Thursday, December 21, 2023

Wonka

Wonka (Paul King, 2023)
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Rating: Q=4, P=4 / Average OJ
Scale 1=3, Scale 2=3, Scale 3=3, Scale 4=3

Musical, Comedy, Family, Based on Book

I am a HUGE fan of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory from 1971, starring the incomparable Gene Wilder, so when I heard that there was going to be a prequel film about Willy, I was skeptical. With Timothee Chalamet? OK, I'm more interested... and other comedians I love (like Rich Fulcher and Keegan-Michael Key)? More interested... I always try to keep an open mind with any film, despite how difficult it seems to compare to another--after all, I firmly believe that each film stands on its own and is individual, and should be given a chance regardless if it is an adaptation or a reinterpretation. That being said, I liked Wonka. I liked it because it was cheerful, fun, and heart-warming. I liked it because it was an escape that I enjoyed being immersed in. I liked the winks and nods it gave to its predecessor and the music it made--it felt like a self-aware musical, with some of the numbers verging on parody. The cast and crew of Wonka knew what it was up against and didn't back down, in my opinion. If anything, they went all-out in full, Mel Brooks fashion. The writing was punchy and silly and zany, and I burst out laughing at a few gags and lines.

Of course, Timothee Chalamet is no Gene Wilder and his singing felt overly auto-tuned, but I believed that he could be a young Willy. Despite many reviews I read, I thought choosing to play him as an ultra-optimist with energy to spare fit perfectly. And the supporting cast felt like they were pulled directly out of a Roald Dahl book--extreme/one-dimensional characters worked here.

So, I was satisfied. Not epic or brilliant or particularly noteworthy, but very solid and fun. I will watch it again, for sure.

--Don't understand the ratings? Click here

Monday, December 11, 2023

The Boy and the Heron

The Boy and the Heron (Hayao Miyazaki, 2023)
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Rating: Q=4, P=4 / Drooling
Scale O=4, Scale P=4, Scale Q=4, Scale R=4, Scale S=4

Animation, Coming of Age, Grief and Coping, Fantasy, Adventure

I had never managed to see a Miyazaki film in the theater when first released. And I never thought I would be able to until I heard that the master filmmaker's (likely) final film, The Boy and the Heron, was finally complete.

There is so much emotion in this film and I can feel the finality of this one--from the topic/storyline to the urgent pace, and the many meanings. Miyazaki is the sage imparting his final words of wisdom on us in each moment. This story is a swirling, twisting dream-like adventure that grapples with very real and difficult questions. How do you grieve and cope? Why is life full of pain? What is the purpose of living? And the broadest one, from the novel referenced in the story and the Japanese title, How do you live? This is not a light film. There are a few cheerful moments and some occasional light-hearted humor, but it is ultimately a serious story. I will need to watch this again and again to notice everything and to understand all that is going on. I don't think Miyazaki meant for this tale to be entirely comprehensible on the first or even second viewing. Like the philosophical questions the characters seek to answer, the film viewer (and the director, too) must search in lots of places and ways to find the answers. And that takes time. A whole lifetime, maybe.

A beautiful film that I will watch many times again, I'm sure.

--Don't understand the ratings? Click here