‘Seabiscuit’ inspiring, emotional success
Don’t forget to bring tissues. That’s my advice if you choose to see
“Seabiscuit,” writer/director Gary Ross’ new film that chronicles the
true story of three underdogs who banded together with an undersize
horse, Seabiscuit, defied the odds and earned themselves the 1938
award for Horse of the Year. No film in recent memory has so deftly
pushed the emotional buttons of its audience. “Seabiscuit” doesn’t
have a cynical bone in its body and it makes a genuinely inspiring
comment on the triumph of the human spirit.
In a summer of mindless, would-be blockbusters that audiences have
wisely turned their backs on, it’s refreshing to see a movie place
its stock in characters. Viewers respond to people, not situations;
characters, not plot. When plot serves character, then a movie begins
to have a pulse. “Seabiscuit” eschews conventional structure and
bravely dedicates its first act to introducing you to its three main
characters: Red Pollard (Tobey Maguire), Charles Howard (Jeff
Bridges) and Tom Smith (Chris Cooper.)
Pollard, a teenager when we meet him, watches the stock market
crash of 1929 destroy his family, reducing his intellectual father to
a peasant and causing the family to give Pollard up to a wealthier
man who’s willing to develop his jockeying skills. Pollard ends up
losing his vision in one eye after a tepid prize-fighting career.
Howard, a successful automobile entrepreneur, enters the
horseracing game to fill the void left by the tragic death of his
young son and the wife who left him soon after. Smith is a taciturn
“horse whisperer” who is more comfortable with animals than with
other people.
Then there’s Seabiscuit, a horse who was bred to race, but was
considered to small and wild to be tamed, and endured years of abuse
as an owner “tried to beat the wildness out of her.”
Although Ross tends to steam roll through these early scenes to
keep the pace moving, I must give him kudos for so efficiently
conveying such a huge amount of information with images. Ross doesn’t
rely on dialogue to do the heavy lifting.
I especially enjoyed Cooper’s early scenes that show the slow
invasion of technology and progress in the old west. At first, we see
Cooper’s character, Smith, wrangling horses on the open plains of the
old west, free and self-sufficient. Soon after, he encounters a
barbed wire fence that protects the new automobile highway that now
crisscrosses nature -- and you know his life will never be the same
again. Later, we see him on a train, poor and unemployed, forced into
a world where money determines status and the open country he loves
is being bought and sold in squares.
Ross renders his characters as puzzle pieces that slowly learn
they fit together. Pollard is without a father, Howard is without a
son -- slowly they come to know each other.
Some of the more breathtaking aspects of “Seabiscuit” are the
races themselves. They are, in my opinion, more suspenseful and
harrowing than watching Neo battle 100 agent Smiths in “The Matrix
Reloaded,” because you care about the characters.
Ross even knows how to play against expectation. He builds up the
tension at the beginning of a race sequence by showing a man about to
press the starting bell. When he does, you expect the race to jump
start, instead, Ross begins a montage of real black and white photos
depicting Americans sitting by their radios in 1938, riveted to details of the race. It’s a touching reminder that the story is true
and that it single-handedly transfixed and inspired a nation 65 years
ago. Finally, Ross gives you the race in all its frenetic glory.
“Seabiscuit” does have flaws. The dialogue is often painfully on
the nose. When Smith says, “You don’t throw away a life just because
it’s been banged up a little,” it’s effective. When it’s repeated a
few more times, it begins to feel like a sledgehammer.
I question a sequence that appears to suggest that Pollard senses
something tragic has happened to his beloved horse in another side of
the country. This is not a movie about emotional telepathy. And the
development of Howard’s second wife, Marcela (Elizabeth Banks), feels
like it was left on the cutting room floor. Banks gives a fine
performance, but as it stands, she falls flat and is a criminally
underused asset.
If not for the fact that “Seabiscuit” depicts events that actually
occurred, you would scarcely believe they could happen. This story of
Seabiscuit was a no-brainer, and has been given the treatment it
deserves.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 30, is working toward his master’s degree in
screenwriting from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
‘Lara Croft’ sequel is weak and lame
Considering how Hollywood has botched screenplays based on very
rich material (“Interview with a Vampire” and “Midnight in the Garden
of Good and Evil” are a couple that come to mind), what hope is there
for an engaging plot based on a video game, especially a second time
around?
After viewing “Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life,” I
conclude the producers and writers of this dud must have found no
useable content related to the game itself and instead appropriated
elements of several well-known adventure, spy and martial arts
movies. It’s worth noting the attributed writers of this mess are
associated with such bombs as “Judge Dredd” and “Hudson Hawk.” They
are not improving with practice.
The thin plot line centers on the discovery of a temple built by
Alexander the Great. Buried beneath the sea centuries ago, the temple
is breached by an earthquake as the film opens. Treasure hunters,
including Lara Croft (Angelina Jolie), rush to the site.
Croft finds a glowing orb that is immediately stolen from her by
murderous rival scavengers. As is revealed later, the orb turns out
to be a map to the Cradle of Life, the resting place of Pandora’s
box. The mere fact the audience is supposed to make this leap in
logic is indicative of the lameness of the plot.
Pandora’s box is coveted by the requisite “mad” scientist, Nobel
Prize-winner Jonathan Reiss (Ciaran Hinds) who plans to market the
relic to international terrorists. Reiss’ plan is for the plague
contained in the box to wipe out most of the earth’s population while
he decides who survives by judiciously dispensing the antidote to
people “worthy” of being saved.
One positive element of the film is Jolie’s portrayal of Croft, a
combination Sherlock Holmes, James Bond, Indiana Jones and Bruce Lee.
Jolie comes across as sufficiently upper crust and more than handles
the physical demands of the part. Croft turns up in the most
challenging situations amusingly dressed in the proper designer
apparel with no luggage in evidence.
Gerard Butler plays Terry Sheridan, a former British commando
turned traitor who is sprung from prison to accompany Croft on this
adventure. Sheridan is supposed to be some kind of romantic interest,
but the character as written has no appeal for someone of Croft’s
breeding and station.
“Lara Croft II” is really let down by ridiculous action sequences
and surprisingly bad special effects. Anyone would die a hundred
times over if subjected to the number of punches, kicks, falls,
explosions and bullets from which Croft emerges relatively unscathed.
Jolie supposedly performs many of her own stunts, and her physicality
is admirable. Unfortunately, her hard work is wasted in mostly hard
to believe, cartoon-like confrontations with the bad guys.
There are many summer action movies better than “Lara Croft II,”
including “Pirates of the Caribbean” and “Terminator 3.” If you only
want to see one or possibly two such films this summer, I suggest
skipping this one.
* VAN NOVACK, 50, is the director of institutional research at Cal
State Long Beach and lives in Huntington Beach with his wife,
Elizabeth.
“Blonde 2” will make you pull your hair out
Reese Witherspoon returns as brainy bombshell Elle Woods in the
comedy “Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde.” Having conquered
Harvard, Elle is now a rising young lawyer at a great firm, balancing
her demanding career with preparations for her wedding to the man of
her dreams.
Unfortunately, Witherspoon’s eyes can’t gleam as brightly as her
teeth over the harebrained plot and poor script by novice scribe Kate
Kondell. Any meaningful or at least interesting issues (adoptee
rights, animal testing and even homosexual pets) get glossed over in
favor of what at times becomes more “pet movie” than a “Reese
vehicle.”
While planning her wedding, Elle hires a private investigator to
discover the location of her dog Bruiser’s birthmother, so that,
logically, she can invite her to the wedding (I guess she didn’t care
about the father.) Adult adoptees would applaud Hollywood for taking
notice of their rights, if they weren’t also being insulted in the
same regard by having their issues represented by a rat-sized canine.
Once Elle’s investigator comes through with the impossible and
ludicrous task, she discovers that Bruiser’s mom is a test animal for
cosmetics. Outraged, Elle goes to Washington to take matters into her
own French-manicured hands. The film also stars Bob Newhart, Sally
Field, Luke Wilson, Bruce McGill, Dana Ivey, Jennifer Coolidge,
Alanna Ubach, Jessica Cauffiel and Regina King.
Suffering from the same condition that befalls most sequels,
“Blonde 2” is derivative, rehashing bits and pieces of the original
to produce an occasional laugh. The ease in which Elle gets a bill
accepted is meant to be inspiring, and perhaps it will be to a
handful of young observers/future politicians, but the unrealistic
simplicity that this film embraces, for me, was maddening.
One bright spot was seeing Field and Newhart. However, the words
they were forced to say were either vastly predictable or mundane.
Director, Charles Herman-Wurmfeld (Kissing Jessica Stein) can’t be
faulted for trying. Technically, the film moves along at a
justifiable pace and amuses, though the first 30 minutes of the film
are seemingly wasted justifying Elle’s going to Washington.
Unfortunately for itself, it is the second film and not the first.
Audiences with fair memories of the first film will be bored of
this retread. The only thing missing from this desperate search for
laughs were bloopers during the credits.
* RAY BUFFER, 33, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over
artist.
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