15 October 2014

TAKE MY WIFE, PLEASE

That Gone Girl is something close to a mechanically flawless thriller I take to be more of an objective reality than an opinion. There is great mastery to be found in Jeff Cronenweth's cinematography, using the harsh sharpness of digital video to render suburban spaces with an exaggerated realism, making them pop so hard that they go 'round the other side and start to feel like fake structures, all surface texture and color, and this turns out to be just about the perfect setting for the story. The subtle visual overlaps in Kirk Baxter's editing (he's working without reliable partner Angus Wall this time) and the pulses in the cutting rhythm nicely echo and reinforce the sense in all good thrillers of fate closing in, wrapping around, and choking the characters and audience, while also - crucially in this case, creating a steady enough flow that a 149-minute running time prances by unnoticed. It's never been clearer that these two men are, increasingly, as important components in the making of David Fincher films as director David Fincher himself, whose noted obsessive perfectionism is anyway ideally suited to making the kind of elaborate watchworks of a film like this, where the story progresses in three separate chronological registers (the present, the several years past, and the past of about a week ago), all building towards one unalterable doom, obvious in retrospect but terrifyingly confusing in the moment.

And for all that it's perfect, I find that Gone Girl suffers from that most amorphous and indescribable and subjective of artistic flaws: I just didn't like it. It reminds me most, out of Fincher's directorial canon, of The Game, another magnificently crafted device that ends up being too chilly and remote from its characters for its own damn good. It's not simply that they're unlikable, though the leads in Gone Girl are immeasurably unlikable. It's that there's not much reason offered within the film for us to have any kind of feeling about them beyond the sense that we're watching rats in an especially masterful maze - but nothing ever offers us the chance to feel like we're inside with those rats, nor apparently does the film even grasp why that might be a way to make a thriller that's generally gripping and involving, and not just a handsome exercise in structuring and executing a thriller whose outcome is largely of academic, not emotional interest.

(And yes, there's the contingent who have seen the movie, as they read Gillian Flynn's bestselling book, as a deeply intimate and involving study of marriage in free fall. I don't begrudge anybody that reading, but I think it only holds if you close the book or stop the movie at the halfway point, and thus save yourself the discovery that it is in fact a trashy potboiler about a psychopath being psychopathic, and if it resembles your marriage in even the broadest sense at that point, I hope with all my heart that you have a terrific counselor).

The plot, in brief, and largely for form's sake - it is an immensely spoiler-sensitive story. Nick Dunne (Ben Affleck) and his wife, Amy Elliott Dunne (Rosamund Pike) have not been happy in their marriage for many years. On the morning of their fifth wedding anniversary, Amy mysteriously vanishes, and the evidence starts to pile up, especially when you start looking for it, that Nick maybe probably killed her. His sole allies are his twin sister Margo (Carrie Coon), a skeptical police detective, Rhonda Boney (Kim Dickens), and eventually the tacky men's rights lawyer Tanner Bolt (Tyler Perry). His opponents number just about everybody with eyes to look at the mounting circumstantial evidence, but most persuasive is Amy herself, who gets to tell her side of the story of how their marriage grew toxic and malevolent in a series of flashbacks to their life together, from dazzling meet cute to the shrill misery of their move to Missouri from New York, precipitated in part by Nick's mother's illness, mostly because of financial collapse during the post-2008 recession. And while I will not at any other point stoop to making a "the book does this, but the movie does this" comparison - both of them are ultimately sudsy, enjoyable, but aggravatingly insubstantial beach reads - I can't overlook how much better a job the book does than the movie of expressing the story as an extension of the general social malaise of economical despair.

Anyway, the question looms: did Nick kill Amy, and is Amy even for sure dead? And I'm going to avoid the Big Spoilers, but it's really not worth talking about the film without touching on at least some of the Little Spoilers, so please take that as your warning to skedaddle if you're inclined.

So if we've shaken off all the spoilerphobes, here's one of the really odd things about Gone Girl, the movie (not bad, necessarily, but odd): it's basically never plausible that Nick is actually guilty of murder. Blame the way that the cinema eye feels "objective" while first-person narration does not, blame the way that Affleck, however brilliantly cast as an arrogant dick who has to work enormously hard every minute to seem even a little bit less smug and off-putting, is still a charismatic movie star, and its damn hard to sell charismatic movie stars as villains, unless you go all the way over the top with it, and of course in Gone Girl, the whole point is to keep things as ambiguous as possible. But for all that he's unpleasant and off-putting almost constantly, the way the visuals are structured and the film is assembled simply takes it for granted that he's innocent, of this crime at least.

The result is a sleek wrong man thriller, nothing more or less, and I suppose there's nothing wrong with that; it's a bit lugubrious for a genre film, with its imposing cinematography and strangulating sense of things getting worse and worse and worse in the screenplay (also written by Flynn, who largely just transcribes and condenses her book, though there's a different final scene). But it also clips by, and there's a decent quantity of humor, almost all of it provided by the side character - almost all of it supplied by Coon's Margo, in fact, in what I'm tempted to call my favorite out of a good bunch of performances (Perry is a sardonic, self-aware reservation, and while Dickens is kind of playing a stereotype, she does it with energy).

The only weaker spots are the leads, really, though whether it's because the austere remove the film keeps us at from them that they seem so vague, or of the shortcomings of the performance are part of what drives the austerity, I cannot say. At any rate, Affleck is here more to be Fincher's handsome, thick-chinned prop of entitled manhood, while Pike, on top of employing a far too measured American accent that never falters, but which she obviously finds uncomfortable (the only time she ever feels like speaking is natural to her is when she adopts a broad Southern accent, which I believe to be easier for Brits to mimic than the studied Midland accent Pike shoots for), disappointingly stops her performance at whatever is obviously happening on the surface - Amy is undoubtedly a rich, chewy role for any performer, even without having to dig for undercurrents, and it's easy to see why Pike left things at the level the script dictates. But one of her best gifts has always been finding what's not in the script and playing a character who comes into the film slantwise, and that's not her Amy, not at all. Her Amy is exactly the Amy I had in my head reading the book, and anyone could have played that part. Pike didn't become one of my favorites of her generation from doing things I would have expected.

None of which really detracts from the pleasures of Gone Girl, since they are almost all formal in nature: the way that the images create tension, the way that the editing punctuates, and to a degree the way that the score keeps it all at a heightened pitch (I am undecided on the music - it works in the film's interests, but it's by far the least interesting of the three film scores that Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross have composed for Fincher). The film clicks along fluidily and icily; it's technically impeccable but the whole thing feels awfully dry to me, proof of the director's technical accomplishment, but even more, proof that he badly needs process-oriented stories to bring to life, like Zodiac and The Social Network, because he's just too damn chilly for character dramas.

7/10

13 comments:

  1. What did you think about Missi Pyle? I was quite convinced that they cast Nancy Grace as herself until the credits rolled.

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  2. "I just didn't like it."

    Me, neither. But that's a hard thing to own up to these days: to say something is too dark and cynical is to admit that you're not quite grown-up enough to live in these Dark and Cynical Times.

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  3. SOME SPOILAGE HERE

    I have to say, your dismissal of the sub-textual commentary on modern marriage is troubling. Maybe it's because I'm on my second, and my first ended in very dramatic fashion (not as much as the film, but whatever).

    It's a film about two people who put on their best faces for each other, and how the years and familiarity of marriage slowly erode the false faces. familiarity breeds contempt. Not everyone does that, but...it is a thing. You're left with the real person you married, and you either adapt and adjust and re-define, or you begin looking for an out. Either by changing your partner, punish your partner for not being what they seemed, or by simply finding ways to escape (infidelity, hobbies, family, whatever).

    And I cannot tell you how many couples I know who have thought a baby would solve their problems and refresh a relationship. You're still the same people, with the same troubles, but with a baby.

    Now, of course, this is presented within the realm of a tawdry thriller. I claim nothing but that I believe Flynn was writing about the worst aspects of modern American marriage in a sub-textual manner.

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  4. This is an interesting case of your mileage may vary. Because I agree with almost everything you said in your review, however I just liked it! In fact, I know I like it more than it deserves. Perhaps, the difference is that I simply adored Rosamond Pike in the film – so much so that I was absolutely rooting for Amy to "win" for the entire movie. I also think the book and the movie have some truly fascinating things to say about gender in our society and as a lady watching this film I really related to some of the issues it brings up in a very personal way. And maybe that's the bit of connection that Fincher's cold characters needed to truly draw me in. However, The Game is absolutely my favorite Fincher movie so maybe it's just my taste.

    (PS – I'm a long time lurker, so I just want to say how much I enjoy your reviews. Your criticism is incisive in your writing is hilarious. I often read the really funny bits to my friends.)

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  5. @the izz: Welcome aboard! And I do too - the opening paragraph of Beverly Hills Chihuhua is a work of art.

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  6. @Not Fenimore Thanks! Just reread the Beverly Hills Chinchilla review. I had forgotten how terrific it is! "...crypto-racist do-over of The Incredible Journey."

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  7. "...Full of hideous CGI dogs."

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  8. moviemotorbreath- She was great, of course, though a little cartoony. But so is Nancy Grace.

    Rob- I don't even think of myself as not-cynical. There's just something about Fincher's film that always feel unnecessarily inhuman to me, and the book was that way already; the film amplifies it.

    the izz- Welcome! Stick around as long as you like, always good to have a new voice around.

    the izz, Not Fenimore- Y'all are too sweet.

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    mpjedi2- The thing is, I'm absolutely certain you're right about that being Flynn's intention. I think she's even said as much in interviews. The problem I have with that reading, and it's certainly as much a matter of taste as anything, is that there's a huge difference to me between "this person I married is not who I though she/he was", which is beautifully handled in things like the Cool Girl monologue, and "this person I married is the literal, actual Devil", which is where the whole second half resides. Even as metaphor, I just can't buy Amy as anything but a crazed monster beyond human kenning, and that ruins the groundwork the first film laid, where we assume she has actual person-like feelings and wants.

    I had the exact same problem with the book, and I sort of nudged at it in my monthly preview, but I didn't want to go into the spoilers there. It felt like 200 pages of rather interesting exploration of how people behave in marriage followed by 200 pages of horror fantasy about a blonde Dr. Mabuse making the innocent dance for her evil delight.

    Anyway, I'm glad you brought it up, because I wanted to discuss it, but I wanted to keep away from big spoilers in the review itself.

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  9. WEAPONS GRADE SPOILERS

    I think we're about on the same page Tim. Sitting watching this in the pictures, having been looking forward to it for weeks, I found myself thinking: this is gorgeously shot, brilliantly acted, sumptuously scored and tautly written. Why aren't I enjoying myself?

    I was twisting myself in knots for hours afterwards trying to figure out what it was that didn't sit with me, and I think the root of my problems is the stubborn anti-catharsis of the ending. It would be easy and convenient to write Gone Girl off as a potboiler in the vein of Fatal Attraction, but the fact is, you don't end a story that way unless you're trying to make A Point, and I can't find A Point in Gone Girl that warrants it ending the way it does.

    The topicality of the story is, as has been pointed out by everyone involved, the facades we present to each other during courtship versus the ugly realities of married life. OK, fine. Flynn posits that people who are patently unsuited to each other trying to force themselves into complementary identities to fulfil social expectations is a Bad Idea, and that the conflict between Nick and Amy is simply a more dramatic manifestation of the malaise that affects millions of unhappy marriages. With you so far.

    My difficulty is that having the movie end with Amy essentially forcing herself and Nick back together against his wishes is an unsatisfying and inconclusive resolution - not because I'm a 'fraidy cat who's terrified of unhappy endings, who wanted to see the truth be brought to light, the villain defeated and the hero redeemed, but because it actually weakens the film's commentary on public vs. private identity.

    I've never been married, and it's entirely possible I never will be, so husbands and wives, correct me if I'm wrong here, but I'm fairly sure there's a qualitative difference between an unhappy marriage that's maintained due more to inertia than anything else, and an actual, literal hostage situation. A lot of unhappy marriages continue in spite of themselves, for the sake of the kids or whatever, but equally, a lot of marriages DO end suddenly and dramatically, often due to one spouse discovering something about the other that they'd kept hidden. If the story in either incarnation had ended with either Nick or Amy dead or in prison, I can't help but think that it would have felt more true to life AND offered audiences a note of finality, rather than the limp-wristed ambiguity we got.

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  10. I'm a long time lurker here as well, and I'm just posting this because, man... This movie!

    As you have pointed it out, I agree that this is a story about the roles of marriage and the way it sticks out to society, men and women; human relations really, I think that, for the most part, it is there. But furthermore, the narrative...

    I focus only on the relationship of this two people: Yes this woman is the devil and whatnot, the storyline lets us know that real soon, so there has to be something more about it right?
    I was trying to get the ambiguous character of Nick Dunne, this guy with no attributes, motivation whatsoever, who gets involved in the sick pantomime of her wife. We get resolve eventually (I'm not going to elongate the character development [also SPOILERS], but at some point there is this... shift?), and he -stays- with her.
    Why? The way I see it, he sees that she is her antagonist, he thrives in the performance of the "damaged-but-none-the-less-perfect-couple", she sees this as well. They are both eventually stripped off of the facades they were to themselves, and while she probably hates her, he sees himself in her. They deserve each other.

    I don't know, I'm probably rambling but this twisted love story, made the movie (for me).

    AAAND lets not get in the way society and media manipulates reality, gender roles, blah blah blah...
    Over all, an awesome movie(...for me).

    Just wanted to share my excitement.

    - Love the blog Tim, also wanted a pretext to say it.

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  11. Tim, great review as always though I have to wonder how much of your perception of the film was influenced by having read the book beforehand. I went with a bookreader, and she felt similarly, whereas I having not read the book kindof loved it. It's been a while since a tawdry thriller of this type has worked on me exactly as intended, and Fincher and co. just played me like a fiddle, caught up as I was with each turn of this twisty twisted film. The shift in the middle, and especially the way it was revealed, just delighted me as I began to realize what I was in for. Agree to disagree on Rosamund Pike who I thought was pitch perfect on every register and whose measured, affected and calculating demeanor was exactly what the character called for. Affleck too was terrific though a lot of that had to do with his casting and the sort of baggage he brought to the role. My date however was just ho-hum about it all. For her the film was less about plot and carefully built surprises, but how the characters were coming across.

    Spoilers!
    I agree with you that it is never plausible that Nick murdered Amy, but the mystery the movie initially put forth never struck me as "did he kill her?" but "what the hell actually happened?" since it is clear from the getgo that we have two conspicuously unreliable narrators at the heart of this, often relating directly contradictory stories. The answer was never going to be as simple as "yes he killed her" or "no he didn't" (which perhaps would have made for an interesting though entirely different sort of film but I think Fincher and Flynn were well aware of the genre they were working in and proceeded accordingly). My expectation going in was already "of course he didn't because this isn't that sort of film" rather than thinking so because of Affleck's performance or persona. I have to imagine that other people thought so as well, and so the movie to its credit doesn't bother to play that up as any sort of real mystery instead focusing in the present day on the growing media reaction and how Nick handles or mishandles it.

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  12. I've never understood the critical fawning over the novel. It's a pacy enough read for the first half, but it falls apart long long before the end. Not seen the film yet but I can imagine that, in this respect, it resembles Fincher's earlier 'Girl with the Dragon Tattoo' - a chilly, stylish, assuredly made film that suffers from the fact that it proceeds from source material that is (in 'TGwtDT's case, an unreconciled vacillation between locked room mystery, gritty social commentary, and study of wartime complicity/guilt) broken.

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  13. Typically, sensible review, Tim. Although I'm not sure how much of that is because I mostly agree with you although I like it a smidgen more. (I read the book AFTER just to see the film unspoiled), but I don't think it would have changed my opinion much reading it first.
    I'm not much fond of the text, but what I think the film critically needed (especially to justify the sense of ennui of the marriage continuing) was for Nick to seem more assertive. Not necessarily villainous, but Affleck is so good at playing the dumb sad-sack there's no competition between Amy's dastardliness and him which makes the slight battle towards the end very limp. Even when he does get angry it feels effete, and I keep feeling that the end should be more "they deserve each other" and less "the spider's got the fly in her web forever".
    (Although all the complaining on content may finicky because it is indeed, well made but I keep searching for an overall point and as Thrash Til' Death says there doesn't seem to be much of one, which makes the film almost physically and structurally like Amy. Sleep and lithe, but sort of shallow ("smart" but shallow, nonetheless).
    Speaking of which...


    ...On Rosamund. I love her and have loved her for some time and I'm generally impressed by her work here yet still agreeing with much of what you say. The precision of her accent is so perceptible I keep wondering if it's a deliberate effect of Amy being particularly inauthentic. When she started the Southern Accent I whispered to my sister (maybe THIS is her real accent, the entirety of Amy - pre reveal, seems of in an overly sanitised way) - almost hollow. But the line between playing someone hollow and playing the role without gradations is probably thin.

    The long comment is justified because I haven't been here in a while. It's been too long since I've read your (great) stuff.

    (What's the statute of limitations on blog posts? I'm within it 70 days after posting, right?)

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Just a few rules so that everybody can have fun: ad hominem attacks on the blogger are fair; ad hominem attacks on other commenters will be deleted. And I will absolutely not stand for anything that is, in my judgment, demeaning, insulting or hateful to any gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or religion. And though I won't insist on keeping politics out, let's think long and hard before we say anything particularly inflammatory.

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