Showing posts with label Todd Haynes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Todd Haynes. Show all posts

Monday, February 1, 2021

Patricia Highsmith / Carol


Patricia Highsmith
CAROL
Cate Blanchett
Rooney Mara





https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtRcMG5qWCE

Carol's Subversive World of Gay Women 

Phyllis Nagy | TIFF 2017




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=679wr31SXWk

Carol Official US Trailer #1 (2015) 

Rooney Mara, Cate Blanchett Romance Movie HD






Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Carol / Forget Cate Blanchett and look at Rooney Mara's beatnik style

Rooney Mara

Carol: forget Cate Blanchett and look at Rooney Mara's beatnik style

Therese is the truly stylish one in Todd Haynes’ new film: less glamorous, more ordinary – and above all achievable


Lauren Cochrane

Monday 30 November 2015 14.27 GMT

If Cate Blanchett’s character Carol has title billing in Todd Haynes’ Carol, its Rooney Mara’s Therese who is the fashion insider’s character to study. Set in 1952 in New York, Carol has the wealthy grown-up artifice of the decade – all peplums, set hair, trapeze jackets and red lipstick – familiar to fans of Mad Men’s Betty Draper or Grace Kelly. But Therese, a twentysomething shop assistant living in a cold-water apartment, brings a different take. It’s one that’s less glamorous and more ordinary but simple and chic in a sort of beatnik way, like Audrey Hepburn in Funny Face before the makeover. 

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Patricia Highsmith / Secret Lives



Patricia Highsmith

Secret Lives

“Carol” and “Legend.”

BY 



Who is the heroine of Todd Haynes’s “Carol”? There are two candidates. One is Carol Aird (Cate Blanchett), a wife and mother whom we first espy in a mink coat, and who never really sheds that touch of caressable luxury. The second is Therese Belivet (Rooney Mara), who is only just a woman; in the 1952 novel from which the film derives, Patricia Highsmith’s “The Price of Salt,” Therese—pronounced the French way, bien sûr—is nineteen. Mara’s poise may add a few years, but, nevertheless, a précis might suggest a disturbing tale of maturity preying on youth. Yet that is not what emanates from “Carol.” It feels more like a meeting, or a conflagration, of equals. “Take me to bed,” one says to the other, and the line is both a yielding and a command.

Monday, January 25, 2016

Carol: the women behind Patricia Highsmith's lesbian novel

Patricia Highsmith

Carol: the women behind Patricia Highsmith's lesbian novel


Todd Haynes’s film of Highsmith’s only openly lesbian novel, Carol, is about to premiere in Cannes, starring Cate Blanchett. Novelist Jill Dawson writes about the women behind the book



Jill Dawson
Wednesday 13 May 2015 10.40 BST


There was another inspiration for the character of Carol: Highsmith’s former lover Virginia Kent Catherwood, the elegant and well-heeled socialite from Philadelphia, whose divorce in the 1940s had kept gossip columnists in New York in a state of scandalised delirium with its lesbian intrigue. “Ginnie” and Highsmith were lovers in the mid 1940s and full vent is given in Highsmith’s diary to her powerful desire for her lover and also, at times, the feelings of murderous vengefulness that are expressed in all of Highsmith’s writings. Catherwood had lost custody of her child after a recording made of her in a hotel bedroom with another woman was used in court against her, a detail mined for the plot of The Price of Salt in a way that gave Highsmith pause. In the end the detail stayed, an essential driver to the narrative, making the love affair between Carol and the younger, mute-with-longing Therese (based on Highsmith herself) all the more perilous and poignant.

Carol sweeps gay and lesbian critics' awards after Oscars snub

Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara
Carol sweeps gay and lesbian critics' awards after Oscars snub

Todd Haynes’s lesbian drama wins Dorians, despite missing out on best film and best director Academy nominations last week, though Rooney Mara remains favourite to take best supporting actress


Ben Child
Tuesday 19 January 2016 11.15 GMT




Fifties romance Carol was the big winner in the Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association awards – the Dorians – taking five top prizes including best film, best director for Todd Haynes and best actress for Cate Blanchett.

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Carol review / Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara are dynamite


Carol review – Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara are dynamite

Todd Haynes’s flawless adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s novel is a ravishing tour de force
T
his superb adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s 1952 novel The Price of Saltdoesn’t put a foot wrong. From Phyllis Nagy’s alluringly uncluttered script to Cate Blanchett’s sturdily tremulous performance as a society woman with everything to lose, this brilliantly captures the thrills, tears and fears of forbidden love. As the young shutterbug finding her true identity amid an atmosphere of perversely festive paranoia, Rooney Mara brings a touch of both frost and warmth to the screen, while Ed Lachman’s richly textured Super 16mm photography digs deep into the mid-century milieu.
But it is director Todd Haynes, oozing the confidence that defined 2002’s Far From Heaven, who is the real magician here, combining the subversive clout of his 1991 Jean Genet-inspired Poison with the flawlessly empathetic character study of 1995’s Safe and the swooning period detail of 1998’s Velvet Goldmine. In many respects, Carol is the culmination of Haynes’s career, one that dates back to the still-suppressed late-1980s examination of anorexia, Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story, and now comes full circle with this very different tale of a woman out of time.
Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara in Carol.
Photograph: Wilson Webb

Conceived in a fevered state (“it flowed from my pen as from nowhere”) and jointly inspired by Highsmith’s passion for an elegant blonde woman she once served in a Manhattan department store around Christmas 1948 and the custody battles of a former partner, The Price of Salt was originally published under the pseudonym Claire Morgan for fear that it would adversely affect the Strangers on a Train writer’s reputation. With winning restraint, Haynes captures both the intimacy and illicitness of Highsmith’s writing, from the Brief Encounter opening (private liaisons interrupted in public), through Douglas Sirk-inflected melodrama (domestic pain behind a handsome facade) to grace notes of film noir (love as a crime scene, a handgun in a motel suitcase).
We first meet the star-crossed couple by accident, Blanchett’s Carol Aird bidding an apparently casual farewell to Mara’s Therese Belivet, a fleeting hand-upon-the-shoulder the only hint of something more. As the pair go their separate ways, Therese gazes back in time through the streaked windows of a car (glass, smoke and crowds constantly come between them – along with age, status and societal norms) to their secret history.
We see the talismanic first meeting in which Carol attempts to buy a doll for her daughter, but shop girl Therese suggests a train set instead. We discover the leather gloves left (deliberately?) on the counter, which will lead Therese to the upmarket home of her customer, and out on a road trip west toward frontiers new and boundaries uncrossed. And we witness the marital estrangement that has left husband Harge (Kyle Chandler) impotently clinging to any vestigial control of his wife while Carol finds herself torn between the daughter she will always love and the man she never could.

“We’re not ugly people,” declares Carol in one particularly raw exchange and yet the battle in which these two are locked, involving private detectives and public scandal, is anything but pretty. Only the unearthly beauty of Therese’s presence makes Carol’s situation bearable, prompting her to conclude that she is an “angel… flung out of space”.
Having earned a best actress Oscar last year for her latterday Blanche DuBois in Woody Allen’s Blue Jasmine, Blanchett (for whom Carol has long been a passion project) reconfirms her status as one of modern cinema’s most facially balletic actresses; the symphony of emotions that play out upon her painted visage range from sly seduction to piercing grief without need of a raised voice. For Mara, it’s all about the eyes, her gaze turning from inquisitive to impassioned, even as she retains a cool portrait-picture poise. Together, the two are dynamite, the sparks between them amplified by Sandy Powell’s superb costume design, which adds an angular edge to the evolving interpersonal dynamics. So central are Powell’s subtle dress codes that in moments of nakedness it is not the presence of flesh but the absence of costume that startles.

The real genius of Haynes’s movie is that it is as resistant to labels as its director. Liberated by the prospect of working from someone else’s script (a first), Haynes has conjured a polymorphous kaleidoscope that can be read variously as a ravishing romance, sly psychodrama or arch sociopolitical satire. That it can be all and none of these things at once is typical of a director who once used Barbie dolls to pierce to the very heart of pop culture, and now bridges the divide between arthouse experimentation and mainstream adoration with ease. Bravo!



Cate Blanchett / How Carol Got Screwed








How ‘Carol’ Got Screwed

Cate Blanchett in "Carol"

There’s one every year. Correction: there are plenty of movies every year whose absence at the announcement of the Academy Award nominationscause head-scratching, teeth-gnashing, and similar displays of displeasure, but every year there’s one whose snub (and I don’t use the word lightly) seems particularly egregious, and worthy of exploration. Last year it was Selma; this year, it’s Carol, Todd Haynes’ magnificent adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s The Price of Salt.

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

The 50 best films of 2015 / Carol / No 7




The 50 besfilmof 2015 

in thUS  

No 7 

Carol


Continuing our countdown of the best movies released in the US this year, we doff our hat to Todd Haynes’ beautifully dressed adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s lesbian-romance novel

Andrew Pulver
Thursday 10 December 2015 12.00 GMT


With Safe and Far from Heaven, director Todd Haynes has already proved himself a master at stories of brittle, repressed women struggling to access and express their innermost emotions. Thus his stewardship of an adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s semi-autobiographical novel – published pseudonymously in 1952 as The Price of Salt – instantly appeared an inspired conjunction, especially with Cate Blanchett having already accepted one of the lead roles. “A frock film ... with Cate attached,” is how Haynes himself described Carol and, as a bare-bones conceptualisation, you can see how it suits him down to the ground.




Of course, there’s more to Carol than that. Highsmith’s novel described the tremulous progress of a love affair between a wannabe set designer working in a department store, and an older, fur-coated woman who stops in to buy Christmas presents. Haynes’s film version is tremendously atmospheric, with near-fetishistic levels of attention to detail in bringing the period backdrop to life. (It would be hard to top the laser-eyed concentration on colour co-ordination and soft furnishings that Haynes displayed in Far From Heaven, but Carol is easily its equal.)


But Carol benefits hugely from its two principal actors, Blanchett and Rooney Mara, who distil exactly the right kind of neurotic energy required for the roles. Blanchett’s has a more maternal yet predatory dimension – her character, after all, is the older, and the initiator, but also has more to lose – while Mara radiates a prickly naivete that makes her Therese Belivet harder to like, but somehow just as intriguing. Without these two tremendously sensitive performances, Carol would be in danger of becoming a frock movie and little else; but, aided by the script’s fractured chronology, it becomes a sculptured, restrained treatment of a surging, emotional relationship. 





Lesbian-themed romances may no longer command the same level of hostility from the mainstream audience as they once did, but Carol is still a pretty rare beast. It’s neither a cautionary tale, nor special-pleading empowerment; nor it is especially political or celebratory. Instead, it does its best to avert its eyes from its own cinematic novelty; like Brokeback Mountain, its direct male equivalent, it goes about its business with a quiet confidence, mining its complex relationship configuration for empathetic human drama. What has resulted is a film of the highest quality.


Sunday, December 13, 2015

New ‘Carol’ Trailer Brings Love and Loss for Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara








New ‘Carol’ Trailer Brings Love and Loss for Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara

      SEPTEMBER 9, 2015



carol-trailer-rooney-mara-cate-blanchett
The first teaser trailer for Carol, the 1950s-set love story between Cate Blanchett’stitle character and Rooney Mara’s idealistic young clerk, was a beautifully edited musical homage to the film’s central relationship. Short on dialogue and long on emotions, the teaser feels like a tonal companion piece to this new U.S. trailer, which is much more conventional. Unfortunately, it also falls into the common trap of giving away a condensed version of almost the entire movie rather than setting up stakes to make viewers invested.

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Carol / The best Patricia Highsmith adaptation to date?



Carol: the best Patricia Highsmith adaptation to date?



Director Todd Haynes understands that cinematic portrayals of the author’s novels work best when they are faithful to her subtleties, whether good or bad


John Patterson
Monday 23 November 2015 09.57 GMT


Fans of the unsettling thrillers of Patricia Highsmith – and their many movie adaptations – should prepare for a new classic among Highsmith movies in Carol, Todd Haynes’s sombrely rapturous filming of the most atypical work in the author’s oeuvre, her early lesbian romance The Price Of Salt.