Oscar History
Film Bitch History
Welcome

The Film Experience™ was created by Nathaniel R. All material herein is written by our team. (This site is not for profit but for an expression of love for cinema & adjacent artforms.)

Follow TFE on Substackd

Powered by Squarespace
Keep TFE Strong

We're looking for 500... no 390 SubscribersIf you read us daily, please be one.  

I ♥ The Film Experience

THANKS IN ADVANCE

What'cha Looking For?
Subscribe
« Yes No Maybe So: "Killers of the Flower Moon" | Main | Oscar History: The Very First Ceremony! »
Tuesday
May162023

Cannes at Home: Day 1 – When "Gatsby "opened the festival...

by Cláudio Alves

The 76th edition of the Cannes Film Festival has begun in a flurry of controversy. Jeanne Du Barry, Johnny Depp's return to the silver screen after a much-publicized trial, was selected to open the festivities, prompting reporters to swarm the Croisette with polemic on their minds. The situation wasn't helped by incidents earlier this year, when director Maïwenn spat on a journalist, making their film about much more than just Louis XV's last mistress. In giving such attention to the kerfuffle, we've all played into Thierry Frémaux's hands. Regardless of the picture's quality, everybody's eyes are on Cannes, whether looking for a redemption story, an immoral scandal, or secret fashion messages on the red carpet.

Then again, the Cannes opener is seldom an example of masterpiece cinema capable of accruing wide acclaim. More often than not, the titles blessed – or is it burdened? – with this honor tend to be mixed bags with big names attached, glossy stuff ready to act as attention magnets. Such was the case ten years ago when Baz Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby opened the festivities to various degrees of critical hostility. Looking back, one is enticed by the possibility of reappraisal…

I don't know about you, but I love a paradox. That may be why I feel compelled to defend the CGI-heavy, frenzied to-a-fault Great Gatsby 2013. Everything that makes it lousy is also what makes it genius. Each adaptation flaw represents another reason why, to date, Luhrmann's vision is the best film yet made out of F. Scott Fitzgerald's era-defining work, the Great American Novel, through and through. Some would say the extravagance misses the point, tarnishing its literary origin through vacuous stylization, a lot of glitter surrounding a fundamental nothing. More naysayers would point to the modernizations littered around as a point against fidelity.

Although fidelity isn't always the point, Luhrmann and co-writer Craig Pearce feel fixated on Fitzgerald's words. It’s a tough thought exercise, but try to separate the glitz from the text when considering the movie. Framing device aside, you may find a slavishly faithful reconstruction of the book upon which the filmmakers have created their storm of audiovisual stimuli attuned to a post-MTV audience. But it's also distant from that origin in ways that transcend style, making assertions of fidelity somewhat dubious. As much as the screenplay keeps things in the same general form as the printed prose, as much as it tries to bring Fitzgerald's specific phrasings to the forefront, thematic intentions have been warped out of shape.

Examining the final film as a coroner might regard a corpse, we can pinpoint the stress marks across its body, the bruised ghost of Luhrmann's touch. In this autopsy, more of the killer than their victim becomes evident. At the very least, the director's Modus Operandi as a storyteller is plain to see, his romantic sincerity at odds with Fitzgerald's cynicism. As conceived by the mad Australian, The Great Gatsby is a tragic love story, no matter that the narrative doesn't support such conclusions or that the characters are incompatible with such earnestness. It's like the moviemaker took the obfuscations at face value, buying into the novel's illusions with such enthusiasm he becomes a metatextual twin to Gatsby. Or perchance a reflection of naïve Nick, smitten with his neighbor.

So, we have a screenplay adapted with plenty of fidelity that uses constant narration and graphic effects to bring the book to the screen. At the same time, it goes against the book's ruthless social observation, turning eyes away from its figures' horrifying hollowness. The movie does this to pursue an active misreading of its source. On the one hand, it pledges itself to a novel that came to define an era. On the other, every creative department does the most to spit on that era's specificities, transfiguration the past into a hyper-artificial phenomenon reflection of 2013 tastes.

Instead of classic jazz, the soundtrack is a Jay-Z-curated fantasia that could have rightfully filled the Oscars Best Original Song ballot all by itself. Instead of period reconstruction, the visuals are a festival of fakery, wardrobes gilded with modern Prada, and sets augmented with CGI. The very texture of the thing is sharp digital, rendered for a 3-D projection where depth works to make the world look like a pop-up book rather than an immersive universe. It's a bellow declaring war on the idea of authenticity. It's a formalistic denial of Gatsby's declaration that, of course, you can repeat the past – whether this is intentional on Luhrmann's part is beside the point.

It's beside the point to me, but I might be crazy. Who else but a crazy cinephile could look straight at this mess and call it brilliant?

Luhrmann feels antagonistic toward Fitzgerald's notions of emptiness, wanting to consider the characters as characters than as the vicious voids they are on the page. However, the cinematic construction many decry as a fault is perfect at capturing the bauble that shines prettily until you squeeze too hard, breaking to show nothing inside. Even the maximalist visual idioms that turn obvious symbolism into monuments repeat this dynamic, capturing something of the book other filmmakers have failed to reproduce. Bluntness in boldness is just right. The eyes of god are a pop of color in the digitally-drained landscape, the green light nothing but a computer-made facsimile of illumination, the doubled Toby Maguire's a metaphor of within and without literalized.

And the parties, oh, the parties. They are the kaleidoscopic carnival of the Jazz Age brought to life, anachronism and all. By focusing so much on the romance, Luhrmann bests many an essay on Fitzgerald's book, revealing the self-deluded mania, the sheer inhumanity, of these pre-Depression hedonists. Leonardo DiCaprio's failure as the lead to this love story is similarly so bad it's good, while Carey Mulligan's Daisy reads like a repudiation of sentimentality. He's a broken characterization. She's an airy idea with a voice full of money. They're never the beautiful paramours Luhrmann seems to be working for, never people. And yet, in this upside-down cinema, it makes sense.

In his inability to tell the truth, Baz Luhrmann succeeded in telling a story that's about untruths, those lies one tells others and themselves, the world, the times. The Great Gatsby does all that, combining incompatible ideas, paradoxes galore. And still, it also serves as Elizabeth Debicki's well-deserved big-screen breakthrough. What more can you wish for?

You can find The Great Gatsby on most major platforms, available to rent and purchase.

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (9)

I saw it in the theaters and thought it was an exciting and fun film with a great cast. It was Baz at his most decadent and I enjoyed every minute of it.

May 17, 2023 | Registered Commenterthevoid99

I love the madness of King Luhrmann!

About your statement “the soundtrack is a Jay-Z-curated fantasia that could have rightfully filled the Oscars Best Original Song ballot all by itself”, so was “Young and Beautiful” eligible?

May 17, 2023 | Registered CommenterAntônio

I love this as a Cannes opener. Decadent, filled with parties and dramatics and moviestars and beautiful costumes. If it were any better, I'd almost be disappointed for the opening night crowd. MOULIN ROUGE! was another perfect opening night selection, and the rarity of a compeition film.

And it's certainly a better choice than some of the other Hollywood nonsense that Cannes chooses to screen.

May 17, 2023 | Registered CommenterGlenn Dunks

Same old Baz throw as much as possible at the viewer and maybe something lands,I wish he'd reign himself in just once and see if he's more than just flash.

May 17, 2023 | Registered CommenterMr Ripley79

I don't particularly like this move. Some elements (Leo playing movie star; Joel Edgerton stealing the whole show;Gowns, beautiful gowns) are divine, but for all that glitz and soundtracking, it kinda fell flat for me. It didn't even "look" great with all that CGI, which is the least you'd expect for Baz.

All that being said, a great way to start a party. Something fun for folks to talk about, whether they liked it or not.

May 17, 2023 | Registered CommenterVal

Some past films that opened the Festival and would have been a memorable experience

The 400 Blows 1959

The Birds 1963

The Collector 1965

Wouldn't it have been a thrill to sit in that audience who were seeing these for the first time?

Of course, it would have been a hoot to sit in that starry event with a real stinker like Grace of Monaco, too.

May 17, 2023 | Registered CommenterFinbar McBride

Young and Beautiful was absolutely robbed of an Oscar nod.

The fact that it didn't make it to the final five was already shocking (I remember someone at some point sending an email or something saying that it wasn't eligible, which wasn't true, but that might've had something to do with it).

The cherry on top was the fact that this was the year year of the infamous Alone Yet Not Alone nomination that was rescinded two weeks later... and I have no doubt Young and Beautiful would've been the next song in line had that replaced the nomination.

Then the Bond producers passed over Lana's Spectre submission ("24" from her album Honeymoon was likely the song, as Spectre was the 24th film in the Bond franchise... It's a great Bond-esque song regardless) for Sam Smith, who somehow won the Oscar for that forgettable, middle of the road track is such a shame!

I hope Lana gets to do a Bond theme one day, as she has the perfect vibe for that!

May 17, 2023 | Registered CommenterPhilip H.

I remain convinced that the only reason he made this movie was that his wife Catherine Martin could win another Oscar. And she did! Everybody should find their Baz.

May 17, 2023 | Registered CommenterTomG

I'm torn on this one. Baz's frenetic energy definitely works in sports (that first big party at Gatsby's mansion in particular), but for the most part there's just far too much going on. I don't think his style remotely fits the words/material. Also, that flashback/institution story structure is terrible. Which is a shame because Edgerton and Debicki do the most they can with the material, and Mulligan is quite good in a nearly impossible part.

May 18, 2023 | Registered CommenterScottC
Comments for this entry have been disabled. Additional comments may not be added to this entry at this time.