Birdman (FILM REVIEW)
Birdman
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Fading Star Mounts Comeback on Broadway in Midlife Crisis Dramedy
A couple of decades ago, actor Riggan
Thomson (Michael Keaton) was sitting atop the showbiz food chain.
However, the former box-office star’s stock has been in sharp decline since he stopped
playing Birdman after a trio of outings as the popular, blockbuster superhero. And
today, he’s so closely associated with the iconic character that nobody’s eager
to hire him.
With his career
fading fast and no roles on the horizon, Riggan decides to take it upon himself
to orchestrate his own comeback. The plan is to mount a Broadway production, with
what’s left of his dwindling savings, of the Raymond Carver short story, “What
We Talk about When We Talk about Love”.
First, he adapts the short
story to the stage, with the idea of not only starring but directing. Then, he enlists
the assistance of his skeptical attorney/agent Jake (Zach Galifianakis) and his
drug-addicted daughter Sam (Emma Stone), while rounding out the cast with his
girlfriend, Laura (Andrea Riseborough), fellow film industry refugee, Lesley (Naomi
Watts), and her matinee idol beau, Mike (Edward Norton).
Will the washed-up
thespian manage to make himself over with the help of this motley crew? Unfortunately,
Riggan is a troubled soul with more on his plate than the already intimidating challenge
of putting on the play.
For, he happens to be
haunted by a discouraging voice in his head telling him he’s going to fail,
too. That would be his alter ego, Birdman, a nasty, one-note,blithering
birdbrain of balderdash.
Written and directed by Oscar-nominee
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu (for Babel), Birdman
is a bittersweet
portrait of a Hollywood has-been desperate for
a second go-round in the limelight. The sublimely scripted dramedy simultaneously
paints a perfectly plausible picture of life on the Great White Way courtesy of pithy background
banter.
The movie features a plethora of praiseworthy performances,
starting with Michael Keaton (Batman) who will likely earn an Oscar nomination
in a thinly-veiled case of art imitating life. Also impressive are Emma Stone,
Edward Norton, Naomi Watts and an unusually-sedate Zach Galifianakis,
if only for his acting against type.
The theater world’s eloquent answer to Black Swan equally-surrealistic
exploration of ballet.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated R
for sexuality, brief violence and pervasive profanity
Running time: 119
minutes
Distributor: Fox
Searchlight Pictures
To see a trailer for Birdman,
visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIxMMv_LD5Q
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