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Archive for the ‘Julia Stiles’ Category

Mona Lisa Smile

31 Dec

Mona Lisa Smile – directed by Mike Newell. Chickflick. A new art instructor at Wellesely College for women finds herself up against unquestioned traditions. 117 minutes Color 2003.
★★★★★
Julia Roberts as an academician is beautifully miscast on the grounds that her popular consistency won’t know the difference. After all, how many of them went to Wellesely to begin with or have even heard of it? The marble-like conservative nature of the institution is sufficiently pigeoned-on to have closed it, and it is a wonder the filmers were not sued. Or maybe they were.

But our Julia prevails. She soldiers through a role for which she has not the slightest cultural depth. She reminds one of Joan Crawford with her broad mouth incapable of a subtlety and her big staring eyes. And inwardly you can see how much she enjoys being a star. Their instruments are quite different, however. Both are calculating performers. But Roberts is more at ease in her work; her assurance arises not out of her ego, but out of a sense of fun and of absurdity. She can play comedy at the drop of a hat, and Crawford could not play it at all. She is neither a masochist nor a sadist and Crawford was both. Roberts is an actress of seventeen smiles, Crawford of two. They are both wonderful. And they were both sometimes miscast.

But the script provides various resorts for Roberts, such as the fact that she expects perfection from everybody, or rather that she expects everybody to be an already finished work of art. She gets her come-uppance, thank goodness.

And in this she is helped by three typical students, Kirsten Dunst who plays a controlling marriage-aimed student, Julia Stiles who plays a young woman on the fence between marriage and a career, and Maggie Gyllenhaal who plays a free-loving girl, co-dependent to unavailable men.

The film has many nice touches and a real feeling of a small New England campus in the 1950s. It is interesting to revisit those times and consider how true or false the film is to them. It is a feminist screed on one level, which is just fine by me, since it is a blatant exposure of the small and very commercial expectations young women were steered toward in those days – and little did I know. I went to Columbia: Barnard was different.

And I wonder at the casting of the picture. It’s been ten years since it was made, and looking at the three leads, Dunst, Stiles, and Gyllenhaal, it is clear what their destinies as actors would be. The first two would go on; maybe they had some talent; Stiles certainly had a beautifully placed voice. But only Maggie Gyllenhaal would go on to be a star. For there she shines, with her sexiness, her intelligence, her deep humor, her wisdom, her flexibility, her charming happy face, and her big heart: the paramount soubrette. Talented as all get out. The first two I would not avoid seeing; they have not wronged me; the third I would make my way to see with relish. And I do.

John Slattery and Marcia Gay Harden and Marian Seldes and Juliet Stephenson are fine in supporting roles. And the picture is not pat. It wisely turns on itself in a way that is helpful to one once it is over.

 

The Omen 666

24 Jan

The Omen 666  -– Directed by John Moore. Creepy Thriller. The Devil Wears Buster Browns when a bad seed starts growing and growing and coming toward you. 110 minutes Color 2006.

*

There is a difference between a role and a character. A role is The Mother, The Husband, The Child. But the writer must also make characters of them or all we have is cutouts. The character allows the actor to create humans out of and inside those roles. It’s done with words said by a character that make him alive, human, and particular. Dickens was a master at this. A character should be like no one else on earth. A character is also created by actions which also define him, by the term Part we mean the action the actor who plays the role takes. “I play the role of the boyfriend. It’s the part of the boyfriend who kills the ogre.”  In Omen 666 there there are roles but no characters, save two. They are not, however, created by the writers, but by the sheer eccentricity of the actors who play them, David Thewlis and Pete Postlethwaite, actors also of a rare  power — by which I mean freedom in their craft. Each brings such particularity to his work because of his voice and appearance, that they come alive, immediately. Julia Stiles as The Mother, however, has no such personality. She is a good actor, of course, but that’s all you’re left with. Not a human being but an actor. Liev Schreiber is another good actor, but the same is true of him. He has a fine figure, a beautiful and well-placed voice, and an interesting face which has no bad camera angles. But he has no lines. Nothing that he says rings true, not because he is unconvincing but because the lines are empty. He has no character to bring to life; he has nothing to work with, but himself, and he himself is not A Role, not An Ambassador, not The Father Of That Boy, not Someone in that situation, because the writers have not made that Someone into an individual. Give an actor as good as Liev Schreiber the merest clue, and he will make of it a memorable creation. Not here. It’s not his fault. The script is clueless. Millions have been spent on this production. You notice it because that’s all there is to notice. When Postlethwaite died, I turned it off.

Michael Gambon, Mia Farrow

 

10 Things I Hate About You

02 Dec

10 Things I Hate About You – Directed by Gil Junger. High-school farce. An update of The Taming Of The Shrew. 99 minutes Color 1999.

* * * *

Some wild scenes with the great Allison Janney, as the dirty-minded Guidance Counselor, open this show, and I wish they had continued. What we do see and hear is a spritely-written piece played at a clip. What it is, of course, is an update of Shakespeare’s The Taming Of The Shrew. And the characters pleasantly keep the old names: Petruchio becomes Patrick, Kate and Bianca have the last name of Stratford, and Kate, played by Julia Stiles, even has a recantation speech at the end, in the form of a parody Shakespearean sonnet. It’s quite sweet. We also have Heath Ledger as the lead, and one wonders why. He is an odd actor. Here as Petruchio he seems to have too much weight upon him, and I don’t mean physical weight. But he seems much older than the others. His face and his way are those of a mature male, not of a high-school senior. And there is something heavy within him. I think it’s just a question of miscasting, here perhaps because he was an actor without wit. One thing that makes him sound older is that he had the most wonderful deep voice. He’s sexy and good-looking in an unusual way. I know he was miscast in the Casanova picture, where wit and intelligence and flair are absolutely required, as are a very raffish and pro-active sexuality, none of which Ledger’s temperament possessed. And, unlike Petruchio, Heath Ledger, like James Dean, is introverted – which is the basis of his seductiveness, if nothing else. Maybe he was just an interesting actor of limited means who was hard to cast. I don’t know. I wonder what he would have become had he lived. I wish he had. We see him no more. And in this film, just as in the original play, after the pre-scene, we see the naughty Allison Janney no more, also. It made 53 million dollars. Shakespeare, that old commercial playwright, is smiling.

 

 
 
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