DIRECTORS
Mike Gabriel
Eric Goldberg
SCREENWRITERS
Carl Binder
Andrew Chapman
Susannah Grant
Philip LaZebnik
PRODUCER
James Pentecost
MUSIC
Alan Menken
Stephen Schwartz
EDITOR
H. Lee Peterson
CAST
Irene Bedard (Pocahontas)
Judy Kuhn (Pocahontas [singing])
Mel Gibson (John Smith)
Linda Hunt (Grandmother Willow)
John Kassir (Meeko)
Frank Welker (Flit)
David Ogden Stiers (Governor Ratcliffe)
Christian Bale (Thomas)
Billy Connolly (Ben)
Gordon Tootoosis (Kekata)
Russell Means (Powhatan)
MPAA rating: G
Running
time: 81m
U.S. release: June 23, 1995
Video availability: VHS - DVD
Other Disney
films
reviewed on this site:
- A
Bug's Life
- The
Hunchback of Notre Dame
DIRECTOR
Ron Howard
SCREENWRITERS
William Broyles Jr.
Al Reinert
based
on the book Lost Moon by
Jim Lovell
Jeffrey Kluger
PRODUCER
Brian Grazer
CINEMATOGRAPHER
Dean Cundey
MUSIC
James Horner
EDITOR
Dan Hanley
Mike Hill
CAST
Tom Hanks (Jim Lovell)
Bill Paxton (Fred Haise)
Kevin Bacon (Jack Swigert)
Gary Sinise (Ken Mattingly)
Ed Harris (Gene Kranz)
Kathleen Quinlan (Marilyn Lovell)
MPAA rating: PG
Running
time: 140m
U.S. release: June 30, 1995
Video availability: VHS - DVD
Other movies
by Ron Howard
reviewed on this site:
- A
Beautiful Mind
- Ed
TV
- How
the Grinch Stole Christmas
- Ransom
|
As Disney never tires of pointing
out, Pocahontas is the studio's first historically-based
animated feature. What they don't point out, understandably,
is that -- with the exception of two or three characters -- this
is essentially a live-action movie that a lot of people spent
four years drawing. Has there ever been a cartoon less animated
in spirit than Pocahontas? Disney's well-meaning solemnity
seeps over the characters like spilled ink. There's a built-in
problem with animated films featuring mostly people: Unable to
project our emotions onto the otherness of cartoon animals, we
observe the imitation humans, scrutinizing their every movement
for accuracy. You look at someone turning his head and notice
how his nose seems to shrink or expand from frame to frame. Even
when a human gesture rings true, you can't help considering how
much work went into animating that gesture.
Pocahontas goes by fast, and some of it is reasonably
entertaining. By now, Disney has this stuff down cold: the pastoral
images segueing into show tunes ("Colors of the Wind"
will likely continue Disney's monopoly of the Best Original Song
Oscar); the largely opaque heroes/heroines; the buffoonish villains
who exist to be deflated; the earnest preaching, which here shifts
from the usual "Be yourself" to "Accept others
who are different." And Disney has always excelled at low-comedy
supporting players; there are really only two here -- Meeko the
raccoon and Flit the hummingbird -- but the movie would feel
completely stiff without them. (They don't talk, which is an
almost radical step for Disney.)
Despite Disney's pride in delivering a history lesson, the advance
word has advised us to approach Pocahontas not as armchair
historians but as people who want to be entertained. (Okay, here
we are, now entertain us.) In other words, Disney is saying:
Get off our backs, we're doing a good deed here. And I guess
in some respects they are. Pocahontas is a decent film
for girls, who generally don't find many role models at the movies,
and it's a long-overdue big fantasy for Native American children.
Yet Disney's fiddling with history has produced a bloodless romance.
Pocahontas, a proud young woman who resists marrying her boring
intended, meets John Smith, a blandly cute Disney hunk who lands
on this strange new territory along with a crew of English settlers
searching for gold. Pocahontas and John fall in love because
... because there would be no movie if they didn't. Neither one
is a person; they're both too busy representing something or
other. Call me a grinch, but I'm not particularly moved by two
abstract concepts falling in love.
Disney already handled the "We're all the same underneath"
theme in Beauty and the Beast, where it resonated more
deeply. Belle, a studious girl, learned to love the Beast even
though he looked like an upright ox and sounded like Robby Benson
talking through a shoe. Pocahontas takes a much more PC
approach, never more explicitly than in the number "Savages,"
in which the Native Americans and English settlers prepare for
battle and denounce their foes as savages ("They're barely
even human"). But is it so unreasonable for the Native Americans
to characterize the settlers that way? The romance between Pocahontas
and John Smith is meant to be a bridge between cultures, a salve
on ancient wounds, but we know that English culture won out and
the wounds were mainly Native American. That Disney has received
support from Native American groups is irrelevant -- how can
the studio whitewash this story as a Romeo and Juliet
conflict? (Actually, it's closer to West Side Story, but
never mind.) And the movie's pleas for tolerance are hypocritical
in light of the effete villains, who even have a spoiled, plump
dog named Percy. With its decadent plummy-accented queers pitted
against virile heteros (Mel Gibson provides the speaking voice
of John Smith), the movie is flat-out homophobic, a kiddie-musical
version of Rob Roy.
Despite that, Pocahontas is a guilty-white-liberal movie.
It sees Native Americans through Caucasian lenses: See, underneath
that scary warpaint and red skin they're really just like us.
And if they were unlike whites in every possible way, would that
justify wiping them almost completely off the face of their own
earth? After a while, the movie turns schizo: No, they're like
us except that they respect nature and they don't believe in
guns. (Which made them easy targets until they were forced to
start believing in guns.) What lesson will Native American children
draw from Pocahontas? "Love thy white neighbor even
though he took your country away"? How warmly would the
black community receive a cartoon in which a slave woman and
a plantation owner fell in love? Would they, too, suck up to
Disney for finally putting their people on the screen?
On almost every level, Pocahontas is a mistake, though
I did enjoy the clowning of Meeko and Flit. They're basically
leftovers from The Lion King, and I'm aware that Disney
threw them in so as to have characters they could convert into
stuffed toys, but they give the film what life it has. The anti-gun
message is a nice touch, I suppose -- two Native Americans are
fatally shot, and cannons tear trees apart -- but no English
settlers get hit by arrows, which makes the Native Americans
look fairly ineffectual. And then there's Pocahontas herself.
Lacking a mother (just like every other Disney heroine), she
instead has a grandmother-tree, whom she asks for advice about
her destiny. But does her destiny have to include romance? Especially
with a white guy? (As Pinocchio demonstrated, Disney can
actually make a superb fantasy without a whiff of hearts and
flowers.) Checking out the hunky John Smith, the grandmother-tree
gives the couple her seal of approval. She must not have noticed
what his fellow soldiers were doing to her fellow trees.
Most of
us don't go to the movies wanting the projected equivalent of
an encyclopedia. Historical accuracy is the least of Pocahontas'
problems; if we're told a solid, absorbing story -- if we're
caught up in the characters, real or invented or whatever --
not much else matters. At the other extreme, Ron Howard's Apollo
13 promises to be a riveting history lesson. The facts of
the aborted Apollo 13 mission in April, 1970, seem like God-given
movie material. Three astronauts -- family men Jim Lovell (Tom
Hanks) and Fred Haise (Bill Paxton), plus cocky bachelor Jack
Swigert (Kevin Bacon), a last-minute replacement for the original
third crew member -- go up in space with visions of Neil Armstrong
dancing in their heads. Early in this second moon shot -- on
April 13, in fact -- an explosion disables their capsule. It's
uncertain whether they'll have enough oxygen, water, and energy
to make it back to Earth alive. The men have to improvise solutions
as problems arise, while NASA engineers on the ground do what
they can, which at first isn't much.
Apollo 13 has a satisfying grand sweep. Ron Howard sets
up the trappings of the NASA techno-brotherhood, and he knows
how to whip up massive, stomach-freezing effects, as he showed
in Backdraft, with its flames roaring out at us like the
wrath of a dragon. He knows how to put us inside a pressure cooker.
And since movies, unfolding in a horizontal, rectangular world,
are an inherently claustrophobic medium, I expected Apollo
13 to paralyze the audience with nauseated horror at being
locked in this capsule -- floating in an infinite inky void yet
enclosed in a tight metal tube. But none of this really comes
through. Partly it's because these men aren't very nervous about
being shot up there to begin with, so that undermines our nervousness.
It's all old news to them. They're stoic, they deal well with
stress; like Tom Wolfe's knights of the right stuff, they have
an unspoken pact not to express fear or doubt. And so you feel
the force of the movie slowly leaking out.
The story, adapted by William Broyles Jr. and Al Reinert from
last year's book Lost Moon by Lovell and Jeffrey Kluger,
abounds in real-life ironies. After 1969's famous giant leap
for mankind, America is rather blasé about a return trip
-- until things start going wrong, at which point the media camps
out en masse on Lovell's front lawn. (As Lovell's wife Marilyn,
Kathleen Quinlan spends the movie sitting in the house, staring
at the TV, and fretting.) Howard picks up on an intriguing unsung-hero
aspect of the story: Ken Mattingly (Gary Sinise), the experienced
pilot Jack Swigert replaced -- he would have gone up if not for
a suspected case of measles -- stays on the ground and goes through
one flight simulation after another, looking for a way to bring
the capsule home on minimal energy. Mattingly's story would make
a good movie in itself; he gets all the stress of the mission
and none of the actual elation of being near the moon. He's the
original virtual-reality hero.
Howard couldn't have cast three more likable actors as the imperilled
spacemen. What's amazing is how little of their personalities
comes across. Even Kevin Bacon, a suave Casanova whose idea of
a come-on is a smirking demonstration of a lunar module sliding
into dock, is too close to Dennis Quaid's hell-raiser in The
Right Stuff (and none of these boys is a hell-raiser). Physically,
the performances look strenuous. The sequences in the capsule
were filmed in real zero gravity, aboard the Vomit Comet used
in astronaut training, and sometimes the actors look a little
green around the gills. But the stars, and Tom Hanks in particular,
are running on autopilot. Like the men they're playing, they
seem to have convinced themselves that the only thing that matters
is the problem at hand; once the pressure's on, there's no room
for such frivolity as inventive acting. (I kept expecting Bill
Paxton to flip out as he did in Aliens -- "Game over,
man!" -- but no such luck.) Hanks has an effective way of
speaking in a dead, neutral tone when Lovell is frightened, but
it seems like an actor's choice. Hanks is trying to be true to
the real-life, brave Lovell. The actors are smothered by history
and good intentions.
Apollo 13 is so much more self-possessed, so much clearer
in a basic narrative sense, than almost every other blockbuster
this summer that I didn't trust my initial, complacent enthusiasm
for it. Of course it looks great next to Batman
Forever or Johnny Mnemonic -- what movie wouldn't?
There was one moment during Apollo 13 when I felt an Olympian
surge of adrenaline: the countdown to the launch. Everyone in
the audience stopped breathing. (The launch itself doesn't live
up to it. And I must point out the sonic inaccuracy, perpetuated
by Star Wars and countless other space operas, of the
exterior shots of Apollo 13 in orbit: We shouldn't be hearing
exhaust or explosions in the airless vacuum of space -- we shouldn't
be hearing anything. A surprising lapse in a movie otherwise
slavishly devoted to The Facts.) I also liked the DIY solution
devised by Mission Control for the carbon-dioxide problem. The
movie is terrific on nuts-and-bolts stuff -- the disposal of
waste, the instruction manuals magnetized to the capsule walls.
But nuts and bolts aren't the same as drama. I hate to say it,
but in format Apollo 13 is Speed
in space, and without Speed's kinetic audacity.
A director like James Cameron, whose nerve-destroying The
Abyss made me vow never to go more than five feet underwater,
would have made us sick with stress up there in that capsule.
He would have risked melodrama, and probably would have toppled
right into it with a mighty crash, but at least he would have
gambled. Apollo 13 actually would have been perfect for
Cameron's temperament and talents. Ron Howard has talent but
no identifiable temperament, and he isn't a gambler. Taking his
camera into zero gravity, he makes us feel the strange giddiness
of weightlessness. Howard is the ideal man for a space movie
-- he's a weightless director. Apollo 13 has its gripping
bring-the-boys-back-home narrative drive going for it, and Howard's
monklike attention to detail sometimes pays off. It's a solid
and honorable piece of work, but to think it was a great movie
you'd probably have to have a thing for control panels.
|