
Have you ever left the cinema confused? Not sure what you’ve just paid money to see? This can sometimes mean the film is crap: confused plots (or lack thereof) and or performances. However, this can sometimes be a good sign: you’ve been challenged and now see the world in a new light. Today’s reviews fall somewhere in this grey zone of cinematic confusion. Let the ride begin.
Black Swan
In an interview with an Australian film magazine a comparison was made between Aronofsky’s last film The Wrestler and his latest offering Black Swan. For those of you who saw The Wrestler this may seem a bit like chalk and cheese: the story of a broken down, has-been professional athlete up against the grace, beauty and finesse of the ballet world. However, the comparison also invites favourable reminiscence about the guts and raw intensity of Mickey Rourke’s performance and the ability to make a largely ridiculed and derided form of entertainment heartbreaking and accessible to a mainstream audience. So is the comparison warranted?
Firstly, the intensity of the Black Swan has not been rivalled this year. Not since watching the last half hour of Inception have I been on the edge of my seat until the credits started rolling. The slick directing from Aronofsky ensures the dramatic suspense of the storyline does not fizzle out and as we are thrown into a world of fantasy, ballet and inner turmoil one feels as though you are living the experience of Natalie Portman’s Nina. The end is comparable to Mickey Rourke attempting one last “Ramjam” and no less thrilling.
Also, like The Wrestler, the performances are superb. Portman as Nina, the innocent new principal ballerina, gives a performance worthy of the Oscar buzz. Her struggle to embrace the darker side of her personality is engaging and painful as we see her battle, self-harm and the whims of a demanding artistic director in Vincent Cassel. One of the early scenes in which they embrace and she bites him demonstrates both the clever psychology of Cassel and the ability of Aronofsky to keep the audience on its toes.
Finally, the music does not disappoint. The score keeps pace with the action and almost negates the need for spoken interaction. The last half hour is only sparsely punctated by dialogue as the music heightens the dramatic tension. Like the soundtrack to The Wrestler, this will be in my rotation for sometime.
So was it a fair comparison? I hope not. Both films are intense and tell familiar stories in a unique and engaging light. Both have wonderful performances by lead actors and direction that crescendo into heartbreakingly beautiful cinematic finishes. However, Mickey Rourke did not win an Oscar for his performance and it would be a travesty if Natalie Portman is denied one here.
The Dilemma
I think the backers of this film had a dilemma: cast funny guy Vince Vaughn as your lead and get dependable director Ron Howard to control him. Unfortunately, one of Vaughn’s companies financed it and so what you get is confusion: Ron Howard drama trying to compete with Vince Vaughn humour.
This is not to say that the film isn’t funny. As I sat there watching I knew which parts were meant to be funny: cue Vince ranting while someone else played the straight guy. Unfortunately, when we got to those moments I didn’t feel like laughing all that much. Okay, I did giggle at the urinating joke in the beginning, but laughing at an intervention to stop problem gambling that turns into the very public break up of a marriage is not exactly a belly ache. Call me old fashioned but Vaughn threatening to burn off the face of a man whose house he just broke into or hijacking someone else’s wedding anniversary to rant about cheating doesn’t tickle my funny bone.
Moreover, Vaughn’s character must have been lobotomised somewhere in the back story because he lacks basic emotional awareness granted to functioning citizens. He’s shocked that his best friend is angry at him for telling him he slept with his wife before they were married? That’s a new one. Hang on, he doesn’t quite get why the cheating man wants to kill him when he breaks into his house and destroys his possessions? That’s just plain unreasonable. Most disturbingly, he wants to get married to his girlfriend (played by Jennifer Connelly*) yet fails to be honest with her about the situation or realise that his behaviour is somewhat suspicious for a recovering gambling addict.
Now at this point it seems just like a long rant and I probably didn’t appreciate the film for what it was: comedy =) Not true, I love comedy but laughing at gambling addiction, break and enter and infidelity aren’t exactly on my laugh radar. Nice concept, poor execution. Lesson to learn: never let Vince Vaughn tell Ron Howard how to direct a film.

