Coppola is fascinated by Tokyo and explores it with a roaming camera that never seems to settle on a single aspect of the city because it is in love with it all. In the hotel, during the course of their daily lives, Charlotte and Bob are confined. She is usually framed against large windows, curiously looking at, but rarely engaging with, the world outside. He just sits on his bed or in his bathtub, looking at the camera while thinking he has seen it all.They spend a few days together, exploring, then they say goodbye at the hotel. As Bob is leaving Tokyo he spots Charlotte walking down the street. He runs out of his cab to give her a proper farewell in the streets of Tokyo where their relationship flourished. He hugs her. They take a moment, a much needed breath of air, then whisper a few private, unheard words to each other, and bravely part ways to continue with their lives. It's heartbreaking to watch them part, but at the same time it is a very hopeful ending since it leaves both characters reenergized and ready to go back to their families. Lost in Translation depicts the loneliness of a man, late in his career and that of a woman, just beginning her life. Through the other, these two individuals find the cure to their loneliness. All of Coppola's films deal with loneliness. Lost in Translation is my favorite because it provides a brief respite from it.
2.Somewhere- The movie opens with the static shot of a winding road in the desert. A Ferrari flies by the camera and races off into the distance. It makes a turn offscreen and repeats the same motion whizzing past the camera once more and disappearing from view far away. This happens 5 times, in one continuous shot. The car then comes to a stop and the driver gets out. He is nowhere and he knows it. Johnny is a wealthy movie star, living the dream. During the movie people go up to him just to get a glimpse at what the life of a star is like. In reality: pathetic. Johnny lives alone in a hotel where he parties constantly and sleeps with every woman he sees. All of his activities are geared to give him pleasure but he takes none. His daughter comes to visit him for the summer. Elle Fanning gives a brilliant performance as Cleo, an astute girl who is forced to take care of her screwed up parents. In a wonderful scene, Cleo orders the ingredients she needs to make dinner for her dad, instead of simply ordering the hotel's room service. But in the end she's just an 11 year old girl and ends up breaking down in one of most harrowing scenes Coppola has ever shot. It is in her that he finds purpose. In the last shot of the film, Johnny gets out of his Ferrari, drops the key and starts walking. Finally, his life is going somewhere.
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"I want to rob" Nicki (Emma Watson) |
4.The Bling Ring- The movie is a snapshot of today's celebrity obsessed youth. It follows the story of a group of teenagers who decide to rob the houses of their favorite celebrities. They take their money and their clothes and start living the lives of their idols. Mark, a loner who at the beginning of the movie was just looking for a friend, confesses that he had over 800 friend requests on Facebook after word of his exploits had gotten out. He accepted them all, because why not?The only thing these egomaniacal kids want is to be the stars of their own universe. Take, for example, a scene in which the group of friends sit at the beach. Coppola never shows the sea, only her hypnotized subjects staring intently into their phones unawares of the beauty surrounding them. In another instance, Mark spots Kirsten Dunst at a party. An excited Rebecca (the ring leader who first thought of the robberies) calls out that they have to take a picture. Do they take a picture of Miss Dunst? No. Instead they take a picture of themselves which had me wondering whether Rebecca even notice Kirsten Dunst or her friend speaking to her. None of the characters in the film seem to have any sort of conscience. In fact, they seem to think that its their right to break into the homes of "Lindsay" and "Paris" as if they were simply visiting a friends house. Chloe, a member of the "bling ring" as they were named in the news, gets drunk at a party and later causes a car crash. The following days no conversion occurs in her. Instead, what she does is brag to her friends about the alcohol content in her blood which the police told her was off the charts. Not all blame can be placed on the kids. Each has either absentee parents or deeply troubled, equally shallow "role models" in their lives. The most appalling of these is the mother of Emma Watson's character, Nicki, who gives her daughters Adderall for breakfast and follows a disturbing New Age religion based on the movie The Secret. While Leslie Mann's performance is often hilarious it prompted me to ask how far off the mark is it really? According to critic Richard Roeper, Coppola toned down the character of Laurie whose real-life counterpart is the subject of a "reality" TV show. Some critics complain that Coppola is too at home in this world and is too compassionate on these kids. On the contrary, I think The Bling Ring goes past merely observing this "MVP lifestyle" to become an impressive example of sharp yet subtle social critique
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Regardless of the ranking, I love each and every one of these films and hope Sofia Coppola will go on to make many more. She is one of the finest filmmakers alive. It would be a shame to let her pass without giving her the recognition she deserves.
Verdict- 4/4 for all of her films.
Virgin Suicides (1999) 1h 37min. R
Lost in Translation (2003) 1h 41min. R
Marie Antoinette (2006) 2h 3min. PG-13
Somewhere (2010) 1h. 37min. R
The Bling Ring (2013) 1h. 30min. R
Random Thoughts
Here's a great, though excessively harsh, article on how to make a Sofia Coppola movie: Its a list that begins with "1. Start with a seemingly vapid lead. 2. But remember she’s actually just misunderstood" and then goes on to “5.whatever the case may be, she’s trapped” and then all the way to "25. Distract the audience with bright lights” and “29. Use a modern pop score no matter what. NO MATTER WHAT.” which is something I failed to mention. Quentin Tarantino may be the only filmmaker to rival Sofia Coppola in terms of assembling a great sound track filled with modern pop songs that seem to fit perfectly with the scene they’re placed with. Listen to this:
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