Aniston of the week: Along Came Polly

Still wading through those rom-coms, this week we take a look at Aniston’s pairing with ‘everyman’ Ben Stiller. aniston_alongcamepolly

FILM: Along Came Polly
DIRECTOR:
John Hamburg
YEAR:
2004
CHARACTER NAME AND PROFESSION:
Polly Prince, waitress and aspiring illustrator
PLOT SUMMARY:
A man name Reuben Feffer (Ben Stiller) who is a risk-assessment analyst (non-spoiler – his job matches exactly his personality) gets married, but his wife Lisa (Debra Messing) sleeps with a scuba instructor on the first day of their honeymoon. Reuben is sad, he goes back to work, everyone knows what happened to him. His best friend Sandy (Philip Seymour Hoffman) invites him to an art show to cheer him up and he meets Polly (Aniston!) who went to the same middle-school as him. He’s surprised to find that Polly, a former Valedictorian and leader of the model UN, is now a tattooed waitress (shocker!), who owns a pet ferret, as though he lives in a world where people always fulfil childhood expectations. When Polly finds out what happened to Reuben, she feels sorry for him and they begin dating, despite being initially repulsed by him and having nothing in common.

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Aniston, here capturing exactly my expression as I watched this film.

CHARACTER TRAITS: Intelligent, funny, spontaneous, open, honest, kind, self-aware.
NOTES ON PERFORMANCE:
Aniston should be commended for simply acting alongside Stiller here, even though they have zero chemistry, she still convinces as Polly, with some of her most authentic scenes being those opposite Missi Pyle as her friend/colleague Roxanne. You can tell Aniston is trying here, and it’s not her fault that the writer/director has created such an unconvincing narrative.

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With Ben Stiller as Reuben

NOTES ON FILM: The lack of chemistry between Stiller and Aniston totally ruins the film, as does the lengths the films goes to prove they’re sooooo different, which then works against credibility when they end up together at the end. Not even Aniston could convince me that Polly really wants to be with Reuben. Again, a film in which the female character is actually more interesting than the male protagonist and I’d prefer to watch a film from her perspective. Imagine – she’s minding her own business and this trainwreck of a guy lands in her life and tries to convince her they’re somehow compatible – that’d be hilarious because she’d just go off to Tanzania in the end and have a blast.
CONCLUSION:
I felt like Rodolfo the ferret while watching this film – banging my head against a wall.

My week in film: Beyond the Lights, Brooklyn and Joy

Viewed this week, three films about female lives that in different ways present the difficulties of balancing a personal and professional life.

Gina Prince-Blythewood’s Beyond the Lights went without a cinema release in the UK last year, despite its excellent cast (Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Minnie Driver, Danny Glover) and pertinent plot – it concerns a young R&B singer struggling with fame and self-perception – and critics felt that this might be due to an expectation of the audience’s racial bias, among other reasons (The best films you won’t see in cinemas, Telegraph). Now on Netflix, the film is well worth seeking out. Mbatha-Raw plays Noni, coached by her mother (Driver) from a young age to succeed at all costs in the tough music business, who is on the brink of releasing an album that will ‘change everything.’ Clearly unhappy with the enormous pressure, after an awards show, Noni attempts suicide but is talked down from her hotel balcony by the police officer (Nate Parker) assigned to her. What follows is Noni’s uncertain navigation of her future – everything has changed for her, but her mother/manager ignores her internal struggle.

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Minnie Driver and Gugu Mbatha-Raw

Beyond the Lights isn’t without cliché, its bodyguard/singer central pairing is very familiar, but what’s refreshing is the way Prince-Blythewood creates a world for her authentic characters that feels utterly convincing and deeply sympathetic to Noni’s journey towards emancipation. Taught at a pivotal, early stage in life that only winning is of value, regardless of what is costs, Noni must learn to value herself first, instead. Mbatha-Raw’s performance is immensely affecting, as she balances Noni’s public and private personas with skill.

Another enjoyable performance is at the heart of Brooklyn, now nominated for three Oscars (Best Film, Best lead actress*, Best adapted screenplay) and six BAFTA’s (Best film, lead actress, supporting actress, best screenplay, best costume design and best make-up). Adapted by Nick Hornby from the novel by Colm Tóibín, the 1950’s set Brooklyn tells the story of Eilis (Saoirse Ronan), who moves to New York from Ireland to work, leaving behind her sister, Rose and mother. Eilis, at first homesick, eventually settles into her life working at a department store, taking night classes in accounting and living at Mrs Keogh’s (Julie Walters) boarding house, all arranged by Father Flood (Jim Broadbent). Eilis even falls in love, with Tony (Emory Cohen), and their tender romance is the final element that will bond her to her new home.

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Emory Cohen and Saoirse Ronan

Again, it’s the expectations of others that Eilis must rebel against. When drawn home, it appears to Eilis that the life she never thought she’d have in Ireland might be possible after all, and director John Crowley makes much of her homeland’s charms, just as her friends and relatives appear desperate for her to stay. As in Beyond the Lights, it’s the search for freedom that is essential to the character. Though both films have romantic elements, neither Noni or Eilis are motivated entirely by their relationships with men, rather it’s their desire to discover a life that will be true to their own ideals and values that drives each narrative.

In David O. Russell’s Joy, with Jennifer Lawrence in the title role, the struggle for financial success plays a greater part in the story, where Lawrence’s divorced mother of two pursues her dream as the inventor of a self-wringing mop. Living with her permanently bed-located mother and her ex-husband and father in the basement, whilst maintaining a job as a travel agent with an unreliable car, much is made of Joy’s chaotic life. Like David Lynch before him (but with half as much style), Russell uses the camp of soap operas as an analogue for Joy’s messy life, where the stakes are high and a large cast of characters are all invested in the outcome of her invention.

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l-r Edgar Ramirez, Elizabeth Rohm, Dascha Polanco, Isabella Rossellini, Robert De Niro Jennifer Lawrence, Diane Ladd

There’s lots to enjoy here- Virginia Madsen’s affectionate performance as Joy’s mother Terry, the lolloping pace, which seems to progress the film’s plot in spirals, and of course, just the presence of Isabella Rossellini. There’s something a little bit bonkers about Joy, too though, and not in a way that feels purposeful, as was the case with the delightful and thoughtful I Heart Huckabees. It’s an American Dream tale after all, and the many set-backs Joy faces feel somehow artificial, (but maybe that’s the point) as though she must overcome an ever increasing number of hurdles in order to truly appreciate being able to have power hair and wear a power suit and be the entrepreneur her granny always knew she would be. Where Joy fails and Brooklyn and Beyond the Lights succeed, is in giving a sense of who their central characters are, rather than just being an accumulation of personal struggles.

Also watched: Slow West (John Maclean), which was somewhat unconvincing.

Aniston of the week: Rock Star

In the week that David Bowie and Alan Rickman died and lacking a film in which either starred with Aniston*, what serves as adequately appropriate within our subject’s portfolio is her part in a film that celebrated and parodied rock-star fandom, albeit with mixed results. In love with an LA-based British hair-rock band (based loosely on the story of Judas Priest) a far cry from the genius of Bowie, it’s a film that nevertheless revels in the power of music to inspire, and the importance of individuality and creative autonomy above all else, epitomised by Bowie.

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Aniston as Emily

FILM: Rock Star
DIRECTOR:
Stephen Herek
YEAR:
2001
CHARACTER NAME AND PROFESSION:
Emily Poule, manager/’business woman’
PLOT SUMMARY:
Chris Cole (Mark Wahlberg) fronts a tribute act to Steel Dragon, but infuriates his band mates with his perfectionism. His manager and girlfriend, Emily (Aniston) supports him wholeheartedly. When the actual lead singer of Steel Dragon, Bobby Beers (Jason Flemyng) is kicked out of the band, Chris is whisked away to audition as his replacement. Getting the job, he changes his name to Izzy, and dives headfirst into all the clichés of the rock n’ roll lifestyle. Initially happy to continue supporting him, Emily tires of being relegated to ‘one of the girls’ following the tour bus and decides to move to Seattle to set up her own business. Chris gets further hooked on his new drug-fuelled life and only rethinks things when he realises he’s just a singer for hire, with no creative autonomy. Eventually Chris and Emily reunite, once he has left Steel Dragon to become a solo indie singer. Basically he goes from 1980’s hair glam and power vocals to 1990s Seattle grunge.
CHARACTER TRAITS:
Emily is loyal, kind, witty, assertive and self-assured.

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Stand behind your man, Aniston with Mark Wahlberg as Chris/Izzy

NOTES ON PERFORMANCE: Basic Aniston here, which isn’t to criticise – she’s as funny, poised and committed as ever – just not given room to demonstrate much range. Highlights are her withering looks to Timothy Spall’s road manager, Mats, her comic line readings and her convincing sad face when she realises Chris is lost to rock n’ roll.

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“You’re in Seattle!” Save it, Emily, rock n’ roll took him long ago

NOTES ON FILM: Director Stephen Herek demonstrates some of the ground he’s covered elsewhere – the belief in rock n’ roll from Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure (1989), the dreams come true story of The Mighty Ducks – but Rock Star most closely resembles Mr Holland’s Opus (1995), with Aniston cast in the role of supportive partner, forever side-lined by her man’s failure to see all the ways he’s blessed. Other female characters fare even worse, as they’re either sycophants or neglected wives and girlfriends.
CONCLUSION: When Emily leaves to set up her Seattle business I wished I could see that film instead.

*Aniston almost starred with Alan Rickman in Gambit but sadly that never came to fruition.