“So if you meet me
Have some courtesy
Have some sympathy, and some taste
Use all your well-learned politesse
Or I’ll lay your soul to waste” – The Rolling Stones
(slight spoiler warning)
When the economy began to collapse in 2008, a lot of Americans at last began to realize who was really running this country. That debacle left a lot of unfinished business in the trajectory of middle-class Americans on their way to fulfilling the promise of the lives they’d just barely started. Where at one time a young couple living in New York City with hopes of becoming famous writers felt confidence about the future, now they’ve left the city, moved to the country where there isn’t much to do but become clichés of the middle class, living out the failed dreams of their parents.
This was not going to be the fate of Amazing Amy – that type A bombshell women envied and men worshipped. Not the same Amazing Amy from the children’s books that set the bar for perfection parents in the post-Oprah, post-therapy, post-boomer generation strived for. Amazing Amy was a success in school and in life. Amy Dunne lived somewhere in her shadow, an asterisked footnote of the perfect child her parents really wanted. Self-esteem, that’s what counts in modern American child rearing. Only too much self-esteem can build monsters.
In a career making turn, Rosamund Pike is Amy Dunne in David Fincher’s new film, Gone Girl, Like last year’s Wolf of Wall Street, Gone Girl chokes on the American dream. That dream is usually afforded only to men. We don’t think about what women want out of it, do we. Women are bred to want to be rescued by a handsome prince, and then live happily ever after. Nick Dunne (Ben Affleck in a pitch perfect performance) arrives just time to rescue poor Amy from under the shadow of Amazing Amy. And aren’t they so happy together. Perfect man, perfect wife. Perfect life.
But as these things go, perfection has no place in the dirty job that is reality. Who can survive the pressure of perfection? What child raised today with parents hovering, with self-esteem injections hourly, sometimes medication to be perfect in every way.
Fincher introduced the notion of the double life in Fight Club, then manifested that outward illusion with The Social Network, which changed the way we presented ourselves to the world.
Fincher’s Gone Girl takes up where his Social Network left off. Both films are a meditation on getting those things we believe we’re all entitled to, by any means necessary. With Mark Zuckerberg that gold ring was success and a circle of friends. With Amy Dunne, it’s the perfect life she feels is owed to her. The Big Lie promises women that they will never be cheated on, that their husband will love them with unfaltering devotion and want to fuck them every night for the next 50 years. They want their husband to listen to their problems, appreciate their talents, admire their fashion sense, crave their cooking, and pose for happy photos they can post on social networks. It almost doesn’t even matter who that guy is, which is how Nick almost inadvertently fits into the picture. He’s Joe Anybody – a pretty dumbass Amy can plug in to her pretty little puzzle. The last essential piece.
The power of projection and manipulation of image is the new normal. One need look no further than how Kim Kardashian spent hours organizing the floral arrangement for the Instagram photo of her marriage to Kanye West, which broke the Instagram record for :most-liked.” Does anyone even care anymore if any of it was real? It doesn’t matter. Give the people what they want. Gone Girl eviscerates this disgusting new dimension of American culture.
We women live under the cloak of inadequacy every day of our lives. We eat that shit for breakfast (low carb please), and stuff our faces with it during daylight hours as we dutifully count our calories, contort ourselves in yoga class, shave our pussies, wax our legs, pluck our eyebrows, wear sunscreen, stuff our swollen feet into high heels and then vomit it all up before we go to bed at night. Some of us are driven to the brink of insanity, but none of us can ever really talk about it because to merely confess that it’s a struggle is to admit we’ve failed at being what society expects us to be.
And everywhere we look there are always prettier, younger girls. A monster is born in Gone Girl, a monster built from the cries of frustration from a hundreds million women. And that monster is prowling the quiet countryside operating from a handmade rulebook, a catalogue of justifications and entitlements, the end result of ranking high self-esteem as the utmost character trait.
Gone Girl continues a recurring theme in Fincher’s work that explores dual worlds: the world the characters show us and the one the director shows us. He gives us two versions of the truth. It’s our choice, in the end, which one to believe. His team of collaborators is right there with him on the same page, as always. This time around, the score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross echoes the duality of the film’s central theme, alternating between swoony romantic mood music and a disturbing thrum of psychosis. Once again Reznor and Ross create sounds so distinct from the industry norm, it’s almost a different language. Fincher gives away much of the movie’s rhythm and mood up to Reznor/Ross, trusting the composers to avoid manipulation – in fact, their manipulation in this instance is ironic.
Fincher’s film is a time piece wound to perfection, with each scene building to the next. Even if you know where it’s going, you’re still surprised where it goes. Every shot is a breathtaking example of how talented this director is with the camera, how well he knows the language of film. What makes Fincher exceptional as a director is his camera’s eye – and his ability to know people. Not since Hitchcock has there been a director who is so good at betraying who people really are as we watch them on screen. We see Amy’s parents, staring out at the camera vacantly. We see Nick’s twin sister, hovering somewhere between love and hate — an excellent Carrie Coon slinging out zingers and acting as the film’s conscience for the audience. We see Nick’s young hot fuck, an innocent ripe peach in the wrong place at the wrong time (the beautiful Emily Ratajkowski) – a subtle way Nick helps her get dressed recalls a parent dressing a child.
All the while what you’re seeing here is a world of people who don’t really know themselves very well. If Nick is our film’s heart, we find ourselves at conflict with that – this is not really a couple any of us can understand because what brings them together is what most of us would reject when confronted with it. Only Tyler Perry – very nearly stealing the show – gives the audience some comic relief in admitting how fucked up they really are.
But the film really belongs to Amy – as this is as much about this odd character invented and made famous by Gillian Flynn — as it is another masterpiece in the Fincher canon. Pike is glorious in the twists and turns Fincher and Flynn put her through. The film, and the book, are really about Amy – the worst than American self-esteem parenting has wrought upon society. Amy’s parents are glassy eyed culture puppets. Their daughter is merely inspiration for their books and even when she goes missing, they try to help find her by setting up a website, findamazingamy.com. Even when faced with losing her her life is still churned into PR for the books.
It is here that we sympathize with the devil — a modern American girl suffocated under the mask of the SuperChild in the post therapy, post Oprah America where parents don’t punish their children nor risk shaking their self-esteem because self-esteem is what it’s all about. We’re taught that feeling good about ourselves is the key to going out there and getting what we deserve.
Amy Dunne is not just the fears and anxieties of the American male embodied in a female, she is the sum total of women’s collective female fears too — that ideal we are all taught to strive for but can never attain. We women know what is expected of us by men and by ourselves. We wake up every day knowing it.
With her “cool girl” monologue Flynn busted open the dirty secret we women have always known about what it takes to “land a man.” Sure, there are always exceptions but for every exception of the perfect happy marriage there is that “here’s my dream man” Facebook status update that makes some of us think, “Yeah right. There’s a cool girl.”
Men always say that as the defining compliment, don’t they? She’s a cool girl. Being the Cool Girl means I am a hot, brilliant, funny woman who adores football, poker, dirty jokes, and burping, who plays video games, drinks cheap beer, loves threesomes and anal sex, and jams hot dogs and hamburgers into her mouth like she’s hosting the world’s biggest culinary gang bang while somehow maintaining a size 2, because Cool Girls are above all hot. Hot and understanding. Cool Girls never get angry; they only smile in a chagrined, loving manner and let their men do whatever they want. Go ahead, shit on me, I don’t mind, I’m the Cool Girl.
Men actually think this girl exists. Maybe they’re fooled because so many women are willing to pretend to be this girl. For a long time Cool Girl offended me. I used to see men – friends, coworkers, strangers – giddy over these awful pretender women, and I’d want to sit these men down and calmly say: You are not dating a woman, you are dating a woman who has watched too many movies written by socially awkward men who’d like to believe that this kind of woman exists and might kiss them. I’d want to grab the poor guy by his lapels or messenger bag and say: The bitch doesn’t really love chili dogs that much – no one loves chili dogs that much! And the Cool Girls are even more pathetic: They’re not even pretending to be the woman they want to be, they’re pretending to be the woman a man wants them to be. Oh, and if you’re not a Cool Girl, I beg you not to believe that your man doesn’t want the Cool Girl. It may be a slightly different version – maybe he’s a vegetarian, so Cool Girl loves seitan and is great with dogs; or maybe he’s a hipster artist, so Cool Girl is a tattooed, bespectacled nerd who loves comics. There are variations to the window dressing, but believe me, he wants Cool Girl, who is basically the girl who likes every fucking thing he likes and doesn’t ever complain. (How do you know you’re not Cool Girl? Because he says things like: “I like strong women.” If he says that to you, he will at some point fuck someone else. Because “I like strong women” is code for “I hate strong women.”)
Fincher uses the Cool Girl monologue as one of the film’s most exciting moments, though it’s impossible to discuss without giving away spoilers. Suffice it to say, he knew it had to be in there and boy is it in there. For me, that scene in Gone Girl is like Alex Kitner getting attacked in Jaws – a mini masterclass in what film directing is all about. You know when you’re watching a Fincher film you are watching a master at work, a master at the top of his game.
Gone Girl is about creating the perfect illusion because maybe then there can be the happiness the American dream promises. It is also a dumb world full of dumb people who fall for dumb stories. Don’t we just want the glossy story? We don’t care if it’s true. We need our villains and another pregnant missing white woman. We need to hate those who done us wrong and elevate the victim. We avenge justice with our remote control, our Twitter, our Facebook. We rise and fall on the daily hysteria the networks are more than happy to deliver. We do this almost every day on the internet and it plays out weekly on television. Gone Girl reflects that back at us, with haunting reminders of an America that once was and a lifestyle that might have to be experienced not on Main Street but on a dot com.
Can we, in the end, have sympathy for the devil? Can we forgive ourselves if our hopes and dreams are nothing more than a shimmer off on the horizon, too far away to reach, not far enough away to unsee. And so instead we crawl towards it, arms open, eyes closed, propelled by illusion.
With the middle class collapsing all around us, with global warming and the next fatal epidemic quickly spreading, Amy and Nick Dunne survive as a relic of what used to be but can be no more. Butterflies trapped under glass, captured by a director and a writer who are unafraid to show them as they really are, for better or worse, richer or poorer. Maybe this film is about the death of marriage in America. Maybe it’s about the death of that pretty little lie. One thing it’s not about is what almost every film coming out in the next few months is about. It’s not about men.
Fincher had the right instinct for Gillian Flynn to transform her own novel into the best adaptation of the year so far. The hard-working Flynn is not afraid of stepping into unknown terrain as she sprints out of the gate. In Fincher she has found someone with balls big enough to present hard truths, even if they make us squirm in our seats. Here, their collaboration results in nothing less than the best film of 2014.
night
In debating this movie with my husband, we came to the conclusion that the stereotype of the Woman Monster is rooted, partially, is this truth: historically, because of the power differential between men and women, the fear has grown that a woman can only strive to equal a man through scheming and trickery. The debate really is: is this stereotype, or do women really behave this way because of the power differential in society?
Mendelson is just wrong this this. Check out my rebuttal on my blog.
Ranking Fincher’s dramatic works:
MASTERPIECES
1) The Social Network
2) Se7en
3) Gone Girl
4) House of Cards: Chapter 1
5) Zodiac
PIECES BY A MASTER
6) Fight Club
7) The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo
8) Panic Room
ESSENTIALLY FLAWED PIECES WITH MASTERFUL FRAGMENTS
9) House of Cards: Chapter 2 (writer is to blame)
10) The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (producers and Fincher itself are to blame)
UNSEEN
Alien 3
The Game
Wow. Saw it on Sunday, and it does not leave my mind. If Social Network was Fincher’s Citizen Kane, this one is Fincher’s Vertigo, no less.
This is mine:
1) Se7en
2) Fight Club
3) The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo
4) The Social Network
5) Zodiac
6) The Game
7) Aliens 3
8) The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Haven’t seen Panic Room or Gone Girl yet, so this list is going to change in the future.
My ranking:
1. The Social Network
2. Se7en
3. Zodiac
4. Alien 3
5. Fight Club
6. Gone Girl
7. The Game
8. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
9. Panic Room
10. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
From Anthony Lane’s review for The New Yorker:
“Gone Girl” is meant to inspire debates about whether Amy is victimized or vengeful, and whether Nick deserves everything he gets, but, really, who cares? All I could think of was the verdict of Samuel Butler on Thomas Carlyle: “It was very good of God to let Carlyle and Mrs. Carlyle marry one another, and so make only two people miserable and not four.”
Can’t wait to see the film, not least so I can give this review a full read without fear of encountering spoilers.
Dickens has been one of TV’s underrated gems between Deadwood and Friday Night Lights. I have nothing but pure faith in her abilities.
What I find fascinating is the casting of Pike, Dickens, and Coon. Women as Sasha said play a big part in the book and I’m guessing that follows in the book as well. Could Coon work herself into the best supporting actress discussion?
Sasha what is your opinion of some of the other female roles outside of Amy Dunne because the great thing about Flynns novel is she has some great supporting female characters such as Nick’s sister Margo Dunne played by Carrie Coon, Rhonda Boney played by Kim Dickens, Ellen Abbott played by Missi Pyle and Noelle Hawthrone played by Casey Wilson to name a few.
Absolutely. When you watch how people review this film, when you watch people talk about the book and talk about Fincher’s prior work, keep an ear tuned to general culturally embedded misogyny. What that means is general mistrust of women as well as hatred of women. This film will be among the few entering the Oscar race that has a lot of women in it, is about women and stars a woman (not to mention being written by a woman). Kim Dickens is fantastic, as is Carrie Coon and all of the supporting players, both male and female. It’s expertly cast top to bottom. Not a weak link in the cast. I’m afraid the lack of imagination here lies with the people who are overly harsh in their criticisms by prejudging it as “chick lit” or whatever. SO ANNOYING.
My ranking of Fincher’s work:
1. The Social Network
2. Zodiac- this was my second favorite film of 2007. The lead in the film is the Zodiac killer and the obsession with catching him. This is my favorite of Fincher’s work, but I think The Social Network is a better overall film, much like Darkness on the Edge of Town is my favorite Springsteen album, even though I know Born To Run is flawless. I watch Zodiac almost every year and am still get completely drawn in.
3. Seven- I was 15 when I saw it in the theater and it was the first movie that punched me in the gut. I could never have predicted that ending and how off the beaten path it was at that time. I love Freeman’s performance in this and the mostly realistic portrayal of police work displayed.
4. Fight Club- might be Brad Pitt’s best work and Fincher’s craziest film.
5. Dragon Tatoo- this would rank higher if it had more Mara and less Craig. She blew everybody else off screen in the movie.
6. Benjamin Button- still feel this is Fincher’s please give me an Oscar film. I liked it and thought it was better than Slumdog, but it isn’t Fincher at his best.
7. Panic Room- my wife and I saw this on our first date so I will always have a soft spot for this. I still think it was better than it got credit for and I thought all the performances were very good, especially Foster and Whitaker.
8. The Game- it is an entertaining film, but it never went deeper than that for me.
9. Alien 3- not as bad as it’s reputation, but not as good as what came before it(light years better than what came after it). Thanks to this film, Fincher is very uncompromising. I wonder what would have happened to him if this movie succeeded…..
Gone Girl is my most anticipated movie of the year. The only movie I haven’t seen in the movies that he directed was Alien 3(I was in sixth grade) and Alien scared me shitless. I will be interested to see where it ranks for me. I can’t wait until next weekend.
Fincher movies – let’s see…
Se7en (is it pretentious to use the “7”?)
The Social Network (not much wrong with it, though – I just like Se7en a bit more)
Zodiac
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Fight Club (I mean, it’s quite good, but doesn’t do much for me, ultimately – also, I guess I saw it comparatively too late, and had already seen too many “twist” movies by then…)
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Alien³ (it’s not good, but I don’t hate it either)
All very good movies. I plan on seeing The Game at some point. Panic Room I have not and most likely will not ever watch – I pretty much hate home invasion movies.
Sasha what is your opinion of some of the other female roles outside of Amy Dunne because the great thing about Flynns novel is she has some great supporting female characters such as Nick’s sister Margo Dunne played by Carrie Coon, Rhonda Boney played by Kim Dickens, Ellen Abbott played by Missi Pyle and Noelle Hawthrone played by Casey Wilson to name a few.
Well, I love the ones I have in my collection:
The Social Network
Se7en
Zodiac
The Game
I can’t wait to watch and add Gone Girl as well. Sasha, does this movie have any similarities to last year’s Prisoners? I loved that movie too and it felt like a Fincher movie. Fincher has this amazing style and is the closest we get to Hitchcock. Soderbergh is similar as well but Fincher’s movies have this mystery about them. Every time you watch, you discover something new. Hopefully it will win. It’s been a while since the movie that I like the most won for Best Picture. I have to go back to 2007…
watching this on Monday because the Sunday shows for this at the Rio Film Festival are only for guests – why the fuck do you have a film festival, an event that has the sole purpose to get regular folks to watch movies they wouldn’t otherwise, and then limit the access to those very movies to pseudo-celebrities? pisses me off.
I said this somewhere else: this is the most excited I’ve been for a book-to-film project since the first Harry Potter film came out when I was 15 (I was a MASSIVE Potter geek back then). counting the seconds.
OT: just watched “Whiplash” earlier and it has easily placed itself as my #2 of the year so far, after “Boyhood”.
holy crap, what a phenomenal film.
I switch back and forth between the top 4 films
The Social Network-perfection. One of the best American studio pictures in the last few years.
Se7en-seemly ordinary at first until 5 minutes in where it brings down into a hellhole. That ending still gets under my skin and for a Hollywood film no less. Who would have thought it?
Fight Club-Feels like the public finally got the film 5 years after it’s release and now we’ve completely forgotten about it’s thematic ideas all together yet again and haven’t learned a thing from it. In fact it feels like things have gotten worse. It tends to be loved for all the wrong reasons and as a result the people who dislike it continue to dismiss it as male rebellion for teenage boys. Perhaps The Social Network’s predecessor.
Zodiac-Fincher’s All the President’s Men. A film of unsatisfactory answers or probably the lack of them. That’s the point. Too many were hoping for Se7en Part 2, but it’s a far different from an older filmmaker although it’s up with Fight Club and The Social Network in terms of humor. It also has his strongest cast and that’s saying something.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo-I like this flick. I think it’s too often dismissed as unnecessary. I mean yea we already have the Swedish film, but this is still thoroughly entertaining. It looks great. It’s well made. Yea it’s sort of an ordinary mystery movie with a fascinating female character thrown in, but I still enjoy it.
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button-Could probably use a rewatch, but I still think it’s something of a Forrest Gump rehash as obvious as a criticism as that might be and perhaps an unfair criticism. Still one of those gorgeous films I’ve ever seen. It has two solid understated performances from it’s main actors and there’s plenty to like. Just not sure if this is the kind of story that Fincher is terribly interested in telling himself. I could be wrong.
The Game-Solid concept. Perfect casting for Douglas. Mostly well executed. Still not feeling the 3rd act all that much.
Panic Room-Solid concept. Memory of it is a bit of a blur. Could use a rewatch.
The first 4 I think are perfect or at the very least pretty close. Can’t wait for Gone Girl. The book taps in some pretty interesting ideas, pulpy story or not. Sadly that pulp might make some critics and worse voters dismiss it. Se7en last night. Thinking The Game tonight. Or maybe Zodiac. Or Fight Club. Now give us that 1950s crime drama with James Ellroy, Fincher. Kind of want Affleck to be nominated to shut the Batfans up who hate his casting.
I suspect if she worked for Sight & Sound magazine the reviews would be very different.
Would never. I do not refer to myself as a film critic because I am not one. I am a film advocate. If they hired me to write op-eds I would do it. The last thing I want to be is a critic. There are too many as it is.
Besides all that “so far” silliness, what is your opinion about Ben Affleck’s chance of getting a best actor nod?
I think it will depend on how much Academy members like the film. As we know Best Actor is often tied to Best Picture. If it were me I would assume he’s the fifth slot. So you go, in order of likely winners:
Keaton
Cumberbatch
Carell
Redmayne
A fifth slot that could go to David Oyelowo, Affleck, Brad Pitt, Jack O’Connell, Miles Teller, etc. It’s just crowded as hell. It being so crowded, I’m not sure Affleck can squeeze in. If they like the movie – let’s say enough for a Picture, Director, Screenplay, Actress, Editing, Cinematography, Score – we could be looking at a nod for Affleck.
Sasha. I can’t believe a major publication hasn’t snapped you up as a film reviewer. I don’t think there is anybody out there who writes as well as you do.
Thank you. I’ve been offered many jobs over the years but I have my own site so I never saw the point of writing anywhere else. The Wrap posts my reviews from Cannes.
I can’t really rank Fincher’s movies because I haven’t figured out where I would place Gone Girl yet. It might be my favorite of all of his. I am annoyed with the stupid refrain by critics that it’s not as deep as his other movies or that it’s a trifle – they only say that because we’re ALL conditioned to believe only stories about men are worthy. So Gone Girl is probably my number one – but I’m not sure. I have to rank the Reznor/Ross collaborations at the top because those are exceptional to me.
Gone Girl
Social Network
Dragon Tattoo
Benjamin Button
Fight Club
Seven
Panic Room
The Game
Zodiac
Zodiac is a glorious, brilliant film but I have always had a hard time with Jake Gyllenhall as the lead. It is BRILLIANT though.
How I rank Fincher’s Films
1. The Social Network – 2010
2. Fight Club – 1999
3. Zodiac – 2007
4. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button – 2008
5. Se7en – 1995
6. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo – 2011
7. Panic Room – 2002
8. Alien 3 – 1992
*The Game – 1997
I don’t know why, but I have never seen The Game.
Sasha, do you know how you would rank Fincher’s work?
excuse my intrusion, but if I don’t jump in and interrupt it will look like I’m copying Sasha’s list if I come along afterward.
The Social Network
Zodiac
Seven
Fight Club
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
The Game
Panic Room
there’s nothing on that list that I haven’t seen 5 times or more.
I kept chasing Alien 3 in different permutations till I found the version I like.
I’m not sure she would be able to write as freely as she does at a big publication.
Sasha. I can’t believe a major publication hasn’t snapped you up as a film reviewer. I don’t think there is anybody out there who writes as well as you do.
Sasha, do you know how you would rank Fincher’s work?
Ben Affleck’s last film won the Oscar and he has obviously become a decent film director. I am really waiting (and hoping) to see his directorial influence on David Fincher. This is sort of a film with two directors!
Sasha,
Besides all that “so far” silliness, what is your opinion about Ben Affleck’s chance of getting a best actor nod? Yes it is Amy’s story but Her husband is a very important part of that story and almost every review I read so far(oh again;) say Ben Affleck nailed it! Do you think a very well reviewed movie with great story, directing and female lead performance could carry him to nomination especially is his performance is a good one?
In my honest opinion, David Fincher is the best living American director.
Yeah, I think anyone who has been following AD for a long time {like me, pretty much the whole duration I think, including the OW days, but can’t confirm right now} ought to know how personal Sasha’s reviews tend to be. That is to say her wording comes from her gut. I suspect if she worked for Sight & Sound magazine the reviews would be very different. I’m surprised nobody has decided to pull her apart for bringing the women in film debate into her review too. I enjoyed reading the review, but am still shocked Boyhood has been toppled. 😀
What’s wrong in saying ‘so far’ this year in September. I said it would be Sasha’s best film of 2014 LAST YEAR…
I haven’t even seen the movie, and I’m declaring it the best movie of all time. So far.
Gone Girl is the the most anticipated movie I want to see in this Oscar season. So, I am not surprised that Sasha has declared it as her best film of the year. In fact, I actually expected it to – albeit for the wrong reasons. I haven’t read the book so I’llbe curious about the twists and turns of the movie. There is this key image of Amy putting creepy make-up on in the trailer that is a bit of a spoiler maybe. Will see! I love Fincher’s movies.
Dear Sasha,
That truly was one of the best reviews I’ve ever read. I was already excited to see Gone Girl having been a big Fincher fan, but the light you shed on what’s going on today in our culture makes me want to fly to New York and see it as soon as possible. Thank you.
Won’t see this for several days, but reading the reviews (very good, of course), I can’t imagine why most people would care about either of these spoiled people. Sooner or later we all figure out that the lives we see on TV and in ads are bs we’ll never afford, get real jobs at the tractor equipment company, fool around and make do. Maybe the entitled Oscar voters, who would off themselves before working at the Home Depot, or live in a small town mcmansion, will sympathize.
If people come out of the film angry about our destructive gender roles cages, as I understand that Sasha interprets the film, wonderful.
How was the editing without Kirk Baxter’s frequent collaborator, Angus Wall?
From what I have read (including Sasha’s always wonderfully written review) Pike has finally had a role where she can show her talent. It is interesting how Fincher is widely recognized as a technical wizard but in truth he has also managed to bring out fantastic performances from his actors. I wonder why the industry and many critics do not give much emphasis on this (I exclude Sasha obviously!). Mara in TGWDT. Eisenberg and Garfield in TSN. Weaver in Alien 3. Pitt, Blanchett, Swinton and Henson in TCBB. Norton, Pitt and Bonham-Carter in FC. Whenever Fincher comes out with a movie which is a success, once again the credits are many times given to the material as if he is just a minor executioner.
Fincher has so much detail in his pictures. So much intent. His shots are not paintings just for the sake of visual aesthetics. There is purpose. There is meaning. There is a point of view. Each shot is a Rubik cube that has been conceived from all possible angles and painted with a specificly thoughtout color pallet. And above all, he launches sweet, subliminal SOS alerts regarding our modern times. In this sense, I see some working method similarities between Fincher and Kubrick. The latest reviews seem to introduce a new facet in Fincher’s work. A touch of Hichcockian. I am currently listening to the complete OST just to get into the mood. Enjoy.
http://www.npr.org/2014/09/25/350948108/first-listen-trent-reznor-atticus-ross-gone-girl-motion-picture-soundtrack
Great review as always. You spoil us, Sasha. Maybe a tad too pessimistic on the republic. We’re still the best. Ugh, I can’t wait to let you guys know what I think! Other than that, only some serious 5th grade-level reading comprehension deficiencies being exhibited on an otherwise lovely thread, oh yeah, and I finally saw MAPS TO THE STARS and all I can say is that it’s the best thing I’ve seen this month…so far…there’re still five days to go.
Thanks for the spoiler warning, Sasha.
I have a plan to go see both Boyhood and Gone Girl next week. The current opening date here in the host country’s capital city for Gone Girl is also slated to be on October 3, 2014 (US time), or more accurately in our case being on October 2, 2014 (here in a Southeast Asian country); so, self-employed with my [mine] own freewill, I’m going to check out the film at noon (a downtime here due to the 9-5 office workers still being engaged [I also pray to my UFO Gods that the local students are not crazy enough for Fincher or Pike to take my best seat and help make it into a +full house]). (+I hate full-house for several reasons; I usually went out to cinema late at night, at noon or so, to avoid big crowds, the sounds of popcorn being crunched and mobile phones, smelly mouths, genius assholes who analyze it scene-by-scene to their girlfriends as it they were toddlers, crows or dolphins, etc.)
Anyway, except her major debut (a Bond film; don’t get me wrong, I think *she looked gorgeous in it, but especially when looking back, I find that it didn’t suit her talent [reading: she could have been given a meatier role]), I enjoyed *Rosamund Pike’s performances in Pride and Prejudice in particular and a few other films despite her roles in all of the latter being but the commonplace female supporting ones. So, I’m looking forward to my favorite Fincher’s dark tone and Pike’s performance, the latter being also warranted by Sasha.
—
As for Boyhood, to be blunt, the main purpose is that I’d like to prove mainly that the long journey for a decade or so was far more than a gimmick. That said, due to the fact that virtually all of the English-speaking critics and pro bloggers, as well as the online columnist Jeff Wells, reportedly have had only good/great things to say about it in general, I believe I’m in for a good ride (B- or higher in this context) when it comes.
I think Dargis’ implied critique of Pike’s performance is interesting. I thought she was the best thing about the movie, but I can see Dargis’ point, come to think of it. It didn’t detract from my initial experience of the movie though. The material is pulpy after all, so why not make it explicit?
“One of those filmmakers whose technical prowess can make the mediocrity of his material seem irrelevant (almost), Mr. Fincher is always the star of his work. His art can overwhelm characters and their stories to the point that they fade away, leaving you with meticulous staging and framing, and edits as sharp as blades.”
Dargis totally nails it here. It’s the most accurate summation of how Fincher goes about his work these days. And this is from someone who HAVE seen the movie (it was screened for the press in most of Europe prior to the US).
no worries.
This isn’t What Lies Beneath or Fatal Attraction – it isn’t that mainstream. I like both of those films, however.
This reads like it was written from Saudi Arabia – and I love that. Easy for us men to forget what women are going through.
Having read the book I feel like this is too good to be true. Flynn had me til the big twist, then nick’s previous narration made no sense. But I’m looking forward anyway. I hope the movie really is about the American Dream as this says, because that almost never happens in this genre (Fatal Attraction, What Lies Beneath, etc)
Yes, Bob, I saw that. Responding to you but deleting the link. I prefer not to link to her (totally wrong) review. It’s not a movie that everyone is going to like. Me, Sasha Stone, Fincher fan, loved the movie. And that is what this piece is about.
but not to Manohla [deleted – find it at NY Times if you care to read it]
You can fill in the “so far” if you’d like. I felt it diminished the statement. That’s just a writerly choice.
Thanks Ryan for making me laugh. We love our readers, right? But there is a modern lament that says “please hold our hand and do things absolutely correctly.” I’m not the teacher standing up in front of the class. This is what I wrote, what I think, how I feel. I’m not going to rewrite it to help you feel better. Probably this is an agenda-ladened complaint, because I haven’t seen Interstellar – you know it’s Interstellar they’re thinking will clock in as the best of 2014. And it very well might – but probably not to me. FIncher films do not come around very often, nor do Martin Scorsese and/or Stephen Spielberg – chances are if any of those three directors put out movies they will become my number 1 films of the year. Because that’s how I roll, homies. They are my favorites because when they are on their game they make better films than anyone else. For me, Boyhood is a very very tight second. After that it would be Mommy, Birdman, The Imitation Game, Mr. Turner, Whiplash, The Homesman, Rosewater…I’m sure Selma, Unbroken, Interstellar will be high on my list as well. I do not know about Fury or Into the Woods — these are movies I have no idea how they will go but there is a 99.9 chance my number 1 will remain the same through the end of the year. Just giving you fair warning.