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Film Features Film/TV

Suffragette

Sarah Gavron’s new film Suffragette looks and feels like a fresh hunk of Oscar bait.

Now, you might be wondering what exactly “Oscar bait” is. Although noted author and peerless Academy Awards handicapper Mark Harris hates the term and wishes it would go away, Oscar bait is real, but it is seldom spectacular. You’ve seen Oscar bait before. Perhaps you’ve even enjoyed some of it. Maybe you’re an Argo kind of gal; me, I’m partial to animal-centric heart-tuggers like Spielberg’s War Horse. Wikipedia defines movies like these as “Lavishly produced, epic-length period dramas, often set against tragic historical events such as the Holocaust,” that “often contend for the technical Oscars such as cinematography, makeup and hairstyling, costume design, or production design … The cast may well include actors with previous awards or nominations, a trait that may also be shared by the director or writer.”

I might also add that movies like these typify a strain of safe, grade-grubbing, color-between-the-lines moviemaking that’s engineered for mature adults uninterested in or unresponsive to important aesthetic qualities like vulgarity, coarseness, economy, and wit. They also arrive on schedule every autumn. Once the leaves start to turn and the superhero franchises go into hibernation, these simple, proper, “sophisticated” films start showing up in theaters like fashionably late guests trying to class- up a kegger.

At first glance, Suffragette fits the Oscar bait description. At 106 minutes, though, it’s merely a normal-length period drama that’s set in 1912 England. The tragic historical event that drives its story and galvanizes its characters is, thankfully, not World War I; it’s the women’s suffrage movement, a time when many brave women exhibited surprising courage and resilience but were met with patronizing indifference and/or brute force.

Yet in a few key ways, Suffragette struggles against its prestige-picture corset. The production design is shrewd and economical but unspectacular, the cinematography serves up the same gruel-like gray found in any movie about the miseries of early 20th-century factory work, and the makeup, hairstyling, and costume design, while impressive at times, probably isn’t ostentatious enough to garner awards. Nevertheless, there’s a trio of Emmy or Oscar-nominated actors (Carey Mulligan, Brendan Gleeson, and Helena Bonham Carter) knocking heads here, and about midway through the film one multiple-Oscar winner shows up to bless the proceedings.

Suffragette‘s weird, bellicose sentimentality is also atypical for Oscar bait. It feels like a byproduct of Gavron and screenwriter Abi Morgan’s attempts to identify and harness the numerous energies — domestic, political, paternal, spiritual — that powered the movement they depict. Unfortunately, such energies often dissipate when set against Alexandre Desplat’s insufferable, obvious orchestral score. To its partial credit, though, Suffragette is a messy, distracted film that, like its laundress-turned-activist heroine Maud Watts (Mulligan), isn’t sure what exactly it wants to be.

It begins as a lively, idea-heavy drama about the validity of violent revolution, narrows its focus to document the social cost of one woman’s gradual political awakening, and plays around at being a cat-and-mouse detective story for a scene or two before reinventing itself as a gauzy, delicately colored reenactment of a shocking historical accident that had a monumental impact on both the English suffrage movement and suffrage efforts from around the world.

The performances are fine: Mulligan is her usual incredulous, sobbing self; Gleeson assays a half-decent portrait of disgruntled middle-aged compromise; Bonham Carter is tiny and fierce; and rugged types like Anne-Marie Duff shine for a scene or two. But not everyone is watchable. Emmeline Pankhurst, the rabble-rousing ringleader of the English suffrage movement, is played by none other than Meryl Streep. Streep appears for a single scene, but when she delivers her fiery, inspirational balcony speech, she looks like Mary Poppins and sounds like Glinda the Good Witch. Plus, there’s so much crosscutting between Parkhurst’s speech and the British government’s attempts to nab her that what could have been a fun, hammy, Orson Wellesian drop-in is over before it lands.

Such eccentric timing exemplifies Suffragette‘s hyperventilating, wind-sprint-sense of pacing. One minute the camera is darting through crowds at high speeds, barely recording moments of triumph by the women or moments of violence by the police in charge; the next minute it slows way down for close-ups of tear-stained faces, newspaper photographs, and feet.

So is Suffragette Oscar bait or not? More than likely, it’s not enough of anything to matter much.

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Film Features Film/TV

Calvary

All is not as it seems in the idyllic Irish town where Father James (Brendan Gleeson) runs a small country church in director John Michael McDonagh’s new film Calvary. The tiny seaside community is populated with a rogues gallery of citizens who wouldn’t look too out of place in Twin Peaks. But instead of Lynchian dream logic, the activities of this dark comedy’s characters are all too real, and all too human.

The film begins with a hook worthy of an old fashioned film noir. Father James is taking a confession from an unseen man who claims to have been brutally sexually exploited by a Catholic priest “every other day” during his childhood. When he finishes his harrowing tale, the penitent informs Father James that he plans to murder him and asks him if a week from Sunday would work okay. The penitent is very clear about his motives: He thinks Father James is a good, moral man who does a good job as parish priest. That’s why killing him in cold blood will both hurt the Catholic Church worse than killing one of the pedophile priests like the one who raped him and will make a better story for the media. Incredulously, Father James agrees to meet the man on the beach in a little more than a week for his murder.

Calvary

Naturally, Father James goes to see his boss, the bishop (David McSavage), for advice on what to do next. The bishop asks, “Do you know who it was who threatened you?” “Of course,” says Father James. It’s a small parish, and everybody knows everybody. The bishop gives Father James permission to go to the police, since it’s clear that the threatening penitent isn’t really penitent at all, and thus not covered under the confidentiality of the confession booth. But Father James says no, perhaps because he feels an institutional responsibility to the man whom his church wronged so brutally, or perhaps for reasons of his own that become more clear as the story progresses.

The simple fact that Father James already knows who his potential murderer will be but the audience doesn’t is the single best choice director McDonagh makes in Calvary. This is the director’s second film with Gleeson, a veteran character actor who might be most recognizable to American audiences from his role in the Harry Potter series as Hogwarts professor Mad-Eye Moody. McDonagh and Gleeson have developed a great director-actor rapport, allowing Gleeson to be captivating as Father James careens through the potential last week of his life, bouncing off the town’s inhabitants and tying up loose ends. Strangely, the probably doomed priest seems to be the only person in town who actually enjoy living. His daughter Fiona (Kelly Reilly) has recently tried to kill herself after a bad breakup. A reclusive writer (M. Emmet Walsh, still awesome at age 79) is only holding on long enough to finish his last manuscript. The visiting priest Father Leary (David Wilmot) is cynical and flinty about Father Leary’s parishioners, telling him “You’re just a little too sharp for this place.” But still Father James tries to do his duty and minister to his flock, confronting Jack Brennan (Chris O’Dowd) for beating his wife Veronica (Orla O’Rourke) who is having an adulterous, interracial affair with Simon (a terrifically stoic Isaach De Bankolé), even though none of the three participants in the violent love triangle appears to be ashamed of their actions or too bent out of shape about the consequences. The only person loving life in this town is the gay hustler Milo (Killian Scott).

McDonagh piles calamity upon calamity onto Father James, who never loses his good natured benevolence even as his life disintegrates around him and his resolve falters. Will Father James keep his fateful Sunday appointment on the beach? That’s the question that keeps the tension ratcheting up in this otherwise shapeless parade of eccentric Irish characters. McDonagh’s love of symmetrical compositions and the target rich environment of the scenic Irish countryside keep the proceedings visually interesting, but it’s Gleeson’s understated performance as a man trying to follow Jesus’ example while everyone around him says, “What’s the point?” that elevates Calvary to the realm of the divine.

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Film Features Film/TV

Film Review: The Grand Seduction

A golden-hued fable about downtrodden workers debasing themselves for their new corporate masters, The Grand Seduction is also a never-ending exercise in forced whimsy that begins and ends with the sounds of struggling blue-collar folk humping away their pain as though they were earthbound seraphim celebrating paradise on earth.

Brendan Gleeson plays Murray, a down-on-his-luck fisherman shuffling along in the dying Newfoundland harbor of Tickle Head. One day, Murray — who, like the perpetually overcast sky, is a big, lumpy, quietly threatening part of the region’s climate — thinks he can turn everything around and rescue his welfare-check brethren by convincing a large corporation to open a petrochemical-repurposing factory there. According to Murray, the factory jobs will restore everyone’s dignity and sense of purpose, especially if they never stop to consider where any of the factory’s industrial waste runoff will go.

There’s one problem, though: Tickle Head doesn’t have a doctor in town, and the company won’t set up its factory without one. Enter Dr. Lewis (Taylor Kitsch), an improbable plastic surgeon and naïf who, on his way through customs, is busted with some cocaine by the harbor’s former mayor. In exchange for his freedom, he’s sentenced to spend a month as Tickle Head’s general practitioner. Dr. Lewis’ whims and eccentricities are catered to as soon as he arrives. Indian cuisine, fishing expeditions, ersatz father figures, even a pretty young lass — the harbor dwellers present them to him with a sneaky, phony righteousness we’re supposed to find resourceful and endearing.

The not so Grand Seduction

The film’s charms are meager. There are too few naturally unnatural comic moments like the scene when a distraught, fully-clothed Murray climbs into bed with his friend Simon (Gordon Pinsent) one evening, and Simon dismisses his wife’s worries about a threesome by saying, “Aw, now, he doesn’t drop by that often.” That’s funny. So is the scene where an entire bar has to feign enthusiasm about cricket for Dr. Lewis’ benefit when what they really want to do is watch some hockey. There’s precious little romance, too. When scanning this batch of sycophants and sociopaths, Tickle Head’s fetching young postmistress (Liane Balaban) seems like the only honorable human being, but she’s kept off-screen and away from this pinup-handsome medical professional in a clear and willful violation of numerous romantic-subplot bylaws.

By overplaying the idiocy of the yokels and underplaying their thoughtless selling-out, The Grand Seduction‘s appalling ideological underpinnings rise to the surface. It doesn’t mean to be, but it is much more interesting as a movie about power and greed than a comedy about a pretty place. And its similarity to Bill Forsyth’s 1983 masterpiece Local Hero is so distracting that when the businessmen alight from the sky late in the film, I prayed for the ghost of Burt Lancaster to step out of the helicopter.

Whether it wants to or not, The Grand Seduction ends up validating Toshirô Mifune’s remarks about Japanese peasants in Seven Samurai: “They pose as saints but are full of lies! If they smell a battle, they hunt the defeated! They’re nothing but stingy, greedy, blubbering, foxy, and mean! God damn it all! But then who made them such beasts? You did!”