Posts Tagged ‘Jason Reitman’

Up in the Air

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Ryan Bingham (George Clooney) has to constantly travel for his job but as much as most people would dislike spending most of their lives on airplane, he loves it. For him being at an airport, in a hotel or on an airplane is like being home. He has no desire to get married or have children. He doesn’t want a place to live, he just wants to travel.

up clooneyIt is all going perfectly well for him until a 23 year old girl, Natalie (Anna Kendrick), introduces a new idea at his work. Up until now a group of people were sent out to fire people in companies that were too scared to fire their own employees. Natalie comes up with the idea that it would be a lot more efficient to fire via internet chat. Ryan is outraged. For him this change means the end of his life as he knows and loves it. To introduce the young Natalie to the process of firing people, she is sent on a trip together with Ryan.

Something else happens at the same time… Ryan meets a woman that he can actually connect with. She is perfect for him, she loves traveling, shares his passion for collecting flight miles and she is a lot of fun. Slowly Ryan is starting to think that there might be another way of life. He can actually see himself being with this woman.

Apart from it being slightly depressing, the movie is great. Clooney is perfect for the role. He is the best example for type-casting. It seems like he is playing the same role in every movie. Maybe he is just playing himself. I had never seen Anna Kendrick in anything else (or not noticed her) but she did a pretty  good job. It just really irritated me that she looks so much like Sarah Michelle Gellar. I don’t really have much to say about Up in the Air other then watch it. It is as humorous as it is tragic, has great perfomances in it and is not your average movie story (although it is predictable).

Jason Reitman, who also directed  Thank You for Smoking and Juno, clearly loves music. Up in the Air is only as good as it is because of the music. He is definitely a very talented director and I expect to see great things from him.

Update

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Thank You for Smoking

After watching Juno, I wanted to check out what else director Jason Reitman had done. He has not only directed but also written the screenplay for Thank You for Smoking (adapted from a novel by Christopher Buckley).

The film has a rather odd theme: Nick Naylor, the “hero” of this story is the spokesman of the tobacco industry, and the villain is a Senator who tries to get the world to be a smoke-free zone. Over the course of the film, Nick discovers why he is doing this job and how he feels about promoting cigarettes.

The film is quite funny but not ground-breakingly so. I am not sure what exactly it wants to say, because it is advertising smoking (in a sarcastic sort of way, but still doing so) and the protagonist never really has the epiphany that what he is doing is actually a really bad thing and he should stop. Well, to be fair, he does realize this but he never really gets it. If you happen to come across the DVD it might be interesting to watch the film, because it is quite different, but I wouldn’t advise you to go out of your way to get it…

Little Children

Since Kate Winslet is one of my favourite actresses (well, actually my all-time favourite) I have watched pretty much every film she is in. Here she plays a bored suburban mother who finds herself living in a strange big house, married to the wrong man and spending her time with her daughter whom she doesn’t really care for. She can’t connect to the other mothers at the playground and is fairly miserable until one day the handsome stay-at-home father (Patrick Wilson) shows up and turns her life upside down. There are other characters, such as a pedophile who has exposed himself to minors and is now facing the consequences for it.

Adapted from the book Little Children (Tom Perrotta) by actor/director Todd Field (Eyes Wide Shut) this film is a masterpiece of tragedy. Everyone in the story is leading a depressing life and even though there are some ups, the poor characters don’t get to be happy in the end. Nevertheless it is a very thought-provoking and complex film, using some black humour so as not get over-dramatic. The actors are remarkable. Kate Winslet manages to not make her character seem too desperate, but rather unluckily misplaced. It is really worth watching this film.

Bridget Jones’s Diary

This is an absolutely fabulous British comedy, which has quickly become a classic such as Notting Hill or Four Weddings and a Funeral. Another film which has been adapted from a book (a really great one as such, written by Helen Fielding), which in turn has been adapted and turned into a modern story from Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Bridget is a fairly average British woman, slightly overweight, liking her alcohol, single and unhappy about it.

Anyone who hasn’t seen this film (are there still some people left?) should go out tonight and get the DVD. It really is a lot of fun. Poor Bridget (Renée Zellweger) is utterly clueless about life, falling for the wrong guy (Hugh Grant in a brilliant role) until she finally finds her Mister Right (Mark Darcy, played by the gorgeous Colin Firth who was Mr. Darcy in the BBC’s Pride and Prejudice). She is determined to improve her life by starting a diary but of course she can’t really turn herself around. It is a real delight to watch her misfortunes!

Bienvenue chez les Ch’tis (Welcome to the Sticks)

Apparently this film has set new viewing records in France. Directed, produced and acted (in the main role) by Dany Boon this is a comedy about a post office administrator who (after doing something stupid) gets transferred to the North of France. The audience learns quickly that the North is a really bad place: people are only forced to go there as punishment. Boon’s character leaves his depressed wife and child behind in the warm South. Once he gets to the North things turn out to be quite the contrary to his expectations: it is not freezing and the people are actually really nice!

I am sure this is a very funny film in the original, it does not, however, work well in translation. The people up North have a peculiar accent which I am sure is hilarious. In the dubbed version (at least in the German one) the accent is completely made up and sounds utterly ridiculous. It turns the comedy into slapstick, which ruins it. Other than that the characters are sweet and the story is strange but amusing.

Bridget Jones’s Diary and Little Children are being awarded the MovieCat Award for being two outstandingly well-made films (even though mentioned in the same sentence, they are, of course, great for completely different reasons).

Juno

Monday, November 10th, 2008

When sixteen-year-old Juno MacGuff (Ellen Page) gets pregnant from a one-time-in-a-chair-act with her best friend Paulie, she decides to give the child up for adoption. She finds Vanessa and Mark’s (Jennifer Garner and Jason Bateman) ad in the “Penny Saver” and decides this perfect yuppie couple will be the ideal foster parents for her baby.

The film is told over four seasons, starting in autumn when Juno discovers that she is pregnant to summer when she has given up the baby and can start being a normal teenager again.

First off: Ellen Page is absolutely brilliant. Juno is one of the coolest girls I’ve ever seen on screen (possibly too cool to exist in reality). She is honest, straightforward, unusual and absolutely lovable. She uses her incredible wit and sharp irony to cover herself up against the cruel situation of being a teenager. Her not-quite-boyfriend Paulie Bleeker (Michael Cera) is on the cross country team, wearing gold shorts, head and wrist bands. He is quirky, confused and sweet. Juno definitely has the upper hand with him.

Screenwriter Diablo Cody decided at the age of twenty-four that life should have more to offer for her then being a secretary and out of a whim became a stripper. After a year of stripping by night and blogging (there is still hope!) by day, Mason Novick (who later became her manager) got interested in the writing on her extremely popular blog Pussy Ranch (one of the many she wrote) and secured her a publishing contract. Soon her memoir Candy Girl: A Year in the Life of an Unlikely Stripper came out which enabled Diablo to write the wonderful script for Juno.

Jason Reitman had only directed one notable film before this, Thank you for Smoking (which I have not yet seen, but which got quite good reviews). It is so refreshing to have a bunch of fairly unknown creatives coming up with such a great film. Juno got nominated for endless amounts of awards and even got a (deserved) Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.

This film is a wonderful coming-of-age story. It is quick paced, full of witty dialogue and reminds me a bit of a pop song. There is no way of not feeling ecstatic after watching Juno. I hope to see more films written by Diablo Cody (will order her book) and films with Ellen Page soon.

Juno is rewarded the MovieCat Award for the really fun soundtrack and for being a film to fall in love with.