Last weekend marked my return to the movie theater after
many, many months of absence. I say that like I regularly went before baby-
truth is that I struggle to sit through movies, even more so when I’m stuck in
the confines of one seat for hours at a time. Nonetheless, my husband and I
both wanted to see Gone Girl (me because I was curious to see if this would
back up my “bad books make good movies” theory, and my husband because he loves
the director, David Fincher), so we abandoned the kid and went.
Several months ago I wrote about my lackluster feelings
towards the novel by Gillian Flynn. I thought the writing was mediocre, the
characters flat, and the entire premise (including the ending) downright
ridiculous. Scratch that- not ridiculous, stupid. There were spots that were
difficult to get interested in and others that I wished would hurry along- the
pacing was poor. And I didn’t have a problem that the characters were
despicable, as I don’t need to like the people I’m reading about (I know this
is a common complaint in a sea full of accolades).
The movie, though, was great. I was a little apprehensive
that it was over two-and-a-half hours (I prefer ninety minutes), but it didn’t
feel like it all (until I had to pee, anyway). While the dialogue and plot
events were basically identical to the novel, it was in many ways very
different. The acting absolutely made the movie- Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike
were phenomenal, as were supporting actors Tyler Perry and Neil Patrick Harris.
They absolutely nailed it.
The movie’s tone is vitally different than the novel- it’s
far more of a satire than the original. I often felt that it was almost making
fun of the book, on some level- Affleck and Pike are deliberately overacting,
producing this sort of hyper-aware, tongue-in-cheek, borderline campy feel at
times feel (should I start a movie review blog, guys? Ha!).
Fincher is directly critiquing the
role of the media in our lives, both their ways of spinning things and the
public’s ways of believing them. He’s commenting on marriage and trust (although
I will give the book credit for maybe doing this at least slightly). He’s
showing us how scary boredom, childhood scars, and money woes are.
I find it fascinating that Flynn wrote the screenplay for
this movie- if you look at the script alone you would simply see the book
condensed. But yet with the acting and direction something much more emerges,
something richer and more cerebral. It’s subtle, but powerful.
Did you see it? Did you read it? Thoughts?
Haven't seen it yet but as soon as my exams are done, I'm there.
ReplyDeleteAgree with you - I thought the book was pretty stupid but while I was reading I did keep thinking "This will make a top movie".
I actually enjoyed the book...BUT I LOVED the movie! I thought I was the only one who found the film interpretation better than the book. I was glued to the screen throughout...and I'm going to want to see it again...and again!
ReplyDeleteI felt the same about the book. There were a few interesting passages that made me think (particularly the idea of the "cool girl"), but overall I found it forgettable and overrated. That being said, I can't wait to see the movie.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen the movie yet - the only time we had someone able to babysit, the only showing not sold out that day was at 1020pm! Also, I too have a hard time sitting through a movie, although, I'm a lot better about it if I'm at the theatre, and movies over 90 minutes make me anxious as well, haha!
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