Tuesday, January 20, 2009

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button



The Curious Case of Benjamin Button re-teams actor Brad Pitt with director David Fincher. The duo had previously worked together on such films as Fight Club and Seven. If their previous work is any indication as to how the pair have worked together, then going into “Curious Case…” expectations were certainly high.

            From the opening sequence in a Louisiana hospital room, the gritty darkness incorporated into the scene screams of vintage Fincher. There’s an old woman lying on her deathbed, her daughter staying by her mother’s side until the very end. The old woman has a story to share, a black and white flashback that tells the tale of a blind clock maker who lost his son in World War 1. The clock maker creates a clock the runs backwards and has it hung in a busy train station, the significance is that perhaps if time moves backwards, those that had lost something or someone would be able to rewind time themselves, and recover what they had lost.

            Thus, the movie begins. It turns out that the story the old woman has told to her daughter is significant because the woman carries with her a diary belonging to one named “Benjamin Button”. Benjamin was a different sort of person in that he spent his entire life, aging backwards. The diary is his life’s work, recounted by Button himself, and done so prior to becoming an adolescent and forgetting everything that had happened. The film’s plot is told through this diary, with narration by actor Pitt playing the lead role of Benjamin Button. It is a story based upon the short one of the same name written by famous author F. Scott Fitzgerald.

            Cate Blanchett, like director Fincher, re-teams with Pitt and she plays Benjamin’s love interest “Daisy”. Blanchett and Pitt last worked together in the film, Babel playing a husband and wife pair. Benjamin and Daisy hit it off right from the start, which is odd because when they first meet, Daisy is very young. As a viewer, we know that Benjamin Button is only eight years old but says so himself that, he “looks a lot older”. Daisy seems to see past his age and they become instant friends. As Benjamin ages and gets younger and younger he continues to seek out his one true love no matter where she is on the globe. Blanchett is, with her curvy dark eyes and creamy white skin tone, once again superb in her part. She continues with this role, to be one of the better actresses working in Hollywood today.

            Other cast members of note include, Tilda Swinton, who since playing the White Witch in the “Chronicles of Narnia,” seems to only be able to play bored housewives looking to commit adultery. She played the same part in the Cohen Brothers recent film, Burn After Reading while going after George Clooney. And she finds love in the arms of Brad Pitt in “Button” playing bored wife, Elizabeth Abbott, whom Benjamin believes to be his first real love. (Apparently not realizing the feelings he had for Daisy all along). She seems to have lost all sense of meaning in her life once she was unable to be the first woman to swim across the English Channel. Jared Harris of Mr. Deeds plays Captain Mike, seemingly the most masculine male influence in all of Benjamin Button’s life. It’s everything that Captain Mike is not, that Benjamin seems to love and respect him for.

            The story is captivating. Here is truly a film that keeps you watching for three hours, without having much action to show for it. The acting is great, and Brad Pitt should get a nod for a nomination in the“Best Actor” category during awards season this year. If Pitt does get nominated, than he and wife Angelina Jolie (Changeling) may both be up for a trophy. Those who should win some awards is who ever did the special effects for this film- the make up and aging done to the characters is absolutely flawless. Second to none! 

One of, if not the best, film of 2008!














1 comment:

Anonymous said...

No one else enjoyed this movie like we did it was phenominal just throwing out my appreciation for someone else recognizing its awesomeness