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Review: "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs"

November 19, 2018 by Andrew Carden in Reviews

Once in a blue moon, Joel and Ethan Coen will deliver a picture that is far more stimulating on the screen, in a purely visual sense, than on the page. A film like The Man Who Wasn’t There, for instance, was less a triumph in screenwriting than a brooding feast for the eyes, made all the more captivating by Billy Bob Thornton’s masterful leading turn.

The Ballad of Buster Scruggs marks one of these instances, except it lacks a performance on Thornton’s level. It’s a western anthology and, like so many anthology pictures, is a mixed bag, its half dozen chapters ranging from droll and delightful to uninspired and anti-climatic. The lone bright spot that lingers throughout the proceedings is how drop dead gorgeous it all is, Bruno Delbonnel’s photography richly deserving of Oscar consideration.

The film’s six stories are presented through an ancient book, titled The Ballad of Buster Scruggs and Other Tales of the American Frontier.

Kicking off the series is, well, “The Ballad of Buster Scruggs,” a chapter equal parts funny and gruesome as the title character (Tim Blake Nelson), an outlaw cowboy, sings and shoots his way through the glorious Monument Valley. Nelson’s buoyant turn is irresistible stuff, so it’s a shame the entry flies by in no time. Likewise, the second story, “Near Algodones,” is terrific but fleeting. It features James Franco as a bank-robbing cowboy but it’s Stephen Root, as the plenty prepared bank teller, who steals the show.

“Meal Ticket” has heaps of promise but, despite a intriguing turn from Harry Melling, never takes off as it should. It sports Liam Neeson as a struggling impresario who travels from town to town with his performer Harrison (Melling), a limbless man who recites classic works of poetry and literature. As Harrison increasingly proves less of a draw, the producer must consider alternative talents to support a living. It’s a fine concept that isn’t sufficiently fleshed out.

The very best story comes next - it’s the prettiest (like, jaw-droppingly splendid) and most absorbing and expertly performed. “All Gold Canyon” is centered on an old prospector (Tom Waits) on the hunt for gold in a magnificent mountain valley. Through tireless work and determination, he finds precisely what he was looking for…and don’t you dare try robbing him of his findings.

The fifth story, “The Gal Who Got Rattled,” is headlined by Zoe Kazan, portraying Alice, a young woman venturing across the prairie to Oregon with her brother (Jefferson Mays). When he dies, she decides to continue on westward and becomes close to the wagon train leaders (Bill Heck and Grainger Hines) in the process. If Kazan rings too contemporary to quite convince in her role, Hines is pitch-perfect as the seasoned Mr. Arthur.

Last and least is “The Mortal Remains,” a chatty tale about a quintet of stagecoach travelers (Tyne Daly, Brendan Gleeson, Saul Rubinek, Jongo O’Neill and Chelcie Ross) en route to a mysterious destination. The novelty of seeing Daly, per usual giving it her all, in a semi-major motion picture isn’t enough to much lift this uninvolving dud.

In the end, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs emerges more a haphazard curiosity than anything close to top-tier Coens. It is a must-see for Waits fans and sure is a pretty picture but otherwise - mark this down as one of the more disappointing efforts of 2018.

B-

November 19, 2018 /Andrew Carden
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Boy.jpg

Review: "Boy Erased"

November 12, 2018 by Andrew Carden in Reviews

Boy Erased has all of the ingredients of a Best Picture Oscar winner, including three of the most devastating performances to this year grace the screen. What it ultimately lacks, holding it back from reaching masterpiece territory, is the right filmmaker to get it across the finish line.

This isn’t to completely lambaste the picture’s writer-director-actor-producer Joel Edgerton, who in the past has proven himself a marvelous talent both in front of (in It Comes at Night and Loving, among others) and behind (with The Gift) the camera. Edgerton here delivers a very fine film, albeit a frustratingly workmanlike effort that leans heavily on its actors and source material. It’s an endeavor that finds Edgerton an immense talent at getting the best out of his actors, while sporting very little visual flair himself as a filmmaker.

The film, based on Garrard Conley’s eponymous 2016 memoir, follows Jared Eamons (Lucas Hedges, yet again proving himself one of today’s finest young actors), the son of Baptist parents (Russell Crowe and Nicole Kidman), who, upon revealing his homosexuality to them, reluctantly agrees to enroll in a gay conversion therapy camp. There, Jared befriends other participants, each struggling to navigate and survive their way through this hellish experience. The program is spearheaded by “therapist” Victor Sykes (Edgerton), whose conversion methods are equal parts manipulative, traumatizing and sadistic.

Boy Erased is at its most compelling when focused on the family dynamic, with Hedges, Crowe and Kidman having an absorbing, all too convincing rapport that often rings of Ordinary People. Each actor is turning in some of their very best work, perhaps Crowe in particular, who absolutely kills it in his final scene toward the picture’s end. There’s also a terrific cameo from the always fabulous Cherry Jones, portraying the family physician, none too sold on Jared entering the program.

Less stirring are the camp scenes, with Edgerton too muted as the ringleader to pack the necessary punch. There are, however, very affecting scenes around the lead-up to Jared’s coming-out, including a shattering sequence involving classmate Henry (Joe Alwyn). Constantly jumping back and forth between past and present, and compellingly so, Edgerton’s screenplay is a greater success than his direction, which veers from the uninspired to the heavy-handed.

My qualms with some of Edgerton’s contributions aside, Boy Erased remains a mostly riveting production, with its trio of stars in pitch-perfect form. I just wish I could give the film these masterful performances grace a tad higher grade than…

A-

November 12, 2018 /Andrew Carden
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At last, Black Panther cracks Best Picture!

At last, Black Panther cracks Best Picture!

2018 Oscar Nomination Predictions (November)

November 07, 2018 by Andrew Carden in Oscars

Howdy, my fellow Oscar aficionados!

Over the past month, since my October forecast, the following events have gone down in this awesomely unpredictable awards season:

  • A trickle of new trailers continue to drop, with the past month seeing releases from Destroyer and Vox Lux

  • The Gotham Awards kicked off precursor season with its set of nominees. (Yay Glenn!)

  • Despite strong reviews, Damien Chazelle’s First Man opened at the domestic box office to a resounding thud. Can the Ryan Gosling picture hang on and still net 10+ Oscar nominations or have we been overestimating this thing all along?

  • Speaking of awards season contenders in free fall, Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody was met with a decidedly chilly reception from critics. Will leading man Rami Malek, who did earn strong notices despite the film’s otherwise middling reviews, hang on in Best Actor contention?

  • Fox Searchlight confirmed Olivia Colman will be the lone Best Actress push for The Favourite, with co-stars/Oscar winners Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz vying for Best Supporting Actress love.

  • In a very wise move, Sony Pictures Classics bumped Jonathan Pryce down from Best Actor to a Best Supporting Actor push for The Wife.

With that said, please see below my latest set of Oscar predictions, for the month of November. In parentheses you will find how many slots a contender has moved up or down since my last rankings. In a number of cases, I have dropped a film or performer entirely. Also, for the first time this season, I am taking a stab at Best Original Song.

Enjoy reading and, as always, feel free to comment with your own thoughts as well!

Best Picture

  1. A Star Is Born (+1)

  2. Roma (+1)

  3. BlacKkKlansman (+4)

  4. If Beale Street Could Talk (-)

  5. The Favourite (+1)

  6. First Man (-5)

  7. Green Book (-2)

  8. Widows (-)

  9. Black Panther (+2)
    —

  10. Can You Ever Forgive Me? (-1)

  11. Vice (-)

  12. The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (+3)

  13. Crazy Rich Asians (+1)

  14. The Mule (-2)

  15. Mary Queen of Scots (-2)

Best Director

  1. Alfonso Cuaron, Roma (+1)

  2. Bradley Cooper, A Star Is Born (+1)

  3. Spike Lee, BlacKkKlansman (+3)

  4. Barry Jenkins, If Beale Street Could Talk (-)

  5. Steve McQueen, Widows (-)
    —

  6. Damien Chazelle, First Man (-5)

  7. Yorgos Lanthimos, The Favourite (-)

  8. Peter Farrelly, Green Book (NEW)

  9. Adam McKay, Vice (-1)

  10. Ryan Coogler, Black Panther (-)

DROPPED
Clint Eastwood, The Mule (-2)

Best Leading Actor

  1. Bradley Cooper, A Star Is Born (-)

  2. Viggo Mortensen, Green Book (+2)

  3. Christian Bale, Vice (+2)

  4. Ryan Gosling, First Man (-2)

  5. Willem Dafoe, At Eternity's Gate (-2)
    —

  6. Lucas Hedges, Boy Erased (+1)

  7. Rami Malek, Bohemian Rhapsody (+2)

  8. Ethan Hawke, First Reformed (NEW)

  9. Clint Eastwood, The Mule (-1)

  10. John David Washington, BlacKkKlansman (-)

DROPPED
Robert Redford, The Old Man and the Gun (-5)

Best Leading Actress

  1. Melissa McCarthy, Can You Ever Forgive Me? (-)

  2. Olivia Colman, The Favourite (NEW)

  3. Glenn Close, The Wife (-1)

  4. Lady Gaga, A Star Is Born (-1)

  5. Viola Davis, Widows (-)
    —

  6. Yalitza Aparcio, Roma (-)

  7. Nicole Kidman, Destroyer (+1)

  8. Julia Roberts, Ben Is Back (+1)

  9. Kiki Layne, If Beale Street Could Talk (-2)

  10. Saoirse Ronan, Mary Queen of Scots (-)

DROPPED
Emma Stone, The Favourite (-6)

Best Supporting Actor

  1. Mahershala Ali, Green Book (-)

  2. Richard E. Grant, Can You Ever Forgive Me? (+1)

  3. Sam Elliott, A Star Is Born (-1)

  4. Sam Rockwell, Vice (+3)

  5. Daniel Kaluuya, Widows (+1)
    —

  6. Adam Driver, BlacKkKlansman (+3)

  7. Timothee Chalamet, Beautiful Boy (-3)

  8. Russell Crowe, Boy Erased (-)

  9. Michael B. Jordan, Black Panther (NEW)

  10. Russell Hornsby, The Hate U Give (NEW)

DROPPED
Stephan James, If Beale Street Could Talk (-6)
Robert Forster, What They Had (-1)

Best Supporting Actress

  1. Regina King, If Beale Street Could Talk (+1)

  2. Emma Stone, The Favourite (NEW)

  3. Rachel Weisz, The Favourite (+2)

  4. Nicole Kidman, Boy Erased (-1)

  5. Amy Adams, Vice (+2)
    —

  6. Claire Foy, First Man (-5)

  7. Marina De Tavira, Roma (NEW)

  8. Natalie Portman, Vox Lux (-)

  9. Margot Robbie, Mary Queen of Scots (-)

  10. Sissy Spacek, The Old Man and the Gun (-4)

DROPPED
Olivia Colman, The Favourite (-7)
Kathy Bates, On the Basis of Sex (-1)

Best Original Screenplay

  1. Alfonso Cuaron, Roma (-)

  2. Deborah Davis and Tony McNamara, The Favourite (-)

  3. Brian Hayes Currie, Peter Farrelly and Nick Vallelonga, Green Book (-)

  4. Joel and Ethan Coen, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (-)

  5. Adam McKay, Vice (+1)
    —

  6. Bo Burnham, Eighth Grade (+3)

  7. Paul Schrader, First Reformed (NEW)

  8. Jihad Hojeily, Michelle Keserwany, Nadine Labaki and Khaled Mouzanar, Capernaum (+1)

  9. Piotr Borkowski, Janusz Glowacki and Pawel Pawlikowski, Cold War (NEW)

  10. Daniel Stiepleman, On the Basis of Sex (+1)

DROPPED
Jonah Hill, Mid '90s (-6)
Jean-Claude Carriere and Julian Schnabel, At Eternity's Gate (-4)

Best Adapted Screenplay

  1. Spike Lee, David Rabinowitz, Charlie Wachtel and Kevin Willmott, BlacKkKlansman (+1)

  2. Barry Jenkins, If Beale Street Could Talk (-1)

  3. Bradley Cooper, Will Fetters, Irene Mecchi, Stephen J. Rivele, Eric Roth and Christopher Wilkinson, A Star Is Born (+1)

  4. Nicole Holofcener and Jeff Whitty, Can You Ever Forgive Me? (+1)

  5. Gillian Flynn and Steve McQueen, Widows (+1)
    —

  6. Josh Singer, First Man (-3)

  7. Jon Robert Cole and Ryan Coogler, Black Panther (+3)

  8. Audrey Wells, The Hate U Give (NEW)

  9. Joel Edgerton, Boy Erased (-2)

  10. Beau Willimon, Mary Queen of Scots (-1)

DROPPED
David Lowery, The Old Man and the Gun (-3)

Best Animated Feature

  1. The Incredibles 2 (-)

  2. Isle of Dogs (+1)

  3. Ralph Breaks the Internet: Wreck-It-Ralph 2 (-1)

  4. Lu Over the Wall (-)

  5. Mirai (+2)
    —

  6. Smallfoot (-1)

  7. Ruben Brandt, Collector (NEW)

  8. Spider-Man: Into the Spider Verse (+2)

  9. Fireworks (-3)

  10. Night Is Short, Walk on Girl (NEW)

DROPPED
The Grinch (-4)
Tito and the Birds (-2)

Best Documentary Feature

  1. RBG (-)

  2. Free Solo (NEW)

  3. Three Identical Strangers (-1)

  4. Minding the Gap (NEW)

  5. King in the Wilderness (-2)
    —

  6. Won’t You Be My Neighbor? (-2)

  7. The Oslo Diaries (-2)

  8. They’ll Love Me When I’m Dead (NEW)

  9. The Price of Everything (-1)

  10. Maria By Callas: In Her Own Words (NEW)

DROPPED
The Silence of Others (-5)
Inventing Tomorrow (-4)
Fahrenheit 11/9 (-2)
Jane Fonda in Five Acts (-1)

Best Foreign Language Film

  1. Roma (Mexico) (-)

  2. Capernaum (Lebanon) (-)

  3. Cold War (Poland) (+1)

  4. Never Look Away (Germany) (-1)

  5. Shoplifters (Japan) (+1)
    —

  6. Border (Sweden) (+1)

  7. Sunset (Hungary) (-2)

  8. Girl (Belgium) (-)

  9. Ghost Hunting (Palestine) (+1)

  10. The Interpreter (Slovakia) (-1)

Best Cinematography

  1. Matthew Libatique, A Star Is Born (-)

  2. Alfonso Cuaron, Roma (+2)

  3. Robbie Ryan, The Favourite (+2)

  4. James Laxton, If Beale Street Could Talk (-1)

  5. Rachel Morrison, Black Panther (+2)
    —

  6. Linus Sandgren, First Man (-4)

  7. Sean Bobbitt, Widows (-)

  8. Bruno Delbonnel, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (+2)

  9. Christopher Aoun, Capernaum (-)

  10. Caleb Deschanel, Never Look Away (-2)

Best Costume Design

  1. Sandy Powell, The Favourite (-)

  2. Sandy Powell, Mary Poppins Returns (-)

  3. Colleen Atwood, Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (-)

  4. Ruth E. Carter, Black Panther (+3)

  5. Andrea Flesch, Colette (-)
    —

  6. Alexandra Byrne, Mary Queen of Scots (-)

  7. Caroline Eselin, If Beale Street Could Talk (+3)

  8. Mary Zophres, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (NEW)

  9. Jenny Beavan, The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (-)

  10. Guy Speranza, Stan and Ollie (-2)

DROPPED
Mary Zophres, First Man (-7)

Best Film Editing

  1. Jay Cassidy, A Star Is Born (+1)

  2. Alfonso Cuaron and Adam Gough, Roma (+1)

  3. Tom Cross, First Man (-2)

  4. Joi McMillon and Nat Sanders, If Beale Street Could Talk (+1)

  5. Joe Walker, Widows (-1)
    —

  6. Barry Alexander Brown, BlacKkKlansman (-)

  7. Sam Sneade, The Favourite (-)

  8. Debbie Berman and Michael P. Shawver, Black Panther (+1)

  9. Wyatt Smith, Mary Poppins Returns (NEW)

  10. Hank Corwin, Vice (-2)

DROPPED
William Goldenberg, 22 July (-1)

Best Makeup and Hairstyling

  1. Vice (-)

  2. The Favourite (-)

  3. Stan and Ollie (-)
    —

  4. Mary Poppins Returns (NEW)

  5. Deadpool 2 (+2)

  6. Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (+2)

  7. Colette (-1)

  8. Black Panther (+1)

  9. Suspiria (+1)

  10. Mary Queen of Scots (-6)

DROPPED
At Eternity's Gate (-6)

Best Original Score

  1. Nicholas Britell, If Beale Street Could Talk (+1)

  2. Justin Hurwitz, First Man (-1)

  3. Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, Mary Poppins Returns (+1)

  4. Terence Blanchard, BlacKkKlansman (-1)

  5. Alexandre Desplat, Isle of Dogs (-)
    —

  6. Hans Zimmer, Widows (-)

  7. Carter Burwell, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (NEW)

  8. James Newton Howard, Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (-1)

  9. Michael Giacchino, The Incredibles 2 (-1)

  10. Michel Legrand, The Other Side of the Wind (-)

DROPPED
Nicholas Britell, Vice (-2)

Best Original Song

  1. “The Shallow,” A Star Is Born

  2. ”I’ll Never Love Again,” A Star Is Born*

  3. “All the Stars,” Black Panther

  4. “The Place Where Lost Things Go,” Mary Poppins Returns

  5. “Gravity,” Free Solo
    —

  6. “I’ll Fight,” RBG

  7. “Always Remember Us This Way,” A Star Is Born*

  8. “Time for Change,” On the Basis of Sex

  9. “Trip a Little Light Fantastic,” Mary Poppins Returns

  10. “Here I Am,” Dumplin’

*it remains unclear how many A Star Is Born tunes will be pushed. If “The Shallow” is the lone entry, place “Revelation” (Boy Erased) and “Hearts Beat Loud” (Hearts Beat Loud) in 9th and 10th.

Best Production Design

  1. Fiona Crombie and Alice Felton, The Favourite (-)

  2. John Myrhe and Gordon Sim, Mary Poppins Returns (-)

  3. Stuart Craig and Anna Pinnock, Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (-)

  4. Hannah Beachler and Jay Hart, Black Panther (+5)

  5. Paul Harrod and Adam Stockhausen, Isle of Dogs (+2)
    —

  6. Lisa Chung and Guy Hendrix Dyas, The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (-1)

  7. Mark Friedberg and Kris Moran, If Beale Street Could Talk (NEW)

  8. Michael Carlin, Lisa Chugg and Nora Talmaier, Colette (+2)

  9. Jess Gonchor and Nancy Haigh, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (NEW)

  10. Gina Cromwell and James Merifield, Mary Queen of Scots (-4)

DROPPED
Nathan Crowley and Kathy Lucas, First Man (-7)
Stephan Cressend and Cecile Vatelot, At Eternity’s Gate (-1)

Best Sound Editing

  1. A Star Is Born (-)

  2. First Man (-)

  3. Black Panther (+1)

  4. Mary Poppins Returns (+1)

  5. Ready Player One (+2)
    —

  6. A Quiet Place (NEW)

  7. Widows (+2)

  8. The Incredibles 2 (-)

  9. Mission: Impossible - Fallout (-6)

  10. The Mule (NEW)

DROPPED
Bohemian Rhapsody (-6)
22 July (-1)

Best Sound Mixing

  1. A Star Is Born (-)

  2. First Man (-)

  3. Black Panther (+4)

  4. Mary Poppins Returns (+1)

  5. Widows (-1)
    —

  6. The Incredibles 2 (-3)

  7. Roma (+2)

  8. A Quiet Place (NEW)

  9. Ready Player One (NEW)

  10. The Mule (NEW)

DROPPED
Bohemian Rhapsody (-5)
Mission: Impossible - Fallout (-3)
The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (-1)

Best Visual Effects

  1. Avengers: Infinity War (+1)

  2. First Man (-1)

  3. Black Panther (+2)

  4. Ready Player One (-1)

  5. Mary Poppins Returns (NEW)
    —

  6. Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (-2)

  7. Isle of Dogs (+2)

  8. The Nutcracker and the Four Realms (-2)

  9. Deadpool 2 (-1)

  10. A Wrinkle in Time (-3)

DROPPED
Solo: A Star Wars Story (-1)

November 07, 2018 /Andrew Carden
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Other.jpg

Review: "The Other Side of the Wind"

November 06, 2018 by Andrew Carden in Reviews

In 1961, nearly a decade prior to principal photography began on Orson Welles’ The Other Side of the Wind, the filmmaker, whose most recent picture was Touch of Evil, began mulling over a project loosely based on Ernest Hemingway, who that year committed suicide. Welles intended his leading man to be an aging admirer of bullfighting who is enamored with a much younger bullfighter.

This concept ultimately stalled, lingering in the background for Welles well into the close of the decade, at which point the director opted to change the project’s setting to Hollywood and his central protagonist to a fading filmmaker. At last, in 1970, The Other Side of the Wind went into production…and would remain a work-in-progress over the six years to come. It was not until 1974 that Welles finally found his Jake Hannaford, the Hemingway-like figure who is killed in a car crash on his 70th birthday - none other than fellow actor-writer-director John Huston would dive into this pivotal role.

With nearly 100 hours of footage in the can, production wrapped on The Other Side of the Wind in early 1976. Instead of earning a theatrical run, the treatment you’d expect for a Welles-Huston collaboration, the picture would spend decades in legal obstacle hell, languishing long after the director’s death in 1985. Instrumental in saving the film were director (and co-star of the picture) Peter Bogdanovich and producer (and production manager on the film) Frank Marshall, both significantly responsible for getting the picture financed, edited and into the hands of Netflix, where it is now available for streaming.

Considering its awe-inspiring production history (and my admiration for so many Welles productions, perhaps most of all The Magnificent Ambersons), it does hurt a bit to report The Other Side of the Wind, while not without its pleasures, is mostly an incoherent mess, a haphazard satire of 1970s New Hollywood that is too bonkers to be boring but never on the level of Welles’ best work.

The picture opens on the sight of a totaled vehicle, which we learn, via narration from protege Brooks Otterlake (Bogdanovich), was driven by the now-deceased Hannaford. Earlier that day, prior to his death, we find Hannaford vying to rejuvenate his declining career. His comeback vehicle is hardly a mainstream picture along the lines of Citizen Kane or The Treasure of the Sierra Madre but rather a trippy, sex-packed art house production, performed without any dialogue.

Throughout The Other Side of the Wind, footage from the film within the film, headlined by the stunning Oja Kodar (as “The Actress”) and Bob Random, is intercut, leaving the proceedings all the more dizzying an endeavor. Much of the picture centers on Hannaford’s birthday party at an Arizona ranch where guests, the director himself most of all, become increasingly inebriated. Hannaford is desperate to secure funding for his picture, a quest that seems all the more improbable as the evening progresses.

The Other Side of the Wind is chock full of entrancing performances, with Huston a pitch-perfect fit for the dwindling director. He is surrounded by the likes of Susan Strasberg (as a ferocious film critic), Lilli Palmer (as an exasperated former star of the silver screen) and Mercedes McCambridge (as Hannaford’s longtime secretary), all game for the madness of these proceedings. Alas, these turns are largely upstaged by the disorderly, chaotically edited picture around them - just when a character pulls you in, you’re abruptly swept away.

Amazingly, amidst this starry cast, it is Kodar, in the film within the film, who leaves the most lasting impression. She has a hypnotic, intensely alluring screen presence, with the camera head over heels in love with her - no surprise, given she was the director’s girlfriend over the final years of his life. If the film within the film wasn’t so tedious and ridiculous, one has to wonder how much more the exciting Kodar could have excelled.

The Other Side of the Wind is of course a must-see for all Welles aficionados, warts and all. That does not, however, mean its a great picture. In the end, its production history is leaps and bounds more riveting than the final product before us.

C+

November 06, 2018 /Andrew Carden
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Can You.jpg

Review: "Can You Ever Forgive Me?"

November 03, 2018 by Andrew Carden in Reviews

In 1967, the year of Spencer Tracy’s death, up-and-coming writer Lee Israel broke through with a devastatingly great profile on Katharine Hepburn, published in Esquire. Over the following two decades, Israel penned a trio of celebrity biographies, one of which, Kilgallen (a portrait of journalist and game show panelist Dorothy Kilgallen), was lauded as among the finest bios of the 1980s.

By the 1990s, however, her past works proved long forgotten, as Israel found herself earning attention not for her biographies or countless magazine articles but rather her recent criminal activities.

Director Marielle Heller’s Can You Ever Forgive Me?, based on Israel’s eponymous memoirs, opens on Israel (Melissa McCarthy) who, in 1991, is struggling to make ends meet, months behind on her rent and devastated that she cannot afford medical treatment for her beloved cat. Israel is desperate for an advance on her latest project, a biography of Fanny Brice, but her agent (the formidable Jane Curtin) cannot make that happen, nor does she terribly want to. The irksome, surly Israel has burned bridge after bridge in recent years and has no industry allies to speak of.

At last, Israel finds a companion in Jack Hock (Richard E. Grant), a vivacious grifter who shares in her disdain for society and dependency on the bottle. Hock isn’t the least bit shaken when Israel presents her grand scheme to bring home that elusive dough - she is going to earn a living fabricating signed personal letters from deceased, high-profile writers, from Brice to Noel Coward to Dorothy Parker. Israel finds fleeting success but, when suspicions are raised around her documents, Hock steps in as a partner in crime to sell them on her behalf. With the FBI on their trail, however, is it inevitable that Judgment Day lurks on the horizon.

With a sparkling screenplay from Jeff Whitty and the reliably amazing Nicole Holofcener, and led by a pair of actors in career-best form, wholeheartedly committed to the material, Can You Ever Forgive Me? ultimately emerges one of the year’s very best pictures.

McCarthy and Grant have a dazzling rapport, with each going to town on the comic and dramatic opportunities presented to them. Not to be overlooked is the rest of this splendid ensemble cast, including Curtin (who slays in her two scenes), Anna Deavere Smith (superb as exasperated ex) and particularly Dolly Wells, warm and perceptive as Anna, a book shop owner who takes a liking to Israel. A dinner between Anna and Israel proves one of the film’s most absorbing and affecting scenes, in a film full of them.

Can You Ever Forgive Me? will be richly deserving of every accolade it inevitably earns for McCarthy and Grant - but I sure hope they aren’t the picture’s lone recognition this awards season.

A

November 03, 2018 /Andrew Carden
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