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Don Jon (2013)
There's a lot to like about Joseph Gordon-Levitt's feature debut as Writer/Director and as starring actor.
(This review is based on an advanced screening at the Revere Hotel in Boston, Massachusetts.)
Let's get this out of the way right from the start: if you will be offended by a movie with lots of F-bombs and/or one that's about a guy from Jersey who's addicted to porn—or more specifically, masturbating to porn —then Don Jon isn't for you. That said, there's a lot to like about Joseph Gordon-Levitt's feature debut as Writer/Director and as starring actor.
Don Jon doesn't waste any time letting us know what it's about. There's nothing subtle in an opening that shows Joseph Gordon-Levitt's character, Jon Martello, masturbating to porn. His matter-of-fact voice-over explains precisely what he likes about getting off to porn and why he prefers the women on the screen to actual warm-bodied women in his bed. His friends call him 'Don', though, because he manages to score 'dimes'—meaning a '10'—whenever they go out.
Enter Scarlett Johansson (for whom Gordon-Levitt wrote the role) as Barbara, a 10 in any movie, but especially in this one. It's a jolt initially to hear her accent—which some argue sounds more like one from Staten Island—but if you're not from New Jersey, you won't have a problem with it. Barbara is the game changer for Jon, perfect in every way, except for one minor problem: she's not happy about the porn.
Julianne Moore and Tony Danza round out a stellar cast that includes cameos from Channing Tatum, Anne Hathaway, and Cuba Gooding, Jr. Danza plays Jon's dad in a performance reminiscent of (and just as strong as) Robert De Niro's fatherly role in Silver Linings Playbook. Moore plays a middle-aged student in a night class with Jon. She provides an older woman foil for Jon's girlfriend/porn issues—someone other than his buddies and family to heckle and care for him. Moore gives a layered performance, ably demonstrating the disappearing effect of age when hanging out with students half her age, gracefully revealing that there is much more under the tender shell of her character Esther than Jon can possibly imagine. donjon1 Gordon-Levitt's screenplay is solid and well structured, built around themes like the fact that Jon Martello is a devout Catholic. With welcome regularity, we see Jon back on the pew with his family, followed by a weekly rendezvous in the confessional in which he itemizes his sexual transgressions to the priest on the other side—the number of times he had sex out of wedlock, how many times he masturbated to porn, etc. The next scene invariably shows him in the gym working out to the prescribed number of Hail Marys and Our Fathers (and we get to peek at just how buff Gordon-Levitt has been keeping himself). The laughs get louder every time the screenplay whips around to this place keeper, and we fall into pace with Jon and his routine as we get to know him.
Gordon-Levitt takes what should be a ridiculous premise for a movie and through strong writing and directing outputs a sincere plot. Though full of the American Pie-style humor requisite for a story about masturbation, Don Jon more importantly takes its characters (and us) somewhere—and it's not where you think. In the wasteland of cookie- cutter movie plots, Don Jon's story is a breath of fresh air—one that makes us laugh, makes us think, makes us cringe, and makes us come out wanting more from Joseph Gordon-Levitt.
To Rome with Love (2012)
To Rome With Love: Not Midnight in Paris, but made me want to get on a plane to Rome...
After seeing Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris last year, my cheeks hurt from grinning. Woody's love letter to Paris, filled with lavish photography of the city's famous sights had me scrambling to book tickets to the City of Light. Could he top it, or even come close?
To Rome With Love opens with Allen's characteristic credits rolling to the nostalgic strains of Volare. The cheesy Italian tourist music proclaims from the start what kind of movie this is: a fun frolic through Rome, its ruins, and its romantic traditions as passed down by decades of Roman Holiday-types of films.
Four separate vignettes reveal the plot, the narratives interweaving in no particular order, each illuminating a different Italian motif.
Allen's films attract top actors, and his direction and screenplays tend to bring out their best performances. In To Rome With Love, this is best seen in the sketch involving the American couple Sally and Jack (Greta Gerwig and Jesse Eisenberg) and Sally's best friend Monica (Ellen Page), visiting them in Rome. Sally constantly frets that Jack will fall in love with Monica, an actress who possesses an uncanny sex appeal. I had doubts whether Ellen Page could pull this off, but the Oscar-nominated actress (for 2007's Juno) and actor (Eisenberg, for 2010's The Social Network) make us believe it when Jack caves in to her magnetic sexiness. The presence of Alec Baldwin's character John provides an interesting temporal twist to this storyline. He plays an architect that Jack, an architecture student, has idolized. The two run into each other in Sally and Jack's Trastevere neighborhood and from then on John serves as a kind of Greek chorus to Jack (and sometimes to the women), warning him of Monica's less-than-authentic cultural qualifications and of blowing the good thing he's got with Sally.
The conflicting placements in time between Jack and John's story lines bewilder some viewers, but Woody leaves us the key, much like he did by opening the film with Volare. At one point, Monica gushes over the significance of Albert Camus' The Myth of Sisyphus, the quintessential Absurdist work that compares the plight of the Greek mythological figure Sisyphus with the absurdity of humanity. Allen has given us his own Absurdist take with To Rome With Love, not spoon-feeding us a straightforward intrigue, but asking us to suspend logic for several hours and enjoy the human spectacle as portrayed against sumptuous Roman scenery.
In another yarn, Oscar-winning Roberto Benigni (for 1997's Life is Beautiful) plays Leopoldo Pisanello, an ordinary man suddenly beset with inexplicable fame. There is nothing subtle about Allen's poking fun at the fickleness and aggressiveness of the paparazzi and at the public that accepts whatever the press feeds it. Benigni's troubles entertain while his character cycles through the phases of his notoriety.
Spain's Penelope Cruz (another Oscar winner, for Allen's 2008 Vicky Christina Barcelona) shows off her linguistic chops with a role as a prostitute in a third sketch completely in Italian. This one, an outright sex romp, follows the mayhem that ensues when a newlywed Italian couple arrives in Rome. The husband is there to take a position with the family firm. The wife disappears while out to get her hair done and Cruz's character assumes the role of his wife when the stodgy aunts and uncles misinterpret why she's caught in bed with the husband in the couple's hotel room. Implausible? Yes, and silly, but mostly it's Absurd, and throughout the rollicking action, we explore ideals of Italian love and sex, of the absurdity of star-struck fans hopping into bed with film stars, and we get to peek at the lovely Roman scenery behind it all.
The fourth tale is that of Giancarlo (played by tenor Fabio Armiliato), a mortician who sings like an opera star, but only when he's in the shower. Woody Allen plays a retired music producer that overhears Giancarlo and insists on bringing his talent before the masses. Their respective children Michelangelo and Hayley (Flavio Parenti and Alison Pill) are engaged and Jerry and Phyllis (Woody and Judy Davis) are in Italy to meet Michelangelo's parents. There are funny moments throughout To Rome With Love, but this sketch had me laughing out loud. The full theater chuckled almost every time Woody opened his mouth (especially when repeatedly mispronouncing "Michelangelo") and roared at the opera scenes. Stupidly funny, yes, but again, pure Absurdity is the point. How refreshing to belly laugh at a musical form like opera, one that takes itself so seriously.
To Rome With Love carries an "R" rating for the sexual references, and there is a lot of hopping in and out of bed, but there's not much to offend the sensitive viewer. As with Midnight in Paris, foreign language was spoken, with subtitles. Two of the sub-stories were completely in Italian. The Italian language, however, adds to the charm as much as the Coliseum, the Trevi Fountain, and the picturesque alleys of Trastevere.
I could have done without the bookending of the film with two different characters talking to the camera, explaining that there are all these stories taking place in Rome. The one at the beginning was mildly amusing, a flamboyant policeman directing traffic on the Piazza Venezia. I would have kept the scenery of the spectacular monument to Vittorio Emmanuele II, but cut the policeman's dialog along with that of the man on the balcony overlooking the Spanish Steps at the end of the film.
To Rome With Love wasn't Midnight in Paris, but I'm not sure anything will ever match that treasure. As with Midnight in Paris, though, I grinned throughout, and I find myself inclined to get on a plane for Rome. To Rome With Love has received criticism for not acknowledging the economic woes in Italy, but it shouldn't have—it wasn't that kind of movie. That movie's soundtrack wouldn't have opened with Volare.