Adaptation
Movie Review:
From
the mind of Spike Jonze and Charlie Kaufman comes Nicolas
Cage starring as twin brothers who are struggling with emotional
as well as literary turmoils. Its funny, creative
and showcases good performances. Sign me up!
Charlie
Kaufman (Cage) is burnt out. He constantly strives for perfection
in his work but often is completely unaware of the world
around him. Charlie struggles to adapt a rather cerebral
novel called "The Orchid Thief" which showcases
author Susan Orleans (Meryl Streep) journey into the
world of rare orchid collecting. The focus of the novel
is a recluse collector named John LaRoche (Chris Cooper),
who seems to be filled with passion when comes to seeking
out orchids in the wild. Crippled with a shadowed past,
LaRoche captures Susans attention as the perfect literary
character. How can Charlie capture the hidden world of Orlean
and LaRoche if he hardly understands his own? Oh and Charlie
lives with his twin brother Donald who is also trying to
become a breakout screenwriter in his own right.
The
mind of Charlie Kaufman, the screenwriter is an enigma.
How close is the actual writer to his persona in the movie.
Kaufman is one of the great screenwriters of our time and
this is evident in the first two-thirds of this film. The
third half runs like Charlie gave up on the concept or they
hired a worthless ghostwriter to wrap the script up. I have
seen better endings on reruns of Miami Vice.
I did
love how Cage plays the twins without making them physically
look very different. In some scenes you can actually see
each of them mirroring each other with hardly a wardrobe
or make-up change. When showing identical twins on screen,
scripts tend to go for the exact opposite approach so that
the audience isnt lost to which character is which?
Even though there is just a subtle difference between the
brothers, Cage uses his performance to bring a difference.
It is quite ingenious in its delivery.
I also
found myself really relating to the laid-back performance
of Streep. She uses a lot of restraint in her character,
which makes her very "waspy". Its very powerful
and one of the key reasons why I found the films ending
to be such a huge disappointment. I didnt for a minute
believe that the Orlean character could do what is depicted.
In the
film, Kaufman says that its demented for when a screenwriter
to place himself in his own script. It sure is when he does
and gives up for a predictably useless ending.
(3 of
5)
So says
the Soothsayer.
Dean
Kish
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