The monthly meeting of the Mock Squid Soup film society, hosted by
Armchair Squid and
Mock! (and excited bloggers everywhere), occurs yet again!
Here were my clues:
1) Directed by someone who helmed a Harry Potter movie. Alfonso Cuaron, who was responsible for
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. And if you haven't already, definitely see
Children of Men.
2) Something about LEGOs. There was a LEGO International Space Station. I still need this. I still don't have it.
3) Matt Damon and Jessica Chastain were in similar movies, together. Yes, first as supporting characters in
Interstellar, and then enjoying Damon's hysterical hijinks in
The Martian. All three movies highly recommended.
So, I finally saw
Gravity. My sister fell asleep, but I was absolutely riveted watching it. The 2013 blockbuster was warmly received by critics and audiences alike, but it took me a couple years to catch it myself. As I assumed I would be at the time, I was impressed with the results. In it, Sandra Bullock endures a series of unfortunate events, in space (with no snarky narrator), and in the process blows up the remainder of NASA's assets (more or less), but she makes it back, darn it, and that's what counts.
I may be sounding flippant, but that's just because it makes me easier to read (hopefully). It really is a great movie, and a sad statement on the state of space exploration affairs, in which disaster really is the best we can hope for these days, as we wait for something better in the future. Fifty years ago we saw man walk on the moon, and yet in all the time since we've been slowly floating away from such ambition (if you'll, ah, pardon the allusion), with one disaster after another, in real life, curtailing the public's interest and the program's budget, one at a time. We have more nations in space than ever before (the ubiquitous box office attraction these days, China, makes a cameo in
Gravity, naturally), but all we're doing is place-holding.
It's depressing, but
Gravity, strangely, isn't. It's one of the big hits Bullock has had in recent years, a whole string of them after a long period where it seemed like she, too, had been left behind (not
quite like, say, Mark Watney, but still). Although we experience her journey far more than follow her along (she doesn't do a
ton of talking to herself), she's far more hopeful about her prospects than the grim suggestions of her fate and inexperience suggested before anyone actually saw it.
It doesn't hurt that George Clooney appears. He sat through a dry spell, too, but nowadays people kind of like him, and for good reason.
Another space movie you should probably see is
Moon, in which Sam Rockwell discovers there's more to him than he knows (heh). The proliferation of astronaut movies in recent years, regardless of their subject matter, has been very good to see for someone like me whose childhood was filled in part by fantasies of going into space. Even if everything
does go wrong, we've done enough so that we aren't completely lost. I'd call that hopeful enough to think the future still looks bright.
Now, going back to
Gravity itself, this is a prime example of filmmaking at its finest, a director firmly in control of his craft, not needing anything more than a relatively simple subject, two characters, and for considerable periods of time not even needing either of them to speak. Survival cinema (
Cast Away,
All Is Lost,
The Revenant) isn't even where I would classify
Gravity. I'm of the school where if I'm going to be impressed with a movie, it's because there is something sensational about it, not so much special effects (because at this point any movie can do something flashy with that and not necessarily stand out
because of them), but simpler things like dialogue (though, oddly, I've never really cottoned to someone like Aaron Sorkin, who's supposed to be the Greek god of banter; my examples from
The West Wing and
The Social Network suggest he's better at having characters bandy about talking points but never really getting anywhere, with the ambiguity not so much being an asset as an indicator that, really, Sorkin has nothing to say, which is to say, I'll always be more of a Tarantino guy, who builds entire scenes of seemingly inconsequential conversation to speak volumes about the characters involved) or how something is shot (which is why Orson Welles
is the Greek god of cinematography).
And the mastery Cuaron displays in
Gravity is different from the splendid tracking shot that is
Birdman (Cuaron, it should be remembered, still holds the mark for tracking shots in the aforementioned
Children of Men; seriously, if you haven't watched it, what are you waiting for?), in that following Bullock in her dilemma is totally different from following Damon in his during
The Martian. We aren't given any prelude material, but rather we're dropped right into the midst of the crisis. A lot of viewers have assumed that Bullock is simply incompetent, but the disaster began before she had to deal with it, virtually on her own. Clooney talks her through the early panic, but most people would panic in that situation. It should be noted that Clooney in fact sacrifices himself to save her. That's a completely different mindset from the one we follow. Because Bullock
does settle down, and figures out how to survive, just like Damon.
Like
Apollo 13, this is all about damage control. And maybe it
is metaphor, but it's also about resilience and trusting the systems that have been set in place around you. By the time Bullock is hurtling to earth, we're once again in that scenario where we kind of expect to see her happy ending through to conclusion. Except the conclusion isn't always what we expect. When
Cast Away settled on Tom Hanks and Helen Hunt
not happily reconciling, it tainted the whole movie's legacy, so that the only thing people remember about it now is Wilson. Which is fine, but it's also basically exactly the same as
The Martian, all things considered, or half of
Robinson Crusoe. I've suggested elsewhere that Matt Damon essentially
becomes Tom Hanks in
The Martian. I mean, I like it, think it was one of 2015's true pleasures.
But
Gravity is better. Maybe not for everyone. I mean, as a spectacle, because we
love spectacles, it is, but I think more people would happily rewatch
The Martian than
Gravity, just as fewer people are willing to give
Interstellar its due, much less something like
Tree of Life, which is like
2001: A Space Odyssey, but a million times better.
Which, by the way, is what I'd also say of
Oz the Great and Powerful over
The Wizard of Oz. The China Girl is a thousand times more fulfilling than the Scarecrow. James Franco, who fits this material better than, say, the horrid mess that was
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, makes a better career statement than Judy Garland connecting with "Somewhere Over the Rainbow." And that's cinematic heresy for you right there. But what are you going to do?
As an art statement,
Gravity is exactly in the direction film
should be going, letting great filmmakers make great films. Not comfortable films. Not small intimate films or big historical dramas. We've latched onto Star Wars because it reached further than any big idea had gone before, and did it in as simple a way as it could, given the circumstances. George Lucas had previously made
American Graffiti, the cultural predecessor to
Happy Days. So basically Luke Skywalker is Richie Cunningham and Han Solo is the Fonz, and the
Millennium Falcon is a set of hot wheels. Pure and simple.
Gravity is pure and simple, but it's also big and complex. If we're not exactly looking like we're making progress in space anymore, or as a culture in general, if you want to be expansive about it, this is a film that says all is not as bad as it looks. We follow Bullock home. Pure and simple. And we let the character worry about the rest. Because the rest belongs to us, not in the sense that we will use our imaginations concerning what happens next, but we in all our seemingly stagnant progress will have something else to experience tomorrow, even if all the important pieces of the story, of history, have already happened, all the International Space Stations and Chinese units gone. But not forgotten.
That's our advantage. Our wonderful, terrible, inspiring, limiting, source of all our abilities. Memory. Like gravity. It's an anchor. It brings us home every time.