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The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Rated - 4 stars

In terms of ambition and risk, David Fincher’s grand and peculiar 166 minute movie dwarfs everything else around right now. It’s garnered 13 Academy Award nominations and broken the $100 million mark at the North American box office, but none of that makes it any less odd.

F. Scott Fitzgerald’s slim novella presents enormous difficulties to the filmmaker. It is the story of a man born into a wizened and infirm body who gets younger as he ages. At ten he has the physique of a diminutive septuagenarian. At twenty, he looks like a 50-year-old. And so on, all the way to infancy and death.

Between them, Fincher, the make up and digital effects teams, Brad Pitt and all the Benjamins (Robert Towers, Tom Everett, Spencer Daniels and Chandler Canterbury) stitch together a character who is completely believable from first to last – or last to first, if you prefer.

Pitt has never been better – this performance is probably the finest advertisement for CGI enhancement that any actor could wish for. Most unsettling is when Benjamin reaches his fifties, in age, and the face on screen is the young Brad we remember from Thelma and Louise. Maybe the synthespians of the future will never get old.

Benjamin’s adoptive mother, a practically-minded African-American woman named Queenie (Taraji P Henson), accepts the boy’s unusual condition with the forbearance of someone accustomed to life’s vicissitudes. In a clever invention from screenwriter Eric Roth (The Good Shepherd and Forrest Gump) Queenie runs a caring home for the elderly, so master Benjamin fits in reasonably well, though one old lady is disconcerted by his fondness for her granddaughter Daisy.

Fitzgerald’s story is a pregnant philosophical conceit, like a Twilight Zone episode set among Baltimore’s nineteenth century gentry. Roth expands it into a rich twentieth century picaresque, ranging far and wide as Benjamin tastes romance in Russia with the wife of an English diplomat (a beguiling Tilda Swinton), comes off second best in an encounter with a German U-boat, and pursues the love of his life first to New York and then to Paris.

If Daisy (Cate Blanchett) is a nod in the direction of another beloved Fitzgerald character, Button is more akin to a slightly savvier Gump than to Gatsby. He's a passive, reactive character, turned around by time’s arrow and his outrageous fortune. Unlike Gatsby he gets the girl – and then renounces her.

The movie bides its sweet time, not all of it well spent. A framing device with Daisy on her deathbed, Hurricane Katrina brewing in the background, is cumbersome and not always as clear as it might be. A vignette with Elias Koteas as a clockmaker (Monsieur Gateau) who loses his son in WWI and manufactures a station clock to turn back time is beautifully told, but it’s gilding the lily. Likewise an infuriatingly computer-generated hummingbird that pops up twice, a self-consciously poetic touch that feels heavy-handed and false.

Despite these flaws, and others, the film’s bittersweet reverse angle on the aging process is inescapably moving. There is something beautiful about the trajectory which sees Benjamin and Daisy’s life-long love affair blooming briefly in middle-age, at the point the scales come into balance, though Fitzgerald’s dry account of the relationship gradually falling apart is probably more honest. All the same, we’re left with a terrible sense of loneliness and loss as time inevitably takes its toll.

David Fincher is famous for dark thrillers like Seven, Zodiac and Fight Club, but this bizarre and graceful love story is as morbid in its way. Everybody dies. Even that ornately decorated New Orleans architecture is doomed to crumble. When all is said and done, it takes an artist to make time stand still.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Rating of 4 
	  stars out of 5 Tom Huddleston, Time Out

The investigative scope and emotional weight of David Finchers Zodiac surprised those of us who accused him of... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsForest Gump companion movie.

OttoParts OttoParts from Wales [Highly rated reviewer] , 18/12/2008

If you're the mood for a Forest Gump kind of movie, then this film will be perfect for you.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is penned by Forest Gump scribe Eric Roth and it shows. This film has exactly the same feel and sentiment as the Robert Zemeckis directed movie. The story is comes across in exactly the same way with the explanation heavy voice-over and the main character, Benjamin, literally in the eye of the storm of some of the most significant events of the 20th century.

Pitt and Blanchett are ideally cast. They breeze through the material. But it's more about good casting than it is career defing performances from these two. There is unanimous talent from all of the supporting cast too.

Benjamin Button is an obvious break away for director David Fincher, someone who has formed a near flawless career with some much darker material. My personal hope is that this is his 'one for the studio' film that would give him further license to carry on making films like Zodiac, Se7en and The Game. Though he's created yet another outstanding film with Bejamin Button, I feel there are a few other directors who would have made near enough the same film with this material... Oh well, at least it wasn't made by Ron Howard...

  130 out of 138 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 3 starsYeah, it's ok...

A customer from London , 24/02/2009

It's long and I had a numb bottom by the end of it. That's the thing that stayed with me after leaving the cinema, above all else.

The film itself is ok. Brad and Kate are good, but not particularly stretched by their roles - the CGI does most of that. The story is pretty predictable after the initial exposition. I found it a little annoying the extent to which the film makers tried to yank at the audience's heart strings throughout - the comparison to Forrest Gump has been made and it's that level of saccharine sweetness that you get here: something incredibly happy happens, then something incredibly sad happens, then something incredibly happy happens... The poor characters must be emotionally exhausted. You just want something average to happen to them e.g. Brad goes out to buy a sandwich and nothing good or bad happens, other than that the sandwich is satisfactory. Worth a watch, if you've already been to see Slumdog Millionaire and Milk and are at a loose end.

  45 out of 47 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsTwo acting greats, brilliantly cast around predictable plot

wreeve wreeve from London NW3 [Highly rated reviewer] , 09/01/2009

I wasn't that excited to see this movie but there wasn't anything better on at my local cinema. The trailer suggested a bizarre but predictable plot, and it's length - over 2.5 hrs - put me off too. My wife and sister-in-law felt the same. But we all were pleasantly surprised by a beautifully executed movie.

The plot is as simple as the trailer and one line synopsis suggests. Boy (who happens to be aging in reverse) meets girl (who ages normally). Or, in a little more detail (but no spoilers), little girl meets 'old man'; at some point they 'equilibriate'; then old lady deals with.... but I won't give anything away.

However, several things were surprisingly delightful. The CGI/make-up, for one thing, is absolutely unbelievable. We were all stunned at how convincing the aging/youthing processes were on all the actors affected.

Now, you might regard Brad Pitt as perfect just the way he is, without wanting to see him go thru the seven ages of man. But his performance at each age is terrific and we are reminded once again (Fight Club, Twelve Monkeys etc) how he is not just a pretty face. Kate Blanchette likewise is absolutely captivating. And their on-screen chemistry (or make-up, or whatever it is) was tear-jerking. This movie is not Fight Club or Elizabeth but that's not to denigrate it or the lead performances. The supporting cast are great too - particularly Julia Ormond and the 'black mama' (not sure who she is).

If you're looking for a twist, or a Dorian Gray-like quasi thriller/horror, this is not your movie. If you're looking for some romantic drama, and don't mind a touch of the unusual, this is your movie. Or if you just want some traditional escapism with a simple story, beautifully told and tellingly acted, watch this film.

  40 out of 46 people found this review helpful

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* * * This review contains spoilers * * *

Rated - 2 starsToo long with nothing to say (spoilers in 3rd paragraph)

A customer from Lancashire , 19/02/2009

Particularly considering the number of positive reviews, you'll see the movie anyway but don't be taken in! It is not as good as the hype would have you believe.

Without the gimmick of Brad's character growing younger, this would be a story about two people who drift in and out of each others lives and have a love affair in their forties. In fact, even with the gimmick, that's all it amounts too. That Brad's character is born old and grows young just makes it weird - it doesn't add anything to the narrative (it actually hinders it as I've tried to explain below). Normal people are born, live, fall in (and out of) love and lose loved ones along the way before they die. So does Benjamin. His condition does not give him any unique insight which would make the gimmick worthy. Maybe I'm in a cynical mood but it just seems a means to drum up interest in a conventional, even dull, tale about two people which - the casting of Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett notwithstanding - noone would otherwise be particularly interested in seeing.

If the producers wanted an effective weepie, they should have heightened the sense of heartache that Benjamin and Daisy supposedly have to suffer. The gimmick actually makes it difficult for the producers to convey that these are soulmates dealt a cruel blow by a quirk of nature. For the sake of taste, they couldn't be together when the physical age gap was decades (and - big problem - why would a girl be attracted to an apparent 70+ year old even if it is Brad Pitt?? We have to take it on faith that there is some mystic connection). They have, then, only about 15ish years in which to conduct a normal relationship. They spend the vast majority of their lives apart and having love affairs with others so the fact that they're supposed to be soulmates does not ring true. Okay, it's sad that they can't be together as Benjamin gets younger but it's not like they couldn't have forseen what was going to happen so why have the baby?

The film just doesn't have anything to say in it's overlong 2.5 hours and in an attempt to make up for it, it finshes off with some weak guff about people being what they are. Yeah, so what? Every character in every film - in fact every person in the world - is what they are.

There are better life affirming and/ or weepie films out there - when you've seen this one, don't say I didn't warn you...

  29 out of 31 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsYeah, it's ok...

A customer from London , 24/02/2009

It's long and I had a numb bottom by the end of it. That's the thing that stayed with me after leaving the cinema, above all else.

The film itself is ok. Brad and Kate are good, but not particularly stretched by their roles - the CGI does most of that. The story is pretty predictable after the initial exposition. I found it a little annoying the extent to which the film makers tried to yank at the audience's heart strings throughout - the comparison to Forrest Gump has been made and it's that level of saccharine sweetness that you get here: something incredibly happy happens, then something incredibly sad happens, then something incredibly happy happens... The poor characters must be emotionally exhausted. You just want something average to happen to them e.g. Brad goes out to buy a sandwich and nothing good or bad happens, other than that the sandwich is satisfactory. Worth a watch, if you've already been to see Slumdog Millionaire and Milk and are at a loose end.

  45 out of 47 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 0 starsPerfectly executed film, bittersweet story

pdcdesign from Cardiff , 23/09/2009

The film as you would expect from the title and trailer describes the life story of Benjamin Button (Brad Pitt) who is faced with the unusual predicament of aging backwards. Director David Fincher guides us through a series of Benjamin's life defining moments, but it is his relationship with Daisy (Cate Blanchett) that is central to the film. I was drawn in by this hugely interesting premise and keen to see how a tale that presents such obvious technical challenges would translate to the big screen. Despite taking nearly three hours to unfold I was more than satisfied with the experience, I fully believed in both Benjamin's character and the relationships he forms throughout this beautifully crafted film.

I can definitely see where the comparisons with Forest Gump have come from and whilst I'm a fan of both films I had the same problem with them - they are a tad tedious! It's sadly inherent in a film that focuses on someones life story that they end up being rather predictable viewing experiences. Fortunately the film kept my attention thanks to some exemplary casting and stellar performances from both Pitt and Blanchett, as well as a Taraji P. Henson who play Benjamin's surrogate mother Queenie. The key moments of Benjamin's life are brilliantly captured, I personally enjoyed that the director focused on both the highs and lows of life in equal measure but I was left emotionally exhausted by the time the film reached its climax.

Benjamin Button has much to offer, it's almost worth watching for the presentation alone. It's a tribute to the quality of the make-up and CGI in this film that I was so drawn in to the screenplay; we have really reached a stage where special effects no longer distract from the content. I can see why many will be left frustrated due to the slow pace and subtle payoffs, but if you put aside the time and go into this with a curious mind I'm sure like me you will be pleasantly surprised.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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