EIFFEL – Review

Romain Duris (left) as Gustave Eiffel, in a scene from EIFFEL. Courtesy of Blue Fox Entertainment.

Architect and structural engineer Gustave Eiffel built not only Paris’ iconic Eiffel Tower, but designed the interior structure that ensured that our iconic Statue of Liberty would stand up and continue to stand for the long term. These are among the historical tidbits you will learn in EIFFEL, a lush French historical romance/drama built around real events in Eiffel’s life.

EIFFEL is a beautiful period film with polished production values, an attractive cast, and an appealing premise. Since the Eiffel Tower just celebrated its 130 anniversary in December, one might assume EIFFEL is a biopic. It is, partly, but mostly it is a romance set against the backdrop of the building of the Eiffel Tower. The film is loosely based on Eiffel’s true story and centers mostly on the period of Eiffel’s life where he is working on his tower, with flashbacks to twenty years earlier, when as a creative young engineer he met a young woman he now encounters again.

As the film opens, Gustave Eiffel (Romain Duris) is at the peak of his career and being honored by the Americans for his completed work on the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the French people to America. The success of that project has French leaders thinking they also need a big iconic structure to grace their upcoming World’s Fair, and Eiffel looks like just the man for the job. As he launches this grand project, Eiffel, a widower with a grown daughter and younger children, encounters Adrienne (Emma Mackey), a woman he had been in love with 20 years ago but who is now married to a wealthy man involved in the project.

Martin Bourboulon directs this romantic fantasy that is loosely based on some real events in Eiffel’s life, or more accurately, built around them. EIFFEL is more historical romance than biopic. Fans of historical romances will find much to like here, with an attractive couple in lush period settings and costumes, showcased by lovely cinematography, as the story of the couple jumps back and forth in time between their earlier affair and later meeting. It certainly looks beautiful but the story is rather thin and the drama does not do much to really develop depth in the characters, while leans a bit too much on its prettiness. While Duris’ Eiffel shows his age as he goes from young man starting his career to middle-aged man at the height of his field, Emma Mackey is unchanged as she goes from teen living with her her parents in their large country manor house to society wife. Those more interested in history than romance, and hoping to learn more about the man who build the Eiffel Tower will find thinner material here, as Bourboulon puts far more into the romance than the history.

The drama does make some effort to highlight Eiffel’s genius. Structural engineers like Eiffel are the unsung heroes of architecture and public art, the ones whose unseen works ensures those large artistic works, as well as bridges and towers, can stand up to the elements, laying the base (literally) for their endurance and building the hidden infrastructure that supports them. The film does makes some effort to highlight that, as well as Eiffel’s accomplishment in turning what was supposed to be a big sculptural modern symbol for the the Paris World’s Fair but a temporary structure, into a permanent visual symbol of Paris.

The visual beauty of the drama is flawless, and every shot is framed for maximum appeal and the period elements are all lush. However, the film’s structure of moving back and forth in time is a bit clunky at times, with more of the romance story interest in Eiffel’s youth and more of the history interest around the later period as he builds the tower. The actors do a fine job, with Duris as Eiffel having more the work with than Mackey, who often is called on the do little more than look pretty. The drama does delve into Eiffel’s family life a bit, and a nice supporting performance is offered by Armande Boulanger as Eiffel’s supportive but independent daughter Claire but these scenes are too few.

EIFFEL has more to please those who enjoy period romance than history-based drama, although it tries to straddle both, but it is nice to see the man who built the icon symbol of Paris get some cinematic attention.

EIFFEL, in French with English subtitles, opened in theaters on Friday, June 3.

RATING: 2.5 out of 4 stars

COLUMBUS – Review

(l-r) John Cho and Haley Lu Richardson on the steps of Columbus City Hall, in COLUMBUS. Photo credit: Elisha Christian. Courtesy of Superlative Film and Depth of Field ©

COLUMBUS is not a film about the Italian explorer but about an American city named for him. No, not Columbus, Ohio, but the lesser-known Columbus, Indiana. This small Midwestern city is home to a surprising number of buildings designed by big names in mid-century Modern architecture, such as Eero Saarinen, I.M. Pei, Deborah Burke, Harry Weese and others.

St. Louisans might recognize Eero Saarinen as the designer of the Gateway Arch but architecture buffs will know those names are some of the biggest of the Modern style of architecture. If you are a fan of mid-twentieth century architecture, or of Columbus, Indiana, then COLUMBUS is the film for you. But even if not a fan of either, viewers might give this thoughtful, beautifully-shot if slowly-paced indie drama a look.

In the film COLUMBUS, a couple find themselves walking around the city of Columbus, Indiana, discussing life and architecture, as examples of its many mid-century modern building serve as backdrop.

The film is sort of in the style of BEFORE SUNRISE, in which Ethan Hawk and Julie Delpy walk around Paris and talk. There are more characters involved in COLUMBUS’s story and more consequential things happen in the end, but there is a comparable serious mindedness. In that other film, the focus was less on the city itself but this one integrates architecture into the plot and make is a central focus.

Cho plays Jin, the estranged son of a famous Korean professor of architecture, who falls seriously ill shortly after arriving in Columbus, Indiana, where he is supposed to give a lecture. Jin meets a young librarian, Casey (Haley Lu Richardson), who grew up in Columbus but is resisting pressure from friends to move away to go to college, She loves Columbus’ modern architecture and takes the skeptical Jin, who says he is not an architecture fan, on a tour.

Jin may not be a fan but he does know something about architecture. Further, Jin is at loose ends, since his father’s colleague Eleanor (Parker Posey), who had been traveling with him, has had to return home. Her departure leaves Jin on his own waiting for his father’s condition to stabilize enough to take him back to South Korea. But Jin is not eager to spend his days at the hospital with his unconscious father, so he and Casey walk around town, look at buildings, and talk, sometimes about their lives, sometimes about architecture.

The director is clearly interested in mid-century architecture and, of course, the film was shot on location. Director, writer, editor Kogonada offers a love letter to Modernist architecture and the city of Columbus in this bitter-sweet indie romantic drama. Kogonada,who was born in South Korea but grew up in the Midwest, makes his narrative film debut with COLUMBUS but the director was already well-respected for his video clip compilation short films, or supercuts, and his essays on film making.

 

Cho and Richardson turn in fine performances as Jin and Casey, a pair of adult children still struggling with issues with a parent, his father and her mother. The story, centered on those concerns and their growing bond, is well-written. Kogonada’s drama is languidly-paced and meditative, focused on the obligations and relationship of grown children to their parents, as well as architecture. There is a little cross cultural element as well but generally the story is universal. Cho’s Jin has conflicted feelings about the father he is estranged from but Richardson’s Casey struggles with her own issues with her fragile working-class mother Maria (Michelle Forbes). Parker Posey is excellent as Eleanor, who serves a sort of confident for Jin, much as does Casey’s co-worker at the library Gabriel (an appealing Rory Culkin). Separation from a parent, though moving away or death, are looming topics throughout.

If one is a fan of modern architecture, the film has plenty of eye-candy, packed with long views down glass corridors, beautifully composed shots under concrete archways, soaring slim shapes against blue skies, and low-slung glass and concrete structures set in green lawns. Throughout, Elisha Christian’s cinematography is excellent, even making the modest home Casey shares with her mother look good. Every shot seems perfectly framed, like paintings. The music, by Hammock, adds a dreamlike touch to the film.

Sometimes it is like paging through Architectural Digest circa late 1950s. A couple of the houses mentioned or visited were designed by Eero Saarinen, but the Miller House gets a featured role, appearing in several scenes.

One’s degree of interest in mid-century architecture is one gauge of interest in this film. While I am interested in architecture, I must admit I am not much a fan of mid-century modern, as trendy as it is. Still, mid-century modern is wildly popular and COLUMBUS shines a spotlight on the many fine examples of that architectural style this little-known small city contains.

For fans of its Modernist architecture, COLUMBUS is a visual treat but others may find its serious, thoughtful story just as engaging.

RATING: 3 1/2 out of 5 stars

Frank Lloyd Wright biopic being designed

Lionsgate has acquired the rights to Nancy Horan’s historical novel Loving Frank. The film will focus on the pre-WWI years of Frank’s life and his controversial affair with Mamah Bothwick Cheney. Anyone who has an interest in Wright and his work will probably realize he would make an interesting character in a film, seeing as he wasn’t always a very nice or “moral” guy. Nonetheless, the architectural genius with have his moment on the big screen, even if it does highlight his less than flattering side(s). The screenplay is set to be written by John Burnham Schwartz (Reservation Road).

[source: Variety.com]