Monday, 7 October 2013

An Introspective Sojourn – Blue Jasmine Review


 




 As a term of caution, mental fragility comes with a warning label that screams ‘baffle and intimidate’.  In art, we measure our own emotional responses in turns as to the state and outcome of the perpetrated.  It would seem that in our own inconclusiveness we seek definitive meaning... 

A HIGHER PLANE

Of course, in film this becomes a dilemma.  Film and celluloid, by their very nature suggest fluidity, the very antithesis of ambiguity.  Siegfried Kracauer (‘Theory of Film’) sets his stall out to present the medium as a three part act.  A beginning, a middle and an end.   As a visual art, an economy of words expressed become words suggested, which make heavily dialogued pieces that much more difficult to sell.  The way we consume our movies make this especially so.

And here, in most welcome fashion, is the point of this opening.   In my view this may be the first time in years that a Woody Allen picture has gone against the grain of filmic norms.   At his peak, Allen, like Ingmar Bergman (a major creative influence), understood how to use a Shakespearean framework as an inspiration but not necessarily a template with the use of Brechtian techniques to break down the fourth wall (see Annie Hall).  His recent output, even one as well balanced as ‘Midnight in Paris’, played as comedies in the strictest sense starting in the dark of meandering souls and ending in the hopeful, reflective lamps in caramel-woozy European dusk.

‘Blue Jasmine', a return to familiar US shores (albeit San Fran not New York), plays without the aforementioned three part act but instead is shipped by an overwhelming emotional arc anchored by a riveting central performance by Cate Blanchett.  



Plot is threadbare as the emotional spectrum of Jasmine takes main stage.  In essence the film chronicles the descent (often internal) of Jasmine from a position of wealth and security to one of paranoia and insecurity.  Supporting performances of note include a seedy turn by Alec Baldwin as well as a comically understated role by Louis CK, however the real standout is Sally Hawkins playing Jasmine’s sister, Ginger.  It’s a thankless task having to play what could be seen as a contrived moral counterpoint to Blanchett’ Jasmine but Hawkins carries it off with delicate aplomb.

As the film comes to its conclusion it returns to where we were at the beginning.  No great reveals or moments of saccharine melancholy.  Most importantly it doesn’t force redemption or understanding on its anti-heroine.  

It leaves her alone like all substantial art should, as a mirror to the human condition left to contemplate the meaning of her lost perspective; without hubris, a future laid out on rain stained pavement slabs.
Rating: 8.5/10 (A-)