Megalopolis Is Terrible And Everyone Should See It

James Erwin

James Erwin is Federal Affairs Manager for Telecommunications at Americans for Tax Reform and the Executive Director of Digital Liberty. He previously worked four years for Senator Susan Collins on the Senate Aging Committee and in her personal office. A native of Yarmouth, Maine, Erwin holds a B.A. from Bates College. He currently resides in Washington, DC, and his work has appeared in The Hill, National Review, and Townhall. Follow James @erwin1854 on the platform formerly known as Twitter.

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17 Responses

  1. Jaybird
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    says:

    I’m only about halfway through but I wanted to say that the French colonial plantation was part of the whole time travel thing that they had going on. From civilization to colonialism to a pre-modern tribalism to howling barbarism.

    A shedding of trappings.

    Okay. Back to the essay.Report

    • John Puccio in reply to Jaybird
      Ignored
      says:

      Having seen Apocalypse Now a few times through the years, and then watching the Final Cut last year, I enjoyed the inclusion of the French Plantation segment. Certainly a digression but disagree with the author that it is idiotic or serves no purpose. It most certainly adds to the story, albeit at the expense of the film’s pacing.

      As for Godfather III Coda – I thought it was an improvement on the original, but until technology allows him to replace his daughter with another actress, that movie is fatally flawed. (And they should have just paid Robert Duvall what he wanted)…Report

      • DensityDuck in reply to John Puccio
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        says:

        Yeah; it’s extremely important to both the modern history of Vietnam, and to the original “Heart of Darkness” novel, that this colonialism be addressed in some way.

        I didn’t have as much trouble with the pacing because I wasn’t really experiencing it as a movie, more like reading chapters from a book. (In fact, I wonder whether the film would work broken up into pieces and served as Netflix “episodes”?)Report

        • John Puccio in reply to DensityDuck
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          says:

          That’s an interesting point. Some of the best tv shows in history have those non-sequiturs that are complete digressions but stand out as the most memorable episodes. Pine Barrens for the Sopranos, The 7 Fishes for The Bear, Ronny/Lilly for Barry immediately come to mind.Report

  2. Jaybird
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    says:

    Man. I almost want to see it now.

    Back in September, there was a Verge article about how Coppola “wanted voice recognition software to let audience members ask Adam Driver’s Cesar character a question during theatrical showings of Megalopolis”.

    Then, like, they’d find a clip with the most appropriate response from Driver.

    Coppola thought that it’d be a merging of Hollywood and Ancient Theater. I imagine that, in practice, it’d be a mess.Report

    • DensityDuck in reply to Jaybird
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      says:

      You’d think that someone who’d been making movies for more than half a century would recognize that Theaters Do Not Work That Way and that they weren’t going to change everything just for him.Report

      • Jaybird in reply to DensityDuck
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        says:

        In our first or second year of marriage, Maribou took me to a local production of The Birds (by Aristophanes!) and, at halftime, the actors came out and started interacting with the audience.

        All that to say: theater sometimes works like that.

        Given the whole “watch the movie in bed” thing that is possible now…

        Anyway, I see what he was going for. Even if, in real life, the first guy to ask a question would have asked something involving Adam Driver’s wedding tackle.Report

  3. Burt Likko
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    says:

    I saw it the week it was released. I knew going into it that it would be a glorious, overblown, and pretentious disaster. This movie commits every Coppola sin that every Coppola movie makes. These include inadequate lighting, casting and making up male actors in secondary roles such that they are indistinguishable from one another, an almost allergic aversion to editing, incomplete mattes (CGI backgrounds here, as noted in OP), and actors mumbling.

    100% share in OP’s complete frustration with the dangling plotlines and apparent refusal to actually use the analogies to Roman history that the characters’ names and the extensive but unused Roman-esque plot points which … wound up deviating from Roman history. About the only thing that seemed to actually track was Clodio’s antics while in female dress, which I thought tracked the story of his infiltration of the Bona Dea ritual nicely — except for the part where it made him politically radioactive; in Megalopolis, it seems completely disconnected from his subsequent rise to populist thug-in-chief.

    After taking some time to process what I’d seen, I wound up concluding that maybe the movie was not meant to have a plot at all. We should instead view it as a kind of cinematic impressionism — a series of scenes and images and vignettes that, when considered in retrospect, are supposed to give us the feeling of taking an emotional journey, and tell us a story of an artist who struggles to make his difficult but powerful vision reality and makes the world a better place for it, both for the world at large and for the family he forged along the way. Certainly Francis Ford Coppola would like that to be how he is remembered, and it’s probably pretty close to the overall story he was trying to tell.

    The end product, though, really isn’t that impressionistic auto-epitaph. I’d now say that Megalopolis is The Fountainhead meets The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across The 8th Dimenson. Would not have greenlit.Report

  4. Burt Likko
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    says:

    Another thought, going back to near the top of the OP, I’m struck by the tribute and high praise paid to Dementia 13. I chat sometimes with a film buff barkeep at one of my local taverns, and she admires Dementia 13 the most of all of Coppola’s films too.

    The reason why reminds me of active production company Blumhouse Productions. These folks are responsible for mainly low-budget (by modern Hollywood standards) horror movies including Paranormal Activity and progeny, The Purge and progeny, Get Out and Nope of Jordan Peele fame, Glass and Split by M. Night Shyamalan, and and a bunch of others. The recipe is get one or two names attracted to a project, give it a tight budget and then say “no” when the director comes back begging for more money to make an even more awesome movie than was requested.

    Blumhouse makes eight to fifteen feature films a year, and they’re almost all profitable, with good margins, because production costs stay under control. This forces directors to work within budgets, find creative solutions to storytelling challenges, and rely on good writing and acting rather than special effects to make the movie compelling. The movies don’t all have to be big hits, they just need to tell stories that particular audiences will find fun enough that word-of-mouth will produce an ROI.

    That’s what happened with Dementia 13 and it’s what happened with Get Out and it’s a reminder that a whole lot of good art happens when the artist is forced to work within constraints. When an artist gains enough resources on their own that they can do things like mortgage billion-dollar wineries to get complete artistic control and unlimited filmmaking resources for themselves, the result can easily look like Megalopolis.Report

    • James Erwin in reply to Burt Likko
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      says:

      This comment should be the TL;DR of the article.Report

    • John Puccio in reply to Burt Likko
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      says:

      The result can also be 2001 A Space Odyssey.

      So few directors have ever had enough freedom and capital to do whatever they want, I’m inclined to believe the sample size is way too small to declare “compromise” the secret to making great cinematic art.Report

      • DensityDuck in reply to John Puccio
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        says:

        I think maybe the discipline is less sticking to a budget and more sticking to a plan. I feel like that was the biggest complaint through the (excellent!) column here, that there wasn’t a plan, that there were some good ideas tossed into the mix but they came to nothing because any plan that anyone came up for them was tossed out in the next day’s filming.

        Which reminds me of another recent high-profile mess, the contemporary Star Wars movies, where “we aren’t going in with a plan” was actually advertised as a feature. “Forget it, we’ll fix it in edits” was the theme of that project, and apparently the theme of “Megalopolis” as well; just shoot a bunch of scenes and figure out how they can be a story later, with reshoots to cover anything that didn’t get done the first time around.

        (Someone on Twitter did a lengthy analysis of how most of the plot of “Rise of Skywalker” was created post-shooting; their detective work included analysis of how any time a character said anything about the plot it was just a talking-head with no other actors in the shot, suggesting that was done as a reshoot.)Report

  5. Mike Palicz
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    says:

    This is a very good article and an easy read. I hope you write more.Report

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