《塔瑪拉?德魯》爆笑演繹 整形美女榮歸故里(有聲)
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Tamara Dreweis based on a graphic novel by Posy Simmonds, which was inspired by Thomas Hardy's Far From the Madding Crowd; and after a spate of graphic-novel movies that aim, inexplicably, strenuously, and self-defeatingly to evoke their source material, it's a relief to find one that puts the spirit of the thing ahead of the form. Director Stephen Frears gets the feel of Simmonds' frames: busy but airy, the characters looking especially precarious against the fixed landscape.
Gemma Arterton's Tamara Drewe —a chatty lifestyle columnist for a London newspaper — is the last character to arrive in this small English backwater, but she's the catalyst, setting everything in madcap motion. She has two key attributes: She's utterly gorgeous, showing up in a pair ofshort-shorts and riveting the gaze of men and women both. And she knows that hergorgeousness is provisional. She grew up with a near-Cyrano-sized honker she had fixed, and now she can't quite believe her new power.
Because this is Hardy-inspired, there's an unusually large number of perspectives. Tamsin Greig's Beth Hardiment owns this writer's retreat with her husband, bestselling mystery writer Nicholas. She doesn't just cook and clean; she's a kind of muse, giving him ideas and typing his handwritten drafts. But the aging fop cheats on her like mad — which gives hope to the schlubby, radiantly unsuccessful Hardy scholar played by American stage actor Bill Camp. Perhaps, he thinks, Beth could be his muse. Luke Evans is the dreamy handyman who loves Tamara, Dominic Cooper the rock-star drummer who plays his sticks up and down her body to seduce her. And there are two local high-school girls, Casey and Jody, who sneak into Tamara's house and send a lascivious e-mail in her name that ushers in the apocalypse.
In its unpretentious way, Tamara Drewe has the fullness of an 18th-century novel in which fate is inexorable, character equals destiny, and there are casualties. But in place of Hardy's pathos is a perverse little smile that's blessedly contagious.
It's Kind of a Funny Storyis also set on the border between funny and discomfiting. It opens with its narrator, Craig, played by Keir Gilchrist, having a vision of himself jumping off the Brooklyn Bridge. Vaguely suicidal, he talks his way into a psychiatric ward. He has a dad played by Jim Gaffigan who's not particularly verbal but whose driving ambition for the boy has reduced him to a wreck. Craig has a best friend with a four-point-six grade point average (how, he asks, is that even possible?) and a relationship with the girl Craig adores. More pressing is an unfinished summer-school application that his father believes holds the key to future success.
With all the ingredients for a self-pitying, narcissistic adolescent fantasy, the movie manages to be offhand. As in Ned Vizzini's endearingly nervous novel, directors Ryan Fleck and Anna Boden keep one eye on the protagonist and the other on the other patients. One is a girl who cuts herself who's played by the impossibly pretty Emma Roberts, and her immediate rapport with Craig is enough to make most teenage males think about signing themselves into the local hospital. Her character is a stretch. But the one who dominates the movie is slobby, bearded Zach Galifianakis' Bobby, who first appears to Craig in the emergency room waiting area dressed in a doctor's white coat and scrubs.
Galifianakis is stunningly good. His Bobby describes himself as on vacation from the world — and this is something of a working vacation for Galifianakis, too. He slows himself down, takes a breather from his manic comedian persona, and allows something melancholy and bitter to emerge. His Bobby understands the pressure Craig is under to perform.
It's Kind of a Funny Storyis too tidy and often too cute. What saves it is the directors' soft sell. It's not about breakthroughs, epiphanies, one-size-fits-all cures for depression. It's about seeing one's own confusion in a larger context and learning that misery really does love company.
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