sighthawks

sighthawks

Monday 4 February 2013

FILM - FAR FROM HEAVEN


Film - Far From Heaven


Aight so yo. I was sitting around doing nothing like the studious student I am, eating my petrol station chicken and bacon sandwich (that tasted nothing like chicken or bacon) looking up suggestions for films similar to revolutionary road. I was doing this because revolutionary road is really good. So I came across 'Far From Heaven' - a film set in the same depressingly perfect American suburbs where everyone hates everything but has to pretend not to (sort of). 

Oppression, repression, suppression, and loads of other tragically interesting -sions pop up in this film. The focus is on Cathy and Frank Whitaker (Dennis Quaid, and Scarlett Johansson Julianne Moore) a seemingly perfect couple raising two kids in a 'charming' little neighbourhood. Frank has a great job as an executive at advertising company 'Magnatech', while Cathy sits around at home, cleans, and chats shit with the other mothers in the community (they like to talk about how many times a week their husbands give them the D). Everything goes tits up though (i still to this day do not understand how 'tits up' can be considered to be anything other than amazing) when Cathy goes to take her late-working husband some din dins. She catches him passionately kissing some other dude in his office instead of doing his Home-o-work (jokes for days). But seriously now, this obviously takes her by surprise and though you get this immediate feeling that their relationship has been fucked up beyond repair, they both agree that Frank will go to Conversion therapy. That's where psychologists psychiatrists psychics and psyborgs (jokes for days) try to turn homosexual people into heterosexual people. 

Meanwhile, Cathy strikes up a relationship of her own that's frowned upon by the community she lives in. Raymond, Cathy's large black gardener provides her with relief and intellectual stimulation in a tumultuous period of her life (Although it seems to me that he puts the moves on her from day, but perhaps to more educated movie-goers and watchers their relationship is one that blossoms from platonic to something that is  tantalisingly close to erotic). Anyway, without spoiling the ending (Cathy's racist homophobic psychopathic brother kills everyone) the film follows Frank and Cathy's dance into the depths of 1950's America, its prejudices and stereotypes, and its suffocating way of life; you get to see how elusive happiness can be, and the part society plays in always keeping this happiness just out of arms reach.

Raymond, here to trim your hedges, save you from marriages
that are being torn apart by secret homosexual desires, go
to art exhibitions with you, change the way you think
about abstract art, AND lay the pipe down.
Top that cracker.
I liked it. Its a morbid downward spiral that keeps your attention and has interesting developments and some  really believable emotional moments. When I first started watching it though, it all felt really surreal- twin peaks surreal. Kinda like the actors knew they were acting, maybe that's intentional and something to do with how living that life is an act anyway, or maybe it was me just being a little drunk. These surreal vibes never really went away though, and a lot of the lighting in tense scenes is reminiscent of 'Dick Tracy, private eye, Noir type flicks. This isn't bad though, in fact it actually makes the film look pretty cool. 
My general interest in the myth of the hollow american dream really drove me to this film, and kept me watching. If you're like me and you like depressing films about unfulfilled potential, mid-life crises, and broken homes and lives ( what a barrel of fun i am) then I think you'll like Far From Heaven.

MARK ALTHAVEAN 'SISQO' ANDREWS OUTTA 5 



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