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The Americanization of Emily
It's a good movie but not a great movie and for me its biggest problem is that it is a satire and, as often happens with satires, its message take precedence over its story and its characters. And that's where my conflict arises. I have great sympathy for the message in The Americanization of Emily. It's a message I would want to communicate if I were communicating a message. But the movie, as a satisfying story, suffers because the message overwhelms it.
Julie Andrews is a woman whose path crosses his and she has a sense of honour and the military that, to put it mildly, doesn't sit well with Garner's. She and Garner are completely at odds and so, as you can imagine, a romance arises. This story line - the characters' story, the romance - is one of the two primary threads in the film. The other, however, is the focus of the satire and it concerns how the adulation of heroes in war is at least partly responsible for the perpetuation of military conflict. Garner's unheroic character, his cowardly Lt. Comdr. Charles E. Madison, is in complete contrast to the image of the military hero.
Having said that, it's not that this is a bad movie. It has some very good moments. The movie as a whole, however, isn't satisfying. It doesn't cohere well. One of the movie's great moments, by the way, actually belongs to the story line I like least, the satire.
Unfortunately, a single scene does not a movie make. So I'm left with my overall feeling ... This is a movie whose motives I feel great sympathy for but whose execution I can't get on side with. Satire generally only moves me for a few moments. As 90 or 120 minute films, they generally bore me. Here, there's the germ of a nice romantic story but it never gets off the ground because the filmmakers are more interested in getting their message across. It's a good message. Unfortunately, I don't like messages in my movies. I prefer good stories and interesting characters. In this case, close but no cigar. © 2005 Piddleville Inc. |
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