In an article titled “Pulp Affliction: The Sorry State of Film Study”, Boston University film scholar Ray Carney said the following about Hollywood filmmaking:
“The superficiality of the experience is in fact what
many viewers love about Hollywood movies. They take you on a ride. You climb
into them, turn on the cruise control, and sit back. Not only are the events,
characters, and conflicts entirely predictable (most movies are their
trailers), but there is nothing really at stake for anyone–actor, director, or
viewer–in any of it. It's an amusement park ride–a few programmed thrills and
then all is well. When it is over, you leave the theater and go home untouched
and unchanged.” (excerpt from
http://people.bu.edu/rcarney/carncult/showbiz.shtml)
While I respectfully disagree with Professor Carney’s
negative view, I can see exactly where he’s coming from. It is true that many
Hollywood films – particularly action films – offer an experience akin to
amusement park rides. I just happen not to consider that to necessarily be a
bad thing. And Alfonso Cuaròn’s Gravity
demonstrates this point better, perhaps, than any film made in the past twenty
years – with the possible exception of Christopher Nolan’s Inception. Watching Gravity in 3D is exactly like being on
the most exciting of rollercoaster rides.
Or is it really? After all, rollercoaster rides offer
much more limited emotional experiences. They do not immerse you in a character’s
emotions or story. Even in “narrative” rides like the Phantom Manor in
Disneyland, you never lose the slightest awareness that you are a spectator
riding in a seat. The ride that comes the closest to achieving this level of engagement
is Star Tours, and even rides such
as those cannot be considered cinematic, as they rely on moving seats and an
automate placed in front of the screen.
From that perspective, Gravity could be considered the missing link between Star Tours and cinema. From the opening
17-minute tracking shot to the final low-angle shot of Sandra Bullock standing
triumphantly on the beach, her arms up in the air as she welcomes life back, Gravity does a masterful job of transferring
the viewer’s consciousness into its film space and giving them a false but
uncannily convincing impression of full immersion.
This is achieved by long, seamless tracking shots that
count as some of the most virtuosic ever put to screen: Like most great long
tracking shots, they do not draw attention to themselves but gently guide the
viewer in an exploration of the film space. The setting in actual space is
perhaps the best possible justification for their existence, as there are few
obstacles to obstruct the camera’s trajectory. The movements are slow, and at
times, Cuaròn’s camera appears to be gliding along with its actors. Not since Stanley
Kubrick’s space waltzes in 2001: A Space
Odyssey has the impression of space motion been so well conveyed.
Of course the fundamental difference between Kubrick
and Cuaròn’s approach lies in Cuaròn’s emotional proximity to the protagonist
of Dr. Ryan Stone (Sandra Bullock in a
career-topping performance), exemplified by the visibility of the
electronic displays on her visor in subjective shots. The length and
combination of these tracking shots and subjective shots – the former often
overlapping into the latter – allow for a detailed exploration of a wide range
of human emotions.
And this is where we get to the heart of what Gravity achieves that makes it more
than a glorified rollercoaster ride. Cuaròn immerses the viewer into his film with
a dual purpose: To excite them and to put them face to face with their own
humanity. It is puzzling that the actress tasked with the gist of such a job
should be one of the most recognizable film stars in the world. Are movie stars
not movie stars precisely because they appear to be more than human to us? Do
we not idolize them because we project the best of what we like in ourselves
and each other into them? Surely a lesser known actress would be a better cypher,
I thought to myself. And yet, in spite of it all, Sandra Bullock succeeds far
beyond anything I would have expected. There isn’t a trace of the movie star in
her. Never has she been so human, not even in her likeable “everywoman” roles
in films like Speed. She runs a
rich gamut of emotions with an authenticity reminiscent of Charlize Theron and
Gena Rowlands. Fear, panic, resignation, weariness, frustration, ecstasy. She
expresses all these emotions and more as if she were experiencing them for the
first time.
That’s what I called “the gist” of the transmission of
human experience. The rest of it is
taken care of by the wide range of shots covered by Cuaròn – and director of
photography Emmanuel Lubezki, whose previous partnership with Cuaròn resulted
in his masterpiece Children Of Men,
the best film of 2006. Mostly liberated from the shackles of natural and man-made
constructions, the camera is free to multiply shot sizes and angles without
ever breaking. This is something that few other long takes have achieved, with
perhaps the notable exception of the breathtaking opening three-and-a-half
minutes of Orson Welles’s Touch Of Evil.
This technique, combined with the frequent subjective shots and 3D,
alternatively makes the viewer a partner of Dr. Stone or Dr. Stone herself.
The remarkable Bullock-Cuaròn-Lubezki trio helps
transcend occasionally facile characterization that sometimes succumbs to
rather irritating gender stereotypes. Dr. Stone’s companion for half of the
film is Lieutenant Matt Kowalski (George
Clooney), a handsome and flirtatious veteran who uses his cool charm and wit
to calmly guide Dr. Stone through the long and perilous ride back to the space
module after debris send them adrift and kill their coworker Shariff (Paul Sharma). During that ride, he gets
Stone to calm down by getting her to talk about her civilian life. It is there
that we learn that her post-work routine consists of driving endlessly without
purpose, something that she has been doing since the accidental death of her 4
year-old daughter. It’s a very common Hollywood trope that I’m getting a little
weary of: A character’s problem is stated and represented by a metaphor – in
this case, also a parallel to much of her situation throughout the film – that
will get a callback later as she overcomes it – in this case, when she accepts
her daughter’s death and uses it not as an excuse to give up and hope to be
reunited with her in a hypothetical afterlife (Stone is heavily implied to be an agnostic) but as an impediment to
keep on living.
The character of Dr. Stone in and of herself is not a
problem. Her backstory in and of itself is not a problem. What is a problem is
the way her problem is resolved, and
the way her rapport with Lieutenant Kowalski is written. Both are adequately
summed up in the film’s worst scene: Alone in a space module whose battery has
run down, deprived of Kowalski’s guidance due to his sacrificial death tens of
minutes earlier and left with no hope of being rescued, Stone gives up and
waits for her death. Suddenly, she hears a knock on the door. An astronaut
outside opens it and gets in. Who should it be, but Kowalski, alive and well!
With his usual charm and humour, he reminds her of her flight simulations,
cheers her up and suggests ways for her to get around her predicament. The
camera – which, typically, has been showing this in one shot – pans closer
towards Dr. Stone, then back to the left to reveal that this, indeed, was just
a hallucination/dream. But it provides Stone with the necessary motivation to
keep fighting for her life and win.
The problem of this scene is twofold:
-
Firstly, it gives the viewer the feeling of
being cheated. Everything they have seen so far has stayed very securely within
the boundaries of realism. Seeing a character whose death – in the film’s
realistic context – is quite unequivocal, suddenly reappear is a distracting
break from immersion. George Clooney (who
incidentally pitched that scene as an uncredited script contributor) is a
super-famous film star not known for dying in his films, so killing him off in
the first half of the film appears quite bold. His apparent survival thus
strikes the viewer as a betrayal of that apparent boldness, and the
confirmation of his status as a hallucination feels like an attempt to cover up
the mistake.
-
Secondly, it plays to the simplistic gender
stereotype of the woman as easily succumbing to emotional duress and needing a
man’s calm authority and seductive appeal to stabilize her and motivate her. I
readily concede that most women are more emotional than men are, but it is
precisely because Dr. Stone is an astronaut – one of the most physically and intellectually
demanding jobs in the world – that such overreliance on Kowalski’s guidance
irritates me.
Yet Gravity
succeeds as a human story in spite of these Hollywoodian contrivances and
conventions because of Bullock’s never-endingly committed performance and
Cuaròn’s careful attention to her character’s emotional journey. It surpasses
Danny Boyle’s decent 127 Hours and even
Cast Away – Robert Zemeckis’s best
film – as a tale of endurance beyond all possible prior experiences. It does not
reach the majesty or profundity of 2001:
A Space Odyssey or the poetry of Wall-E
(though both Stone and Wall-E make similar
use of a fire extinguisher), and I confess to not having seen Andrei
Tarkovsky’s Solaris yet. But in its
successful transportation of the viewer’s consciousness into a veritable realm
of fictional space, I consider it a successful work of art and a possible
trailblazer for new possibilities. We may be surprised at the new places Gravity could take cinema.
No comments:
Post a Comment