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Once Movie Review
Once Review

"Once" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : John CarneyProducer : Martina Niland
Screenwiter : John Carney
Starring : Glen Hansard,Marketa Irglova,Bill Hodnett
For such a modest movie, John Carney's Once sure does have big ideas. Dangling
precariously between rom-com and musical, Carney has called his film a "visual
album," chronicling a slightly tragic love story with songwriter accompaniment.
Winner of the Audience Award at the last Sundance Film Festival, the film
already has a built-in audience with lead actor Glen Hansard, the lead singer
of Dublin-based rockers the Frames, who got his start, musically and
cinematically, in Alan Parker's The Commitments.
Unlike Tommy or The Wall, the cinematic repercussions of Hansard's songs were
never foretold in any of the Frames albums; all the songs involved were written
during Carney's screenwriting process. Carney believes that three-minute pop
songs can equally weigh with ten pages of dialogue and uses many of Hansard and
his co-star Marketa Irglova's songs to relate emotional weight, an easy way out
for exposition. Yet, the exposition is still there, and the songs played are
melodramatic enough to make a VH-1 countdown show. Yes, yes, but Carney's idea
is still sound.
Hansard and Irglova meet one night as he shrieks out some Coldplay knock-off
and she sells flowers on her way home to see her mother and her child. She asks
why he doesn't sing his song during the daytime; he replies that the public
just wants popular songs. Soon, she is getting her vacuum repaired by him as he
gives her songs he's written about his ex-girlfriend, hoping she can flesh them
out. Their romance, initially botched by his awkward offer to bed her, simmers
under a dull flame as they start recruiting band members to help with a weekend
studio session before he heads back to London and she reunites with her
estranged husband. Shocker: The producer on their sessions falls in love with
the songs and thinks they have a real chance of selling.
The trajectory is just that: Hansard and Irglova's songs will sell like a
hijacked box of iPhones and the pair will meet again. The against-all-odds
attitude this otherwise charming experiment gives off couldn't be less bogus if
James Blunt sat on a stage in front of an empty bar saying "this one's for the
lady in the back." Far be it for me to bemoan any film that pokes at the
struggles of an up-and-coming singer/songwriter, but we're not talking about
Nick Drake or Jeff Buckley here. We're talking Chris Martin with a caterwauling
howl instead of a lilting coo.
What sticks and ultimately makes the film memorable is the subtle ebb-and-flow
of the relationship and the unlikely capturing of songwriting in action. The
35mm work keeps a shy eye toward the pair with only a couple of rather odd but
effective crane shots used to punctuate the action. Hansard and Irglova,
non-actors for the most part, are appealingly natural and are mesmerizing when
in the throws of the song. Effectively, Carney's idea realizes an interesting
and believable scenario but imagines it at the whim of lukewarm music-business
politics. Unlike its music, Once seems smitten with the scent of discovery and
uses it to further invigorate a tired trick.
Say, you wanna hear some "Stairway?"
Reviewer: Chris Cabin
WENT TO SEE FILM ON BASIS OF 4 STAR RATING IN LOCAL NEWSPAPER. AUDIENCE MADE
UP MAINLY OF SENIOR CITIZENS. I WAS AND AM A PROFESSIONAL MUSICIAN.
DESCRIPTION OF FILM AS "VISUAL ALBUM" IS VERY ACCURATE. AUDIENCE HATED THE
FILM. PROBABLY BECAUSE OF DISLIKE OF GENRE ETC. ACTING WAS EXCELLENT. THE
PROBLEM, I THINK...IS THAT THIS MUSIC, WHILE APPEALING TO SOME PEOPLE, HAS A
NARCISSISTIC MATRIX.
ITS A THREE CHORD GENRE WITH HIT EM IN THE HEAD DYNAMICS. VERY LITTLE NUANCE
BUT EVERYONE GROOVES ON THEIR OWN INVENTIVENESS OR LACK OF IT. NEVERTHELESS,
ALL TOLD, THE FILM HAS MERIT BECAUSE OF THE CHARM OF THE SCRIPT. EVERYBODY IS
SO DAMN COOL AND COOPERATIVE. THE THINK I DISLIKE MOST IS
THE QUASI-BAROQUE PLAYING OF THE GIRL WHO NEVER STUDIED KEYBOARD HARMONY. I
STILL CAN'T FIGURE OUT WHO GIFTS HER WITH A PIANO AT THE END OF THE FILM.
THE HUSBAND OR THE OTHER GUY.
>I
STILL CAN'T FIGURE OUT WHO GIFTS HER WITH A PIANO AT THE END OF THE FILM.
THE HUSBAND OR THE OTHER GUY
It is customary to provide some warning about spoilers...
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