Movie Review #59
The Aviator (2004)
Directed by Martin Scorsese
Written by John Logan
Rating: 7.75/10.00 or *** 1/2
Ambition is always a "baggage" personality trait, meaning that someone's drive is usually accompanied by something hidden, something that inhibits personal progress. That something could be an impossible goal, unsupportive friends and family, or personal problems. In the case of Howard Hughes, one could make an argument for any three of the reasons, but no one can dispute the most important of these was his personal troubles. Howard Hughes had a twinkle in his eye and a cloud over his head. His zealousness to succeed was his medication, but it would not be enough. Howard Hughes was doomed to solidarity, a life spent in one room repeating words over and over again, afraid to touch anything because of the suffering it might bring.
Martin Scorsese's The Aviator is a series of Howard Hughes's vignettes, from his formidably rich beginnings to his somber end with society. Scorsese presents a biography the way it should be. Unbiased and unrestrained. This is Scorsese's best effort since the vastly underrated Bringing out the Dead. But he hasn't quite come back to the greatness he once possessed.
The film begins with an energy few films ever reach. We see sweeping scenes of Hughes's efforts to make his late 1920s film Hell's Angels, an expensive but profitable effort. When he asks L. B. Mayer (Stanley DeSantis) for two cameras to film one of his most important scenes, Mayer laughs him off saying that 24 is certainly enough. Not for Hughes. Hughes was never satisfied, and everyone silently laughed at him for it. But Hughes seemed to be right about most things; he continued to acquire money and launch even more dangerous and seemingly impossible projects. From motion pictures to aviation, Hughes was at the forefront of discovery, and Scorsese presents this part of his life with amazing captivation. The film almost explodes with energy; the time hardly seems to go by and yet an hour has quickly passed.
This first hour is blessed with Cate Blanchett's pitch perfect portrayal of Katharine Hepburn. Blanchett elegantly and efficiently portrays the actress with a restrained grace. Her nuances are Hepburn's; her voice is nearly equivalent. Blanchett plays Hepburn with energy, compassion, and appropriate complexity. Although Hepburn eventually leaves Hughes, she never loses the fondness she has for him. Hughes returns the favor. These scenes are touching, graceful, magnificent. Blanchett's performance deservedly won her an Academy Award; she gives the film such an unbelievable amount of weight. When Blanchett's screen time all but ends, it creates a huge void in the film that never quite gets filled.
The film slowly becomes sinister in its second and third acts. The shadows are already present in the first hour, but they are subtle and for the most part insignificant. But the pain of Hughes's obsessive compulsive disorder is only beginning. In a pivotal scene, Hughes enters a bathroom to wash up. But he can't seem to quite do it. A guy asks Hughes to give him a towel. Hughes refuses. The guy walks around him, quietly mumbling his anger. Meanwhile, Hughes scrubs and scrubs. The guy leaves. Hughes starts to bleed from the incessant scrubbing. He stops and walks to the door, but he can't touch the handle. He can't get out of the bathroom until someone opens the door. At long last, someone does, and he darts out without touching anything. This is a brilliant scene, a clear foreshadow of his later solidarity. Hughes has all the power in the world except he cannot open a door.
The film suffers from the loss of Blanchett. Leonardo DiCaprio gives a good effort as Hughes; indeed, his performance is more assured than his previous Scorsese effort (Gangs of New York). But, he is nowhere close to perfect. Several of his scenes seem a bit overacted while others seem remarkably timid. His uneven performance becomes especially clear when sharing scenes with Kate Beckinsale (as Ava Gardner) and Kelli Garner (Faith Domergue). In fairness, this is due somewhat to the writing/editing, as the Gardner and Domergue sequences are vastly incomplete. These scenes should have been expanded or removed entirely. In fairness, Beckinsale and especially Garner give respectable efforts given their tragically short screen time.
Meanwhile, I think there is a little too much emphasis on the Spruce Goose scandal. Alan Alda gives a half-hearted performance as the greedy senator Ralph Owen Brewster, in cahoots with Pan-Am executive Juan Trippe (Alec Baldwin). Although the senate hearing scenes were generally effective, they seemed at times too long and too melodramatic. Alda's performance also took a lot away from these scenes, almost to the point of making Brewster a caricature of sorts. On the other end of the spectrum, Baldwin gives a credible performance as Trippe.
Other strong support comes from the underrated John C. Reilly as Hughes's social representative, the Ed McMahon of his life so to speak, Noah Dietrich. Whenever Hughes had an impossible financial demand, Dietrich somehow pulled through. Other cameos from Jude Law, Willem Dafoe, and Edward Herrmann are especially memorable.
There are tremendous sequences in The Aviator. There is a brilliant sequence involving a near plane crash and an even better one involving an actual plane crash. Several of the Hollywood scenes feel almost as if you are there right with them. Scorsese never had trouble portraying an era (Refer to The Age of Innocence or Raging Bull, e.g.), and he again masterfully recreates another one here. There is a delightful scene with Hepburn and Hughes in a plane ride above Los Angeles. Another great scene involves a meeting with MPAA honchos, when a meteorology professor instructs the men about the constructs of actresses' bosoms.
The film is haunted by its own construct in a way. It has such an energetic first hour that the second and third hours seem like a let-down at times. Indeed, this is a necessary progression, but it does hamper the film's effectiveness at times. Some of the storylines (e.g., the female relationships after Hepburn's) seemed to be cut too thin and at times were distracting. Although DiCaprio does fairly well in the film, I grew a little tired of his performance by the end. Overall, however, The Aviator is an impressive effort, showing me that Scorsese hasn't completely lost his touch.
By the end of the film, Hughes is shown as a desperate recluse, afraid to enter society. There is an extended sequence showing Hughes wallowing in a room, naked, watching movie after movie, for days and days. The scene is amazingly effective, unbelievably tragic. One can scarcely forget the first hour of the film, with Hughes so full of life. It seemed that nothing and no one could stop him. And really no one could. No one but himself.