Showing posts with label Paul Greengrass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Greengrass. Show all posts

Friday, March 7, 2014

Captain Phillips / Dangerous Waters




Captain Phillips / Parkland
DANGEROUS WATERS
by Anthony Lane
Octuber 14, 2013

Tom Hanks confronts pirates in a new movie directed by Paul Greengrass.
Illustration by Tomer Hanuka.

The British director Paul Greengrass makes two kinds of movie. The first kind is the thriller about people for whom life is already a cavalcade of thrills—Jason Bourne, for instance, a man so busy jumping through windows and driving head on into approaching traffic that it takes him three whole films to find out that his real name is David. The second kind is the thriller about people whose lives are, for the most part, extremely unthrilling, and who, given the choice, would prefer to keep it that way. In the case of “Bloody Sunday” and “United 93,” the choice is not theirs to make, and the mood of those emerging from the cinema at the end could hardly be more different from the joyous exhaustion of a Bourne fan.
The confusing thing is that both kinds of movie look the same. Editing, for Greengrass, creates a lung-bursting race against the clock, and the camera shifts and hops about like someone trying to get a better glimpse through a crowd. He started out in television documentaries, and the impulse to trap something—a gesture, a phrase—as it zips by, or at least to give the illusion of that capture, pervades his feature films. Hence the moment in his new movie, “Captain Phillips,” when the title character (Tom Hanks) and his wife (Catherine Keener) leave their house in Vermont and get into their car. We cut back inside the house and see them through the window; for an instant, we sense them being spied on, as if by the eye of fate. They then drive away and, in the movie’s weakest scene, explain to each other how dangerous the world has become. Thanks, guys. Our nerves already gave us the bad news.
Phillips is on his way to Oman, in order to take command of the Maersk Alabama, a giant freighter, bound for Kenya. This means traversing pirate-infested waters off the Somalian coast. Once out in the ocean, Phillips, wary of the threat, orders a security drill. Halfway through, it ceases to be a practice, as pirate boats, right on cue, approach. One of them is outwitted, but the other persists, and soon enough, thanks to a long ladder deployed like old-fashioned grappling irons, the Maersk is boarded. Its crew of twenty is pursued, and pinned down, by a mere quartet of armed men. Their leader, Muse (Barkhad Abdi), tells Phillips to relax, adding, “I’m the captain now.” A ransom of ten million dollars is demanded. The stage is set.
Throughout this, the Greengrass paradox is on display: how can so confusing a situation seem so clear? Only Spielberg can match him in the ability to lay out conditions and terms. At no point, as hunter and prey converge, do we fail to grasp who is where and what is happening. If the welter of closeups—of faces, maps, guns, and instrument dials—grows too intense, the camera retreats, for a few calming seconds, to an aerial view, allowing us to watch the Alabama, from above or afar, being shadowed and pestered by the enemy skiff. As the plot unfolds, the irony of that mismatch starts to grow. Help is summoned, and the full might of American power is brought to bear. Meanwhile, the action switches to one of the freighter’s lifeboats, which carries the attackers and a single, bewildered hostage. And thus we are granted the spectacle of an aircraft carrier, two warships, and a contingent of Navy seals parachuting out of the sky, all in pursuit of a little orange tub, which bobs like a cork upon the waves. If the crisis weren’t so deadly, it would be a joke.
“Captain Phillips,” which is based on real events, of 2009, poses a problem for Greengrass. Hitherto, his work has exuded a spirit of testy liberal complaint, scornful of cabals, coverups, and the darker arts of government. And what do we have now? Vermont Man versus the Somalis. To return to my opening distinction, the story begins as one kind of Greengrass film, about an ordinary joe, and then hardens into the other kind, equipped with unswayable snipers and stone-jawed commanders whose idea of a windy rhetorical speech is “Execute.” It’s the old Hollywood conundrum: how does a left-wing conscience find room to maneuver in a right-wing form? The screenplay, by Billy Ray, is not much help. The thinnest of backgrounds is supplied for the hijackers, who are said to be fishermen, and who talk of their crimes as if still plying that trade. (“We caught a ship last week.”) There is no avoiding the fact: these are desperadoes from a dysfunctional land, who terrorize in the hope of reward. And Muse—gaunt of frame and burning of gaze—is a seriously frightening foe.
Why, then, do we not feel bullied by the result? Partly because the camera, as I say, tells a subtler tale than the dialogue does, and lures us into a grudging respect for the bravado of Muse and his men; but mainly because of Tom Hanks. This most likable of actors deliberately presents us with a character who makes no effort to be liked. A warmer and wiser guy would have tipped the scales of the movie—we would have rooted for him, and for the triumph of American virtue, ahead of any ordeal. Phillips is brisk, to the point of rudeness, with his crew; he is pragmatic but easily spooked, and heroic by default; he is the anti-Bourne. The rubbery mug of the young Hanks is barely discernible behind spectacles and a badger-gray beard, yet that early comic training pays dividends in his extraordinary final scene. There is not a jot of humor in it—just the opposite—but his control of physical detail, as Phillips is buffeted by the shocks that flesh is heir to, has lost none of its force. Twenty-five years ago, in “Big,” Hanks gave us a boy who became a man overnight; now, in “Captain Phillips,” he gives us a man so shaken and sickened by adventure—by the high seas of adult experience—that for a while, despite himself, he turns back into a child.
The title of Peter Landesman’s “Parkland” refers to Parkland Memorial Hospital, in Dallas. John F. Kennedy was taken there after being shot, on November 22, 1963, as was Lee Harvey Oswald, two days later. Much of the movie—a feature film, though it uses scraps of documentary footage—takes place in the hospital, where Jim Carrico (Zac Efron), a first-year surgical resident, aided by a team that includes the emergency-room supervisor, Doris Nelson (Marcia Gay Harden), struggles in vain to save the President’s life. Efron has a good moment, near the start, when Carrico seizes up, immobilized at the gravity of what he is being asked to do; then he shakes himself, like a dog, and gets to work.
Other locations play no less a role. There are two important offices: one from which Abraham Zapruder (Paul Giamatti), grabbing his hat, goes out to film the motorcade, and another where Robert Oswald (James Badge Dale) first hears his brother’s name on the radio, after Lee’s arrest. There is also a Kodak lab, to which Zapruder is escorted by the authorities so that his film can be processed in a rush; the motel to which Robert and his mother (Jacki Weaver), a world-class fruitcake, are moved for their own safety; and Love Field, where the casket containing the body is loaded onto Air Force One, with a gasping effort that borders on black comedy. What we don’t properly understand—in contrast to “Captain Phillips”—is how these places relate to one another. The film feels like a parade of comings and goings, and you could be forgiven for thinking that Dallas was an oversized village.
Dramatically, that scurrying has an unfortunate effect. Landesman rarely allows himself to linger on one strand of the tale and let it take root. I always thought that Zapruder deserved a movie to himself: imagine his regular routines, gradually established in our minds, and then disrupted with such brutal suddenness that he is never the same again. Here, surely, was the chance for that movie, with Giamatti, a great screen actor, easing into the role as though he were donning a made-to-measure suit. And what do we get? Hurried scenes, splurges of information disguised as dialogue (“Eighteen frames a second!” Zapruder cries, camera in hand), and a closeup of his eyes as he watches his handiwork being screened. Only later, as he offers it to Life, adding, “You’re going to have to pay for it,” does the tautness of his character emerge. The pact may not be Faustian, but there is a definite squirm of the soul. How could an amateur make the most closely observed film of the twentieth century and stay sane?
“Parkland,” sadly, does not repay equal scrutiny. Kennedy specialists will glean nothing new, and those hoping for sobriety will flinch at the camera’s intrusions. The film seems tasteless in both senses—bland and impersonal as it searches for a core to the story, yet ready to home in on the portions of skull and brain matter that Doris Nelson hands to an assistant. Some of the actors project a genuine intensity, but many of them, like Billy Bob Thornton, who plays a Secret Service agent, and Jackie Earle Haley, as a priest, simply don’t get the chance. And so, as the solemnity of the enterprise is frittered away, you feel moved to ask: what is this film for? 



Wednesday, June 8, 2005

Alan Clarke / The lost leader


'Intense, brilliant, truthful drama' ... Alan Clarke's Scum


Alan Clarke

The lost leader

Alan Clarke was one of this country's greatest directors, the man who gave us Scum, Made in Britain and Rita, Sue and Bob Too. Fifteen years after his death, his friends, colleagues and admirers remember him

8 June 2005

Paul Greengrass
Director, Bloody Sunday

The first Alan Clarke film I ever saw was Sovereign's Company, an old Play for Today from the early 1970s about a young man who joins his grandfather's regiment and is so fearful of being unmasked as a coward that, in the end, he beats another soldier to death. I was 15 years old, and I can still remember today the sense of shock and anger that I felt as I watched it. Later came Made in Britain, Elephant, Scum, Contact, The Firm - a string of the most intense, brilliant, truthful dramas ever seen on British television. These were groundbreaking films that chronicled the Thatcher years and uncovered the terrible cost of the Troubles. As a director, it seems to me that Clarke had it all - he had range, he had vision, he put energy on the screen, he could tell a story, he discovered fantastic actors and got great performances from them, and he could use a camera like a dream. He remains, in my eyes, quite simply the greatest British director of my lifetime.

Lesley Manville
Actor, The Firm

It was very liberating shooting The Firm. We shot the whole film on Steadicam, and very often Alan wouldn't do separate shots for close-ups, so the actors had a lot of physical freedom. It made a huge difference in the performances - that was paramount for Alan. I remember shooting the scene where Gary Oldman's character comes home to his wife (played by me) and they argue and fight and he forces her to the floor to have sex, and you think, this is awful - he's raping his wife. But in fact she starts to giggle and you realise that this is their "thing". This scene was cut for censorship reasons, but I remember shooting it in one long take. It was amazing - not acting in short bursts trying to maintain emotion, but performing it from beginning to end. The acting was everything for Alan, and extraordinary though it may sound, that is rare in a director.

Danny Boyle
Director, Trainspotting

I produced Alan Clarke's film Elephant for BBC Northern Ireland in 1989. There wasn't much producing involved, apart from making sure Alan's per diems were paid promptly. Instead, I got the chance to pick the brains of a genius director. His advice was pragmatic: "Get plenty of coverage as editing solves everything, and stop reading the Guardian - everything you need to know and everything you don't want to know is in the Sun."

Tim Roth
Actor, Made in Britain

Scum was the film that made me want to be an actor. I went to see it at the Prince Charles in London five or six times. I thought, if these guys could be actors, then I could, too. You got the feeling they were people he'd lifted off the streets. When he put me in Made in Britain, I'd never worked in front of a camera; I had no idea about it at all. From him I had a crash course in film-making. After that I assumed all films were made on Steadicam - it wasn't until I did a film with Mike Leigh that I realised that you could have a fixed camera. The fact you could follow the actors around and do long takes made Steadicam so attractive to him. You were limited only by the amount of film in the camera. With Alan, though he pushed you to immerse yourself in the character, it was never the Method, or any other particular system. When anyone asks me what my favourite experience was as an actor, I always hold up Made in Britain. I was as raw as I could possibly be. It was my first job, the one where I lost my virginity.

Corin Campbell Hill
Assistant director, The Firm

"When I catch up with the dog in my brain, I'll let you know," he would say. Alan was a walking stream of consciousness in his zip-up jumper, worn trousers and dishevelled hair. He'd walk and talk you down a hundred paths of how he might make the film. We walked and talked miles. Paratroopers in Northern Ireland, teenage drug addicts, football hooligans, hopeless unemployment - this was his world. He was brilliant to be around, ever-changing, ever-alive. And he fought hard. They were tough films to make and to get made. He pushed himself very hard. He wrestled the films out of himself. They did not come easily. He lived and breathed work. He was a man of contrasts, so warm and open, so quiet and solitary. His last fight - with cancer - was his hardest. He bore his pain with grace. He died so young with so much more to say. There was no one to touch him.

Sandy Lieberson

He had a different perspective from the rest of us and forced us to open our eyes to the society and culture he saw. I brought Alan to LA to spend a few months looking for ideas and stories that might be made in the US. He soon checked out of the comfortable hotel in Beverly Hills, moved to a small hotel on Hollywood Boulevard full of junkies and prostitutes, and then disappeared without trace for two months. We became friends, saw each other regularly, and eventually I had the good luck to produce Rita, Sue and Bob Too. Alan's losing battle with cancer brought many of his friends together for the last few weeks of his life. We met every evening in Alan's room at the nursing home, drank, smoked some dope, exchanged stories and managed to find things we could all laugh at. It made us all more human.

Gary Oldman
Actor, The Firm

The absence from the cultural landscape of a true giant like Alan is immeasurable. Culture moves through such remarkable people. Painting never looked the same after Picasso. Gangsters never looked the same after Coppola. Comedy never looked the same after the Marx brothers or Chaplin. These artists - and the cliche holds - had that most rare thing: true vision. Alan was such a visionary, plain and simple. Though many have tried, no one has replaced him. And I can't think of one British film-maker in recent years who hasn't been affected or influenced by Alan. I feel privileged to have been associated with him.

David Leland
Writer, Made in Britain

Alan once lived in a basement flat in Almeida Street with the writer David Yallop. He said it was so messy it was the only address in Islington where the bin men delivered. Alan and I worked on many projects - Russian labour camps, machinations of multinational corporations, interrogation and torture, and more. Even at the most serious moments, you were never far from a laugh. That I miss. The way we worked together - we were always together, we did all the research together. He would walk and talk. I think we covered every street in Geneva for Beloved Enemy. Once I'd written it, he wanted me to be there on set and during rehearsals. If an actor asked a question he couldn't answer, he'd say, "Dave, you've got a minute to answer, or I'm cutting it." He wasn't afraid to say he didn't know, until he got the answer that worked for him.

THE GUARDIAN