Showing posts with label Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu. Show all posts

Friday, 26 February 2016

THE REVENANT: Bloody Brilliant! [4/5]

Tarantino’s most-celebrated blood-porn and Terrence Malick’s spiritual and emotionally enriching visual-narratives have found a beefy believer in Alejandro G Inarittu’s latest revenge drama THE REVENANT. Though this is not the first time Terrence Malick has shared his confidante behind the lenses Emmanuel Lubezki with Inarittu, [Lubezki has already won an Oscar for the latter in BIRDMAN OR (THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE)] but this time the plot itself, an expected yet absorbing one, allows him to bring into play his trademark masterstrokes on the moving picture canvas. The same also encourages the film to be as wintery, gory and gruesomely beautiful as Tarantino’s last THE HATEFUL EIGHT; in fact, in a more riveting and gut-wrenching outfit.

Set in 1823, the story tracks down a group of trackers in fur trading business being attacked by some Native Americans while returning to their homes. The most-experienced Hugh Glass [Leonardo DiCaprio] is leading the fleeing troop till he himself gets badly hurt in a terrible bear attack. Considering his hopeless physical condition, the troop decides to leave him and his son behind with a couple of members to accompany them. Abandoned by his own team, Glass is forced to survive through many physical challenges of extreme nature and intense mental trauma to deal with. A strong desire seeking revenge keeps him going even when going gets tougher.

THE REVENANT doesn’t overwhelm you with its crude, simplistic and naïve American legend as the basic plot but undoubtedly excels as a gritty documentation of a survivor’s story. The glory belongs to a taut screenplay that never offers you a dull moment. The severity and intensity of physical assaults on Glass are such brutal that you never expect him to breathe life again but the way Inarittu crafts and constructs the rise of the fallen is tremendously absorbing. Inarittu orchestrates scenes like an extended opera; they decline to cut the shots in between and go on and on with a continuous thrust scenes demand. The precise scene where Glass is seen attacked by a grizzly bear is one of the most gratifying part in the film, not only as a visual fascination for the viewers but also as a textbook example in VFX advancement. There is never an iota of disbelief in what you see and hear huffing, roaring, grunting and purring on screen.       

Setting frozen rivers, frosted trees and widespread snowfields as the film’s scenic canvas, Inarittu alongside Emmanuel Lubezki ensures you’re taken to the same territory with no hesitation, no apprehension and with all the certainty to experience the events to its maximum but it is only the second best asset THE REVENANT owns. The top one on the chart is DiCaprio’s categorical, precise and career-best performance as Hugh Glass. Watching him sinking deep in the character that needed extreme physical participation (He crawls, creeps and slithers in most of the reels), intense acting skills (He hardly mouths verbal expressions) and a seasoned expertise in evoking transferable pain from his haunting past is an ecstasy. You don’t need to be a fan to recognize and recommend his talent for the Oscars’ pride. Tom Hardy as his counterpart Fitzgerald- a mean, sly and egotistical teammate provides a great support.

To conclude, THE REVENANT is a gritty, gutsy and grave revenge drama that is not for the faint-hearted. After all, when was the last time you saw someone clearing out the insides of a dead horse to make it a potential shelter in a bone-freezing sleet or someone chewing blood-soaked raw meat from a freshly slaughtered Bison? MAN Vs WILD lovers can come up with many such stories but this is some rare cinematic experience! Go for it, you might end up watching an Oscar wining performance! [4/5]                             

Saturday, 31 January 2015

BIRDMAN OR [THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE]: A cinematic bliss! Extremely Heartwarming!![4.5/5]

A Critic from The Times is all geared up to knock down one’s first tryout at theatre-production with a bad bad review. She hasn’t even been to any of the previews yet. The actor-director gives her back a hard time for being impolite, uninformed and ruthless about one’s massive efforts behind it. And then, comes the concluding line of the heated conversation, “you aren’t an actor. You are a movie-star.” The man at the receiving end is a washed-up actor famed & framed in typecast for playing a superhero all his life and now, his next move is to make a thriving comeback with a Broadway adaptation of a seasoned short-story. The invited struggle was supposed to be for breaking one’s comfort zone and making him easily placed in mainstream but it turns out to be a clash of ego, self-centric image and mental baggage of past riding on head.

Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu’s BIRDMAN OR [THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE] is a smart, witty, sharp and awesomely entertaining journey of a faded superstar trying to search for a new identity in the changing times. Riggan [Michael Keaton] was the most popular in 90s. His movies where he would lock up himself in a bird suit to create Birdman- the superhero have been in the list of all time top-grossers but today, he’s hardly there. He holds no Facebook page. He doesn’t know how to handle a Twitter account. His last hope to survive the struggle to exist is the Broadway production he’s acting in and directing.

BIRDMAN OR [THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE] is filled with dark humor coming from left, right and center. Smartly written dialogues are performed with such ease and with barely any hint of pre-conceived realization that you need to be on your toes all the time to not miss any of the punches. Film is edited sharply and astutely in such manner that the whole film looks like a one continuous shot film. It amazes you with the kind of precision one could only imagine while writing, shooting, acting and editing such flawless film. Film has a certain mysterious outlook with added surreal elements of a fantasy flick and the grasping music by the celebrated drummer Antonio Sanchez perfectly adds complementing flavors to that.

As an overtly enthusiast and an actor craving for perfection in his performance till the levels of madness, Edward Norton gives us the most unpredictable yet reliably most entertaining character in the film. Beware! As to make it look more real, he has just tried to have real sex with his on-stage co-actor [Naomi Watts] in a full-house theatre. Emma Stone plays the rehabbed daughter to Riggan efficiently. Zach Galifianakis’ role of the play-producer is a controlled performance with its own share of giggling moments. Naomi Watts, Amy Ryan and Andrea Riseborough too mark their presence felt but the one who gives it all is unquestionably Michael Keaton. As an actor torn and tattered between his successful past and almost non-existing present, Keaton wears the pain and the pun both on his expressive muscles with a powerful performance. This is my pick at the Oscars for the Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role.

With invariable mentions of Hollywood celebrities, cleverly witty remarks on them, settings of stage-rehearsals, inter-personal conflicts between actors sharing the same platform, inhibitions, insecurities, identity-crisis and the undying urge to be on the front page and not on the third, BIRDMAN OR [THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE] is a perfect Hollywood film, set in Hollywood and about Hollywood. DO NOT MISS IT as Inarritu gives his best shot, so does Keaton! A Masterstroke, extremely heartwarming!! [4.5/5]