Register  |   Log In  |  
Sign up to our weekly newsletter    
Search   
Follow Me on Pinterest
Empire
Trending On Empire
Two free posters with Empire magazine
Subscribe: Get Dead Island: Riptide
Empire's Soundtrack Celebration
90 Years Of Warner Bros.
Vote for your favourite film
Cannes Film Festival 2013
News, photos and more from the Croisette
Empire Blogs
Under The Radar

Back to all blogs Comment Now

Venice 2012: To The Wonder

Posted on Monday September 3, 2012, 13:54 by Damon Wise in Under The Radar
Venice 2012: To The Wonder

Terrence Malick's To The Wonder was, after The Master, perhaps the hottest ticket on the Lido this year, but the scenes outside the cinema at yesterday morning's press screening were nothing like the carnage that occurred before the equivalent screening of Tree Of Life last year in Cannes. Perhaps it's because attendances are down this year, maybe it's because Ben Affleck is no Brad Pitt, or it could just be that Tree Of Life was so long in the making that it became almost mythical. Any which way, it just didn't seem that there was the same level of interest in Malick's relatively rapid follow-up.

Which was perhaps just as well, since To The Wonder is a very disappointing film that borders on self-parody with its tics and flourishes. I wasn't wild about Tree Of Life, but I did feel that – outside of the dreadful Sean Penn scenes – it had a visual lyricism and a strong narrative angle, in that it was a film seen in hindsight, from a child's perspective, which gave Malick licence to withhold certain details and only sketch in others. Here, the camera is objective, and Malick withholds so much information that it becomes hard to care. Luckily it's not as long as Tree Of Life, but its nearly two-hour running time is a long slog, and it's very, very hard stay engaged with the people it depicts.

Before it began, rumours abounded that Rachel Weisz had been cut from the film (true), and when Javier Bardem was bumped off the press schedules it seemed he might have been too (false). But even the advance image for this film – Affleck in a cornfield with Rachel McAdams – is misleading, since she's hardly in it, and the film is effectively a love letter to former Bond girl Olga Kurylenko. She plays Marina, who we meet in the opening footage, horribly shot on touristy video aboard what looks like the Eurostar, as she and her new boyfriend Neil (Affleck) go on holiday together to Mont Saint-Michel in France. Marina has a young daughter, and Neil invites the pair to move back to America with him, which they do.

It's hard to say what happens next without spoilers, since the film is entirely free of subplots. All that really happens is that Marina moves to the US, has a crisis of conscience and moves back to Paris. (Luckily, there is a bit more to it than that.) But whatever goes wrong with Marina's relationship, Malick never tells us. Neil, who seems to be some kind of environmental officer, is moody and aggressive, and all we get are snatches of wispy, almost Monty Python-esque arthouse dialogue from Marina. Literally, the first word is “Newborn”, and I'm not paraphrasing too much when I say that Christmas cracker mottoes like “how does love love” pile up in their dozens.

Into the midst of this comes Bardem as a priest, who mumbles in voiceover about his quest to connect with God. He's not entirely miscast, but there was spontaneous laughter at the first shot of him in his robes. Affleck, however, is toe-curlingly miscast, and where Kurylenko is (perhaps to the point of irritation) free and expressive with the clearly improvisatory nature of the shoot, Affleck is like a lump of wood. Obviously this is all beautifully shot, and there are some dazzling scenes amid the dense, cryptic verbiage, but most of it looks too uncomfortably like Tree Of Life 2 for this to be any kind of recompense. Hardcore fans of Malick will defend it, but To The Wonder will die a death at the box office, and, sadly, it will be a fate that this wilfully impenetrable film brings on itself.



Login or register to comment.

Comments

1 Garth_Marenghi
Posted on Monday September 3, 2012, 21:24
Guess I'm the only one who liked the Sean Penn scenes in Tree Of Life then?

Also, not surprised about Affleck. I know we're supposed to fawn over him now, but he just makes my skin crawl. The man exudes smugness from every pore. Much happier when he stays behind the camera (his workmanlike performance is the only bad thing about The Town).

2 UTB
Posted on Tuesday September 4, 2012, 08:39
I do enjoy a good Malick slog but the aforementioned whisperings are becoming a bit tiresome, I would agree.


Log in below, or register to post comments
Username:
Password:
Remember Me:

CATEGORIES

Empire States (412)

Under The Radar (289)

Infinite Lives (75)

Small Screen (53)

Cannes 2011 (28)

Off The Wire (23)

Comic-Con 2010 (21)

Words From The Wise (11)

Casting Couch (2)

Oscars 2011 (1)


RECENT POSTS

Bloody Cuts In Conversation
By Owen Williams

2013 IIFF - The Winners
By Simon Braund

2013 IIFF - Lifelong
By Simon Braund

2013 IIFF - Peter Weir Masterclass
By Simon Braund

The 2013 Istanbul International Film Festival
By Simon Braund

Dubai International Film Festival 2012: The Winners
By Simon Braund

Dubai International Film Festival 2012: Death Metal Angola
By Simon Braund

Dubai International Film Festival 2012: Wadjda
By Simon Braund

Dubai International Film Festival 2012: Takashi Miike
By Simon Braund

Dubai International Film Festival 2012: Opening Ceremony
By Simon Braund


RECENT COMMENTS

Christoph Waltz will win an Oscar
"although its old now :(, of course he was gonna win it :), one of the many idols of why i wanna be a"  SONYA ALALIBO
Read comment

Brisbane International Film Festival: First Report
"I think it is pretty clear the story revolves around The Blacksmith, in The Man With The Iron Fists,"  owenyunfat
Read comment

TIFF 2012: Silver Linings Playbook, The Perks Of Being A Wallflower, Cloud Atlas, The Place Beyond The Pines
"Thanks for the feedback! I hope I didn't give the impression that Cloud Atlas is a write-off; I just"  Damon_Wise
Read comment

TIFF 2012: Silver Linings Playbook, The Perks Of Being A Wallflower, Cloud Atlas, The Place Beyond The Pines
"Hi Damon With regards to Cloud Atlas, I fear that it will face the same problem a"  ChesterCopperpot
Read comment

TIFF 2012: Silver Linings Playbook, The Perks Of Being A Wallflower, Cloud Atlas, The Place Beyond The Pines
"No worries! I just try to describe things as I see them, and I often forget that, as Empire has grow"  Damon_Wise
Read comment

TIFF 2012: Silver Linings Playbook, The Perks Of Being A Wallflower, Cloud Atlas, The Place Beyond The Pines
"Don't get me wrong, I appreciate your early reviews from the festivals, and of course, I'm not alway"  pythonlove
Read comment

TIFF 2012: Silver Linings Playbook, The Perks Of Being A Wallflower, Cloud Atlas, The Place Beyond The Pines
"Ryan Gosling as a stunt rider who has mechanic skills and gets involved in bank heists. It sounds li"  keef_mac
Read comment

TIFF 2012: Silver Linings Playbook, The Perks Of Being A Wallflower, Cloud Atlas, The Place Beyond The Pines
"I don't see that it's derisive, just context. Indeed, I will be using the word British in a forthcom"  Damon_Wise
Read comment

TIFF 2012: Silver Linings Playbook, The Perks Of Being A Wallflower, Cloud Atlas, The Place Beyond The Pines
"Damon, what would you do if we took the adjective "American" away from you? It seems to b"  pythonlove
Read comment

TIFF 2012: Argo, Seven Psychopaths
"Glad to read that two of my most anticipated movies of the year do not disappoint. Even more excited"  OrganicLifeform
Read comment


POPULAR POSTS

Sundance Part Six: In The Loop
13 comments

The Films You Should See At This Year's London Film Festival
10 comments

Damo's Top Ten Of 2009
9 comments

Basterds Blog
9 comments

The Times BFI London Film Festival Preview
9 comments

Sundance 2010: Four Lions blows everyone away!
8 comments

Sundance 2010: The Killer Inside Me causes outrage!
7 comments

Chris Hewitt Of The Year Award!!!!
7 comments

TIFF 2012: Silver Linings Playbook, The Perks Of Being A Wallflower, Cloud Atlas, The Place Beyond The Pines
7 comments

The Wrestler
6 comments


BLOGGERS
Damon Wise (273)
Helen O'Hara (156)
James Dyer (85)
Chris Hewitt (83)
Amar Vijay (71)
Ali Plumb (50)
David Scarborough (38)
Sam Toy (34)
Sam Toy (31)
Stephen Carty (31)
James White (27)
Simon Braund (24)
Olly Richards (23)
Ian Freer (21)
Nick de Semlyen (20)
Phil de Semlyen (18)
Nev Pierce (10)
Glen Ferris (8)
Dan Jolin (8)
Nick de Semlyen (8)
Owen Williams (8)
Peter Lord (6)
Emily Phillips (6)
Kat Brown (3)
Dan Goodswen (3)
Kim Newman (3)
Jodie McEwan (3)
Empire Empire (2)
Sebastian Williamson (2)
Eve Barlow (2)
Emma Cochrane (2)
Edmund Ward (1)
Chris Smith (1)
Alice Wybrew (1)
Jonny Pile (1)
Steve Charnock (1)
Empire Workie (1)
Colin Kennedy (1)
Tom Ambrose (1)
Lucy Quick (1)
Benjamin Lee (1)
David Parkinson (1)
Dallas King (1)
Ross Bennett (1)
John Hitchcox (1)
Siam Goorwich (1)
Sanam Jehanfard (1)
Anton Bitel (1)


CURRENT HIGHLIGHTS
Movie Poster Mashups: The Furniture Edition
You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll be appalled at the punning...

Cannes Film Festival Videblogisodes #1
Leonardo Di Caprio, Baz Luhrmann and a mysterious stranger kick things off

Exclusive: Why Man Of Steel Wasn't Called Superman
Writer and producer David S. Goyer speaks

Dwayne Johnson Talks Fast & Furious 6
'I wanted to come in and frankly dominate the movie.'

Music Celebration: David Holmes On The Making Of The Out Of Sight Soundtrack
'I watched the film... the music was all over the shop'

The Rise And Fall Of The Movie Power Ballad
What happened to those endless movie theme no.1 hits?

Hans Zimmer Career Interview
On The Dark Knight, Man Of Steel and Going For Gold

Subscribe For Only £20
Get Dead Island: Riptide and six issues of Empire for only £20! Subscribe now
Steven Spielberg iPad App
Hollywood's most beloved director in this unique iPad special. Download now
Empire iPad Edition
The world's biggest movie magazine available on iPad Download now
Home  |  News  |  Blogs  |  Reviews  |  Future Films  |  Features  |  Interviews  |  Images  |  Competitions  |  Forum  |  iPad  |  Podcast  |  Magazine Contact Us  |  Empire FAQ  |  Subscribe To Empire  |  Register
© Bauer Consumer Media  |  Terms And Conditions  |  Our Data Promise To You  |  Bauer Entertainment Network
Bauer Consumer Media. Company number 1176085 (England). Registered Office: 21 Holborn Viaduct, London EC1A 2DY