I wasn't immediately sold on Noah Bambauch as a
director, as I found The Squid and The Whale excruciating, but I guess that was
the point. Margot at the Wedding warmed me a little, but Greenberg sold me and
also showed me Greta Gerwig for the first time, a natural, she shone beside Ben
Stiller's bleak Greenberg. Gerwig really reminded me of Chloe Sevigny's
character in Walt Stillman's brilliant, The last Days of Disco. So I wasn't
surprised when she turned up as the lead in his first film in 13 years, Damsels
in Distress! She is a light yet goofy presence on screen, a little off kilter
yet earnest, her Lola in the fabulous anti-romance, Lola Versus is a testament
to that.
But onto Frances Ha, Gerwig is Frances, a twenty
something living in New York with her bestie, Sophie (played with awkward beauty
by Mickey Sumner, daughter of one Gordon Sumner!). Frances is a dancer...sort
of, desperately trying to make her way into a prestigious dance company with
moderate results. When Sophie announces she is moving to a funkier part of New
York that Frances can't afford, Frances is left homeless and bereft. Her love of
Sophie is supreme and without her best friend in almost every moment of her
life, she is shattered. Frances moves from place to place, trying to find her
own place in this big city and make her way as a dancer. Yes, there are shades
of Girls and Hannah Horvath here, especially when Adam Driver turns up in the
mid section of the film.
Frances is big on the dreams, but possibly less
on the ability, but she just doesn't seem to know or care, and that is what
makes this film just wonderful. Frances is a dreamer, and just keeps on
blundering through regardless. Her ability to pick herself up again and again
after each wrong turn or disappointment, and her tenacity to do it with heart
and a skip in her step, made my own heart soar.
The black and white cinematography adds to the
charm of this film, so much so you simply forget there is no colour. I am unsure
why Bambauch did this, possibly a homage to Woody Allen's Manhattan, and New
York (and Paris) certainly look great in black and white. And then there's the
soundtrack, a fabulous mix of classical and instrumental alongside poppy hits
such as David Bowie's Modern Love, Hot Chocolate's Every 1's a winner and The
Rolling Stones's Rocks Off...yes there was much dancing in our
seats!
But it's Gerwig's clumsy sweetness that shines
through, along with a great back drop of New York (and Paris) and a large
supporting cast of small parts, and makes this the feel good movie of the year.
It's feel good without being soppy or silly. It's funny without being bawdy or
ridiculous. It's sublime and joyous! Movies like this are indeed a rarity, go
now and see this gem, you won't be sorry. But be warned, you will fall in love
with Frances and indeed Greta Gerwig herself.
4 comments:
Movie of the year! I can't believe it took me till about 1/4 of the way in to realise that the film was shot in black and white. Engrossing storylines AND stellar performances.
It has a lovely appeal, I still think of it and smile.
Loved it too..definitely had that Girls meet Woody Allen 'Manhattan' plus a bit of French New Wave in it. Talking about French, that 'Paris' scene is so heartbreaking /depressing..funny how it contrast to her trip to Sacramento.
Ha ha, love your 'name' Tobias! Indeed it referenced many great things before it but made it it's own. Loved the Paris trip ;)
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