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Story
Spanning
from WWI to the 21st century, Eric Roths
screenplay (based loosely on a 1922 short story
by F. Scott Fitzgerald) tells the unique story
of a man named Benjamin Button (Brad Pitt). He
is born in New Orleans as a very old baby, the
equivalent of a man in his 80s, who then ages
backward into youth over the better part of a
century. The film is told in flashback by a very
old, dying woman Daisy (Cate Blanchett), who recounts
her tale to her daughter (Julia Ormond) from a
hospital bed during Hurricane Katrina. Left on
the doorstep of a retirement home one night by
his father (Jason Flemyng), Benjamin is brought
up by Queenie (Taraji P. Henson), who runs the
place. While there he meets a young girl, Daisy,
who will become a key figure -- romantically and
otherwise -- in his life. Ben does have some grand
adventures: He goes to work on a boat, sees sea
battles during WWII, finds love with an older
married woman (Tilda Swinton) -- and gets progressively
younger as the decades fly by. It all manages
to be alternately haunting, romantic, funny, epic,
emotional and incredibly moving and will likely
to stay with you a lifetime.
Acting
Brad
Pitt manages to deliver a thoughtful and subtle
performance through all the special effects makeup
and CGI. He does so much just by using his eyes.
Cate Blanchett is equally fine as she plays Daisy
from a teenager to an old woman and matches Pitt
in bringing an entire lifetime skillfully to light.
Her aging makeup is completely natural and shes
very moving in the hospital scenes opposite Ormond.
Henson is just marvelous as Queenie, a warm and
understanding soul. Swinton is elegant and memorable
in her few crucial encounters with Ben and plays
beautifully off Pitt. Jared Harris (TVs
The Riches) as the colorful Captain Mike, who
hires Ben on his tug boat, and Flemyng (The League
of Extraordinary Gentlemen), as Bens father,
are also effective in their brief screen time.
Direction
Interestingly,
Benjamin Button has been gestating for decades
in the Hollywood firmament but needed time for
the proper technology to catch up to it. Director
David Fincher (Zodiac, Fight Club) with his early
background at George Lucas ILM, proves to
be the perfect choice to marry a compelling story
with spectacular visual effects achievement. He
did not want to do the film unless the technology
allowed one actor to play the role throughout
the course of the film. Remarkably, they were
able to achieve this superimposing Brad Pitts
face and eyes into all the incarnations of Ben
Button. In one sequence, Pitt looks just like
he did in Thelma and Louise. Its an amazing
feat. He has seamlessly created a unique universe
without ever bringing attention to it, advancing
the art of screen storytelling leaps and bounds
ahead of everything else that has come before.
Benjamin Button is a plaintive and provocative
meditation of life, death and what we do while
we are here. Its the stuff of dreams.
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