BIG EYES
Director : Tim Burton
Cast : Amy Adams, Christoph Waltz, Danny Huston, Krysten Ritter, Jason Schwartzman, Terence Stamp
Genre : Drama
Run Time : 106 mins
Opens : 29 January 2015
It was the 1960s and Margaret Keane’s hypnotic
paintings of the doe-eyed waifs captured the imagination of the world, but for
a long time, nobody knew the dark truth behind these depictions of innocence. After
separating from her husband Frank, Margaret (Adams) takes her young daughter
Jane (Delaney Raye) to San Francisco. There, she meets and quickly falls
hard for Walter Keane (Waltz), seemingly also a passionate painter. Margaret
and Walter marry and after Margaret’s unique “Big Eye” paintings garner
attention, Walter begins to take credit for them. Soon, the paintings are
everywhere, mass-reproduced and sold in supermarkets and gas stations, with
Walter making television appearances and hobnobbing with celebrities, everyone
believing him to be the true artist. As Walter grows more domineering, making
Margaret fear for her own safety, she finally tells the world the truth as the
couple battles it out in court to determine proper credit.
Big Eyes marks director Tim Burton’s
first biopic since 1994’s Ed Wood,
re-teaming him with that film’s writers Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski.
It’s been repeatedly noted that this is Burton’s first live-action film since
1996’s Mars Attacks! without either
Johnny Depp or Helena Bonham Carter. A
project like Big Eyes is exactly what
Burton needs and it is perhaps not entirely coincidental that this film about
artistic integrity comes from a director once lauded as a fresh, unique voice but
who has become something of a parody of himself. The film still bears many of
Burton’s signature touches and the heightened stylisation proves to be a
double-edged sword even when it’s consciously scaled down. While the saturated
colour palette and the Stepford Wives-style
depiction of a suburban idyll that becomes a personal prison add panache to the
proceedings, they also hamper the authenticity of the true story.
We’ve
all heard stories of artists being taken advantage of and the Margaret and
Walter Keane case is one of an artist being taken advantage of in the extreme. Burton
establishes a sense of unease throughout and writers Alexander and Karaszewski
manage to play on the audience’s knowledge of how things went down in a
general, such that we know where it’s all headed but anticipate and dread it in
equal measure as Walter’s lie snowballs. Production designer Rick Heinrichs and
Burton’s usual costume designer Colleen Atwood create an immersive
period-accurate milieu tinged with that kitschy Burton flair. The music video
for Soundgarden’s Black Hole Sun
comes to mind. While the film’s tone is not as uneven as it could’ve been, one
still gets the feeling that characters such as Margaret’s friend DeAnn (Ritter)
and snobbish gallery owner Ruben (Schwartzman) have been written in only to
provide requisite comic relief in what really is an emotionally-heavy film,
though it has been described as a “comedy-drama”.
Amy
Adams’ name has popped up on various “Oscar snubs” lists and it’s easy to see
why. Adams ably embodies the quiet dignity of the character, shying away from
showy bursts of emotion, her performance all the more affecting for it. An
artist’s personal attachment to his or her work is a difficult sentiment to
convey, but the way Adams plays it, one really feels that when credit for the
Big Eye paintings is snatched from Margaret, it’s as if one of her own children
has been taken from her. The film makes no bones about being a feminist
statement and Adams’ Margaret is very sympathetic and easy to root for.
Christoph
Waltz brings his trademark wildfire charisma to the role of Walter Keane,
effortlessly essaying a smug, charming manipulator with flair to spare. While
magnetic and watchable, Waltz does veer dangerously close to the cartoony side
of things when Walter lashes out at Margaret, as if he’s practising for his upcoming
Bond villain role. His portrayal of the abusive, controlling husband here is
near-identical to the performance he delivered as the abusive, controlling
husband in Water for Elephants.
Journalist Dick Nolan (Danny Huston) observes “subtle doesn’t sell”, and Waltz
seems to have taken that to heart. All that said though, he’s a much better fit
for the part than Ryan Reynolds, who was attached to the film at one point,
would’ve been.
Big
Eyes sets itself apart from the prestige biopic pack with a deliberately
cloying aesthetic, director Burton expressing the idea that ugliness can lurk
beneath the surface of beautiful things. In focusing on Margaret and Walter’s
relationship, Big Eyes seems to
side-step challenging discussions about the role art plays in society which,
when viewed through the lens of a period film, could have been especially
thought-provoking. While still impactful and moving, this approach strips the
material of some of the rawness and honesty it requires and ultimately, Big Eyes doesn’t dig deep enough.
Summary: A domestic abuse drama tinged with queasy stylisation,
Big Eyes has Tim Burton deviating
from his now-tired formula and boasts Amy Adams in top form but suffers
slightly from being too simplistic.
RATING: 3.5 out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
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