Ha! That’s right, it’s time to review a movie whose title
contains one half of my catch phrase, so I thought I’d give it the other half
it so richly deserves! The picture of course is Frances Ha, which I was intrigued to see when I learned that it was
at least in part a tribute to the great French New Wave pictures I love so
well!
And certainly it wears this influence on its sleeve, as it
uses a lot of music from those films, stuff from The 400 Blows or some of the sweeter Georges Delerue work! I
thought this was a nice touch, and it gives the picture a classic feel it might
otherwise not have managed! The black and white photography is another apposite
touch!
It’s a character piece, mainly: the tale of the eponymous 27
year old lady making her way the only way she knows how in the Big Apple! She
lives with her dearest pal and dances for her dinner! That’s a tough way to
make a living, and Frances doesn’t ever have much money, but she has fun
anyway! She attends parties and gallery openings and does lots of playfights
with her pal!
But things start to fall apart a bit, ha ha! She breaks up
with her boyfriend, which itself doesn’t trouble her overmuch; but then her pal
Sophie, who makes a lot more money than Frances, takes a different apartment!
Frances is left to do a bit of apartment hopping and job searching too! Ha ha,
and then the squirmy fun, if you want to call it fun, comes from observing her
string of poor choices and frequent lack of self-awareness!
She takes an ill-advised two-day trip to Paris, more to
reinforce the New Wave connection than for any narrative reason, and is forced
to find other ways than dancing to make ends meet! (It still doesn’t seem realistic
that she could, considering the credit card debt we see her rack up!) But
eventually she matures somewhat and takes a few belated but definite steps into
adulthood!
It’s a pretty good movie if you like anxiety and awkwardness
and stressing about money! Ha ha, and who doesn’t? Occasionally, as when she
tries to playfight her new, reluctant roommate, her cluelessness borders on
some kind of mental disability or emotional infirmity! In any case, it ceases
to be believable! But the acting is good, and the French New Wave stuff
certainly pushes ol’ Burl’s buttons! And I enjoyed the black and white
photography and the gallery of NYC locations!
The picture was a solid indie effort, I guess you’d say, and
it had plenty of nice touches! I’m going to award it two and a half subway
platform micturations!
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