Michael Phillips
The Artist
3 1/2 Stars
Please be silent behind the screen.
Backstage at the 1927 Hollywood premiere of his latest screen triumph, film star
"The Artist" exists also to be loved.
Writer-director
No wonder American audiences aren't quite sure what to expect from the French import that premiered, triumphantly, at the 2011
"The Artist" is a pastiche with heart, sincere and rangy (too rangy in some ways).
At the top of his profession, Valentin meets eager would-be starlet Peppy Miller, played by
Corny, all the way. I have a few problems with "The Artist," some of them wonky and period-specific. For one thing, the film puts no real priority on being period-specific (it spans 1927 to the early '30s). Filmed in squarish, silent-film 1:33 ratio, Hazanavicius goes only so far in framing and propelling a given scene in a way evoking any particular filmmakers of the day, even the film's acknowledged influences, including the lushly cinematic romances of
So that's what's wrong with "The Artist," which hardly gets in the way of what's right.
Dujardin found big success in
My favorite scene comes just when we must invest fully in the love story if "The Artist" is to amount to more than a gimmick. It is a series of takes on a movie set wherein Dujardin and Bejo are seen playing around, enjoying each other's company and then, miraculously, falling in love. "The Artist" comes back to this footage later, fruitfully. The musical score by Ludovic Bource doesn't need the help from Herrmann and other sources; it's beautiful on its own, and when the best of Bource's themes ("Comme une roseie de larmes") underscores the pathos, well ... between that and Uggie, I was more or less in the bag. The PG-13 rating is faintly ridiculous. What's on screen barely merits a PG, and "The Artist" may not be great art, but it's pearly entertainment.
"The Artist" Movie Trailer
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