Genre:
Drama
Director: Steven Shainberg
Cast: Nicole Kidman, Robert Downey Jr., Ty
Burrell, Harris Yulin, Jane Alexander, Emmy Clarke, Genevieve
McCarthy
RunTime: 2 hrs
Released By: Warner Bros
Rating: M18
Opening
Day: 11 January 2007
Synopsis
:
Set
in New York in the late 1950s, FUR conjures an image of visionary
artist Diane Arbus by intertwining a fictional romance with
aspects of Arbus’ life in order to explore the mysterious
artistic development of a woman who is now regarded as one
of the most influential photographers of all time.
Movie
Review:
In facetious literary terms, Diane Arbus (that’s
pronounced ‘Dee-Ann’) would be dismissed as just
another poor little rich girl. On Arbus’s terms, she
rose swiftly and almost suddenly to strike back at the alienation
she felt. From being in danger of becoming just another a
crusted New York housewife with an upper-middle class background
to becoming one of avant-garde photography’s greatest
legends, Diane Arbus transcends just being a pioneering female
figure. Indeed, the director Steven Shainberg does not intend
to merely pay tribute to her, but to every artist and to everyone
who dared break the mould to pursue their desires.
Born
Diane Nemerov, Diane (Nicole Kidman) was considered a gifted
child. But being devoid of attention (the type she preferred
anyway) in the phallocentric 40s gave rise to the feeling
of rebelliousness in her. She met and married fashion photographer
Allan Arbus (Ty Burrell), a tumultuous marriage if anything
but one that served to provide an avenue for Diane’s
bustling imagination and intelligence. It’s important
to note that the “Fur” does not acquaint us with
her life’s numerous ups and downs but praises her most
prevailing aspect – a career as one of the most influential
photographers of the century. In such, it’s not a description
of her successes but one that explores her processes as she
walks the line between obsession and artistry, and what triggered
that explosion of insight that she innately shared through
her photographs.
What
“Fur” does do is try to imaginatively recreate
the months in between Arbus’s life as she leaves her
husband’s side to work on her notion of photography,
her own personality. Although based on Arbus’s life,
it’s hard to call “Fur” a biography in any
sense of the word when it’s suitably a fantasy, one
borne of utter whimsy that directly relates to Arbus’s
own capricious nature and curiosity. “Fur” hypothesises
an experience Arbus has with a kindred spirit. From this person,
she’s inspired to work her magic with the marginalised
of society, from whom she eventually made her name.
During
a moment away from her life’s façades as wife
and assistant to her husband, she becomes intrigued, drawn
towards a hooded man that lives upstairs. His name is Lionel
Sweeney (Robert Downey Jr.) and he’s covered in hair
(or fur as it is insisted upon in order to provide a connection
to Arbus’s father), the hirsute body hiding the subject,
the mentor that Diane desperately needs. Thus, we have a darkly
comic fairy tale rife with sexual tension and a quaint sensation
of discovery as we are propelled into a fantasy-fuelled expedition
into Diane’s catalyst for the rest of her life.
Nicole
Kidman seems a strange choice in the context of Arbus’s
life but not as Diane Arbus in “Fur”. Bearing
not much of a resemblance to Arbus, but probably to the models
that plagued her creative bone for much of Arbus’s early
career with her husband in tow. Kidman is ethereal in “Fur”,
a waifish porcelain countenance that seems to float off the
ground is in direct contract to Arbus’s grounded personality
and experiences, one that’s seen enough to know enough.
But what Kidman gets right is a keen intuitiveness and intensity,
and that’s all that’s needed to replicate her
subject’s progression into the legend she became.
In
an invigorating and stimulating palette, the camera captures
Arbus’s passion and observes lovingly. It’s reasonably
tough to photograph a remarkable photographer, but the lensing
is more than adequately eye-catching and fawns over her with
a measure of sympathy and awe. While navigating through the
lives of such incalculably talented artists like Sylvia Plath
and Diane Arbus and the inextricable sadness attached to them,
“Fur” is determined to uplift in spite of a tragic
ending in Arbus’s life.
Movie
Rating:
(A fascinating insight into a captivating personality)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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