Big Fish
Rental
We're all accustomed to Tim Burton making quirky, interesting movies.
Well, this movie is quirky and interesting, but yet, if you didn't
know it was Tim Burton, you never would guess it, besides the
meticulous construction of the fictional world inside the head of
hero Ed Bloom. But Burton's usual skill with whimsy and spirit is
dampened in this film; the surreality has no heart, no aim. The
unfocused quality of the story gives me pause. I tried to find
meaning within the methods of the intricate web of back stories and
meandering tall tales and apply them to the present-day plot line
involving Bill Crudup. Perhaps we are supposed to follow Crudup's
character's growth and discovery ourselves, but much of the time I
felt locked out. It's a romantic fiction, an adventure, and a quirky
character comedy, with a warm, glowing center, but it takes far more
than three licks to get to the center of this treat.
Big Fish is two movies: a fantastical story of Bloom, a glowing, soft
focus small town hero, a big fish in a small pond who talks his way
into an unbelievably spectacular and interesting life, including
winning his Dulcinea through chivalric labors. In this world, Ewan
is young Bloom, and Alison Lohman is his heart's desire. In the
other movie, Crudup knows his grandstanding father only as old, loud
Albert Finney and his mother as indulgent Jessica Lange, normal
people whose only peculiarity is Finney's tendency to tap dance
behind a wall of fiction and not get close to anyone (and usurp all
attention for himself).
The two movies do not marry until the very end, in a swirling
maelstrom of conclusion and resolution that mostly satisfies, but we
ambled so far and wide getting here, I can't say I fully enjoyed the
trip. I say mostly satisfies, in that we never know where the
stories ended and the man began - we, as well as Crudup, are forced
to accept Bloom as he is. The physical and acting perfection of the
cross-generational casting of Lohman and Lange in particular was
spooky and stunning, as was that of McGregor and Finney.
Episodically, the featured moments of Bloom's life are diverting,
interesting, and hold your interest, but they do not feed the story
or build any sense of character, of any of the participants or their
witnesses. Helena Bonham Carter is used as usual as a freaky funky
side character, tying together plotlines in a logic-defying turn.
All the performances are as convincing as they can be, Finney's in
particular; it is sometimes hard to see why Crudup would have such
trouble connecting with this man, but as soon as Crudup finds his
closure, we realize old Bloom had nothing to offer us as he seemed to
do in the beginning. Watching this movie is like trying to recall a
memory dancing at the edge of your mind.
--
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These reviews (c) 2003 Karina Montgomery. Please feel free to
forward but credit the reviewer in the text. Thanks. You can
check out previous reviews at:
http://www.cinerina.com and http://ofcs.rottentomatoes.com - the
Online Film Critics Society
http://www.hsbr.net/reviews/karina/listing.hsbr - Hollywood Stock
Exchange Brokerage Resource
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