Topic: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

In the relatively brief history of cinema as a storytelling medium, it seems like it’s been easy to pick out the major landmarks along the way, especially in the last few decades. Everyone who saw STAR WARS knew it had changed everything; a generation later, JURASSIC PARK would inspire similar awe and achieve equally enviable success. You see a film like THE MATRIX and you know, in your bones, you’ve just seen a new way to use the medium, something that will change its course forever.

Then again, sometimes it’s not so obvious. Sometimes a film takes its time to find its feet. THE WIZARD OF OZ; CITIZEN KANE; BLADE RUNNER — all classics of the medium, all flops upon release. But they withstood the test of time and are now appreciated and revered for those exact qualities which most likely alienated the contemporary audiences.

As of this writing, CLOUD ATLAS is performing poorly at the box office, taking in only $14.5 million in its first week against an estimated $100 million budget. But you would make a tremendous mistake to think this is a reflection of its quality.

Directed by Lana and Andy Wachowski — the directing duo behind the MATRIX films and SPEED RACER — in collaboration with Tom Twyker — best known in the U.S. for RUN LOLA RUN — the film spans a period of several centuries, following six stories intercut together, all occurring in different times and places, all related thematically and by the presence of common actors playing (different) characters in each story.

If there’s one thing I’m not, it’s a man who believes the Wachowskis can do no wrong. Bring up the MATRIX sequels and you’ve probably got about thirty seconds of discussion before I become unreasonable. And I’m about to squander any and all possible film snob cred by stating that I didn’t think much of RUN LOLA RUN, either. The trailers for CLOUD ATLAS were certainly ambitious, but did little to inspire my interest. Ultimately I went to see it because I try to see all the major releases like this, hoping for the best, preparing for the worst.

Joyfully, I got the best. CLOUD ATLAS is my favorite film of the year.

CLOUD ATLAS is a film that requires your full attention, but will reward you for it in the end. It jumps, sometimes extremely quickly, between its six stories, but — as the movie itself assures us early on — there’s a method to the madness. It’s not stylized for no reason — in fact, considering the Wachowski oeuvre, the filmmaking aside from the editing is surprisingly conventional. But, as the Kuleshov effect demonstrates, editing is where the story is really told.

And what is the story of CLOUD ATLAS? A difficult question to answer if one attempts to focus on the six interwoven threads, which are (from Wikipedia):

  • South Pacific Ocean, 1849. Adam Ewing, an American lawyer from San Francisco during the California Gold Rush, has come to the Chatham Islands to conclude a business arrangement for his father-in-law. He meets Dr. Henry Goose who offers a cure for the parasitic worm that is seemingly eating his brain. While ashore, Adam learns about the enslavement of the Moriori tribe and observes a slave being whipped. The slave, Autua, stows away on the ship and Adam reluctantly keeps him hidden.

  • Cambridge, England and Edinburgh, Scotland, 1936. Robert Frobisher, a gay, penniless, young English musician, finds work as an amanuensis to a famous composer, allowing Frobisher the time and inspiration to compose his own masterpiece, "The Cloud Atlas Sextet" while his master attempts to take all credit for the Sextet as his own.

  • San Francisco, California, 1973. Luisa Rey, is a journalist, sent to write a story about a new nuclear power plant. She meets Sixsmith, a respected nuclear physicist who decides to help Rey expose a conspiracy regarding the safety of a nuclear reactor. In the meanwhile, a hitman, hired by oil lobbyists, attempts to silence the exposers.

  • United Kingdom, 2012. Timothy Cavendish, a 65-year-old publisher, flees the associates of a jailed gangster author and ends up confined against his will in a nursing home from which he attempts to escape.

  • Neo Seoul, (Korea), 2144. "Old" Seoul has sunken partly beneath the rising seas, which are now held back by colossal sea walls that protect the rest of the city. Sonmi-451, a genetically-engineered fabricant (clone) server at a hyper-fast-food restaurant, is interviewed before her execution. Sonmi rebels against the totalitarian society that created and exploited her kind.

  • On one of the beautiful Hawaiian Islands on post-apocalyptic Earth, a tribesman named Zachary living a primitive life after most of humanity has died during "The Fall" is visited by Meronym who arrives on a fusion-powered hover-yacht, and is a member of the "Prescients," the last remnants of a technologically-advanced civilization. After Meronym saves Zachary's young niece, he agrees to guide her into the mountains in search of Cloud Atlas, an outpost and station where many unburied dead bodies lay, where she hopes to send a message to people who have left Earth and are now living on other planets.

The stories are connected in two ways. The first, and most obvious, is that the main character of each story comes to know the story that preceded, and discovers this story at a crucial turning point in his/her own. The experience of the protagonist of the prior story heartens the protagonist of the next and leads them to take the action that will inspire the next. CLOUD ATLAS is a story about why we tell stories, and how our actions affect each other down the generations in unexpected ways.

The execution of CLOUD ATLAS makes it also an exploration of how we tell stories, intercutting the action of the stories together in ways that at first seem inexplicable, but then it slowly becomes clear they are thematically, and structurally, related. The stories are told in a mostly linear fashion within themselves, but sewn together in the most astonishing example of vertical storytelling I’ve ever seen. We jump rapidly between time periods as each story reaches its second act break, its bad guys close in, its dark night of the soul. Despite the different times, places, antagonists, and explicit goals of the protagonist, underneath it all the experiences are fundamentally the same. In each case a story about love and trust, in each case a story about defying the so-called “natural order” which is revealed to be a mere construct of those who most benefit from the status quo.

Even the name itself hints at this notion — a “cloud atlas” is a visual guide to identifying the various types of clouds (cumulus, cirrus, nimbus, etc.). The clouds come in various shapes and sizes, can be classified as different from each other, but ultimately they are all made of the same stuff. They are all, despite their appearances, identical. They can change from one to the other over time, combine, disperse. Change, indeed, is the only true "natural order."

The name appears in the 1936 storyline, when the composer Frobisher writes the “Cloud Atlas Sextet,” a symphony in six movements. The structure of the film follows this same conceit — six stories interwoven, recurring motifs that follow, transpose, reinterpret each other as the work progresses, each moving, sometimes in harmony and sometimes in discord, through the major movements of modern storytelling. The structure of the film is perfectly literary, perfectly musical, and perfectly cinematic all at once. I have honestly never seen anything like it.

CLOUD ATLAS has come under a bit of fire for its race-bending — Caucasian actors portrayed as Korean, in particular — but in this film’s case it is thematically appropriate and respectful. The same actors portray characters in different eras, jumping across lines of age, of race, of gender — another way of making the statement that under our different appearances, we are all in fact the same. Recasting just for the purposes of the different ethnicities would in fact have undermined this aspect of the story. It should also be noted that Korean actors portray Caucasian and Hispanic characters, and in the far-future story, the primitive culture is light-skinned and the advanced dark-skinned, a quiet inversion of the slave-owning white culture portrayed in the earliest time period. It’s not about how you look, or even really who you are. It’s about what you’re made of.

There are gunshots and car-chases and VFX aplenty, but this is not turn-off-your-brain moviegoing. This is a crank-it-up-and-sit-up-straight experience, a movie that asks you to meet it in the middle. It wants to tell you a story — six stories about one story, more specifically — but it wants you to engage with it, to be an active participant rather than a passive observer.

Studios don’t make movies like this anymore. The studio penguins think the audience can’t handle it, won’t try. So they produce movies full of color and light and sound and fury all signifying nothing. A movie has arrived at last that trusts and respects its audience, that delivers all the spectacle but believes in the audience’s intelligence rather than insulting it. And I despair that the box office is on track to prove the penguins right.

I have little doubt CLOUD ATLAS will be recognized twenty years from now as essential viewing for all serious students of the art of cinema and storytelling. But will it be to study the moment the path of blockbuster filmmaking was altered, for the better and for good? The film that proved style and substance, thought-provoking and profit, need not be mutually exclusive? Or will it be to speculate, and lament, over what might have been?

Vote with your wallet. Go see CLOUD ATLAS.

Thumbs up +3 Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

Great review, man.

Do you think this is the sort of thing we could do a commentary for? Would it basically be an unrelated three hour conversation?

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

Consider me convinced.

(UTC-06:00) Central Time (US & Canada)

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

Couldn't agree more. It's my favorite film of the year as well.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

I listened to the Cinefantastique podcast on the movie, and at the very least it sounds like a good adaptation of an un-filmable book. The story there was told out of order, and you jumped from time period to time period with no idea of where you were until you figured it out from context. The only real complaint was the movie cut between segments too fast, that there was no time to laugh at a joke or cry at a scene because you're sent to another story with a different mood before you could really react (this came from the one reviewer who had read the book)

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

Teague wrote:

Do you think this is the sort of thing we could do a commentary for?

I'm already dying to do a commentary.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

Great review Dorkman. I wish I could agree with you, but I'm glad you loved it.

Here's my problem with it. Yes, the editing is extremely impressive and they pull that aspect off, no question.
However, to me, the whole movie comes off as empty and pointless, and the primary reason is this:
For the most part, each individual story is like the "Surrogates" of its respective genre.

We get the most generic and uninteresting mystery story (an evil corporation? way to stretch those narrative muscles), a pretty generic sci-fi blade runner ripoff (with a protagonist who does almost nothing except get dragged around by the badass hero who has pretty much 0 characterization, a story about a white guy freeing a slave which makes him feel better about himself (which plays out exactly to the letter like you'd expect).

Even the stories that could potential be more original and interesting, like the far future one and the escaping old people one, are greatly undercut by the lack of runtime. Plot points get dropped all over the place (the mobsters from the beginning of the Cavendish story who completely vanish, Susan Sarandon suddenly showing up at the end without even a scene of the two re-uniting).

And it's totally understandable to me that this is simply an unwinnable problem you run into by trying to cram 6 stories in 2 hours 40 minutes. My contention though, is that this either needed to be a mini-series, or they should've made some hard choices and cut 2 of the storylines and fleshed out the other 4.

The fact is that as outstanding as the cross-cutting is, aside from being interesting on a theoretical level, it all goes to waste because the stories are mostly generic, forgettable, and uninteresting, like watching rough story outlines before the writers put in any of the interesting details or quirks that would've made them unique.

And that's a damn shame, cause I really wanted to like it.

Thumbs up +2 Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

I think you're looking at the movie wrong. Don't think of it as six separate stories. Think of it as one unified story. If you handed me each portion as a short film, yes, they seem undercooked. But as part of a cohesive whole, they're thematically resonant and the characters do have clear arcs. Cloud Atlas isn't an anthology, it's a single film, and a single story.

I disagree that each story is generic, forgettable, and uninteresting. I found all of the "stories" to be extremely engaging, which is surprising, because I knew how they ended, having read the book. I think that the Cavendish story is the weakest on-screen because the stakes aren't as high as what's being cut around it, but it's still fun to watch, and it has some great moments.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

Thumbs up +1 Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

Doctor Submarine wrote:

Cloud Atlas isn't an anthology, it's a single film, and a single story.

Well said!

Doctor Submarine wrote:

I think that the Cavendish story is the weakest on-screen because the stakes aren't as high as what's being cut around it, but it's still fun to watch, and it has some great moments.

I thought the same at first, but ultimately his (dramatized) story is part of what inspires Sonmi to stand up and become Future Jesus, so the fact it's actually a humble and frankly silly story in itself is, as you said, part of the larger story. As they're cutting between each other, it's a reminder that Sonmi wouldn't be going through her story if not for Cavendish going through his. Point being, even small stories are worth telling.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

I will say, my favorite part of the whole movie was the shitty Tom Hanks film dramatization of Cavendish's story, that put a big smile on my face.

I'm trying to kind of describe why the movie didn't work for me, but to be honest I can't really place it. I just feel like the individual story payoffs are really unoriginal and weren't doing anything for me. I mean you've got Hugo Weaving as a hitman, going up against motherfucking Keith David, and you don't even give me a proper showdown between them, and just have him get killed in a really lame "girl-power" moment. I think that's another big problem, this movie is extremely broad with both its themes and lots of the dialogue. I am so over seeing characters tell other characters off about how bad slavery/oppression is while emotional music plays in the background. The whole thing feels like a 15 year-old's version of an empowerment film, pretending to be important without any real depth to it (I felt similarly about V for Vendetta for what it's worth). And I hate the design of the "sub-conscious" character in the far-future segment, such an on-the-nose and unsubtle way of getting that idea across. At the end, I walked away feeling absolutely nothing.

Part of the problem might be that I saw Fish Story a week earlier, loved the hell out of it, and really felt like it hit all of these same ideas and story beats in a much more fun and original way.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: CLOUD ATLAS review by Dorkman (possible minor spoilers)

Great review, and I do hope you guys do a commentary on this because I also thought it was an excellent film. It was probably the first film with such a long run time that I never felt for a moment dragged on. I also agree with Doctor Submarine in that the film isn't 6 separate stories but one unified one. For me it worked well, I enjoyed seeing how the characters were related as well as seeing how the stories changed in the different time periods.

Thumbs up Thumbs down