Two gems from
2021
When it debuted three
years ago Wandavision offered a radically different scenario to the
Marvel movies’ scale and approach.
Having not watched it till now I obviously know most of the twists
(though not as it turns out all) but the true test of a great show is how well
it works under those circumstances. Is it all twists or is there something
more?
A series about the
effect of grief and loss could be a dark, melodramatic production yet Wandavision
eschews such expectations to deliver something playful and imaginative both in
content and presentation. Most episodes play as a sitcom from a different era;
starting with the Fifties and working all the way through to the 2000s. This is
in itself an interesting conceit pinpointing just how tv changed over time. These
pastiches are meticulously accurate from
what I’ve seen of real shows from those times right down to the slightly lame
gags and over reacting audience laughter of the earlier ones and the to- camera
confessions of later shows. In between we see glimpses beyond and sometimes
large sections set outside the town. The effects are modestly proportioned for
a tv series but used ingeniously to unsettle the comedic aspects.
This approach must have
been quite a surprise when the series first aired and even though I knew
the format before seeing it I was kept engaged. Elisabeth Olsen and Paul
Bettany turn out to be kings of tv comedy behaving in perfect period style.
Both actors give delightfully light performances; even their cadences are
reminiscent of many a real vintage sitcom, yet when they need to be serious
they are. What works especially
well are the tiny elements that suggest we are seeing something that’s not
quite right. There’s the odd repeated line, an object in colour or in the 60s
episode a disembodied voice through a radio. Even the spoof ads carry clues in
that Hydra appear to be the makers of some of the products. The first hint that Wanda
is the creator of this world rather than being trapped in it comes in a seemingly
random moment when she sees a hazmat suited man emerge from a sewer drain and
says “No” whereupon things roll back.
Later the appearance of two twins who age a decade in a moment and the arrival
of Pietro, Wanda’s deceased brother add more spice. The latter is played by
Evan Peters allowing some meta comment as to the face change in this reality
(the actor having played the character in the unconnected X Men films). The
series continues to unpeel as it progresses leading to episode seven’s
climactic reveal that it was Agatha All Along. Kathryn Hahn has already been
fantastic as the eccentric yet oddly accepting neighbour and this development allows
her to become an even larger character. Despite
the series’ title its protagonist is really Monica Rambaud whose efforts to
persuade Wanda of the wrongs of her actions drive the narrative from outside
the barrier separating the town from the real world. Teyonah Parris gives an impressive
performance.
Inevitably the nature
of the plot means characters pop up and later vanish leaving the final two
episodes as somewhat more of a standard Marvel showdown with lots of flying
battles and static. Yet the theme of Wanda’s grief remains prevalent and
manifests in some of the scenes where Agatha forces her to relive the trauma.
I’m not entirely sure why Agatha does this as it seems to be more for the
viewer’s benefit but the explanation why Wanda’s domain leans on
classic American tv is especially poignant. Inventive, clever and a lot of fun Wandavision has to be one of the more unique entries in the Marvel canon
I found Love and
Monsters on Netflix and had never heard of it so thought I’d give it a
watch and I’m glad I did. The film was commercially overlooked due to its
release during the pandemic though its visual effects were rightfully nominated
for an Oscar. Its set in a near future where 95% of the world’s population have
been wiped out by the fallout of hundreds of nuclear weapons being fired at a
rogue asteroid to stop it crashing into the planet. That’s what you’d call a no
win situation. Seven years later, the
remaining people live mostly in subterranean bunkers to protect themselves
against the giant lizards and bugs that now roam outdoors. While the premise
may suggest a grim dystopian grind the film keens more toward a sense of
optimism and courage aligned with a slightly irreverent tone, a combination
that makes it very watchable.
Our main character is
Joel Dawson, a twentysomething who has not really found his place in this
world. Feeling he doesn’t really contribute to the colony he’s in and pining
for girlfriend Aimee (an excellent Jessica Henwick) he decides to undertake a
potentially perilous journey on foot to in find her. After all he believes his fellow colonists will only muss his making soup. So, he sets out
with little knowledge and even less experience of what he might face. Such a
narrative relies on an actor who can convey a lot often via voiceover or
talking to a dog he collects along the way and this movie is lucky to have
Dylan O’Brien who owns it from the start. He really brings Joel alive on
several levels creating a warm person with whom we share the trauma ahead.
Along the way his interactions with a couple of travellers and later a robot
add texture to his character – a scene where he sits on a bench with the robot
is lovely, Spielbergian stuff. While
there are plenty of themes the most effective is when Joel discovers his value
to the colony he has left behind, a moment that shows this movie never takes
the easier pessimistic route and finds positivity in even the most extreme
scenario.
There are also lots of
formidable creatures mostly made with practical rather than digital effects
giving them a heft and menace often absent from this kind of film especially
sequences involving a giant locust and an almighty crab. Sharp editing adds
tension to these scenes creating a good momentum overall. Even though the story
turns a little into something else near the end it never forgets its main
character nor its sense of peril. You could ask questions of the story premise
(like why is only some wildlife mutated and why no humans?) but Love and Monsters
is involving, exciting and well deserving of your time.
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