Tuesday, 14 May 2013

The Impossible-film review


told you I would do it. don't you feel the fool.
I’m going to be honest.  I went to The Impossible with relatively low expectations. I hadn’t heard much about the film, just the odd bit of critical praise and obviously the subject matter. I went expecting a better than average but rather twee movie. One of those that would have, perhaps, been better suited to a T.V movie. The cast seemed to support this argument for me. Both Ewan McGregor and Naomi Watts, whilst talented thespians had seemingly spent the last few years starring in passable films compared to the modern classics that were once their forte.

My expectations were not altered when the film began. Some nice shots of Thailand coupled with a rich white family, a mother and father with three boys, one of which confused becoming a teenager with becoming a bit of a nob, going on an expensive beach holiday in Thailand. Credit where it’s due, the cast and director did manage to make the characters very believable in a short space of time meaning that after only about ten minutes I cared about them all. But still, so far so twee, albeit skilfully so. This could have been a fine way to start the film if not for one thing. The opening scenes were peppered with ominous shots of the sea. An odd angle here, a minor chord there, all serving to tell us that in this film the picturesque sea is the enemy. I for one found this unnecessarily comedic. Anyone going to see The Impossible will have a slight knowledge that it is about the tsunami and will therefore know what it is about. The sinister sea shots felt like something from an especially bad episode of doctor who and even made me think my expectations had been too high, I had horrors of having to sit through Obi Wan vs. the sea.

Then the wave hit and all my doubts were destroyed in the chaos.

Yes chaos. To see such a force of nature hurtling towards me taking everything in its path was truly exhilarating. But then the horror, what about the Kenobis? What followed was a heart wrenchingly intense period of desperate survival and hopeless searching. The mother and the eldest boy were swept away by the flood and faced some horrific injuries and witnessed a lot of the devastation. They had to survive not only relapses of the tsunami but they had to find their way across an unrecognisable landscape for even the locales never mind tourists. Even when taken out of the land and placed into a hospital the intensity never let up, becoming a more focused assault on emotion casting aside the assault on the senses that came with the wave.  With the mother being confined to the hospital bed are focus was drawn to the teenager who took us on his journey with him. We felt the hopelessness cast aside through helping out in small ways in the hospital; we felt the intense pain and panic in the moments when he was separated from his mother. To say he started the film as generic angst ridden teenager this transformation was truly a revelation.  

Sometimes I am a bit of a cynic when it comes to films. A film will have to try very hard to convince me that a main character is truly in any danger. Well this certainly did the impossible….im sorry no more puns, come back, please? I have cake? Yes from the moment the tsunami hit I felt that these characters were in danger, at times I say no way that they could survive. For a time after the wave, the film solely focuses on the mother and teenager so I thought Ewan was a goner. This sense of danger is at its highest when focusing on the mother. And it’s one that never lets up.

The segments following Ewan McGregor and the other children are thankfully not as intense in the same sense. I say thankfully because, I don’t think I could have handled it, I was close enough to walking out of the cinema as it was, but also because it provides the dizzying chaotic highs, with sombre, reflective lows. He searches desperately for his family, going as far to leave the two other children in apparent safety, in order to do something that to everyone else seems so hopeless.  Again these segments are heart wrenching but for different reasons, for these segments provide hope and humility. But again, finding them does not guarantee a happy ending.

To discuss any more of the plot would be to spoil it so I shall instead talk again about the acting. The entire cast is superb. The two smaller children are given the least to do but this means their moments are believable and credit goes to them for showing signs of the ordeal they have faced off screen. Ewan McGregor is, for reasons I have already mentioned, fantastic as is Tom Holland as the teenaged Lucas. It truly is a fantastic ensemble cast but plaudits should definitely go to Naomi Watts. Whenever she is on screen she grabs your attention without trying, she plays the mother desperate to protect her child brilliantly because she refrains from going too far. In some films she would have appeared almost superhuman in terms of what she overcomes to get to safety. Yes in the film she manages to walk, run and even climb a tree with a nasty leg wound but you see it taking its toll on her. The fantastic thing is that you see her first reactions are always towards Lucas’ but always with some personal detriment to her own being, even at her most ill it is evident she would cause her own death if it meant the survival of her son.

After the initial TV drama affair, the direction cinematography really comes good. A hand held, ‘shaky’ cam style is used to really delve the audience into the chaos of the situation. It’s not like other films where it feels gimmicky, in settings like the crowded hospital you could think it was an accident and the camera man really was just getting jostled by the crowds; such is the level of immersion in this movie. That, said the truly great moments are those in the water. A mix of surface level and underwater shots allow us to follow the bodies as they are pulled along by the tsunami allowing us to truly feel the intensity and power of the wave.

Unfortunately this isn’t a perfect film. Aside from the , granted probably intentional choices, elements I didn’t like at the beginning of the film there are certain issues people may find with it. Firstly it is an overly westernised account of the tsunami. One may argue that this made it more relatable, and that’s fair enough; it did. There locale characters used, yet they always seem to be helping the white tourists. Yes this paints them in a great light as far as the west is concerned but I would have liked to have seen the effects on them and their way of life more because they can’t fly home they have to live with the devastation.

In conclusion, The Impossible is a truly excellent film within itself despite possible contextual and ethical grievances. Forget explosions and chiselled muscled action heroes running from them and firing cars at helicopters, The Impossible is a true edge of your seat film, that will leave you feeling exhausted both physically and emotionally.  
 


*this is a review of the film at the cinema, home viewing experience may vary. 

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