The latest from filmmaking team Joel and Ethan Coen, HAIL
CAESAR!, is a true love letter to a forgotten era in Hollywood. Taking place in
the 1950’s, it was a time when studios cranked out fun films like Old Westerns
with singing cowboys, lavish musicals with tap-dancing sailors, Biblical epics
packed with over-the-top characters and long speeches…along with sneaky gossip
columnists who were the only sources of information for people with a hunger
for news of their favorite stars and starlets. It is an era that the Coens
likely found a lot of inspiration from in their formative years, and a perfect
setting for a simple, yet fun adventure.
Eddie Mannix (Josh Brolin) is a “fixer” for a big studio who
takes care of big problems to keep the big wheels turning. When big star Baird
Whitlock (George Clooney) is kidnapped by a group of disgruntled writers while
filming a major movie, Mannix sets out to solve the mystery…along with juggling
an un-married pregnant starlet (Scarlett Johannson), and a young Western actor
(Alden Ehrenreich) who has to improve his acting.
HAIL CAESAR! roughly covers just over 24 hours in the busy
life of Eddie Mannix as he goes from set to set, office to office, and
situation to situation trying to keep scandals from hitting the front pages and
the production of many major motion pictures from shutting down. The central
task of Mannix, to get Whitlock back, takes up much of the film, and isn’t
presented as a mystery or a whodunit, but instead focuses on the Why of it all.
Where Whitlock is taken and by whom is answered pretty early on, and with that
answered the mystery shifts over to the inside man in the studio who made it
all happen.
There’s a lot going on in HAIL CAESAR! as Mannix races from
one mess to another (including a sub-plot where he is being offered a new job
for a lot of money and a lot less stress), and for a while it feels like the
mystery of Whitlock’s kidnapping is being treated as secondary. There’s also an
episodic feeling going on as several characters appear with new sets of
problems (this would make a tremendous TV series), and the film feels like it
may be disjointed. But these are the Coens in charge of this production, and
every plotline and character comes together nicely by the end, and even before.
Some nice twists and turns come about, and through some clever scripting, ties
everything up neatly.
Setting the film in a 1950’s Hollywood studio gives the
Coens as much freedom as a kid in a large sandbox. The film bounces from set to
set with singing and lasso-throwing cowboys (brilliantly played by Alden
Ehrenreich, who is channeling Gene Autry and Roy Rogers), big-water pool
musicals, and a tap-dancing sequence by WWII sailors led by Channing Tatum
which has to be seen to be believed. The Coens are having a blast re-creating a
very special time in Hollywood, and it’s enough to make us yearn for those days
again. For a cinephile, HAIL CEASAR! is a treat.
Acting is superb. George Clooney plays the part of a big
star who is clueless about the real world perfectly, and Josh Brolin is a joy
to watch as the determined straight-man with a lot on his plate. Scarlett
Johansson has to lay on a thick and tough Brooklyn accent and nails it, while
again, Channing Tatum’s tap-dance routine is outrageously fun. Cameos by Jonah
Hill, Clancy Brown, Ralph Fiennes, Frances McDormand, and Tilda Swinton (who
plays the role of twin-sister gossip columnists) are all handled well. Despite
all the star power, the show is truly stolen by young Alden Ehrenreich as an
Old West star; who channels the stars of old into a bright and joyful
performance.
With the proceedings taking place in Hollywood the Coens are
given the chance to let the big climax of the film take place on the set of a
movie which is in its own climactic scene, which makes it twice as effective
and double the fun. Joel and Ethan Coen have put together not only a homage to a
long-dead era of movie-making, but an incredibly fun romp that can’t be
experienced enough. HAIL CAESAR, indeed.
BOTTOM LINE: See it
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