Posted on 12/24/2008 10:48:31 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Opening on Christmas Day, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is the result of an unexpected cinematic collaboration between scriptwriter Eric Roth, who penned Forrest Gump, and director David Fincher, whose credits include Se7en, Fight Club, and Zodiac. Very loosely based on an F. Scott Fitzgerald story, and starring Brad Pitt as Button, the film is about a life lived in reverse. Born with the physical features of a man in his eighties, Button grows backward into middle age, youth, and infancy. Fincher and Roth turn Buttons peculiar life, at the center of which is his star-crossed love for Daisy (Cate Blanchett), into a vehicle for raising the great questions of the human condition.
Lauded by critics as one of the best films in recent years, Button certainly has the feel of a film that aspires to greatness. Beyond its philosophical probing of issues, it boasts a running time of 176 minutes fulfilling an indispensable criterion for artistic gravitas in recent years: nearly endless length. The visual effects, requisite for the film version of a story featuring the life of a man who ages in reverse, are indeed stunning; the films period detail and use of various locales are nicely realized, even if Brad Pitts Cajun accent is predictably unconvincing. Despite all of this, the films artistic aspiration is more pretense than success.
The films objectives contrast sharply with Fitzgeralds, whose story is a whimsical look at a very odd life. Fitzgerald, who underscores the curious aspects of Buttons life and exploits its comic possibilities, invests Button with no great depth. Button falls in love and marries but soon tires of his aging and increasingly tired wife hardly the stuff of romantic tragedy.
The film takes Fitzgeralds basic conceit and channels it through a sort of Forrest Gump plot; it features a character who becomes involved in a series of (mostly disconnected) events, spanning several decades. As with Gump, Buttons peculiar condition gives him a certain detachment from events and from complex human reactions to them. Here, too, a mothers platitudes are sufficient in a world that looks much more complex than it really is. Here, too, a romance holds the story together. Of course, the romance here has a different appeal precisely because it is Brad Pitt, not Tom Hanks, in the lead role. The film relies upon audience appreciation of Pitts good looks to build tension: viewers await the reappearance of an ever-more youthful Pitt as Button retreats in age.
Not content simply to tell Buttons story, Fincher and Roth perhaps in another nod to Gump present his story in a series of flashbacks. The film begins in a New Orleans hospital, where Daisy, then an elderly woman, and her daughter Caroline (Julia Ormond) await Daisys imminent death and the arrival of Hurricane Katrina. As she slips in and out of consciousness, her daughter reads from the diary of Benjamin Button. The revelations in the diary have to do with her mothers lifelong relationship with Button, a relationship previously unknown to the daughter.
The problem here is not just the predictability of the revelations, which viewers will see far in advance. Perhaps the most inexplicable thing about the film concerns the choice to frame the story by reference to Hurricane Katrina. Rumors have it that this was Brad Pitts way of bringing attention to ongoing rebuilding efforts in New Orleans. Since Buttons story itself is only incidentally about the city, the Katrina framing device is a huge distraction one that almost reduces the films artistic ambitions to a creative infomercial.
Benjamins story begins with a recounting of his birth at the end of World War I. His mother dies in childbirth and his already antique appearance leads his father who is unwilling to raise a freak to abandon him on the steps of a kind of old folks home. A doctor who examines him there concludes that some children are not made to live. But a kindly African-American worker at the home, Queenie (in a marvelous performance by Taraji P. Henson), embraces Benjamin as one of Gods children even as she observes that Lord has done something very strange in this case and adopts him. As it should, the film gets good comic mileage out of the incongruity between Buttons age and his appearance. Upon first seeing him as a baby, an elderly woman comments, He looks just like my ex-husband.
The avuncular looking Benjamins childhood friendship with the youthful Daisy (Blanchett) is at once tender and comic an odd twist on the beauty and the beast theme. Not true love, merely the flow of time itself, transforms the beast into something very fine indeed: Brad Pitt. After parting in childhood, they meet occasionally, and their separate but intersecting lives move toward an inevitable blossoming of love as the two reach adulthood at approximately the same time. Were meeting in the middle, they observe, we finally caught up with one another. There is something touching about their romance, especially because the film is fairly restrained in its sentimentality.
The problem is that the film wants to make more of the romance and its circumstances than they merit. It wants to lay bare for us the important things in human life. As Benjamin says at one point, what matters is that weve lived our lives well. Yet, the film has very little to say, beyond pious platitudes, about what it means to live well. We all end up in diapers, is one of the films insights into aging.
Again like Gump, Benjamin is passive in the face of events. That befits the films central lesson, which has to do with acceptance. That theme is captured in a phrase repeated throughout the film. You can complain about your lot in life and curse the fates, but eventually you realize that you just have to let it go. Faced with the prospect of a mildly entertaining but pretentious and overlong film, viewers might want to adopt that precept themselves.
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Thomas S. Hibbs is distinguished professor of ethics and culture at Baylor University and author of Arts of Darkness.
FSF and Pitt, to me, are both way overrated.
I detest Sally Field, and the scene where she humps the creepy guy so her retarded son can go to school is just...creepy.
I'm no prude, but did not find that scene funny at all. (Nor did I like having to explain it to my young children.) Others in the audience tittered - I suppose some out of embarrassment, but some guffawed as if that were a great comic moment.
Otherwise I guess the movie had some good points. I'm happy when a worthy handicapped person, even a fictional one, is celebrated. It's good to have an entertaining story that gives people have second thoughts about a class of human beings that have long been ridiculed for no damn good reason.
This kindly "African-American" is an invention of Pitt's also (in addition to the Hurricane Katrina storyline). She is not F. Scott Fitzgerald's character, at least.
I just read the first five chapters of The Curious Case of Benjamin Button --full text free online-- and there is NO "Queenie" anywhere in those chapters. Nor does Fitzgerald call anyone an "African-American" (now there's an anachronism).
Looks to me like another case of "The Magic Negro" as described by leftist LA Times writer David Ehrenstein. AKA The Numinous Negro, as identified by Rick Brookhiser of NRO earlier.
Does Hollywood make any movies anymore that don't have a "Magic Negro" in the storyline?
Ha ha! I never thought of it that way before!!
Sounds like a remake of ‘Harold & Maude’ (1971).
But the characters sexes are reversed...
This concept is hundreds of years old. Didn’t Merlin—of the Arthurian legends—age backwards? Merlin didn’t have the aged appearance at birth of Benjamin Button, but Merlin did have the wisdom and experience of an old man when he was born.
This concept is hundreds of years old. Didnt Merlinof the Arthurian legendsage backwards?
The backwards aging of Merlin is from a relatively recent version of the legend. The Once and Future King, I believe, written by T.H. White and published in 1958. I don't think it was part of the legend prior to that.
Thanks, and best wishes for a very Merry Christmas!
The story is supposed to take place in BALTIMORE.
He went to Yale.
There is NO mention of New Orelans in the short story, is there?
I loved that movie as well. Also Legends Of The Fall was great!! Both made me want to move to Montana, I got as far as Wyoming. :)
Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid was 1982
Zelig was 1983.
DMDWP was the first and better than any other.
Another pretentious ‘art’ piece that does a disservice to the original, which means, it and Pitt will likely win an oscar. Shameful.
He’s aged 20 years since then, and now shags an adulterous heroine addict who is addicted to child collecting.
Disliked Gump as well.
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