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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesWith the door now open, Peppy begins her rise in Hollywood and conveyed in a lovely montage sequence that shows her numerous films and her name moving slowly up the credit roll, and we next arrive in 1929, where the young actress is now a huge star and the year marks two momentous events. First, Kinograph studio head Al Zimmer (John Goodman) shows George talkie test footage and announces that it will be the wave of the future. George laughs it off as a fad, telling Al, "If that's the future, you can have it." He decides to fly in the face of the way filmmaking is going and finance, direct and star in his own new silent film "Tears Of Love." But stakes on the success of this venture are raised by the second big event of 1929, the stock market crash. Of course, as fate would have it, "Tears Of Love" opens the same night as Peppy's latest film, "The Beauty Spot" and the results for George are heartbreaking. With lineups around the block for Peppy's film, "Tears Of Love" is sparsely attended and now broke and a sudden pop culture relic, George -- whose wife just left him -- moves into a small apartment to mourn his past, lick his wounds and try to figure out what to do next.
As you know, Hazanavicius conveys this entire silent era story as a silent film. But he's not just using that Academy ratio and genre affectations as a crutch or simply as a tool for homage. He embraces them wholly and instead of finding limitations, uses the medium in a way that is not just expressive but makes it seem like new all over again. The shot composition is tremendous stuff. One particular scene of George leaving a meeting with Al after being old he's being pushed aside for new, younger talent is breathtaking. The camera stands back showing four floors simultaneously of the studio offices as George, now just an anonymous nobody, makes his way down the stairs, just another person in sea of people. It's Fritz Lang worthy. And Hazanavicius gets plenty of other behind the camera help as well.
We can't remember the last time a film felt magical, but that's the only word to describe "The Artist." A big blast of pure delight, there is no doubt at this point that "The Artist" has vaulted itself into a frontrunner for a Best Picture nomination. The Weinsteins will still have a marketing challenge ahead of them, but that has never stopped them before, and given the near unanimous and deserved praise for the film, that will definitely be a big boost. But perhaps most importantly, "The Artist" is just flat out entertaining. In this era when technology and brands seem to precede ideas and talent, Hazanavicius' film is a reminder that a good story, with great acting (Dujardin gives a breakthrough performance) that delivers (more than) what it promises will always go further than gimmicks and temporary pop culture phenomenons. [A]
This was an edited version of our review from Cannes.
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1 Comment
Kate | March 6, 2012 9:01 PM
Just saw this and I thought it was amazing. Jean Dujardin is spectacular, I have no words...