martes, 6 de noviembre de 2012

COMPOSITION #2: BIG FISH.

Burton, Tim. 2003. Big Fish. USA: Columbia Pictures. Film




“There are some fish that cannot be caught. It's not that they are faster or stronger than other fish, they're just touched by something extra.”

When I went to the cinema with my family to see Big Fish for the first time, none of us understood it. I was 11 years old and I continuously wondered “Finally, did it really happen or not?” But I did not think very much about that. I preferred other types of films, those in which the plot is easy and you did not have to think very much. Nevertheless, when I had seen this film among those offered to make our reviews, I wanted to see it: “Maybe this time I can understand it” I thought. Finally, I am pleased to have done it, because I have discovered a delightful and haunting story that will remain in my mind for many years.
Magical and moving are the best adjectives to describe this film, which basically talks about the reconciliation between a dying father and his sceptical son. It was very special for its director, Tim Burton, since his parents died little time before he started to direct the film. It has two different faces: on the one hand, it gave a little dose of moving reality and, on the other hand, we enjoy several minutes of amusing fantasy. This mixture may be the reason why Big Fish had seven nominations from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, four for the Golden Globe Award, two for the Saturn Adward, one for the Oscars and one for the Grammy Award.
Edward Bloom (Albert Finney) is a dreamy man who loves telling tall stories about his life. His son, Will (Billy Crudup), gets angry when his father tells a fantastic tale about his birth in his wedding. Because of that, Will does not speak to Edward and they maintain contact only through his mother (Jessica Lange). When his father is about to die, Will travels home from Paris, where he lives and works as a journalist, and tries to get to know his true father’s life piecing together a true picture of his father from flashbacks of the amazing adventures that Edward has been telling him since he was a child. In this way, we discover that Edward (Ewan McGregor) left home in search of adventures when he was a young man: he saw his death in a witch’s eye, he travelled with a giant, he discovered a werewolf, he made a promise to a little girl in a town where no one wears shoes, he found a highly unusual singing Siamese twin act and he did everything he could to marry Sandra Templeton (Alison Lohman), the love of his life, who is engaged to someone else.
This film talks about many important issues that should be remarked. The first and most important one is the distancing between a father and a son, which makes up the main plot. Will thinks that his father is a liar and that he concocts all the stories that he tells. He thinks that Edward has not looked after his family and, even, that he has had an affair. Will feels that he does not have anything in common with his father: Edward was a salesman who liked to tell stories and Will is a journalist who works telling the facts as they actually are. In fact, he became a journalist because he was fed up with Edward’s tall stories. At first, when he was a little child he trusted his tales, but as he grew up he started not to believe them anymore and he wanted to know the true story. He does not matter how disappointing it could be, he just want to know the real facts in his father’s life.
Secondly, in the flashbacks we have, for instance, a very important point of view about death. When Edward was a child, he saw in a witch’s eye how he would die but he was not afraid at all. Actually, it seems like he is not upset about having that fate. This fact is an important key that can reveal you why Edward lives like that, without fear. The search for the American dream is another important issue. When Edward was a child, he grew up faster than the others and he read that if you keep a type of fish (the goldfish) in a small bowl it will remain small but with more space, the fish can grow the double, triple or quadruple its size. That fact made him understand that his village, Ashton, was too little for him and he went in search for adventures with a giant who was sowing the pain. There are some other important issues like the corruption of culture – a poet from Edward’s village will became a thief – and the hidden town of Spectre, which is one of the most characteristic scenes of Big Fish. Nonetheless, one of the points that I have liked the most is the eternal love that Edward professes to his wife. It is one of the most beautiful love stories that I have found in a film. It brings a lot of sweet scenes like when he shouts her that he wants to marry her and covers her garden with her favourite flowers.

To sum up, Big Fish has been criticised for being incomprehensible, utterly endless, prone to fantasizing and a little childish, but, however, I would recommend you this film for four reasons: first, you will find wonderful performances that will impress you like a charming McGregor, a mysterious  DeVito and specially an entertaining Finney; second, you will find a moving film that probably will make you cry; third, you will discover amusing and original adventures that probably will make you laugh; and, finally and most important, because there is a very shocking end that I have not told you. 



1 comentario: