The visions are captured well, at least initially. Some of
them are terrifying. And Shannon and Jessica Chastain do a fine job bringing
this working-class couple to life in an authentic way. But the script goes
nowhere. It's one vision after another, and they do get repetitious after a
half-hour.
Filmmaker Jeff Nichols (his second feature film) definitely
has talent, but here he has crafted a film that is a long Act 1. No Act 2. It's
all set-up and no conclusion. There is a lame pseudo-conclusion in the last
five minutes that seems to have been thrown together because all his friends
told him the script had no ending.
When I say it has no ending, I mean that it has no organic
one -- one that emerges naturally out of the story. Add Nichols' name to the
long list of younger filmmakers today who don't know how to write second acts.
I'm not sure if it's the music-video culture that has done this, or the
epidemic of ADD, or the disappearance of novels from filmmaking culture.
Call it the Sofia Coppola school of filmmaking. Conjure up a
vision of a world, describe it to us with great use of music along the way, and
then it's over. Scripts without any story arc. Is it postmodern or just
old-fashioned lazy story-writing?
I have seen very recently, in only the last year, a rebellion
against this story-less approach. The most exciting new filmmakers of 2011
(Mike Cahill of "Another Earth," Evan Glodell of
"Bellflower," David Schwimmer of "Trust," to name a few)
have an intense interest in stories. Here's hoping that their approach takes
hold in the film schools.
One could even add Nicolas Refn of "Drive" to that
list, even though he's been directing films for more than 10 years now.
"Drive" is so fresh and new and such a departure for him that it
really represents a new beginning. It also is likely to become a touchstone and
enduring inspiration for legions of 21-year-old filmmakers. I hope it helps set
the tone for artistic young filmmakers in the 2010s.
But bottom line: the reason "Take Shelter" didn't
work for me is that I got very bored after a half-hour. The slack pace and
repetitiousness became unbearable. I'd also say that the film ultimately is shallow.
2 comments:
Maybe you may want to get a facebook button to your site. Just bookmarked this url, but I had to make it by hand. Just my 2 cents.
My blog:
Rachats De Credits rachatdecredit.net
I see "Share" links at the top of my blog that work for Facebook, plus Facebook buttons at the bottom of each blog post. Not sure what additional button you mean. BILL
Post a Comment