• "George and Tammy"

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Thu Sep 7 19:46:54 2023
    When I saw Jessica Chastain in _The Tree of Life_, _Zero Dark Thirty_,
    and her interviews on Charlie Rose 10+ years ago, I knew that this
    is a person without a ceiling. Anyone could have seen the greatness
    in her. Everything I ever knew and cared about acting, I learned from
    studying her work. She played a huge role in reviving my interest in
    cinema.

    Yet I am still left speechless by her staggering achievements of the
    last few years: the Oscar-winning _The Eyes of Tammy Faye_, the
    underrated _The Good Doctor_, the reboot of Ingmar Bergman's "Scenes
    from a Marriage," her Broadway triumph _A Doll's House_, and finally
    the miniseries "George and Tammy." On top of that, both "Tammy"s
    are released under her own Freckle label (as is _The 355_ which is
    so much better than the inexplicably awards-winning bastardization
    of _Dune_). The enforced Covid interruptions seemed to have
    rejuvenated her. How Chastain can ever top these glory years? But
    I'd hate to be the one betting against her.

    "George and Tammy" could also be titled "Scenes from a Marriage,"
    but the contrast between the two cannot be more stark. "Scenes"
    is like a 5-act stage play, thrives on continuity, long scenes,
    the two leads Chastain and Oscar Isaac transforming, revealing,
    re-inventing themselves as each hour-long episode unfold. It
    is a paragon of brilliant acting; Chastain's character, in
    particular, is always pretending to be something she is not,
    acting/bluffing her way through adversity to gain an edge. The
    series is cerebral, like a murder mystery at times.

    In contrast, "George and Tammy," based on their daughter's memoir,
    does not dwell on narration; it has a backstory only too familiar
    to country music fans. So it focuses on the greatest hits and the
    lowest lowlights of the star-crossed relationship between Tammy
    Wynette (Chastain) George Jones (Michael Shannon), letting the
    viewer (and some flimsy dialogue connective tissue) to fill in
    the blanks. It is impressionist and intensely emotional. There
    is hardly anything you'd call "acting" here. Both lead characters
    wear their heart on their sleeves; Chastain and Shannon simply
    embody these deeply flawed people to the last fiber of their
    ultra-expressive, larger-than-life beings. Their searing,
    soul-baring work is inspiring and devastating to watch -- even
    for someone like me who knows nothing about country music.
    (The Wikipedia rides to the rescue a little bit ...) Theirs
    are truly epic performances, going through more emotions in each
    episodes than most actors render in a life time. The supporting
    cast is uniformly excellent, especially Kelly McCormack whom I
    never knew before. One suggestion: if Chastain ever needs
    someone to play her younger self or daughter, she can do worse
    than the French actress Alyzee Costes ("The Black Butterflies").
    The physical resemblance is uncanny.

    I don't remember another project where a Chastain character gets
    to be so deliriously happy -- flashing her thousand-watts-smile,
    head over heels in love, sultry, lusting for Jones' touch. Later
    Wynette becomes disillusioned, rueful, increasingly exhausted,
    constantly in pain (botched abortion), in drug-induced haze. But
    her core being, and her lust for life, never goes away. I wish
    I can understand Wynette's (or country music fans') love of George
    Jones, introduced as a debauched drunk given to violent fits.
    When married to Wynette and sober, Shannon portrays him as
    awkward and shy, riding around an undersized lawn-mower like a
    lovable neutered bear. Chastain and Shannon collaborated on
    _Take Shelter_; she greatly admires him and must have hand-picked
    him for the role.

    But soon afterwards Jones wants his fire back, takes to drinking
    again, shoots up the family X'mas party with a shotgun, and beats
    up Wynette in a scene which is truly hard to watch. He almost
    kills his best friend in another drunken rage. Wynette accuses
    him of killing her love for him via his drinking, but her
    workaholism, her tendency to put career above everything, is an
    addiction too. You wonder if this is what has drawn Chastain to
    this project; being an A-list actress, she knows what it is like
    riding a hurricane.

    Wynette and Jones get divorced. He hits rock bottom and finds
    religion. She has 21 major surgeries, becomes addicted to pills,
    marries her manager who medicates and then hits her. (That
    manager's ex-wife is Wynette's close friend and assistant who
    kills herself -- a plot point curiously elided until the very
    end.) All these misadventures, needless to say, are mined as
    materials for hit songs, sang by the two leads themselves.

    The re-enactments of the studio recording and live concerts
    have been the major selling points of this series. Both are
    very convincing in their singing (although I am hardly qualified).
    Chastain has apparently never sang in a film or play, but admits
    to being a jukebox connoisseur. Shannon's baritone voice
    serves him well, while Chastain's is both trenchant and luxurious,
    ranging from barely audible to radiantly resplendent. As I have
    written too many times, she is born to be the commanding Voice
    of the Bene Gesserit of _Dune_. The make-up department deserves
    special recognition. Her big hair and overripe make-up in
    the series give the actress a look completely different than
    in her recent films. Yet when she does up her hair, nervously
    smoking and quivering with rage while Jones deliberately
    sings for hours to keep her off the stage (perhaps the most
    series' greatest scene), it is unmistakably the Chastain
    we have revered.

    Wynette pushes herself so mercilessly she is dead by her
    mid-fifties, and Chastain seems to have lost a lot of weight
    to capture her character's frailness. Towards the end she
    becomes resigned, says a lot less, conserving energy for her
    performances. Yet she still finds joy in singing, fulfillment
    in her work and in having secured a future for her children.
    After all that turmoil, her contentedness is wonderful to
    see, even as she rues the ruined relationship with Jones
    ("it is too late"). The series ends with Wynette, Jones,
    and their old band on the road again, casually singing and
    riffing on their RV, while their spouse-managers wrangle
    about money off-screen. It cannot have been scripted better.

    Even though I prefer the story in "Scenes from a Marriage,"
    the cinematography and set designs of "George and Tammy"
    are unquestionably far superior. Director John Hillcoat
    has done many music videos, and worked with Chastain in the
    hillbilly noir _Lawless_. I am not a big fan of the graphic
    torture in _Lawless_ but cannot help admire the sumptuous
    color schemes, blocking, and brilliant lighting in this
    series -- especially during the concert scenes. The
    editing is first rate. The fateful shoot-up over X'mas
    is accompanied with flickering soft light, like in _Dekalog
    3_, but here they are menacing, come from police sirens.
    Episode 5, much of it shown from Jones' perspective and
    contains its share of drug-induced fantasies, is quite
    daring for this kind of series. Maybe I should catch
    Hillcoat's adaptation of _The Road_ after all. Series
    creator and co-writer is also more convincing here than in
    _The Eyes of Tammy Faye_; there is far greater appreciation
    and respect for the times and the era. Technically and
    in terms of story-telling, it is hard to find a single
    flaw with this amazing work.

    I have resisted watching "George and Tammy" for the
    longest time. The combination of my internet and amazon
    streaming proves deadly. But more than that, I was
    intimidated by the emotional energy one expends to do
    justice to Chastain's previous series "Scenes from a
    Marriage." Of course my investment is a tiny fraction
    of what the creators and actors expended; I cannot
    imagine how hard they worked on it. "George and Tammy"
    is just as rich and rewarding. The DVD is supposed to
    be released soon; I so look forward to rewatching it
    on that medium.

    (for A.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)