Showing posts with label Alec Baldwin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alec Baldwin. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2013

REVIEW: Blue Jasmine

Blue Jasmine (2013): Written and directed by: Woody Allen. Starring: Alec Baldwin, Cate Blanchett, Louis C.K., Bobby Cannavale, Andrew Dice Clay, Sally Hawkins, Peter Sarsgaard and Michael Stuhlbarg. Rated PG-13 (Booze is drank and things are said). Running time: 98 minutes.

4 stars (out of four)

When we first see Jasmine (Cate Blanchett), she seems well put together. Elegant, riding in first class, lounging in her chair like she’s just bought the world on credit, she dishes the details of her divorce to the elderly woman seated beside her. Gabbing all the way to baggage claim, you might call her overly chatty or brazenly forthcoming with personal details, but she certainly presents herself as a picture of poise.

Blue Jasmine, the new film written and directed by Woody Allen, depicts the steady unraveling of this woman’s persona. Bubbling just underneath her designer clothes and meticulously maintained golden blonde hair is a twitchy, desperate woman who, we learn, has just suffered a nervous breakdown and appears to be on the verge of another.

Allen often writes neurotic characters into his scripts, usually as a stand-in for his own anxious persona, but Jasmine is a far more complex character than the typical dyspeptic types found in so many of Allen’s comedies. Her problems run much deeper than phobias and a surly worldview; her life of luxury has been violently ripped out from underneath her, a fact she attempts to avoid with corrosive self-deception.

Through conversations and flashbacks, we learn that Jasmine’s husband Hal (Alec Baldwin), a hugely successful entrepreneur, has been convicted of fraud. His empire, including Jasmine’s cushy Park Avenue lifestyle, turns out to have been built on lies and deceit, and has subsequently been snatched away by the U.S. government.

Now broke and hopelessly lost, Jasmine turns to her couldn’t-be-more-different sister, Ginger (a charmingly dizzy Sally Hawkins), who graciously takes Jasmine in despite their past. (Ginger and her ex-husband Augie (Andrew Dice Clay, somehow both gruff and cuddly) were collateral damage in one of Hal’s schemes.) Jasmine will live with Ginger and her two young boys in their modest San Francisco apartment, at least until she gets her feet back on the ground.

The film’s tone ducks and weaves with Blanchett’s performance. One moment, Blue Jasmine is a social comedy, the next it’s an unnerving portrait of mental illness. The comedy comes largely from Ginger, her new mechanic boyfriend Chili (Bobby Cannavale with a hilariously long strand of hair slicked behind his ear), and a spare handful of the people who enter and exit their lives. (Louis C.K. has a nice supporting turn as a competing love interest of Ginger’s.)

These characters are a rowdy and deeply flawed bunch, and from Jasmine’s condescending, undeservedly privileged vantage point, they seem painfully uncultured. On a lunch date with Ginger, Chili and his dopey pal Eddie (Max Casella, getting the biggest laughs of the movie), she doesn’t just order a vodka. She orders a Stoli with a twist of lemon.

But these people are also full of life. Compare them to Jasmine, who walks around in a fog of misery, bumping into men both good and bad (Peter Sarsgaard as a widowed and heartbroken man with great ambitions, and Michael Stuhlbarg as an unsavory dentist).

All the while, Jasmine’s past follows her around like a malignant shadow. The story of Hal’s crimes is more than just fabulously juicy gossip; it is part of her identity. It’s how she gets introduced at parties. She can’t escape it.

Woody Allen has juggled the comedic and the tragic before, but rarely with such a deft touch. He has an ear for idle conversation and his social dialogue is as on point as ever. But he also shows an unprecedented boldness by presenting Jasmine as a very real, very complicated individual. The script hits some decidedly minor notes. Sometimes these moments are offset with comedic relief. Sometimes the laughs come from a less comfortable place.

Allen is a terrifically prolific filmmaker (he’s stayed on pace at a movie a year for more than four decades), though not a very consistent one (his films fall all over the map in terms of quality). Blue Jasmine ranks in the highest tier of his work and is perhaps his best film since 2005’s simmering noir thriller Match Point. It’s a smart, compassionate and funny film, anchored by Cate Blanchett’s remarkable performance. Jasmine is wretched but also vulnerable, bitter but sadly disillusioned. There is much that is buried deep inside her and Woody Allen proves a fearless excavator.

- Steve Avigliano, 8/22/13

Monday, July 9, 2012

REVIEW: To Rome With Love

To Rome With Love (2012): Written and directed by: Woody Allen. Starring: Woody Allen, Alec Baldwin, Roberto Benigni, Penélope Cruz, Judy Davis, Jesse Eisenberg, Greta Gerwig, Alessandra Mastronardi, Ellen Page and Alessandro Tiberi. Rated R (Various infidelities). Running time: 121 minutes.

 2 stars (out of four)

Woody Allen’s tour of Europe continues with To Rome With Love, a collection of vignettes about tourists and locals in Rome that feels less like a love letter to the city than a justification for Woody’s traveling. The film, though not without its amusing moments, is an awkward jumble of comic sketches that fail to add up to a cohesive whole.

We meet Hayley (Alison Pill), a New Yorker on holiday for the summer, who asks for directions from Michelangelo (Flavio Parenti), a dashing Roman. After no time at all (more specifically, after a brief sight-seeing montage), the two are engaged and arrange a meeting of the future in-laws. Mr. Allen himself returns to acting playing his usual crotchety self and delivering some stale one-liners as Jerry, Hayley’s father.

Jerry is a retired classical music producer and when he overhears Michelangelo’s father (opera singer Fabio Armiliato) belting in the shower, he insists the man has a gift that must be shared with the world. This idea is met with sarcastic scorn from Jerry’s wife (Judy Davis) who shrewdly observes Jerry is simply bored and looking for an opportunity to relive the glory days. This storyline eventually peters out into a one-joke bit that is worth a chuckle the first time you see it but quickly gets old.

A characteristically animated Roberto Benigni stars in a similarly one-note story as an everyday joe who inexplicably becomes a national celebrity overnight. Paparazzi mob him outside his home: “What did you eat for breakfast?” they ask him in an excited commotion. “Do you take your bread toasted or untoasted?” And so on, and so on.

In another episode, a newlywed couple, Milly (Alessandra Mastronardi) and Antonio (Alessandro Tiberi), get separated and subsequently embark on parallel sexual indiscretions; Milly with a movie star (Antonio Albanese) and Antonio with prostitute (a criminally underused Penélope Cruz). Their stories meander for a while in mildly farcical territory but don’t really go anywhere.

The only narrative that does progress and develop an actual arc features Jesse Eisenberg as Jack, a young architect living in Rome with his girlfriend Sally (a barely seen Greta Gerwig). Sally has invited her best friend Monica (Ellen Page), a notorious seductress, to stay over their place and visit. “Don’t fall in love with her,” she tells Jack, which is really another way of saying, “You’re going to fall in love with her.”

Eavesdropping on the developing love triangle is John (Alec Baldwin), a famed architect Jack recognizes on the street and invites to his apartment. John, as it turns out, once lived on this very block when he was Jack’s age. Indeed, Jack may even be a young incarnation of himself. (Or is John a future incarnation of Jack?) At any rate, Woody Allen has fun letting John stroll in and out of scenes like a one-man Greek chorus in Jack’s mind, warning him of the trouble he is about to get into while also conceding the inevitable. He was young once too and easily tempted by charming girls like Monica.

Jesse Eisenberg and Ellen Page are well suited to the fast-talking neuroses of Mr. Allen’s characters and though their dialogue is far from Mr. Allen’s best writing, the pair have a way of making their lines sound snappier than they actually are. This is Woody Allen Lite (he has crafted much more subtle and interesting tales of infidelity in the past) but it is still the best offering here.

The title of this movie is curious. Woody Allen’s last film, Midnight in Paris, told an enchanting story set in the City of Lights that also found plenty of time to indulge in the scenery. It evoked the magic of the city (literally) as well as Mr. Allen’s adoration of it. To Rome With Love feels obligatory. Often Woody Allen seems to be padding for time and he overwrites a lot of scenes, beating a joke into the ground or, worse, explaining why it’s funny. I’ve never been to Rome but I imagine it deserves better.

- Steve Avigliano, 7/9/12