BCNN1 - black news, christian news
Front Page   Search BCNN1   Make BCNN1 Your Homepage   Refresh this Page   About   Contact   Links   Advertise   Privacy Policy   Sitemap
Christian News Black News National News World News Business News Financial News Health News Entertainment News Sports News Technology News Books Eye on Africa Opinion BCNN1 Home Page

Amelia Movie Review

| 10 Comments | No TrackBacks

 
amelia-hilary-swankjpg-c7cdc2e6e7dc0b9e_large.jpgThe press called her a "lady pilot," but Amelia Earhart called herself a "tramp flyer." 

 

She seems to have preferred "flyer" to "pilot"; perhaps it was just a manner of speech, or perhaps it was the sky she cared about more than the airplane, the act of flying rather than the mechanics of manning an aircraft. The other word she liked was "vagabonding." As imagined in Amelia, Mira Nair's handsome biopic, Earhart craves freedom above all: "no borders, only horizons."

I came away from Amelia wanting to read the books on which it professes to be based, Susan Butler's East to the Dawn and Mary S. Lovell's The Sound of Wings. Mission accomplished? Yes and no. To the extent that the film elevates Earhart's profile and sends curious viewers to biographies and websites to learn more, Nair and company, and Earhart advocates generally, may be pleased.

Will the film itself please Earhart fans? Hard to say. Amelia piques my curiosity more than it satisfies it. Not knowing much about Earhart, I'm surprised at how little the film surprised me. I want to read the books to find the surprises the movie left out. I found the movie a decent enough take, though I suspect the film may be subject to a law of inverse relationship of knowledge to enjoyment: The more you know about Earhart, the less satisfied you may be with the film.

Amelia Movie.jpg
But it's worth seeing, perhaps, just to see Hilary Swank as Earhart. It seems incomprehensible that Amelia is the first big-screen biopic of the pioneering feminist aviator, but the very idea of Swank as Earhart is so obviously right that it's hard to imagine anyone else carrying an Earhart biopic. (I haven't seen the 1994 TV movie starring Diane Keaton, but looks aside, Keaton seems all wrong. Incidentally, Amy Adams did not play Amelia Earhart in Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian; she played an animated waxwork representation of Earhart, just as Robin Williams doesn't play the real Teddy Roosevelt.)

Swank not only looks like Earhart, her whole persona--matter of fact, down to earth, blunt, driven, but not larger than life--all seem ideally suited to the Earhart mythos. Her smile, her presence, her attitude, everything seems right. Amelia has garnered obvious comparisons to Martin Scorsese's The Aviator (deleted scenes from which included Jane Lynch as Earhart). The Aviator is probably a more interesting movie, but DiCaprio never embodied Howard Hughes the way Swank embodies Earhart.

It is harder to see Richard Gere as publishing magnate George P. Putnam, Earhart's promoter
amelia_movie_poster_01.jpg
and publisher, and eventually lover and husband, or Ewan MacGregor as Army pilot Gene Vidal, with whom Amelia worked in various capacities and with whom the film proposes she had an extramarital fling. In part this may be because unlike Amelia, Putnam and Vidal (the father of Gore Vidal, who appears as a boy) don't have the same public personas which Gere and MacGregor might or might not approximate--an issue only compounded by the comparative familiarity of the two actors.

MacGregor does persuasively pull off Putnam's gradual shift from professional interest in Amelia, to affection, to infatuation, to unconditional love. Amelia's need for freedom without boundaries makes her wary of George's attentions: "I can't endure even a beautiful cage," she says.

When she finally does accept his proposal of marriage, it is with the explicit proviso--in writing--that she will not hold him "to a medieval code of faithfulness," nor consider herself bound to such a code. She even insists on a sort of one-year trial marriage, a forward-thinking prenuptial agreement that George accepts reluctantly, only because he wants Amelia on whatever terms he can get her. George believes that he will be able to make Earhart happy; the movie suggests that he succeeds, though it takes her some time to realize this.

The commercial side of Amelia Earhart is one of the more intriguing things about the story. Amelia indicates that Amelia Earhart only became Amelia Earhart because Putnam wanted a woman flyer--preferably a physically attractive one--for publicity purposes. Amelia's initial flight over the Atlantic was a stunt, and she herself was a passenger, which needled her so much that she eventually repeated the flight solo, becoming only the second person to do so after Lindburgh.

To fund her ongoing passion for flying, Amelia does celebrity product endorsements, makes appearances, writes books (published by Putnam, of course), and even launches her own brand name line of clothing, luggage, and other promotional items. "The only way to finance your flying," George reminds her, "is to make enough money to finance your flying." Well, there you go.

amelia-hilary-swank-and-richard-gere.jpg
I was reminded of the marketing of the Iwo Jima heroes in Clint Eastwood's Flags of Our Fathers, the difference being that Earhart was the primary (though not the sole) beneficiary of her own self-marketing. It's like there are two Amelias--the public Amelia whom the private Amelia accepts as the condition for the private Amelia's freedom.

Although the flying footage is beautifully done, I like best the scenes in which Amelia lands, arriving unexpectedly in some distant corner of the world that wasn't expecting her, and that in some cases she didn't expect to be. Splashing down in the coastal waters off the British Isles, she asks the locals who greet her with a Celtic chorus whether it's an Irish custom to welcome visitors with song. "I wouldn't know," replies a policeman. "This is Wales!" On her second, solo trans-Atlantic flight, aiming for Paris, she arrives instead in Ireland. I would have liked to see landings like this from the locals' perspective, with the quiet of the countryside slowly penetrated by the roar of distant engines in the sky.

The final act, on the last leg of Earhart's foiled, fatal attempt to circumnavigate the globe, is tense and gripping, despite the foregone conclusion. The frustration of the Howland Island officers monitoring Earhart's final transmission is haunting, and I appreciate the film's restraint in sticking to the known facts rather than playing out one or another of the less plausible theories of her final end.

Still, if there's something elusively incomplete about the film, I don't think it's the uncertainty of her fate or the incompleteness of her final flight. Amelia is a fine tribute to an American pioneer, but I feel sure that Earhart's story merits, and would reward, a more searching and thoughtful exploration. 

SOURCE: Christianity Today - Steven D. Greydanus
Comments | RSS  | 
| More

 

Try Angie's List!

Related Posts with Thumbnails

10 Comments

Please help us to monitor our comments by reporting abusive, spam, offensive, illegal, racist or libelous posts to bcnn1(at)bcnn1.com.

Louisiana drug rehabilitation center and LA alcohol rehab center offering treatments for addictions to alcohol, drugs, gambling and dual diagnosis. 2 Nov 2010 ... Lastest Confidential Drug Treatment News · A Better Tomorrow drug and alcohol treatment center, Drug Rehab programs ...Drug Rehab Center, Alcohol Rehab Center – RecoveryConnection.org. Find a drug rehab center or alcohol rehab center. Locate an alcohol rehab center or drug ... Drug rehab Addiction to drugs is not only a medical disease, but in the case of prescription drug addiction, it is also something that cannot be helped. 16 Sep 2008 ... An Asian elephant that was fed bananas laced with heroin by cruel smugglers to keep him under control has been put through a detox program ...Drug Addiction Treatment Programs - EDTreatmentCenters.com. Find drug addiction treatment programs with our helpline. Licensed drug addiction treatment ...

You made a number of good points there. I did a search on the theme and found the majority of folks will have the same opinion with your blog.

You completed various fine points there. I did a search on the theme and found the majority of folks will agree with your blog.

Well I really liked reading it. This article provided by you is very effective for proper planning.

I feel one of your ads initiated my web browser to resize, you might well need to place that on your blacklist.

Can you email me with a few hints about how you made your blog look this awesome , I'd be thankful.

Hey, I found your website is especially intriguing. I enjoyed your blog a bunch. Thanks again for taking the time to put this online. I certainly loved every part of it.

This is great stuff, its awesome to be in the know.

This blog appears to get a large ammount of visitors. How do you get traffic to it? It gives a nice unique twist on things. I guess having something real or substantial to post about is the most important thing.

How do you make your blog site look this cool. Email me if you get the chance and share your wisdom. I'd be thankful!

Leave a comment

Weekly Bible verses and Christian quotes

 

Christian Cash Assistance

 

Black news of interest in the Christian community

The BCNN1 advertisement policy

Connect with BCNN1

BCNN1 on Facebook BCNN1 on Twitter Get the BCNN1 RSS Feed Del.icio.us Add BCNN1 to your Google home page StumbleUpon Add BCNN1 to your Yahoo home page Technorati

Need Prayer?

Christian News

On Being Saved in Black America What to do after you enter through the door BCNN1/BCBC National Bestsellers List BCNN1/BCBC National Bestsellers List Black Christian Book Promo Videos What to do to go to Hell Job Search World Time MSNBC Morning Joe Meet the Press CNN CBS News Nightly News The Today Show NBC Fox News ABC News TV One