Sunday, May 24, 2015

Tomorrowland


Tomorrowland poster.jpg

Released:  May 22nd, 2015
Rated:  PG
Distributor:  Walt Disney Studios
Starring:  Britt Robertson, George Clooney, Hugh Laurie, Raffey Cassidy
Directed by:  Brad Bird
Written by:  Damon Lindelof, Brad Bird
Personal Bias Alert:  not a Disney devotee, not enamored with Brad Bird’s catalogue

7 of 10






            The trailer for Tomorrowland instantly got my attention.  Not for the flying cars or the magical pin or George Clooney.  It was the teenage girl wearing a baggy sweatshirt carrying a ball cap and a money clip.  It was me in all my societal-norms ignoring glory, preferring to dress and carry myself in a way that lets me do whatever the hell I want without having to lug a purse or maintain an outfit.  Watching the film only makes me love this representation more.  The way she presents herself is never commented on, even for a joke, and no ever tells her to get back home to her boyfriend or the mall or any other teenage girl clichés.  It’s a subtly progressive step forward in the portrayal of young women, catering to those of us who have ideas, dreams, and senses of purpose entirely independent of our gender.

            These ideals are exactly the kind of thing Tomorrowland is trying to promote, if in a more broad sense.  The girl in question, Casey (Britt Robertson), is chosen for the adventure exactly because she doesn’t think like everyone else.  She dreams of a better world, or at least one where she can go to space, and stubbornly refuses to admit defeat.  So when a recruiter shows up looking for new blood to go to the futuristic Tomorrowland, she gets a golden ticket pin.

            It’s a tricky role for Robertson as plucky optimist shares a border with annoying twerp, but she always keeps Casey on the right side of the line.  Between this and The Longest Ride, she’s proving her worth as a genuinely likable young actress.  George Clooney brings a toned-down version of his usual gruffness as the guy helping her get into Tomorrowland, but the big surprise is Raffey Cassidy, a child actor who you probably last saw as the younger version of Kristen Stewart in Snow White and the Huntsman.  She has a very large role here as the recruiter, possibly the most complex of all the leads, and makes it believable every step of the way.  The details of why she’s so great would bring up spoilers, but suffice it to say that she’s an actress you should keep your eye on.

            Where the film drags is in its plot, which doesn’t overly surprise me given its writer/director team.  Brad Bird makes likable films, but they often lack the emotional punch that comes with true greatness.  Damon Lindelof has an even sketchier history, with his writing having been featured in uneven projects like Prometheus, Cowboys and Aliens, and Lost while also creating and writing a very interesting adaptation of The Leftovers for HBO.  Here, there’s a lack of purpose to the whole plot beyond a vague sense of wanting to get to Tomorrowland.  What will happen once they get there is never clearly established, and without that there’s nothing they’re clearly fighting against.  So the story meanders and the climax fizzles.  In fact, they don’t actually succeed at fixing what seems to be the main threat.  They start down the road but don’t complete the task before the credits role.  I guess it’s supposed to be enough that they’re working on it?

Even with this meandering, Tomorrowland never lost my attention.  There’s too much wonder floating around to get frustrated with it, peppered as it is with exciting, imaginative scenes that give the film that Disney sense of magic.  Let’s face it, a world with jetpacks and spaceships and elaborate diving contraptions stay cool long into your adulthood, and Brad Bird delivers the glorious looking world that’s promised in the trailer.  Almost everyone will want to visit Tomorrowland, and the brief time you get to spend there in this film is a satisfactory way to spend your afternoon.

This is a family film, so the events never get too dark or scary.  Still, it’s a strong PG, so beware with very young kids.  Older children and adults will enjoy the film’s inventive action and cheeky sense of humor, although the lack of punch will probably keep it from becoming a Disney classic.

Other Notes:
Ø  I like that the utopia of Tomorrowland includes scientists, artists, and dreamers of all kind.
Ø  That memorabilia store is pretty much my version of heaven.
Ø  Hugh Laurie to George Clooney:  “Age suits you well.”
Ø  This and Mad Max are battling it out for the most beautifully rendered vision of the future so far this year.  I recommend seeing them both to decide which one you want to see come true.

No comments:

Post a Comment