Showing posts with label Greta Gerwig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greta Gerwig. Show all posts

7/24/2023

Barbie (2023), Lars and The Real Girl (2007), and Megan (2023)

Barbie is the movie of 2023! No doubt about it. I went to see it and really liked it. It is funny on a way that satires our society and felt very much like the great movies that Mel Brooks made in the 1970s. Greta Gerwig's comedic touch is certainly in this and the only thing missing is her doing a supporting role somehow in some scene; I think she's really funny as noted before in other reviews here.  But Margot Robbie as Barbie is really good, and worth of some awards for her performance. 


Ryan Gosling is very good too, as "Ken". It reminded me that he was in another movie about a doll, Lars and the Real Girl, which is a really great and underrated gem. Ryan is so good in this film as a man who develops a serious attachment to his new plastic friend. It's a quirky movie but it's profound as well and is really worth seeing.

Barbie reviews by other bloggers:

Another movie about a doll that came out earlier this year is Megan. I really loved this one! It's a horror-comedy about a killer doll, sort of like Child's Play/Chucky but not as violent/bloody. One of the new twists of this movie's doll is that it's programmed with an ability to attach with it's owner, and ultimately becomes possessive and needless to say, creepy. But very fun to watch, and ultimately satisfying. 




Deep Focus Lens review of Barbie and the film's dance sequences, choreography, and sets

3/01/2018

Lady Bird (2017), Francis Ha (2012), and Mistress America (2014)

Francis Ha is an independent comedy that's filmed in black-and-white--I'm not sure why exactly the director chose black and white, but I like it, and generally I find any modern-day black and white film to be interesting. If I had to guess, I'd say that director Noah Baumbauch wanted to go for a classic movie look, which is OK by me. It's also considered Greta Gerwig's breakthrough role and perhaps the one that got her the most attention, maybe at least from independent film fans. The director had previously worked with her on the film "Greenberg" which I haven't seen yet. Francis Ha puts Greta in the lead, in a comedic role, and it's a simple film, basically just following her character around as she spends time with her friends and romantic interest (Adam Driver) and finding work as a dancer in New York. She also manages to get away and fly to Paris on vacation for two days. Who does that? Francis does. I actually knew someone who did that---go on some overseas trip for a weekend and come back, so I guess it's not entirely implausible. Francis is an interesting character, and funny because Greta is really funny. "Modern Love" by David Bowie is this movie's theme song. A blogger (can't remember who) wrote that they hated this movie, but I don't know why. I liked it alot.

Mistress America is the next film by Baumbach, and also stars Greta in the lead. Her character is almost the same as Frances, and when I watch this movie I think of this as the sequel. I really love this movie and liked it even better than Francis. We first meet the character of Tracy, played by Lola Kirke, who is starting her first year of college. She wants to be a writer. She doesn't know a soul, but she has a relative in New York played by Greta whom she befriends; Greta shows her New York. I love her character because she wants to do so much with her life; teach exercise/spinning classes, open her own restaurant. She has lots of dreams. I love her character because even though she's about 10 years older than Zoe, she's still looking to find her place in the world. The movie has a great soundtrack (You Could’ve Been A Lady by Hot Chocolate is this movie's theme song) and I love the writing. Greta is really kooky but likeable. Another review of this film from the blog Cinema Scope here.

Lady Bird is Greta's first directorial film, and she wrote it is as well (but doesn't star in it). It's semi-autobiographical, though. The lead role is played by Siaorse Ronan, who plays a teenager in high school who is coming of age, and the film focuses in on her last year of high school, climaxing in the senior prom. She has a best friend - I don't know the name of the actress - who decides not to go to the prom and feels like an outcast. I really liked this character, but I liked Siaorse's character too, as she deals with her family, her mom (Laurie Metcalf) and religious/Catholic traditions, and her romance with someone who may not be right for her. The film has a light comedic tone throughout, and reminded me of a John Hughes film of the 1980s like Pretty in Pink or Sixteen Candles; it just seemed to have a similar tone. Also, I imagined this character to be a younger "Frances Ha".

Even though all three of these films are not officially connected with each other, I like to think of them as a trilogy, with Lady Bird being the first movie. Francis Ha would be the second, and Mistress America the third.

If you've seen all 3, what do you think? Do you also see a connection with the three in a similar way?

7/21/2012

To Rome With Love (2012)

Set in Rome, the movie is made up of four vignettes, some better than others.

The one I liked best was the one with Roberto Benigni, who I don't think has been in any movie since Life Is Beautiful (La vita è bella). He plays an ordinary man who suddenly is chased by the paparazzi for no apparent reason. It's comical, and brought to mind the paparazzi of La Dolce Vita.

Another story I liked features a couple in Rome on a short business trip. When the wife gets lost in the city, the husband finds himself spending the day with another woman - a prostitute, played by Penelope Cruz - introducing her to his family and business contacts with comical results.

There's another one with Alec Baldwin, who plays a mentor to a young architect Jesse Eisenberg. Alec is pretty flat in this; he seemed to be reading all of his lines for the first time, uninterested. George Clooney might have been a better choice than Alec in that role.

Jesse gets caught in a love triangle with his girlfriend Greta Gerwig and Greta's best friend on vacation Ellen Page.

I'm giving To Rome With Love a "C" - average. The vignettes are amusing but not too remarkable. Lovely scenery of Rome, though.