Well-acted ‘Hours’ worth the time; ‘Guy’ wastes its time
‘The Hours’ takes on difficult issues
Who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf? Not Michael Cunningham, whose 1998
Pulitzer Prize-winning novel “The Hours” intertwines the lives of
three women separated by generations and geography, but touched by
Virginia Woolf’s novel “Mrs. Dalloway.”
Not screenwriter David Hare or director Stephen Daldry, who
together took on Cunningham’s distinctly literary novel that no one
imagined could be turned into a movie and created an engaging,
provocative and intelligent film.
And certainly not Nicole Kidman, who plays real-life author
Virginia Woolf in the film with such conviction that she’s garnered a
Golden Globe and now an Academy Award nomination for her powerful
performance.
In “The Hours,” as Woolf (Kidman) is writing her revolutionary
novel and struggling with mental illness, the demure, almost
invisible Laura Brown (Julianne Moore), a 1950s L.A. housewife, is
reading the finished novel and battling her miscast matriarchal role.
Fifty years later, Manhattan book editor Clarissa Vaughan (Meryl
Streep) is arranging a party for her ex-lover, now dying of AIDS, who
has nicknamed her “Mrs. Dalloway.”
From the very beginning, intricate interweaving of subtle and
parallel connections between the three storylines -- flowers placed
simultaneously in vases -- capture the viewers curiosity and
emphasize the similarities among the three women.
As Virginia Woolf writes her first sentence, “Mrs. Dalloway said
she would buy the flowers herself,” Clarissa Vaughan avows that she
too will buy the flowers herself. So when Woolf exclaims “I am living
a life I have no wish to live. How did this happen?” we realize that
each woman touched by the novel will reexamine her life’s
significance.
As in Woolf’s novel, in which a single day in June is spent with
Clarissa Dalloway, a single day is spent with the film’s three main
characters. Hour by hour, we learn more about each woman’s life:
Woolf’s fight against inner voices; Brown’s feelings of inadequacy as
a mother; and Vaughan’s valiant effort as a weary caretaker.
Hour by hour, the turmoil hidden beneath the calm surface is
revealed.
And as the hours pass, we begin to understand what Woolf and
Cunningham, as authors, tried to convey in their novels: to find
beauty and poetry in each and every day.
Magnificently written and acted, “The Hours” tackles difficult
themes such as elusive emotions, feminism and suicidal depression
with respect and restraint, which allows the audience to reflect long
after the credits have rolled.
* JULIE LOWRANCE is a Costa Mesa resident who works at a Newport
Beach overnight aircraft advertising agency.
Talent in ‘How to Lose a Guy’ wastes effort
“How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days” is a cute title and, as the movie
progresses, it does exactly that -- it loses the guy along with the
rest of the audience.
Andie Anderson (Kate Hudson) works for fashion magazine
“Composure” as their “How To” girl. She wants more literary freedom
to pick her subjects and suggests to her editor, Lana (Bebe
Neuwirth), during a staff meeting that she would like a subject with
more substance.
With help from the rest of the staff, they fashion a bet that if
she can attract a guy and then cause him to dump her within 10 days
(she’ll use the behavior her friend uses to inadvertently drive men
away), Andie can have some latitude with picking her assignments and
she will accomplish three things: Have her article for this month,
display to her friend how not to drive men away and earn herself a
promotion. The guy must be at the party tonight so that all of them
can select him.
On the opposite team, we have Ben (Matthew McConaughey). This is
Ben’s big introduction into this muddle. Ben works for an advertising
agency whose leader (Robert Klein) will assign a huge diamond account
based on the outcome of a bet between Ben, a motorcycle-riding,
raconteur whose modus operandi is a one-night stand, and two
beautiful co-workers, Spears and Green (Michael Michele and Sharon
Harlow). The bet is that Ben must meet a woman for the first time at
tonight’s party and court her for 10 days, and she will fall in love
with him. By Sunday, 10 days from today, Ben will show up at the
diamond extravaganza with her on his arm.
Possibly, there is a way to make this nonsense amusing, but it
presents itself as a running example of basically funny vignettes so
outlandish that the humor is in the premise -- not the execution.
Some of the pranks that are designed to drive a man away are not
believable. Would a guy, at the end of the fourth quarter of a
championship basketball game, with the score depending on a free
throw, go get his girlfriend a Coke? How about when he takes it back,
it’s the wrong kind and he has to do it all over again? Nope, me
neither. How about letting her have a key she filched from the
manager? No? Not likely. There are a few more equally incredulous
stunts, but they are done deftly and are very funny.
The thing is, these are talented people with a good strong
supporting cast and they have made a movie that demeans their talent
and leaves me questioning their ability to choose a vehicle. Or maybe
it’s written into their contract. Anyway, how bad can it be with all
that beauty and talent?
* JOAN ANDRE is a Newport Beach resident who does a lot of
volunteer work.
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