Friday 11 November 2011

Learning The Hard Way



As I'll be away all weekend, I'm posting another scene today to fill the silence.

I had a rented copy of The Reader (2008, dir:Daldry) in my possession for quite a while, but for some reason kept putting off watching it. Then on Tuesday, with the due date looming, I dived in and watched it in bed. It was getting on to midnight, so I decided to watch the first half an hour then go to sleep and return to it in the morning.

Naturally, this didn't work out.

I was absorbed by the storyline, Winslet's acting, Kross' beauty, the cinematography and most of all, my conflicted feelings. You don't get to know, to understand, the character of Hanna Schmitz, but through Michael's devotion to her, you find yourself welling up at her war-crimes trial, confused by your own small shred of sympathy for this character who, in so many other films, would have been the mark of evil.

This shot is taken from the scene in which one of Michael's fellow students angrily challenges their professor, saying that these women are guilty of a terrible crime and controversially claiming that everybody - parents, teachers, everybody - knew what the Nazis were doing. One student runs out of the classroom, while others look horrified. Michael tries to counter that their task as law students is to understand these women; his colleague insisting there is nothing to understand.

I think this scene impressed me both because I am currently a student - participating in debates like this and relishing the acquisition of knowledge and the chance to use it - and because it shows so clearly how, whilst you might have a strict moral code, while you may be taught right from wrong, when you find yourself in the middle of a moral conflict, the lines blur and you can see new shades of grey.

Thursday 10 November 2011

Talk To Me



To return to Eyes Wide Open - I've restricted myself to these two shots, but hundreds are beautiful; it is subtle, could almost be wordless and makes your heart race in the way a will-they-won't-they Hollywood rom-com struggles to recreate - I've selected this scene as my favourite.

Ezri and Aaron are working together to unpack a meat delivery at Aaron's butchery. Following their discussion, detailed below, Ezri assumes he has been rebuffed by Aaron, but we know the longing remains. Here, Aaron is seen repeatedly returning to where Ezri is working, without rhyme or reason. He simply wants to talk to him, to look at him, to have an excuse to be near him.

This scene so resonated as I feel we've all been there; desperate to break the ice or to have any form of communication with that one person you can't breathe without contacting. Aaron awkwardly claps his hands, light-heartedly punches the wall and turns around and the tension is palpable - he wants to physically, as well as verbally, reach out, and you beg of him to.

Look What Beauty


I'll break my own rules to begin with - start as you mean to go on and all that - by posting a shot I like; but I will follow it up with my favourite scene.

This is a screen grab from the moment in Eyes Wide Open (2009, dir:Tabakman) when Aaron appeals to Ezri to resist temptation and pass the test he feels God is sending him. Aaron comments that God has never made a "broken tool" and illustrates his point by exclaiming that Ezri has such beauty he can't be defective.

Therein lies a key theme in the film - even as he reaffirms his faith, Aaron's words and actions are undercut by the desire he feels for Ezri and we, as the audience, are invited to gaze upon Ezri's sculpted face and note the achingly small distance between the two men.

Even to say someone is a masterpiece makes your heart soar a little - the kind of compliment you know comes from a place of truth and love, not just lust.

There's a bit more to come from this film yet.

As an aside, yes, I was watching this on BBC iPlayer - props to them for making such a beautiful film available to everybody.

My Favourite Scene

Today is the day I decide to start a blog, dedicated to my favourite film scenes.
Tomorrow may be the day I give up posting.
For the moment, however, I'll stress that these aren't my favourite scenes from my favourite films, they are just the bits in films I've been watching that have broken my heart, restored my faith in people, given me a new crush, helped me understand, caused me fits of laughter or blurred my eyes with tears.
I'll try not to just have photo after photo of Michael Fassbender or Ryan Gosling, but I can't make any promises...