Jeri Jacquin
In theatres this week from visionary writer/director Quentin
Tarantino and Columbia Pictures is a film that can only be called ONCE UPON A
TIME IN HOLLYWOOD.
It is 1969 Los
Angeles and Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) is having
an identity crisis. Once the lead in his own television series, he also makes
time to do roles in other television shows. Living in the Hollywood
hills on the secluded Cielo Drive ,
he is driven around town by his stunt double and friend Cliff Booth (Brad
Pitt).
Also living on Cielo
Drive next door is actress Sharon Tate (Margot
Robbie) and husband director Roman Polanski (Rafal Zawierucha). She is living
and loving life taking time to enjoy her career.
While working out life and where his career is going, Dalton has to take each
phase like a scene with decisions that constantly plague him. Cliff is a little
more free spirited and enjoys stunt work when he gets it and being a friend to Dalton . It is difficult
for Cliff with a rumor that surrounds an incident in his life.
On several occasions he sees the young girl Pussycat
(Margaret Qualley) hitchhiking through L.A.
After dropping Dalton
off on the set, he sees Pussycat again and offers her a ride. Strangely enough
she is staying at the Spahn Movie Ranch where Cliff once shot scenes and she
invites him to meet Charlie. Eager to see owner George Spahn (Bruce Dern), he
is met with hostility by Squeaky (Dakota Fanning) and Tex (Austin Butler).
What none of them could know was what would happen on Cielo Drive that
hot night in 1969!
DiCaprio as Dalton
is absolutely stunning in this role. He is a paranoid, dysfunctional, insecure
chain smoking alcoholic who believes the worst about himself as an actor. That
is what makes his performance brilliant in that he is not only able to pull all
of that off, but kept me convinces for two hours and forty-five minutes.
DiCaprio’s acting within acting scenes is intense at times but so damn well
done I forgot it was a scene within a scene of the movie itself. I will be
thinking about this performance for a very long time.
Pitt as Cliff is laid back and happy with his life of being
in the background of Dalton ’s
career. This character that has a past that gets in his way yet not enough to
bother him. His true love is pittie Brandy who is just as adorable as she wants
to be and very protective of her human. Pitt gives the audience charm, rooftop
abs (oh sorry, should I not have mentioned that?), that insanely memorable grin
and a threshold of no-nonsense that is amazing up to the point where it isn’t.
I am crazy about every aspect of this character until the absolute…very…end and
then I just fell head over heels once again for Pitt. There couldn’t have been
a better pairing than these two actors and honestly I never would have thought
of it which is why I’m not a director.
Robbie as Tate gives a performance of a sweet and simple
woman who loved music, friends, and sitting in a movie theatre watching herself
not out of narcissm, but to experience the audience reaction. Her character
portrayal of the actress was beautiful.
Olyphant as Stacey gets a chance to don western gear and I
loved watching him dual it out, so to speak, with DiCaprio. Fanning as Squeaky
portrayed someone I wouldn’t want to meet in a dark alley…ever. Butler , Madison
and Beatty as the terrifying Manson trio are as frightening as they need to be
and I’m leaving it right there.
A shout out to young Julia Butters as Trudi is epic in her
two scenes with DiCaprio. My reaction to her was immediate and filled with
smiles. Her character is smart, witty, and perceptive all trapped inside the
body of an 8 year old. I want to be her when I grow up!
Other cast include Sydney Sweeney as Snake, Timothy Olyphant
as James Stacy, Harley Quinn Smith as Froggie, Damian Lewis as Steve McQueen, Mike
Moh as Bruce Lee, Lorenza Izzo as Francesca Capucci, Rumer Willis as Joanna
Pettet, Scoot McNairy as Bob Gilbert, Clifton Collins Jr. as Ernesto, Michael
Madsen, and Kurt Russell as Randy.
Also, Rebecca Gayheart as Billie, Lena Dunham as Gypsy,
Nicholas Hammond as Sam Wanamaker, Mikey Madison as Sadie, Madisen Beaty as
Katie, Julia Butters as Trudi, Luke Perry as Wayne Maunder, and Al Pacino as
Marvin Schwarzs.
This is as brief of a review as I could possible do for this
film because I really don’t want to spoil any of it for anyone. I can say that
I think I’ve seen a strong contender for an Academy Award nomination and many
actors that could easily fill all the slots for Best Actor and Best Supporting
nods.
What I love best about this film, and perhaps it shows my
age, is that I remember all of it. The clothing, magazines, music, cars, the
scenery, the places and the events of the era turned a light back on inside my
head. All of it provided an emotional rollercoaster of staying in the story and
trying not to let the eye candy distract.
The story, and oh what a story it is, came from the mind of
Tarantino absolutely. Every scene was a wonder of where it was going and what
would happen when we (meaning everyone in the theatre with me) got there. Dalton and Booth took us
on the ride and I didn’t fight on second of it. We wanted to know more about
their personal issues and the six degrees of separation between every character
we were introduced to. Trust me when I say this was definitely a theatrical
experience.
Were there a few giggles? Of course! Tarantino has a twisted
sense of that and he lets us in on it. Of course I caught myself giggling a few
times to myself but that’s my own personal twisted sense of humor.
The audience walked out on a high of immediately talking
about what they had seen and wondering if the people they were with shared in their
thought process. No one left right away but instead mingled outside of theatre
5 to continue sharing the experience. Here I sit and I’m still thinking about
it all.
Yes the film is 161 minutes long yet it is one of the best
times I’ve had at the movies in a long time. Being in the desert of
wanting-thirst for something amazing on screen, Tarantino has just given me a
huge whiskey sour and I certainly wouldn’t mind another.
In the end – it is a story of Hollywood Tarantino style!
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