When I first started writing about comics, around 2006-07, I wrote for a now-defunct website called "Independent Propaganda." The name of my column was BACK MATTER, and a fuller explanation can be found here. One of the things the creator of the site wanted to do was not just spotlight independent comics, but to also spotlight indy/art (put quotes around those words) movies. And, as the site was evolving - before it got sucked into the internet void - I tried to keep up with a couple of movie reviews. Here's the one for The Fountain, which, at this point, is my favorite all-time film. Enjoy.
THE
FOUNTAIN a film by DARREN ARONOFSKY
THE FOUNTAIN is Darren Aronofsky’s most ambitious film to date, and
for a number of different reasons it was also his most challenging. Following the critical success of his first
two features – PI in 1998, winner of
the director’s award at the Sundance Film Festival, and REQUIEM FOR A DREAM in 2000, which garnered an Oscar nomination for
Ellen Burstyn for Best Actress in a Leading Role – Aronofsky had a story idea
that he said “came to him in a flash.” This
idea became THE FOUNTAIN, a story
spanning across a thousand years from the past through the present to the
future. After the success of THE MATRIX in which the Wachowski
Brothers had taken the science fiction genre to a new level, Aronofsky saw a
chance with THE FOUNTAIN to expand upon the visual spectacle the
Wachowski’s had achieved. Initially
slated to star Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett, funding fell through when Pitt
backed out due to creative conflicts with the director. At this point Warner Bros. had already
invested $20 million into the film, and with the stars gone it did not seem as
if THE FOUNTAIN would get made. But Aronofsky, now unshackled by the huge
budget and multitude of fingers in the pie, went back to the well and broke the
story down in order to develop it for a leaner independent budget.
With the re-written script in hand,
Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz stepped into the shoes left by Pitt and Blanchett
and production was renewed. Scheduled to
be released in the fall of 2005 – set to coincide with the publication of the
graphic novel painted by Kent Williams, which adapted the original screenplay
rather than the reworked film – the release date was pushed back a few times
until finally being released this past Thanksgiving. Eight years after its initial conception, the
long hard road of THE FOUNTAIN was
finally over and Aronofsky could breathe a sigh of relief.
I must admit to some trepidation
when I finally walked into the empty theatre and sat down for THE FOUNTAIN. I first read about Aronofsky’s new movie four
years ago when I found the official fan website – www.aronofsky.net – which at the time
still had Pitt and Blanchett attached to the film. PI
and REQUIEM FOR A DREAM are two of
the small number of DVDs I own, and the promise of a new film from this
cutting-edge director was exciting news.
But what if the anticipation overreached the actual film? I worried I might have built it up too much in
my head. Could it live up to the hype?
Yes it could.
THE FOUNTAIN is a love story stretching over a thousand years. Taking place in three distinct time periods –
1560s Spain , the present
day, and the far future – the movie jumps back and forth between the multiple
eras, allowing the film to unfold in a non-linear fashion similar to the films
of Alejandro González Iñárritu,
director of 21 GRAMS and BABEL . By telling his story in this manner,
Aronofsky forces his audience to pay close attention, asking them to make the connections
between the three narratives and discover the spine holding it all together. Jackman and Weisz are star-crossed lovers – a
Spanish conquistador and Queen Isabel, a surgeon doing cancer research working
to find a cure for his stricken wife, and a space traveler haunted by the ghost
of his lover as he moves toward discovering the secrets of a dying star. The tortuous journey these characters face –
searching for the Tree of Life, the Fountain of Youth, an end to death – is
tense and moving. But within each strand
there is something held back, some piece of the puzzle missing, and it is not
until the three storylines come crashing together at the climax of the film
that the bond threading through each of these six characters’ lives becomes
evident.
Diffused in a golden light, another
thematic connection for the disparate narrative threads, THE FOUNTAIN is also an incredibly beautiful movie to watch. The way Aronofsky jumps back and forth – past
to present, future to past, present to future – in an almost haphazard manner
is a wonder to experience. Despite the
vast differences between time periods, Aronofsky manages to make the
transitions seamless, focusing his scenes sharply in order to keep those in the
audience on the edges of their seats.
Aronofsky is dexterous, demonstrating a complete understanding of what
makes film unique as an expressive medium and utilizing those distinctive strengths
to tell an engrossing and poignant story.
THE FOUNTAIN is easily the best film I have seen in a number of
years. Many films play upon an
audience’s emotional heartstrings, utilizing familiar musical themes to evoke feelings
that directors worry may not come across in the film itself. This is artificial, and it can be
annoying. With THE FOUNTAIN, Aronofsky managed to touch me emotionally in a way I
can never remember experiencing before at a film. This can not only be attributed to the
brilliant story conceived by Aronofsky and Ari Handel, but also to Aronofsky’s artful
direction. He manages to get brilliant
performances out of Rachel Weisz and Hugh Jackman that are terribly affecting
and I wonder at how this film did so poorly at the box office.
It has been posited on the
internet, and I tend to agree, that the poor showing financially and the spate
of poor reviews the movie received has nothing to do with the quality of the
film, but more to do with the complexity and far-reaching goals Aronofsky has
for THE FOUNTAIN. I am not one easily given over to praise, but
I feel that this is truly a masterpiece of modern cinema and I hope that it
will find its audience through its DVD release, which is currently scheduled
for May 15. In short, I must give my
highest recommendation for THE FOUNTAIN,
a brilliant film that asks a lot of its audience but returns the effort in
spades if one gives it a chance.
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