Without
abandoning her favoured 4:3 aspect ratio, Andrea Arnold has expanded her
horizons with each new project. She navigated increasingly fraught urban
scenarios in her short Wasp and features Red Road and Fish Tank; she ran wild
on the Moors with 2011’s radical rethink of Wuthering Heights. Her next step
takes her closer to Hollywood than one might have imagined of a filmmaker whose
instincts are realist. American Honey
is preceded by the Universal logo, and plays out entirely on US soil, where
things are bigger, louder and brighter; perhaps it’s unsurprising Arnold should
have lost her bearings a little.
That Arnold
seeks to open up a new angle on America is evident just from her opening scene,
of a young woman in a supermarket dumpster, retrieving a frozen chicken. The
girl is Star (Sasha Lane), and immediately we can tell she is as much of the
fringes as Arnold’s previous heroines. Something is stirred within her,
however, when she spies a minibus full of tanned, boisterous contemporaries
pulling into the carpark: here is both a ready-made gang and a family more
appealing than her own grim domestic set-up. Even in this most fiercely
individualistic of nations, the need to belong is strong.
No matter
that they number Shia LaBeouf with ear studs and ponytail, she runs away with
this merry band of outlaws – not circus folk, for all their off-duty
rough-and-tumble; rather, they form a fly-by-night, seat-of-the-pants operation
flogging magazine subscriptions. It’s a weird way into the wider country, and
Arnold seems at least semi-aware of the irony her protagonists should be
channelling their abundant energies into rustling up interest for what
circulation figures would suggest is a dying medium – but she also wants us to
share these kids’ wide-eyed wonder as they reach some new point on the map.
Thanks to her
resident cinematography genius Robbie Ryan, these sights are no less impressive
for being viewed in 4:3 through a grimy minibus window; though square and
cramped, every frame hums with life of some kind. The menagerie Arnold rounded
up in Wasp and Fish Tank is here expanded to include flying squirrels, brown
bears, even the worm at the bottom of a mescal bottle. (One reason she may have
shipped out: it gives her whole new species to classify.)
Her ability
to find poetry in poverty is also much in evidence – and, unlike in other
Universal releases, that poverty is certainly apparent. LaBeouf’s Jake,
variously compared to a gangster and Donald Trump, possibly exerts the hold he
does because he’s the first man Star’s ever met who owns a suit jacket. Still,
even in this moderate-to-small form, business can be a cruel place:
bubblegum-snapping overseer Krystal (Riley Keough, coolly terrific) obliges her
lowest-selling salespeople to wrestle for the others’ amusement.
The flaw with
American Honey is how all this life has been shaped. At an unwieldy 163
minutes, the film has the feel of a rough cut, and while part of me was
impressed that an outsider had been allowed to turn in something this
uncompromising, my shifting buttocks noted four or five too many scenes of the
gang hanging in car parks listening to aggressive rap music, and three or four
more of them razzing one another in the minibus while listening to aggressive
rap music. (I suspect many viewers will want less mixtape, more movie.)
Fish Tank
snapped into thriller mode late on; Wuthering Heights had Bronte’s eternal
passions as a throughline. All American Honey has to sustain it is Star, Jake
and Krystal’s playground love triangle, unless you’re particularly compelled by
the particulars of hawking magazine subscriptions. Even here, I didn’t buy that
people would so graciously welcome these urchins into their homes to discuss
the finer print, and I don’t believe that, in the 21st century, even
a tearaway like Star would jump into so many strangers’ cars and trucks with
such carefree abandon.
There’s a
small miracle here, and it’s that a model of filmmaking arrived at on the sink
estates of Glasgow and Essex should have been transplanted West, and taken root
so. Yet American Honey struck this viewer as Arnold’s least impactful film to
date, losing its moments of wonder and rapture amid an unvaryingly dreamy haze.
As it drifts into its third hour, the film amply demonstrates Arnold’s
near-unparalleled ability to get down and stay down with the kids. Those of us
whose afternoons don’t, perhaps, stretch into infinity might just prefer her to
get on with it, that’s all.
American Honey is now available on DVD through Universal Pictures.
No comments:
Post a Comment