Posted 25 November 2019 - 07:28 PM
Oh, I forgot we also saw A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD on Friday, and it was a few things.
1. It was NOT what I was expecting. I was expecting a more biographical look directly at Fred Rogers, which this is not. That said, it was quite good telling the story it tells which is how in the late 90's Rogers life interweaves with the life of a young investigative journalist with a bunch of family issues stemming from his father.
2. It's got WEIRD ass scene transitions...basically the director took the concept of the Mr. Rogers Neighborhood opening with the miniature town diorama of the Rogers house/street...and expanded it to be used as the real films transitions...so it pans out and you see all of Pittsburg in hand-made diorama, or the streets and cars of the city where the scene is about to take place ect. So it switches often from the actual live scene to these almost Michel Gondry grassroots artsy sequences and back again. It's VERY strange and quite jarring. They also kind of follow this suit when they use a Mr. Rogers video tape of how a printing press prints magazines...which shows a sort of 70's/80's documentary of the concept accompanied by the "manufacturing line" piano music...that transitions weirdly into the first scene in the Esquire magazine HQ offices where the protagonist works...and then that is never used again. I feel like this movie is just WAY more artsy than I expected it to be.
3. It's well-acted across the board, with especially Hanks doing a stellar job. And I'm quite glad that while Hanks does a serviceable (if not perfect) job of imitating Fred Rogers speech, I'm VERY glad he didn't attempt to duplicate his very distinct Pennsylvanian accent. He does however ALMOST do a Rogers imitation that is a tad too much Forrest Gump...making Rogers soft-spoken, deliberate speaking seem as if he might have a disability that limits his speech instead of the just very frank and deliberate way Fred spoke.
I feel like overall this was good, but not great. The documentary on Netflix, WON'T YOU BE MY NEIGHBOR, is much more worth your time to get a dose of what made Fred Rogers tick. I think this is especially clear when there is a scene in this film where Fred tells Lloyd to take a moment of silence to remember those who loved him and how they resulted in his being who he is (and everyone in the restaurant does this with them because they heard Rogers say it)....this exact idea and scene is in WON'T YOU BE MY NEIGHBOR and the denouement of its point is MUCH more hard hit there because you get everyone replying that they largely thought about their mothers. In this film, the scene you never land that notion and it just ends with Fred saying "Thank you for doing that with me Lloyd"...which feels like it absolutely wastes the potential of that scene.
So while A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD is good, WON'T YOU BE MY NEIGHBOR is MUCH better.
"When the last tree has fallen, and the rivers are poisoned, you cannot eat money, oh no." ~Aurora
“Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone.” ~Ursula Vernon