‘Sunset’ starts where ‘Sunrise’ stops
ALLEN MacDONALD
In 1995, director Richard Linklater released a little film that I
still have never seen. It’s called “Before Sunrise,” and it
chronicles a single evening of a young couple meeting on a train,
deciding to jump off together and spending their few short hours
together in Vienna. Of course, they make intense physical and
intellectual connections and fall in love. And not your garden
variety “in love,” but more like the once-in-a-lifetime,
been-hit-by-a-bolt-of-lightning, will-never-find-this-again variety.
At the end, the lovers, Celine (Julie Delpy) and Jesse (Ethan Hawke)
agree to meet again in Vienna six months later.
Did they? Nope. Nine years later finds Jesse on the last leg of a
book tour for his first novel, which is not-so-loosely based on the
events of the first film. As he fields press questions at the famed
Shakespeare and Co. bookstore in Paris, Celine appears in the
background. When Jesse sees her, you can feel the chill rocketing
down his spine. Turns out Celine frequents the bookstore often and
knew of his upcoming in-store appearance.
Unfortunately, the unexpected reunion will be short-lived as Jesse
must catch a ride to the airport in 90 minutes -- and only has time
to grab a quick coffee with Celine before returning to the United
States. So, for the next 90 minutes, the narrative unfolds in real
time. There are no jumps forward, no cuts that find our characters
have moved from one location to another. If they go somewhere, we
watch them walk there and go through the door. “Before Sunset,” now
playing at Edwards South Coast Village, is built on conversation, and
it does so in a way that rings with a natural authenticity. What do
you talk about when you only have an hour and a half to catch up with
the only person you believe you have ever truly loved?
Linklater, along with the help of stars Delpy and Hawke, clearly
ruminated on this question and settled on an organic style that
allows Celine and Jesse’s conversation to evolve in a believable
fashion: At first they’re guarded, polite and pleasant. They both
work hard to downplay that glorious night they spent together a
decade before, dismissing it as capricious youth, but as the sand
slips through the hourglass, and the protective layers over their
hearts get peeled away one by one. They express the dissatisfaction
they feel in their lives, how they’ve both wondered if they’d kept
their promise to one and other, that they would be happier now.
There are eruptions of anger and resentment, followed by
outpourings of empathy and understanding. And every time Jesse pushes
back his ride to the airport, you know he’s not just buying himself
10 minutes, he could be buying himself a new life. But have they
built up what they had too much in the intervening years? Was what
they remember real or the result of nostalgia-enhanced memory? In
other words, are they remembering a version of the past that never
happened? Or is the fear of mortality driving them to correct
perceived mistakes of the past?
A lot of questions, not all of them answered, but the film does
distill a lot of intensity into a surprisingly short amount of time.
I can tell you this: I will be going out to rent the DVD of “Before
Sunrise” tonight. But maybe I was right to wait, as taking their
journey back into the past may make the present more bittersweet.
This is a movie not to be missed, but if 100 minutes of conversation
bores you, you might want to buy a ticket for “I, Robot” instead.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 30, recently earned a master’s in screenwriting
from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
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