Alexander the Last Movie Review
Alexander the Last Review

"Alexander the Last" Overview

Rating: NR
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Joe SwanbergProducer : Noah Baumbach,Anish Savjani,Joe Swanberg
Screenwiter : Joe Swanberg
Starring : Jess Weixler,Justin Rice,Barlow Jacobs,Amy Seimetz,Jane Adams,Josh Hamilton,Jo Schornikow
For the last couple of years, filmmaker Joe Swanberg has been one of the
unofficial "people to watch" in the indie movie world. A passionate participant
in the "mumblecore" movement, he gained attention with Hannah Takes the Stairs
in 2007, and scored solid reviews (including mine) with 2008's Nights and
Weekends. With Alexander the Last, Swanberg aspires to the next level -- in
story scope, character development, and artistic commentary -- and just misses
the mark.
It's not for lack of trying. Swanberg builds a loose character setup within an
ambitious background of reality and artifice. He asks us to consider when
intimacy is true, when it is simply make-believe, and when the hell we should
be able to tell the difference.
It's a logical proposition for the mumblecore style, where digital video and
loosely structured dialogue convey their own reel reality. Of course, it just
feels real, and here Swanberg demands a deeper interpretation from both us and
his characters. Intended or not, John Cassavetes' films posed those same
questions -- with a similar style -- and the connection is impossible to ignore.
The reality of Alexander the Last focuses on actress Alex (Jess Weixler, Teeth
), her husband Elliot (actor/musician Justin Rice, Mutual Appreciation) and
Alex's sister Hellen (Amy Seimetz, Wristcutters). The film's artificial
universe exists in Alex's on-stage world, where she's preparing -- endlessly it
seems -- for a steamy lovemaking scene with Jamie (Barlow Jacobs, Shotgun
Stories), who's sleeping with Hellen in the real world.
So while Alex and Jamie rehearse the choreography of rolling around and
removing clothes on stage (with the great Jane Adams as the director), we also
spy Hellen and Jamie getting it on for real. Swanberg cuts abruptly between the
scenes, forcing the question: Has Swanberg blocked the "real" sex scene as
carefully as the "fake" one is being staged for the play?
The art, the reality -- and the art of reality -- all intertwine. What's
missing is a bit of accessibility to the characters, who seem a little too
wrapped up in the quiet, slacker tempo that's become a mumblecore signature.
The acting does the film justice -- Weixler is just great, a combination of
maturity and vulnerability she wears naturally -- but Swanberg should give us
something to grab on to earlier in the film, and hold our sympathy for the
distance.
He did it with outstanding skill in Nights and Weekends (with co-director/star
Greta Gerwig), and it would help here. When Elliot reads Poe to Alex, we can't
take our eyes off Weixler's enamored look; the action, though, is an unnatural
contradiction that annoys more than it entertains. (Maybe it's "The bells, the
bells, the bells....")
The earlier Cassavetes reference brings to mind Opening Night, his study of a
troubled stage actress played by his wife, Gena Rowlands. Like Cassavetes, as
Swanberg and crew combine the worlds of real and staged action, they achieve
something more vital: They expose characters' personal pains, ticks, fears --
and celebrations. When Alex proclaims she's having one of the great days of her
life, we'd like to be there.
Bring out the Snuggies!
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Review by Norm Schrager
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