MARRIAGE STORY – Review

Ah, this film’s poster promises the adored end result of many a typical “rom-com’, or even a full-fledged “hearts and flowers” love story (with part of that in the title itself). There are two “A” list actors (each part of major “tentpole” franchises) happily nuzzling each other while an adorable child (perhaps the product of their screen coupling) seems to be giggling in the photo’s lower half. But looks, along with movie “ballyhoo” can be most deceiving. Especially with one of our most acclaimed “indie” writer/directors is given the big credit above the title. Just what is his “take” on the institution in this very modern MARRIAGE STORY?

Said story certainly begins on an uplifting note as we’re dropped right in the middle of two montages that deliver “warm fuzzies” that most greeting card commercials try to elicit. Nicole (Scarlett Johansson) narrates the snippets that support her remarks concerning the strengths of Charlie (Adam Driver) as husband and father, followed by his singing (well speaking) of her praises. And where is this “admiration society” meeting taking place? Well, it’s the office of a marriage “mediator”, because these two are separating. Nicole storms out, loudly proclaiming these lists are bull…um…nonsense. They try to go back to their jobs, which is tough since they work together. She’s part of an avant-guard off, off-Broadway theatre troupe and he’s the founder/director. Nicole makes it clear that after the production opens and is “on its feet” she plans to return to LA with their nine-year-old son Henry (Azhy Robertson). Her mother (Julie Hagerty) and sister (Merritt Wever) live out there so they can help with Henry while she tries to return to movies or TV (prior to NYC she starred in a hit teen comedy flick). At the suggestion of some new industry friends, Nicole talks to, and soon hires, high-profile family attorney Nora (Laura Dern) to work on the divorce and the custody agreement. When Charlie flies out for a visit, he’s blindsided by her news (“I thought we were leaving out the lawyers”). After a brutal meeting with legal “pit bull” Jay (Ray Liotta), Charlie finally finds a lawyer Nicole hadn’t contacted, a semi-retired entertainment attorney now family lawyer Bert Spitz (Alan Alda). As Charlie attempts to establish a California residence while flying back and forth to NYC (his new play may be headed uptown), he and Nicole realize that their marriage can’t be saved, but, for the sake of Henry, will they still be able to remain a family?

This is a film filled to the brim with superb performance, with Ms. Johansson delivering perhaps the best dramatic work of her twenty-plus years in movies. For about the last half of that time she has mainly bounced from “rom-com” heroine to SF/fantasy femme fatale (we’ll get to see her Marvel work one more time in this May’s Black Widow prequel), however she goes through the full range of emotions as the often conflicted, eventually determined Nicole. At first, she seems to be a cliche “flighty” actress, rejecting counseling, and discarding her family over career ambitions. Then there’s her riveting revealing confessional to her possible lawyer Nora. It’s a powerhouse one-take “no cuts” several-minute monologue in which she truly “bares all”, going from being an exposed “raw nerve” to focused “crusader”, liberated by finally giving voice to her frustrations and disappointments. We get another sample of her considerable skills much later as she goes “toe to toe” in another long dialogue (like a mini two-act play) with the equally talented Driver. His character Charlie changes as well, starting as the victim, a “good dad” “sucker-punched” until we see his often stubborn selfish nature as his artistic goals are nearly smothering his partner. Driver also puts a fresh spin on the “fish out of water” riffing on the East-Coaster aghast at the shallow trappings of “La La Land”. At times he’s a clueless lost traveler in a confusing tangle legal web. He’s pretty funny too, as he fails to predict his son’s impulses and especially when a sight gag goes terribly wrong. Also bringing the funny, Hagerty as Nicole ditzy mother (she doesn’t understand that she can’t remain pals with her kids’ exes), Wever as the jittery, flustered sister (she ‘s gotta’ serve “papers” to Charlie), and Wallace Shawn as the most senior member of Charlie’s acting troupe (look at the faces of his much younger costars as he repeats another story about his “glory days”). And of course, there’s comedy icon Alda whose mild-mannered Bert is almost eaten alive by the legal sharks led by the formidable Dern who is truly a barracuda in high heels, in one great scene she roars back at society’s double standards that shackle her gender. Equally fearsome on the flip side is Liotta whose Jay is pure macho swagger in a thousand-dollar tailored suit.

Noah Baumbach expertly brings his moving, unpredictable script to vivid life with no false steps or cardboard villains. Though they’re battling in the courtrooms, Nicole and Charlie still share moments of kindness and compassion, all for the best of reasons, namely the well-being of son Henry. Though they clash there’s still the underlying respect so that Henry never hears a “burn” from one parent about the other. There’s no flashy camerawork, though Baumbach knows just when to cut in for a telling look or glance. But his biggest strength is as a guide to the cast through the emotional minefield of a disintegrating relationship. Everything is real with no easy fixes or reconciliations. It’s the end of a romance, but the partnership begins to morph into something else. In that way, the tale of these two (three really) is actually hopefull. Though often unbearably raw, MARRIAGE STORY is an uplifting modern ode to a family’s resilience.

3.5 Out of 4

MARRIAGE STORY opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Tivoli Theatre

WELCOME TO MARWEN – Review

The mysteries of the human brain have fascinated filmmakers (and filmgoers) since the earliest days of cinema. Of course, the subject has been fodder for countless horror and science fiction films with variations on iconic literature works such as Frankenstein and Dr. Jekyll and Mr, Hyde. These also inspired comedies such as THE MAN WITH TWO BRAINS and THE NUTTY PROFESSOR, among others. But there have also been several fact-based, or “inspired by real events” films centering on brain diseases and injuries, exploring how catastrophic trauma affects those individuals. CONCUSSION from 2015 dramatized the very real cases of veteran football players who took hits to the head that caught up to them years later. Then there are the injuries to the brain that, like a computer keyboard, “pushes the delete button” with delusions and fantasy replacing the horrific memories. That’s exactly what happens to the real man profiled in the new film. But rather than escaping to famous fictional locales like Oz or Pandora, he retreats to a place he created. To paraphrase the great late Rod Serling, “There’s the signpost up ahead”, proclaiming WELCOME TO MARWEN.

The story begins as a WWII bomber makes a rough landing, nearly engulfing the pilot in flames. As “Cap’n Hogie” jumps clear we see that he is actually a doll (sorry, action figure) who walks and talks on his own. As are the gang of Nazi soldiers that ambush him. Luckily Hogie has “back up’, a quartet of beautiful female resistance fighters who mow down the “goose-steppers”. Suddenly they freeze as we hear a click. Zooming out we see that the toys are being positioned and photographed by a man, Mark Hogancamp (Steve Carell) in the field outside his upper New York state home, next to the miniature city of Marwen, Belgium that he’s constructed. A moving van at the house across the street has ruined his shot. Luckily the new neighbor is a lovely single lady named Nicol (Leslie Mann), yes no “e”. We learn Mark’s backstory by the photos and scrapbook inside his home. And that’s all he has left to recall his past life, the life before a gang of thugs (one had a swastika arm tattoo) beat him so badly outside the local bar, the Avalanche, that Mark lost his memories, his artistic abilities (he was an artist on WWII comic books) and had to learn to walk once more. Photos from the hospital stay show an Iraqui war vet, GI Julie (Janelle Monae) guiding him through rehab. The quiet is soon disrupted by Mark’s visiting nurse, the load forceful Russian woman named Anna (Gwendoline Christie). The rest of the day Marks divides between visiting the local hobby shop run by Roberta (Merritt Wever) who orders the special WWII models and figures for him, then returning to the Avalanche where he works as a janitor and helps the chef Carlala (Eiza Gonzalez), who aided him on that fateful night. He’s also preparing for an art show of his toy photos that Roberta has set up for him in an NYC gallery, as his attorney implores him to attend the sentencing hearing of his attackers so that he may read a victim’s statement. As the pressures build, Mark spends more time in the make-believe world of Marwen where he’s the heroic Hogie and all the above-named women are his fighting pals (just pals, though). As he becomes friends with Nicol, she also joins the adventures, but more than a pal. But the sinister sorceress Dejah (Diane Kruger) threatens Hogie’s new love. As the court date looms, can Mark break away from his fantasy and finally face the reality of his new life, and perhaps start over with Nicol?

With superb work most recently in BEAUTIFUL BOY and VICE, Carell has proved himself equally adept at both drama and comedy, so he’d seem a natural for this role which combines plenty of both. As Capn’ Hogie he gets to parody the square-jawed dashing hero of many a TCM marathon. Mark requires a delicate touch showing his vulnerability, while also portraying his struggle to overcome the many physical and mental challenges stemming from the vicious assault. Carell shows us his frustrations which can either shut all his emotions down (doing his art, he seems to enter another sensory plane) or cause him to panic and revert to “flight” mode. Outside of Marwen, Carell even gives Mark a charming suitor stance as he opens up to the understanding Nicol. Mann, working with Carell for the first time since 2005’s THE 40-YEAR-OLD VIRGIN, has a sweet relaxed chemistry with him making for several natural quiet moments. But for all her welcoming qualities, Nicol is still a mystery. With the help of some photos and furnishings, Mann shows us that Nicol has also dealt with tragedy as she faces the future with hope and optimism. Unfortunately, the other fine actresses don’t have roles written as intriguing as her. Two time Emmy winner Wever tries to make the determined Roberta compelling, but she becomes the too accommodating doormat to Mark, who degrades her in his fantasy world (somehow her blouse is always torn). Two up and coming talents, Gonzalez and Monae have very little to do outside of Marwen (the later is only in human form for a few seconds). Then there’s the dazzling Kruger, who alternates between silky temptress and shrieking harpy as the witchy Dejah (and why does she share a name with Edgar Rice Burroughs’s Princess of Mars in the John Carter series).

Director of many classic film fantasies, Robert Zemeckis, tries to meld the fable and reality with wildly uneven results. After a few years respite, he returns to motion-capture (mo-cap) technology (THE POLAR EXPRESS, BEOWULF, and A CHRISTMAS CAROL) for the zippy, inventive WWII sequences which feel like a Rankin/Bass TV special based on Marvel’s “Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos” comics. The faces feel so alive while retaining that sculpted plastic sheen as their “ball and socket” joined arms and legs flail about and grip all manner of weapons as their stitched clothing flaps in the wind. They look especially great as they jump to life-size in a nifty courtroom battle scene. Ah, but the real world is not nearly as slick and fun, or…interesting. Without allowing us to get to know the pre-attack Mark, he’s fairly one-note. The script from Zemeckis and Caroline Thompson seems more content with making him a martyr, punished for his clothing quirks (ala’ ED WOOD). The attempts at pathos become mawkish and eventually dull. And what does Dejah really represent? His fears? Society’s hate toward misfits? And in a perplexing scene, she is tied into a clumsy “call back” to Zemeckis’s greatest movie triumph (as they say in that flick, “That’s heavy, Doc”). The whole thing just lurches and lumbers from one set piece to the next until it just skids and comes to a thudding halt. Maybe its documentary source MARWENCOL makes more sense because WELCOME TO MARWEN is more of a dull dramatic dead end.

2 Out of 5

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of WELCOME TO MARWEN

This holiday season, Academy Award® winner Robert Zemeckis—the groundbreaking filmmaker behind Forrest Gump, Flight and Cast Away—directs Steve Carell in the most original movie of the year. Welcome to Marwen tells the miraculous true story of one broken man’s fight as he discovers how artistic imagination can restore the human spirit.

When a devastating attack shatters Mark Hogancamp (Carell) and wipes away all memories, no one expected recovery. Putting together pieces from his old and new life, Mark meticulously creates a wondrous town where he can heal and be heroic. As he builds an astonishing art installation—a testament to the most powerful women he knows—through his fantasy world, he draws strength to triumph in the real one.

In a bold, wondrous and timely film from this revolutionary pioneer of contemporary cinema, Welcome to Marwen shows that when your only weapon is your imagination…you’ll find courage in the most unexpected place.

The epic drama is produced by Oscar®-winning producer Steve Starkey (Forrest Gump, Flight), Jack Rapke (Cast Away, Flight), and Cherylanne Martin (The Pacific, Flight) of Zemeckis’ Universal-based ImageMovers banner produce alongside the director. It is executive produced by Jacqueline Levine, as well as Jeff Malmberg, who directed the riveting 2010 documentary that inspired the film.

Welcome to Marwen – In Theaters December 21

Enter for your chance to win two free passes to the St. Louis advance screening of WELCOME TO MARWEN. The theatrical sneak preview will be on December 19 at 7pm.

Add you name and email in our comments section below.

NO PURCHASE REQUIRED. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house.

WEBSITE: www.welcometomarwen.com

RATING: WELCOME TO MARWEN has been rated PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned – Some Material May Be Inappropriate for Children Under 13) for sequences of fantasy violence, some disturbing images, brief suggestive content, thematic material and language.

Steve Carell as Mark Hogancamp photographs the dolls for his fictional town in “Welcome to Marwen,” directed by Robert Zemeckis.

Olivia Wilde And Luke Wilson Star In New Trailer For Reed Morano’s MEADOWLAND

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Cinedigm has released the new trailer for director Reed Morano’s MEADOWLAND.

The drama screened in April at the Tribeca Film Festival. In her review, Sheila O’Malley (rogerebert.com) said Morano’s movie, “shows a strong visual style, at times overwrought and hallucinatory, at other times quiet and focused. The acting is terrific and grounded, without the expected theatrics or huge breakdowns. Grief is an enclosed and very silent world. That’s the thing that nobody tells you about it, and that’s the devastating process shown in “Meadowland.”

One of the must-see movies of 2015, the cast includes Olivia Wilde, Luke Wilson, Giovanni Ribisi, Elisabeth Moss, Ty Simpkins, John Leguizamo, Kevin Corrigan, Merritt Wever, Scott Mescudi, Mark Feuerstein and Juno Temple.

In the hazy aftermath of an unimaginable loss, married couple Sarah (Olivia Wilde, Rush) and Phil (Luke Wilson, The Skeleton Twins) come unhinged, recklessly ignoring the repercussions. Phil, a New York City cop, starts to lose sight of his morals as Sarah puts herself in increasingly dangerous situations, falling deeper into her own fever dream.

The directorial debut of cinematographer Reed Morano and written by Chris Rossi, MEADOWLAND is a visceral exploration of grief and hope.

Check out the movie when it opens in theaters October 16th, On Demand October 23rd.

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