Uninspiring. Unmoving. Overrated. Slow. Basic One of my most anticipated movies of 2019 was just that. The production department created one of the best series trailers for Noah Baumbach’s (The Squid and the Whale, While We’re Young) Marriage Story. In one trailer, lead Nicole (Scarlett Johansson – Lost in Translation, Match Point) is reciting a prepared letter that she wrote about all of the things that she loves about soon-to-be ex-husband Charlie (Adam Driver – BlacKkKlansman, Paterson). It’s a voice overlay where we see the two interacting with each other, both through good times and bad, flashing to scenes with their young son Henry and others in some sort of courtroom. It ends with Nicole saying to Charlie, “I think we should talk.” He responds with, “Okay.” The two sit uncomfortably, looking at each other for a good five seconds (an eternity in a trailer) before he says, “I don’t know where to start.” In the second trailer, it’s a reversal. Charlie recites the prepared letter that he wrote to Nicole. A different series of similar scenes plays in the background, and the ending is the same. It’s clear that this movie is about some sort of fractured relationship. We are left clinging for more.
Category Archives: Alan Alda
Bridge of Spies (2015)
Bridge of Spies. The ultimate cure for insomnia. Okay, okay, it wasn’t that bad. It actually started great. It was also based upon a true story, so it had that going for it. But Lincoln, War Horse, and Munich were all Steven Spielberg-directed movies, and I found all three of those to be incredibly dull. I’m a huge Spielberg fan, but after doing a quick scan of his filmography, he hasn’t directed a movie I’ve liked in a decade (2005’s War of the Worlds). And I get wanting to branch off from the science-fiction/action-adventure genre that really defined him, but he seems to be missing something when it comes to these dramas. Of course, there are exceptions to the rule. Saving Private Ryan was one of the greatest movies ever made. So while I appreciate his desire to recapture the glory he achieved in a movie like that or a movie like Amistad or a film like Schindler’s List, I must then wonder why he’s wasting his time on a film like Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Worse, based on how poor that movie was, why was he set to direct a fifth installment of the series? Long story short, this isn’t the same Steven Spielberg of the 1980s and 1990s. There will be fans of the style of films he seems to be mainly concentrating on now (heck, Munich, War Horse, and Lincoln were all nominated for best picture), but all three of these movies (as well as Bridge of Spies) just felt long and tedious to me.
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