Aloha is another
Cameron Crowe picture about a successful man who finds his professional life in
jeopardy while his inner life is restored by romance. Furthermore, it’s another
of his romantic comedies spiked with office drama, like Jerry Maguire was
falling in love while negotiating sports agent business and Matt Damon fell for
Scarlett Johansson while she helped him with his zoo in We Bought a Zoo. There’s also Orlando Bloom’s disgraced suit
meeting Kirsten Dunst in Elizabethtown,
and you could throw the reality-scrambling Vanilla
Sky into the mix, with publisher Tom Cruise crushing on Penelope Cruz, if
you view its twisty ending optimistically. In Aloha, a depressed defense contractor (Bradley Cooper) survives an
explosive encounter in Kabul and is reassigned to Hawaii, where he’s to
negotiate a new roadway through Native Hawaiian territory. His military liaison
is a bright charming young woman (Emma Stone). If you already think he’ll fall
in love and grow a conscience, you’ve been paying attention.
Because Crowe is a warm writer sincere in his
sentimentality, he can usually make his formulaic tendencies work. (Of course,
he’s even better when drifting away from formula. It’s why Say Anything… is still his best film.) What’s most peculiar about Aloha is how everything around this
central romance plot is much more fascinating and effective than what is inside
it. Cooper and Stone have fine chemistry playing two people who have to fall in
love because they’re the stars of the movie and the script keeps pushing them
together. It’s largely unconvincing, following a period of initial irritation,
then intense love, then a tearful misunderstanding, and so on. What’s far more
interesting is watching Cooper’s interactions with other characters in a
breezy, low-key, undemanding story of a man slowly regrowing his conscience.
This growth takes root as Cooper works with his boss (Bill
Murray), a tycoon trying to launch a satellite with the armed forces’
help. One gets the impression Cooper has been unscrupulous in the past. Half-articulated military industrial commentary abounds in a guardedly
biting way, as the rich man’s real aims are hidden from the brass (Danny
McBride and Alec Baldwin). Meanwhile, both public and private interests are all
too willing to manipulate Native Hawaiians to go along with their schemes, trading
them land and assistance to wave construction through sacred spaces. This
thread is far more interesting than whether or not the girl will fall for the
guy, especially when their relationship is so thinly sketched and taken for
granted. The story is dusted with a few intimations of magical realism that
never amounts to anything, and is resolved far too neatly and softly to retain
its teeth, but is a more intriguing element in every way.
Better still is a subplot involving an ex-fiancé of
Cooper’s, played by Rachel McAdams with glowing happiness tinged with a hint of
regret. It's been a dozen years since their break up. She has two kids (Danielle Rose Russell and Jaeden Lieberher) with a
military man (John Krasinski). She loves her family. And yet the appearance of
her old love gets her thinking. This storyline features the best writing and
acting in the film, Crowe at his best drawing relationships that play out with
real compassion and unexpected developments. It’s a reflection of where the
main character’s life went wrong, a cozy family unit he’s invited to spend time
with, but left just on the outside of embracing. There’s too much history
there, and too much pressure to get his job done. If the corruption he
encounters is the seed of his moral reawakening, seeing the love he left is the
fertilizer for this new growth.
There are plenty of worthwhile pieces to Aloha, but Crowe doesn’t put them
together. They play like separate elements instead of a cohesive whole,
connected by character and only faint echoes of each other. It’s telling that
the conclusion finds several final moments, tying up individual threads – an
arrest, several reconciliations, a tearful reveal – without a feeling of
overall finality. This is a film of gentle rhythms and light tropical breezes.
French cinematographer Eric Gautier captures lovely island landscapes and
floats between the performers with ease. Crowe writes a handful of terrific
lines and finds some nice cuts from his record collection for the soundtrack. It’s certainly well
intentioned. But why does it feel so slight and disconnected? The writing lacks
a certain sparkle, and lingers in disjunction between disparate elements. There
are strange asides – a grisly toe injury, a ghostly vision – distractingly out
of place, appearing once, then never mentioned again. Hardly a disaster, it’s
perhaps best to approach Aloha as a
sweet, earnest jumble, likable parts in search of a whole.
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