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A Ghost Story (2017)
It is no spoiler to say there is nothing to be afraid of in this film. No blood to be seen, no jumps out of your seat. That could mean many supernatural and paranormal film fans will stay away, but they would be missing one of the most unusual and thought-provoking films seen in years. If you can look past the costume party white sheet with jagged eye-holes, you will find A Ghost Story (2017) to be a haunting reflection on grief and what lies beyond the last heartbeat.
Although it has an unsettling timeline, the story itself can be pared down to a few simple elements. We enter by eavesdropping on a young couple who are packing to leave their modest home. Known only as C (Casey Affleck) and M (Rooney Mara), she is keen to leave, he wants to stay. What happens next messes with our notions of time, space, death and beyond. Within seconds, we see him dead at the wheel of a crashed car. We watch her identify the body then walk out of a morgue. The camera remains fixed on the sheet until it slowly sits up. We follow it back to the house where it can only watch M in her stunned grief, unseen and unable to reach her. In a series of rapid time compressions, she packs and leaves, and is replaced by a procession of other families until the house becomes derelict and abandoned. All the time C watches alone. After a bulldozer flattens the house and a high-rise is built, we go back to when the property was an open prairie where a family of 19th century settlers are slaughtered by natives. C watches them decompose, still riveted to the place he too died. He returns to the time and place of his death to see himself and M arrive in their new home.
This unusual story unfolds from the viewpoint of a ghost. Once you are OK with that premise, everything else begins to make sense, depending on what you invest in the experience. When you let go of the usual paranormal genre tropes, you sense that ghosts occupy space without temporal boundaries and they do no harm. You also realise that cinema itself has conditioned our notions of linear time and physical place. Nobody has been there to report back, so who can refute the circularity of time after death? Nor do we know if ghosts can materially connect with the living or if they simply ‘belong’ at the place they became.
This low-budget high-risk film is one of the most innovative you will find in its genre but opinions are clustered at the extremes. Despite having a stellar duo in Casey Affleck and Rooney Mara, acting makes a limited contribution to what this film achieves. The silent Affleck is mostly under the sheet and Mara is brilliant for the time we see her. There are no CGI tricks and the film is shown through a round-corner square screen that is retro low-tech with editing and pace to unnerve you. Patience and faith are both needed and rewarded. The unbroken five-minute take of M sitting on her kitchen floor devouring a pie with C watching helplessly is a painfully exquisite portrait of transfixed grief. Surviving that scene can be a portal for a tale from the timeless beyond.
Director: David Lowery
Stars: Casey Affleck, Rooney Mara
A USA production
That pie scene was a little too long for me.
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LOL; it was too long for everybody Keith. But I guess time stands still for grief and ghosts are going nowhere. Once you realise that the camera is not stuck and that the story is conveying something, then the melancholy and helplessness becomes overwhelming.
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I got the emotion there but I guess it felt longer than it probably was.
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So is grief, Keith. But I get what you’re saying. It was uncomfortable. Meant to be.
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The first two lines make me want to see it all the more as I love unusual takes on ghost stories. If it can miss out the gore entirely I’m even more impressed. The grief part makes me lean away, for Esme is a sensitive soul and loses buckets of water when her heart strings are plucked. Would you call it a weepy film?
– Esme looking like the little flower she is and waving upon the Cloud
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While getting close to someone grieving is sad, I would not describe this as a weepy film. Its more meditative than anything else. I had as eerie sense of being somewhere I have never been but am sure of going. Maybe like living in a cloud?
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Very much want to see this one . . .
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Take heed of the warning: patience and faith will be rewarded.
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You got me with the intro paragraph, and then with “Patience and faith are both needed and rewarded.” Top that with no CGI? I’ve gotta see this one.
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Some friends saw this last night and were grateful for the warning about “patience and faith”. Most films are best consumed cold; not this one.
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I’ve been itching to see this–some like it, others not so. I’m glad you favored it, I dare say I will, too!
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Definitely a thinking person’s spook; should suit you well.
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Boy haircut Mara is the best Mara
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Very interesting! I totally missed this one but I love the premise
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Easy to miss a spook Michael, but worth tracking down.
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I just saw this film. You did a magnificent job of reviewing a difficult to understand and impossible to pigeonhole movie. For me the most poignant scene was as M drove away after loading up all her possessions (and sorting hers from his). That long scene with the low angled sun flashing in and out of her eyes really got to me. I was also intrigued by the party conversation about the inevitable impermanence of life. Would we call that a nihilistic diatribe? It was thought provoking, circular, and well, not rewarding because it was open-ended. This would be a heck of a film club discussion movie!
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Love reading your reaction. That packing scene got me too. Your description of a “hihilistic diatribe” is so apt. I’m guessing the director is messing with our minds here as it was so full of cliched sloganeering as a cover for expressing vulnerability and confusion. Would love to find the text. Dying to know what you thought of the pie-eating scene?
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It was loooong. But what Mara packed into those long uncomfortable minutes, without a syllable, and with only a few tightly controlled sniffles was nothing short of miraculous. (And I kept wondering what it was that she had to eat..what substance did they provide that she could give shoveling in like that, for I’m sure, more than one take!)
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I was taken by the disconnect between the eating and what we share of her feelings. Her actions were mechanised but angry and expressive. A masterful scene of impeccable minimalism.
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Minimalism. That’s it. And I’m a huge fan of minimalistic music. Philip Glass, be still my heart.
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As a rule I really like innovative films and I liked this. I’m not sure the director completely pulled it off and of course the pie eating scene stretched our patience, but I think he gave it a damned, good go. This was ‘my kind of ghost story’, as it brought some ‘existential’ questions to the fore…..though the concepts are obviously mutually exclusive. I felt very sorry for C, who was compelled to endure a lonely eternity.
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I’m not so sure about ‘ghost story’ and ‘existential’ questions being “obviously mutually exclusive” concepts. For me, thats the whole point of the film and why it works. We are conditioned by popular culture tropes to think of ghosts as evil or scary, while existential thought is lofty or philosophical. Ghosty Story shows a non-living facsimile of a sentient being as a hovering presence waiting to be released into the ether, disconnected from time or place. I find that a comforting notion as one approaches a time in life when, like Prospero, “every third thought is of the grave”.
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I wasn’t sure about their mutual exclusivity but I thought I’d better cover myself on the off-chance.
My thoughts on ghosts always centred along the lines: “What do you do when you’re not haunting? Doesn’t it get boring? Do you have any companionship or do you eat? Etc..etc?”
As for the notions of Prospero, I can relate. Fortunately I sorted out my position a long time ago and I’m quite comfortable with my conclusions.
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LOL! … Descarte would have loved.the very idea of a ghostly life being boring.
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Maybe Descarte hadn’t thought it through? Ha ha!
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