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Rosamund Pike

I Care a Lot: Two Wrongs Make it Right?

February 20, 2021 by Steve Norton Leave a Comment

Vicious and brutal, I Care a Lot is a relentless exploration of what happens when greed is allowed to run rampant at the expense of the vulnerable sector.

It’s also a tonne of fun.

I Care a Lot follows Marla Grayson (Rosamund Pike), a highly successful legal guardian who takes responsibility for the elderly and then exploits them for their vast fortunes. Sensing a huge potential windfall, she takes on a seemingly innocent new client named Jennifer Peterson (Dianne Wiest), immediately placing her in a nursing facility and strips her of her financial assets. However, when Jennifer’s ruthless benefactor Roman (Peter Dinklage) hears of her plight, Marla and her partner (Eiza Gonzalez) must go to war to protect their investments and potentially, save their lives.

Written and directed by J Blakeson (The Disappearance of Alice Creed), I Care a Lot is an energetic dark comedy that commits to its wicked machinations and never looks back. Bursting with fire and entertaining from start to finish, Blakeson’s script pops with devilish glee as it highlights the malicious nature of corporate greed at the expense of the poor and oppressed. Though we have seen Dinklage in villainous roles before, he is in top form here as Wiest’s mysterious and vicious backer, Roman. Even so, the greatest surprise here is Pike who positively relishes her role as the morally bankrupt Marla. Bouncing with energy onscreen, Pike wheels and deals with a maniacal grin that is both enticing and intense. (In fact, even the usually docile Wiest underscores her performance with a sinister darkness.)

With that in mind, one of the more fascinating aspects of I Care is that it really has no hero (or heroine). Whereas most films would emphasize the honourable lawyer fighting to protect their client or the unjust system that takes advantage of the underserved, I Care has no such interests. In this world, corruption is rampant on both sides of the battle and victory seems to stem from the person who ‘wants it more’. By unleashing its inner darkness, I Care allows greed to become the soul of Darwinian business practices. Ferociously attacking each other’s livelihood, both Marla and Roman exemplify the very nature of ‘survival of the fittest’. While Marla views her elderly clients merely as numbers within her check book, Roman is equally merciless, refusing to lose what he feels belongs to him out of sheer tenacity and pride. (For this reason, the title I Care a Lot carries a sense of irony as ‘caring’ takes on an entirely different meaning in this world.)

Having said this, it goes without saying that the characters of I Care seems to care little about what is ‘right’ objectively within this world. At a time when large corporations continue to value profit margins ahead of people lives, I Care becomes a cautionary parable to the all-consuming nature of greed. As the two titans collide in a battle for dominance, both Roman and Marla seem blissfully unaware of the lives who are impacted by their recklessness. For both characters, acquiring wealth and power are the greatest good, regardless of who stands in their way. (Wall Street’s Gordon Gecko would be pleased.) Though families are torn apart and destruction rampant, they continue to remain focused on themselves. While the film eventually does acknowledge the suffering that their actions cause, Marla and Roman seem largely content to create chaos for their own sake.

Though the heart of I Care a Lot may sound bleak, the film’s style and enthusiasm are hard to resist. Featuring solid performances across the board and a brutally fun script, Blakeson’s film breathes satirical fire that demands attention. As the stakes continue to rise and the inner darkness of his characters is unleashed in all its fury, Blakeson never loses sight of the damages caused by their carelessness.

Even if they seem completely unaware.

I Care a Lot is currently streaming on Amazon Prime in Canada.

Filed Under: Film, Film Festivals, Reviews, TIFF, VOD Tagged With: Dianne Wiest, Eiza Gonzalez, I Care a Lot, J Blakeson, Peter Dinklage, Rosamund Pike

TIFF20: I Care a Lot

September 18, 2020 by Steve Norton Leave a Comment

I Care a Lot follows Marla Grayson (Rosamund Pike), a highly successful legal guardian who takes responsibility for the elderly and then exploits them for their vast fortunes. Sensing a huge potential windfall, she takes on a seemingly innocent new client named Jennifer Peterson (Dianne Wiest), immediately placing her in a nursing facility and strips her of her financial assets. However, when Jennifer’s ruthless benefactor Roman (Peter Dinklage) hears of her plight, Marla and her partner (Eiza Gonzalez) must go to war to protect their investments and potentially, save their lives.

Written and directed by J Blakeson (The Disappearance of Alice Creed), I Care a Lot is an energetic dark comedy that commits to its wicked machinations and never looks back. Bursting with fire and entertaining from start to finish, Blakeson’s script pops with devilish glee as it highlights the malicious nature of corporate greed at the expense of the poor and oppressed. 

By unleashing its inner darkness, I Care allows greed to become the soul of Darwinian business practices. Ferociously attacking each other’s livelihood, both Marla and Roman exemplify the very nature of ‘survival of the fittest’. 

Though the heart of I Care a Lot may sound bleak, the film’s style and enthusiasm are hard to resist. Featuring solid performances across the board and a brutally fun script, Blakeson’s film breathes satirical fire that demands attention. As the stakes continue to rise and the inner darkness of his characters is unleashed in all its fury, Blakeson never loses sight of the damages caused by their carelessness.

Even if they seem completely unaware.

I Care a Lot is currently streaming on the TIFF Bell Digital Theatre during the Toronto International Film Festival.

Filed Under: Featured, Film, Film Festivals, Reviews, TIFF Tagged With: Diane Wiest, Eiza Gonzalez, I Care a Lot, J B, Peter Dinklage, Rosamund Pike

Hostiles – Journey Between Life and Death

January 21, 2018 by Darrel Manson Leave a Comment

“When we lay our heads down out here, we’re all prisoners.”

In Scott Cooper’s new western Hostiles, the cowboy-and-Indian genre is used to consider the power that prejudices hold over us. But it also gives a glimpse of the possibility of reconciliation that can overcome even lifelong animosities.

Cavalry Captain Joseph Blocker (Christian Bale) is a former war hero. He now spends his day chasing down renegade bands of Comanches and bringing them to jail. He’s due to retire, but instead he is assigned a public relations mission—to escort a dying Comanche chief to his ancestral lands in Montana. Yellow Hawk (Wes Studi) has been imprisoned in New Mexico for decades. Now dying of cancer, he is granted permission from the President to return to Montana with his family (who will again be imprisoned after his death).

Blocker wants nothing to do with this. Yellow Hawk has killed many of his friends through the years. But when threatened with a court-martial and loss of his pension, he reluctantly agrees. Blocker and a small detachment set out on the journey that will be a bit like The Odyssey with various trials and dangers on the way.

Soon after they leave, they come across a homestead that has recently been attacked by a band of Comanches. Only the wife/mother, Rosalee Quinn (Rosamund Pike), survived the attack. She is near catatonic watching over her “sleeping” children. Blocker brings her along on the way to the next fort. The women of Yellow Hawk’s family share their clothes with Rosalee, the first act of compassion by either side. As the journey progresses there will be much that gives those on each side insight into the life of the others.

The most obvious theme of the film is the way racism and prejudice have been central in our national understanding. The attitudes with which Blocker and his cohort, and Yellow Hawk and his family view each other is not really as persons but rather as stereotypes. It is only as they slowly see each other’s strengths and weaknesses that they begin to see the common humanity. But even with racism so front and center, the film also subverts our ideas. One of Blocker’s party is African-American, a buffalo soldier with whom Blocker has served for some time.

But there are also deeper conversations to be drawn from the film. This is a story that is permeated with death. Yellow Hawk is dying. Rosalee’s family is already dead. Death can come upon them in many forms at any moment. The soldiers (as well as Yellow Hawk and his son Black Hawk (Adam Beach)) are all trained in killing. Death is seen as loss, as tragedy, as inevitable, as fulfillment, as an escape, and as punishment at various points of the film. Killing may happen as a necessity, as desperation, or as an act of anger and revenge.

As we study the various characters in the film, we may well see signs of what is now recognized as Post Traumatic Stress and Moral Injury. After an early encounter, a young Lieutenant (Jesse Plemons) is disturbed because this was his first time to kill a man. Master Sergeant Metz (Rory Cochrane) tells him that after enough killing, you don’t feel anything. The lieutenant responds, “That’s what I’m afraid of.” MSgt Metz and Blocker, both long time Cavalry soldiers exhibit signs of “melancholia”—they are weary of all the killing and of all the men that they have lost.

The paradox of the film is that it simultaneously is a journey from life to death and a journey from death to life. Yellow Hawk grows more ill as the journey progresses. There are various deaths along the way from a variety of reasons. Few of those who set out will make it to the end. But there is also movement in the other direction. Those who are dead on the inside find a chance for new life if they are willing to seek it. It is this hope that makes Hostiles more than just a rehash of the exploitive history of the American West. It allows the story to reflect the conflicts that continue to fill our culture and if we will choose to see them as journeys of death or towards life and fullness.

Photos courtesy Yellow Hawk, Inc.

Filed Under: Film, Reviews Tagged With: Adam Beach, Cavalry, Christian Bale, Jesse Plemons, Native Americans, Rosamund Pike, scott cooper, Wes Studi, western

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