Wednesday, 1 April 2020

Proxima (2020)

The latest film from writer-director Alice Winocour tells the story of Sarah, a French astronaut selected to spend a year on the International Space Station. At the height of her career, she is repeatedly faced with difficult choices in attempting to fulfill her roles as both a mother and an astronaut who is devoted to her own dreams of walking amongst the stars.
Winocour takes both mother and daughter on parallel journeys - in early scenes each gaze through glass walls at groups of males in their element, helplessly separated. As Sarah undergoes the arduous training process, readying her body for space, so too must her daughter Stella struggle with learning disabilities and low self-esteem to grapple with her schooling and social life. While the relationship between mother and daughter is at the forefront of marketing materials and provides focus for the screenplay, Winocour’s dedication to developing each of these characters individually into both believable and aspirational people is the finest element of her film. Their natural hurdles in achieving their goals establish two grounded and human characters who compel the viewer to empathise with challenges that are both a part of and far beyond those of their day-to-day lives.
Winocour states that she didn’t draw much inspiration from recent American films set in space because of their tendency to portray astronauts as super-human, she was instead artistically inspired by Tarkovsky’s character-driven Solaris. She has, however, created a film which fits will into a tradition of Hollywood pictures – from Cuaron’s Gravity and Nolan’s Interstellar, to Chazelle’s First Man and even the recent Brad Pitt vehicle Ad Astra – which all showcase fractured relationships between parents and children before an unearthly backdrop. Even Ridley Scott’s classic sci-fi chiller Alien deals with anxieties about motherhood and the death of a symbolic family. What Winocour has to offer the genre is a fundamentally female perspective. The space genre has long been dominated by male voices, Sandra Bullock’s Ryan Stone in Gravity speaks the words of a male writing team and even Sigorney Weaver’s iconic Ellen Ripley was purposefully written in such a way that she could have been played by either a male or female actor. Winocour accentuates the female-specific challenges of space-travel, explaining in an interview that spacesuits are designed for male bodies, with the weight being distributed upon the shoulders while women possess naturally stronger hips. Her film achieves nuance by foregrounding the moments in which Sarah cannot keep up with the rigorous training, despite her determination. A lesser writer (or a male one writing woman, see Paul Feig) would probably have crafted a very uplifting but ultimately insincere story about a female astronaut who excels at everything – where girl power is the most powerful force in the universe – but Winocour doesn’t shy away from the practicalities of biology and in doing so imbues the girl power with realism.
Such realism extends to every shot in the film which frequently evoke the hand-held, verité style. From the preproduction stages, Winocour consulted closely with the European Space Agency, interviewing astronauts and scientists. A “documentary aspect” informs the film, as each stage of Sarah’s training process corresponds with the real-life process, and even the filming locations used being those of the authentic workplaces of space orginisations. Winocour compares the relationship between astrophysicists and astronauts to that of the cast and crew of a film – two groups of utterly dissimilar people working together for a common goal - and this is perhaps why the film will appeal to a far wider audience than just science fanatics. It’s often said that filmmakers like Christopher Nolan and Alfred Hitchcock made films which metaphorically expressed their own relationships to filmmaking and cinema itself, the characters are co-workers, their characters’ struggles their own. Winocour’s own humanity is what brings Sarah to life, her own daughter was eight years old at the start of production. Sarah’s struggles may look like an astronaut’s but they are also a woman’s. She is constantly conflicted between her personal ambitions and her obligations to her child in the same way that any person dedicated to both career and family must be.
This is a strong film, building on cinematic history (perhaps unknowingly) with the raw materials of a real life. Proxima stays just on the right side of realism to fend off the threat of becoming overly sentimental but never does so at the expense of character or truth.

Documentary Filmmaking: Redux Community Season 3 Episode 8 (2011)


Community was a pivotal television show for the six years it was broadcast. The project which brought together Dan Harmon (Rick and Morty), Megan Ganz (Always Sunny in Philadelphia), The Russo Brothers (Captain America and Avengers franchises), Chris McKenna (Jumanji Sequels), Jim Rash (The Descendants) and Donald Glover (Childish Gambino, Atlanta) was mired in controversy and production complications for six years but still managed to push the boundaries of what television could be with layers of wit, high concepts and a postmodern sensibility which will delight film fans. Set in a Community college, the series follows the antics of disgraced lawyer Jeff Winger and his study group as he learns humanity and comes to find a family amongst the oddballs and misfits of Greendale Community College. This episode is a perfect standalone which follows the Dean of the college as he attempts to produce a television advert for the school. Upon discovering that ex-student Luis Guzman is willing to feature, the Dean descends into auteur’s madness following in the footsteps of Francis Ford Coppola as he struggled against the shoot from hell for Apocalypse Now. In the style of the making of documentary Hearts of Darkness, the Dean is followed around by filmmaking student Abed who charts his descent. A truly brilliant episode which could stand alone as a hilarious short film. As of April the 1st 2020, all of Community is available to stream in Britain on @netflixuk and @primevideouk . S.H.

X-Men: The Animated Series (1992 - 1997)


An undisputed cult classic, the 1990’s adaptation of the X-Men hits glorious highs being able to both achieve a narrative complexity impossible to the studio-produced blockbusters and a cohesion which was absent from the ongoing, multi-authoured story-telling style of the comic books. Coming from a time when writers were able to create challenging and creative content in children’s animated television which was impossible in its more financially restrictive live-action counterparts, the X-Men animated series stands out as a shining example of its genre.

Tomorrowland (2015)


You probably didn’t see Tomorrowland in theatres. Don’t worry, I’m the only one that did. Director Brad Bird sent me a personal card to thank me for my business. But I genuinely don’t believe this film deserved to fail! Tomorrowland is reportedly the project that Bird turned down Star Wars: The Force Awakens to direct and his passion and optimism shines through every frame. A rather meta-text Tomorrowland offers a throwback to the optimistic science fiction futures of the past, arguing that believing the worst will happen will be the downfall of humanity. Rise up! Our plucky, young, female post-Katniss, pre-Rey protagonist does! And there’s magic badges??? This film is wild.

Tangled (2011)


Love in the time of Covid – I think we will all feel a renewed sense of empathy for Rapunzel as she sings around her social-distanced tower, listing all the things she does in a day to pass the time. Tangled is the go-to for lazy journalists complaining about Frozen’s success – “but Tangled is much better…” and they’re not wrong. A Shrek-sperian rejigging of the fairy-tale formula, Tangled infuses anarchic wit, physical comedy and surprisingly intricate plotting with a set of Disney-renaissance inspired song-numbers from Alan Menkin including the ludicrously funny I Have a Dream.