Friday, 23 September 2016

Film review: Café Society (2016)


Directed by: Woody Allen
Written by: Woody Allen
Starring: Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen Stewart, Steve Carell & Blake Lively

Set in the back drop of the glitz and glamour of the 1930’s. Tired of working a dead end job for his father in New York, Bobby Dorfman (Jesse Eisenberg) contacts his hotshot movie agent uncle Phil (Steve Carell) who reluctantly takes Bobby under his wing and familiarises him with the Hollywood highlife. Bobby is then introduced to the mesmerising Vonnie (Kristen Stewart), she warns from the start that she has a boyfriend (which happens to be her employer) however helpless Bobby falls madly in love with her. The pair develop a blossoming friendship before lovesick Bobby returns to New York where he meets a beautiful socialite, Veronica (Blake Lively). Things seem to be working out for Bobby until Vonnie visits New York, rekindling Bobby’s original affections.

In typical fashion Woody Allen presents us with a nostalgic peak of the past, Café Society is a beautifully captured picture which explores a romanticised view of the 1930’s. Intriguingly this is Woody Allen’s first collaboration with the cinematographer Vittorio Storaro who convinced him to digitally capture the feature which is a first time for Allen. The golden hue like quality makes this film an absolute delight, the audience is presented with a number of close up shots of Kristen Stewart which are very reminiscent of early Hollywood pictures starring the likes of Rita Hayworth or Donna Reed. Jesse Eisenberg puts in a wonderful performance playing the awkward “deer in the headlights” character which is seemingly the perfect platform to deliver Woody Allen’s writing. This certainly isn’t Woody Allen’s best more recent film and doesn’t quite meet the heights of Midnight in Paris or Blue Jasmine. The relationships between the characters aren’t fully explored, instead we are told about them through Allen’s narration. Steve Carell plays the high flying Hollywood agent well with some excellent scenes between him and Jesse Eisenberg; that said, I couldn’t help thinking his casting in Café Society was a little ill-fitting, perhaps because while his performance is considerable I can’t shake the image of him having his chest hair waxed in The 40 Year Old Virgin. Putting all that aside, Woody Allen’s writing is… Woody Allen’s writing, he sticks with familiar ‘love triangle’ themes however this doesn’t matter at all, the story is romantic and poignant lightly peppered with classic Woody Allen humour. Café Society is no Annie Hall but still remains a thoroughly enjoyable and absorbing watch.


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