Saturday 23 February 2013

REVIEW - TO THE WONDER


There is wonder in every frame of To the Wonder. This is no surprise, and nor is anything about Terrence Malick's latest film - it is quintessential Malick, which means it is abstruse, visually stunning, and extremely good. Watching it, you grasp just how gifted Malick is as both filmmaker and philosopher. He largely dispenses with conventional dialogue, favouring fragmented narration, and intricately detailed mise en scene, edits and soundscapes to intimate the deepest, most fundamental thoughts and emotions of his characters. The suggestion is that we are not lords of this earth, but a part of it. The beauty that can be found in music, in nature, in ourselves, both physically and cerebrally, is evinced here. We are informed by nature, and have the ability to inform it with our own natural gifts. In France, the architecture compliments the scenery; in America, where the people feel a desire to express themselves to the fullest, and through artificial means, it insults it, or destroys it. Marina and her daughter are stifled by this new life, this culture that is born out of a need to create active culture, rather than nurturing itself and allowing it to evolve organically. Neil accepts it, but unknowingly yearns for the spiritual, the intangible, the radiance that the women in his life all seem to possess. It is in Malick's storytelling, in the specific selections of score, the distinctive editing, the marvellous use of sound, the costumes, which turn to a flat, brutal light-swallowing black when their wearers lose their own internal light, and the usual exquisite photography, that he harbours his emotional intellect, and he coaxes greater meaning out of the human beings in his story than words - just another construct - could ever achieve. To see To the Wonder and to embrace it as Malick embraces us, like the melancholy priest played here by Javier Bardem, is to experience cinema at its most transcendent and sublime.

8 comments:

  1. Superb review.
    Thank you.
    Definitely looking forward to it even though it's release would be inaccessible .
    Tree Of Life was Magnificent.
    Terrence Malick always presents inexplicable cinema with staggering imagination.
    Emmanuel Lubezki is a master cinematographer with an eye for immense detail and groundbreaking vision.


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    1. Gosh, Emmanuel Lubezki may have even outdone himself with his work on To the Wonder. It's at least as good as his former collaborations with Terrence Malick.

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    2. Great.Thank you.

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  2. And brother, as you know, Amour sweeps Césars.
    And its becoming more and more certainty that Riva and Haneke might as well repeat the success at Oscars too.
    And for the record, Dujardin surprisingly lost his best actor bid at César last year.

    Césars -

    Best Picture
    Amour
    Director
    Michael Haneke, Amour
    Actress
    Emmanuelle Riva, Amour
    Actor
    Jean-Louis Trintignant, Amour
    Original Screenplay
    Michael Haneke, Amour
    Adapted Screenplay
    Jacques Audiard, Thomas Bidegain, Rust & Bone
    Supporting Actress
    Valérie Benguigui, What’s In A Name
    Supporting Actor
    Guillaume de Tonquedec, What’s In A Name
    Newcomer (Female)
    Izia Higelin, Mauvaise Fille
    Newcomer (Male)
    Matthias Schoenaerts, Rust & Bone
    Original Score
    Alexandre Desplat, Rust & Bone
    Sound
    Antoine Deflandre, Germaine Boulay, Eric Tisserand, Cloclo
    Cinematography
    Romain Winding, Farewell, My Queen
    Editing
    Juliette Welfling, Rust & Bone
    Costumes
    Christian Gasc, Farewell, My Queen
    Art Direction
    Katia Wyszkop, Farewell, My Queen
    First Film
    Louise Wimmer, Cyril Mennegun
    Foreign Film
    Argo
    Animated Film
    Ernest Et Célestine, Benjamin Renner, Vincent Patar, Stéphane Aubier
    Documentary
    Les Invisibles, Sébastien Lifshitz
    Short Film
    Le Cri Du Homard, Nicolas Guiot

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    1. I know, delighted! I hope the Academy follows suit!

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  3. And when shall you post your final Oscar predictions?
    Have no idea about Best Documentary Short, Best Live Action short and Best Animated Short.
    But got to see Paperman before the live action animated shorts were pulled from internet.
    And Curfew trailer, that's it.
    Going with popular choice.

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    1. The animated shorts are all still available online except Head Over Heels, if you search hard enough. I've seen the other four, and have yet to get around to watching any of the documentary or live action ones, but I hope to see as many as possible before tomorrow night.

      I'll probably side with popular choice too.

      Final Oscar predictions some time tomorrow!

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    2. Shall give it an another try then, brother.
      Thanks a lot for the information.

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