Among the many well-made, one-word films out this year (Boyhood, Interstellar, Fury, Nightcrawler), two recent ones stand out: Birdman (though it has that curious parenthetical addition: or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) and Whiplash.
Let’s begin with Birdman
(and we’ll leave off the playful, if not pretentious, part of the title.
It’s about a washed-up Hollywood actor who 20 years earlier
played a superhero called Birdman in three films. Riggan Thomsen (Michael
Keaton, in an outstanding performance) wants to be considered a serious actor
and has written a play he is directing and starring in, an adaptation of
Raymond Carver’s short story “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love.”
The film combines humor with serious themes. Director Alejandro González Iñárritu is playful in many ways, but he
infuses the film with profound questions we all face to some extent. He also
uses various means to present these themes.
The camera follows the actors
around like a documentary, and Iñárritu loves
closeups. We viewers are intimately involved with these actors. We also get to
see what goes on backstage during a play as well as what leads up to its being
performed at all. The cuts between scenes are so smooth that the entire film
feels like one long take. Again, this places us in the action, in present
tense.
Throughout, Iñárritu satirizes
both Hollywood and the New York theater scene. He does this not only through
dialogue but with some fantastical special effects that show Riggan’s thoughts. He also employs
some magical realism, giving Riggan the ability to levitate and use
telekinesis, usually when he’s angry.
Riggan’s daughter, Sam (Emma
Stone), is a recovering drug addict and a reminder of Riggan’s failure as an
absent father while she was growing up. She confronts him at one point with the
question of why he’s trying to make his life meaningful by being considered a
serious actor.
The film also uses the play, in
which the main character feels he doesn’t exist because his wife doesn’t love
him, to display its themes.
These themes or questions about
how we try to find meaning are there, yet they don’t overwhelm the action or
hinder the humor. They are subtly made, as is the satire, which also works on
several levels. In the end, we’re left with the question turned back on us.
What do we hold up as worth pursuing for meaning. And is it?
And now to Whiplash, which was the opening film at the Sundance Film Festival
in January and won the audience award there.
When you hear it’s about a young
jazz drummer and his emotionally abusive teacher, you may shrug and say, What’s
the big deal? But it, too, works on several levels and grabs us right away with
its storytelling and pacing.
Andrew Neiman (Miles Teller), 19,
is accepted into the Shaffer Conservatory and soon wins a spot in the jazz
ensemble led by the school’s premier teacher, Terrence Fletcher (J.K. Simmons).
Fletcher at first is nice to Andrew, but soon his verbally abusive treatment of
his students comes out and gets directed at Andrew when they play the song
“Whiplash.”
Andrew wants to be a great drummer
like his idol, Buddy Rich. He’s so dedicated that he gives up dating his
girlfriend. The whiplash of emotions and confidence move back and forth throughout
the film, and it goes directions you don’t expect.
The main question the film raises
is, How much should one sacrifice for one’s art? But it goes beyond the
creative arts. Is it good to push ourselves (or be pushed) beyond our perceived
limitations in order to reach our full potential?
The film is well-shot. The
drumming scenes are gripping. I’m still not sure how they did it. And J.K.
Simmons’ performance is excellent.
Don’t be surprised if he (for
supporting actor) and Keaton (for actor) are Oscar nominees.
Birdman and Whiplash deal with the tension between
art and life. It’s an age-old theme, but they tackle it in new, creative ways.
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