The Hillsdale Collegian
  Volume 127, Number 12                            January 22, 2004
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Arts

'Big Fish' a masterpiece

Cult classic must-sees


Tim Burton's Big Fish received great critical acclaim long before its public release, and with good reason. The film is a spectacle in many senses. Candy for the eye and for the passions.

Burton's directorial style comes into full bloom with this feature, capturing attention with many subtle special effects that run seamlessly into the tale. Obviously, Burton had been itching to make a film of this nature, and Edward Scissorhands, Sleepy Hollow and Nightmare Before Christmas are all reflected in this visual tour de force. Even some of the farcical visual comedy of Beetlejuice can be seen, particularly in the story surrounding Danny DeVito as ringmaster Amos Calloway.

Big Fish is certainly more than a pretty fall walk through a park, however. The film tells the story of Ed Bloom (played in his old age by Albert Finney and as a young man by Ewan McGregor), a man who has crafted his life, or at least his rendition of it, to be nothing short of a legend. Always the storyteller, Ed's fables always entertain everyone around him. Everyone, that is, except his son Will (Billy Crudup). As Ed lies on his deathbed, Will returns from three years of silence toward his father in an attempt to discern what of his father's personal legend is fact, and what is fantasy. As a result, we are presented with retellings of myth that is Ed Bloom's life. In the varied and sundry tales, Ed saves his small hometown from a fifteen-foot giant named Karl (played by 7-foot-6-inch Matthew McGrory), catches and then releases an uncatchable fish, works in a circus for three years to learn the name of the girl he knows he will marry someday, and helps out a struggling poet from his own town. While the yarns are spun with a deft hand, the only prominent common thread is that they have all happened to Ed. The tall tales are often so disjoint that at times one begins to wish for a more unified story, but a wonder as to what will beset Ed next always overcomes such misgivings.

The overall tale is told as well as the individual ones. The plot moves along at a steady, pleasant pace, and the dialogue is thoughtful and witty. All the parts are well-played, particularly McGregor's young Ed Bloom, who portrays old Bloom's image of himself with an easygoing, casual air and a warm Southern drawl. Helena Bonham Carter serves well as both the witch who foretells a teenage Ed of the manner of his death, and Jenny, a young woman for whom Ed is later a benefactor. The only major glitches regarding the cast include Crudup's Will, who seems just a bit too embittered by and skeptical of his fathers stories, and whose eventual change of heart comes off as rather sudden. In his defense, however, these issues may easily be as much the fault of the Daniel Wallace novel on which the film is based or of the screenplay as of Crudup's acting. Other minor character issues include the fact that both DeVito and Steve Buscemi have long since become parodies of themselves, so their otherwise delightful appearances on screen evoke reactions of the "Heh heh. Steve Buscemi. Excellent," variety, causing some undue distraction.

There are few who will not enjoy Big Fish on some level or another. The pure, unadulterated, modern, simple fantasy is a breath of fresh air among the recent glut of sweeping epics, over-the-top action movies and pedantic romantic comedies. The storytelling warrants the audience's rapt attention, and Burton's unique style commands it. It made me laugh, and made most of the rest of the house, male and female alike, cry like little children. While the ending reads off of the scale on the Sentiment-O-Meter, it seems highly appropriate to the nature of the rest of the film.

I'm giving Big Fish four stars of five, and tossing back a tall, cold Newcastle for dear old Brett in his absence. See it. You'll like it.

Tune in next week for some hot, hot cinema action as my new cohort Cheryl Heitzman and I take in Along Came Polly.

 

the Collegian @ the Movies

Will Farnham
Will Farnham

Full Star Full Star Full Star Full Star

(out of five)

plus

(in honor of Brett Langsather)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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