynter, robert altman, the company, zoe saldana

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