SnoBorderZero
CS! Silver
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 17,626
Likes: 3,182
Location:
Last Online Nov 24, 2024 17:07:20 GMT -5
|
Post by SnoBorderZero on Oct 12, 2017 23:57:23 GMT -5
Every year we mark our calendars in excited anticipation of the year's biggest releases. We eagerly daydream about the new Star Wars, or Blade Runner, or Spider-Man and are even more delighted when these massive properties turn out to be as good as they have been. And yet every year, especially as we creep closer towards the end of it, one or two little films come seemingly out of nowhere, whether it's an American indie or a foreign import, that blows us away and reminds us that often times the most innovative and sincere works aren't always the ones receiving the most attention. I can say with certainty that if there's only one smaller film this year that can boast being a small packaged knockout, it's Sean Baker's The Florida Project. I found myself entranced by the film's breezy, neorealist approach and the genuine depiction of people you don't think about and certainly don't want to be. The Florida Project is a film made with expert craftsmanship and an unobtrusive style that alternates between the pure bliss of being a child and the horrible realities faced by America's lowest denominators. While the film's subject matter and trashy characters aren't going to be universally triumphed or admired, The Florida Project is a rare work of art that is completely engaging from start to finish and will leave no one unaffected by its heavy themes and brilliant performances by its cast. The film centers around six-year-old Moonee (Brooklynn Prince), who lives in a dumpy motel on the outskirts of Disney World. During the summer, Moonee and her ragtag group of mischievous friends spend most of their time around the complex stirring up trouble, destroying property, and hustling for ice cream. Moonee's mother Halley (Bria Vinaite) is a former stripper who has no legal prospects for bringing money into their lives and, despite adoring her daughter, is as poor a role model that a child could have. Attempting to wrangle in all of the questionable residents at the motel, aptly named The Magic Castle, is property manager Bobby (Willem Dafoe), a levelheaded guy whose backstory we unfortunately don't get much of but is well respected by his tenants despite his best efforts at cleaning the dump up. The Florida Project certainly has a plot, but it's very free flowing and harkens to the style of the Italian neorealist filmmakers who were more interested in depicting slices of life than dramatic narratives. For most of the film we follow Moonee, and Baker's vignette-like approach to the narrative perfectly compliments the sporadic adventures of his young protagonist as we sift from one spontaneous moment to the next. It's highly effective, and I found myself so wrapped up in the little going-ons within the motel that I hardly noticed very little was occurring in terms of traditional narrative. It's difficult not to get swept up in Moonee's devious adventures and carefree attitude. There's a childish voyeurism here that's brilliantly fun escapism despite the crummy surroundings and lifestyle that Moonee is being subjected to. Perhaps the greatest achievement of The Florida Project is how genuine all of it feels. I'd have to guess that a lot of scenes are pure improv, on-the-fly moments, especially with Moonee and her friends. None of the film feels particularly staged aside from the larger plot points, and Baker does a phenomenal job of capturing an authentic portrayal of the mannerisms and hyperactive fun of being a young child. While the element of being so close to Disney World is never a main focal point of the film, Baker is constantly hinting at all of his characters dreaming of something better for themselves, but instead of the Magic Kingdom will always have to settle for the realities of the Magic Castle. But despite The Florida Project being packed with grim subject matter and moments that are heart wrenching to observe, with Moonee as our free spirited and absolutely delightful protagonist, life at the Magic Castle doesn't seem so bad. Nothing seems to get Moonee down, and Baker has tapped into what many great filmmakers before him have done in depicting difficult scenarios through the blissful eyes of a child that can watch the follies of adults with an innocent ignorance. And yet Baker avoids one of the most frustrating archetypes in cinema: the child genius. The kid that's got a snappy retort to everything and is constantly pointing out what the adults aren't getting right. You'll find none of that nonsense here. Even if there's not a single character in the film other than Dafoe's Bobby that you aspire to be, you can't claim that any of these bunch of lowlifes aren't authentically portrayed. There's a lot to admire about The Florida Project. Like with his previous film Tangerine, Baker utilizes an iPhone to get certain shots and has a terrific sense of where to place the camera and when to hold the camera on his characters. The camera often sits at eye level with Moonee when she's surrounded by adults, keeping us with her and her perspective while the adults attempt to sort of their messes. Baker utilizes improv a lot in the film, and as a result elicits the most realistic interactions among children I've ever seen in a film. There's a beautiful spontaneity to the film that wraps the viewer up. Days and nights flow into each other, and narrative becomes unimportant amidst the breezy flow of events that the film comprises itself of. This is 2017's little film with knockout power, bolstered by a magnificent turn by Brooklynn Prince as Moonee and Willem Dafoe as Bobby. The Florida Project is a tremendous cinematic accomplishment, a grim crowd pleaser, and the rare film that takes risks and shies away from conventional storytelling techniques only to see all of these decisions pay off with resounding results. 9/10
|
|
Dracula
CS! Gold
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 26,105
Likes: 5,732
Location:
Member is Online
|
Post by Dracula on Oct 29, 2017 10:34:47 GMT -5
The Florida Project(10/23/2017)
When I was a kid my family was never overly prone to family vacations, but one year when I was about eleven we did go on the customary Orlando trip that most American families need to make at least once. However, me being me, I had little interest in actually going to Disney World given my belief that Disney was for babies. For me the big attraction was Universal Studios Florida, where I had a blast. As a child the name “Orlando” seemed like some kind of wonderland that had wall to wall fun stuff everywhere and I could only help but be jealous of whatever kid lived in such a place. Needless to say, I was rather oblivious of the fact that the city of Orlando actually had the reputation of being something of a tacky dump outside of its theme parks. It’s simple economics really, it’s something of a one-industry town and people have little reason to live there unless they’re working at a theme park and that isn’t necessarily a very high paying job. As such you’re left with a city that’s dependent on a significant unskilled workforce but also desperate to hide them away from the tourists. It’s this hidden side of the “magic kingdom” which is at the center of the new film The Florida Project.
The film is set at a cheap motel near Disney World which, during the offseason, has come to be a long term home for a variety of disenfranchised people with nowhere else to live. We focus our attention on a young girl named Moonee (Brooklynn Prince) and her mother Halley (Bria Vinaite). The film is told largely but not exclusively from Moonee’s perspective and it doesn’t spend a lot of time explaining how Halley came to be in this situation, but it’s not hard to connect the dots. Halley can’t be much older than 20 and she’s tatted up, talks like the “cash me ousside” girl, and doesn’t seem to have much in the way of long term plans. She gets all her money through a variety of rackets and the hotel’s manager Bobby (Willem Dafoe) is increasingly having his patience tested by her reckless behavior and often late “rent” payments. However, Moonee is largely oblivious to these adult concerns and not particularly aware of how “ratchet” her surroundings are. Instead she spends most of her time playing with a couple of other children staying at these motels like her friends Jancey (Valeria Cotto) and Scooty (Christopher Rivera).
The Florida Project is director Sean Baker’s follow up to his 2015 film Tangerine, which looked at a few days in the lives of a pair of transsexual prostitutes in Los Angeles. While The Florida Project looks at characters that are straighter and whiter than those of his previous film but both films share an interest in showing the lives of the people who are normally ignored by society. Here he’s looking at people who would not even be called “working class” exactly as many of them aren’t even working and if they are it’s in highly transient minimum wage jobs. Halley in particular feels like she could have been a character in last year’s Andrea Arnold film American Honey; she is young, not terribly well educated, exudes sexuality, and seems to be rebelling because the alternative is to become some kind of pathetic housewife. In Arnold’s movie that kind of behavior seemed somewhat harmless, but unlike the characters in that movie Halley is a mother and that means she’s dragging a small child into her web of dysfunction. However, Moonee does not seem to constantly be in abject danger and she’s actually pretty well adjusted to her environment. Much of the film is told from her perspective and you can sort of nostalgically relate to a lot of the regular kid stuff she does even if she is in a different situation and occasionally behaves in rather unrefined ways.
Outside of Moonee and Halley the main figure of the film is Willem Dafoe’s hotel manager Bobby, who has the rather tricky task of playing someone who clearly has some respect for the various tenants of the hotel even though they test his patience at times and is helpful to them in some ways even though he is in other ways complicit in their exploitation. There is an element of suspense around his character in that the audience wants to like him for a variety of reasons but they’re also constantly weary that he’ll disappoint them. Sean Baker never does end up judging him one way or another and a big part of the film’s success is that it never judges any of the other characters either even though it doesn’t shy away from their less flattering characteristics. The movie is not interested in lecturing its audience about the causes of income inequality and while there are some bad people in the movie there are no true villains that it places the blame for any of the troubles on. Instead it wants to simply be this empathetic and in some ways actually kind of funny look at the lives of the characters in this particular time and place.
Sean Baker’s previous film, Tangerine, was famously filmed using a (modified) iPhone but still looked great and perhaps took on an added energy through the use of its unconventional medium. Working with a bigger budget this time around Baker is now actually shooting on 35mm but is once again working in a rather colorful (both literally and figuratively) location and has maintained the vibrancy. The film may confound some audiences looking for a movie with more of a traditional narrative with a three act structure and characters with more of a clear motivation. This is not to say that it’s a completely formless movie by any means and compared to many arthouse films it’s downright conventional. There is a clear ending that it is building towards but that isn’t always clear when you’re watching it and the movie definitely goes against convention by including a lot of scenes that exist more to fill in the world than to advance a plot. That could hurt its commercial prospects and so could it’s rather unusual title, which sounds like a codename that no one bothered to change, but it’s definitely a movie that’s worth checking out for its energy, its wit, and it’s willingness to look at a world that generally goes unexamined.
****1/2 out of Five
|
|
Neverending
CS! Platinum
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 65,783
Likes: 8,648
Location:
Last Online Nov 24, 2024 23:39:06 GMT -5
|
Post by Neverending on Oct 29, 2017 12:32:03 GMT -5
Disney World isn’t technically in Orlando. It’s its own city named Celebration. Orlando’s primary industry is tech. All those engineers that keep those theme parks running have spawned into various businesses. Trying to portray the city as some sort of ghetto is kinda silly. Orlando is more middle class than other major cities in Florida.
|
|
Dracula
CS! Gold
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 26,105
Likes: 5,732
Location:
Member is Online
|
Post by Dracula on Oct 29, 2017 14:56:15 GMT -5
Disney World isn’t technically in Orlando. It’s its own city named Celebration. Orlando’s primary industry is tech. All those engineers that keep those theme parks running have spawned into various businesses. Trying to portray the city as some sort of ghetto is kinda silly. Orlando is more middle class than other major cities in Florida. The movie technically takes place in Kissimmee, if that makes a difference.
|
|
Deexan
CS! Silver
Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 18,196
Likes: 2,995
Location:
Last Online Nov 13, 2021 19:23:59 GMT -5
|
Post by Deexan on Nov 17, 2017 1:38:40 GMT -5
Powerful ish.
|
|