REEL CRITICS
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Reel Critics column features movie critiques written
by community members serving on our panel.
‘Anywhere but Here’ is good place to be
“Anywhere but Here” is about an individual unhappy with herself and her
lot in life. Given choices, she really would rather be anywhere but here
than to continue living in a nowhere Wisconsin town surrounded by family
and friends content to stay where they have always lived.
Susan Sarandon’s Adele is an amalgam of every weird and loving mother you
can imagine. She’s selfish, determined, unreasonable, loving and
undeterred. Looking for that better life, she pools her limited resources
to buy a car for the escape. Not a Ford or a Chevy, but a gold Mercedes.
Destination: not just California, but Beverly Hills.
Adele has a traveling companion, her daughter Ann (Natalie Portman). Ann
did not want to leave Wisconsin. Her persona is one of good sense and
stability, but her sullen demeanor lets you know this trip is not going
to resemble a day at Disneyland.
A shocking confrontation evolves in which mom stops the car and kicks
daughter out in the middle of the desert and speeds away.
Adele is a chameleon or a poor man’s Auntie Mame, but she finds a
teaching job. They move a lot but always in good neighborhoods. She makes
some poor choices and neglects items like the electric bill.
Sarandon and Portman are a really good fit. Each grows strong as they
fight for individual independence, and you root for each of them.
“Anywhere but Here” is a good place to be. The viewer will come away with
a keener understanding of the human condition.
* ELAINE ENGLAND, 65, lives in Newport Beach and owns a gift-basket
business she operates out of her home.
Film sends muddled message of Joan of Arc
Luc Besson’s “The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc” stars Milla
Jovovich (“Dazed and Confused,” “Return to the Blue Lagoon”) and is the
pair’s second effort after 1997’s “The Fifth Element.”
Like the latter, “The Messenger” is beautifully photographed and benefits
from elegant art direction. And like “The Fifth Element,” this films
suffers from a weak screenplay and muddled acting.
The film tells the story of young Joan, the French hero and future saint,
who believes she was told in a series of visions by God to lead the
French army to victory against the occupying English army.
In leading the French to a major victory over the English at Orleans, she
enables Charles VII (John Malkovich) to be crowned King of France. While
the film is credibly cast, with supporting actors led by Dustin Hoffman
as Joan’s conscience and Faye Dunaway as Yolande of Aragon, Jovovich has
the burden to carry the film but unfortunately is unable to accomplish
the daunting task of showing the many facets of Joan’s life. Jovovich
alternates between over-the-top exuberance and hushed tones.
Besson, working from a script he coauthored with Andrew Birkin, attempts
to take a revisionist look at Joan’s life. Was she a mystic, prophetess,
warrior-princess, or simply a delusional woman who violated church laws
and was therefore burned as a heretic?
Besson and Birkin attempt to demonstrate the complexities of Joan’s life
and her myth, but their point of view simply becomes muddled and dull.
The total film time is approximately two and a half hours, which doesn’t
really help when the film gets away from its strong point of beautifully
choreographed battle scenes, photographed by Thierry Arbogast. Besson
seems to have confused the belief that an “epic” must approach three
hours in length.
The only spoken scenes that convey any real gravity or purpose are the
ecclesiastical courtroom scenes which were actually taken from surviving
trial transcripts. Unfortunately, Besson should have noticed that the
scenes he and Birkin drafted did not approach the drama and clarity of
these passages acted out more than 500 years ago.
If you really must see a film on the life of Joan of Arc, rent 1928’s “La
Passion de Jeanne d’ Arc” by Carl Dreyer and starring Maria Falconetti.
This French silent on Joan’s imprisonment and subsequent trial will
clearly demonstrate what great filmmaking is about.
* ROB OROZCO, 30, is an attorney who lives in Newport Beach with his wife
and two cats.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.