Monday, June 14, 2010

CONVERSATIONS WITH OTHER WOMEN makes me feel dumb ... and I like it.

An instructor of mine once criticized a script I had written by saying that it was a play, that there was "nothing cinematic about it." That comment has stuck with me a long time, and I think it's because some of my favourite movies could be described the same way. WHEN HARRY MET SALLY. DINER. BEFORE SUNRISE and BEFORE SUNSET. The visuals aren't what do it for you in those movies, it's the characters and dialogue that keep you on the edge of your seat. In that spirit, I present you with CONVERSATIONS WITH OTHER WOMEN.


CONVERSATIONS WITH OTHER WOMEN is basically a 90-minute two-hander between Aaron Eckhart and Helena Bonham Carter over one night. You could see it staged as a play very easily. But CONVERSATIONS WITH OTHER WOMEN dances neatly around that theatrical complaint with its use of split-screen. The entire film is done in split-screen, with each half of the frame focused on one of the characters, and occasionally showing their mindsets. For example, there are scenes where one of the characters tells a story, and in the other frame, a filmed version of that story plays out. There are also times when the frames nearly synch, usually at moments of extreme intimacy.

Sound gimmicky? It is, but it's also occasionally brilliant, especially when the film allows the characters to breathe and forgets about dazzling your eyes and over-stimulating your brain. Aaron Eckhart is tremendous in this film, emotionally devastated and barely keeping it together, childishly selfish and lashing out from beneath a suave exterior. It makes those memories of when they showed you THE CORE in science class (at the end of term, of course) seem like a bad dream. Helena Bonham Carter is also extremely impressive, playing suitably mysterious and vague, alternatively cold and fragile, deeply sad and world-weary with flashes of charm and wit.

There's some great ideas in the film that the split-screen format perfectly exploits, like when the characters imagine alternate reactions within scenes that play out into alternate futures, or when a character says a line and we see how the other hears it (with a different inflection and emphasis). The film starts to layer these sorts of experiments with increasing frequency as the film plays out, to the film's detriment. Just when you're starting to really engage with the characters and their past, the film starts jumping all over the place trying to get you deeper into the psyche of the characters in the moment and showing off cool new uses of the split-screen.

I hate to say it, but it might just be too dense for me - and I mean that in the sense that there's so much to process. It feels unfair to criticize a movie for having too much going on, but that's how I feel sometimes. I'm still trying to process what Eckhart's multiple reactions mean - and which one Bonham Carter is reacting to - while the film has moved on and is showing Bonham Carter's version of their past and is asking me to compare it to Eckhart's version from twenty minutes ago. It gets to be a little much.

Overall, though, CONVERSATIONS WITH OTHER WOMEN is a fantastically unique film with some great performances that I'd highly recommend you check out. I'll gladly lend you my copy. But still, I never had these problems with a play.

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