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By Dave McCoy MSN Movies
The last time I wore a tux was five years ago ... and I swore I'd never
wear one again until my own wedding. See, I'm a journalist and I work for
Microsoft. That combination means I dress as comfortably and shabbily as I
possibly can. But when the good folks at Paramount Vantage called a few months
ago and offered me a ticket to the world premiere of "A Mighty Heart," followed by a special dinner attended by Angelina Jolie, well, forget my wedding! A chance to
walk the red-carpeted steps of the Grand Theatre Lumiere and be in the
same room with Jolie (and probably Brad Pitt)? Where's the nearest tux
shop?
See, when you attend a premiere in Cannes, everyone dresses to the nines.
It's mandatory: tuxedos for the boys; gorgeous, sexy, revealing dresses for the
girls. Crowds begin lining up two or three hours before a premiere to get a
glimpse of their favorite stars. Paparazzi cram into fenced-off pits trying to
get the best shots. And as I mentioned last year, women and men, all dressed up
with nowhere to go, hang about with signs, begging for a ticket (it's like a Grateful Dead show, minus the patchouli oil and weed).
It's a crazy, unique, wonderful thing ... in theory. Right now, it's 80
degrees in Cannes, and super muggy. It's been that way since Day 1, and though
we've had the threat of rain, no relief appears in sight. Eighty degrees,
muggy, tux. Do the math. By the time I stepped onto the famed red carpet, I was
sweating like a 500-pound man who got locked inside a sauna. It wasn't pretty
... but damn if everyone else didn't look just as uncomfortable. It's quite a
scene, let me tell you, and I'd be lying if I didn't admit I was worried
about tripping and falling down all 20 stairs.
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From left: Director Michael Winter- bottom,
Mariane Pearl, Adam Pearl (front), Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt
(Chris Ashford/Camera Press/Retna
Ltd)
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Once inside and seated, the audience can watch the movie screen as others
enter the theater. Oh, there's Gérard Depardieu. Oh, hey, there is
... some random, stunning model who thinks she's a star and is taking 10 minutes
to walk up the steps. Hey, there's a wrinkly old French dude who must be someone
important because everyone is kissing him. Ah, OK, here we go ... Angelina and
Brad. People went nuts. The pair looked incredible (painfully so ... I
mean, it's unnatural) and now I'll play the role of fashion critic: Brad was
stunning in his black tuxedo, hair cut short and styled like Cary Grant.
Angelina, hair pulled back, looked statuesque in a black dress made by some
designer for some ridiculous price that could feed the entire population of a
Third-World country. Sorry, best I can do for you, folks. Ain't my bag.
When they finally made their way into the theater, they received a heroes'
welcome from the thousands that packed it (by this point, I had lost 27 pounds
and was swimming in my rented, shiny shoes). There was someone else there too
... who was it? Oh, right. Mariane Pearl and her son, Adam. They are the
subjects of "A Mighty Heart" (you thought I'd forgot about the movie, didn't
you?) and when I saw them, I suddenly realized how yucky this whole fashion
parade was.
You all know the story of Wall Street Journal scribe Daniel Pearl. Of how, in
January 2002, he was kidnapped while following a lead in Karachi, and how
several weeks later, he was beheaded, setting off a string of post-Sept. 11
journalist deaths (230 and rising) in the Middle East region. "A Mighty Heart"
is based of Mariane Pearl's memoir, which details those weeks she spent trying
to find her husband and the chaos of the region. It's a stirring work
dedicated to Adam to show him the kind of man his father was, because they would
never meet.
Although I agree celebration is in order for getting this story on the big
screen, against the context of premiere night in Cannes and the celebrity
obsession ... I don't know. It just felt wrong.
But to the movie. It's made by Michael Winterbottom, who's crafted
films in nearly every genre ("The Claim," "Jude," "24 Hour Party People," "Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story") and has
taken on political subject matter several times (though I'd argue poorly and in
a heavy-handed manner) with "The Road to Guantanamo" and "Welcome to Sarajevo." "A Mighty Heart" is far better than those
last two films, though not without its own serious flaws.
The entire film covers the weeks between the kidnapping of Pearl (played
mostly in flashback by Dan Futterman) until his eventual death -- a technique
that is always tricky. How do you keep an audience engaged in a story to
which they know the ending, especially one as tragic and brutal as this?
Winterbottom pulls it off by creating a dizzying, confusing, fast-paced mystery,
mostly without sentimentality, that reveals layers and layers of international
deceit and deception. And most importantly, he has Jolie. In easily her finest
performance, Jolie the pop-culture figure loses herself inside the role of
Pearl. Mariane is of Cuban and French descent, and when you put the two
women side by side, you'd never think Jolie could pull it off. But she
does. Her hair is curly, complexion changed and she's pregnant the entire film.
While the world spins out of control around her, Pearl (and Jolie) remains
centered and the film becomes as much about a wife's love for her husband as the
evil surrounding them. But it's also here that Winterbottom and screenwriter
John Orloff make their biggest mistake: As the film moves forward, Mariane Pearl
becomes more a saint than human. She is allowed no flaws in the film to the
point where it threatens the validity of the circumstances (a final speech she
gives, postmurder, to a group that helped try to find Daniel is the type of
stuff Oscar voters may love but is unnecessary and slightly embarrassing).
That said, the film is still quite effective and moving and infuriating. And
the sold-out audience loved it. Pearl and Jolie received a standing ovation that
lasted well past five minutes. They both deserve it in their own ways.
My (Non) Dinner With Angie
"But Angie, Angie, ain't it good to be alive? Angie, Angie, they can't say
we never tried" -- Rolling Stones
So, I mentioned the special dinner above. Well, sorry readers, but it didn't
happen. It suddenly went from small dinner with some journalists to cast
and crew only. I'd love to tell you some great anecdotes about Brad and
Angelina, but it's not going to happen. In all honesty, though, I wasn't that
upset. For starters, I suffered through a lunch with the press while
attending the Coen Brothers' roundtable, and I certainly couldn't endure
that awkwardness again. But more importantly, I had to get out of that tux and
back into my normal, casual, tasteless lifestyle.
A demain ...
Wednesday: Sorry I didn't get to Gus Van Sant's "Paranoid Park" like I promised yesterday. I'll cover it and
several other movies tomorrow.
Dave McCoy is lead editor for MSN Movies. He'll file daily dispatches
from Cannes through May 28.
Will you see "A Mighty Heart"? Write us at heymsn@microsoft.com
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