• _Black Widow_ revisited

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 5 22:30:13 2021
    A second viewing of _Black Widow_ only reinforces my admiration of
    the visual elegance in the film's quiet Ohio moments. A brownish
    dusk look dominates the palette, but instead of the David Fincher-
    style ugly greenish brown, the interior settings of _Black Widow_
    have a lovely, penetrating look, complementing the lush but late-Fall
    outdoor color scheme to foreshadow the end of a rustic paradise.
    When focusing on the characters though, cinematographer Gabriel
    Beristain uses a very shallow focus lense that blurs the background
    into a gauzy haze, as if to emphasize that the backstory of these
    Russian implants are obscure even to themselves. When the film
    moves to Norway, Morocco, and Budapest, the lighting is much
    harsher, like a dose of reality. The broken down apartments
    and decrepit soviet helicopters there give the film much of its
    charm (and are what you'd expect of director Cate Shortland),
    but the shallow focal length on the characters remains almost
    until the end.

    The globe trotting pace reminds us of James Bond movies, and indeed
    _Moonraker_ is a touchstone; Natasha streams it in her trail in
    Norway. Bond films used to alternate between glitzy and grimy,
    each installment overcorrecting the last. _Black Widow_ is
    more _For Your Eyes Only_ (with its Eastern European overtones)
    than _Moonraker_, but perhaps Shortland is having an inside joke
    and lampooning the _Moonraker_-like, over-the-top skystation
    destruction at the end of the film? If so, is Olga Kurylenko's
    robot-hybrid the answer to the Bond film's Jaw?

    Rachel Weisz's calm, slow-eyed depiction of a scientist is such
    a contrast with her spirited philosopher Hypatia in _Agora_. Both
    are amazing though, and Weisz must have relished her moments as
    a dressed-up assassin at the end of the film. I am sure she
    has never taken on such physical, aggressive roles in her
    storied career. Glad to see so many great actresses get to
    become action heroes, like Jessica Chastain in _Ava_! Speaking
    of which -- the newsreel elision/explication of large chunks
    of back stories over opening credits seem to be a standard in
    action films now, but is put too especially sombering use in
    _Black Widow_.

    I am sure it takes little training for Weisz to affect an
    East European accent, given her Austro-Hungarian heritage.
    The other members of her fake family wear their accents and
    slow delivery well too. David Harbour's pot-bellied Alexei
    is a good comic relief, and Florence Pugh seems to take five
    seconds before each emotional response. They interact with
    an intoxicating rhythm, miles from the smart-alecky tone found
    in other comic book hero films. Pugh and Harbour really have
    amazing chemistry. I suspect their characters share an aversion
    to showering too! Weisz has a lovely line describing their
    family reunion as clinging, needy, and overly emotional -- it
    is so in-character.

    That leaves Natasha as the outlier of this family. Granted
    Johansson's character does not grow up in the East, and even
    the young version (played as a blue-haired rebel by Ever
    Anderson, Milla Jovovich's daughter who is already a better
    actress than her mother) is a fireball not given to hesitation.
    But Natasha just does not have the weight of character that her
    fake-family share. She seems to change with the weather,
    there is no core, no soul, to her existence. Maybe this is
    unfair -- I haven't seen the other nine and a half Avenger
    movies, maybe the fans can see in her something constant.
    But good actors do research and fill in their characters'
    backstories; props help them create distinctive personalities
    too (like Russian accents in this case). In a way it is
    Shortland's failure not to achieve this with Natasha,
    although it may be hard to correct the lazy habit of
    someone who is also the film's executive producer. But
    this problem with Johansson is even more prominent in
    the ridiculously overhyped _Under the Skin_. One moment
    she is a stone-faced killer impervious to weather, the
    next scene she is a little girl scared of the cold. That
    is just bad movie-directing, but the actor surely can
    do better too.

    For all those faults, _Black Widow_ is clearly the best
    of the superhero films I've seen, bar none. I hope it
    wins its share of awards.

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