Chew's Review - 'Blue Jasimine'
By Gary Chew | August 8, 2013 The exigencies associated with love and class continue to be magnified in the oeuvre of Woody Al...
https://www.elkgrovenews.net/2013/08/chews-review-blue-jasimine.html
By Gary
Chew | August 8, 2013
The
exigencies associated with love and class continue to be
magnified in the oeuvre
of Woody Allen - except when he's playing clarinet. Insofar
as film is concerned
though, Allen is at his best when making you heartily laugh
while you're trying
to repress any empathy you're feeling for one of his many
memorable, hapless
characters.
The hapless
character in “Blue Jasmine,” his latest, is named Jasmine,
played by the
supremely gifted actor, Cate Blanchett. And it's not just
because most of the
film is shot in the Bay Area that Jasmine's predicament
plays out on more shaky
ground than, say, of Alvy Singer’s, Annie Hall’s and so on.
What's funny about
“Blue Jasmine” isn't so much Jasmine's character but most of
the other roles
that must be played as “real” characters … who surround the
unstable Jasmine and
the disassembling of her life as currently lived. Blanchett
does Jasmine
situated among a cast of other fine actors - all looking as
if only they were
meant to play their respective, zany parts.
If you
sense anything autobiographical in the picture, it might be
you’re thinking that
Woody “knows the ropes” of such circumstances.
There's
much time-switching going on in “Blue Jasmine.” The back and
forth is keenly
presented so as not to confuse. Segues are usually triggered
by spoken words of
dialogue.
So that
means you see Alec Baldwin as Jasmine's wealthy husband,
Hal, throughout the
movie, even though Hal has long been hauled to the joint for
shoddy business
practices with even further events that would be a spoiler
if I told you. The
same goes for other of Allen's well-drawn
characters.
One of my
favorites in this category is stand-up comic, Andrew Dice
Clay as Augie. He's
the man in Ginger's life, early on. British actor Sally
Hawkins (“Never Let Me
Go”) is mind-boggling playing Ginger. You'd swear she’s from
Hoboken. She's a
couple of cuts, at least, beneath Jasmine in social status.
These gals'
differences are as distinct as Sausalito and
Fresno's.
When
Jasmine's high-living style crashes and burns on the East
Coast, she moves in
with sweet Ginger (they're non biological sisters of the
same family) on the
West Coast. San Francisco is the town - Allen not
being a big fan of Los
Angeles. It's in the Bay Area where most of the class
conflict takes place
between Jasmine and Ginger with her California
associates.
After Hal,
Jasmine is determined to make something of herself, but
things aren't looking
too rosy; especially after she takes a receptionist job with
a square but horny
dentist who hits on her when no patients are in the office.
Michael Stuhlbarg
has that role and was the lead in the Coen brothers' “A
Serious Man.”
Jasmine's a
wreck. Pills and alcohol are much in use. Panic attacks are
not uncommon.
Talking to herself is not unheard of in her presence or even
when she's alone.
Blanchett has nailed the character. But what can one expect
from an actor of
Cate's caliber who, not long ago, cross-gendered to do a
great “Bob Dylan” in
“I'm Not There.”
Another not
unusual suspect in “Blue Jasmine” is Peter Sarsgaard (“An
Education”) as Dwight,
a Bay Area yuppie who has a cushy government gig in D.C.
He's planning to run
for national office from the Golden State and parks his BMW
next to his bay side
house in Marin.
No class
warfare here. Dwight looks like “new spouse” material for
Jasmine. Surely, this
can't be in a script by Woody Allen.
What - a
happy ending? Are you kidding? But you will be
laughing.
Copyright 2012
by Gary Chew.
All rights reserved.
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Archived reviews from 2003-2011
at www.tulsatvmemories.com
Other stuff at http://www.soundcloud.com/decibellydancer
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