Showing posts with label Michelle Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michelle Williams. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

OZ "THE GREAT AND POWERFUL" | Teaser movie poster and synopsis

Oz: The Great and the Powerful is a a story about Oscar Diggs (James Franco), a small-time circus magician with dubious ethics. Hurled away from dusty Kansas to the vibrant Land of Oz, Oscar thinks he’s hit the jackpot—fame and fortune are his for the taking—that is until he meets three witches, Theodora (Mila Kunis) Evanora (Rachel Weisz) and Glinda (Michelle Williams), who are not convinced he is the great wizard everyone’s been expecting. Reluctantly drawn into the epic problems facing the Land of Oz and its inhabitants, Oscar must find out who is good and who is evil before it is too late. Putting his magical arts to use through illusion, ingenuity—and even a bit of wizardry—Oscar transforms himself not only into the great and powerful Wizard of Oz but into a better man as well.

Oz: the Great and the Powerful also stars Abigail Spencer, Joey King, Zach Braff, Martin Klebba, Ted Raimi, Bill Cobbs, Tony Cox, Tim Holmes, Toni Wynne, Dennis Kleinsmith, and Ron Causey and directed by Sam Raimi

Oz: the Great and the Powerful will be released in US theaters through Walt Disney Pictures on March 8, 2013.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

MICHELLE WILLIAMS interview on “MY WEEK WITH MARILYN”

Michelle Williams takes on the iconic role of Marilyn Monroe in The Weinstein Company's critically acclaimed "My Week with Marilyn." Earning for Williams a Best Actress Oscar nomination, the film is based on Colin Clark's book of the same name and chronicles his time spent working with Monroe while she was in England shooting the romantic comedy "The Prince and the Showgirl" in 1956.

Williams sat down with journalists to talk about portraying Monroe, the film, shooting her current role of Glinda the good witch in Sam Raimi's "Oz: The Great and Powerful" and her six-year-old daughter Matilda with late actor Heath Ledger.

Question: Did you have an awareness of Marilyn Monroe and her starpower when you were younger?

Michelle Williams: "I was interested in her, but then I kind of lost track of her over the last 10 years or so. I had a poster of her up in my room. It wasn't a picture of her as the icon, it was a picture of her looking like an ordinary joyful girl. So I definitely had some kind of connection. (Working on this film) reignited whatever initial, sort of, attraction I had to her when I was a teenager."

Q: Did you do your own singing in the film?

Williams: "Yes and my mother is going to be so excited when she sees this. She always wanted me to sing and dance. I had so much fun doing that!"

Q: So doing a musical could be in the cards for you?

Williams: "I would love to. What's so liberating about singing and dancing is that it turns your head off. You coast on this wave of muscle memory. You literally can't think while you're performing. There's a kind of transcendence to it. I think maybe that's why Marilyn was so especially talented at it. Her singing and dancing are unparalleled and her musical numbers are just breathtaking."

Q: The film used many of the same locations in shooting "Prince and the Showgirl." Did that add to the production?

Williams: "There was a lot of synchronicity. We shot in the actual Parkside house (that Marilyn lived in). My dressing room at Pinewood was Marilyn's actual dressing room. That was so special. The stage where she shot that song and dance number was the stage where I shot mine. So many of the props in our movie were in the original 'Prince and the Showgirl' movie."

Q: Did it ever feel ghostly?

Williams: "Well, it's all energy. And it's what you make of it. I like to make things out of nothing! (laughs) I like to spin things out of thin air, so that stuff works for me."

Q: Did you wear wigs for the part, or grow out your hair?

Williams: "I wore wigs, but I had to keep my hair really bleached underneath because it would show through the wigs. My eyebrows had to be dark and they were reshaped. You go through so many grotesque phases making movies (laughs). I never really feel quite like myself. I just feel like a mutant -- always halfway in between some other person and myself. I don't know what belongs to me and what doesn't!"

Q: After filming ended was it hard to let go of Marilyn?

Williams: "I think when you work in a way that really gets under your skin, its not an easy break. You make a little extra room for these people that you play and then they leave. You're left with this hollow space. I wish I could play her again."

Q: Does your daughter Matilda come to set?

Williams: "She comes with me everywhere."

Q: How do you balance getting into character and then going home at the end of the day to be a mom?

Williams: "What works for me is to have a commute from where we live to where I work. So that in the morning, I leave the house behind and walk clean and fresh into my professional life. And then the same thing on the way home. I find that a 20 or 30 minute commute makes a kind of passageway for me that I need."

Q: You're currently shooting "Oz," playing Glinda. Matilda must love coming to that set.

Williams: "It's the best thing professionally that's happened to us. It has brought her on board my work in a way that wasn't possible in a movie like 'Marilyn' or 'Blue Valentine.' On those, there was no space for a kid to come visit and be a kid. (With 'Oz') she comes every single day after school because it's like a playground. She says, 'There's only one good witch and it's my mom.' She's very excited about it."

Q: It's interesting that you said the project was the best thing to happen professionally to "us" not "me."
Williams: "Definitely. Every choice that I make is about how it's going to affect our life -- where it films, how long it is, what else is going on in her year, what's the last job I did, how much time I've had off in between, how much time we had to really deeply connect and how long can we sustain a period of time where I'm working. So when 'Oz' came along, it was very clear to me that it was the right decision for us."

“My Week With Marilyn” will be shown exclusively at Ayala Malls Cinemas (Glorietta 4, Greenbelt 3 and Trinoma) starting Feb. 29.

Friday, February 10, 2012

MY WEEK WITH MARILYN | Exclusive at Ayala Malls cinemas

The Weinstein Company's critically acclaimed and Oscar-nominated film “My Week With Marilyn” starring Michelle Williams and Kenneth Branagh will be shown soon exclusively at Ayala Malls Cinemas (Glorietta 4, Greenbelt 3 and Trinoma).

Early in the summer of 1956, American film star Marilyn Monroe (Williams) set foot on British soil for the first time. On honeymoon with her husband, the celebrated playwright Arthur Miller (Dougray Scott), Monroe came to England to shoot “The Prince and the Showgirl” - the film that famously united her with Sir Laurence Olivier (Branagh), the British theatre and film legend who directed and co-starred in the film.

That same summer, 23-year-old Colin Clark (Eddie Redmayne) set foot on a film set for the first time in his life. Newly graduated from Oxford, Clark aspired to be a filmmaker and found a job as a lowly production hand on the set of “The Prince and the Showgirl.” Forty years later, he recounted his experiences of the six-month shoot in a diary-style memoir entitled The Prince, the Showgirl and Me. But one week in Clark's account was missing...

It wasn't until years later that Clark revealed why. In a follow-up memoir entitled My Week with Marilyn, he recounted the true story of one magical week he spent alone with the world's biggest star -- the week he spent with Marilyn.

"For a lot of people Marilyn is more of an iconic image than an actress,” admits director Simon Curtis. "People haven't seen her films as much as they have her portrait. My way into this project was falling in love with the first of Colin Clark's two memoirs. As somebody who was assistant director at The Royal Court Theatre, I found it fascinating to uncover this moment in time.”

The first memoir, The Prince, The Showgirl and Me, recounts Clark's experiences working as third assistant director on the set of Monroe's first film as both producer and star in which she played opposite Olivier, who also directed. The book recounts the production's myriad problems, fuelled almost exclusively by the lack of communication and understanding between the two stars: Monroe's erratic behavior and tardiness were exacerbated by her addiction to alcohol and prescription medication; while Olivier, a staunch traditionalist, refused to accommodate Monroe's idiosyncrasies or her devotion to Method acting, which she practiced under the guidance of Paula Strasberg.

While Clark's memoir is a dishy, fly-on-the-wall account of Olivier's and Monroe's fraught partnership, his follow-up memoir, My Week With Marilyn, feels like an intimate confession. In it, Clark affectionately remembers one enchanted week he spent leading the troubled Monroe on a tour of the English countryside. It offers an all-too-rare glimpse of the real woman beneath the carefully cultivated image, unencumbered by the busy machinery of stardom.

"I couldn't believe my eyes when My Week with Marilyn was published,” avows Curtis. "Colin really did have this tense, erotically charged week with the most famous woman in the world, at the peak of her fame. I couldn't believe my luck when I was able to get hold of the rights. People had tried over the years. And in the last year I've met at least three very established directors who have said, "I've always wanted to make that story.' So I feel very lucky.”

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Capsule Reviews: Trespass, My Week With Marilyn, We Need to Talk About Kevin

Trespass (Joel Schumacher, 2011)


Having premiered at TIFF in September and come to DVD not two months later, Trespass couldn't possibly have been any good, but its badness is still striking. Shot with colors so artlessly exaggerated it looks merely as if someone adjusted the color balance rather than composed anything, Trespass wouldn't be interesting if it were lensed by Emmanuel Lubezki. A bog-standard house thriller with a simperingly moralistic message about family, the film proceeds with hilariously random flashbacks, endless narrative diversions, and hopelessly absurd dialogue. Nicole Kidman still can't get her emotions to match her starched facial expressions, while Nic Cage plays the fast-talking diamond dealer with his usual incoherent yelling. (I confess that his agonized cry of "You shit fucking animals!" is something of a highlight.) The film does improve (by which I mean becomes even worse) when someone socks Cage in the mouth and he speaks with a thick voice the rest of the film. But not even the delight of Cage at his worst can make up from Schumacher's clumsily overactive direction or the constant addition of conflicts thanks to useless reveals.


My Week With Marilyn (Simon Curtis, 2011)


When a film summarizes itself with its opening text scrawl, it has to work twice as hard to make the audience care for what is to come. But Simon Curtis' lazy sorta biopic doesn't have an ounce of insight in it, printing the legend and never engaging Monroe on any human level. We get a glossed-over view of her instability, with the brilliant Michelle Williams setting aside her command of elegantly controlled body language to offer up an Oscar-ready performance of big accents and aggressive acting. Kenneth Branagh, however, redeems much of the film's facile approach, giving his finest performance in years as a crotchety, thin-lipped Sir Laurence Olivier, looking for rejuvenation in co-starring with Monroe but discovering only his obsolescence in the process. But he can only overcome so much; Curtis even presents Monroe as an airhead in her private life, taking her to a giant library only to have her rush to a massive dollhouse to ooh and aah. By presenting her as naïve and simple behind closed doors, the director never truly delineates between the real woman and the ass-shaking, pose-striking, kiss-blowing sex symbol who turns on every time the press finds her.


We Need to Talk About Kevin (Lynne Ramsay, 2011)


We Need to Talk About Kevin has two strong factors in its favor. One is the direction of Lynne Ramsay, who relies on striking, even idiosyncratic visuals and her actors' body language to convey story and emotion while still being lucid enough to not only follow but predict (almost to the film's detriment). The other is Tilda Swinton, who captures the trauma and paranoia of being not merely the witness to but the ultimate target of her child's killing spree, not only scanning her memories to find out where it all went wrong but feeling the hot sting of hostile stares from the community that blames her for her son's rampage. Together, Ramsay and Swinton create a claustrophobic mood wracked with doubt, as even Eva begins to wonder if she truly is at fault.

Where the film falls down is in its handling of Kevin, who upends whatever nature vs. nature debates arise from some of Eva's memories by being so innately evil that comparisons to such films as The Omen and The Bad Seed have cropped up everywhere.. Every child hired to portray the child at various stages has dark, expressionless stares and absent humanity, which makes the occasional glimpse of a slapped hand or a cutting remark from Eva or a violent video game enthusiastically played seem like belated attempts to add a counterbalance. When young Kevin caustically responds to his mother's remark about matching a room to his personality with, "What personality?" he lets on more than he realizes. At times, the film displays the more nuanced tone of the visual assembly that makes Kevin almost compelling, but soon he's back to that lifeless look in his eyes, leaving me wanting more of these complex moments.

Nevertheless, Swinton is so good at finding depth in the only person ever simplified more than the child killer in such situations, and Ramsay's direction is often so compelling despite its occasional obviousness, that We Need to Talk About Kevin emerges one of the finer films of the year. When everything, or even just most things, click, it makes for a haunting study of survivor's guilt that even manages to find hints of redemption amid the bleakness of the red-soaked visuals and Johnny Greenwood's howling score.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Michelle Williams | Marilyn Monroe approves of my movie

Michelle Williams knows her portrayal of Marilyn Monroe in the upcoming My Week With Marilyn would make the iconic blond bombshell proud.

Um, how would she know that?

Monroe has apparently given her stamp of approval from beyond the grave...

"While we were filming, something came out in the National Enquirer that a psychic had spoken to her and that she approved of what we were doing and she thought I was doing a really good job," Williams told us at the Hollywood Film Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. "So maybe she likes it!" (Guess this is one of the rare cases when a celeb actually likes getting some ink in the supermarket tabloid!) 

Perhaps Monroe allowed the 31-year-old Oscar nominee to channel her off screen speaking voice.

"I studied tapes," Williams said. "There's really nothing that exists of her, that I could find anyway, that exists of her having a conversation with a friend...So there wasn't a template that existed for her everyday vocal pattern, so at a certain point you have to make it imaginatively."

Whether it was through research or imagination, Williams obviously nailed the late Hollywood legend's signature style.

"I do remember one moment of being all suited up as Marilyn and walking from my dressing room onto the soundstage practicing my wiggle," Williams recently told Vogue. "There were three or four men gathered around a truck, and I remember seeing that they were watching me come and feeling that they were watching me go...I thought, ‘Oh, maybe Marilyn felt that when she walked down the beach.'"

Source: E! Online | Marc Malkin & Brett Malec | Just Jared

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

MICHELLE WILLIAMS as the iconic MARILYN MONROE: New 'My Week with Marilyn' movie stills!

Check out Michelle Williams in these new stills from her upcoming film My Week with Marilyn.

The new pics depict Michelle in traditional Marilyn garb, as well and her co-star Eddie Redmayne, who plays an assistant on the set of Marilyn’s filmThe Prince and the Showgirl. Also pictured are Dominic Cooper as Milton Greene, Kenneth Branagh as Sir Laurence Olivier, and Dougray Scott as Arthur Miller.

One still gives us a sneak peek at Julie Ormond, who plays Vivien Leigh! My Week with Marilyn is set to hit the big screen on November 23.


 
 
 

 


 



Source: Just Jared

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

MICHELLE WILLIAMS | Talks up wry, romantic My Week With Marilyn

It almost wouldn’t be the New York Film Festival these days without Michelle Williams, whose My Week With Marilyn marks the actress’s fourth effort in five years to grace Manhattan’s venerated fall-movie showcase. It’s inarguably her highest-profile work to splash down here — a world premiere debuting in the festival’s prestigious Centerpiece slot, glowing with awards-season ambition and hinging almost entirely on Williams’s risky interpretation of Marilyn Monroe. But come on: We’re talking about Michelle Williams here. Of course she pulled it off.

Based on a pair of memoirs by Colin Clark, My Week With Marilyn breezes around the pitfalls of the modern biopic, instead bringing to life a notorious cultural moment — the making of The Prince and the Showgirl, the troubled Monroe/Laurence Olivier collaboration from 1956 — through Clark’s disarming coming-of-age perspective. An art historian’s son with designs on a filmmaking career, Clark (played here by Eddie Redmayne) persists and finagles his way into Olivier’s inner circle ahead of Showgirl’s production. Finally (almost punitively) assigned the deceptively titled job of third assistant director, the 23-year-old finds himself fetching tea, booking accommodations and, before he knows it, retrieving the tardy, insecure American sexpot from her dressing room at Pinewood Studios.

Thus begins a simmering courtship between the two, chaste at face value but unswervingly romantic in its coalescence of privilege and damage. The whole film, directed with aplomb by Simon Curtis, inhabits and traverses the space between those dynamics: Monroe exhausts the vexed Olivier (Kenneth Branagh), alienates her new husband Arthur Miller (Dougray Scott), captivates her great British co-star Dame Sybil Thorndike (Judi Dench), and is the perfumed gust that sends Olivier’s wife Vivien Leigh (a beautifully vulnerable Julia Ormond) tumbling over the precipice of middle age. (In real life, Leigh originated Monroe’s Showgirl role on the London stage in Terrence Rattigan’s source play, The Sleeping Prince.) Fully aware of and thoroughly destabilized by her effect on this pedigreed class, Monroe’s confidence in Clark comes as a threat to some and a surprise to all.

Yet the duo’s connection enables Monroe to pursue crucial moments away from her doomed screen persona. Williams thrives in both modes, to say nothing of her performance of Monroe as Showgirl’s titular Elsie Marina. Combining the three — often in the same scene, directed by Olivier within direction by Curtis — proves a nimble feat of craft that eschews convention, mythology and everything we think we know about Marilyn Monroe.

In a press conference following this morning’s screening, Williams emphasized the subtleties separating Marilyn onscreen and off — nuances lost in the unfortunate tradition of, as NYFFprogrammer Scott Foundas put it, “bad impersonators” who’ve reincarnated Monroe for the camera.

“Because the previous representations of her were more of that ilk, it felt like that was kind of the first thing that made me think, ‘Well, maybe I can explore this,’” Williams said. “It was a decision made kind of in the safety of my own home; I didn’t really consider the larger implications of it. And it was a very, very slow process. It all started at home. It all started with watching movies, listening to interviews, poring over books. It was just something that I put on in my living room — mimic a walk, or figure out how exactly it is she’s holding her mouth.

The image that you’re most familiar with? There’s a person underneath there. That was the first big discovery: That it was carefully honed, but it was artifice.

“The first sort of big discovery that I stumbled on was that [for] Marilyn Monroe herself, ‘Marilyn Monroe’ was a character that she played,” Williams continued. “The image that you’re most familiar with? There’s a person underneath there. That was the first big discovery: That it was carefully honed, but it was artifice. It was honed to where you couldn’t tell that it was artifice. It felt so real, but it was something that she’d studied and perfected and crafted. So once I discovered that that was a layer, I was finding out what that layer was and getting underneath it. It was a long and ungainly process.”

But it pays off. I enjoyed the hell out of My Week With Marilyn, from its intermittent song-and-dance interludes (“It still comes up on my iPod all the time — all the Marilyn Monroe,” Williams said of the songs she sang for the film) to its wry period infatuations to its clipped classical austerity laid waste by Monroe’s woozy compulsions. Mostly, though, Marilyn succeeds as a loving movie about movie love — the lightness of its bliss, the heartache of its illusions. None of the film’s personal infatuations (particularly that of an extraneous wardrobe girl played by Emma Watson) yield quite the charge of the lush moving pictures they serve.

It’s almost ghostly in a way — and to hear Redmayne tell it today, maybe not by accident.

“I think one of the great things of the whole production was the sense that we shot in the same studio that The Prince and the Showgirl was shot in.” turned to Williams. “And… your dressing room?”

“My dressing room was Marilyn’s actual dressing room when she was making Prince and the Showgirl,” Williams said.

“And Parkside House is playing Parkside House,” Curtis said of the star’s rented English residence. “So when Marilyn is sitting on those stairs having looked at Miller’s journal, Michelle sat on the very stairs that Marilyn would have sat at. One of the great moments for me was when we shot that wonderful dance from The Prince and the Showgirl. We were actually seeing that on the same stage — on the very spot — where I think it was in 1956 that Marilyn actually danced. In that very spot! It was incredibly moving and incredibly special.”

Indeed. Keep an eye on Movieline for more about My Week With Marilyn as its Nov. 4 release date approaches.

Source: Movieline | S.T. Vanairsdale

Friday, October 7, 2011

Michelle Williams plays a stunning MARILYN MONROE in 'MY WEEK WITH MARILYN'. Watch the movie trailer

Simon Curtis‘ My Week With Marilyn (2011) movie trailer stars Michelle Williams, Eddie Redmayne, Kenneth Branagh, Julia Ormond, and Toby Jones. My Week With Marilyn‘s plot synopsis: “Colin Clark met Marilyn Monroe while working as a young assistant on Laurence Olivier’s “The Prince and the Showgirl.” When Marilyn experienced emotional difficulties during shooting, the 23-year-old third assistant director came to her aid and romance developed. But one week of honesty and fun was not enough to save the doomed star from self-destruction.”

I have been waiting to see footage of this for nothing more than the portrayal of Marilyn Monroe by Michelle Williams. Her performance in Shutter Island was very good and I was wondering what she would concur. Would it be like the famous actresses brought back to life in The Aviator or something more. After this movie trailer, I would say its something more.


There’s the other defense, too: that ‘Marilyn Monroe’ was a character played by Norma Jean, as that “should I be her?” line makes explicit. So can Michelle Williams play both Norma Jean and Marilyn?

This was probably the best line in the entire movie trailer because of the depth and implication of that question and what it said about Marilyn Monroe and Norma Jean. I hope this duality is explored in the film.

I’m also curious to see how the tone really plays. Framing this as a sort of romance thriller (“she’ll break yours!”) rather than a tale of the moment when one young man learned the true intersection of reality and fantasy seems like it might be a conceit of the trailer rather than the film.

I hope it is not a conceit of the trailer rather than the film. That would make a much better film than the standard romance thriller.

My Week With Marilyn also stars Dominic Cooper, Judi Dench, Dougray Scott, Eddie Redmayne, Derek Jacobi, Jim Carter, Geraldine Somerville, Miranda Raison, and Zoë Wanamaker.

Watch the My Week With Marilyn movie trailer below and leave your thoughts on it. My Week With Marilyn will be released in US theaters on November 4, 2011.

Source: Film Book

Friday, May 20, 2011

Meek's Cutoff (Kelly Reichardt, 2011)

Meek's Cutoff is an arduous trek through purgatory, the cracked and arid plane of reality separating the paradise a group of Oregon settlers seek to find and the hell to which they seem hopelessly destined. When the travelers change altitude on the bleached-bone plains of the Oregon High Desert, they always seem to go down, down, down deeper into this unforgiving pit of land. The expedition's guide, Stephen Meek (played by Bruce Greenwood, though you won't know it until you see his name in the credits), foretells the contents of hell, warning that it is full of bears, Indians and mountains. But those always seem to be just outside the frame, suggesting that they will fall into the bottomless maw of fire and pain at any second.

Of course, purgatory itself is a punishment meant to cleanse its prisoners of sin, and Kelly Reichardt opens her film with mood-establishing shots that set a tone of repetitive, grueling labor meant to deliver the three families (Will Patton/Michelle Williams, Paul Dano/Zoe Kazan, Neal Huff/Shirley Henderson) to their Eden. Long, static shots show the settlers moving across a river, descending down the sloping riverbed as if being swallowed at the start. Later, this vaguely disturbing scene will seem idyllic as the party moves further and further away from the fresh water they waded through to continue their journey west. Already, the seeds of dissolution, resentment and panic are setting in: before heading on with a few barrels of water to last them, one man carves "Lost" into a fallen tree nearby.

That simple message communicates the dwindling faith the party has in their leader, who brags all day about glorious deeds and his assurances of a better life awaiting them, only to get the wagon trail in more desolate lands. Meek is an imposing presence, a hulking grizzly of a man with matted hair, full beard and incomprehensible gruff, but set against the infinite desert of Oregon Country, even he seems small at times. When the travelers capture an Indian and debates killing him or using him to find water as supplies run dangerously low, Meek finds himself even further distanced from an increasingly hostile party who find themselves more willing to follow a potentially scheming prisoner who cannot communicate with them than the rugged mountain man who failed them.

Some have described Reichardt's film as a feminist Western, which is true in some respects but misleading. The women, one of whom has a young child and is pregnant with another, are brought along on this fool's errand by the men who insisted they'd be making a better life for them, and now they must press on just to survive. In her wide, horizontal panoramas of the desert (the camera always tilted slightly downward to further enhance the emptiness of the front plane), Reichardt almost always places the women behind the men. Long shots of the men debating courses of action are accompanied with muffled sound, a distraction until one realizes that these are POV shots of the women standing by waiting for their husbands to return with instruction. When Patton and Meek hold a vote over the Indian's fate, the women get no say.

Yet Reichardt never gives in to easy moralizing. When Meek states that women embody chaos while men embody destruction, his tone of voice communicates chauvinism, but the fact that he attributes negative qualities to both genders instead of glorifying men or beatifying women suggests a moral compromise that runs through everyone. The women never mesh with the environment around them, their bright dresses, even when caked in dust and dirt, always marking them as freakish within the director's dour mise-en-scène. Williams initially seems a figure of grace when she acts with kindness toward the Indian, but when Kazan asks why she's bothering to sew up the man's broken moccasin, Williams replies flatly, "I want him to owe me something." It's almost as if, despite the 1845 setting, she's seen the movies showing this sort of story and plans ahead to save her skin in case things go awry.

Her reasoning points to the moral complexity of the film as a whole, one that leads neither to lesson-learning consideration shown to natives nor grisly rapprochement for Manifest Destiny and white paternalism. A grim sense of fate hangs over the film, maintaining a level of suspense punctuated by the mounting horror that, regardless of what happens to this isolated band of characters, the implications of their senseless, cruel journey will be visited on the region as a whole before America finally claims all the continent it can.

That sense of loss and cosmic harshness pervades the party's journey. To lighten the load, families must dump nonessential items from wagons already containing that with which each family would not part. A makeshift iris shot out the back of the canvas wagon frames a family heirloom dropped unceremoniously into the dirt to be forgotten. Later, the child discovers an area filled with gold, but the settlers must keep going to find water and civilization first, so they leave an almost comically useless marker out in the middle of nowhere to return to it in better days. Only once after the initial shots at the river do the travelers come across water, but its undrinkable, teasing the desperate settlers like the ocean around the ancient mariner's ship.

The word "poetic" gets thrown around too often when most of the time people just mean "pretty," and Meek's Cutoff is not poetic. It is, however, terrible and beautiful, realistic but not realist in all its limiting rules. Reichardt's previous films displayed emotions so keenly felt that the plight of one struggling yuppie and her dog could be as moving as the most shameless tear-jerker, and a damn sight more honest. But here, she demonstrates a capacity for thoughtful, careful composition that makes the film as much a formal achievement as it is an allegorical one.

The film's utter lack of dénouement, perhaps even falling action, may vex some, but one should keep in mind its setting: Oregon Country in 1845 was itself in a purgatorial state between independence and incorporation into America and Canada along the 49th Parallel. The land in which this story takes place is unfinished and pulled in ambiguous directions, a realm illuminated and left dark by an ambivalent Virgil who does not speak the same language as his dependents. If Dead Man is the ultimate display of the West as hell, Meek's Cutoff may be the quintessential view of the West as a place of perpetual displacement and transition, though its dubious movement tends to lead in the direction of hell instead of heaven.