Thursday, July 30, 2009

The Ugly Truth



In The Ugly Truth (2009), set in Sacramento, CA, there's a scene where the main character Abby, (Katherine Heigl) describes why she prefers to live there over New York City.
Watching this movie in Sacramento was quite funny. The audience coudn't help but laugh when Abby mentions some statistics such as a lower divorce rate in Sacramento, and some implication that it was a very safe place to live in. Abby works for a morning news show, with the mandatory cooking segment, but no mention of any crime, poverty or budget crisis. The marriage stats seem to be off as well, according to bestplaces. In this context the movie title "The Ugly Truth" takes on a whole new meaning.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

The Hangover



A key scene in the movie The Hangover (2009) is a scene where Ed Helms sings and plays the piano in the disaster-stricken hotel suite where the main characters find themselves the day of the hangover that gives the movie its name. On the piano there's a chicken, whose purpose is never fully explained. What is the chicken doing in the hotel room? Why is it on the piano? The scene parallels the donkeys on a piano from the surrealist film Un chien andalou. Rather than a run-of-the-mill forgettable piece of easily digestible entertainment for mature audiences, the film is quite refreshing. It challenges the viewer, starting with the non-linear fashion in which the action is revealed. Speaking of which, in reality, the most relevant action is, actually, never revealed. The characters themselves don't know what happened that night, and have to piece the events together from many bits of information. At the end most of the plot is uncovered. But, alas, the mystery remains about the chicken. Where did it come from? Especially in Vegas. We may ultimately never know, and asking that question is maybe as futile as trying to solve a chicken-and-egg paradox. But that clue, that loose end of the chicken in the hotel suite, is in my opinion the starting point where we can begin to read between the lines of the many layers of meaning hidden in this apparently funny and innocuous film, which in the end is charged of significance, drama and ultimately, a very clear political message so obvious that does not merit further clarification.