Monday, July 9, 2012

“Moonrise Kingdom” (2012)


“Moonrise Kingdom” (2012), Wes Anderson, 3.5 stars

“What kind of bird are you?” – Sam

Wes Anderson’s quirky “Moonrise Kingdom” rolls back the clock to the 1960s and recounts the tale of a pair of lonely and troubled pre-teens who run off together to escape the anguish of their anything but normal lives.  Sam (Jared Gilman) is a member a khaki scout troop bivouacked for the summer on the island of New Penzance.  Suzy (Kara Hayward) is the eldest child in a massively dysfunctional family that lives on the island.  Her parents, Walt and Laura Bishop (played by Bill Murray and Frances McDormand), two lawyers teetering on the edge of divorce, communicate through a megaphone, and her mother is having an affair with Captain Sharp (Bruce Willis), the island’s only police officer.  Sam’s skills as a scout facilitate the pair’s escape despite the fact that Suzy is dressed as if she’s on her way to Sunday school and has brought along many of the comforts of home, including a suitcase, a cat, and a record player.  Captain Sharp enlists the aid of Scoutmaster Ward (Edward Norton) and his troop of eager khaki scouts, but the couple remains one step ahead, in one scene by unleashing some unexpectedly gruesome violence on their pursuers.

Much of the action within the film borders on the absurd, but the cast plays it completely straight, which makes the staging and reciting of their lines very funny.  The camera seems to be constantly on the move, dollying left, right, up and down and not at all self-conscious about the sweeping movements that give grandeur to rather ordinary scenes.  Scenes within the massive Bishop house are the most elaborately staged with characters entering and exiting the frame as the camera dollies with or in opposition to their movements.  Even static shots call attention to themselves: many are photographed from high or low angles (seldom straight on); many are filled with odd color combinations; and many catch characters behaving in ways you just don’t expect, for instance, Walt shuffling about with an axe on his shoulder and a bottle of wine explaining to his sons that he’s about to chop down a tree. (Actually, you might expect him to do that if you’ve seen the trailer.)   It’s a quirkily constructed piece of work in which quirky characters find comfort in each other’s quirky company, and it feels as if everyone involved, the camera included, had a good time making the film.  I had a good time watching it, and so did the audience I saw it with.

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