Showing posts with label Robert Zemeckis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Zemeckis. Show all posts

Sunday, March 9, 2025

Time just went


HERE

2024
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Eric Roth and Robert Zemeckis (based on the comic book by Richard McGuire)

Spoilers: maybe high, more like inapplicable
Note: runs slightly long, but it was the most movie of 2024, whether we treated it that way or not

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Walt Disney, part XXXV: I hope you're proud of yourself—and those pictures you took


WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT

1988
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman ("based on" the novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit? by Gary K. Wolf, but at least the book properly punctuates its title)

Spoiler alert: forget it, reader, it's Chinatown

Saturday, January 12, 2019

Robert Zemeckis, part XXI: I like wearing women's shoes, somehow it connects me to the essence of dames


WELCOME TO MARWEN

Robert Zemeckis' most interesting effort in eighteen years is also his easiest to dislike and misunderstand, which is why the director's first grab toward real greatness in just as long has become branded his worst film, and has, accordingly, failed miserably.  Thing is, I'd usually blame you, but in this instance, I don't think there's anyone else to blame but Bob himself.

2018
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Caroline Thompson and Robert Zemeckis

Spoiler alert: mild

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part XX: Stop saying "Casablanca"


ALLIED

Emptier than it has any right to be, considering what it wants to be about, Allied is a misstep from a master.  And while it's effortlessly watchable, because the only Zemeckis live-action joint that wasn't watchable came out almost four decades ago, it's still pretty close to the least-good good movie he ever made.

2016
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Steven Knight
With Brad Pitt (Wing Commander Maurice "Max" Vatan), Marion Cotillard (Marianne Beausejour), Lizzy Caplan (Bridget Vatan), and Jared Harris (Frank Heslop)

Spoiler alert: mild

Sunday, May 15, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part infinity: Robert Zemeckis

I. I Wanna Hold Your Hand (1978) II. 1941** (1979) III. Used Cars (1980) IV. Romancing the Stone (1984) V. Back to the Future (1985) VI. Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) VII. Back to the Future Part II (1989) VIII. Back to the Future Part III (1990) IX. Death Becomes Her (1992) X. Forrest Gump (1994) XI. Contact (1997) XII. What Lies Beneath (2000) XIII. Cast Away (2000) XIV. The Polar Express (2004) XV. Beowulf (2007) XVI. A Christmas Carol (2009) XVII. Mars Needs Moms* (2011) XVIII. Flight (2012) XIX. The Walk (2015) XX. Allied (2016) XXI. Welcome to Marwen (2018)

Well, unlike in our last filmmaker's retrospective, Robert Zemeckis is still very much an active director: he's got a movie coming out later this year, in fact, and I'm sure as hell excited about it, because the man's been on an upswing lately.  Of course, most people would be on an upswing after A Christmas Carol and Mars Needs Moms, but, hey—let's not take Flight and The Walk away from the man, okay?

The point is, there is no final word on Zemeckis as of yet: he's still making pictures, and hopefully will continue to do so for many years to come.  We can therefore only sum up what he's done so far—and it's a career that any director (or writer, or producer) would envy.  Even his one-time mentor and all-time friend, Steven Spielberg, must have had to take a step back every five or six years and say, "Well, Bob, you did it better."  Okay, he probably didn't—Spielberg is Spielberg, after all, and keeps his own counsel.  But Forrest Gump does syrupy sentimentality better than any Spielberg film ever has (and even manages to spike it with a bit of real American venom in the process).  Contact is Close Encounters, perhaps not writ larger—but certainly writ one hell of a lot more legibly.  And if the Back to the Future films aren't about to stand up to Indy... well, it's still one fantastic adventure, and the world would be far poorer without it.

Ah, but why must this be the lens through which we view Zemeckis—always a pupil, never the master?  It's a long shadow for a man to live in.  And it hasn't been the right way to look at Zemeckis since at least 1994.  Heck, maybe 1984.

Instead, let's reflect upon Zemeckis' career as Zemeckis' career.  It began with Spielberg, sure.  And it also began with a lot of crap: it took Zemeckis a long time to learn that full-tilt insanity was no way to make movies that people liked, and that's how his Shrillness Trilogy—for Zemeckis' career is extraordinarily amenable to being subdivided into trilogies, and not just the obvious, official one—must be seen as something of a stain upon his early filmography.  Yes, Used Cars has its charms, and Spielberg's 1941 (which Zemeckis helped script) is worthwhile in a very, very attenuated sense, but I Wanna Hold Your Hand would be a pretty lousy debut for anybody, and especially a director who'd bounce back with some of the greatest movies of all time.

After that, there was Romancing the Stone, which finally gave him his own traction in the industry, and the valuable experience of working on someone else's screenplay—an exercise which apparently finally taught him that "characterization" and "tone" were important parts of a motion picture.

He brought that experience back to his friend and old writing partner, Bob Gale, and they finished Back to the Future.  And we needn't belabor BttF any more than we already have, though we clearly can't get away with failing to note what he did in between BttF and Part II, which was one of the most technologically-audacious films ever made, that amazing hybrid of live-action and animation, Who Framed Roger Rabbit.

Following those twin triumphs, he transitioned into more prestigious fare (with a stopover in super-goofy body horror, in the half-forgotten gem Death Becomes Her).  Thus began what I like to call Zemeckis' Philosophical Pessimist Trilogy—Forrest Gump, Contact, and Cast Away—which all dealt meaningfully with the apparent lack of meaning in our existence.  Yet, as befitting Zemeckis' resolute commitment to telling stories for a mass audience, they do so in an unflaggingly populist manner.  (Well, maybe not Contact.  But, damn it, I love it anyway.)

Well, we can disregard What Lies Beneath as make-work, I suppose—even if it's nowhere even close to a "bad" movie.  And that leaves us with the Mo-Cap Trilogy... and what to say about that, that I haven't said already?  The Polar Express, Beowulf, and A Christmas Carol (not to mention Zemeckis' production of Simon Wells' studio-leveling Mars Needs Moms) represent more-or-less the nadir of his career.  Certainly, it is the nadir of his mature career.  (Should I mention that I'm the only one who calls his first three flicks a "Shrillness Trilogy"?  Perhaps it'll catch on.  Those movies have some pretty serious issues.)

Anyway, Zemeckis had a dream—and, honestly, if nothing else, you have to admire the passion with which Zemeckis took up arms to try to make motion capture animation the future of filmmaking, even if you stridently disagree with him.  And yet, whether the technology wasn't there, or the technique, or perhaps even the talent, I'm afraid we must write off those twelve years he spent on his mad quest as a failure.  Leave it to James Cameron, Bob; he has the formula.

But now we're back to the future, so to speak, and here we find our new Zemeckian classics, Flight and The Walk.  What will Allied bring to the table?  Can we put those three movies together into some new trilogy?  Well, that would be pretty arbitrary, but we'll see.  (Update: we did, and it brought very little to this particular table, sad to say; it was up to 2018's Welcome to Marwen to complete that trilogy, instead.)

So let us simply close on a brief defense of Zemeckis, as if he needs it—but perhaps he does, because I can't think of a single filmmaker as absolutely and routinely successful as Robert Zemeckis who is not given his due as an artist and as an auteur (whatever that word really means).  His is a singular style; his is a singular vision.  Indeed, it's a vision that I'd like to see more of in Hollywood—he has the demeanor of a natural entertainer, but he's never been afraid to go places where lesser filmmakers have feared to tread.  So: three cheers for one of the greats, and here's a ranked list, since people seem to enjoy that kind of thing.  (Updated 11/30/2016, to bring Allied into the fold, and 1/12/2019, for Welcome to Marwen)

19a. MARS NEEDS MOMS (3/10)*
19. I WANNA HOLD YOUR HAND  (3/10)
18. A CHRISTMAS CAROL  (4/10)
17a. 1941 (5.01/10)**
17. THE POLAR EXPRESS (5.01/10)
16. USED CARS (6/10)
15. BEOWULF (6/10)
14. ALLIED (6/10)
13. ROMANCING THE STONE (7/10)
12. WHAT LIES BENEATH (7/10)
11. DEATH BECOMES HER (7/10)
10. THE WALK (8/10)
9. FLIGHT (8/10)
8. BACK TO THE FUTURE PART III (8/10)
7. WELCOME TO MARWEN (9/10)
6. CONTACT (9/10)
5. WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT (9/10)
4. BACK TO THE FUTURE (10/10)
3. BACK TO THE FUTURE PART II (10/10)
2. FORREST GUMP (10/10)
1. CAST AWAY (10/10)***

Films marked with one asterisk (*) indicate films that Zemeckis only produced, but did not write or direct.  Films marked with two asterisks (**) indicate films that Zemeckis helped write, but did not direct.
Films marked with three asterisks (***) indicate Cast Away, and man, do I fucking love Cast Away.

Robert Zemeckis, part XIX: Welcome to the coup!


THE WALK

We prepare to end our look backwards at Robert Zemeckis' career with The Walk, which I am more certain than ever really was 2015's most worthwhile biopic.  So: at once a caper film of extraordinary wackiness, an enthralling testament to human awesomeness, and a sensitive tribute to the fallen Twin Towers upon which its story turns, that The Walk all seems of a piece is nothing short of a miracle—although it can't be denied that, in its most theoretically enrapturing moments, it suffers from a slight (but noticeable) lack of punch.

2015
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Christopher Brown and Robert Zemeckis (based on the book by Philippe Petit)
With Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Philippe Petit), Charlotte Le Bon (Annie), Clement Sibony (Jean-Louis), Cesar Domboy (Jeff), James Badge Dale (J.P.), Ben Schwartz (Albert), Benedict Samuel (David), Steve Valentine (Barry), and Ben Kingsley (Papa Rudy)

Spoiler alert: N/A
Note: This is a re-edited version of a review posted in January 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part XVIII: This film was brought to you by the Cocaine Council


FLIGHT

Zemeckis comes back very strong, with one of the better addiction dramedies of our age.

2012
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by John Gatins
With Denzel Washington (Whip Whitaker), Kelly Reilly (Nicole), Nadine Velasquez (Katerina Marquez), Bruce Greenwood (Charlie Anderson), Don Cheadle (Hugh Lang), and John Goodman (Harling Mays)

Spoiler alert: moderate

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part XVII: Why couldn't we have just done a feature-length Bloom County cartoon instead?


MARS NEEDS MOMS

How can so many people go so mad all at one time, and decide to make something like this?

2011
Directed by Simon Wells
Written by Wendy Wells and Simon Wells (based on the book by Berkeley Breathed)
With Seth Green/Seth Dusky (Milo), Joan Cusack (Mom), Dan Fogler (Gribble), Elisabeth Harnois (Ki), and Mindy Sterling (The Supervisor)

Spoiler alert: moderate

Monday, May 9, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part XVI: There's more of gravy than of grave about you


A CHRISTMAS CAROL

Zemeckis' mo-cap efforts had been getting better, but with A Christmas Carol, the director does something he hadn't done in a full thirty years—namely, make a really bad movie.

2009
Written and directed by Robert Zemeckis (based on the novella by Charles Dickens)
With Jim Carrey (Ebenezer Scrooge and several ghosts), Gary Oldman (Bob Cratchit, "Tiny" Tim Crachit, and another ghost, Jacob Marley), Robin Wright (Belle), Bob Hoskins (Fezziwig), and Colin Firth (Fred)

Spoiler alert: c'mon, man, for real?

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part XV: Ripper, tearer, slasher, gouger, and so forth


BEOWULF

Not the abject artistic failure you might have expected, Beowulf at least suggests why Zemeckis kept at the mo-cap thing.

2007
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Neil Gaiman and Roger Avary (based on the poem)
With Ray Winstone (Beowulf), Anthony Hopkins (Hrothgar), Robin Wright (Wealthow), Brendan Gleeson (Wigraf), John Malkovich (Unferth), Crispin Glover (Grendel), and Angelina Jolie (Grendel's Mother)

Spoiler alert: moderate

Friday, May 6, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part XIV: Snowpiercer


THE POLAR EXPRESS

Zemeckis' first mo-cap cartoon is blessed with not just a great deal of appealingly colorful design, but a whole new second volume in Tom Hanks' Encylcopedia of Amusingly Stupid Voices, too.  But reach beyond these attractive (albeit sometimes clunkily-animated) surfaces, and all you have left is the hollowness that lay at the heart of The Polar Express, a genial-as-shit nothing of a movie that I can't quite bring myself to even really dislike, yet shall never, ever truly enjoy.

2004
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by William Broyles, Jr. and Robert Zemeckis (based on the book by Chris Van Allsberg)
With Daryl Sabara/Josh Hutcherson/Tom Hanks (The Boy), Nona Gaye/Chantel Valdivieso/Meagan Moore/Tinashe Kachingwe (The Girl), Eddie Deezen/Jimmy Pinchak (Know-It-All), Jimmy Bennett/Peter Scolari/Hayden McFarland (Billy), and Tom Hanks (The Father, The Conductor, The Hobo, The Puppet Scrooge, Santa Claus, and The Narrator, the Boy as a Man)

Spoiler alert: insofar as this movie has a plot in the first place, moderate

Sunday, April 24, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part XIII: The sun will rise


CAST AWAY

Movies about existential terror don't come much better than this one, and in the rare case they actually do, it's only because they're the same movie, except set in space.

2000
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by William Broyles, Jr.
With Tom Hanks (Chuck Noland), Helen Hunt (Kelly Frears), Chris Noth (Dr. Jerry Lovett), and Wilson (himself) (yes, he's really credited)

Spoiler alert: high

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part XII: The lady in the water


WHAT LIES BENEATH

Robert Zemeckis turns an abject lack of surprise into a decent-enough thriller, with one scene that's truly worthy of a master; but, otherwise, the very best that What Lies Beneath ever offers is only its sense of comfortable familiarity.

2000
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Clark Gregg and Sarah Kernochan
With Michelle Pfeiffer (Claire Spencer), Harrison Ford (Norman Spencer), Miranda Otto (Mary Feur), James Remar (Warren Feur), Diana Scarwid (Jody), Joe Morton (Dr. Drayton), and Amber Valletta (Madison Frank)

Spoiler alert: moderate, unless you've never seen a movie before, in which case "high"

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part XI: HITLER LIVES ON VEGA


CONTACT

Contact is perhaps not the best film it could possibly be, but that doesn't stop it from being the best film to tell its kind of story since 2001 itself.

1997
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by James V. Hard and Michael Goldenberg (based on the novel by Dr. Carl Sagan, as well as the original screenplay by Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan)
With Jodie Foster/Jena Malone (Dr. Ellie Arroway), Matthew McConaughey (Palmer Joss), William Fichtner (Kent), John Hurt (S.R. Hadden), Tom Skerritt (David Drumlin), Angela Bassett (Rachel Constantine), James Woods (Michael Kitz), Rob Lowe (Richard Rank), Jake Busey (Joseph), and Ted Arroway (David Morse)

Spoiler alert: severe

Monday, April 18, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part X: Dear God, make me a bird


FORREST GUMP

All its layers of sometimes-contradictory meaning aside, Forrest Gump remains a superb and moving work of cinema, devoted to our ongoing failure to understand the journey without a goal that we've decided to call "life."

1994
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Eric Roth (based on the novel by Winston Groom)
With Tom Hanks (Forrest Gump), Sally Field (Mrs. Gump), Robin Wright (Jenny Curran), Haley Joel Osment (Forrest Gump, Jr.), Mykelti Williamson (Bubba Blue), and Gary Sinise (Lt. Dan Taylor)

Spoiler alert: high

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part IX: The aging process


DEATH BECOMES HER

An hour plus of the finest possible Zemeckian slapstick sadly becomes a strident harangue in its final act; yet there's too much here that's good and even great to let this one go without a fight.

1992
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Martin Donovan and David Koepp
With Meryl Streep (Madeline Ashton), Goldie Hawn (Helen Sharp), Bruce Willis (Dr. Ernest Menville), and Isabella Rossellini (Lisle Von Ruhman)

Spoiler alert: moderate

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part VIII: Tempus quiescit


BACK TO THE FUTURE PART III

Back to the Future takes a vacation in the Old West, which doesn't seem like it should be the summing up of a box office-shattering, pop culture-redefining trilogy, and guess what?  It really isn'tbut there we have it, and there's no changing it now.  And yet it's still an awful lot of fun on its own lessened terms, and that doesn't just count for something; it's damned near the whole ball of wax.

1990
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis
With Michael J. Fox (Marty McFly and Seamus McFly), Christopher Lloyd (Dr. Emmett Brown), Mary Steenburgen (Clara Clayton), and Thomas F. Wilson (Biff Tannen and Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen)

Spoiler alert: severe

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part VII: Tempus sulcat


BACK TO THE FUTURE PART II

Back to the Future jumps right up its own ass—and, somehow, this makes it even better than it already was.

1989
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis
With Michael J. Fox (Marty McFly, Marty McFly, Jr., and Marlene McFly), Christopher Lloyd (Dr. Emmett Brown), Elisabeth Shue (Jennifer Parker), Lea Thompson (Lorraine McFly nee Baines), Jeffrey Weisman (George McFly), and Thomas F. Wilson (Biff Tannen and Griff Tannen)

Spoiler alert: severe

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part VI: I hope you're proud of yourself—and those pictures you took


WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT

Zemeckis reemerges with one of the most technologically audacious films of all time, a spectacle worth watching over and over again for the sheer complexity of its achievement.

1988
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman ("based on" the novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit? by Gary K. Wolf, but at least the book properly punctuates its title)
With Bob Hoskins (Eddie Valiant), Charles Fleischer (Roger Rabbit, Benny the Cab, and several weasels), Kathleen Turner (Jessica Rabbit), Lou Hirsch (Baby Herman), Stubby Kate (Marvin Acme), Alan Tivern (R.K. Maroon), and Christopher Lloyd (Judge Doom)

Spoiler alert: forget it, reader, it's Chinatown

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Robert Zemeckis, part V: Tempus fugit


BACK TO THE FUTURE

And now, we really find out what we've gotten ourselves into: the uninterrupted run of classics, super-classics, and near-classics that can compete with the work of any director, living or deadnot to mention a great movie, in and of itself, as well as the beginning of something even bigger than just one film, no less than a trilogy worthy of being mentioned in the same breath as the mightiest franchises of a singularly-befranchised decade.

1985
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis
With Michael J. Fox (Marty McFly), Christopher Lloyd (Dr. Emmett Brown), Claudia Wells (Jennifer Parker), Lea Thompson (Lorraine McFly, nee Baines), Crispin Glover (George McFly), and Thomas F. Wilson (Biff Tannen)

Spoiler alert: severe