As you can guess I was looking forward to seeing Babylon, the new Damien Chazelle movie, because, you know, Tobey. I’ve been watching the trailers, featurettes and reviews ever since the first trailer was released and ever since the first screenings were held. The mixed reviews at first worried me, because they were not quite all over the place, but in extremes. People either loved or hated the movie. Over time, as I watched and read more reviews, it started to intrigued me. I read and watched the reviews carefully, comparing other people’s notes and opinions. There’s something interesting happening here.
There are
too many endings (not starting at the end to be contrary, but this is the one point
most people talk about no matter if they liked the movie or not).
The movie
is too long. I only partly agree with that. The pacing for me was just fine; I
wasn’t a moment bored and somehow Tobey, who appears to the end of the movie,
managed to creep up on me. However, I watch a lot of Classic Doctor Who where
the pacing can be that of a snail. So, don’t take my word for it.
The
performances are great by the whole cast. This is the point where I did
experience some underwhelment. Obviously, in the trailers and featurettes, they
showed the best clips and with that the best part of the performances. Tobey
really shone in the trailers and it made me really look forward to his
performance. Me being underwhelmed had nothing to do with Tobey’s performance;
he really is brilliant. I just somehow expected more (quality, not quantity)
from Tobey.
The person
who underwhelmed me the most was Brad Pitt, because to me it felt like he was
playing Brad Pitt. Diego Calva was great, especially since it was his first Hollywood
(leading) role and he held his own among the more experienced big names. My
favorite performance (besides Tobey’s) was from Jean Smart. She has some of the
best lines and wonderfully funny delivery like (paraphrased): “To be a witness
of moving pictures and magic…Ah, who am I kidding; look at these idiots!!!”
In one
review someone said: “In some scenes, he goes too far and somehow doesn’t go
far enough at the same time” I agree with that. And this coupled with another
reviewer who said: “A Scorsese coke film by a squeaky clean director.” sums up
the problem with Babylon, I think. It feels like Damien Chazelle put things in
there just for shock value, but doesn’t understand how to do this engagingly,
or something. I don’t know. It just didn’t quite work for me.
Several
reviewers felt the characters weren’t explored quite enough. Especially Sidney
Palmer, played by Jovan Adepo, and lady Fay Zhu, played by Li Jun Li, got lost
in the movie. I think they were there to highlight the roles different
ethnicities played in early Hollywood and maybe how they got sidelined? I don’t
know, the movie is not really clear about what it wanted to say about these two
characters.
Quite a few
reviewers complained there’s not enough focus and therefore the storytelling is
all over the place. I can see why people felt like that, but to me it felt like
a natural (chronological) flow of people going through life. To me it felt like
I (time) travelled with them into the talkies era till it all ended for every
single one of them. I do understand the criticism, because it’s not always
clear what a character is doing at a certain time or why a character is doing
something at a certain time. The story can feel a little dislodged and random
at times because of this. But isn’t that how life works as well?
It’s not
the greatest movie I have ever seen, but it’s definitely not the worst either. I
believe this movie will have some staying power and build up a cult following.
I hope it will.
In one
review the reviewer, who did not like the movie, said he would change his
opinion if Damien Chazelle, in about 5 years time, comes forward and says
(paraphrased): “I intented this movie to be meta and ironic in the light of
today’s movie climate”. I think this might happen. Apparently Chazelle
anticipated the mixed reactions and even welcomed it. And the movie climat is
rapidly changing at the moment with streaming services taking over. Some
reviewers pointed out we are in a similar transition right now and the box
office results of Babylon are a result of this. In other words, this is a movie
about suffering the fate of great transition itself suffering a similar fate of
another great transition. That’s why I believe this movie will eventually be
seen as a masterpiece.
No comments:
Post a Comment