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Observe the extreme self-control with which I refrain from making some sort of lame subject-line pun about pilgrimage, or something. Although it was: I've been looking forward to Scott Pilgrim for months, on account of (a) hopeless Brian Lee O'Malley fangirling, (b) hopeless Edgar Wright fangirling, and (c) general nerdy indy-music video-game fangirling.

So, first off: wheee! I am somewhat thoroughly immersed in the comic books, having read the whole series three times since August, when I bought them in a bizarre and distributed acquisition spree across two airports, three bookshops and the length, lingth and longth of Britain. I <3 Edgar Wright. The mood, tone and feel of the film is pitch-perfect; it's almost impeccably cast, cleverly scripted, and the editing and cinematography are always competent and occasionally bloody marvellous. It's in spirit and very largely in plot an extremely faithful adaptation, with whole chunks of dialogue and framing of shots stolen wholesale from the comics. It made me giggle with unseemly glee rather often. (Particularly, for some reason, in the first Sex Bob-Omb song. I don't know if it was simply the dreadful Canal Walk sound, but the whole thing came across with the absolutely perfect incoherent repetitive garage-band distort. It made me very happy.)

The six books of the comic are rather a chunk of narrative to cram into a (mercifully short! - I wish more modern movies would keep it under 2 hours) film, and by necessity some subplots were lost. I can see why they did it, but I mourn the absence of Knives Chau's sword-wielding dad, the gay Stephen Stills thread and Envy's bionic-armed drummer having the fling with the vegan Evil Ex. I also very much didn't enjoy the relocation of the Knives/Ramona fight from the library to the final confrontation with Gideon, it seemed to me to thematically distort the whole thing: Ramona/Scott/Knives is never a legitimate triangle, it's always Scott/Ramona/Gideon. I suppose they had to lose the more weird and confusing bits inside Ramona's head, but it also, I think, weakened the conflict to reduce it to a DNI on the back of Ramona's neck. Sigh. Besides, it denied me the joy of watching Scott crawl into Ramona's dimension-warping handbag, which has always seemed to me to be a beautifully incongruous Freudian image.

The casting is genius, or at least mostly genius. I took an unholy pleasure in watching Brandon Routh and Chris Evans send themselves up - they did it so wholeheartedly. A lot of the casting was visually spot-on, with Kim Pine, all the evil exes and Stephen Stills being particularly faithful visual echos of the comics. You don't realise how much a real actor can look like a line drawing until you see it in action. Ramona wasn't quite perfect, but I thoroughly enjoyed her nonetheless, possibly because she reminded me continuously and irresistibly of Nantalith, who simply has to dye her hair pink sometime for my amusement. The casting which didn't quite work for me, strangely, was in Envy and Scott. As she's drawn, Envy Adams is absolutely the best excuse any movie will ever have to cast a high-cheekboned pointy-faced stick insect, which Brie Larson, despite some seriously rocking moves during the Clash at Demonhead performance, simply isn't. (Also, who's called Brie, anyway? now I'm hungry). And Michael Cera, despite being a reasonable approximation of Scott in terms of nerdy vagueness, is always and inescapably Michael Cera.

Quibbling aside, however, I loved this movie - I loved its speed, its ability to mimic the comics in a narrative construction which is all about inconsequential juxapositions, its faithful visual renditions not only of characters but of all the video-game nods and elements. I loved the over-the-top framing of the fight choreography and the way that the film didn't fulfil my fear that they'd disrupt its central fantasy conceit, that Scott Pilgrim can kick anyone's butt. (So many contemporary fantasy films bog down in "The Hero Acquires His Skills". It's trite. The comics make me very happy in their complete refusal to examine how it is that Scott does what he does). I loved the music. The music made me nostalgic for my days in a garage band, and I've never even been in a garage band.

This is one for the DVD collection. I shall happily re-watch it whenever I want to break out my delusion that Hollywood can make movies which are sensitive to their source material, and are able to embody the happy, essentially innocent fantasy of a world in which the extra geeky dimensions are unquestioned and joyously real. Or whatever.

Que Cera, Cera

Date: Sunday, 2 January 2011 11:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pinkthulhu.livejournal.com
For some reason it apparently didnt do that well at the box-office; perhaps the Michael Cera irritation factor creeping in:

http://io9.com/5613417/scott-pilgrim-vs-the-lamentable-weekend-gross-++-what-happened

I'm looking forward to seeing it though.

http://io9.com/5680190/watch-captain-america-stick-his-skateboard-trick-in-this-scott-pilgrim-bonus-clip

Re: Que Cera, Cera

Date: Sunday, 2 January 2011 07:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] extemporanea.livejournal.com
Very tiny band of target demographic, I think: ironic whimsical video-game nerd slackers, or people able to enjoy perambulations of same. Very cute skateboard clip, though!

Date: Sunday, 2 January 2011 01:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grumpyolddog.livejournal.com
This movie bored me to tears. Would not rewatch. Not even quite bad enough to be funny.

Date: Sunday, 2 January 2011 07:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] extemporanea.livejournal.com
Alas, you are clearly not the target market. I am very willing to concede an extremely narrow appeal into which I clearly fit rather neatly.

Date: Monday, 3 January 2011 06:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] extemporanea.livejournal.com
p.s. interesting question: did you enjoy Hot Fuzz or Shaun of the Dead? There are serious similarities in tone.

Date: Monday, 3 January 2011 01:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grumpyolddog.livejournal.com
Both very much, although Shaun.. was by far the superior film because it was unencumbered by horrible attempts at comedy accents and a frankly dislikeable lead character which is not something Simon Pegg can do all that well.

I don't see the similarities on the grounds that both were good and very funny where Scott Pilgrim is shit.

Date: Monday, 3 January 2011 02:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] extemporanea.livejournal.com
:>. I beg to differ. What SP is doing is a very highly specific thing and I am completely willing to admit it's not everyone's cup of tea, but what it does, I think it does very well.

The similarities are in the wholehearted, affectionate and ironic adoption of a highly specific set of tropes and genre conventions - whether it's zombie films or buddy cop films or video games, Edgar Wright really does the same thing over and over. It tickles my genre fancy something 'orrible. But I'm odd that way.

Date: Monday, 3 January 2011 03:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grumpyolddog.livejournal.com
Unsurprisingly, I disagree. Shaun was great because it subverted exactly one genre and that genre was not the zombie flick; it was the romantic comedy. First, it did this from the bloke's point of view which is almost unheard of since romcoms pretty much much belong to Nora Ephraim and whichever pointless cow wrote Bridget Jones - forgive me if my preferences are showing - and secondly, it used zombies as a plot device rather than the main feature.

If you watch Shaun as a zombie flick, it's actually quite ordinary and doesn't mess with the formula at all. Watch it as a romcom and suddenly, it's a different (much cleverer) film.

Hot Fuzz lacked a lot of this and was mainly carried on Nick Frost's ability to hold up a script and several good jokes (along with a lot of really bad ones). On the whole though, it ended up being a fairly ordinary comedy cop film and nothing we haven't seen before.

Scott Pilgrim is just bad.

Date: Monday, 3 January 2011 03:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] extemporanea.livejournal.com
I think Shaun was equally aware of its zombie and romcom antecedents, the joke was really in the mixture. Point well taken re the bloke's view of the romcom, but to be perfectly fair, Scott Pilgrim is doing exactly the same thing. I am completely with you on Bridget Jones, she's a pain in the butt in both book and film forms.

I fear I thoroughly enjoyed Simon Pegg playing dead against type in Hot Fuzz. I think it had way more nuance than an "ordinary comedy cop film".

Thank you for your spirited disagreement ;>. A pleasant little exercise in sharply differing opinions which are going to remain, I fear, sharply differing.

Date: Monday, 3 January 2011 03:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grumpyolddog.livejournal.com
Well, as someone who has a fairly strong West Country accent - unless I choose not to - Hot Fuzz irritated me with its "look at these rural thickos!" subtext.

I may try to filter that and view as an inherently snobbish Londoner might sometime.

Hooray!

Date: Sunday, 2 January 2011 07:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] first-fallen.livejournal.com
I'm glad you finally saw it! I loved it. I don't know what your problem with Michael Cera is, he's lovely :).

Saw Tron today, was very disappointed. Not nearly as much fun as SP. It's a bad sign when you're yawning and wondering when the movie will be over :(

Re: Hooray!

Date: Sunday, 2 January 2011 07:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] extemporanea.livejournal.com
My problem with Michael Cera is that he's always Michael Cera. His characters are all versions of the same thing. It works quite well for Scott, but it's still not quite Scott.

Date: Sunday, 2 January 2011 10:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mac1235.livejournal.com
I loved it!

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