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    Movie Quickies: Sherlock Holmes, The Lovely Bones, A Serious Man

    Categories: Movie Talk, Screenwriting (Film).

    Hey, folks—

     

    Sorry it’s been so long since the last post… last week was a
    mad dash for the holiday finish line, with a lot of late nights and early
    mornings.  But saw a bunch of
    movies this weekend… some wonderfully written, some horribly written… so I wanted
    to pass on some thoughts on “Sherlock Holmes,” “The Lovely Bones,” and “A Serious Man”

     

    SHERLOCK HOLMES
    Exactly the movie you think it’s gonna be, and exactly the movie it should
    be—fun, fast, and popcorny.  I’m
    not always a Guy Ritchie fan, and while his whooshy style sometimes gets
    tiresome, he uses it nicely here. 
    It still occasionally feels like stylistic trickery, but he uses it well
    to bring to life Holmes’ thought processes and flashbacks… meaning it actually
    helps tell the story, rather than just looking cool.

     

    As for the script… the real centerpiece isn’t the mystery,
    but the Holmes/Watson relationship. When the film begins, best buddies Holmes
    and Dr. Watson have been living together for years, but Watson has recently
    gotten engaged to his girlfriend Mary… meaning that Holmes is not only about to
    lose his roommate, but also—he fears—his best friend.  Together, Holmes and Watson are part quarreling brothers,
    part sparring married couple. 
    Screenwriters Simon Kinberg, Anthony Peckham, Lionel Wigram, and Michael
    Robert Johnson
    do a nice job creating a brokenhearted Holmes… and I credit
    Kinberg with their snappy Tracy-Hepburn repartee.  The script doesn’t dig particularly deep into the emotional
    intricacies of their relationship, but it serves its purpose well.

     

    As for the mystery itself… to be honest: it’s not always
    easy to follow the logic from one clue to the next; “CSI” episodes are easier
    to follow.  But it doesn’t matter
    here… the fun of the movie isn’t the thrill of solving the puzzle, it’s
    spending with Holmes and Watson.

     

     

    THE LOVELY BONES – I
    haven’t read Alice Sebold’s novel, so I don’t know what story the movie was
    SUPPOSED to tell, but I’m guessing this wasn’t it.  Told from the perspective of Susie Salmon, a murdered
    teenager beyond the grave, “The Lovely Bones” tells the story of… what?  Susie’s ghost wanting revenge on her
    secret killer, George Harvey?  A
    husband and wife trying to hold together their marriage in the aftermath of a
    tragedy?  A sister investigating
    her sister’s death?  In the hands
    of usually-terrific writers Fran Walsh, Phillipa Boyens, and Peter Jackson,
    it’s all of those… and none of those.

     

    First of all, there’s no single character here with a
    specific Want… or who takes any specific action.  And while I’m all for ensemble pieces, characters in
    ensembles still need specific, tangible Wants that drive them to action… and
    the characters here have none.  Or,
    rather, they flit from Want to Want and Action to Action with little
    consistency, so we’re never sure who we’re rooting for or what they’re trying
    to accomplish.

     

    The movie’s biggest weakness, however, is that it’s
    overwhelmed not by the lack of story, but by Peter Jackson’s visual
    effects-driven depictions of Susie’s afterlife.  A good 60 percent of the movie is composed of these gorgeous
    visuals… that serve absolutely NO purpose in the movie.  They seem to be laden with symbolism,
    but this symbolism is both heavy-handed and meaningless. 

     

    In one scene, for instance, as dead Susie has realizations
    about her life, a gigantic rose blooms beneath her feet (heavy-handed).  Meanwhile, back on Earth, Susie’
    father, Jack, is in the midst of a conversation with Mr. Harvey and spots a
    rose on a bush… then immediately realizes Harvey is Susie’s murderer.  WTF?!  A) The rose is meaningless to Susie’s father… he has no
    reason to connect this to his dead daughter.  B)  Even if the
    rose somehow makes him think of Susie, there’s absolutely no reason that this
    reminder should suddenly make him suspect Mr. Harvey.  It’s cheap, lazy storytelling—replacing actual logic with
    sentimentality that doesn’t really connect the dots (but tries to trick
    audiences into thinking it does). 

     

    In fact, virtually every moment of the
    trying-to-catch-Mr.-Harvey story, the small thriller element of the movie,
    hinges not on actual crime-solving logic, but on characters having unfounded,
    emotional hunches.  (I can’t tell
    you how many times characters claim they have the “skeevies” about someone… and
    those “skeevies” lead them to catching the criminal.)

     

    Because Jackson spends so much time masturbating with his
    visual effects machines, the real drama here gets robbed of its emotional
    potential.  There’s plenty of great
    dramatic fodder here, but virtually none of it gets explored.  The 40 percent of the movie that’s NOT
    spent in Susie’s overblown afterlife is mostly narrated by Susie… with very
    little drama or story taking place between characters.  There’s a nice, angry—albeit
    short—scene between Susie’s mother and grandmother… and that—aside from the
    Susie’s murder scene—is the only scene where characters seem to be conflicting
    emotionally against each other. 
    The other scenes with any emotional intensity concern either one
    character alone… or are narrated from a distance.

     

    Sadly, “The Lovely Bones” is neither compelling family drama
    nor solid thriller… but it’s a great example of how NOT to write both.

     

     

    A SERIOUS MAN
    Maybe one of my favorite movies of the year, the Coen Brothers’ “A Serious Man”
    shouldn’t work.  At all.  The story of stepped-on husband/father
    Larry Gropnik, it focuses on a main character who wants nothing tangible—he
    simply wants answers to questions, both specific and existential.  (I.e., “Why is my wife cheating on
    me?”  “Why does God let horrible
    things happen to good people?” 
    Etc.)  It is, in a way, a
    Woody Allen film as done by the Coen Brothers.  Hilarious, frustrating, endearing, shocking…

     

    It’s hard to pinpoint traditional screenwriting lessons or
    take-aways, because it’s such an unconventional film, but one of the things it
    does remarkably well is create a tenacious character who wants something
    (answers) and pursues them doggedly, then it continually throws obstacles—both small
    (a son’s annoying questions) and large (car crashes, extramarital affairs)—in his
    path.  It’s a great study in
    constructing a character who refuses to give up on his mission, no matter how
    big the challenges in his way.

     

     

    Anyway—I’m off tonight to see “Brothers.”  More importantly—while this is kinda
    old news—how awesome was the “Glee” finale a couple weeks ago?  (Finally watched it yesterday… twice.)


    A SERIOUS MAN TRAILER


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    One Response to Movie Quickies: Sherlock Holmes, The Lovely Bones, A Serious Man

    1. Carlo says:

      I haven’t seen "A Serious Man" yet, but fully agree with you on the other two. BTW, "Glee" rules! Loved the fall finale.

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