Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts

Friday, August 20, 2021

Annette: Swings Between “La La Land” and “Moulin Rouge!”


By José Alberto Hermosillo

“Annette” is a sublime, evocative, and artistic avant-garde musical with many symbolic elements representing love, betrayal, misadventure, and vengeance. 

“Annette’s” splashy, elaborate musical numbers, combined with fast-paced editing, showcase a clear, mature style in directing and experimental filmmaking. The narrative becomes existentialist when the main characters’ quest for self-realization begins. They desperately try to find the true meaning of their mundane lives. 

The musical opens with an emblematic continuous shot from inside a recording studio to the busy streets of Santa Monica, California. We can start recognizing some familiar faces right from the lively opening of that magnificent, yet minimalist, overture. Along with the main characters, we see the fantastic duo of Sparks, the stylish chorus, and visionary director Leos Carax (“Holy Motors,” “Mister Lonely”), who introduces the film by playing himself as the music producer. “Annette” is Carax’s best work so far. 


The romance between the well-known comedian Henry McHenry (Adam Driver) and the celebrated opera singer Ann Defrasnoux (Marion Cotillard) begins as casual dating in Los Angeles, where they start their love story.

From then on, all attention focuses on Henry. In his one-man show, he announces his engagement to Ann. 

After Ann’s opera performance, paparazzi and journalists wait outside the theater, singing and huddling around the famous couple. Henry and Ann choose to hide their identities under motorcycle helmets. Hollywood life takes us to a red carpet where they exchange vows, symbolizing their marriage. Ann, the bride, throws the bouquet to the eager media as they exit the scene, while they express their love for each other musically in a more private setting.

Good taste prevails in all musical numbers, even with “We love each other so much” singing while having sex and not in the shower, precisely as ordinary people do. Nevertheless, the arrival of their first baby will change their lives forever.

As their marriage continues, the dramatic music rises to a crescendo—suggesting an extramarital affair. As we mentioned, the story focuses on the distortion and deconstruction of Henry, the infamous and irreverent comedian with low self-esteem and many addictions. Henry’s stand-up shows are worth our full attention because he foreshadows his next moves in his intimate and outrageous monologues. Ann feels trapped in a toxic relationship. She and her innocent baby, Annette, plan to move out once and for all.


French-born Oscar-winning Marion Cotillard is exquisite, delicate, and gentle as her character becomes haunting. Adam Driver’s performance is mature, possibly his most challenging to date, surpassing his work in “Marriage Story.” 

The music grows more obscure as everyone experiences a series of tragic events. The American pop and rock duo Sparks crafted complex lyrics and alluring music. The band previously recorded “The Seduction of Ingmar Bergman” for a tour, but the logistics of traveling with such a large cast were difficult. Once, Leos Carax used a Sparks song in “Holy Motors.” 

After meeting in Cannes a few years ago, they decided to collaborate on this fantastic musical. Caroline Champetier is responsible for the sumptuous cinematography of “Annette. She has also directed other luminous works in France, like “Of Gods and Men” and “The Innocents.”


“Annette” is either complacent or disappointing. Set in Los Angeles, the romance has nothing to do with “La La Land,” and its musical numbers are not comparable to the frenetic pace of “Moulin Rouge!” because “Annette” is sober and entirely unique in every sense. 


“Annette’s” stunning visuals and originality keep our attention while we wonder, “What in the world are we watching?” 


“Annette” is open to interpretation. When we reach its shocking, overwhelming, and beautiful grand finale, it’s breathtaking and prompts us to consider the importance of karma, since what goes around comes around. 

After all, our lives are like lavish musicals where we meet fascinating people, fall in love, get married, have children, watch them grow, make mistakes, and learn from those wrong choices. As we regain control of our souls, we may find time to reflect deeply on how our actions affect others.


“Annette” was the opening film and won Best Director at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival. The operatic musical is something we’ve never seen before—completely original!


As I finished watching “Annette,” I desperately wanted to rewind and watch it again, hoping my faithful readers would dare to do the same and see “Annette” at least twice.

The “Annette” Official trailer


Related Articles:

IF YOU ARE READING FROM A MOBILE DEVICE, CLICK: view web version FOR OTHER COOL FEATURES SUCH AS TRANSLATE POWERED BY GOOGLE, AN INTERACTIVE FILM FESTIVAL CALENDAR, AND MORE AWESOME ARTICLES.

 Festival in LA ©2021

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Invisible Life: Melodrama is Not Dead In Brazilian Cinema

By José Alberto Hermosillo

“Invisible Life” is a nostalgic, affectionate, and well-crafted masterpiece.

The Brazilian/German co-production is a profound and artistic adaptation of Martha Batalha’s novel “A Vida Invisível de Eurídice Gusmăo,” depicting the lives of two sisters growing up in Brazil and their tortuous separation by their conservative parents in the 1950s - Eurídice (Carol Duarte), the extraordinary pianist/aspiring soloist; Guida (Julia Stocker), yearning to be a devoted housewife.

Invisible Life, still photo ©2019 Amazon Original.

A series of unfortunate events will determine the fate of the Gusmăo sisters. The pre-established authoritarian male structure of that time caused their dear separation.

Life sets them apart, but their hearts remain together through the illusion of writing to each other. Those undelivered letters sustain the melodrama's tightness till the end, like a thread in a very well-structured film.

Furthermore, in the story, the parents force Euricide to marry a man who doesn’t care for her vocation. Eurídice’s strain continues to rehearse and improve herself for the long-awaited audition. 

Guida returns to her parents’ house with her broken dreams and an advanced pregnancy, forcing her to live in the streets.

At that time, women couldn’t aspire for higher education or better-paying jobs in their society, and Sexism suppressed many women’s dreams, goals, and desires.

The sisters’ experience can be compared to our mother's and grandmother's lives, which didn’t have the opportunities they deserved. They could be famous if they were only allowed to fulfill their dreams. 

“Invisible Life” is a well-told family melodrama with social and political substance, transcending to our days in defense of women’s emancipation, if we can read between the lines.

Karim Aïnouz in Los Angeles
Karim Aïnouz, director of "Invisible Life." Photo Jose Alberto Hermosillo ©2019 Festival in LA
 
Director Karim Aïnouz (“Madame Satã,” “Futuro Beach”) made a risky decision to adapt the novel to the big screen with delicacy and mastery.

Born in Fortaleza, Brazil, Aïnouz was inspired in part by the courage and spirit of his single mother’s survival.

After a private screening in Hollywood, Aïnouz was questioned by viewers about altering the novel’s ending. He said adapting the book's conclusion to the screen took over a year. The film's end rightfully complements the entire story, making it more poetic and cinematic. The writer’s team includes Murilo Houser and Inés Botargaray in the credits.

Invisible Life, still photo ©2019 Amazon Original.

In charge of the film's lavish look is cinematographer Hélène Louvart. The talented DP worked in other relevant movies around the globe, such as “Happy as Lazzaro” in Italy, “Maya” in France and India, “Petra” in Spain, “Dark Night” in Florida, “Beach Rats” in New York, and now “Invisible Life” in Brazil.

With many colors and elaborate set compositions, “Invisible Life” is a tropical allegory full of liveliness, heartening emotions, and plenty of nostalgia. It is a story about women with broken wings longing for the lives they could have.

The film’s editing elongates the story's flow and can be confusing if we don’t follow the family tree carefully. Still, the project is enjoyable, regardless of other criticism and respectable points of view.


“Invisible Life” can be compared with other compelling and classic melodramas such as the Best Picture winner “Rebecca” by Alfred Hitchcock, “Imitation of Life” by Douglas Sirk, “Like Water for Chocolate” by Alfonso Arau, and “All About My Mother” by Pedro Almodóvar.

Invisible Life, Italian poster.

“Invisible Life” inspires women to break barriers and close the gender gap in an optimistic sense. 

The Brazilian melodrama won Un Certain Regard at Cannes 2019, the CineCoPro Award at the Munich Film Festival, and was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award.

The timing of this engaging melodrama couldn’t be any better, as we see today’s women pushing back against barriers that limited previous generations from accomplishing their goals and reaching for more opportunities, leaving behind the oppressive world, remarkably and exquisitely depicted in “Invisible Life.”

Film critic José Alberto Hermosillo & director Karim Aïnouz
Jose Alberto Hermosillo, film critic. Karim Aïnouz, director of "Invisible Life." ©2019 Festival in LA


Related Articles: 

IF YOU ARE READING FROM A MOBILE DEVICE, CLICK: view web version FOR OTHER COOL FEATURES SUCH AS TRANSLATE POWERED BY GOOGLE, AN INTERACTIVE FILM FESTIVAL CALENDAR, AND MORE.
 
Festival in LA ©2019