These items reveal that their excursion originates from a
particular childhood understanding of running away, but the new feelings
stirring inside them, of curiosity, attachment, caring and, yes, perhaps even
love, feel so strong and immediate. In self-confident, yet halting ways these
kids begin to see their adventure writ larger and more passionately on their
hearts. The boy is an orphan and the girl is emotionally troubled and from an
eccentric family. To them, this is not just an attempt to flee lives they find
inadequate and have a fun time together. They’re fleeing into their fantasies
and the merging of their imaginations becomes not just a woodsy adventure or a
lovely camping experience, but a grand romance with two budding lovers on the
run. The boy’s peppy scout leader (Edward Norton, with a gee-whiz wholesome
exterior) has marshaled his remaining campers and joined forces with the
island’s sole police officer (Bruce Willis, bespectacled and business-like) to
track down the runaways. The girl’s family – three small brothers, a worried
mother (Frances McDormand, tightly-wound) and a slow-boiling depressive father
(Bill Murray, looking through sad, tired eyes) – join in on the search as well,
which is rather patient, considering the circumstances.
This is Moonrise
Kingdom, the new film from the distinctive and consistent Wes Anderson who
takes this opportunity to populate one of his terrifically realized dollhouse
worlds to make a film with a simple, sweet, and emotionally open surface, and a
beautiful, moving emotional complexity underneath. Unlike his earlier films
like The Royal Tenenbaums and The Darjeeling Limited, which are in
large part about people trying desperately in various neurotic ways to prevent
the collapse of familial relationships, this is a film that locates its
concerns directly on the border between generations, finding a little community
trying to work together, a ragtag collection of flawed adults and precocious
children out to find two of their own. (The group picks up small, funny roles
for Bob Balaban, Tilda Swinton, Jason Schwartzman, and Harvey Keitel as it goes
along.) It’s a situation in which adults might realize how childish they
behave, in which children try on identities they imagine belong to more mature
perspectives. Finding the humor inherent within, Anderson (who wrote the script
with Roman Coppola) balances scenes of arch dialogue matter-of-factly stated
and cartoonish delight elaborately staged – like a treehouse perched at the
very top of a tall tree in a scout camp run with a regimented, militaristic
structure – with scenes of striking emotional honesty and clarity.
This is a film full of delicate scenes, tenderly acted by
Gilman and Hayward, the young leads. This is their first film and Anderson has
helped them create such confidently, wonderfully drawn characters, located so
precariously on the edge of childhood, but not quite ready to tip over into
full-blown adolescence. Each of these kids has moments where they look
straight-ahead into the camera in tight close-up and reveal such deep feelings,
which only adds to their soft kindness and moments of adorable precociousness.
Their relationship – love, or something like it – develops with an emotional
truth that is often (unfairly) not associated with Anderson’s exacting mastery
over the formal elements of filmmaking. Torn between the worlds of childhood
imagination and problems of adulthood, these two troubled kids run away to the
woods where the privacy of shared solitude allows them to become who they think
they are, deep down inside. Here is a film world of real innocence and real
potential danger. This is a film with a profound respect for childhood and the
perspectives and feelings of the young. Music swells and the camera moves for
big moments of emotionality; to the young, any event sufficiently impactful is
worthy of a personal epic. After all, the young couple first met the year
before at a local church’s production of Benjamin Britten’s Noah’s ark opera,
an appropriately ornate dramatic backdrop to spark puppy love. Their escape
feels ripped out of the movies and informed by the adventures in the books they
cart with them and the sophistication they think find in totems of adulthood (like
French pop music or a pipe).
This is not a fussy film despite Anderson’s typically
mannered approach and meticulous art design, which here makes the New England
island setting appear to have leapt right out of a charming, slightly yellowed,
mid-century storybook, a delicate world of children’s imagination nestled
just-so in the midst of rugged natural terrain. The dollhouse qualities of the
sets, props, and costumes are placed in a context of forest and bodies of
water. The camera glides, finds stillness, and even shakes from time to time as
Anderson puts delicate fantasy – heightened, but not fantastical – and relaxed
farce right up against quiet scenes of intergenerational emotional connection.
This is a sweet, sad comedy about comically confident children and comically
flawed grown ups. Selflessly acted, but no less richly evocative, the adults in
the cast allow deadpan ease to mask roiling turmoil, to blend so effortlessly
with their young costars, who let turmoil settle in like they’re discovering it
for the first time. The ensemble moves through the simple plot like a finely tuned
orchestra, each striking different notes at different times, blending to become
a whole moving experience.
Moonrise Kingdom
is a deeply romantic film about change, about moving into adolescence, about
the doubts, uncertainty, depression, and confusion that can follow into
adulthood where such feelings can settle, creating miscommunications and
dissatisfactions. It’s such an evocative portrayal of this collision of moods
and sensations in a film that’s at once so contained, taking place over the
course of only a few days on a small island, and yet filled with so many
whimsical flourishes of Anderson’s imagination that it feels like a rich world,
wonderfully, carefully designed. It’s a film full of liminal moments shot
through with a potent melancholy of childhood’s end and the growing knowledge
that adults have within them a deep sadness and uncertainty. Passions and
interests seize the soul with intensity and then pass like an especially
violent storm. And from the devastation comes new and unexpectedly fruitful
growth.
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