Showing posts with label Johnny Flynn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Johnny Flynn. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 May 2022

Clouds of Sils Maria

 Year:  2014

Director:  Olivier Assayas

Screenplay:  Olivier Assayas

Starring:  Juliette Binoche, Kristen Stewart, ChloĆ« Grace Moretz, Johnny Flynn

Running Time:  123 minutes

Genre:  Drama


Maria Enders (Binoche) is an acclaimed, successful actress who is cast in a play called Maloja Snake about the relationship between an older and younger woman.  Twenty years previously Maria had starred as the younger woman, the part that made her name, and now she is cast as the older partner, opposite young American starlet Jo-Ann Ellis (Moretz).  In remote Sils Maria, high in the Alps, Maria and her assistant Valentine (Stewart) cloister themselves to rehearse and prepare the character.  As they prepare and delve deeper beneath the skin of the character, Maria, who was reluctant from the beginning to accept the part, becomes increasingly prey to her insecurities and professional jealousy, as the play begins to increasingly mirror her life.


This is a slow, meditative psychological drama.  For the most part, the film is a two hander between Juliette Binoche and Kristen Stewart as they rehearse and discuss the play, the psychology of Maria's part and the state of cinema, and walk in the spectacular Alpine scenery.  Juliette Binoche is very good in a part that was written specifically for her by writer/director Olivier Assayas, who incorporated elements from Binoche's real life into the script.  Kristen Stewart also gives a very strong performance as the loyal assistant, Valentine.  Despite prominent billing, ChloĆ« Grace Moretz has comparatively little screen time, although she makes the most of it as the young starlet, who is never out of the tabloids or internet gossip sites for her boozing, drugs, fighting paparazzi and police officers, and her older, married boyfriend (Johnny Flynn).  The film is highly allusive, hinting at and referencing things that are never shown or explained, for example Maria often asks Valentine about her relationship with a photographer, but Valentine always evades the questions.  In one scene she returns to the house, apparently deeply upset, having seemingly split up with him, but we never learn what happened.   It is also hinted that Maria and Valentine's relationship may be more than strictly professional, but it is left ambiguous.  This is a film which seems simple on the surface, but is deceptively complex, where a lot is left up to the viewer to interpret in their own way.  Some may find this entrancing, others merely frustrating.  Some of the film is very funny, making fun of contemporary Hollywood cinema.  Maria is embarrassed that her biggest hit was an X-Men film, and she constantly gets offered roles in horror or science-fiction movies (a nun who turns out to be a werewolf and a mutant hybrid), which she is very contemptuous of.  In one of the film's funniest scenes, Maria and Valentine got to see Jo-Ann Ellis' latest movie, a science-fiction film where she is dressed in a red catsuit and matching wig in what looks like a particularly cheesy 1980s episode of Doctor Who.  When Valentine (wearing a Batman tee-shirt) tries to convince Maria that comic book and science-fiction films can be serious and artistic, dealing with complex, serious themes, Maria responds by laughing at her.  The film is beautifully made and stylishly photographed.  The film's title, and the title of the play within the film, refers to a weather phenomenon where the clouds hang low beneath the mountain peaks and move through the valleys giving the appearance of a large snake.



Kristen Stewart and Juliette Binoche in Clouds of Sils Maria

Monday, 4 January 2021

Emma.

 Year of Release:  2020

Director:  Autumn de Wilde

Screenplay:  Eleanor Catton, based on the novel Emma by Jane Austen

Starring:  Anya Taylor-Joy, Johnny Flynn, Josh O'Connor, Callum Turner, Mia Goth, Miranda Hart, Bill Nighy, Gemma Whelan

Running Time:  124 minutes

Genre:  Period, comedy-drama

In Regency-era England, the wealthy young Emma Woodhouse (Taylor-Joy) enjoys meddling in the love lives of her friends, while having no intention of getting married herself.  Emma soon learns, however, that despite her best efforts, her matchmaking plans often make things far worse.

This film is based on the 1815 novel by Jane Austen.  I have never read the book and so can't comment on how faithful this adaptation is.  The film opens with Emma being described as "handsome, clever and rich", which is a perfect description of the film.  Visually it is sumptuous with every frame practically looking like something you could clip out and put on the wall, while the stories direction and the ultimate end is never really in doubt, it is a witty script, and the whole thing feels like a gorgeous cinematic confection.  Anya Taylor-Joy is perfect in the lead, giving a captivating, spirited performance.  Johnny Flynn as Emma's foil Mr. Knightley, the only one who challenges her on her schemes.  Mia Goth gives depth and heart to her role as Emma's friend, and accidental victim of her schemes.  There s also good support form established British comic actors such as Miranda Hart, Bill Nighy and Gemma Whelan.  I'm not sure how Jane Austen fans will feel about the film, but I found it a hugely enjoyable diversion.

Mia Goth and Anya Taylor-Joy in Emma.