McCarthy Agrees

"A sort of let's-put-on-a-show summer-camp lark for director Ang Lee after the dramatic rigors of Brokeback Mountain and Lust, Caution, Taking Woodstock serves up intermittent pleasures but is too raggedy and laid-back for its own good, its images evaporating nearly as soon as they hit the screen," declares Variety's Todd McCarthy.


"Given the film's vast canvas and ambition to provide a kaleidoscopic portrait of a generational movement, the personal issues of Demetri Martin's Elliot Tiber -- his feelings of responsibility to his immigrant parents, closeted gay status and general behavioral uptightness -- seem unduly magnified in relation to everything else that's going on.

"Elliot (who in real life was 34 at the time, older than the 'generation' in question) is a mild-mannered, unassertive guy without much electricity as a central screen presence. In the role's conception and casting, Elliot is clearly patterned after Dustin Hoffman's Benjamin Braddock in The Graduate, but the effect isn't remotely the same.

"Despite being temporally defined by the run-up to the fest and the weekend itself, the pic has a formless, unstructured feel, as its attention jumps from incident to incident in almost random fashion. Some distantly heard music serves notice that Woodstock itself has begun, but the stage is only ever glimpsed from atop a faraway hill. The musical performances are clearly not the subject of the film, but there's no denying that their absence makes Taking Woodstock feel oddly incomplete; the table is set, but the meal never gets served.

"Other than the oddly extended attention devoted to the harsh irascibility of Elliot's unbendingly greedy mother, pic is pleasant enough on a moment-to-moment basis, but the separate sketches never coalesce into anything like a full group portrait."

Excerpts from my 5.15 Taking Woodstock review: "It too often feels ragged and unsure of itself...Elliot's story comes through but [it seems analagous] to a story of the D-Day Invasion that focuses on Francois, a closeted young man in his 30s who doesn't want to work at his parents' Normandy bakery any more...Elliot was a man of 34 who'd been around a bit -- Martin plays him like Dustin Hoffman's Benjamin Braddock...no Woodstock concert footage is mixed into Lee's movie, and [while] I kept telling myself that it's Eliot's story, not Woodstock II, I wanted glimpses of the real thing...the story is weakened, in my book, by Imelda Staunton's strident and braying portrayal of Tiber's mother-from-hell...[the film] doesn't coalesce in a way that feels truly solid or self-knowing."

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Posted by Jeffrey Wells on May 16, 2009 at 5:28 AM

comment #1

George Prager Author Profile Page says ...

Can we just confront the elephant in the room? Ang Lee isn't a great director. He's in the Harold Becker/Keith Gordon/Pat O'Connor category.

Posted by George Prager Author Profile Page at May 16, 2009 8:37 AM

comment #2

BurmaShave Author Profile Page says ...

Ang Lee is in the same category as the director of MALICE and CITY HALL? Prager that doesn't even make any sense.

Posted by BurmaShave Author Profile Page at May 16, 2009 9:14 AM

comment #3

CitizenKanedforChewingGum Author Profile Page says ...

The Ice Storm is fucking incredible. Prager is just depressed that he was conceived at a key party, and holds it against Ang.

Posted by CitizenKanedforChewingGum Author Profile Page at May 16, 2009 9:56 AM

comment #4

George Prager Author Profile Page says ...

ICE STORM is great, so is CROUCHING TIGER, but the guy is still a middling mid-level director.

Posted by George Prager Author Profile Page at May 16, 2009 10:12 AM

comment #5

George Prager Author Profile Page says ...

Okay, okay...I'm moving him up a notch into the Richard Brooks/Norman Jewison/Martin Ritt/Robert Benton category.

Posted by George Prager Author Profile Page at May 16, 2009 11:24 AM

comment #6

K. Bowen Author Profile Page says ...

Ang Lee is such an immaculate craftsman and so impeccable at period detail that it hides the fact that his stories usually aren't quite as compeling. For all that Brokeback does well, for instance, it's such a conventional story in some ways. I put it this way -- the screening that I was in for Lust,Caution had a reel without subtitles. But we picked up right where we left off with the next reel, and it didn't feel like we missed anything.

Posted by K. Bowen Author Profile Page at May 16, 2009 11:51 AM

comment #7

BurmaShave Author Profile Page says ...

There ya go, Prager. Much better.

Posted by BurmaShave Author Profile Page at May 16, 2009 12:04 PM

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