Showing posts with label Abbie Cornish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abbie Cornish. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Fabulous Abbie

I saw Bright Star a couple of weeks ago, and as you might remember, I wasn't a huge fan. Even the performances, which have been the most lauded aspect of the film, didn't move me, and I was prepared to write off Abbie Cornish all together.
xxx
Then I saw Somersault.
xxx
Abbie Cornish is stunning in the this little indie that won a host of Australian film awards back in 2004, including three awards for best actress.
xxx
She plays Heidi, an emotionally unstable girl who leaves home and heads to a ski resort after a fight with her mother. Heidi uses her blossoming sexuality to get by until she meets Joe, an aimless young man working for his father. Heidi believes there is a connection between them, but when their relationship begins to unravel, so does her life in her new town, and a string of bad decisions leave her right back where she started.
xxx
Cornish's Heidi is childlike in her mannerisms and behavior, but seeking responsibility and adult connections. It's an amazing thing to watch. A scene that sticks with me is Heidi spending the little money she has on a pair of red gloves, then playing Miss Mary Mack with no one in particular as she walks home. Her performance is real and startling, and frankly the film would have been twice as strong if it had stuck with her the entire time, instead of meandering here and there into Joe's boring-by-comparison story.
xxx
I don't know if it was the film, which I found quietly mesmerizing, or the fact that I got to see her act with her native accent, but something in Somersault made me a believer in Abbie Cornish.

SOMERSAULT

Written and directed by Cate Shortland

Abbie Cornish
Sam Worthington
Lynette Curran
Erik Thomason

Premiere date: May 17, 2004 (Cannes Film Festival)
NR

After trying to seduce her mother's live-in boyfriend, guilt-ridden teen Heidi runs away from home and heads for a small ski resort, where her sexual awakening and amorphous yearning for love collide. Rudderless and broke, Heidi exchanges her sexual favors for a place to sleep till she lands a job. But just as she starts to settle in, her irresponsible behavior jeopardizes her fragile equilibrium.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Bright Star, Briefly

I finally got around to seeing Bright Star yesterday. I had high hopes for this film since Jane Campion's The Piano is easily in my top 5 favorite movies ever and was one of my first experiences with artistic cinema.

I have to tell you, though, that I was majorly disappointed. I was completely aware that I was watching a movie, watching actors, the entire length of its running time. And I was not affected at all emotionally, even though I'm quite positive the filmmakers expected me to be. Bright Star just didn't speak to me.

That being said, the below-the-line work here is phenomenal. Beautiful cinematography, art direction, set and costume designs. In particular I'm remembering a scene in which a room is filled with living butterflies. The visual aesthetic is breathtaking and deserving of recognition this year, though it would have been nice if there were a powerful narrative to match.

I wish Bright Star had moved me, that it was another among countless period romances that have my heart. But it's not. I'm in the minority with this opinion, so buy a ticket and let me know what you thought.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

BRIGHT STAR

Written and directed by Jane Campion
xxx
Abbie Cornish
Ben Whishaw
Paul Schneider
xxx
Premiere date: May 15, 2009 (Cannes Film Festival)
PG for thematic elements, some sensuality, brief language and incidental smoking.
xxx
In 19th century London a secret love affair begins between 23-year-old English poet, John Keats, and the girl next door, Fanny Brawne, an outspoken student of fashion. This unlikely pair started at odds; he thinking her a stylish minx, she unimpressed by literature in general.
xxx
It was the illness of Keats’s younger brother that drew them together. Keats was touched by Fanny’s efforts to help and agreed to teach her poetry.
xxx
By the time Fanny’s alarmed mother and Keats’s best friend Brown realised their attachment, the relationship had an unstoppable momentum. Intensely and helplessly absorbed in each other, the young lovers were swept into powerful new sensations, “I have the feeling as if I were dissolving”, Keats wrote to her. Together they rode a wave of romantic obsession that deepened as their troubles mounted. Only Keats’s illness proved insurmountable.

AWARDS INFO COMING WHEN AVAILABLE

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Poll: Which Breakthrough Performance Are You Most Looking Forward to This Year?

As I mentioned in a post yesterday, there are several great performances from relative unknowns coming up this season. Which are you most anxious to see? Are there any other breakthroughs on your radar? Who?

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

New Kids On the Block

This year is looking to be full of breakthrough performances from young actresses, with at least four potential star-making turns coming up in the next few months. Every year it seems like there are a few actors who break onto the awards scene and become the talk of the town. These four young women are all in line for a lot of attention for much talked about work in four very different festival hits.

xxx
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
First is Abbie Cornish in Bright Star, the Jane Campion film about the poet John Keats and his romance with Fanny Brawne. Cornish has starred in a few other films - Candy with Heath Ledger and last year's Stop-Loss - but EW's Dave Karger says that this is her star-making role. The film's debut at Cannes garnered quite a bit of attention, with Variety stating Cornish delivered "an outstanding performance." The Hollywood Reporter sang her praises too:

"Cornish has the acting skill to match her striking beauty and she makes the small loving gestures that the British might call soppy both real and touching."

Campion directed both Holly Hunter and Anna Paquin to Oscar wins in 1993's incredible The Piano, and Barbara Hershey to a nomination in Portrait of a Lady. Cornish could be the fourth woman to make a trip to the Academy Awards with Campion, but she'll have some stiff competition. Bright Star's limited release is scheduled for September 18th.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Katie Jarvis landed her role in Andrea Arnold's Fish Tank after a casting agent saw her having a heated argument with her boyfriend at a train station and asked her to audition. She plays Mia, a troubled and aggressive working-class teen with a passion for dance and her mother's new boyfriend.

Those who have seen the film have been wowed, especially by Jarvis' performance. Guy Lodge's review for In Contention said Jarvis brought "vivid physical charge to the character" and called her "an astute and fully-formed actress (not to mention a great dancer) in her own right".

Fish Tank tied for the Jury Prize at Cannes, and has US distribution with IFC Films, though no official US release date has been named. UK theaters will begin playing the film this Friday.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Carey Mulligan in An Education has been the one to keep an eye on since Sundance. She plays Jenny, a young girl torn between a college education and a romance with a much older man who shows her the ways of the world. Jeffrey Wells over at Hollywood Elsewhere has been ecstatically shouting her name from rooftops since he attended a screening if the film in January:

"I know that special old-soul-mixed-with-youthful-effervescence quality that you see in very few actors and actresses over the years, and trust me, Mulligan has it. A wondrously true and satisfying film has broken out of the Sundance '09 pack, and a brand-new actress with just the right face and just the right approach and precisely the right touch of sadness in the corners of her mouth has hit one out of the park."

Mulligan's performance and the film have been capturing the hearts of almost everyone who sees them all year, with Mulligan widely thought to be the one to beat in this year's Best Actress race. Something about her is charming and winning, and I have to admit this is the performance I'm most anxious to see this year. Look for it in theaters October 9th.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Another Sundance hit, Precious, stars Gabourey Sidibe in the title role. Precious is an illiterate Harlem teen pregnant with her second child by her father. She endures physical and emotional abuse from her mother and endless, cruel bullying from her peers over her obesity.

Most of the talk has been of Mo'Nique and her brutal performance as a montrous mother and Mariah Carey's non-glamorous role as a social worker, but Sidibe has earned raves as well. From the Hollywood Reporter:

"As Precious, Sidibe is superb, allowing us to see the inner warmth and beauty of a young woman who, to her world's cruel eyes, might seem monstrous."

It's a brave first performance to be sure. Precious hits theaters November 6th.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
All four names are sure to be floating around quite a bit as we come into the awards season. As far as Oscars go, Jarvis is a long shot due to her film's obscurity, and Sidibe will have a rough time keeping up with Mo'Nique's powerhouse performance. Mulligan is supposedly good enough to be a lock, and Cornish's chances are bolstered by the genre strength of the doomed period romance.

Sight unseen, my money is on Mulligan and Cornish, who will be battling it out in the coming months for the impressive newcomer vote.

As I've said, I'm most interested in Carey Mulligan, who's been drawing comparisons to Audrey Hepburn (who had her own breakthrough with Roman Holiday) for months. Who are you most excited about? Are there any other newcomers on your radar?

Monday, August 31, 2009

Bright Stars On The Rise

Below is the trailer for Bright Star, the Jane Campion film that debuted at Cannes this year to favorable reviews, with more than a few critics calling it "a return to form" for Campion.

I'm pretty excited about this one. Jane Campion's classic The Piano is a very special film to me, personally. Not only is it an astonishing film, but it's the first movie I watched when I was young that made me realize that film could be art, not just entertainment.

Bright Star has its limited release on September 18th, so when it reaches a theater near me I'll definitely be catching it. It's the story of the poet John Keats and his love affair with neighbor Fanny Brawne, which inspired his work. It stars relative newcomers Ben Whishaw and Abbie Cornish, who both received some praise for their work back at Cannes.

I'm still a little upset with Abbie Cornish for being a low-life homewrecker, but it's exciting nonetheless when new talent is on the horizon. We'll see soon enough if she can give that other newcomer a run for her money during awards season.