Genre:
Supernatural mystery/Period Drama
Director: Neil Burger
Starring: Edward Norton, Paul Giamatti, Jessica
Biel and Rufus Sewell
RunTime: 1 hr 49 mins
Released By: Archer Entertainment APPL &
GV
Rating: PG
Release
Date: 18 January 2007
Synopsis
:
A
supernatural mystery set at the turn of the 19th century,
The Illusionist is a potent combination of romance, politics
and magic. The film stars Academy Award® nominees Edward
Norton (Fight Club, American History X) and Paul Giamatti
(Cinderella Man, Sideways) as two men pitted against each
other in a battle of wits.
Norton
plays a mysterious stage magician, Eisenheim, who bends nature’s
laws to his will in front of awestruck crowds. Giamatti co-stars
as Vienna’s shrewd Chief Inspector Uhl, a man committed
to uphold the law and for whom magic holds no place in his
ordered world.
Jessica
Biel (Elizabethtown, Stealth) shares the screen as the beautiful
and enigmatic Sophie von Teschen, who finds her future inexorably
altered when she encounters the man called Eisenheim, who
comes dangerously close to unlocking the dark secret of the
monarchy that she holds.
Movie
Review:
A film about magicians. Hmm...where
have i heard that one before?
If you have chanced upon Christopher Nolan’s
The Prestige, a much acclaimed (and probably deservingly so)
film about two rival magicians, one who’s a master of
his craft and the other who performs real magic, two traits
conflated into Norton’s magician in The Illusionist.
And the problem of course, is that when it comes to comparing
Nolan with any other director, nine times out of ten, the
Nolan pic will command more excitement, a theory only exacerbated
by the fact that the trailer for The Prestige is a shoe-in
for the best trailer of the year, garnering this encomium
from its ability to apprise the viewers of the basic plot
and characters while engendering an exhilarating gust of excitement,
yet giving away nothing seemingly ruinous.
On the other end, The Illusionist trailer
hints at a film with epic scope, with a love story that could
alter the fate of an empire, intimating a dark secret that
could easily confuse viewers into thinking it’s a horror
film. The film, based on Pulitzer Prize winning novelist Steven
Millhauser’s short story, Eisenheim the Illusionist,
which centers on Eisenheim (Norton), a mysterious and at times
tenebrous magician who is able to perform mesmerizing and
putatively impossible tricks. More so, in fact, than a regular
magician, for while a regular magician’s tricks rest
almost visibly on a thick sleeve or trick door, Eisenheim’s
tricks seem spawned from a child’s imagination, where
the concept of time and space is a mere whimsical thought
in the face of magic.
Shot by cinematographer Dick Pop, The Illusionist
stars Edward Norton as Eisenheim, a courtly yet enigmatic
magician whose uncanny powers hold Viennese audiences spellbound—including
professed cynic, Chief Inspector Uhl (Giamatti). Eisenheim's
renown eventually attracts the interest of arrogant Crown
Prince Leopold (Rufus Sewell), who volunteers his beautiful
fiancée, Sophie Von Teschen (Jessica Biel), to assist
Eisenheim onstage. What Leopold doesn't know is that Sophie
and Eisenheim have a history. Childhood sweethearts, they
haven't seen each other in years, but there's an immediate,
electric charge between them. Their deep, passionate connection
poses a grave threat to Leopold's politically motivated engagement
to Sophie—marrying her will insure his ascension to
the throne. He therefore orders Chief Inspector Uhl to expose
Eisenheim as a fraud, but after shadowing the illusionist,
even Uhl begins to wonder if Eisenheim may in fact have genuine
paranormal abilities.
But all may not be so rosy. With some rather
mixed bag of performance and a reveal neglectfully unoriginal,
there are some eye-catching sequences, including a faded,
sepia-toned flashback to Eisenheim's and Sophie's early days
together that sumptuously looks like it might have been shot
in the late 1800s. Individual images are also indelible, such
as a wall in Leopold's lair overstuffed with antlers and deer
heads that creepily encapsulates his misanthropic nature.
The woodsy exteriors, aided by its on-location Czech Republic
lensing, offset their tranquility with a foreboding sense
of danger.
Cast way against type, Giamatti is spectacular.
He makes Uhl’s duality absolutely believable, the goodness
of his soul battling viciously for control of his heart with
the driving pangs of a blind ambition which have lifted him
out of the doldrums of his life’s original station yet
have also made him assistant to a monster. The fragile friendship
he shares with Eisenheim awakens the dormant shards of the
inspector’s conscience, their battle of wills enough
to make him remember justice is a thing actually worth fighting,
and maybe dying, for. Giamatti nails this internal conflict
spectacularly, the actor digging his heels into the role so
completely his portrayal feels as lived in and genuine as
wearing a favorite shirt to bed.
The rest of the cast is solid if a bit uninspiring.
Norton is an intriguing enigma as Eisenheim, yet Burger only
allows the audience precious little insight into either the
man or his motives making it difficult to ever care for him
when things start closing in on their darkest hour. Sewell
does what he can to make Leopold more than a stock, power-mad
villain, while Biel is much better here than you’d have
ever expected based upon her work in things like “Stealth”
or “Seventh Heaven.” The problem is neither has
near enough screen time to make little more than a superficial
impression, their characters e as one dimensional and hollow
at the end as they were at the start.
But even with these strikes against it I
cannot dismiss what the director has tried to accomplish.
In many ways, Berger has attempted to do for period mysteries
what Bryan Singer did for modern day criminal noir with “The
Usual Suspects.” While his characters could use a little
bit more work, his handling of the picture’s central
themes and ambiguities border on the masterful.
In the end, Burger and Millhauser provide
a "solution" to the film's central mystery that
may strike some as prosaic, but that doesn't much compromise
the overall effect. Beautifully acted and handsomely mounted,
this gorgeous period piece is an intelligent and intriguing
exploration of "the dark arts"—less dependent
on mere hocus-pocus than on the convincing journey of the
soul undertaken by its hero.
Movie
Rating:
(A
beautiful captivating trick to a flawed illusion.)
Review
by Lokman B S
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