REVIEW | Mindlessness Over Matter: Jaco van Dormael’s “Mr. Nobody”
by Michael Koresky (September 15, 2009)
A scene from Jaco Van Dormael's "Mr. Nobody." Image courtesy of TIFF.
Quick, what do string theory, the butterfly effect, 21st-century dystopia, the possibility of quasi-immortality, the unquantifiablity of time, the impermanence of memory, death, love, second sight, the heartache of divorce, missions to Mars, and Jared Leto’s baby blues have in common? After seeing “Mr. Nobody” I’m still not sure, though I am confident that writer-director Jaco van Dormael seems to think they’re all part of the same thematic continuum. Almost moving in its gonzo self-assuredness and take-no-prisoners narrative scope—although with the nearly 140-minute running time, that could just be my exhaustion talking—“Mr. Nobody” is as ambitious as it is incoherent, an obvious labor of love that’s equal parts science-fiction, romance, and Lynchian mind game. Yet with the film’s maddening circular structure and often thudding visual expositions, the experience of watching it isn’t quite as enjoyable as a description might augur. The central problem of “Mr. Nobody” isn’t really that in the end it doesn’t seem to make much sense (literal, metaphorical, or otherwise), but that, unlike in the similarly intentionally befuddling “Donnie Darko,” the getting there isn’t all that fun. When not hidden behind old-man latex in the film’s ostensible wraparound story, Leto seems cast first and foremost for his beauty, considering that he often has little more to do than look soulfully awestruck into a camera often pressed so close to his face that you can count the individual hairs of stubble on his chin. In fact, this reliance on extreme close-up seems to be the main aesthetic decision of van Dormael and his cinematographer Christophe Beaucarne; the result is an incredibly claustrophobic, spatially disorienting visual experience that makes the already damn near impenetrable narrative doubly disconcerting. “Mr. Nobody” opens, appropriately, in a morgue, before going on to show us, in quick succession, all sorts of bizarre end-of-life scenarios that befall our protagonist, Nemo, from a terrifying drowning to a shocking bathtub shooting, to a 112-year-old version of hinself at death’s door, insistently rasping that he’s actually 34 years old. In this section, the film offers all sorts of satiric images of future shock, including a Perez Hilton—type gossip show host, with his microphone surgically implanted in his cheek, cattily discussing the human race’s necessity for stem-cell compatible pigs and promoting the TV broadcast of this “last mortal”‘s final days on Earth. This broad, comedic approach, however, is summarily dropped, and, after a bizarre tangent featuring (wait for it) unicorns and “angels of oblivion,” the film settles somewhat into a dramatic coming-of-age narrative, showing Nemo’s upbringing, from the wrenching divorce of his parents, who made the horrific decision to force little Nemo to choose between them, to his various romances and heartbreaks as a gorgeously troubled, and unexpectedly British, teen (Tony Regbo).
|
iW’s Celebrates Black History Month
iW's shares with you films celebrating Black History Month.
Up In The Air
Now Playing Everywhere Tickets & Showtimes: www.TheUpInTheAirMovie.com Up In The Air has it all Remarkable Acting Vintage Directing Heartfelt Storytelling Unforgettable Entertainment Nominated for 6 Academy Awards Including Best Picture Become a fan: www.TheUpInTheAirMovie.com |