sovay: (Morell: quizzical)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2016-02-06 01:48 am

We'll haul for better weather

My day was much more stressful and snow-filled than I had been hoping, so tonight I walked into Davis Square (in a record twenty-one minutes, despite snow and ice) and saw The Finest Hours (2016) at the Somerville Theatre because I knew the story of the Pendleton rescue and I wanted a movie with the sea in it. Very short reaction: it is about seventy percent the movie I was hoping for. Casey Affleck is great; I knew that from The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007), but I have especially high standards for a diffident introvert at the center of a crisis who rises to the challenge without developing cinematic leadership skills. It was a nice discovery that when Chris Pine's not being alt-Kirk, he can actually act. I like stories of heroic engineering; I like stories of tricky seamanship. I like that neither of the protagonists is the traditional square-jawed type, good at rousing speeches or inspirational charisma so much as just getting on with the job. The romantic conflict is not just a whole-cloth fiction, it doesn't play well with the rest of the script and throws off everything from pacing to tone and I felt very badly for Holliday Grainger, who has an ideal face and voice for 1952 and is so much better than her part. John Magaro has a small role, but between it and Carol (2015), he's on my list of up-and-coming character actors to keep an eye on. Eric Bana's scenes feel like the leftovers from a deleted subplot. A full review will have to wait until I've slept and taken some painkillers, because the Diesel accidentally served me a salt caramel latte instead of a salt caramel hot chocolate and although I took only one sip before tasting coffee, I still have a kind of fringe migraine with a painful buzz at the front of my face and light sensitivity that's causing some odd visual effects. [livejournal.com profile] derspatchel walked me most of the way home in case the rest of the migraine came on and I fell over. It hasn't so far; I spent some decompression time reading entertaining bits of the internet with [livejournal.com profile] rushthatspeaks (I really recommend this oral history of The Apple (1980) as well as the comments). I still don't feel good. I should not spend much more time awake.

[identity profile] negothick.livejournal.com 2016-02-09 04:13 pm (UTC)(link)
To the screenwriters' credit, they did try to give Miriam a bigger role--not only instigating the headlights idea, but arguing with the station commander (you can imagine the eye-rolling that occasioned in the audience at the premiere), etc. We were shown a clip of the real Miriam at her husband's funeral a few years ago (before the film, obviously). I wonder what her reaction has been to seeing herself so transformed onscreen!