Monday, 31 March 2025

VOX LUX ***


 You can say one thing about Brady Corbet; he's not afraid to tackle big subjects in an original fashion. I hated his first film, "The Childhood of a Leader" which I found pretentious and clunky but at least it aimed high and was 'different'. On the other hand I found "The Brutalist" bold and innovative even if it did slip into melodrama by the end. Now I am finally catching up with his middle film, "Vox Lux" which came and went without too many people seeing it and I think it may be his best film to date.

It begins with a school shooting in which Celeste, whom we've already been introduced to in a home video, is a survivor. The movie is her story. Written once again by Corbet and Mona Fastvold it's clearly aiming for the all-encompassing "bigger picture", a life on camera with a solemn-sounding narrator, (here, Willem Dafoe), recounting the story while Scott Walker's incredible, if at times bombastic, score pounds us into submission.

It's a movie that keeps threatening to fall apart but it never does. This is material we've seen before and often, whether in tackling real or fictional artists but Corbet keeps shifting the perspective and subverting the cliches and he's greatly helped by his cast, (Raffey Cassidy and Natalie Portman as two versions of Celeste with Cassidy also playing Portman's daughter, Jude Law as her manager, Stacy Martin as her older sister and Jennifer Ehle as her publicist), as well as by the superb cinematography of Lol Crawley and that score by Walker but really this is Corbet's film. Throughout he's in total command of his material and he never puts a foot wrong. If, like me, you missed it first time round do try to see it now.

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