Saturday, February 25, 2012

NO GUTS, NO GLORY: FINAL OSCAR PREDICTIONS

For all the excitement and buzz leading up to nomination day, it seems like the remainder of this year's Oscar season has passed without many surprises or, for that matter, a whole lot of fanfare. Those two things may be connected, at least for me, since the predictable nature of this year's awards season has left little to nothing to talk about, and has left me, for the second year in a row, a little bit bored by the proceedings. Maybe it's the absence of so many of my favorite films from the race this year, or maybe it's the fact that my favorite performances were snubbed in almost every acting category. Either way, the season will reach its climactic moment this Sunday evening, with the 84th annual Academy Awards, and despite how dull the season has been, I will most certainly be tuning in. For that reason, have decided to lay out all of my predictions for the night right here. The interesting thing is that, looking through the nominees, there's a lot of categories that are tricky to predict this year, it's just that none of them are the ones most people pay a lot of attention to.

And the nominees are...

Best Picture:


The Artist
The Descendants
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
The Help
Hugo
Midnight in Paris
Moneyball
The Tree of Life
War Horse

I've thought a few times that this year's best picture slate is one of the most boring I've ever seen in the category, but in this case, boring doesn't necessarily equal bad, since I enjoyed each and every one of these films for what they brought to the table. That said, when the Academy increased the size of the Best Picture category two years ago, it was in hopes that it would broaden the variety of the nominees: the Academy hoped it would allow for everything from small art house films, to Oscar baiting features, to comedies, to animated films, all the way to well made, widely loved blockbuster films. The last two years, I think that idea generally worked: we saw summer favorites sneak in that never would have had a chance otherwise (Inception, District 9), we saw Pixar finally earn the nominations they should have gotten for the first Toy Story film (Toy Story 3, Up), we saw a huge box office drama (The Blind Side), and some smaller art house gems (Winter's Bone, An Education) that would have been swept aside in years of five. The quality of all of these films can be debated, as can how deserving or undeserving of the accolade they were, but the Academy had gotten its wish, and the variety was there. This year, its right back to the way things used to be: I've heard the "I haven't seen any of these movies!" argument from a lot of different people, and to me, despite the fact that I don't really think any of these films are obscure in the least, is a failure of the expanded category. I'd rather they just nominated five and eliminated the pretense that any of the extra nominees could ever win.

And again, that's not to say that I don't like these films, since Hugo, The Artist and Moneyball would all be among my list of the year's best, and everything else here was more than worthwhile. I even loved War Horse, which many people thought was just paint-by-numbers Spielberg! It's just that, for the most part, the films that I liked the most, the ones that made me think, the ones that stayed with me for the longest after I saw them, are not here. That's fine, since I certainly can't expect every year to be like 2009 (where my top three were all legitimate contenders), and since I never really expected a few of them (Like Crazy, We Bought a Zoo, The Lincoln Lawyer, Source Code, Crazy Stupid Love) to get anywhere near a Best Picture nomination, and the others (Drive, The Ides of March, Warrior, Beginners, Margin Call) got at least some level of awards attention, I suppose I'll get over the disappointment. Ultimately though, it really doesn't make any difference, since not even Hugo, with its 11 nominations and vast critical acclaim, is any match for the silent film time capsule that is The Artist.

Will win: The Artist (alt: Hugo)
Should win: Hugo
Should have been here: The Ides of March

Best Director:

Michel Hazanvicius, The Artist
Alexander Payne, The Descendants
Martin Scorsese, Hugo
Woody Allen, Midnight in Paris
Terrence Malick, The Tree of Life

The argument in movie-buff circles is that Malick should win, since his film is an enormously ambitious technical achievement and his entire cast give terrific performances. My personal choice (of these nominees, at least) would be Scorsese, for making his best and most beautiful film in decades, but neither auteur will be able to weather the massive adoration that the Academy has for The Artist, and much like last year, a less experienced director will take the prize for a film that just charmed the Academy. As for the other two nominees (Woody Allen, an old favorite at this point, and Thomas Payne, whose film began the season as one of the frontrunners but lost steam along the way), they're just happy to be here.

Will win: Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist (alt: Scorsese)
Should win: Scorsese
Should be here: Nicolas Winding Refn, Drive

Best Actor:

Demián Bichir, A Better Life
George Clooney, The Descendants
Jean Dujardin, The Artist
Gary Oldman, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy
Brad Pitt, Moneyball

One of the most solid categories of the night is still missing many of the best performances I saw last year (or in the case of Michael Fassbender, that I still haven't seen), but Actor is usually so crowded that any oversights can and should be forgiven. Clooney and Pitt give a pair of their best and most nuanced performances to date; Pitt, especially, is perfect for his role, and Clooney does a terrific job with some tricky emotional confusion inherent in his character, but both will likely be going home empty handed yet again, as it's Dujardin's strongly physical and decidedly unforgettable work as a washed up silent film star that will likely prevail. That said, Clooney has been a major player all season, making this category the one of the big eight that's most ripe for an upset, but if I've learned one thing, it's not to doubt the SAG, who handed their award to Dujardin earlier this month. Oldman (finally earning his first Oscar nomination for his wonderfully understated work in Tinker) and Bichir (I haven't seen his film yet) are the also-rans.


Will win: Jean Dujardin, The Artist (alt: George Clooney)
Should win: Brad Pitt, Moneyball
Should be here: Ryan Gosling, The Ides of March OR Kevin Spacey, Margin Call

Best Actress:

Glenn Close, Albert Nobbs
Viola Davis, The Help
Rooney Mara, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo
Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady
Michelle Williams, My Week With Marilyn

Once again, the Best Actress category this year boiled down to a battle between Meryl Streep (who delivers a typically great performance in a lukewarm film) and the actress who ultimately ends up beating her to the Oscar. This year the latter role will be filled by Viola Davis, who gives what is definitely one of my favorite performances of the year in The Help (at the head of a killer ensemble cast, no less). Many have argued on Mara's behalf, due to the alarmingly transformative nature of her work, but the nomination is her award, and Davis is a perfectly worthy winner. As for snubs, I continue to get sad when I look at this category and don't see Felicity Jones, who I still maintain gave the best performance of the year in Like Crazy.


Will win: Viola Davis, The Help (alt: Meryl Streep)
Should win: Viola Davis
Should have been here: Felicity Jones, Like Crazy

Best Supporting Actor:

Kenneth Branagh, My Week With Marilyn
Jonah Hill, Moneyball
Nick Nolte, Warrior
Christopher Plummer, Beginners
Maxwell von Sydow, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

One of the biggest surprises of the season took place in this category on Oscar nomination morning, when Maxwell von Sydow scored a nomination for his memorable work in Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close. The other four nominees had pretty much remained constants all season, with the fifth slot thought by many to belong to Albert Brooks for his terrific, against-type performance as a mob boss in Drive. If I had to trade one of these gentlemen out for Brooks, it would certainly be Hill, who gives an okay performance, but one that in no way compares to the other four. As for the winner, this award belongs to the long overdue Christopher Plummer, who will take home this lone key trophy for the underrated Beginners. He's certainly the most deserving here, but Nolte is one of my favorite nominations of the night: a nuanced and moving performance in a film that never got enough credit.


Will win: Christopher Plummer, Beginners (alt: Maxwell von Sydow)

Should win: Christopher Plummer
Should have been here: Albert Brooks, Drive OR Brad Pitt, The Tree of Life

Best Supporting Actress:

Berenice Bejo, The Artist
Jessica Chastain, The Help
Melissa McCarthy, Bridesmaids
Janet McTeer, Albert Nobbs
Octavia Spencer, The Help

The Help will gets its Oscar recognition in the areas that it deserves it the most, via domination in the female acting categories. Spencer has this as locked up as any award all night, and since it's the first Oscar handed out, we should all be able to have 100% on our predictions, if only for a few minutes. Chastain got a nomination for a year of unbelievable work, but it's arguably for the wrong film (her performance in The Tree of Life would have been my first choice), and Bejo is splendid in The Artist, but this is one category where the Academy will not be swayed by their love for her film.

Will win: Octavia Spencer, The Help (alt: Berenice Bejo)
Should win: Octavia Spencer
Should have been here: Shailene Woodley, The Descendants

Best Adapted Screenplay:


The Descendants
Hugo
The Ides of March
Moneyball
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy

Another great category, with The Ides of March rightfully sneaking in (even if this is the only nomination it managed, and with the other films encompassing some of the best last year had to offer. You can count Ides out right away, sadly, since this is its only nomination. Same goes for Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, which is a feat for how much source material it had to condense alone, but ultimately, I think the book was too big for the movie the screenplay formed, and I expect that Academy members will be as split on it as I am. Hugo is the darkest of horses, a solid screenplay (and a very good adaptation) for a film that's far more notable in other areas. That means the battle will play out between The Descendants and Moneyball, and since both are well liked films with precursor writing awards under their belts, it's a tough call between them. My guess? Taking Clooney's likely loss into account, the Academy will turn to award the film here, the only other area it really can. That said, this race reminds me eerily of another Adapted Screenplay category: 2009, where another Clooney vehicle (Up in the Air) was considered locked, right up until the moment it that wasn't and Precious took the prize (a horrible decision, but notable nonetheless).


Will win: The Descendants (alt: Moneyball)
Should win: Moneyball
Should win: Drive

Best Original Screenplay:

The Artist
Bridesmaids
Margin Call
Midnight in Paris
A Separation

While the other screenplay category is one of my favorites of the night, this is undoubtedly the most interesting, pitting a foreign language film, a raunchy comedy, a silent film, and a intelligent and dialogue driven zeitgeist picture (all first time nominees) against the legendary Woody Allen (who has won this category twice and been nominated for it a record 15 times). General wisdom points to Allen for another win, and despite the fact that much of the film's acclaim has baffled me, a screenplay award would make a certain amount of sense, since it's time-traveling storyline and witty set pieces with famous literary figures mark it as the most "original" work in the category. The Margin Call nomination is particularly inspired, though clearly, the film has no chance for a win. The other contender is The Artist, which will have an uphill battle, seeing as most associate the word "screenplay" with "script" and "dialogue," but the Best Picture winner has also won a screenplay award for the past seven years, so that makes this another category to watch.


Will win: Midnight in Paris (alt: The Artist)
Should win: Margin Call
Should have been here: Beginners

The rest:

*Best Art Direction: Hugo (alt: The Artist)

Best Cinematography: The Tree of Life (alt: Hugo)

Best Costume Design: The Artist (alt: Jane Eyre)

*Best Film Editing: The Artist (alt: Hugo)

*Best Makeup: The Iron Lady (alt: Harry Potter & The Deathly Hallows, Part II)

*Best Original Score: The Artist (alt: War Horse)

*Best Original Song: "Man or Muppet" from The Muppets (alt: the only other nominee...)

Best Sound Editing: Hugo (alt: War Horse )

Best Sound Mixing: Hugo (alt: War Horse)

*Best Visual Effects: The Rise of the Planet of the Apes (alt: Hugo)

*Best Foreign Language Film: A Separation (alt: In Darkness)

*Best Animated Feature: Rango (alt: Puss in Boots)

Best Documentary Feature:  Hell & Back Again (alt: Undefeated)

Best Documentary Short: Saving Face (alt. The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom)

Best Short Film (Animated): The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore (alt: La Luna)

Best Short Film (Live-Action): The Shore (alt: Tuba Atlantic)

*Categories I'm relatively sure of.

A few notes: Even if Hugo wins nothing else, it will get Art Direction, for being the most beautiful film in the race (the first shot of the Parisian vistas probably could have won it that award alone). Similarly, Best Cinematography often goes to the film that is the "prettiest" rather than the one with the best or most innovative photography, which this year is undoubtedly The Tree of Life. That film is divisive though, and Hugo isn't even the only other player, as The Artist could easily grab a win for its striking black and white photography. And then there's War Horse, which is a fantastically shot film with enormous scope and more than a couple of unforgettable images. I ultimately went for the one that struck me the most, and I think the "creation of the universe scene" from The Tree of Life will have a lot of passionate supporters that should carry it to a win here, but I've been wrong in less wide open categories before.

Costume design is similarly wide open, with four of the five nominees (The Artist, Hugo, Jane Eyre, and Anonymous) all having a fair shot. With all the doubt I have in that category, I just went with the Best Picture frontrunner, but if not The Artist, Jane Eyre's period setting bears similarity to a lot of previous winners, so that felt like a solid alternate. The Best Picture winner generally sails towards a win in Editing as well, so bet on The Artist there, and there are clearly no other players in Best Original Score, since rarely is a film as reliant on that aspect as The Artist is. Parts of The Iron Lady seemed like they were only made so that the makeup team could get an Oscar, and they will, even as Meryl Streep loses the award for the film's most definitive aspect. Best Original Song has become a complete joke, with only two nominees, but the category has belonged to The Muppets all season, with the only question ever being which song they'd nominate.

The sound categories very rarely split, but Hugo and War Horse both have a shot. I'll go with general wisdom, which says Hugo, but general wisdom also said Avatar two years ago, and that film ultimately lost to the war film (The Hurt Locker), so War Horse is an obvious threat. Visual effects, Animated Feature, and Foreign Language film feel like some of the safest bets of the night, while Best Documentary Feature is probably the biggest wild card. Even the hardcore Oscar pundits have no idea what will win that category, and arguments have been stated for each of the five films nominated. One of the Oscar blogs I read advised me to "just pick this one out of a hat," so that's what I did: fingers crossed. As for the short films, I personally have no clue. Sometimes it feels like those categories are there for the the sole purpose of wrecking my predictions, so I just went with what seemed to be the general consensus: again, fingers crossed.

So that's it: all that's left to do is to sit back, relax, and watch Billy Crystal redeem the Oscars from last year's James Franco-shaped trainwreck.


 Happy Oscars!

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
Warner Bros. / Paramount Pictures, 2011
Directed by Stephen Daldry
Starring: Thomas Horn, Sandra Bullock, Tom Hanks, Maxwell von Sydow
Three stars


On Oscar Nomination morning, a lot of people were shocked when Stephen Daldry's Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close was read off as the 9th Best Picture nominee. The film, which is based on the 2005 novel of the same name (by Jonathan Safran Foer), had already suffered a massive critical beat down, scoring in the 40% range on both Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic, and common consensus was that the film was melodramatic and emotionally manipulative, using the 9/11 World Trade Center attacks as a means to draw a few tears from the audience and make a couple bucks. Nevertheless, I predicted the film as a long shot alternate, wondering if the it had released just at the right time and left enough of an impression on voters to score a nomination. Evidently, it had, and it did land that nomination (along with one for supporting actor Maxwell von Sydow), making it the only one of the nine films I had not seen before nomination day.



While Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close was certainly far from my favorite film of the year, and while it does have its share of flaws, the fact that much of the criticism for the film surrounded its use of the 9/11 events as the backdrop of the story made me scratch my head a bit. Over the past decade, I've seen many people use the words "too soon" in regards to artistic manifestations of that terrible day: it happened in 2006, when filmmakers Oliver Stone and Paul Greengrass made a pair of films focusing on different aspects of the terror. It probably happened in 2002, when Bruce Springsteen released his comeback album The Rising, where many of the songs discussed the overwhelming sense of loss and grief that gripped the nation following the attacks. It most certainly happened (and probably rightfully so) in 2010, when what looked to be a pretty straightforward Robert Pattison romance flick (Remember Me) concluded with the mother of all deus-ex-machina devices, with the main character dying in the World Trade Center in the penultimate scene. In all of these cases, still grieving citizens made the argument that these filmmakers and artists were trying to make money off of their grief, trying to tap into that day tragedy for monetary benefit. But we can't simply ignore that day, and just as WWII has provided the backdrop for countless films for ages, the events of September 11th will be revisited, time and time again, from different angles.

I personally don't have a problem with the 9/11 subject matter if it is handled well: Greengrass made one of the most effective and moving films of the last decade with United 93, which did its very best to tell the story as it happened, in complete realism, without a single Hollywood moment. However, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close hardly even fits into the same category anyway, since only a fraction of the film takes place on September 11th, and most of it revolves around what follows. So even though Extremely Loud is destined to be thought of as "the 9/11 film" throughout this year's Oscar season and probably forever, it's far more about dealing with the devastation of losing a person you love, about learning how to live without that person, even as their memory is with you everywhere you go, than it is about a day in our nation's history. In that regard, I think the film does a terrific job, and even though I didn't personally love every moment of the film, it does pack one hell of an emotional punch. I can certainly understand why Oscar voters responded to it the way they did, even if the higher-brow critical faction didn't find much to enjoy.


Many of the criticisms have also been levied towards Thomas Horn, who portrays Oskar, a child with asperger's who is the central protagonist of the story. I read somewhere that the whole movie was essentially "Horn running around screaming," and while that is obviously an exaggerated remark, the character's mannerisms and personality did start to wear on me towards the films middle section. That said, Oskar is a character who is not entirely likable by design: all evidence suggests that this boy has no real friendships in his school environment. His best friend and his only real link to the world around him was his father (a dependably solid Tom Hanks), who would design tasks to get him to talk to strangers and break out of his shell, and when he perishes in the World Trade Center, Oskar can't really comprehend that loss. The main thrust of the plot involves one final task Oskar believes his father left to him, and he ventures out into the wide expanses of New York City, trying to solve the puzzle. In his searching, Oskar encounters hundreds of people, many suffering from the same kind of grief that he's working through, and eventually it becomes obvious that his task isn't about the destination, but the journey it takes to get there.

The supporting cast is aces all around: Viola Davis, a likely Best Actress winner for her terrific work last year in The Help, has a small but important role as one of the many lives that Oskar wanders into (and changes) throughout his quest. Maxwell von Sydow doesn't say a word throughout the whole film, but his silent, quirky facade makes him the perfect companion for Oskar, even as he hides a life full of pain and regret. And Sandra Bullock gives her best performance to date as Oskar's mother, who, as we learn in the film's final act, isn't quite what she seems. Near the end of the film, Horn and Bullock share a scene that is just dynamite, discussing grief, love and loss, and remembering the man that was taken away from them far too soon. "I miss his voice telling me he loves me," Bullock's character says quietly. It's the perfect encapsulation of loss, condensed down to a single line, and at that moment, there might not have been a dry eye in the house. If I had to pin down why this film got the Best Picture nomination that alluded many much more critically acclaimed films, from Dragon Tattoo to Tinker, Tailor to The Ides of March, I'd point to that single scene: I doubt there's a more powerful one in any of the nominees this year.


When I first saw the trailer for this film, I actually teared up a little bit. Maybe it was the juxtaposition of so many powerful images and ideas from the film's center, or maybe it was all about the use of U2's "Where the Streets Have No Name" (one of my top five favorite songs of all time), but either way, it was a trailer that resonated with me immediately, and a film I gravitated towards for that reason. Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close has taken a lot of flak (and will continue to be on the receiving end of it for awhile, thanks to that Oscar nomination), but once I got past all of that nonsense and right to the core of the film, there was something really worthwhile there. It's not my favorite film of the year: I'd probably rank towards the lower end of the Best Picture nominees, but I don't think there has been a more misunderstood or unfairly maligned film in the past year. Because ultimately, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close really is a good movie. Maybe not a great one and maybe not one I can see myself revisiting a lot down the road, but I'm glad it was made, I'm glad I saw it, and I am truly glad the Academy chose to give it a reprieve from the nonsensical critical slaughter it has received.

And damn, I still love that trailer...


Friday, February 3, 2012

The Tragedy of the Underrated Film: Cameron Crowe's "Elizabethtown," six years down the road

Elizabethtown
Directed by Cameron Crowe
Fall 2005


I could, quite easily I think, call Cameron Crowe my favorite director of all time. Sure, Tarantino's blown my mind wide open countless times, the Coen Brothers have never made a film I didn't like, David Fincher just gets better and better, and Peter Jackson probably gets himself into the conversation based on my love for The Lord of the Rings alone. Then there are greats like Spielberg and Scorsese, who have made so many great movies (and so many different kinds of great movies), that I still haven't explored either entirely, but if I had to pick one director's collection of films as my "desert island film list," Crowe would have to be the winner. His films are so personal, so infectiously moving and memorable, and so full of replay value that I can't imagine getting tired of them. Like great songs or great albums, Crowe's films don't always necessarily become my favorites on the initial viewing, but they really stick with me. Perhaps it's due to Crowe's fantastic use of music in his films, but every single one of them has one or two moments of pure magic, and those moments infect my mind and stay there until I am dying to see the film again. We Bought a Zoo wasn't my favorite film of last year, but it was one I found viscerally moving and very memorable. There were a few moments in that film where Crowe's music choices and Matt Damon's performance juxtaposed so perfectly that they transcended the film's simple narrative and became a part of me, and for that reason alone, I'm dying to see the film again.

I can't figure out for the life of me why I wrote off Elizabethtown for so long. The 2005 film, for the longest time, has been one that I sort of lumped in with Vanilla Sky as a part of Crowe's "dry period," but looking back, I recall quite enjoying it on my first viewing (which was, I suppose, 6 years ago). After reading through an excellent countdown of the greatest music moments in Crowe's films (read it here) and seeing the abundance of Elizabethtown tunes on there, I decided to give the film another chance, and I fell in love.


I think there is something deeply wrong in the way we gauge the quality of films in this day and age. So much relies on what wins awards or what scores a high percentage on Rotten Tomatoes, but really, what do those things mean? As much as I follow the Oscars, as much as I love seeing all the films and deciding for myself what I think should or should not win, at the end of the day, it's just an Award, just a statistic (though one that will, admittedly, immortalize that particular film amongst a highly regarded tradition), but unless my own personal favorite films are being validated by those prizes, does it really make a difference to me what wins? And what about those Rotten Tomatoes scores, which have probably caused people to write off countless numbers of films that I love due to mixed critical reaction: there are things inside these films that simply cannot be condensed down into a number, and in trying to do so, I think we have lost something from modern cinema.

Crowe's films and Elizabethtown in particular got me thinking about this, as they've never been big awards players, and Elizabethtown holds a disgusting 28% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, which is pretty much enough for me to write the site off for the remaining stretch of my existence. There is no arguing that the film is flawed: Orlando Bloom is a deeply likable actor, and he tries terribly hard in this role, but the performance never quite works the way it should. There are strange snatches of awkwardness and even a few scenes (towards the beginning), where something really does feel very, very off. But he does his best. Much like Woody Allen's films, which all seem to present a different version of the director, the Cameron Crowe hero has always had bits and pieces that felt friendly and familiar. Matt Damon, Tom Cruise, John Cusack and Patrick Fugit have all done splendidly in different takes on a similar role, each in wildly different settings, but all playing through some similar thematic issues, and although Bloom doesn't quite hit that mark, I still kind of liked his performance for what it was. More on that later.


Elizabethtown follows the story of a shoe designer named Drew Baylor (Bloom), who has just been fired after designing a product that cost his company a billion dollars. Well, not quite a billion dollars, but as Alec Baldwin states in his brief appearance as Drew's boss, the number is close enough that they might as well round up. And so Drew's story begins, fired, dumped (by Jessica Biel, with so little to do in this movie that you wonder why they even bothered) and at the end of his rope. It's not so far from the set-up of Jerry Maguire, except for instead of resolving to start his own company and come back from his crushing failure, Drew goes home, tosses his belongings in the trash, and prepares to kill himself. It's then that the phone rings and changes everything: Drew's father has died, and Drew has to go to Elizabethtown, his father's old hometown and where he was visiting when he died, to make funeral arrangements. And then he meets Claire (Kirsten Dunst, as a bubbly flight-attendant), and the film really gains its feet.

Doubtlessly, this film is flawed: actors or characters make brief appearances and then disappear without a trace, others seem strangely underdeveloped, and some scenes feel disjointed and out of place. And yet despite all of this, as the film finished out tonight, after years spent writing it off, I immediately thought I may have found a new favorite. Why? How can a film with so many obvious flaws and such a weak opening end up being so sublime, so weirdly, quirkily, unexpectedly brilliant? The answer is that, despite strange casting and scripting flaws (and a serious snafu in the film editing department), this is still a Cameron Crowe film, and it still has his trademark magic: the magic of the all-night phone conversation Drew and Claire share together, with Ryan Adams' "Come Pick Me Up" serving as soundtrack; the bizarre comedy of Drew's drunk encounter with a groom at the hotel he's staying at as he tries to steal a few beers; the wistful warmth of Drew and Claire driving to meet each other at dawn, just to sit and watch the sunset together, staying on the phone until they're face to face; the weirdly emotional power of the scene where Susan Sarandon (as Drew's mother) tap dances to "Moon River," her late husband's favorite song, at his memorial. It's the kind of magic you feel as Drew's cousin reunites his band to play "Freebird" at the memorial, lighting the place on fire, but continuing on through the entire guitar solo, even as the sprinklers drench the place and the audience runs for the exits. It's the sheer perfection of the film's closing sequence, where Drew takes a long road trip home, perfectly laid out and soundtracked by Claire (in the most flawless tribute to the mixtape that film has ever seen), and it's the satisfaction of watching them search for each other in a busy crowd, the connection of their eyes, the sprint towards each other, the collision, the embrace and the long, drawn out kiss. It's old fashioned romance, but Crowe has always had a way of making that seem fresh, and he does it perfectly here.


But perhaps the thing that hits the hardest in this film is the music that Crowe selects to soundtrack it: the crushing tragedy of losing a parent that sets in on Drew as Helen Stellar's "This Time Around" plays and he finds himself looking back; the melancholic strains of Tom Petty's "It'll All Work Out" that so expertly foreshadow the fated collision of these two people and the love they will find together; the welcome arrival of any of the three Ryan Adams songs, at key points in the score, framing the film almost as much as Elton John's opus "My Father's Gun" does; or the way the music washes over the road trip scene and brings the film to a truly fantastic conclusion, from the splendid American vistas that pass by as EastMountainSouth's gorgeously harmonized cover of Stephen Foster's "Hard Times" plays, to the bittersweet melody of Wheat's "Don't I Hold You," which will put a smile on the face of any audience member who has ever fallen in love with a song on a thoughtful late night drive. The list of examples could fill paragraphs, but suffice to say that, of all of Crowe's films, Elizabethtown is perhaps the most fully realized in terms of its soundtrack, and that's saying something. Maybe that's why I love this film so much: the script is certainly flawed, the casting imperfect, but when it comes to perfect collisions of music and film, it's hard to think of another example that blends my two favorite mediums of entertainment and art together so well.

Aside from Vanilla Sky (which I hardly even count as a Cameron Crowe film), Elizabethtown is probably Crowe's weakest screenplay. It's weak in that there are plot and character inconsistencies and that, at times, it feels like there is something missing. But in its concept? In its central story and character ideas? In those areas, the script about as far from weak as you can get. I read a blog post once (read it here) that explained it more perfectly than I can:

"If Jerry Maguire and Almost Famous are both a solid 9 out of 10, then Elizabethtown is a solid 4 out of 10 yet also a solid 12 out of 10. It's everything and nothing, it's great and terrible, terrible and great."

That is to say, there are failures in this film, but when Crowe succeeds, like on that perfect road trip sequence, or the euphoric up-all-night phone call scene, it's hard for me to think of moments in his other films that I love more. I honestly think he could have made his best movie here, had a few things gone differently; he misses that mark, but it's still worth an awful lot that I can't get the movie out of my head. Maybe it's the music geek in me: maybe it's Drew visiting the scene of Martin Luther King's assassination as U2's "Pride (In the Name of Love)" plays like an anthem in the background; maybe it's him stopping by Sun Studios and grabbing a drink in a bar nearby, where the bartender tells him stories of all kinds of music legends (Elvis included) who have walked through his door; maybe it's the chilling mention of Jeff Buckley's final resting place as Drew drives over the Mississippi; or maybe it's just the idea of a guy who suffers a crushing tragedy and a demoralizing defeat at the same time, and then finds himself in the aftermath: in a crazy extended family, in music, and in love. I love that plot and I love the way the film reminds me of moments out of my own life. I think Drew is a really great character, one that I can see myself in a lot, and the fact that Bloom doesn't quite hit the bullseye doesn't take away from how genuine and good-natured his performance is. And his chemistry with Dunst just works: one viewing of that phone call scene makes that statement undeniable.


Elizabethtown, unlike Almost Famous, is not a perfect movie, but it bears its scars proudly, and it rises above them to become a truly great film, even if I didn't realize that fact for six years. There's a tragedy in films sitting underrated for more than half a decade like this one has: the tragedy of missing out on years of these songs and scenes to remember fondly; the tragedy of thinking my favorite director lost his golden touch. But there's also something truly splendid about the underrated film: it's getting to rediscover it years after the first viewing and cherishing it all the more for that reason; it's having the film come back into my life at the perfect time and truly resonating with me like I know it never could have when I was younger; and its the thrill of reclaiming a film that critics and popular consensus kept from me for far too long. In that way, I suppose it's more of a triumph than a tragedy.