The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Step into a world where figurines help heal

- By Michael O'Sullivan

In the 2010 documentar­y “Marwencol,” the world met Mark Hogancamp, the survivor of a vicious beating 10 years earlier who had turned to art as a form of therapy. In strange and strangely moving photograph­ic dioramas, Hogancamp documented life in an imaginary world he had constr ucted in his Upstate New York backyard: a miniature, World War IIeraBelgi­antown populated by foot-tall dolls and filled with meticulous­ly rendered details. One G.I. Joe-style figure represente­d Hogancamp’s alter ego: aU.S.Army Air Corps pilot called Captain Hogie. Among the other inhabitant­s were figures representi­ng both occupying Nazi troops and the members of an all-female squad of partisans, in the form of customized Barbie dolls.

Hogancamp’s true, if fictionali­zed, story, is now being told in “Welcome to Marwen,” starring Steve Carell as both Mark and, via motion capture, the heroic Hogie. Co-written by director Robert Zemeckis and Caroline Thompson, the resulting film is a sometimes jar- ring but ultimately effec- tive extended metaphor for healing, in whi chtwonar- ratives unspool simultane- ously: one taking place in the real world, and one that exists only in Mark’s deeply traumatize­d psyche. Unlike the real Hogancamp’s pho- tographs, which simply hint at the existence of a magicalpar­allel universe, Zemeckis’ film makes that fic- tional universe literal, segue- ing between live action and animation in a way that blurs the seams between them while making it clear that Mark is the only true inhab- itant of t hats econd world.

“Welcome to Marwen” opens with an animated sequence that features Hogie getting shot down over Belgium and then ambushed by Nazi soldiers, in a cartoonish attack that recapitula­tes Mark’s actual pummeling (which was far more brutal in real life than the movie ever shows, even in flashback). This prologue also suggests the reasons behind the attack — reasons that make it clear it was a hate crime and not a simple mugging.

The animation is excellent, from the plastic “skin” of Mark’s action figures and fashion dolls to their stiffly jointed movements.

The story centers on Mark’s relationsh­ip with several women who serve as inspiratio­n for the female denizens of Marwen (“dolls,” as Hogie calls them, in an unironic borrowing from the lingo of 1940s and 1950s war movies). Chief among the dolls’ real-world counterpar­ts are Roberta (Merritt Wever), a friend who runs the hobby shop where Mark buys his art supplies, and Mark’s new neighbor, Nicol (Leslie Mann), aveterinar­yt echnician for whom he starts to develop romantic feelings — feelings that he projects onto Nicol’s 12-inch avatar. (Throughout the film, Mark talks to his dolls, and they talk back to him, if only in his head.)

Meanwhile, twin dead- lines loom: The sentencing hearing for Mark’s assailants, which he would rather avoid, and the opening reception for his first show in a Manhattan art gallery. Will he get his head together in time? If these stressors feel like plot contrivanc­es, they are no more artificial than the film’s central conceit, which you have to a dmit sounds pretty bonkers.

Just keep reminding yourself: It’s all based on a true story.

Hogancamp was a tale nted illustrato­r before the attack rendered him unable to draw. In retreating to a world of his imaginatio­n as a way to exorcise the demons that tormented him, he ended up creating real art. I’m not sure Zemeckis’ achievemen­t rises to the same level, but this cinematic excursion to Marwen is almost certainly a trip to someplace you haven’t been before.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ED ARAQUEL/UNIVERSAL PICTURES, DREAMWORKS PICTURES. ?? Steve Carell as Mark Hogancamp photograph­s the dolls for his fictional town in “Welcome to Marwen,” directed by Robert Zemeckis.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ED ARAQUEL/UNIVERSAL PICTURES, DREAMWORKS PICTURES. Steve Carell as Mark Hogancamp photograph­s the dolls for his fictional town in “Welcome to Marwen,” directed by Robert Zemeckis.
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