by Matteo » Feb 04, '15, 11:02 pm
I watched Birdman last night and I have to slightly disagree with you two. From a technical viewpoint, it's clearly remarkable - Lubezki is one of the most talented cinematographers of his generation, and this work further solidifies it (although I slightly do prefer his work when he's actually working with photochemical film as opposed to digital; they're less gimmicky, better lit, and just have more of conceptual vision). Considering how many long takes there were in the film, the choreography, blocking, timing and precise, meticulous framing were simply impeccable, however. It's hard to fathom that a film of this prodigious technical ambition was only shot in thirty days.
In saying that, as much as I appreciated the 'mechanics' of the film, it's simply one that I could not emotionally be invested with. I did not care for what happened, and I found myself more engrossed with the technicalities of the film than I did the narrative. Perhaps this comes down to my (somewhat excessive) observant tendencies when it comes to photography and editing in film, but it clearly didn't have enough at its core, story-wise, to keep me engrossed. As good as Keaton was, I can not openly jump on the bandwagon by calling it the best performance of 2014 - Ralph Fiennes in The Grand Budapest Hotel, Jake Gyllenhaal in Nightcrawler and Guy Pearce in The Rover were considerably better performances, in my opinion. In fact, I don't even think he gives the best performance of the film - Edward Norton stole the show.
I think this one fits under the "a film I admire more than I love" category. It's brilliantly edited, photographed, VFX-rendered, and directed, but its story simply left me cold and ambivalent. With all that being said, it's great to see a relatively unconventional, uncommon and ambitious film get recognition by the Academy Awards. At least it brought something new to the table, and you have to appreciate that.