There are several moments in We
Bought a Zoo that may be reminiscent of a far better film also
about a man with a plan who arrives in a remote town and is charmed
by the eccentric people living there. Bill Forsyth’s Local Hero,
which came out in 1983, was set on the coast of Scotland. Peter
Riegert played a conflicted oil company executive way back then and
he appears all too briefly as a newspaper editor in the current
release, directed by Cameron Crowe. The star this time around is Matt
Damon, portraying a recently widowed journalist named Benjamin Mee
fleeing Los Angeles and arriving somewhere in rural Southern
California with his two children.
Newspapers throughout the nation are
withering away, plus Benjamin’s adventure beat becomes too
difficult to maintain because it requires a lot of traveling. With
two kids to raise on his own, he simply quits the job. Meanwhile, his
brooding 14-year-old son Dylan (Colin Ford) has just been expelled
from school for stealing and their city home is plagued by noisy
neighbors. A real estate agent shows several properties to him and
his precocious daughter Rosie, (Maggie Elizabeth Jones, cute enough
to stop mugging for the cameras already!). But none are right for
them until they spot a ramshackle country house on 18 gorgeous acres
– and adjacent to an almost-defunct Rosemoor Wildlife Park, in dire
need of renovation and revival. The family also desperately in need
of revival suddenly must contend with lions and tigers and bears. Oh,
my.
Scarlett Johansson and Matt Damon |
– Kelly Foster (Scarlett Johansson),
the nominal head zookeeper clearly destined to revive Benjamin’s
love life.
– Her niece Lily Miska (Elle
Fanning), a teen immediately attracted to the oblivious Dylan.
– Peter MacCready (Angus Macfadyen),
a burly Scotsman with a taste for alcohol who inhabits the sort of
gentle giant role carved out by Robbie Coltrane's Hagrid in the Harry
Potter franchise. He’s the exhibit designer.
– Robin Jones (Patrick Fugit, the
bewildered protagonist in Crowe’s far superior Almost Famous
and a terrifically enigmatic presence here, despite being given only
a few lines of dialogue) is the zoo handyman.
– Crystal, the well-dressed capuchin
monkey Robin always carries on his shoulder steals the show,
especially when she helpfully hands him a screwdriver. This is a
throwaway moment, barely noticeable, but quite possibly the funniest
in the film.
– Walter Ferris (John Michael
Higgins, hilariously paired with Jane Lynch in Christopher Guest’s
A Mighty Wind) is the designated villain, the state inspector
who threatens to keep the zoo from reopening over even the most
trivial infractions.
– Duncan Mee (Thomas Haden Church,
slightly less wacky than as Paul Giamatti’s sidekick in Sideways)
is Benjamin’s brother, always trying to talk him out of saving the
zoo.
Cast of We Bought A Zoo |
But saving Rosemoor is a given in this
fairly predictable Rocky for the metrosexual demographic. Saving the
proceedings from schmaltz seems much more difficult, no matter how
hard the talented acting ensemble tries. Based on a true story from
England described in a 2008 memoir by the real Benjamin Mee, the
motion picture version tugs at the heartstrings whether exploring
the anguish of the fauna or the homo sapiens. Should Spar, an elderly
Bengal tiger, be allowed to die with dignity? Can building a bigger
enclosure – not to be called a cage! – pacify a grizzly yearning
for freedom? Will Lily’s rather aggressive adolescent crush win
over the disaffected Dylan? Is Benjamin’s folly likely to bring him
success and heal his wounded soul?
Crowe, who co-wrote the screenplay with
Aline Brosh McKenna (The Devil Wears Prada, 2006), delivers an
obvious holiday crowd-pleaser. The stunning cinematography, courtesy
of Diego Prieto (Brokeback Mountain, 2005), contributes to the
illusion that this is a significant cultural milestone, as do
soundtrack songs by Tom Petty, Neil Young, Cat Stevens, Bob Dylan and
Jonsi (a.k.a. Jon Thor Birgisson, lead singer of Iceland’s Sigur
Ros – who also composed the score).
Yet, Say Anything (1989) or
Jerry Maguire (1996), it ain’t. We Bought a Zoo
certainly lacks the depth of Almost Famous, arguably Crowe’s
best effort to date and a semi-autobiographical account of his days
as a fledgling Rolling Stone reporter. Don’t even mention Vanilla
Sky (2001) in the same category. During the last six years, he’s
been out of the public eye, except for two music documentaries
earlier in 2011 (HBO’s Pearl Jam Twenty and The Union,
about Elton John and Leon Russell).
Oh, well. This is Christmas, when the
other options include such heavy-duty new fare as The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, The Darkest Hour and even Steven
Spielberg’s epic War Horse. The season to be jolly probably
is going to welcome a jolly tale of critters and the crazy folks who
love them in a warm, (literally) fuzzy environment, all aiming for
feel-good emotions. At one point in the Rosemoor saga, Kelly refers
to Benjamin as “our local hero,” so perhaps Crowe intended an
homage to Bill Forsyth’s classic and hired Peter Riegert to
reinforce that idea. While the conventional We Bought a Zoo
has no real kinship to the iconic, ironic Local Hero, at least
it spotlights the superior work ethic of a little monkey with moxie.
An impressive post, I just gave this to a colleague who is doing a little analysis on this topic. And he is very happy and thanking me for finding it. But all thanks to you for writing in such simple words. Big thumb up for this blog post!
ReplyDeleteAttorney Westlake Village | West Lake Lawyer