I do not get into modern women's pictures. "Divine Yawn-Yawn
Sisterhoods," all those creaky bridges of Clint Eastwood
and Kevin Costner drippy sagas strain my cataracts. So it
shocked me to adore the remarkable "The Notebook," the latest
adaptation of a Nicholas Sparks bestseller. I devoured every
minute of the timeless love story from its peach and apricots-coated
opening to the parallel storylines of two couples. "The Notebook"
made my heart ache and yearn for the fervor felt by the engaging
cast.
Duke (James Garner) cares for a lady suffering from Alzheimer's (Gena Rowlands).
He reads her stories to pick up her spirits and enhance her deteriorating memories.
He has read the stories to her countless times, but the Alzheimer's prevents
her from remembering any detail. In her dementia-suffering mind, these are
fresh new tales.
These stories revolve around Noah (Ryan Gosling, "Murder By Numbers"), a working
class upstart smitten with a wealthy girl (Rachel McAdams). He tirelessly courts
her to her chagrin. The enchanting girl, Allie Hamilton, succumbs to his charms
and falls deeply in love. However her mother (Joan Allen) raised her daughter
to be a society woman, not hooking up with a boy from the wrong side of the
tracks.
Scripted by Jeremy Leven and Jan Sardi, this star-crossed lover yarn is like
a tea filled with milk and lemon that magically doesn't curdle. The well-worn
plotline revitalizes thanks to realistic dialogue and sure-handed direction
by Nick Cassavetes.
From the opening shot containing a sunset that would make Spielberg jealous
to the contrast of white birds flapping toward a white house, Cassavetes paints
this love story on a sparkling canvas. The reflection of the birds transposed
on a window from which Rowlands stares out adds visual metaphors and a classy
mood.
Cassavetes ties the past and present together with the motif of those white
birds once again flocking around Gosling and McAdams in a white boat.
Garner is a consummate actor. He can take a line like "The best love is the
kind that awakens your soul" and melt your heart. Rowlands, the director's
mother, captures the consternation and suffering Alzheimer's inflicts on its
helpless victims.
No role seems blander than of a mother who disapproves of her daughter's choices,
yet Allen adds nuances and wit as the woman who loves her daughter too obsessively.
Forceful but vulnerable, she should finally win her Oscar.
But it's McAdams and Gosling who turn this weepie into a heartbreaker. Noah
and Allie are the couple for which love was thought up. Brimming with passion
and youthful curiosity, McAdams emerges as a movie star. Once the spoiled "Hot
Chick" who switched bodies with Rob Schneider, she demonstrates magnetism once
found in Sandra Bullock. The longing witnessed in Gosling's eyes as he stares
at his love is staggering, as if he starved himself for three months then dangled
a bacon cheeseburger before him.
Smoothing the clichéd edges noteworthy in most love stories, "The Notebook"
sets the mood for ardent summer nights.
Summer nights are meant for sequels -- rehashed, hack jobs that took the best
elements of the first films and regurgitated to any audience's dismay (Does
anyone remember when the word Matrix evoked wonderment?) So this year, Sony
brought out its biggest warhorse, "Spider-Man," but they broke the rules. Not
only is "Spider-Man 2" vastly cleverer than the original, but it touches the
heart and soul with complex relationships and layered meanings.
Two years after the first film, Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) has not adapted
to superhero-dom well. Like my favorite vampire slayer, Buffy, in season six,
Peter finds that despite working 24-hours-a-day saving lives, no benefactor
pays his rent and most of his family and friends mistakenly consider him a
slacker upon whom no one can depend.
In retaliation, he focuses his energy away from his valiant responsibilities
and back towards his true love, MJ (Kirsten Dunst), who has long dismissed
Peter and is now engaged to an astronaut. When a physicist's experiment goes
awry endangering MJ, his aunt and the entire city, Peter must select his path
once and for all.
Scripted by two-time Oscar winner Alvin Sargent ("Ordinary People," "Julia")
from a story by Pulitzer Prize winner Michael Chabon, Alfred Gough, and Miles
Millar, the artistic success of the sequel was not a fluke, but a perfectly
executed masterpiece with crisp dialogue, smashing effects and a love story
that make Noah and Allie from "Notebook" appear to have the sexual chemistry
of Dick and Pat Nixon.
The regulars from the first film (Maguire, Dunst, JK Simmons, Rosemary Harris
and James Franco) keep the material fresh and dig deeper into their characters'
psyches. Wild card Alfred Molina adds menace as Dr. Octopus, a decent scientist
driven insane by his serpent-like claws.
Sam Raimi directs again with glee. An avid comic book fan, he instills the
film with equal parts whimsy, thrills and pathos.
The effects continue to dazzle, particularly the embodiment of Octopus. His
claws react with a slithering grace of the most deadly snakes, seducing their
landlord into devilish acts of terrorism. Your film is only as compelling as
your villain, and Molina's hulking beast brings dread to Peter's world.
But audiences come to see Spider-Man swinging through the city like Tarzan
on a sugar high. Part of the joy of both films is that Peter Parker is a man-child,
buoyant and compassionate. You want him to succeed because he represents the
super-kid in us all.
Unlike a gangrene green giant from last summer, this superhero actually convinces
the audience to reach inside itself and give more to the world than they get.
To say that "Spider-Man 2" is the best movie so far this year is an understatement;
to say it belongs in the echelon of the top ten films of the new millennium
is accurate. Grade: Notebook: A-; Spider Man 2: A+
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