Elizabethtown Review
Near the end of Elizabethtown Claire Colburn (Kirsten Dunst) tells the lead character Drew Baylor (Orlando Bloom) that he must go deep into the “beautiful melancholy” of everything that has happened to him. That pretty much sums up director Cameron Crowe’s modus operandi for the movie. While he would certainly describe the film as whimsical, the word Drew uses to describe the look on his father’s face the first time he sees his dad’s corpse, the truth is that the film is unfocused. Containing elements of a corporate satire, a romantic comedy, an affectionate look at an eccentric southern family, and a warm-hearted lesson about living through tough times, Elizabethtown fails to make any of these elements cohere. Orlando Bloom gives a one note performance, but he is playing a one note character who spends the whole film in a listless suicidal funk doing little more than waiting to cry. He offers nothing that compels an audience to pay attention to him, so the average viewer will begin focusing on the edges of the film. Crowe obliges by stuffing the film with ancillary characters. Alec Baldwin, Judy Greer, Susan Sarandon, and Bruce McGill all have a scene or two that showcases their talent, but they are also each given moments so misconceived that they produce little more than head-scratching disbelief in the audience. Playing a character simply too good to be true, Dunst embodies her perfect, unselfish woman with just enough pain below the surface to make her interesting even though she remains entirely unbelievable. Without her, the film would be close to unbearable. What makes this mess of a movie all the more fascinating is that Crowe’s relentless bittersweet melancholy seems entirely heartfelt. He is not talking down to his audience, tricking them into feeling big emotions. Crowe’s honesty and earnestness make it difficult to hate the film because he plainly believes the moral of his own story. However he became so focused on sharing his feelings in each moment that he never saw the big picture. Elizabethtown is a mess of a movie that only a talented writer could create.
1 Comments:
Crap. I was looking forward to this (if only for the Orlando eye-candy...)
But, I was hoping it would be decent, but it doesn't sound like it, does it?
Well, on to my Netflix list and I won't worry about it until it's out on video (which looks like it might be soon...)
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