Tag Archive: Leonardo Di Caprio


What it takes to win an Oscar

THE REVENANT directed by Alejandro G.Iñárritu (US, 2015)

revenant-leoIn which an A-list vegetarian actor is forced to eat buffalo liver, raw fish and to pick meat off the bones of long dead animal carcasses.

These are only part of what Leonardo Di Caprio, as Hugh Glass,  has to endure after being left for dead in an unforgiving snowy wilderness with a constant threat from roving tribes of Native Indians. Though set at the end of the 19th Century, this is a modern day western in the raw, gritty spirit of Cormac McCarthy.

Emmanuel Lubezki’s landscape photography is astonishing and it come as no surprise to discover that he has also worked with Terrence Malick. It justifies the director’s decision to use natural lighting and to reject the easy option of computer-generated imagery.

The special effects are equally breathtaking. A fight with a grizzly bear is amazingly realistic. Never has the ‘no animal has been harmed during the making of this film’ message been so necessary.

Stripped to the rawest elements, this is a tale of survival and revenge against all odds. The tagline ‘Blood lost – life found’ can also serve as a plot summary. Complaints in some quarters about the movie being merely a celebration of machismo are akin to complaining of lack of affirmative female roles in a war movie.

Tom Hardy plays the ruthless Fitzgerald, Glass’s uncompromising adversary. Hardy is an actor who seems to inhabit his characters while I generally find it harder to separate DiCaprio from his offscreen persona. I will concede, however, that DiCaprio gives an impressive no holds barred performance here, one which should finally earn him the long-awaited Academy Award.

In a state of exhaustion and barely alive, his stony stare into the camera at the end of the movie should come with the caption: NOW can I have an Oscar, pleeeeeeaaaase!

LOST REVOLUTIONARIES

REVOLUTIONARY ROAD directed by Sam Mendes (USA, 2008)

On ‘Lose Yourself’ Eminem rapped that we have just one shot – one opportunity. Fundamentally , this is also the premise upon which Richard Yate’s book and Sam Mendes’ movie is based.

It strikes me as simplistic –and a little depressing –  to argue that we have just a single make or break chance to find a fulfilling direction in our lives. We have to seize chances when they arise but I prefer to think  that these are not necessary one-off, make or break occasions.

In ‘Revolutionary Road ,  April Wheeler (played by Kate Winslet), decides that a move to Paris ,Europe is her one shot escape route. She dreams of starting afresh – replacing desperate housewifery for a life less ordinary.

She temporarily manages to persuade her sceptical hubby (Leonardo Di Caprio) but a tempting promotion offer and an unplanned pregnancy destroys the pipedream and, ultimately, their marriage.

Winslet was apparently blown away by Yates’ novel when she read it while she was expecting her first child to director Sam Mendes.

Mendes says that even if he wasn’t  married to her, she would have been first choice and it’s hard to argue against this. Winslet captures her character’s mood swings brilliantly .

This is more than can be said for Di Caprio. He has never convinced me that he is an actor with the physical stature or gravitas to portray such complex adult roles.

As Martin Scorsese’s blue-eyed boy some have likened Di Caprio  to De Niro but to me he’s more like the new Tom Hanks.  He plays parts efficiently but there’s never any sense that he is taking risks.

It’s still a good movie for all that,  largely because the claustrophobic world of  1950s suburbia is so perfectly evoked.  Sam Mendes is a major league director because he knows when to let images speak for themselves rather than diluting them with explanatory dialogue. The scenes of massed commuters and compartmentalised offices have a resonance akin to King Vidor’s silent classic ‘The Crowd’ while shots of April Wheeler doing household chores are enough to convey the barrenness of her life.

THE SPECTACLE OF FEARSOME ACTS

GANGS OF NEW YORK directed by Martin Scorsese (USA, 2002)

While I was eagerly awaiting the chance to see Daniel Day Lewis in ‘There Will Be Blood’ I decided to backtrack to revisit his scary as fuck portrayal of Bill ‘The Butcher’ Cutting in Martin Scorsese’s epic ‘Gangs Of New York’. Continue reading