8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 18, 2002 ARTS 'In Praise:' influential Godard falls short By Tara Blilik For the Daily S CHAMBER' LACKc! By Andy TaylorFabe Daily Arts Writer Film adaptations of popular novels are always diffi- cult to pull off. In the realm of fantasy, success is especially tricky, because usually, the imagery and atmosphere created by the book are lost in the journey to the screen. This is especially true when millions of children have near-religious devotion to the book. In most cases, a half-baked adaptation can result in poor box-office returns, a collective slaughter by crit- ics and eternal infamy on the fan-boy internet movie sites. However, with J.K. Rowling's "Harry Potter" series, engrossing tales of wizardry and magic through the lens of adolescence, one does not have to worry about such problems. Hordes of 10-year-olds with par- ents in tow would flock to these movies if they consist- ed of Harry and his chums playing ping-pong in the Gryffindor common room for three hours. However, although the movie will be beloved by children, the newest chapter in the saga, "Harry Pot- ter and the Chamber of Secrets," does not capture the quirky details and ambience of Rowling's novels. Although it is better and scarier than the first film, "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone," ber of still feels like T Y the "Cliff's Notes" of a _ c hildren's l i ter a tur e classic. The film begins with Harry Potter getting ready to return to the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry for his sec- ond year of training. After a long summer with his no dull and cruel relatives, he is anxious to get back to tre his friends and to the place he considers his real rol home. However, strange things are afoot. Harry has ad not received a single letter from his friends; a fearful ly and self-flagellating house-elf named Dobby (a CG sir character who is more Jar-Jar than Yoda) sneaks into Th Harry's room to warn him about an impending dis- ler aster that will occur if he returns to school; and Du when Harry and his friend Ron Weasley try to board the train to Hogwarts, platform nine and three quar- sh ters is blocked. Despite these ominous signs, Harry Ra is determined to make it to school to continue his training and face whatev- er challenges await him. Except for a tumultuous arrival at H R k Hogwarts involving a stolen flying car, it is business as usual at the HARRY Pa remote castle. The position of Profes- AND TH sor of Defense Against the Dark Arts, CHAMBEI a position that changes hands at least SECRET once per book, is now being filled by Gilderoy Lockhart (played masterful- At Quality 1 ly by Kenneth Branagh, "Dead Wa Again"), a narcissistic wizard with a Warner Br toothy grin and a best-seller called "Magical Me." Harry also continues to fight with no Daniel Radcliff's Harry is descending into puberty, so sayeth his voice. Courtesy of Warner Bros. HEART OF NOVEL t given enough screen time. This is an unfortunate end in the film, for most of the adult characters' Aes are curtailed in favor of including every little venture of Harry, Ron and Hermione. This adverse- affects the pacing of the film, making it somehow multaneously feel like it jumps around and drags. he film also skimps on screen-time for the benevo- nt giant Hagrid (Robbie Coltrane) and Professor umbledore (played by the late Richard Harris). The reason "Chamber of Secrets" eventually falls ort, however, is not the actors. 13-year-old Daniel adcliffe, whose voice has dropped an octave or two At a screening of "In Praise of Love" ("Eloge De L'Amor"), in a the- ater only sparsely filled in the first place, many members of the crowd made their way to the exits long before the end-credits even started rolling. Considering the reasonable 97 minute running time, these viewers can probably be divided into two groups: they were either fans of Jean- Luc Godard's revolutionary directing of the '50s-'60s and deeply disap- pointed with his attempted comeback, or had no idea what they were getting themselves into in the first place. Subscribing to the former perspective, I regretfully admit that the now 71- year-old director, who was once a piv- otal figure of the French New Wave, should have retired his old fashions of filmmaking when the influential cine- matic movement went out of style. Desperately sifting through the multi-layered tangle of fractured )TTER HE R OF TS 6 and os. since we last saw him, is decidedly un- nauseating as Harry, and he manages to create and maintain a very likable char- acter. His co-stars Rupert Grint and Emma Watson (Ron and Hermione) handle their roles well and help to restore the good name of the child actor. Additionally, the three burgeon- ing wizards seem more comfortable with each other this time around and seem more like actual friends. The major flaw of the movie is that it fails to reproduce the Roald Dahl- like eccentricities of the books. In her events, undeveloped philosophies and embit- S tered critiques allows only a thin plot line to be extracted. "In Praise of Love" is basically divided IN P into two parts. The first is L considered a study of the At M, four moments of love: the Manhati meeting, physical pas-_Manhat__ sion, the separation and reconciliation. These moments are explored as a young filmmaker tries to develop a movie using three couples, a young, adult and an old. There are also intermittent scenes of him searching for an old love interest. The second part considers an old married couple from the French Resistance of World War II, selling their own story, and therefore memory, for entertainment purposes. Moreover, these bits of plot develop- ment only serve to convey Godard's scattered ideas about love and memory, and poke jabs at America and Holly- wood filmmaking. The film is striking- ly non-narrative. As far as the actors go, they function only as pawns to move about Godard's abstractions. It is nearly impossible to identify with any one of the many char- acters, as they are practically indistin- guishable from each other, due to their discontinuous snippets of screen time and the lack of sufficient lighting. One of the longest scenes of the film con- sists of one static shot from behind two characters engaged in a lengthy dia- *I IA O' lad :tar logue. This technique was experimen- tally interesting as Godard used it in his '60s masterpieces, yet the attention span of the general contemporary audi- ence is not conducive to staring at the back of actors' heads. However, Godard must be well praised for much of his exquisite cine- matography. Despite his lack of camera movement, Godard's visuals are edited to create their own lyrical rhythm. Visu- ally, the film has two distinct styles. The first two-thirds are shot in black and white. With this, he captures the fine detail of Paris cityscapes in an ele- gant photographic style. Temporally, the last part of the film exists two years earlier than the first, yet is ironically contrasted by its highly saturated, digi- tized images. Furthermore, these color- ful visions are often superimposed over each other, and designed to resemble a painting materializing into motion before our eyes. Besides the digital addition, "In Praise of Love" seems to fit quite nice- ly into Godard's collection. Supporting the French auteurist the- ories of filmmaking, he is certainly the director k and essential voice behind the film. Quite ,ISE OF self-reflexively, the film- VE maker within "In Praise Istone of Love" refers to his "project." Likewise, n Pictures Godard's filmmaking is almost more like a proj- ect than a film. He uses many of his old characteristic techniques such as bold statements regarding political themes, inter-titles reminiscent of the silent film era, alienating camera work and long takes that linger on cameos to allow a thorough examination from the spectator. To watch it is almost like taking a journey through Godard's stream of consciousness. It is as intel- lectual and as full of commentary as his older works, and no less confusing or frustrating. Unfortunately, the world has evolved all around Godard, who refus- es to evolve his methods of filmmak- ing along with it. "In Praise of Love" mourns a loss of the old ways, and it doesn't fare well in this era. Especial- ly, the anti-American ideology could- n't come in a worse context. Though his film is layered with provocative nuances, comprehension is reliant upon multiple viewings. It is unrea- sonable for Godard to demand this from an audience which can't sit through it even once. 44 vels, Rowling borrows (and in some cases, out- Draco Malfoy and continues to absorb the wrath of Professor Snape (Alan Rickman, "Die Hard"). The real story begins when rumors of the myste- rious Chamber of Secrets, created by a wizard named Slytherin who thought that Hogwarts should cleanse itself of so-called Mudbloods (wizard chil- dren born of regular human parents), begin to sur- face. The gossip is that the chamber, which houses a terrible monster, will be opened by the heir of Slytherin, supposedly a student at Hogwarts. "Chamber of Secrets," like "The Sorcerer's Stone," had to be pared down from the full-length novel, and there were some egregious errors made in the editing process. Snape, the ill-tempered potions teacher, is right steals) from many different sources, including Dahl, C.S. Lewis' Narnia series, Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings" and many more. But this, in and of itself, is not a problem. After all, George Lucas pil- laged several mythological sources for "Star Wars" (believe it or not, Luke Skywalker is not the first protagonist to come to terms with his lineage). The real problem is that while the books are enter- taining, if derivative, re-workings of classic stories, the movie is even one step farther from the source, and except for a scene involving some killer spiders, the eerie and unique atmosphere that Rowling creates with painstaking detail is abandoned for a squeaky- clean glossing-over of the books. 2 4 m