• Sat. Oct 26th, 2024

AN EMOTIONAL EXPERIENCE  – Leonard Maltin’s Movie Crazy

Byadmin

Nov 9, 2023


Like many or most of you, I’ve watched Annette Bening and Jodie Foster give fine performances for years and years, but I got so wrapped up in NYAD –and their exceptional work—that I allowed myself to believe that they really were the women they were playing. That’s called suspension of disbelief, and it made viewing the movie a truly emotional experience for me.

Directors Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi are documentary filmmakers (Free Solo, Return to Space) and mountain climbers, a felicitous choice to bring Julia Cox’s screenplay to life. They are also married, which gives them an understanding of relationships. There’s no substitute for life experience, and while Diana Nyad’s story is unlike theirs in many of its particulars, they clearly connected to it in a meaningful way.

Sports biopics tend to fall into one of two categories: someone who scores a victory unexpectedly or someone who tries their best and is defeated but goes down swinging. Diana Nyad’s story doesn’t fit into any pigeonhole, nor does the woman herself or her close friendship with Bonnie Stoll. That’s another reason the movie works so well. I’ll admit I didn’t remember the bullet points of Nyad’s career so I was a perfect audience for this highly dramatic re-enactment of her attempts to swim from Cuba to Key West, Florida after thirty years of retirement. I didn’t know what was coming next. (It also doesn’t hurt that I readily relate to a film about two senior citizens.)

The feeling of verisimilitude extends to the supporting actors as well, primarily Rhys Ifans as Nyad’s sharp-eyed and sharp-tongued navigator. He, too, inhabits this figure completely and adds to the feeling of being there with the swimmer’s intrepid support team, who push themselves almost as hard as she does—and suffer the same devastating feeling of defeat when she doesn’t reach her goal.

Not being an athlete, let alone a marathon type of guy, I can only imagine what it must be like to push yourself beyond normal boundaries. But this film gave me ample food for thought…and I think it’s terrific.



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