Showing posts with label Anne Hathaway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anne Hathaway. Show all posts

Wednesday, 22 July 2009

Trailerwatch: Alice in Wonderland


I flip-flop between being excited about this and realising that Tim Burton hasn't made a good film in ten years. In theory, Burton's aesthetic is perfectly suited to Alice. I just hope it doesn't have any gothic trappings, because it really doesn't need any. Mia Wasikowska should make a good Alice (she's ace on In Treatment) but why does this trailer make it seem like Johnny Depp is the only star on show here? The Mad Hatter isn't that big a part in the books and whilst I don't have a problem with A-list cameos from Depp, Anne Hathaway and the like, it's Alice's story, not theirs. The CGI looks a bit ropey too.

Monday, 13 April 2009

Rachel Getting Married


Jonathan Demme's return to the limelight provided a doozy of a role for Anne Hathaway as Kym, a former drug and alcohol addict who's just got out of rehab in time for her sister Rachel's (Rosemarie DeWitt) wedding. Arguments, revelations, tears and reconciliations follow.

The first half of the film is its most effective, where we get to see Kym struggle with her return to family life. She's attention-seeking, irritating, lonely and quick to take offence, often all of these things in quick succession. Thanks to a finely-tuned script from Jenny Lumet and the excellent performances from Hathaway and DeWitt, we completely understand why the two sisters rub each other up the wrong way. It's this central dynamic that powers the film, and whether they're tearing bits off each other or, in a tender, silent moment at the end of the film, reaching some sort of understanding, it's difficult to take your eyes from them.

Whilst Demme's naturalistic direction works wonders in the early, more troubled scenes, it becomes aimless, even dull later on. The seemingly endless wedding speeches are nothing compared to the wedding itself. It's sentimental and boring, the way these events often are, but they lack the dramatic fizz that made the movie so compelling beforehand. These portraits of troubled family life have become a staple of independent American cinema, but this is an interesting, astute addition to the canon and one that will no doubt cement Hathaway's place in the A-list.