Showing posts with label Michael Fassbender. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Fassbender. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 February 2014

12 Years A Slave (2013); historical biographical drama film review


Korean poster artwork for the historical biographical drama film 12 Years A Slave.
Intercepting Injustice by Linh
The film adaptation 12 Years A Slave is based on the true story of Solomon Northup, whose 1853 memoir titled Twelve Years A Slave was used as the original source for the film. Northup was a legally free *negro who was born in New York State but was kidnapped in 1841 to be sold into slavery. The film chronicles the twelve years Northup spent as a slave working in the plantations for different masters and the people he encountered who showed kindness or cruelty towards black slaves.
Director Steve McQueen (Hunger, Shame) is beginning to develop a reputation for films regarding issues or themes of human suffering or afflictions that are riveting and leaves the viewer in silent awe. This film is exceptional despite the few alterations in the story that are made for dramatic effects but do not change the overall sentiments of the original book. 
FAMILY FREEDOM: Solomon Northup (Chiwetel Ejiofor) enjoys life as a legally free negro with his wife Anne (Kelsey Scott), son Alonzo (Cameron
Zeigler) and daughter Margaret (
Quvenzhané Wallis) in the historical biographical drama 12 Years A Slave. Image: Icon Films.
The film begins in Saratoga Springs, New York, in 1841 where a legally free negro named Solomon Northup (Chiwetel Ejiofor), who works as a skilled carpenter and plays the violin, is spending some family time with his wife Anne (Kelsey Scott), son Alonzo (Cameron Zeigler) and daughter Margaret (Quvenzhané Wallis). Later, he meets with his white friend Parker (Rob Steinberg) for business and consequently encounters two white men named Mr. Brown (Scoot McNairy) and Mr. Hamilton (Taran Killam), who offer him a brief and high-paying job as a musician with their travelling circus. Solomon goes to Washington D.C. with Hamilton and Brown where he is drugged, bound and kept in a slave pen, before being transported by ship to New Orleans.  On the ship, there are abducted women and their children, and the negro men tell Solomon that he must be silent, endure the beatings and never reveal he is literate.
Solomon is re-named Platt by the slave traders and sold to a debt-ridden cotton planter named William Ford (Benedict Cumberbatch) who treats him kindly. Another owner named John Tibeats (Paul Dano) feels Solomon is using his carpentry and communication skills to challenge Tibeats’s superiority as a master. Solomon suffers cruelty and ill-treatment at the hands of Tibeats, even being hung by the neck from a tree for many hours, until Ford returned from a trip to release him. Stricken with guilt that he cannot protect his slave from harm, Ford sells Solomon to the notoriously cruel Edwin Epps (Michael Fassbender). Solomon meets a young slave girl named Patsey (Lupita Nyong’o) who is the hardest worker and fastest cotton picker on Epps’s plantation. He witnesses her suffering while enduring his own. She seeks his help in committing suicide but Solomon refuses. He spends a decade working for Epps as a cotton picker, driver, and overseer who must punish fellow slaves for disobeying Epps. While working on a gazebo for Epps, Solomon meets a Canadian carpenter, who is also an abolitionist, named Samuel Bass (Brad Pitt), whose generosity alters Solomon’s life.
SKILLED SLAVE: Solomon/Platt (Chiwetel Ejiofor) is grateful for the kindness of his master Ford (Benedict Cumberbatch) when his other master Tibeats (Paul Dano) attempts wrongfully punish him in the historical biographical drama film 12 Years A Slave. Image: Icon Films.
The performances in this film are excellent, particularly with the subject matter of slavery, where extreme prejudices, cruelty and discrimination are depicted through the strong characterisations and cohesive screenplay.
Chiwetel Ejiofor (Half Of A Yellow Sun,Triple Nine) is outstanding in the lead role of Solomon/Platt and he convincingly portrays a man who never gave up on his fight for freedom and to reunite with his family; the versatile Michael Fassbender (X-Men: Days of Future Past, Frank) who worked with Steve McQueen in Hunger and Shame, provides an admirably stellar performance as the racist and cruel Edwin Epps; Paul Dano (Prisoners, Love and Mercy) is brilliant as the envious bigot John Tibeats, whose insecurities manifests as hatred and rage against his slaves; making her debut in this feature film, Lupita Nyong’o is gentle, vulnerable and sweet as slave girl Patsey, whose inner strength wanes with the sex abuse at the hands of Epps and her attempts to escape result in severe whipping.
Supporting roles are equally impressive including from Sarah Paulson as Mary Epps the jealous wife of Edwin Epps; Paul Giamatti as the conniving slave trader Theophilus Freeman; Alfre Woodard is delightful as Harriet Shaw, the former slave woman who became the wife of a wealthy plantation owner, and an inspiration for Patsey; Benedict Cumberbatch is unforgettable as the benevolent cotton plantation owner William Ford whose kindness towards slaves briefly gives Solomon hope in humanity; Brad Pitt is commendable as carpenter and abolitionist Samuel Bass with a passable Canadian accent for his brief scenes in the film.
SOCIAL STATUS: Patsey (Lupita Nyong'o) greatly admires Harriet Shaw (Afre Woodard) who was formerly enslaved but was able to use her personal powers as a woman to become the wife of a wealthy plantation owner in the historical biography drama film 12 Years A Slave. Image: Icon Films. 
The film depicts common practices related to slavery in the pre-Civil War period such as the treatment of negroes as not possessing any human value, but are seen as objects worth monetary value, therefore can be sold, bought or exchanged; the undressing of negroes and line-ups in the nude, then displayed for potential buyers; using negroes for entertainment purposes such as dancing; black women are seen as property of slave owners so they are at high risk of rape and sexual abuse; children of slave women are often removed from their mother’s care and sent away; treatment of slaves varying from kindness to cruelty with whippings, hangings and mutilations.
MANIPULATIVE MASTER: Edwin Epps (Michael Fassbender) informs his slave Solomon/Platt (Chiwetel Ejiofor) that punishment is inevitable and painful if he is caught escaping in the historical biographical drama film 12 Years A Slave. Image: Icon Films.
12 Years A Slave is mostly about the years of one man in slavery, but is also a shared story for many others who have lived through similar experiences of struggles and indignities associated with slavery. It is a difficult film to watch as it depicts moments in America’s history of injustice, inequality and inhumanity towards a race of people, and this appalling pre-Civil War period may still have emotional resonance for future generations of African Americans. However, it is an important film to watch, in the sense that by witnessing the wrongs of the past, we may learn to right those similar wrongs in the future and attempt to never repeat them.
Director: Steve McQueen
Writers: Solomon Northup (author of memoir Twelve Years A Slave), John Ridley (screenplay)
Cast: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender, Benedict Cumberbatch, Paul Dano, Lupita Nyong’o, Sarah Paulson, Paul Giamatti, Rob Steinberg, Taran Killam, Scoot McNairy, Quvenzhané Wallis, Kelsey Scott, Cameron Zeigler, Afre Woodard, Brad Pitt, Dwight Henry, Ashley Dyke, Deneen Tyler, Bryan Batt, Michael K. Williams, Marcus Lyle Brown, Vivian Fleming-Alvarez, Anwan Glover, Craig Tate, Chris Chalk, Garrett Dillahunt, Adepero Oduye, Eliza J. Bennett, Bill Camp, Ruth Negga, Jay Huguley, Christopher Berry, Devyn A. Tyler
Producers: John Ridley, Bianca Stigter, Tessa Ross, Steve McQueen, Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Bill Pohland, Arnon Milchan, Anthony Katagas
Original Music Composer: Hans Zimmer
Cinematographer: Sean Bobbitt (Director of Photography)
Film Editor: Joe Walker
Production: Adam Stockhausen (Production Designer), David Stein (Art Direction), Alice Baker (Set Decorator)
Costume Designer: Patricia Norris
Running Time: 2 hours and 15 minutes
*The term negro/negroes is no longer in general use but is used in historical context for this written piece. Negro is a term that may still be used in anthropological or historical studies for academia.

Thursday, 4 July 2013

Shame (2011); drama film review

Poster artwork for the drama film Shame.

Secret Shame by Linh

Shame is the second collaborative effort between director and writer Steve McQueen and Michael Fassbender, following their first critically acclaimed film Hunger. Shame deals with aspects of the human condition, and depicts how a sex addict copes with his condition amid the continual bombardment of sexualisation of the material world, while navigating through life’s relationships with colleagues, family and strangers. The main character suffers from sex addiction and the ‘shame’ in the film’s title refers to the main character’s feeling of self-loathing and shame of what he has done, of not being able to cope with his condition and the inability to stop the urges.

SIMPLY SOCIALISING: Sissy (Carey Mulligan) flirts with David (James Badge Dale) while her brother Brandon (Michael Fassbender) watches disapprovingly in the film Shame. Image:Film4, Transmission Films.

Brandon Sullivan (Michael Fassbender) is a successful and single businessman in New York who suffers from sex addiction and hides it from others. He pays prostitutes and randomly picks up women in bars for sex at his apartment. His well-structured life of sexual activities to feed his addiction is disrupted when his wayward and estranged sister Sissy (Carey Mulligan) unexpectedly appears and stays at his apartment for a while. 

Both siblings are similar in that they have problems with intimacy in relationships. It’s how they deal with pain that makes them different. Brandon avoids intimacy because his condition renders him unable to become intimate with someone on an emotional level. His sexual activities are purely to relieve his addiction and he feels most at ease engaging in sexual intercourse with strangers than with someone he knows. Sissy is extroverted, carefree, seeks attention and the need to be loved. Her lack of intimacy leads her to self-harm. For Sissy, pain becomes her pleasure, while for Brandon, pleasure relieves his pain.

PRIVATE PORN: Brandon (Michael Fassbender) watches pornography on his laptop to feed his sex addiction in the film Shame. Image: Film4, Transmission Films.

Michael Fassbender (A Dangerous Method, Prometheus) is equally brilliant in Shame as he was in Hunger and brings a compelling quality to Brandon in his performance. Fassbender provides the pathos to make Brandon believable and likeable, and his understanding of a character whose addiction is partly fed by the ‘sex-sells’ world we live in is evident in his performance. As sex is so readily accessible, available online and used in advertising for everyday consumption, Brandon feels it normalises his addiction in some ways, but also makes his addiction more debilitating.

Carey Mulligan (Drive, The Great Gatsby) is excellent as Sissy whose beautiful rendition of the song ‘New York, New York’ in the film hints at her character’s need for love and sense of belonging as much as her wish to start life anew. Mulligan is enigmatic and provocative as Sissy in her scenes with Fassbender and her performance shows she is capable of tackling other more profound, character-driven roles in the future. 

Other notable performances include Nicole Beharie who is wonderful as Brandon’s office colleague Marianne, whose close friendship with Brandon develops into a romance and brings another side of his addiction to the surface; James Badge Dale is fabulous as David, Brandon’s boss and beer buddy, who discovers that excessive amounts of sexually explicit, hardcore pornography caused a virus on Brandon’s work computer.

CLOSE CONNECTION: Brandon (Michael Fassbender) develops a romantic interest in Marianne (Nicole Beharie) in the film Shame. Image: Film4, Transmission Films.

Shame is another cinematic gem from director Steve McQueen, but the subject matter, adult themes and nudity may deter or be unsuitable for some audiences. The film requires the viewer to think about the characters’ motivations and to reflect upon them after the final credits roll. The sex scenes in Shame are explicit but necessary as they depict the need for Brandon to relieve his urges just as a film with drug scenes show alleviation of anxiety for a drug addict. It would be a shame to miss this film.

Shame Featurette-The Story Film Trailer (courtesy of Fox Searchlight):



Director: Steve McQueen

Writers: Abi Morgan, Steve McQueen

Cast: Michael Fassbender, Carey Mulligan, James Badge Dale, Nicole Beharie, Elizabeth Masucci, Rachel Farrar, Loren Omer, Lauren Tyrrell, Robert Montano, Marta Milans, Hannah Ware, Alex Manette, Carl Low, Charisse Ballante, Calamity Chang, Amy Hargreaves, Anna Rose Hopkins, DeeDee  Luxe, Wenne Alton Davis, Lucy Walters, Stanley Mathis, Mari-Ange Ramirez

Producers: Tessa Ross, Robert Walak, Peter Hampden, Tim Haslam, Iain Canning, Emile Sherman, Bergen Swanson

Cinematographer: Sean Bobbitt (Director of Photography)

Original Music Composer: Harry Escott

Film Editor: Joe Walker

Production: Judy Becker (Production Designer), Charles Kulsziski (Art Director), Heather Loeffler (Set Decorator)

Running Time: 1 hour and 40 minutes