Posts Tagged ‘Timur Bekmambetov’

 

9

Hard Times in an Age of Quarrel

October 30th, 2009

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In 2005, after four exhaustive years, graduate student Shane Acker completed his eleven-minute college thesis for UCLA’s Animation Workshop. Filmed without dialogue, “9” was the visually absorbing, computer-generated tale of a “stitchpunk” rag doll battling a mechanical beast in a post-apocalyptic world devoid of humans. Woven from hessian, with round, thick-lensed eyes like dilating apertures, the mute, nimble character of #9 outfoxed a metal, skeletoned cat-like contraption. Acker made, in a mere few minutes of screen time, a gripping and arresting movie. In the spring of 2006, “9” was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. The winner that year was the wrenching “The Moon and the Son: An Imagined Conversation,” an autobiographical indictment of his own father by animator John Canemaker. Each of the films is a wonderful reminder of the power, diversity and talent illustrated in this regrettably underseen, compact form of filmmaking.

Tim Burton was enamored by the university project, brought in director Timur Bekmambetov, among others, as a fellow producer, and Acker embarked on a feature length edition. Sadly, the protracted version of “9″ gives the impression of a movie stretched by a thin, overly familiar narrative. The entirely new back story is recognizable: A well-meaning government scientist designs the Great Machine; the machine turns evil. Armageddon rages in a grainy newsreel montage. Afterwards, in this barren land, a small band of the numbered rag dolls remains, under constant attack from the spindly creatures devised by the machine. Led by a crotchety, de facto leader (the sonorous Christopher Plummer as #1), some are holed up, simply hiding out. A few intrepid stitchpunks embrace a more proactive approach to toppling their hunters; circumstance places #9 in the latter camp. Each of the rag dolls, as it is explained by the deceased scientist’s hologram, was created as components of his “soul.” But their individual personalities don’t resonate strongly in the 79-minute film. The script by Pamela Pettler — who wrote both Burton’s “The Corpse Bride” and Gil Kenan’s “Monster House” – fails to provide the “stitchpunks” with identities past a basic, surface level. The character of #9 is now voiced with earnest nativity by Elijah Wood as though the creatures wish to decimate his beloved shire.

The visuals remain engaging. Sunlight is shrouded by a sky suspended like a coal-choked tarp. The dolls huddle under a military helmet, scurrying cleverly for shelter in the rubble. Filmed from intriguing perspectives, a flexing feline beast peers menacingly for its quarry. Acker also has a skill for creating finely choreographed, atmospheric action sequences.

The newcomer lists the Brothers Quay and Jan Švankmajer as major influences. They are animators of unsettling, phantasmagoric stop-motion films. Detritus packs their miniature sets, and taxidermy and lifeless dolls permeate their work; there’s an air of pungent decay. They execute intricate guerilla filmmaking. Comparatively, Acker feels like the most reserved member of the Tim Burton Revolutionary Knitting Circle. While he resourcefully incorporates skeletons and inanimate objects into his mise-en-scène, and you definitely see the framework of his inspirational gurus, it doesn’t feel creepy. It’s orderly, not edgy. The Quays and Švankmajer flesh out nightmares; Acker specializes in dreams. (A sequence of resurrecting souls is lovingly realized.) He’s a recognizable talent with a recommendable feature-film debut. But, for his next project, hopefully Acker will unhinge his imagination in a plumper story.


August 28th, 2009

Scott Eyman of the Palm Beach Post chats with Rod Taylor, star of “The Time Machine” and “The Birds,” who believed himself retired until Quentin Tarantino rang him up.

“The Most Dangerous Man in America” will be released in September by filmmakers Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith as they chronicle “Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers.”

With the Toronto International Film Festival still two weeks away, the Globe and Mail has unveiled its “Mob Blog.”

Coming in September from producers Tim Burton and Timur Bekmambetov, “9″ is the CGI-meets-a-stop motion-vibe feature length film from director Shane Acker based on his Academy Award-nominated short starring stitch-punks.

One Film Wonder: Michael Jackson revolutionized the small screen. In the early 1980s his videos, bursting with iconic images, became television events; they possessed a transformational popularity which shamed MTV into forever altering its playlist. Two of the greatest auteurs in American screen history directed his videos: In 1986 Francis Ford Coppola helmed “Captain EO” and in the following year Martin Scorsese filmed “Bad.” But Jackson appeared in only three feature films, two of which were a 30-second cameo as Agent M in 2002’s “Men in Black II” and a similarly tangential appearance as Agent MJ in 2004’s “Silly Movie 2″ or, as its alternately known, “Miss Castaway and the Island Girls.”

In 1978, a year prior to the release of “Off the Wall,” and before he eased not so easily down the road to superstardom, a 20-year-old Jackson starred as Scarecrow in the extravagant film adaptation of the Broadway musical, “The Wiz.” Co-starring Diana Ross as Dorothy, the loquacious Nipsey Russell as Tinman, Ted Ross as Lion and Richard Pryor in the title role, the film teamed Jackson with another directing luminary, Sidney Lumet. The film was nominated for four Academy Awards (Cinematography, Art Direction, Costume Design and Original Song). However, “The Wiz” was a box office disappointment as the $24 million movie earned just $13.6 million.


Wanted

Bullet the Blue Sky

August 31st, 2008

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After the art-house buzz for his modern vampire fables “Night Watch” and “Day Watch,” Timur Bekmambetov became a hot property. Atmospheric and spooky, “Night Watch” was riveting entertainment. Providing a welcome twist to the oft-told subject, it contained tangible menace in an epic style as well as a fantastic animated sequence and wonderful set pieces — especially a finely constructed scene which followed the path of a single screw along its journey as it fell from a plane into the bowels of a building. The sequel “Day Watch” ratcheted up the intensity into an apocalyptic showdown replete with a soundtrack of thrash metal and haunting chorale choruses which was still nimble enough to successfully blend tenderness and acute comic touches into the mix.

In his Hollywood debut, “Wanted,“ Bekmambetov showcases absurdly badass moments but only in fits and starts in a film which feels comparatively restrained and incomplete to his earlier works.

Yet, the opening scenes of the film form the foundation for an interesting social satire of a downtrodden cubicle dweller recruited to become an assassin. There’s a Walter Mitty air to the character of Wesley Allan Gibson (James McAvoy).  And the rat race symbolism is unrelenting but effective. However the film veers away from this treatment and spends too much time in training-the-new-guy mode so that it loses this intriguing perspective and lurches towards becoming a  pedestrian affair.

Sadly for a talent as compelling as Bekmambetov, “Wanted” doesn’t really let go.  It lacks a certain sense of abandon, and even fun. When a film doesn‘t appear to embrace the joke of something as absurd as the “Loom of Fate“ you’d suspect that the director was a misanthrope, if you didn‘t know any better.  But both “Night Watch“ and “Day Watch“ revel in humorous moments, even if many of them are black. Perhaps because, unlike “Wanted,“ he co-wrote the screenplays for his two earlier hallmark films, he felt more comfortable finding the gradations of humor amidst the seriousness.  But it may be simply that in his first effort in the States working with Universal Pictures he felt impinged.  Even this film’s signature visual effect of bullets bent by mind control lacks the relish associated with Bekmambetov’s style.

So if you want a mind-blowing shoot ‘em up, then there’s none better this decade than the criminally unseen “Shoot ’Em Up.” Blessed with the marketing budget of, say, the national Green Party, “Shoot ‘Em Up” snuck into theaters last fall for a mere few weeks before being consigned to cult status: You can’t get more cult than a stupendous Clive Owen, Monica Bellucci, and Paul Giamatti flick that due to its tepid American box office allegedly opened in a single Australian theater.  So only a few lucky Melburnians got to see the Michael Davis film which was outlandish, inspired and breakneck. Conversely, while “Wanted” was bestowed with a gargantuan promotional campaign, it is comparably slight and underwhelming. 

The attraction for McAvoy to the role of Wesley Allan Gibson is apparent. He seems to revel in the forlorn Gibson, with his exhausted countenance, crumply dress shirts, and vigorously bitten fingernails. But the rest of the characters are completely unblinking, unfunny automatons. They are exceedingly cool but vacant.  As the master of the assassins, Morgan Freeman has perfected his chilled persona so expertly that it would be refreshing if we could describe one of his characters as “bat-shit crazy.“ Angelina Jolie traipses across the set likes it‘s a runway.  She apparently was paid a great deal to stretch, pout and smirk; not so much for acting. Terence Stamp brought along his startling blue eyes and sonorous voice for an absolute throwaway role which suggests he must have had a spare Bank Holiday weekend.

The ending to “Wanted” is well-crafted nonsense.  A major component of the conclusion is that characters have to make dramatic, ultimate choices but because there’s been no development for any role other than McAvoy’s, there’s no context and the decisions feels forced and vacuous. Sadly, for a filmmaker with as much vitality as Bekmambetov, it’s disappointing to meet this finale with a shrug.

Hopefully, with his next venture, reportedly the third installment in the “Watch” trilogy, he will revert to completing a film worthy of his audacious talent.  He is capable of making films simultaneously over-the-top and under control. Just maybe not in Hollywood, yet.