View all comments (2) - Comment on this review
Changeling Movie Review
Changeling Review

"Changeling" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Clint EastwoodProducer : Clint Eastwood,Brian Grazer,Ron Howard,Robert Lorenz
Screenwiter : J. Michael Straczynski
Starring : Angelina Jolie,John Malkovich,Jeffrey Donovan,Colm Feore,Jason Butler Harner,Michael Kelly,Amy Ryan
Fit snug into the mother superior of self-reflexive roles, Angelina Jolie once
again finds herself the eye of the storm in Clint Eastwood's epic melodrama
Changeling. Armed with her thick, crimson lips, period duds, and that
ever-present cloche, Jolie goes all gooey as Christine Collins, a single mother
who finds herself a media fulcrum when she denies that a boy returned to her by
the LAPD is Walter, her son who had been kidnapped five months prior.
Based on a catastrophic piece of the infamous Wineville Chicken-Coop Murders,
which ran from 1928 to 1930, and the ensuing trials that yielded a major
ousting of the LAPD's top tier and almost no real answers, Changeling is an
exceedingly visual film yet one that lacks confidence in its imagery, relying
too often on clunky language and an unsteady lead performance. This is no loose
adaptation of actual events: Collins fought against the terminally-corrupt LAPD
for years, became a martyr for forced institutionalization, and kept her job as
a roller-skating switchboard operator while continuing the search for her lost
boy. That's no small feat for a lone woman in the late 20s/early 30s.
After taking the boy the LAPD presented home, Collins begins to document
inaccuracies between the delivered boy and her son, only to be brushed off by
Captain J.J. Jones (Jeffrey Donovan), the man in charge of the investigation.
Support comes in the form of Reverend Gustav Briegleb (John Malkovich), a
flamboyant radio preacher who's been hounding the LAPD for years. When Collins
finally takes her story to the media, it's Gustav who starts yelling for her
return as she is forced into a psychiatric hospital with a gaggle of mistreated
women, the most vocal of whom is played by Amy Ryan.
In its third act, Eastwood switches focus to the trial and execution of Gordon
Northcott (Jason Butler Harner), the man who kidnapped and slaughtered over 20
children on his ranch in Wineville, one of which was Collins' son. The
introduction of Northcott disrupts the tone and mood of the film, stumbling
from feminist parable to legal drama. It does permit a final scene between
Collins and Northcott, allowing Jolie a final, enraged plea for closure: It's
later revealed that Walter might have escaped Northcott's ranch, a fact that's
meant to bolster an infuriating feel-good ending.
Changeling, like most of Eastwood's excellent latter-day work, is a classy
affair, but one of technical weight rather than dramatic. Shot by Tom Stern,
the brilliant cinematographer who has been working with Eastwood since 2002's
Blood Work, the director's latest is covered in dehydrated colors and
beautifully scored by Eastwood himself with lilting pianos and blustery
strings. While Jolie overplays her scorned mother, the supporting cast blends
in beautifully, especially Donovan's complexly-composited policeman and
Malkovich's propulsive, lively clergyman. Schematically unstable, it's J.
Michael Straczynski's woozy script that proves the film's most incapable cog,
handling its cerebral and narrative shifts with the subtlety of a race car
hitting a speed bump.
At a hulking 141-minute runtime, Changeling suffers from more than its fair
share of showy moments, none more egregious than when momma bear profanely
tells off the head of the psychiatric hospital. Eastwood's direction is
proficient, but he finds it impossible for his actress and his aesthetics to
coalesce. Unable to internalize the drama, Jolie engulfs every scene with an
utterance of "I want my son back!," often cheapening the meticulous production
design, courtesy of the talented James J. Murakami. It's a gaudy, showboat
performance, trading nuance and grace for simple presence; I'll eat a small
fishing boat if she doesn't get an Oscar nomination. British director Michael
Winterbottom tempered Jolie the starlet as another single mother left as
residue after a media-centric tragedy in A Mighty Heart by centering on the
procedure of retrieval. With Eastwood, however, Jolie's weeping caterwaul
reduces a firebrand of corrupt politics into a work of enthused pageantry.
First we're gonna catch this Zodiac guy, then we'll find your boy.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin
If Angie is there, our Cinema will be full!!!
Have to watch this, not much of the filem, but becs of our Angie!!!
really nice must to watch movie
i have downloaded a lot of photos, wallpapers and photos by given link below
View all comments (2) - Comment on this review






