Genre:
Romance/Comedy
Director: Woody Allen
Starring: Scarlett Johansson, Hugh Jackman,
Woody Allen, Ian McShane
RunTime: -
Released By: GV and Festive Films
Rating: PG
Opening
Day: 5 October 2006
Synopsis
:
SCOOP
is the second film Woody Allen shot in London with Scarlett
Johansson after "Match Point". SCOOP is a mystery
romantic comedy where an American journalist intern (Johansson)
tries to uncover of a mysterious serial killer. Could the
killer really be this elegant, charming English aristocrat
(Jackman) ?
Movie
Review:
Free
from the shackles of proving his worth to a new generation
of moviegoers after his noir-drama (with the barest morsel
of comedy) in “Match Point”, he’s once again
piercing through the British upper crust with a knife and
serving it up on his new favourite dish in Scarlett Johansson.
After showing that he still had the chops to please audiences
and critics alike, he now takes on a lighter and more playful
farce (that can often be the most difficult genre to pull
off) with the same thematic alignments of “Match Point”.
Adopting
London as his new New York, Allen headlines his own comedic
return as an anachronistic, uncouth vaudevillian magician,
summing up his Sidney Waterman “persona” who’s
caught up way over his head. He’s foreign in more ways
than one, when it comes to past that no one in the film really
knows what to make of him. Still carrying out his old school
awkwardness, he’s now a self-parody that’s more
out of touch than misanthropic. Baffling to say the least.
But it’s
an unwelcome transition of sorts for Allen. It’s a self-aware
Woody Allen practising his own shtick in front of the lens’s
reflection while taking himself out of the leading man equation
where every plot thread used to run through his character.
Now, he’s just become a passing witness to his patented
spiel.
He’s
the Woody Allen that has lost his innocent, endearing neurosis
and his refreshingly simplistic view of big city living. As
his nervous tic becomes part of his character trait, he is
still undoubtedly the biggest attraction in the film, even
as his dire, recycled punchlines fall flat and his co-stars
inattentively follow suit in an uneven throwback to 40s and
50s comedy fare.
Johansson
takes on Lois Lane’s intrepidity with a side of enthusiasm
instead of journalistic talent. Hiding her radiant beauty
and killer body behind frappy sweaters and large glasses,
she relinquishes class for a touch of sniveling naiveté
and an almost innocent triviality for sexual relations while
not being adverse to using her “feminine wiles”
to get what she wants. Hugh Jackman plays Hugh Jackman in
“Kate and Leopold”, as in a handsome, charismatic
Brit who’s able to charm the pants of anyone. But as
mentioned earlier, Woody Allen steals the show from anyone
of these guys and unfortunately that’s not really saying
plenty. They are now part of the classic Woody Allen set-ups,
but without any of the crutches that he used to afford his
co-stars.
Allen
lingers on the comedy in scenes instead of propelling the
story from point A to point B. He’s no longer interested
in building on his characters and their ardent relationships
as much as he is interested in feeding off the sparks from
their flintlock interactions, just to find something funny
out of anything. He directs through his script and more pointedly,
the dialogue and actions by building on our morbid fascination
with his self-destructive charm act.
London’s
a full fledged character here and it’s even more pronounced
this time as its idiosyncrasies become an obstacle for the
conspicuously coarse Allen and his young, nubile protagonist
in the world of constipated British high society that only
a New Yorker could have possibly envision. Even while saying
nothing worth saying in particular, Allen shares an inside
joke with the audience about generational gaps and aging,
possibly about his uninteresting interest in the lives of
younger, affluent people and the extreme moral ambiguities
they face.
Movie
Rating:
(Woody Allen is a comedy stalwart that can never be successfully
imitated - not even by himself)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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