Visualizzazione post con etichetta Before Midnight. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Before Midnight. Mostra tutti i post

giovedì 17 luglio 2014

Boyhood


Secondo Jean-Luc Godard, girare film è filmare la morte al lavoro.
Io, tanto per cambiare, non sono d’accordo, e penso piuttosto che girare film sia filmare la vita, al lavoro. Adoro i registi che prendono un personaggio e lo fanno invecchiare davanti ai nostri occhi (leggi alla voce Truffaut: Antoine Doinel ha 12 anni nei 400 Coups, 15 in Antoine et Colette, 21 in Baisers Volés, 23 in Domicile Conjugal e 32 nell’Amour en Fuite).
E’ abbastanza straordinario vedere un attore prima ragazzino, poi adulto, e sapere di essere diventati grandi anche noi con lui.

Un regista contemporaneo che sembra essere particolarmente affascinato da questa tematica è l’americano Richard Linklater, che già con la sua trilogia “Before”, ci ha mostrato la stessa coppia, formata dall’americano Jesse e dalla francese Celine, il giorno in cui i due si incontrano a 25 anni (Before Sunrise, 1995), il giorno in cui si rivedono 9 anni dopo (Before Sunset, 2004) e infine il giorno in cui, ormai coppia consolidata e con figli a carico, fanno il punto sul loro amore: Before Midnight, 2013.
Linklater ha però tenuto semi-nascosto, negli ultimi 15 anni, un progetto ancora più ambizioso, un vero e proprio esperimento mai tentato prima (se non in ambito documentaristico, come nel famoso Seven up inglese): prendere un ragazzino di 6 anni, continuare a filmarlo anno dopo anno, fino a quando ne avrà 18, per poi raccontare la sua storia in un unico film. Incredibile ma vero, Linklater è riuscito nell’impresa davvero ardua di portare a terminare questa folle idea: ha trovato dei finanziatori, ha trovato degli attori disposti a rendersi liberi qualche giorno all’anno per le riprese dal 2001 al 2012 e, soprattutto, ha trovato il bambino giusto. 
Mother and son: Olivia (Patricia Arquette) e Mason (Ellar Coltrane)
Boyhood, appena uscito in America e nel Regno Unito (e sugli schermi francesi dalla prossima settimana), ha suscitato delle critiche entusiaste e riscosso un gran successo di pubblico, nonostante la durata di quasi 3 ore e la mancanza di tutti quegli elementi che rendono più fruibile una storia così lunga: niente scene di sesso, sparatorie o un accativante montaggio sincopato.
Qui c’è solo un semplice snocciolarsi di eventi più o meno importanti della vita di un ragazzo negli anni 2000. Mason vive in Texas con la madre Olivia e una sorella più grande, Samantha. Il padre, Mason Sr., separato da tempo dalla donna, rientra nella vita dei ragazzi all’inizio del film, dopo alcuni anni trascorsi in Alaska. La madre si risposa con un professore che ha già due figli, e Mason e la sorella si ritrovano in una famiglia allargata, dalla quale dovranno fuggire una volta che l’uomo si rivelerà un violento ubriacone. Le cose non andranno meglio con un secondo marito, ma almeno Mason e la sorella saranno più grandi e più capaci di fronteggiare l’emergenza. E poi le solite cose: il liceo, il primo amore, la prima canna, la scoperta di una passione (per la fotografia) ed infine l’entrata al college, l’inizio della vita adulta.
Brother and sister: Mason (Ellar Coltrane) e Samantha (Lorelei Linklater)
La qualità migliore di questo film è la deliberata assenza di scene madri e la scelta di mostrare solo quei piccoli, apparentemente insignificanti attimi che però racchiudono un po’ l’essenza delle nostre vite, come se Linklater fosse andato a rovistare tra le pieghe di scarti minimi ma essenziali. Il regista vuole trascinarci nel flusso dell’esistenza, e questo gli riesce magnificamente: bastano pochi minuti per sentirsi parte di questa famiglia, per mettersi comodi e stare a guardare che succede, anche se non succede poi molto. E poi c’è questa cosa straordinaria di veder qualcuno crescere sotto i nostri occhi in tre ore di film, e veder gli attori invecchiare, senza trucco, senza rughe posticce. Una gran liberazione, una sorta di catarsi collettiva. Il regista sembra anche avere voglia di mostrarci il lato più dolce dell’esistenza. Nonostante la vita di Mason sia lontana dall’essere serena e tranquilla (non ci sono molti soldi, i genitori sono separati, continua a cambiare casa e città, la madre non fa altro che recuperare tipi violenti), è piena di momenti buffi, teneri, e speciali. La mia preferita à la scena in cui il padre parla alla sorella dei metodi contraccettivi. Tutto suona così reale: la faccia un po’ schifata e un po’ vergognosa della sorella, l’imbarazzo del padre che cerca di affrontare l’argomento più o meno seriamente, e il mezzo sorriso di Mason che assiste al dialogo. Ecco, è una meraviglia. C’è una naturalezza avvolgente che ti fa sentire parte di questo mondo, che te lo fa proprio piacere.
Father and son: Mason Sr. (Ethan Hawke) e Mason Jr. (Ellar Coltrane)
Non so dove Linklater abbia recuperato Ellar Coltrane ma ha fatto davvero un’ottima scelta. Per interpretare la sorella, l’irresistibile Samantha, è andato sul sicuro: ha scelto sua figlia Lorelei. Nella parte di Olivia, la mai abbastanza apprezzata Patricia Arquette fa faville e, nella parte del padre, Ethan Hawke, l’attore feticcio del regista, aggiunge un nuovo bellissimo ritratto alla galleria dei suoi personaggi linklateriani.
E quando arriva la fine del film siamo colti alla sprovvista, come la madre di Mason il giorno in cui lo vede partire per il college: sapevamo che quel momento sarebbe arrivato, ma avremmo voluto che non fosse così presto. 
Come passa veloce il tempo, quando si sta crescendo...

venerdì 28 febbraio 2014

Zazie d'Or 2013


Oscars? Golden Globes? Golden Lions? Golden Palms? Golden Bears? BAFTAs? Césars?
Totally has been! Totally out of fashion! The most prestigious cinema award worldwide is – no doubt about it - the one and only ZAZIE D’OR!
Last year, Zazie has been 84 times to the movies and this, dear readers, is the BEST OF IT ALL:


The Zazie d’Or for BEST PICTURE 2013 goes to
LA VIE D'ADELE by Abdellatif Kechiche (France)
They are two girls in France but they could have been a boy and a girl in Japan or two boys in Alaska. Kechiche proves (thanks to two actresses en état de grace) that the first love and the first pain of love are universal and unforgettable. M A G N I F I Q U E !

The SPECIAL ZAZIE D’OR 2013 goes to
INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS by the Coen Brothers (US)
A folk singer, a cat named Ulysesse, a bunch of beautiful songs, a cold winter in the NY of the 60s. And the genius of the Coen Brothers to turn a disastrous series of events into the most pleasant cinema moment of the year. W O N D E R F U L !

The ZAZIE COUP DE COEUR 2013 goes to 
12 YEARS A SLAVE by Steve McQueen  (US)
Before seing this movie I had no idea what being a slave meant. After having seen it, I do.

Very much so.
Zazie would like to give a special prize to the entire cast of this movie for their excellent performances: CHIWETEL EJIOFOR, LUPITA NYONG'O, MICHAEL FASSBENDER, SARAH PAULSON, BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH, PAUL DANO, PAUL GIAMATTI, they are all amazing. BRAD PITT, I am afraid, IS NOT included (but we thank him, anyway, because without his presence the money to produce the film would have never been found).
The Zazie d'Or for BEST DIRECTOR 2013 goes to
NICOLAS WINDING REFN for ONLY GOD FORGIVES (Thailand)
This is a prize that will surprise many of you, I know. Nobody liked this movie except me and few other people. Well, j'assume! I have always loved his cinema, and I adore the way he films. I am completely under his spell. I can stay in front of the screen for hours if Winding Refn is behind the camera.

 
The Zazie d’Or for BEST ACTOR 2013 goes to
BRUCE DERN for NEBRASKA by Alexander Payne (US)

You don't need to have made the Actor's Studio to give the performance of the year. You don't even need to be young and beautiful, to loose 30 kgs, to have a handicap or a mortal illness. Sometimes you just need to be Bruce Dern in a black & white movie. This one.
The Zazie d’Or for BEST ACTRESS 2013 goes to
CATE BLANCHETT for BLUE JASMINE by Woody Allen (US)
Yes, I know, she has already won all the prizes in this world. I’ve tried to find somebody else, I thought a lot about the girls of La vie d’Adèle, but then I had to admit it: the most unforgettable one, is her Jasmine. There's nothing I could do about it!

The Zazie d'Or for BEST SCREENPLAY 2013 goes to
RICHARD LINKLATER+JULIE DELPY+ETHAN HAWKE for BEFORE MIDNIGHT by Richard Linklater (US)
These three people have done something unique in cinema history: they have created a couple 20 years ago and they told us their story ever since. We have grown up with Jesse and Céline: we have shared with them the joys of youth, the doubts of maturity and now the difficulties of the middle age. The dialogues of these movies should be studied in every cinema school, because they're simply perfect. 
I hope we will meet them again!
 
The Zazie d'Or for BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY 2013 goes to
BRUNO DELBONNEL for INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS by the Coen Brothers (US)
Delbonnel, the man behind the magic light of movies like Faust and Le Fabuleux déstin d'Amélie Poulain, works for the first time with the Coen brothers and the result is more than special: the vintage patina of the '60s combined with the cold light of a NY winter is absolutely splendid!
The Zazie d'Or for BEST DOCUMENTARY 2013 goes to

STORIES WE TELL by Sarah Polley (Canada)

I adore Sarah Polley's cinema. Here she relates an incredible personal story: the discovery of her father not being her real father and her search for the natural one. In a strange mix of fictional super 8 films and interviews with the "real" people, she drags us into a very touching family history plenty of emotions, funny moments and universal questions about ourselves.


The Zazie d'Or for the BEST ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK 2013 goes to
INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS by the Coen Brothers (US)
What can I say? I'm listening to this record in a loop since the day I watched the movie for the first time (back in October 2013...)
The LITTLE ZAZIE D’OR (Best First Feature Film Prize) 2013 goes to 
HAIFAA AL-MANSOUR for WADJDA (Saudi Arabia) 
I have the greatest respect for a woman who is trying to make movies in a country where cinema doesn't exist and where women barely exist. She has filmed all the street scenes hidden inside the back of a truck, proving that, sometimes, revolutions can start with a little girl and her bike. W la Liberté!
The JEREMY IRONS PRIZE (Man of my Life Award) 2013 goes to
Irish actor GABRIEL BYRNE
In Le Temps de l’Aventure by Jérôme Bonnell, Byrne proves to be the sexiest 60something on planet earth. In the movie, he takes a commuter train to go from Calais to Paris because he is afraid of the tunnel under the English Channel. If you assure me that I’m going to meet somebody like him on a train like that, I swear to avoid the Eurostar for the rest of my life! 
Gabriel, here I come...

And for you, dear readers, what has been the best of 2013?

martedì 7 gennaio 2014

Top 10 of 2013

It's raining TOP 10 Lists, dear readers, and Zazie (who's been to the movies 84 times last year) is looking forward to letting you know which are the films she simply ADORED in 2013...

1. LA VIE D'ADELE - Chapitres 1 & 2 by Abdellatif Kechiche (France)
2. INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS by the Coen Brothers (US)
3. 12 YEARS A SLAVE by Steve McQueen (US)
4. FRANCES HA by Noah Baumbach (US)
5. LE TEMPS DE L'AVENTURE by Jérôme Bonnell (France) 
6. BEFORE MIDNIGHT by Richard Linklater (US)
7. L'INCONNU DU LAC by Alain Guiraudie (France)
8. WADJDA by Haifaa Al-Mansour (Saudi-Arabia)
9. NEBRASKA by Alexander Payne (US)
10. BLUE JASMINE by Woody Allen (US)

While these are the movies Zazie really COULD NOT STAND in 2013:
1. THE GREAT GATSBY by Baz Luhrmann (US)
2. L'ECUME DES JOURS by Michel Gondry (France)
3. TRANCE by Danny Boyle (UK)

And you, dear readers, which are the movies you've been crazy about in 2013?

giovedì 11 luglio 2013

The "Before" Trilogy

In cinema, we are more than used to trilogies, prequels, sequels and sagas. Especially in science-fiction and fantasy genres, this kind of episodes-movies are very common. It is less common to have “normal” movies made this way.
There is a recent and very interesting exception, though, and it is the “Before” trilogy by American director Richard Linklater.
Linklater (from Houston, Texas, born 1960) wrote and directed three movies, with the same two actors, at a distance of 9 years from each other: the first one, Before Sunrise, in 1995, the second one, Before Sunset, in 2004, and the last one now, in 2013, Before Midnight.
The three movies tell the story of a meeting between two characters and the consequences of it all along their life: the American Jesse (played by Ethan Hawke) and the French Céline (played by Julie Delpy) meet by chance in a train when they are 25 years old. She is going back to Paris, he is going back to the States, they start talking, they like each other, and they decide to spend the rest of the day (and the entire night) together in Vienna. When they separate, they make a mutual wish: to see each other in six months time, in that same place (please remember we’re talking about an Internet/Facebook pre-era). 

We see them again 9 years afterwards, in Paris.
Jesse is a writer and he is in Paris to present his new novel (about his meeting with Céline). When she shows up at the bookshop where the presentation is taking place, the perfect chemistry between them is still there, palpable. We find out that at the famous second meeting he was there but she wasn’t. Her grandma died and she didn’t have the possibility of informing Jesse about it or even to find him. Their lives, in the meantime, have changed: he is married and has a little son, she works for an environment protection organization and had many boyfriends, but not a stable relationship. At the end of this second episode, it is pretty clear there are strong chances that this time they’re not going to separate so easily. 

In this last (but who knows?) episode of the saga, Jesse and Céline are a couple who’s been together for almost ten years: they have twins daughters and they are spending their summer in a Greek Island, where Jesse has been invited as a resident writer.
As it was the case for the other two episodes, also this one covers 24 hours of their life. Jesse is having troubles managing his relationship with his teenage son who’s living in the US, while he lives in Paris with Céline and their daughters, and Céline is worried that he wants to move back to the States. In the long scene at the core of the movie, the two have an enormous fight during which all the “pending matters” between them come to light, obliging them to look where they really are as a couple.

I really think this trilogy is a unique case in cinema history.
One of the most interesting elements is that the screenplay and the dialogues have been written by the director together with the two actors (even if they’re not credited for Before Sunrise) and the quality of their writing is absolutely amazing (it is not by chance that Before Sunset had received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay in 2004).
While filming Before Sunrise, none of them thought about a sequel, but when Linklater asked Hawke and Delpy to participate to his experimental movie Waking Life in 2001, using the characters of Jesse and Céline, they all started to think about a possible follow-up to their adventures. The three of them admitted to have put in this story a big part of their personal life and experiences, and this is probably where the veracity of  tone comes from. Jesse and Céline are extremely real in their way of being: at 20 they are very romantic and idealists, at 30 they start to realise what they really want (and how much they’re going to pay for it) and at 40 they have to deal with the deceptions of day-by-day life, the burden of responsibilities coming from being parents and the ageing issues. 

I have always hated the notion of generational movie, but I have to admit that I completely identify myself in this trilogy (I was born three days before Julie Delpy…). 
Jesse and Céline talk about their lives in the same way we talk about ours: with that indefinable mixture of irony, disillusion, sadness and hope we daily use to face our existence. We share with them the same questions, doubts and fears and we feel relieved to see that they’re struggling on screen as much as we do to arrive safe and sound at the end of the day.
I don’t know about you, but I personally wouldn’t mind getting old together with these two.




Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...