A scene from Disney's John Carter, starring Taylor Kitsch |
Back in the heyday of the big Hollywood studios, when every major company prepared an A picture and a low-budget B picture for each week of the year, no one expected that every movie would be a major event. Movies provided a variety of pleasures, and it wasn’t a big deal if you caught some of them on the fly – a lightweight vehicle tailor-made for a beloved star, a disposal musical showcasing a few terrific dancers or a handful of inventive production numbers, an ingeniously plotted murder mystery or film noir, a romantic comedy or an action picture with a smart, wisecracking screenplay. And though there are far fewer choices now and the vast majority of releases aren’t worth any intelligent viewer’s time or money, movies still provide a spectrum of pleasures. The problem is that the economics of filmmaking has taken many of them off the radar. Studios put the weight of their publicity machines behind only a selected few of the movies they bankroll, theatre owners play along, and, good or bad, a media event like Marvel’s The Avengers literally crowds other, smaller pictures out of the megaplexes. If you don’t live in a big, art-house-friendly city like New York or Boston or Toronto, you don’t get a chance to see anything that isn’t given a wide release, i.e., anything that isn’t groomed to be a hit. The only chance that a terrific little movie like Of Gods and Men or 50/50 or Margaret has of finding an audience is by word of mouth once an adventurous or lucky viewer stumbles across it on DVD. (Margaret, which was cheated of any chance at awards from critics’ groups by a studio that stubbornly refused to send out screeners of it at the end of last year, is finally coming out on DVD in July.)
But even mainstream pictures
that might offer audiences some entertainment – movies that moviegoers in most
locations can actually get to – often fall by the wayside. When
so much emphasis is placed on box office receipts, the stink of failure comes
off movies that don’t make an immediate mark. And
even movie reviewers, whose job is supposed to be to guide the public around
the distractions, to persuade readers of viewers or listeners that the movie
with the loudest media coverage or the biggest numbers isn’t necessarily the
one worth putting down twelve or fifteen bucks for, aren’t immune to the
smell. Critics don’t generally reserve their
nastiest barbs for a loathsome hit like The Hunger Games. They
save them up for modest programmers like Man on a Ledge or
expensive box-office bombs like John Carter.
We can all agree that the $250
million price tag on John Carter, an adaptation of
Edgar Rice Burroughs’s 1917 sci-fi fantasy A Princess of
Mars, was a folly. The movie didn’t
have a snowball’s chance in hell of breaking even, and in the battle scenes you
can see how the budget got in the way: there’s so much
money on the screen that the actors and even the camera seem mired in it,
unable to break free. But for all its
faults the movie isn’t the embodiment of evil. Even
most pictures you wouldn’t mind spending a couple of hours with are mixed bags,
and John
Carter has a lot more to recommend it than
most. The scenes set among the Tharks, the
multi-limbed Martians who haven’t evolved to look like earthlings, are funny in
a parodic comic-strip (Flash Gordon) way, and they’ve been put together
with some visual imagination – not a surprise considering that the director is
Andrew Stanton, the Pixar alum who was responsible for Finding
Nemo and WALL-E. And
the leading man, Taylor Kitsch, commands the screen. In
some episodes he gets to do more: as he showed in the
role of the noble-hearted but self-destructive high-school football star Tim
Riggins in the TV series Friday Night
Lights, Kitsch has a gift for hobbled romantic ardor, and he’s ideally cast
as the Confederate loyalist who transposes his zeal for lost causes to the
fight to restore peace to embattled Mars.
Reese Witherspoon & Robert Pattinson in Water for Elephants |
I often get the sense that, consciously or unconsciously,
many critics write their reviews in their heads before actually seeing the
movies. Often, I suspect, that’s a result of (a) what publicists “leak” to
them about how dismal the pictures are that the studios have opted to bury and
(b) the lack of attention they receive: last-minute critics’
screenings or none at all, delayed release and/or early-year bookings, when the
Thanksgiving-Christmas blockbusters are still bringing in crowds and the
prestige movies, crowned with end-of-year awards, are competing for
Oscars. Once a publicist told some of us before a
screening that what we were about to see wasn’t much good. It
was Alfonso Cuarón’s Great Expectations, and Cuarón
didn’t have the reputation in 1997 that he earned five years later with Y
Tu Mamá También, so this gorgeous movie
was met with groans and guffaws. Some gifted
filmmakers never seem to catch a break – like the Irish director Jim Sheridan,
whose movies are always worth seeing. He was so dismayed by the changes the studio made to last summer’s Dream House that
he wanted to take his name off the final product, and it’s easy to see where it
was interfered with. But Dream House is
hardly the cruddy horror picture it was reported to be. It
has one of those twisty plots that hinge on the insanity of the main character,
like Scorsese’s Shutter Island, but this one works
differently: the revelation that the main
character (Daniel Craig, in perhaps his best performance so far) is delusional
doesn’t seal off the narrative – it opens up the movie emotionally, turning it
into a lyrical, woebegone meditation on loss. The
movie contains sequences that are simultaneously creepy and affecting, and it’s
hard to believe that any film with acting of this quality (Rachel Weisz and
Naomi Watts give fine supporting performances) could be simply thrown onto the
trash heap. That mix of terror and sorrow is just as
potent in The Woman in Black, a ghost story by
James Watkins that slipped in and out of theatres early this year starring
Daniel Radcliffe as a turn-of-the-century English widower who’s still drowning
in grief over his wife’s death four years earlier. Both
the narrative and the imagery appear to have been inspired by Poe, and on the
big screen the film was honestly as frightening as anything I’ve ever sat
through. (One spectral effect made me understand for
the first time the meaning of the phrase “my blood ran cold.”)
Matt Damon in We Bought a Zoo |
And it happened to the German
director Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, who made The
Lives of Others in 2006. Perhaps
because of the deserved widespread praise for that film, when his next picture
turned out to be not another profound political drama but a breezy
romantic-comedy thriller, The Tourist,
it was treated like an embarrassing mistake. The Tourist was a 2010 Christmas release, and I thought
it was one of those deluxe entertainments that you used to look forward to at
the holidays – ingenious, lovingly assembled, with witty star performances (by
Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie) and sumptuous European locales. It
felt like a vacation; it also brought back memories of Charade. When
it was shot down in flames, I experienced something like despair: who
is going to want to make lush, purely enjoyable movies like this one (or Casanova,
which was similarly dismissed five years earlier) if no one shows up for
them? What all of the movies I’ve discussed in
this piece have in common is an ethic, if you will, that is no longer in
fashion: a commitment to storytelling craft and to
the holdover pleasures of the big-studio days. It’s
our loss if we squander them when they’re put in our way.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review, The Boston Phoenix and The Christian Century and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
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