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Claws
Nothing
hurts you like family
BY
JASON BLAIR
MARGOT
AT THE WEDDING: Written and directed by Noah Baumbach. Produced
by Scott Rudin. Cinematography, Harris Savides. Starring Nicole
Kidman, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Jack Black, Flora Cross, Zane Pais
and John Turturro. Paramount Vantage, 2007. R. 92 minutes. 
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| Jack
Black, Nicole Kidman and Jennifer Jason Leigh in Margot at the
Wedding |
Among the best films of 2005 was The Squid and
the Whale, a dark drama that happens to be wickedly funny. If
it leans a little heavily on Wes Anderson (Rushmore), it
at least gives fans of Anderson a director to lionize in Noah Baumbach.
Produced by Anderson, with whom Baumbach wrote The Life Aquatic,
The Squid and the Whale is the story of Baumbach's parents'
divorce, a bitter breakup told from the children's point of view.
From the perspective of two awkward, bemused teenage boys, the arrogance
and stubbornness of their parents — rival writers —
feels unexpectedly light and whimsical. The script earned Baumbach
an Oscar nomination and a number of passionate supporters. Now his
follow-up, Margot at the Wedding, arrives with little fanfare
but great expectations. I suspect few people will see this film,
and potentially a handful of people will enjoy it. I mention that
because while I admire it very much, Margot at the Wedding
is Squid without a safety net. There's no youthful, delicate
point of view. Instead, the knives are bigger, the cuts are deeper
and real blood (emotionally speaking) is spilled. I'm still healing
from my viewing of it, yet because it presents sibling rivalry so
authoritatively, I hope to see it twice.
The story is deceptively simple. Margot (Nicole
Kidman) arrives in Suffolk County, N.Y., with her son Claude (Zane
Pais) for the wedding of her estranged sister Pauline (Jennifer
Jason Leigh). Margot is without her husband, a condition that instantly
makes her conspicuous; her son, who's teased for his girlish looks,
is clingy to the degree that an intercession will be needed; and
Pauline, gentle but brittle, wants to mend fences with Margot and
get married, all at once. That will be difficult, given that the
groom is Jack Black, who plays Malcolm, an ex-rocker, with all the
restraint he can muster. As for plot, that's about the sum of it.
There are some feral neighbors, a dispute over a tree and an adulterous
subplot with Margot and an old flame. But the scenario of Margot
at the Wedding is subordinate to the way the film places its
characters high on a wire and watches them teeter, flail and fight
for survival. Margot isn't really about anything other than
family, which in the end, of course, is everything. It's as literary
as Alice McDermott's fine novel Child of My Heart, which
happens to be set around the same people and places as Margot.
Only Margot is darker.
Margot herself is insufferable, a term she likes
to apply to others. She's the type of person who laments her sister's
pregnancy because it means Pauline can't drink champagne with her.
Despite her flaws, Margot briefly reconnects with Pauline —
who frankly can't believe her sister came at all — until Margot
reverts to leading Pauline through life, rather than simply supporting
her. The film does a cunning job of setting up one sister as flighty
and the other as responsible; before you know it, the fragile Pauline
turns out to be strong, while the stable Margot turns out to be
fragile. Margot at the Wedding is a hard road to travel.
It can be cruel but it never ceases to be funny. The pace is breathless.
There are no interstices: One meaningful scene follows the next
without pause, leaving no room for music or those calm, reflective
shots of nature so common in family dramas like The Ice Storm.
When Malcolm finds himself outside looking in, Black
can't help making Margot at the Wedding a farce. There are
a few rickety sequences in which Black's reactions upset the film.
When the sisters (sans Black) end up in a motel room, the film slumps
when it should be sliding to conclusion. I had the feeling of stepping
off an escalator: My body wanted to know why it wasn't moving anymore.
Then Margot, and Margot, suddenly lurch forward in a way
I couldn't completely accept. But the ride prior to this is so clearly
mapped, I didn't let the detour get in the way.
Margot at the Weddding open Friday, Dec. 28,
at the Bijou.
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