Monday, December 14, 2015

Brooklyn (a movie review post)

I went into Brooklyn with very little idea of what it was about. That's fine, though, because I've been trying more, lately (lately being the last few years), to know less about movies before I go see them (it's a complicated process; don't ask) so I have fewer preconceptions and expectations. Basically, all I knew was that it was about a girl who moved to Brooklyn.

As it turns out, that's really all it's about, a girl who moves to Brooklyn. More specifically, it's about an Irish girl who moves to Brooklyn because she can't find work in her small village in Ireland. It's also a love story. It's the love story of the girl and the Italian boy she falls for, but it's also the love story of the girl and the city she falls in love with.

The movie is good. It's not great, but it's solid, and I enjoyed it. The relationships between the girls at the boarding house where Eilis stays are colorful, to say the least, and the boarding house scenes, mostly around the dinner table, are quite humorous.

The acting, for lack of a better way of saying it, is steady. Saoirse Ronan does a good job of playing someone who is rather lost and confused for much of the movie but, as such, her role is a bit understated. I like Jim Broadbent, but that's mostly just about him. Emory Cohen, as Tony, is probably the most dynamic of the cast. He certainly carries a lot of charisma with him in a bit of a James Franco kind of way. But, really, there's nothing remarkable here. No one to write home to Ireland about.

This next part is a bit spoilery. That's all the warning you'll get.

The biggest issue for me with the story is that Eilis is so passive. She doesn't move to Brooklyn because she wants to; she moves because her sister arranged it because her sister felt she would have better opportunities in the United States. A priest her sister knows arranges for her a place to stay and a job. She falls in love with the boy not because she falls in love with him but because he falls in love with her.

Later, when she has to return to Ireland because of a family death, she almost stays because she just keeps doing the things other people arrange for her: a new job, a new boy, a return to her old, small life. It was distressing to watch her just go along. But only mildly distressing because Eilis seems so unconcerned herself, unconcerned to the point of not even reading the letters she's receiving from her boy in Brooklyn.

The movie just goes on like that until you -- or, at least, I -- wonder what's going on and what's going to happen because, just from a time perspective, the movie must be almost over and there's no real way out for her from what's going on. The way that comes is sudden and contrived and leads to the only active choice that Eilis makes, the choice to return to Brooklyn. And the movie ends. We do get to see her get back, but, really, it's that sudden, and I was left feeling a bit... unsatisfied.

My wife liked it more than me.

But let me go back and say again: It's a good movie, and I did enjoy it. It's just not great. The rising action is too slow and doesn't rise high enough for the conflict, when it happens, to provide much of a climax, then the movie is just over. But, maybe, that's the way of life, which is really what this movie is: life. I wouldn't say it's a must see, but it's worth watching.

12 comments:

  1. If your character isn't engaged and seems bored, that's a bad thing. I'll be prepared for the passiveness if I watch this one.

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    1. Alex: I would be surprised if this is one you'd like.

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  2. I'll wait for it to come on HBO or Netflix. I'm not a big fan of slow moving movies like that unless I can really engage with the main character and from what you're describing, she doesn't seem very relatable.

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    1. Elsie: It's certainly not one that needs to be seen in the theater.

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  3. I've got you beat. I didn't know this movie existed. Never even heard of it until now. And now that I know it exists... well, I'm in no hurry to see it. Doesn't sound like my cup of tea.

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    1. ABftS: There are no explosions in it, if that's what you mean.

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  4. Going in without preconceptions might be a good idea. You don't suffer from the hype surrounding a movie and can judge it for what it's worth.

    Brooklyn sounds a bit boring to me. And I definitely don't like passive female characters. I'll probably put this on my "Skip" list.

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  5. Interesting. I might want to see it. I wonder if the passivity is part of the idea of it?

    The thing about not knowing what the movie about is interesting, too. Sweetie and I once tried that: we would pick a movie and not tell the other one anything about it, so that one of us would go into a movie with no real idea what it was about. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.

    I recently started an audiobook that I'd had on the list for so long that I couldn't remember anything about the plot or why I'd put it on my to-read list. So I started listening to it, but I couldn't get into it. I kept thinking I should see what the plot of the book is to see if it's worth continuing to wade through the beginning -- which wasn't bad, it just wasn't terribly compelling. In the end, I bailed on the book. (It was "An Arsonist's Guide To Writers Homes In New England," in case you were wondering.)

    If you liked this movie, you might like the book "Lucky Us." A similar feel, but MUCH more happens in it. I really enjoyed it.

    That is my scattershot collection of random comments.

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    1. Briane: I don't have the issue with "getting hooked," because, in almost all cases, I'm going to finish a book if I start it. It's not about the hook with me, just the writing, so plain bad writing is the only thing that will get me to put down a book I start.

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  6. I think I would be with you in frustration at the passive stuff. It may be the writers in us--we like characters to drive story and not the other way around. I mean live can HAPPEN to somebody initially, but if they never try to grasp the reins, then they lose my interest.

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    1. Hart: Characters don't have to drive the story, though I tend to prefer it more that way.

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