Birdman (2014)
Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) follows
the escalating struggles of washed up Hollywood star Riggan Thomson (Michael
Keaton), and his seemingly doomed attempts to regain credibility by mounting an
pompous Broadway show.
Pressure is present on all sides, particularly from narcissistic co-star Mike (Edward Norton) and his damaged, resentful daughter Sam (Emma Stone). As his mental state deteriorates Riggan is visited by the spectre of his most famous role, Birdman, and things get strange.strange.
Birdman is a departure for
director Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu, turning away from his solemn yet
powerful dramas 21 grams and Babel and
creating something daring and new. The gamble has paid off,
however, and what we have here is a surprisingly funny, heartfelt and quirky
piece of cinema.
Filmed in what appears to be a
single tracking shot, much like Hitchcock’s Rope, Iñárritu’s
camera stalks his characters down subdued
theatre corridors and lively New York streets, through trippy dream sequences
and intimate emotional moments in one fluid move. It’s a technical blinder,
and much of the kudos must be attributed to
cinematographer extraordinaire Emmanuel Lubezki, who works magic with a tough
gig: the long takes here make his work in Children of Men look
like child’s play.
Of course it’s all trickery,
pieced together seamlessly with brilliant editing, but with some
takes lasting up to twenty minutes, the actors have nowhere to hide and it
results in performances that are invested with genuine humanity and gritty
realism.
At the centre of the maelstrom is Keaton, carrying
the movie with a towering performance that
affords him the opportunity to mine emotional depths he’s so rarely had chance
to flaunt in his previous work. Thomson is a character lost at sea,
failing to keep his head above water and blinded by his own hubris, unaware of
who he is and what he’s supposed to be doing. It’s the performance
of a lifetime and it would be a sin if the Oscars didn’t take notice.
Elsewhere, an impressive Emma
Stone is open and real as Riggan’s damaged daughter while Edward Norton
provides a sublime and frequently hilarious turn as the an arrogant and mildly
insane actor.
While it could easily have been a
simple black comedy about theatrical conceit, Birdman sidesteps expectations and
metamorphosizes into something more affecting and poignant, with deep
ruminations on the nature of celebrity, biting satire of Twitter/YouTube
culture, the nature of art itself and an astute insight into a mind falling
apart at the seams.
All together, Birdman is
a delirious and quirky masterpiece, skilfully engineered and performed with
heart and gusto. It’s so rare to find a film that makes you think, feel, laugh
and cry all at once, but Birdman does that, and it does it in
droves. This is what cinema is all about.
5/5
*originally written for Nouse
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