“What if it wasn’t worth it?” George Clooney is not Jay Kelly. But there is a degree of George Clooney in Jay Kelly. And vice versa. Their acting careers started about the same time and have gone in similar directions (strikingly so as we eventually see), and they are both at a point now where they are globally recognized superstar celebrities. And it is perhaps true of both that they find it exhausting. The biggest point of divergence is in their personal lives -Clooney does not have the grown daughters estranged from him that Jay does, and is not plagued with guilt over neglecting them. But you can believe he fears he might have in this alternate version of his life. There have long been movies about how stardom is a difficult thing for a person, but director Noah Baumbach hits at it more pointedly than most. He and Clooney, along with co-writer Emily Mortimer, tap into some very honest aspects of the supposed emptiness of not just celebrity but aging celebrity -a head space where re...
If you were to guess based off the name Whit Stillman what kind of movie he would direct, you would probably come up with something approximating Metropolitan . Both he and his film feel like they would be most comfortable in the Edwardian era and the comedy of manners sensibilities of P.G. Wodehouse. He apparently did intend the film not to be set in the modern day, but didn’t have the budget enough to convincingly replicate a period setting. But of course his characters, barring just a couple, all feel ripped from another time and place -posh and aristocratic in a way I can’t imagine even the most egregious elites of the modern day trying to keep up. But then, that itself is a notable facet of the film. The movie is set in the midst of ‘debutante season’ on the Upper East Side of New York -which coincides with Christmas- and follows an outsiders view into the insular lives and traditions of a crew of wealthy young socialites. Due to a mix-up, an educated but middle-class Princeton st...