Showing posts with label Wiig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wiig. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 November 2015

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008)

(SPOILER ALERT: DO NOT READ THIS POST IF YOU DON'T WANT TO KNOW WHAT'S COMING?)

[The last of the long delayed draft posts, this bust was prompted by a fantasy sequence from another movie, in which Ben Stiller imagines himself and Kristen Wiig enacting a confused scene from this movie, despite their not having seen it. You just know when comedians make a joke about not having seen a movie, there's something worth busting there ;)

Unfortunately, it's another example of a film that presents the problem of how best to refer to characters when they're portrayed by various actors, at different stages of their lives. On this occasion I've decided to fudge the answer, because the principals are so iconic, by performing an ultra-bust.]

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008) is an American fantasy drama film directed by David Fincher, starring Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett.

In the end, a hospital bed-bound, former dancer mother, Cate Blanchett, gets distraction from an approaching hurricane and the end-of-life care she is receiving, by persuading her daughter to read to her from a hand written manuscript, stuffed full of postcards, letters and mementos, that recount what is either a very tall tale or the extraordinary life-history of her real father, Brad Pitt, a man the daughter once met briefly and who apparently lived his life growing younger.

Always on the periphery of landmark American events spanning the end of the Great War, to the devastation of hurricane Katrina, it is the Grim Reaper's ever-presence that overshadows Pitt's life, begun as a prematurely geriatric foundling, after his mother dies in childbirth, raised by a woman with the motto "you never know what's coming", amongst the residents of the elderly care home she runs, and ending with him shuffling off this mortal coil, despite the appearance of a perfectly healthy infant, in the very same home, some eighty years later, in the arms of his first love and eventual wife, Blanchett, who he met there as a "man-boy" when she was a girl, many years before.


It's hard not to read this allegorical muse on the fleeting nature of human existence, as one of a few, so far rather unconvincing attempts, on David Fincher's part, to prove that he is more than just a thrill-master par excellence.

Bookended by the story of a blind clockmaker (surly a reference to an argument against the existence of God) who constructs a municipal time-piece that runs backwards, strangely mirroring the inverted life of the eponymous hero, perhaps not since the Bible, has there been a narrative so packed with stuff that just doesn't make sense, even overlooking the story's central conceit of a man who ages in reverse, and seems strangely apart from his surrounding, despite award winning special effects and make-up. And it's not just the set that Pitt is detached from, perpetually out of step with the changing times around him.

Okay, Pitt does learn life lessons from a succession of colourful characters, including a womanising pygmy, a self-tattooed boozing tugboat captain, the loose-knickered wife of a British spy, and a seven-time victim of lightening strikes fellow care home resident. But none of them amount to much more that "life's short, make the most of it." And all that in just a minute over two and three quarter hours!

Clearly, however you care to slice it, what's coming is death!

Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Secret_Life_of_Walter_Mitty_(2013_film)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Curious_Case_of_Benjamin_Button_(film)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blind_Watchmaker

Thursday, 13 November 2014

The Skeleton Twins (2014)

(SPOILER ALERT: DO NOT READ THIS POST IF YOU DON'T WANT TO KNOW WHETHER SUICIDE IS EVER THE SOLUTION?)

[Now for a bust of a movie that is pure drama despite some comic moments.]

The Skeleton Twins (2014) is an American drama film directed by Craig Johnson, starring Kristen Wiig, Bill Hader and Luke Wilson.

In the end, suicidally depressed serial cheating wife Kristen Wiig is saved from drowning herself by her suicidally depressed gay, child abuse victim, twin brother, Bill Hader.

Interrupted in the midst of her own suicide attempt by the news that her brother is in hospital recovering from his own failed suicide attempt, Wiig flies to Los Angeles and is persuaded to offer him a place to stay in her home in the New York neighbourhood where they grew up.

Meeting his exceedingly friendly and helpful brother-in-law, Luke Wilson, for the first time, Hader is surprised to learn that the couple are trying for a baby, something Wiig was adamantly against in her youth, a fact that she is annoyed to be reminded of by her brother in front of Wilson.

Hader further antagonises his sister when he unilaterally invites their estranged, New Age spiritualist mother to supper, over which old wounds are reopened, when Wiig accuses her of abandoning them for her new interracial family, following the suicide of their father.

Attempting to appease his sister by allowing her to demonstrate her skills as a dental hygienist, out of hours, at the practice where she works, the pair, high on laughing gas, swap secrets, Hader admitting he has experienced heterosexual sex, while Wiig reveals that not only is she sabotaging Wilson's attempts to start a family, but she is cheating on him with her scuba class instructor, the third such liaison she has embarked upon since they were married.

However, when the police find Hader drunk on the edge of a roof top, he keeps secret from Wiig the fact that he has hooked up with and then been rejected by an initially wary English teacher who has married and had a son since being forced to give up his post, as a result of Wiig uncovering his abuse of her brother as a teen, instead blaming his reckless behaviour on disappointment at not having succeeded since leaving school, as their father had assured him he would.

But when Wiig accidentally discovers, during Halloween celebrations, that Hader has been in contact with the abuser she tried to save him from, the siblings mutual support breaks down completely, Hader only making matters worse by cluing Wilson in on Wiig's birth-control subterfuge, leading to her confession of infidelity, that, despite having dumped her lover, ends in the breakup of her marriage.

The emotional confrontation between Wiig and her brother where each blames the other for ruining their chances of a happy life, prompts Hader to seek an explanation of what his abuse meant to his abuser, that finally confirms Wiig was correct in her estimation of events.

With her marriage over, and without the support of her brother, Wiig decides to finally act on her suicidal tendencies, that Hader only recognises in time to save her from, when she sends him a message reminiscent of his own original suicide note.


Despite remarkably convincing performances from both Hader and Wiig that perfectly capture the love-hate nature of sibling relationships and in particular the special bond that can exist between twins, it is hard to know what to take away from this unremittingly grim tale of despair and disappointment, other that the fact that if you're serious about committing suicide, you need to be a bit more secretive about it than either of these two characters manage.

Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Skeleton_Twins