by A.J.
Best Pictures #30:
2016 (89th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee
Set in a working class black neighborhood in mid-1950’s Pittsburgh, Fences is the story of an aging and bitter man, Troy Maxson (Washington), and his strained if not dysfunctional relationship with his sons and his wife, Rose (Viola Davis). To say that Troy thinks of himself as a working-class hero would be an understatement. Everything he does, whether at work or at home, is done out of sense of responsibility and obligation. Loving, or even liking, his own family doesn’t enter in to it; Troy puts a roof over their heads and food on the table because that is what he is supposed to do. Shouldn’t that be enough? Shouldn’t his teenage son, Cory, forego school sports and potential recruitment by a college to help Troy build a fence in return? Or perhaps Troy is afraid of seeing his own failed professional sports aspirations realized by his son? There is a lot to observe and ponder and it is no wonder that Fences is assigned reading for certain college classes.
I haven’t seen either of the films Denzel Washington has directed previously (2002's Antwone Fisher and 2007's The Great Debaters), but here his directorial style is simple and straightforward: let the performances carry the movie forward. This approach works, to a point. Fences, being based on a play, is dialogue heavy. There isn’t much fence building or baseball playing, though both are important to the story; they are more important as metaphors. What is important is the performances which are very good indeed. Troy is a complex but not very likable character—no doubt this is what was intended by Wilson—and Washington excellently plays him as such. He has a comfort and ease for the rhythm of Wilson’s dialogue. Conversations with Troy usually turn into monologues that his family and friends have heard before but tolerate. Viola Davis’s Rose is a mostly reactionary character, but only because there is no other way to be with a character like Troy. She is the one who patches things up with Troy’s sons and his mentally disabled brother, Gabe. Rose finally does get a big scene pouring out her feelings and frustrations which is delivered quite well by Davis.
I didn’t mind the heavyhandedness of the fence metaphor. Troy’s jovial and wiser than he lets on best friend, Bono, tells him that some people build fences to keep people out and some people build fences to keep people in. The film does not treat this as a revelation, but as a reminder to Troy that certain situations must be dealt with sooner rather than later.
Nominee: Todd Black, Scott Rudin, Denzel Washington
Director: Denzel Washington
Screenplay: August Wilson, based on his play
Cast: Denzel Washington, Viola Davis, Stephen Henderson
Production Companies: Bron Creative, Macro Media, Scott
Rudin Productions
Distributor: Paramount Pictures
Release Date: December 16th, 2016
Total Nominations: 4, including Best PictureOther Nominations: Actor-Denzel Washington, Supporting Actress-Viola Davis, Adapted Screenplay-August Wilson
No comments:
Post a Comment