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Always assume Spoilers and possible profanity in context. These are often adult themed movies.


Showing posts with label Ryan Gosling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ryan Gosling. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

The Place Beyond The Pines

I went to see "The Place Beyond The Pines" with high hopes, since I was so impressed with "Blue Valentine," the previous effort from Derek Cianfrance. "Valentine" was a film that felt as if it had was personally addressing me in many respects. The eerie thing about it is that "The Place Beyond the Pines" did it again, even though the subject matter is very different. In "Blue Valentine" we looked at a doomed relationship and after the fact, we know it couldn't have gone any other way. We also know why, because a lot of times people fall in love and have no idea who is joining them on that journey. The best of intentions make little difference when it comes to keeping a relationship composed of the incompatible together.

"Pines" touches on romance but doesn't live there. Mothers and daughters are essential to the story, but it isn't really about them. You could fault it, I suppose, for not giving the female characters equal screen time, but they're not slighted. They're part of a broken whole. They're in the background of this one trying to make things work, and ending up as mystified as anyone when they don't. There's nothing wrong with a story knowing what it's about. You can't pick a sharp focus and also tell everyone's story. This isn't a story about the "whole," but a story about one of the big pieces. I know that I appreciate a story about the unseen but powerful connections between fathers and sons. I appreciate the thematic focus of the film, and given the amount of ground it has to cover, it does a wonderful job.

We're ushered into this world by meeting "Handsome Luke Glanton" (Ryan Gosling) a loner who travels around with the carnival doing motorcycle stunt shows. He has no interest in settling down in one place or building a stable relationship. He's never seen these things except perhaps in other families, as an observer. These things have never been expected of him because he didn't have a father to base his perception of manhood around. As a result he throws together all the information he's gleaned from outside sources to create his own persona. He has too many bad tattoos, he rides a motorcycle, he tries to be decent but he's too easily prone to violence. His idea of what a man is, is more of a caricature of manhood, based on movies more than any reality. The only thing he knows for sure, is that a man doesn't typically stick around long.

Hi reality changes quickly though, when he finds that he now has a son, the result of a quick fling in Schenectady a year ago. The mother, Romina (Eva Mendes) didn't tell him, because she bought his representation. He's the guy that doesn't stick around. He didn't call so she didn't tell him. She found a good relationship with a more stable man, Kofi (Mahershala Ali) who sees manhood as honoring your responsibilities and taking care of your family. Romina lives in Kofi's house, along with her son, and her mother.

Luke responds immediately to the fact that he has a son. He has a glimpse at the idea that he can be something different, someone more like Kofi. The problem is he doesn't have any experience to tell him how, just the decision he makes based on no real experience. He quits the carnival, and decides to settle down and provide for his son. He runs into a man named Robin (Ben Mendelsohn) who throws him some mechanic work, but not enough to make a huge financial difference. Robin also lets Luke stay in a trailer on his property. Robin becomes a friend and sort of father figure in a limited way. Luke hears what he wants from Robin, mostly that his "unique set of skills" is best suited to making money by robbing banks. Robin's done it before, years ago, and stopped before they could catch him. They come up with a routine involving Luke's motorcycle skills and they make some quick money. Luke feels like he's living up to his decision and shows up with money and gifts for his son. He lets himself in to Kofi's house to set up a crib he bought. It never occurs to him that he wasn't invited, and when Kofi tells him to leave, he responds with violence and ends up arrested.

He gets out of jail more determined to provide for his son and Romina, although he can't legally see them now. He decides to ramp up the bank robberies, and Robin declines to join him, knowing where this leads. He goes ahead anyway and unsurprisingly it doesn't go well for him. The police are ready for him this time. And he ends up another absent father, by trying to do the opposite, because he didn't have anywhere near the skill set he needed for what he was trying to do. His story is only the beginning of "The Place Beyond the Pines." and interestingly, while his screen time is abbreviated, his absence hangs over the rest of the film, just as the absence of Luke's father is an integral part of his ow identity.

The second part of the triptych, Avery Cross (Bradley Cooper) has little in common with Luke. His father is not only present, but overshadowing.  His struggle is not to figure out what a man really is, but to become a different and successful one in his own way and make a favorable comparison. Since his father is a highly  esteemed judge, Avery decides to be a cop, perhaps reasoning that he can pursue justice in a more hands on and active role. Unlike Luke's situation, Avery's father is anything but nebulous as he can actively disapprove of Avery's choices. Avery knows at least partially from his father's example that he desires a happy home with a wife and kids.The fact that he comes from privilege, also opens many doors that would be unthinkable to Luke. In fact, his wife Jennifer (Rose Byrne) doesn't understand why he doesn't embrace that idea and follow his father's footsteps. Being a cop doesn't make sense to anyone but Avery himself.

We first meet Avery during Luke's story, as he's a rookie cop confronting Luke. Avery's reaction to Luke having a gun is perhaps understandable. He's not used to real danger from violence, and shoots before he really considers the action. He ends up with a gunshot injury himself and has to deal with questions about the incident. In the official version of the story, Avery shot second and is regarded as a hero. He's troubled on finding out that Luke had a baby son. He tells a psychologist that he's hardly able to look at his own son anymore, as he can't help thinking of how his actions took away a child's father.

His recovery is the perfect chance for his wife and father to question the wisdom of his line of work. He endures their questioning but can't wait to get back. When Officer Deluca (Ray Liotta) show up at his house for dinner with some other officers, he's pulled back into the police world. Deluca suspects that Luke left some of his robbery money with Romina. He brings Avery to the house where they find the money stashed under the crib that Luke had left there. Avery hates the idea but knows he can't protest under the circumstances. They give him most of the take, which leaves him on the hook for favors in the future. When Avery declines to return to the field, he's assigned to the evidence room. Deluca and his friends see an opportunity there and bring him into it. Avery doesn't approve however, and his guilt over the shooting is only exacerbated by the idea of being complicit in police corruption. He reports it, but his chief doesn't want to hear it. He refuses to take action other than to tell Deluca. This leaves Avery in a dangerous situation and he turns to the only person who can help him, his father. "You can fix this." his father says, "but you won't like it." He follows his father's advice and it works, getting him out of danger, and beginning his political career.



Years pass and we catch up with Avery giving a loving eulogy at his father's funeral. We learn that he and his wife divorced. His son, AJ has been mostly ignored, but wants to stay with his father for awhile. We find that his son his become an affected wannabe gangster. At school, he crosses paths with Jason, Luke's son who sits by himself in the cafeteria. He asks Jason to get him some drugs and he complies, although the two of them get arrested immediately afterwards. Avery pulls some strings to get them both released once he realizes who Jason is. He warns his son not to touch Jason, but AJ isn't much for listening. Jason ends up with a lot of questions about his father, and we learn that Romina has told him very little about Luke. He finally gets his father's name from Kofi, who has raised him and assures him that he's his father regardless. A Google search quickly gives him some more information and even more questions and he soon realizes who AJ's father is, since the shooting was all over the news.

After settling scores with AJ, and Avery, Jason looks up Robin, who tells him that Luke was "the best I've ever seen." on a motorcycle. They chat awhile, Robin only telling Jason the good things about his father. Jason buys hs own motorcycle and sets off, while we see that AJ is playing the role of supportive son to help his father's image as the newly elected Attorney General.

The third part of the film, while necessary is the least satisfying part, mostly due to the convenient crossing paths of the two sons. That being said, once we arrive there it makes sense and the tight connection between the two bloodlines is full of interesting contradictions and parallels. We're shown how each son has picked up elements from his father, while each performs his variation. AJ seems to completely lack his father's moral code, yet he certainly feels overshadowed by his father's success. While this is similar to Avery's relationship with his own father, the two don't have the closeness of that relationship. Rather than help find solutions, Avery uses his power to sweep problems under the rug, leaving AJ no better for his bad experiences. AJ believes his actions have no consequences, and it took a traumatic experience to change his behavior at all.

While blood certainly plays a part in what happens to these people, changes are made along the way. Luke's son, Jason, for example benefits greatly from having Kofi in his life, and while he isn't his biological father, he at least has a solid and decent father figure to weigh himself against. This leaves him better equipped than Luke ever was, and also presents what I found the biggest hole in the film, Jason's reaction to finding out Avery's role in Luke's fate. While his violence against AJ is understandable and retaliation, his confrontation of Avery is a little less so. Jason knew nothing about his father before a Google search set him off, and the amount of rage at Avery seemed a bit much. His father, after all is little more than a concept to him, and the fact that his father is dead is little surprise. Disappointment would ring truer I think. It's AJ's presence as an accelerant which makes the confrontation almost acceptable, but I think a conversation with Avery would've been more effective. Still, I see why this element was needed and it ties the piece together nicely.

"The Place Beyond The Pines" is a big movie, tackling an immense subject. It does this remarkably well, and while I wouldn't call it perfect, I did feel it personally, which is the most I can expect from a film. What happens to us is largely set in motion before we're even born. Boys will always look to their fathers whether they exist or not. Fathers hope they pass on the best to their sons rather than the worst, but they usually pass on both. There is some choice and some circumstance at work, but it requires both luck and determination to get over the legacy you're working with. It can take a lot to learn a little bit and the things that help you are the things you may not even realize you have. Jason, for example is far better equipped than he could have been, just for Kofi being around. While he's the character with no biological investment in the film, he's easily the best father, looking out for Jason because that's what a man should do. Luke attempts to break the legacy that was given to him. He tells Robin, "My father wasn't around and look how I turned out." While his plan doesn't work, it's a step towards progress, and maybe Jason better equipped than his old man can take it a step further.

AJ, I think, has a longer way to go. It's hard for someone missing a sense of decency to ever come around, but perhaps Avery has learned a few things from things being shaken up, and perhaps they'll both put in the work. If he could become as tough and as fair as his father was, ho knows what could happen? At the very least, their privileged cruise control has been set back to manually pressing the gas.  And again, all we can hope is that they're lucky enough to inch a step forward. It's not coincidental that the family name is "Cross" as they'll never get rid of the family weight, but could perhaps become better at carrying it.

"A Place Beyond the Pines" is full of bleak and beautiful scenes, lots of space and shadows in between the trees. It also has a terrific score which augments the journey while promising consequences. The actors here are all in top form and the deep attention to character is what makes it exceptional. These are people who make their best efforts with disastrous consequence, as easily as they're rewarded for mistakes. Nobody sees the whole picture, and seeing more doesn't always help. We're born with potential and we learn a few things along the way, but to step out of your lineage is nearly impossible. Yet Cianfrance doesn't present this as a hopeless fact. His characters are not saved by epiphanies, but through slow and difficult work at connecting with what they are even when they don't know that's what they're doing. When Jason visits his father's friend Robin, he's fortunate that Robin has an idea what he's looking for. While he could tell him a great many things, he focuses on the good part. He was the "best I'd ever seen" at riding a motorcycle, he says and where there was only shame and mystery, Jason now has something to be proud of in his blood. He already knows about the bad parts, the good stuff requires the searching. We see Jason riding off on a motorcycle and while we don't know what will happen, at least he's on a better road than Luke was. They all have a long way to go, but luckily these stories can stretch a long way. Maybe there's time to get it a little more right than your father did.




Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Drive

Nicholas Winding Refn's latest film, "Drive" puts a modern spin on some once beloved and often overlooked Hollywood genres. While car chases haven't really gone anywhere, we haven't seen a good Driver movie in some time. The Nameless "Driver" (Ryan Gosling) recalls Steve McQueen's Bullitt and Kowalski in "The Vanishing Point" and more recently Stunt Man Mike in Tarantino's Grindhouse send up, "Death Proof" The Driver comes from a long but neglected tradition and he carries it on with his competency and his scorpion racing jacket as an emblem. Driver doesn't have much of a social life (or skills) and divides his time between stunt driving for the movies, working for his friend Shannon (Bryan Cranston) at his garage, and doing sidejobs as a driver for criminals. He has a strict code for his moonlighting activities and we first meet him conducting a side job. Driver sells the criminals a "five minute window." He'll pull up to whatever place they plan to hold up and give them five minutes. Should anything occur within that five minutes, he's "with them all the way." but before or after they're "on their own." On his first job in the film, we see him easily outwit the police while escorting his customers away from a robbery. He's ready for anything including the police chopper. He doesn't use guns or get involved in any way however, other than driving.

Shannon seems to serve as Driver's employer/manager, and assistant, giving Driver legitimate employment at the garage and setting up stunt driving gigs. He also outfits the cars that Driver needs for his side jobs. Shannon however, has ties to a local crime figures Bernie Rose (Albert Brooks) and Nino (Ron Perlman) We see him asking Bernie for $400,000.00 which Shannon needs to buy a car to get Driver into professional racing. Bernie is skeptical, reminding Shannon that there are plenty of good race cars and crews already out there. Shannon explains that it isn't the car so much as it is the Driver that matters. After seeing Driver do a test run around a track, they come to an agreement. Bernie stretches out his hand to Driver for a handshake, but Driver says "My hands are a little dirty." Bernie counters "That's Ok. Mine are too."

At the garage Bernie explains to Driver how he and Shannon got acquainted. Apparently Shannon set up cars for B movies that Bernie produced. He also overcharged, which Bernie says he didn't mind. Shannon then tried the same thing on Nino, Bernie's associate, and found that Nino did mind, which cost Shannon a broken hip. Driver doesn't seem moved by the uderlying urgency in this story, When Bernie asks if he's ready to win some races, Driver says "I hope so."

Driver soon meets his neighbor Irene (Carey Mulligan) and her young son Benicio (Kaden Leos) Soon after meeting, he happens to be shopping at the same grocery store as they are, and feels obliged to help when he learns their car has broken down. He quickly becomes taken with the two of them, the son more than the mother. His stoicism bends a bit and we see him actually enjoying himself spending time with them. While he has an easy rapport with Benicio, his attraction for Irene takes a little more time, and just as it seems things are going his way, she recalls that her incarcerated husband, Standard, is about to come home. Driver gets back to his work, although his thoughts are now a bit distracted. He has an awkward meeting with Standard (Oscar Isaac) the night of his homecoming party. Benecio has mentioned Driver coming around and "helping out." which Standard clearly has mixed feelings about, obviously suspecting motives other than altruism.

Standard appears sincere in his repentance, grateful for a second chance. However, he is soon badly beaten by thugs in front of Benecio. Driver happens on the scene finding Standard bloodied, and learns that he owes protection money from his prison term, which is getting raised every day. He's being pressured to rob a pawnshop, to even things up, which he doesn't want to do. They have also promised to come after his family next. Driver agrees to help and goes with Standard to meet Cook (James Biberi) the man behind the beatings and threats to Standard's family.  Cook has another person, Blanche (Christina Hendricks) picked out to help with the job. Of course the job goes badly, and Driver ends up with a million dollars in a duffel bag, forced to sort things out. We find he is as good at hurting and killing as he is at driving.

Driver is of course the classic loner, his rituals and spartan needs, giving him a lot in common with Jef Costello in "Le Samourai" and many other hitmen such as George Clooney's character in "The American." For all we know, Driver once was a hitman. Shannon tells us that five years ago, he just appeared out of nowhere and asked for a job. Driver's awkward social skills certainly suggest some isolation from the rest of the world, and he can stomp a man's face under his boot until there's no head left, without missing a beat. But we don't know for sure, and in this movie, he is not a hit man simply the Driver. We learn that his brief interactions with Irene and Benecio meant more to him than we might have imagined. We don't know where Driver came from, or even what he wants. Money seems trivial to him. Where a hitman has a set objective driver does not, at least until Irene and Benecio's safety is in question. He attempts to solve things the easiest way possible, by simply returning the money, but this is of course not possible, and he knows it and arranges accordingly.

Gosling does a great job portraying Driver as a blank slate. He says very few words, letting his expressions do most of the performing and even that is minimal. It's notable when Driver smiles, because it's a virtual torrent of expression for him. Bryan Cranston is terrific as the well meaning but terribly unlucky Shannon, probably the most sympathetic character, as we really get the sense that he's never had a minute that wasn't behind the eight ball. He wants to do right by Driver, but he can't see the big picture. Ron Perlman is perfectly cast as Nino, the strong arming, overcompensating gangster who kicks things into high gear. Albert Brooks is the most surprising casting choice. His Bernie is about as far away from Brooks' comedy persona as you could get. This character is all the more evil for appearing to be a nice and personable guy. The ease with which he can pull out a razor and cut an old friend is nothing short of chilling.

Nicholas Winding Refn borrows from the car and driver movies, and noir movies, mixed with the style of Asian action films, but this always feels like his own film. His awareness of the genres he's working with is obvious, and he clearly loves where his film comes from. The Driver is an impossible character, the guy who comes from nowhere with exactly the right skills to take care of a certain situation. He has no name, no motives, he's just a force waiting to be set loose. He acts like a hitman but he isn't a hit man. He doesn't seem intent on standing outside of humanity, he just doesn't know how to relate to it. Given the chance, he seems overjoyed at the prospect.

He isn't surprised however, when it proves to be transitory. He's the Driver after all. He's all about passing through, the journey not the destination. With his methodical nature and rituals, it's clearly important that he passes through the right way though, as winning and losing seem to mean very little to him. The Driver who begins the film as little more than a personified function learns a little about being a human being (as is heavily reinforced by the soundtrack) on the way. He's not out to live or die, he just drives, but that doesn't keep him from caring enough to get attached, although it isn't in his nature to stop for very long. That doesn't mean he can't look out the window and wonder, what if he could?

Driver clearly has some concerns about his own nature. Watching a television show with Benecio, he points out a shark in a cartoon, asking Benecio if the shark is a good guy. When Benecio tells him no, Driver asks "Are there any good guy sharks?" Benecio patiently tells him "Look at him. Does he look like a good guy to you?" Later, when calling Bernie to inform him that Nino has expired. He asks Bernie, "Do you remember the story about the frog and the scorpion? Nino didn't make it across the river." His strict rules and stoic restraint, point to a man keeping himself on a short leash. his comfortability with extreme violence also suggest something of his past. Yet Driver knows what he is, and he realizes he must use that to save the only people he cares about, Irene and Benecio. This is perfectly illustrated in a scene where Driver and Irene get on an elevator with a hitman coming for one of them. Driver quickly makes the hitman but doesn't let on. He kisses Irene passionately, throwing the hitman off guard, and then takes advantage of the situation by stomping the man to death while Irene watches horrified, unable to process that he's doing something so horrific, so naturally, for her. The kiss is also perhaps Driver's only passionate moment in the whole film. We wonder if perhaps he knew it was the only time he'd get the chance, but still he makes use of it in a practical sense, as that's his nature. We know it's goodbye.

We don't know however, how things will turn out for the Driver. He's the mysterious right man in the right place at the right time, but he comes across as human enough, in a similar way to Charles Bronson's Bishop character in the Mechanic. We know he's the best, but we don't think he's invulnerable. We're not even sure if he wants to live. When he has a job he has to see it concluded. The money is a very small part of that. Perhaps it's enough that for a moment he got to see his own humanity before driving away.