Pleasantville
black
and white (nearly)...
I bought this on DVD
last week and though I had seen the film before I enjoyed it
again.I do like the story and the
effects are very
impressive.Fantastical writer
Gary Ross (Big, Dave) makes an auspicious directorial debut with this inspired
and oddly touching comedy about two 90s kids (Tobey Maguire and Reese
Witherspoon) thrust into the black-and-white TV world of Pleasantville, a Leave
It to Beaver-style sitcom complete with picket fences, corner malt shop and warm
chocolate chip cookies. When a somewhat unusual remote control (provided by
repairman Don Knotts) transports them from the jaded real world to G-rated TV
land, Maguire and Witherspoon are forced to play along as Bud and Mary Sue, the
obedient children of George and Betty Parker (William H Macy and Joan Allen).
Maguire, an obsessive Pleasantville devotee, understands the need for not
toppling the natural balance of things; Witherspoon, on the other hand, starts
shaking the town up, most notably when she takes football stud Skip (Paul
Walker) up to Lover's Lane for some modern-day fun and games. Soon enough,
Pleasantville's teens are discovering sex along with--gasp!--rock & roll,
free thinking and soul-changing Technicolour. Filled with delightful and shrewd
details about sitcom life (no toilets, no double beds, only two streets in the
town), Pleasantville is a joy to watch, not only for its comedy but for the
groundbreaking visual effects and astonishing production design as the town
gradually transforms from crisp black and white to glorious colour. Ross does
tip his hand a bit about halfway through the film, obscuring the movie's basic
message of the unpredictability of life with overloaded and obvious symbolism,
as the black-and-white denizens of the town gang up on the "coloureds" and
impose rules of conduct to keep their strait-laced town laced up. Still, the
characterizations from the phenomenal cast--especially repressed housewife Allen
and soda-shop owner Jeff Daniels, doing some of their best work ever--will keep
you emotionally invested in the film's outcome and waiting to see Pleasantville
in all its final Technicolor glory.
Posted: Tue - January 18, 2005 at 12:41 PM
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