6A Monday, October Vi, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6A - Monday, October 6, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom FILM COLUMN This column is about Rvan Goslina E 4 'i can't wait till it's '69 days Gone.' How bout you?' Striking, surprising 'Gone Girl' thrills Fincher brings killer Gillian Flynn adaptation to screen By CHLOE GILKE Daily TV/New Media Editor and Ratajkowski proves she's an adept actress even when she's not teasing Robin Thicke. Neil Patrick Harris, famous for playing womanizing Barney Stinson on "How I Met Your Mother," is a natural choice for calculating lover Desi Collings. The film winks at viewers' "Gone Girl" may be a twisty expectations when it comes to and fast-paced thriller, but the Harris, with even his creepiest film's defining -characteristic is lines eliciting giggles. His how surprising series of increasingly predatory it is. A comments are funny until, At first suddenly, no one's laughing glance, the Gone Girl anymore. The reversal is jarring story seems and one of the most startling familiar. At Quality16 moments of the film (I wouldn't Down-on-his- and Rave dare spoil anything more luck husband 20th Century Fox specific). Nick Dunne (Ben Affleck, "Argo") comes home from a day at work to find Affieck s chin his darlingwife Amy (Rosamund a lot Pike, "An Education") missing. gets of He's not as distraught as he screentime. should be; evasive and glib, he flashes his sickening dead-eyed smile at the most inopportune of moments. Even Nick's square jaw and "villainous" chin "Gone Girl" also plays on recall other wife-killers and its recognizability as a David smooth criminals (particularly Fincher film. The director's Scott Peterson, whose name comes with certain p-arallel Sitog And physica sstBmpti 's, and viewers resemblance to Nick cannot be walking into the theater expect coincidental). Affleck's tabloid to see cinematography tinted celebrity makes for a perfect yellow, naturalistic acting and castingchoice. It's arole built for a slow and deliberate unfurling arecognizable face, and aperfect of mystery. Fincher is an auteur vehicle for Affleck to showcase for the modern era, where half the finest acting of his career. of the fun of watching his films Even the most confusing come from the comparison to casting choices make sense the rest of his body of work. upon seeing the film. Pike, who's While Fincher's Missouri is mostly known for playing a Bond doused in maize and Affleck Girl and the sister of Jane Austen often delivers his lines in a heroines, is flawless as a girl Jesse Eisenberg-esque mumble, who's bitter atbeingside-stepped "Gone Girl" is more than another and underestimated. Tyler Perry Fincher vehicle. A lot of the ("Tyler Perry's Why Did I Get nuance of the story is owed to Married Too") is astoundingly screenwriter (and the original subtle in a dramatic role, playing novel's author) Gillian Flynn. attorney Tanner Bolt with some She adapts her source material slick dark humor thatnever veers with an eye for the screen, and into silly Madea territory. Emily isn't afraid to excise elements Ratajkowski (the brunette from that don't translate as well to the "Blurred Lines" music video) film. (Namely, a lot of detail with plays a needy young temptress, Nick's father and elaboration on their struggles in New York.) The book's breathless 432 pages are cut into a lean 149 minutes with just a few regrettable omissions. The only one worth lamenting is the famous "Cool Girl" passage, which has much less impact when delivered in voice-over and placed in a completely different part of the story. The plot twists unfold effortlessly as viewers are. afforded little omniscience. You only glimpse Nick and Amy's relationship from their unreliable narration, which is often peppered with misleading evidence and, sometimes, blatant lies. Insight into the investigation comes from the endearing, sometimes incompetent detectives Boney (Kim Dickens, "Deadwood") and Gilpin (Patrick Fugit, "Almost Famous"). Their leads are flawed, formed as much by the media's perception of Nick and, Amy as the calculated'versions' of themselves that the couple present. Nick might seem like an eager-to-please mama's boy gone psychopathic, but even this blundering open book is capable of keeping some killer secrets. The extent. of Amy's manipulation is rare, clear, and the flashbacks as seen through her diary are mediated through Nick's perceptions ofher (though they are technically written downbyAmy).As the caricatures of the Dunnes denature into. chaos, it's impossible to discern who's trustworthy and who's putting on a show. "Gone Girl" is the type of film that can still provide thrills several rewatches later, and manages to be equally stunning for fans of the book and newbies to Nick and Amy's fucked-up, power play love. It's not just a film, but an experience - thanks in part to masterful acting, excellent direction and the eerie score provided by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross. "Gone Girl" is often emotional, darkly comic, terrifying and always, always surprising. 'Hey girl, so it turns out my ex-girlfriend is pregnant and I'l going to leave you for her.' A computer screen hums they may mean, years down role he typically gravitates in front of me, bleary Twitter the line, to his baby girl. So toward, flashes of brilliance updates rolling up in mechan- for those of you here for my still come when script gives ical euphoria as comedians, typically bullshit cinematic him free reign to dictate nar- journalists, politicians, Bill analysis - with its typically rative and director gives him Nye The gripping scene dissection and free reign to dictate scene. Science Guy typically discerning dialogue He excels in the films which do their discourse - be warned: This accommodate pared down best to burn column is about Ryan Gosling., stories in lieu of bloated through the Nothing more, nothing less. ensemble casts. He'd never noise in 140 It would be wrong to say I do well in a Paul Thomas characters stumbled across the Gos. He Anderson production - or or less. I'm was thrust upon me, thrown for that matter, any other jammed in at me by adoring teenage girls movie which requires a mess a maze of in that deluge of hysteria sur- of grinding gears, storylines, engineers. AKSHAY rounding "The Notebook." subplots to function. For The base- SETH Being 11 at the time of its proof, look no further than ment of the release, I could never really "Gangster Squad," a film UGLi sits in grasp what all the fuss was nowhere close in caliber to whispered about. I remember sitting anything on P.T. Anderson's silence, so quiet you can there, dumbfounded by how resume, but one that buries almost reach out and touch perfectly reasonable people Gosling in the same ways the blanket of dejected bore- could throw up their arms in an Anderson feature would: dom settling over our heads, such enamored glee when- beneath an avalanche of filling labored gaps between ever this nameless, bearded memorable characters - all the clacking of keys. And then man experienced the equiva- with something meaningful it happens. lent of a wet t-shirt contest. to say - who fit together like At first there's just a single, Thoughts like 'this is so fuck- puzzle pieces in the writer/ errant cry screeching itself ing stupid' flitted around my director's grander vision. into existence from a faraway head in neon letters, but an There's no wiggle room corner. There's no way to nail hour or so into the movie, that for him to really grab hold of down the source, but it seems nameless bearded man, who- our attention, use it to pick to be cracking through the ever he was, had me. He had up momentum the way he bathrooms 100 feet away. The me right where I fucking sat. does in the scene from "The camera quickly pans left to In classic Nichola Sparks Ntebook." In this -nsethe ' reveal a young Woman star- ashion;,the scem s f f films whi h cgit as ing dead-faced at her laptop is written with a gener- e ectively as they do, do so monitor, her mouth circling ous dollop of melodramatic because they stick to the ret- around a comically perfect O. gloop heaped onto each line, ognizable mold of letting the As the screaming dominoes seeping through every per- actor transform on screen, across the basement, ever so formance - yet, somehow, in front of our eyes, withoutt slowly, the camera turns back Gosling owns it. As he tries leaving the frame. to the computer screen in to shame Rachel McAdams's In his first really sig- front of me. Twitter updates character into giving their nificant film, "The Believer," storm upwards hundreds at a relationship a legitimate Gosling plays a teenager.who, time. Madness wafts within chance, his face locks away despite being Jewish, adopts the thousands of blipping behind hard lines of anger a violent neo-Nazi ideology. hashtags. Ryan Gosling has and disgust. Mc.Adams looks The movie's first scene shows given birth. Wait. No, Eva cowed, detached from her him stalking after a Jew- Mendes has given birth. Still a material. And at first, this ish man walking toward the father - Ryan Gosling is still contrast in style makes Gos- camera. He beats him into a father, though. Sigh. ling's more phony choices - submission, chiding him to Three weeks have lingered kicking a porch chair in rage, fight back. When there's no past since that lazy Friday throwing his hands up in bla- response, the camera drifts to afternoon I spent huddled in tant indignation - seem even a close up of Gosling's eyes. the basement of the UGLi. phonier. Unflinching and unblink- And in those three weeks, I've Then there's a moment, two ing, he moves toward us. It's thought a lot about Papa Gos minutes along the clip, where an interesting choice by the - what he's accomplished in we get nothing more than a director, to frame this evil, his 33 years on earth, what his closeup of the actor's face as obviously flawed character movies mean to me and what he blocks McAdams from her in the exact same position as car, refusing to let her leave, his victim moments before. his eyes teetering between And it works because of those composure and convulsion. predatory, haunting eyes DIRECTED B He hates this woman he loves - the way they bridge the L so much; this woman who gap from hunted to hunter S Aloves him; this woman who - a transformative theme abandoned him for a richer, which pops up multiple times better man; this woman who throughout the film. once dangled happiness in Gosling's performance front of him, now insistent on bleeds into every aspect yanking him back to the list- of the movie, and though less anguish we've been wit- there are many distracting nessing for the past half hour. instances of lofty melodrama, He still loves her. he's able to ground his emo- It's a powerful piece of tions with a shockingly well- performance that McAdams, realized sense of tangibility. the director and the editor all It's this tangibility that's wisely use as a defining point pulls us into films like "Half in addressing their own roles. Nelson," "The Place Beyond McAdams softens almost The Pines" and to a certain immediately,-a transforma- degree "Crazy, Stupid Love." tion we cut to and from for "Drive" is an amalgamation the better part of a minute of those principles on ste- as the conversation bounces roids. There's barely a single between two people laying line uttered by Gosling. Just, everything out on the table. by turns, wounded looks Until, finally, the camera toward the camera and heat- settles on a two-shot of both ed pauses of fiery silence. leads occupying opposite All of these examples fall sides of the frame - defeated, in line with a body of work dejected, though for once, that cries out "natural actor," equally aware of each other's and in every sense of the pain, word, (beyond all the memes) -- I don't usually use the term that's what Gosling is: a natu- "methodical" when describ- ral actor. ing "The Notebook." But this is clean, methodical film- making at its best. It hinges Seth is looking at pictures of completely on Gosling's Ryan Gosling. To send him more, portrayal, and he more than e-mail akse@umich.edu. delivers. While it may not be the 0 6 0