Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Birdman: Being willing to sort of die in order to move the reader.

***.5 by Tom Johnson

Birdman (or the Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) is a dazzling piece of filmmaking. Emmanuel Lubezki claims director of photography credit here, bringing his tally of visually impressive, important films of this generation up to no less than four (Children of Men, Gravity, The Tree of Life)[1] and cementing his role as one of the most important figures in contemporary cinema. Formally, the film is stunning – it is likely that you have by this point heard that the central conceit is that it appears to be shot in one uninterrupted take – and it is this formal mastery that makes the film such fun to spend time with. The (nearly) all-drum score is equally inspired and a perfect match for the film’s stylistic joie de vivre, conjuring a mood and feeling quite like the jazz of Miles Davis at his creative peak. And the cast – at Mr. Iñárritu’s direction – puts in universally great work.

The film, however, is not without its faults. It has been frequently[2] derided as navel-gazing, and employs some postmodern flourishes that are, to be charitable, not fully successful. As much fun as the film is to watch and its accomplishments admirable, the freneticism borders on claustrophobic, filling up almost all of the two hours with some sort of camera-movement or dialogue with scarcely room for the audience to process the action or catch their collective breath. The wheels threaten to fall off in the third act, as it seems so often happens in film these days[3], and I am willing to commit to saying now that the ending did not “work” for me. All told, however, there is simply too much to love, too much brilliance to watch, and too much fun to be had to do anything other than recommend it without hesitation[4].

The central premise of Birdman is that Riggan Thompson (Michael Keaton) plays a former action-film actor who has been unable to replicate his success since turning down the fourth film in the Birdman series. He has now turned to theater where he is adapting a version of Raymond Carver’s short story What We Talk About When We Talk About Love that he has written, is directing, and in which he is playing the main role. Narratively, Birdman is fairly straightforward. Things are not going well with the show, nor with Riggan personally, and we follow these threads through the phase of a production that theater folks might call “Hell week”[5]. We watch as Riggan struggles with his life and the show, the two mirroring each other in a tight choreography not unlike that of the cast locked in their tight ballet, weaving through the streets of New York, wrestling in the basement, or exploring confused sexuality in the dressing room, the camera swooping around the actors like a vulture. As mentioned, the cast is superb throughout, and will no doubt end up with some decorated hardware cabinets by next March – much is asked of them, and much is delivered – but the primary effect, for me at least, was a constant, head-scratching, “how did they do that?!” like in the dressing room scenes where the camera moves back and forth through a series of mirrors, occasionally pointing directly at them, without showing up in the frame itself.

The plot points read as fairly pedestrian and do little to fully explain what Birdman really is and what it does so well. Stylistically the film is jaw-dropping, but when it comes to substance, things become altogether murkier. There are question marks aplenty when Birdman is approached in totality. Indeed, Mr. Iñárritu infuses the film with a subtle, but pervasive sense of magic and surrealism. The film opens with a glimpse of a comet and a beach full of dead jellyfish. The first time we encounter the central character, he is there before us, in naught but his underwear, in full lotus position, floating in mid-air. Later, we see him twirl a cigarette case with extra-physical powers and similarly destroy his dressing room in a fit of rage. I am hesitant to presume Mr. Iñárritu’s intention with this technique. I could not come up with a satisfactory answer after just one viewing. But the important part, to me, is that I was too absorbed in the film’s strengths to much care to try and sort it out. The technique is no doubt meant to point to the psyche of the film’s central figure[6], but beyond that, I find the technique both affecting and a delight to watch, and I emerged from the film with little interest in dissecting it further. In that way, Birdman’s magic realism feels not unlike Haruki Murakami’s. Peculiar and mystical things happen, and attempts to explain them are secondary to how they make us feel. The film leaves plenty of room so that the technique can be ripped apart like the ending of Chris Nolan’s Inception – is Mr. Iñárritu leaving us clues? – but whereas I was bothered at Nolan’s techniques in that film – because they were central to the narrative - here, what is of importance is not whether Riggan has extra-physical powers, but that we care about him and the world he inhabits. At that, the film succeeds.

Much has already been written trying to identify what it is, really that Birdman is about. A favorite subject of critics in the early going is the film’s subject of the theater and film – either it is a celebration or condemnation of art or artists or a statement on the medium as it exists. Mr. Iñárritu himself has claimed that the film was inspired by his own meditation on mid-life. The use of theater conjures to my mind Charlie Kaufman’s Synecdoche, New York, a film that used the theater – and its central character, a director – as a metaphor for life. Approaching Birdman with these reference points in mind is not irrelevant – consensus suggests that the end result is much less fulfilling when it is approached looking for things that were never meant to be there.

And then there is the film’s intertextuality. Keaton, real-life former Batman, is the obvious one, cast here as the former Birdman. And the film is quick to point out to us that this is no coincidence – there is an early scene where Riggan sees a newscast about Robert Downey Jr. who has had his own career resurgence as Iron Man in the Marvel universe – and after an early “accident” at the theater when Riggan is discussing acting replacements with his producer, Jake (Zach Galifianakis), they run through this bit of dialogue:

RIGGAN
Find me an actor. A good actor. Philip Seymour Hoffman...
JAKE
He’s doing the third Hunger Games.
RIGGAN
Michael Fassbender?
JAKE
Doing the prequel to the X-Men prequel.
RIGGAN
What’s his name? Jeremy Renner...
JAKE
Who?
RIGGAN
The... the Hurt Locker guy.
JAKE
Yeah. He’s an Avenger.
RIGGAN
Fuck. They put him in a cape, too?

The film is happy to point out actors that we know by their real names, yet the cast that we are watching are all actors playing characters – not explicitly “character” versions of themselves[7]. Norton’s career has been a bit more eclectic, but it does not feel like much of a stretch to imagine him also playing a caricature of his professional self. Norton has also had his own turn as a movie-superhero. Emma Stone is no exception here playing a sort of anti-Mary-Jane Parker. The film is rife with this sort of textual interplay. And then there is, of course, the short-story-adaptation as play within a movie dynamic[8] as well as the movie critic herself, which sends us spinning into an endless string of commentaries wherein critics are asked to be critical of Iñárritu’s criticism of film[9] criticism[10]. Or perhaps where we are all asked to imagine the relationship of any sort of critic in relation to any sort of artist, and maybe we should all be more Taylor Swift about it indeed.

Throughout the film, we repeatedly catch a glimpse of a quote on Riggin’s mirror: “A thing is a thing not what is said of that thing.” In the penultimate scene, we see Riggan’s production in its first official night. The camera turns to the audience delivering a standing ovation. In the corner of the frame we are shown one person not standing – the theater critic. She turns and leaves the theater as the audience delivers thunderous applause. The curtain rises[11]  on that yet baffling collection of words: “the unexpected virtue of ignorance”.

If I am to deliver my own interpretation, Mr. Iñárritu and company seem to have cobbled together a new sort of cinematic language, not unlike what Greg Michael Gillis[12] has done in the world of music – there is an acknowledgment that the history of the medium has established a common language amongst its audience, and using that common language, new and interesting things can be said. That is the language of Birdman. It is imperfect, but it is damn interesting doing it.

And then there is this: “It seems like the big distinction between good art and so-so art lies . . . in be[ing] willing to sort of die in order to move the reader, somehow. Even now I’m scared about how sappy this’ll look in print, saying this. And the effort to actually to do it, not just talk about it, requires a kind of courage I don’t seem to have yet.” – David Foster Wallace



[1] Thus far, Lubezski has only hoisted an Oscar once, for Gravity. Children of Men was narrowly edged by another visual stunner, Pan’s Labyrinth. It feels like a safe bet for to make Lubezki the early favorite to repeat for his work here.
[2] and (I’m 50-50 on this) fairly
[3] See also: Interstellar
[4] After all, my favorite book, Infinite Jest has an ending that I am perhaps equally ambivalent about, yet deeply love because it is full of more moments of individual genius than any other I have ever read. It seems foolish to penalize such works solely on the basis of their narrative cohesion when this sort of art seems barely to even care about it itself.
[5] The week of final rehearsals and previews before a production opens in earnest.
[6] It is no coincidence that the trailers are highlighted by Gnarls Barkley’s “Crazy”
[7] i.e. Michael Keaton is Riggan Thompson, former Birdman, one – important – degree separated from a caricaturized version of “Michael Keaton, former Batman”.
[8] Let me again remind you that there is no shortage of folks throwing around the words “navel-gazing” as is wont to happen when it comes to any sort of postmodern technique.
[9] Or, I suppose, theater criticism, but you get the point.
[10] A task that they seem to both relish and despise in nearly equal measure.
[11] So to speak.
[12] If you didn’t click through the hyperlink, he’s the guy who goes by “Girl Talk”

1 comment:

  1. If I could, please entertain that Riggan died either on the stoop of the building after getting the bottle of liquor or maybe when he jumped off the building. There's so much that could be said about how the audience's perceptions of what happened in the film were orchestrated by Inarritu, which hints at an explanation of the movie title. Anyway, bottle line Riggan's life was in such a shit hole there was no way out in his mind except through death. And in his vision of Heaven all is well and wonderful. He's a brilliant actor, his play is a success, he's settled things with the ex and his daughter has forgiven him. And in his version of Heaven in the final moment his daughter literally is looking up to him proud of her daddy seeing him fly. So if you suspend your vision of Heaven with Pearly Gates in the clouds you can see where this theory is plausible and likely. Another thing to consider-Birdman is sitting on the pot in the bathroom (taking a shit....because he's full of it...I thought that was especially funny) and Birdman barely mumbles two words? Riggan fought him constantly in his head during most of the movie....an he's silent at the end? He's silent because Riggan's life is no longer out of control....he is not alive in that hospital.

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