Monday, November 30, 2015

Baby, Baby, Baby: Movie Review


I saw this film at the Austin Film Festival, and was very impressed by it. This film shows a couple falling in and out of love, a story that's been told a thousand times. But this story captured the details and emotional vulnerability of a relationship.

There are always little habits and behaviors in a relationship that not only define the combined personalities, but also define the breaking point. No one wants to feel under appreciated or ignored, especially not by someone you love and trust. In a relationship, you can go in with certain expectations, but when your expectations begin to change and the relationship itself does not, it can create tension.

Initially, Sydney and Sunny are both invested in their relationship. Sydney is a struggling actor, Sunny is a struggling artist. They support each other and encourage each other in their art. Then Sunny becomes more successful with her art and begins forming friendships and connections with other artists. Naturally, Sydney gets jealous and insecure.

The interesting thing is, the more insecure Sydney gets, the more Sunny pulls away from him. She never lies to him about who she is, calling herself "horrible" because she is an only child. He clings to her with the determination of a whiny child.

It's easy to feel sorry for both of them. I feel sorry for Sydney, because he is failing at something he's been working towards his whole life. Meanwhile, his girlfriend no longer has time for him. But mostly I feel sorry for Sunny. She never pretends to enjoy coddling Sydney. She clearly does not want to be someone's cheerleader, and no matter how much Sydney complains about her, she doesn't go easy on him. It's hard when one person in the relationship is busy with their art and the other is not. It can lead any sane person to become a sniveling mess. Being an adult is difficult and I love how this film shows the hardships of adulthood and relationships.

Monday, November 23, 2015

Saving Mr. Banks: Movie Review


This movie makes me love Mary Poppins even more and find connections behind the Disney movie and its backstory. There is so much that an author puts into stories. Using personal experiences or first hand observations can help give that kind of emotion readers connect with.

Walt's exuberant and optimistic displays and Travers' hesitance to change her ideal of the past show the love and innovation used in beloved Disney stories. What I love is how she reimagines and recreates her past to make her father into the hero she always wanted him to be. She gave him another chance to be kind. That is an amazing gift from a daughter who was put through the unstable antics of a dreamer.

Walt takes her creation and makes it brighter. He sees her vision, though it takes quite a bit of work, and makes it into a Disney spectacle. She may fight him every step of the way, but when she goes home she takes a giant Mickey Mouse with her.

We all want to cling to a bit of magic now and then.

She clings to the magic of her childhood, and fixing the problems that her parents could not. He clings to his dream of the magical world of Disney and what it means to create.

This movie not only explores the delightful product of Disney, but shows the process of creation as well. For me, that's the best part. I love knowing how a movie is pushed into existence. It's not enough to know the story, I need the backstory too. I love that she creates Mary Poppins as a way to change her childhood. She fixes her father and makes him a hero, as shown by the title, she saves Mr. Banks.