Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy out for a stroll in Before Midnight
Photo Credit: Sony Pictures Classics
Before Midnight
A+
A Review by Frederick Cholowski
Hollywood films have always
had a faulty perception of love and all that it entails. The films industry
often overdramatizes the idea of romance to bring an audience to a theater without
truly investigating the reality of love and a relationship. This is why it’s
always refreshing when the rare film like Before Midnight is released that
provides a more realistic look of the nature and challenges of long term love.
This is the best in the “Before” trilogy (it really is a funny thing to think that
there have been more than one film) and is easily not only the best film of
2013 but the best film I’ve seen in quite some time (yes perhaps even better
than all of the fantastic films of last year). It’s going to takes something truly
special to beat this knock this off the top of the hill in 2013.
Before Midnight is the third in
the so far “Before” trilogy all of whom investigates different stages of human
love. The first, Before Sunrise showed the dizzying feeling of near instant
love and the way it’s handled in just a single night. The second, Before Sunset
investigated the reconnection and the regrets when the two meet up for the
second time after nine years of being apart. Before Midnight picks up about
nine years after Before Sunset, but instead of Jesse and Celine (played as
usual by the amazing Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy) being apart during the nine
years they have built a new life together. Before Midnight, through a series of
investigative conversations investigates the long term nature of their relationship
and how they have dealt with being in a more mature relationship. Safe to say
it’s not as easy as it seems.
There are always a handful of
elements that can be expected in a “Before” film. The first is the sharp writing.
When boiled down to its basic elements Before Midnight is essentially a series
of conversations between Jesse, Celine and a few brief guest appearances. In
this kind of film dialogue is absolutely essential and here it’s near perfect.
Conversations feel like real conversations often taking routes into different
subjects and even the random, but that ultimately are connected in an intimate
way. The dialogue is improvisational and truly brilliant perfectly capturing
not only really engaging and funny conversations but the true developed feelings
of Jesse and Celine and the relationship they are in.
The second element to expect
is fantastic acting from both Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy. At this point Ethan
Hawke and Julie Delpy play such a believable pair that they may as well be
together. Their continued impeccable chemistry shows two characters that know
each other almost too well and can play off each other practically perfectly.
Their chemistry is only heightened in this film with the material they are
given and it’s truly a fantastic thing to watch them play off each other for
nearly two hours.
The element that makes Before
Midnight even more fantastic then the rest of the films is that Before Midnight
reaches into some darker places this go around. The film shows the pain and
bitterness in their growing relationship in the ways that the previous two
films in the series did not. Jesse and Celine have now been together for a long
period of time and all the frustrations and nitpicks in their relationship
begin to come out. The film also displays this by having Jesse and Celine
actually interact with other characters (especially well in a fantastic dinner
scene that has a great French cinema feel to it) in the first half of the film
allowing writer/director Richard Linklater, and his actors and co-writers Ethan
Hawke, and Julie Delpy to really express how Jesse and Celine work as a
relationship in a group before they are again sent out on long conversations
between just to two of them.
Visually the film keeps it
simple, much to the betterment of the film. Linklater, at this point, has
immense respect for these actors and the dialogue that has been written and
improvised and ultimately stays out of the way of the proceedings with very
simple camera work. Long takes are often used to allow a conversation to flow
and change, as the relationship between these two characters is allowed to
simply unfold. The visuals are simple and elegant allowing for the writing and
acting to do the work. The same thing applies to the score that is soothing and
simple and provides a nice background to the proceedings. It all amounts to a
simple yet perfect feeling visual presentation that complements the true centre
of the film, the conversations.
Before Midnight is easily the
best motion picture to hit theaters in 2013 so far. It provides a look at how tough a
relationship can be and the truth of a “happily ever after.” It provides a
series of conversations that provide powerful, realistic insight into the world
of long term relationships in a way that very few other films can. It’s a masterpiece
of a romance film that is truly in the top of its class. I most likely won't see a better film in 2013 then Before Midnight.
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