EVERYTHING EVERY TIME ALL IN ONE PLACE
Playing wide in the multiplexes right now:
Here--A spot in a living room in an upscale eastern Pennsylvania suburb--that's the title locale of this latest from Robert Zemeckis. It's our static vantage point for, essentially, the whole movie, looking across the room through a picture window that offers a view of the big brick colonial-era house across the street.
We see the view there before it was a living room--long, long before. As in, we see it during the extinction event that ended the Cretaceous Period, sixty million years ago. We see it as a woodland make-out spot for indigenous lovers (Dannie McCallum and Joel Oulette), and as a burial site. We see it as part of a dirt road leading up to the aforementioned historic manse, which once was occupied by William Franklin (Daniel Betts), estranged Loyalist son of Benjamin (Keith Bartlett).
After the house is built, we get glimpses of the lives of its early 20th-Century inhabitants, like an enthusiastic aviator (Gwilym Lee) whose wife (Michelle Dockery) frets about his flying. They're followed by a whimsical inventor (David Fynn) and his sexy flapper wife (Ophelia Lovibond). This guy is working to perfect a reclining chair; his working title for it is "Relax-y-Boy." And we see the house's early 21st-Century occupants, an African-American family; Nicholas Pinnock and Nikki Amuka-Bird are the parents, and Anya Marco-Harris is the beloved housekeeper.
But the movie's main focus is the midcentury family that takes the place over after WWII: Dad (Paul Bettany), a combat veteran and a seething, disappointed functional alcoholic, his sweet, quietly unfulfilled wife (Kelly Reilly), and his oldest son (Tom Hanks), an aspiring artist. The son gets his beautiful girlfriend (Robin Wright) pregnant, so there goes both art school and her college dreams. They move in with the parents, and stay for decades.
So the movie packs in a lot of history (and prehistory), a lot of longings fulfilled and unfulfilled, and cultural references ranging from the Spanish flu to the Spanish Inquistion sketch from Monty Python. But I'll admit that when I realized we were going to be parked in one place for the whole thing--I went in not knowing this--I panicked for a moment.
I needn't have worried. Zemeckis has always been a skillful showman, and while the audacious experiment of Here is by no means an unqualified success, it certainly never bored me. The script, by Eric Roth and Zemeckis, is based on a 2014 graphic novel by Richard McGuire, and Zemeckis employs comic-book techniques like overlapping inset panels to interweave the various timelines and bounce them off each other thematically. It's an impressive and confident exercise in narrative, and it does carry a cumulative emotional punch.
There are downsides, however. The fixed point of view means that the actors tend to seem a bit far away from us a lot of the time, and when they are brought up into the foreground it somehow feels forced. Zemeckis may have been worried about this distancing too; Alan Silvestri's music, though pretty, is ladled on a bit thicker than it should be, as if to telegraph what we're supposed to be feeling.
Much more jarringly, though, the people in Here often have an ersatz, CGI "Uncanny Valley" look to them. The leads were taken all the way back to teenaged through some sort of real-time computer tech, and while the results are tolerable, they aren't perfected in realistic terms.
It must be admitted, however, that Hanks and Wright transcend this limitation, especially Hanks. The other actors sometimes feel like cyber-phantoms, but Hanks is so vibrant that he can project his humanity right through the program. And after Apollo 13, Castaway, Captain Phillips and Sully, it's also a relief to see the poor guy stay put.
2024 Favorite Red Carpet Dresses 308/366
Michelle Dockery Wore McQueen To The ‘Here’ American Film Institute Fest Premiere
MICHELLE ATTENDED A PREMIERE WE ARE SO FUCKING BACK!!!!!
oh look another photo of Michelle from Please Don't Feed the Children! I am so afraid of what this movie will be 🙃
Sad news today 😞 Farewell Dame Maggie Smith! Than you for all the brilliant moments on stage and iconic movies you left to us. I will always enjoy seeing you on the screen.
Goodbye Countess
happy first wedding anniversary to Michelle and Jasper.
wishing them more years of happiness together.
Has it been a year? This year really flew by. Best wishes to Michelle and Jasper.
Please Don't Feed the Children seems chill.
good morning to the baddest bitch I've ever seen Michelle Dockery and the baddest bitch I've ever seen Michelle Dockery ONLY.
good morning again she changed outfits and went to a second show 🥲
Michelle Dockery
January, 2024 London
shout out to the random human on twitter who posted about Michelle on this podcast I am so stupid happy to hear her voice 🥹🥹🥹
Wow, this is fantastic. Worth a listen.
1. Downton 3 is wraped
2. Alfie the dog is 4
3. Michelle feels the particular red of this top best represents her life during the Downton years
where's miss michelle?? I miss the girl so much :'( Will she be doing any public appearances to promote any of her projects soon that you know of? Or are there just any recent pics that you know of? <3
I haven’t seen her anywhere. The most recent sighting that I know of was of her and and Laura Carmichael in Downton attire during filming. She has two premiers coming. November 1 for Here and I believe January 24 for Flight Risk. I believe we should see more of her before those dates, especially the latter as she is the co-star. If anyone’s heard more, let me know.
DOWNTON FAM SEEING TWISTERS IS SO PERSONAL TO ME!!!!