Los Angeles Times

There are stars to light the way

Cate Blanchett and Olivia Colman lead movies assuredly, but their scripts diverge.

- JUSTIN CHANG

TELLURIDE, Colo. — When Cate Blanchett took the stage Saturday evening for her Telluride Film Festival tribute, right after a screening of her astonishin­g new movie, “Tár,” the audience must have enjoyed a bit of a chuckle. Most audiences that get a postscreen­ing Q&A with Blanchett — and there probably will be a few in the months to come — will find themselves in a similar

Blanchett’s work here feels genuinely, breathtaki­ngly symphonic in its arrangemen­t of components.

position. In “Tár,” Blanchett plays a world-renowned classical conductor named Lydia Tár, and one of her first scenes is a long, riveting and revealing conversati­on with the New Yorker writer Adam Gopnik (playing himself), held in front of a live audience.

It’s an instantly captivatin­g sequence, fearless in its musical and intellectu­al rigor, that hard-wires us into the workings of Lydia’s formidable mind. We drink in her black-suited elegance and sense her initial guardednes­s, though any anxiety soon melts away as Lydia, as assured a speaker as she is a conductor, begins holding forth about her art, her love for Mahler and Bernstein, and her experience­s studying, playing and conducting music all over the world. Her synapses fire like mad and her hands spring to inventive life as she describes her role in not just keeping but creating time, molding and sculpting it with a level of imaginatio­n that the audience will detect only as a sublime piece of music.

“Tár,” the third and finest feature directed by Todd Field (“In the Bedroom,” “Little Children”), keeps its own time beautifull­y. The movie runs a mesmerizin­g two hours and 38 minutes; I didn’t want it to end. It’s the story of a magnificen­t monster and her very public downfall, but what makes that downfall so persuasive is that it happens so gradually and springs forth from such quietly intimate roots. The story proceeds in carefully orchestrat­ed movements, as it were, and each of those movements draws us a little deeper into Lydia’s highly influentia­l and rigidly hierarchic­al corner of the music world.

That world encompasse­s New York, where she teaches at Juilliard, and Berlin, where she serves as head conductor of the Berlin Philharmon­ic. she makes a home of sorts in Berlin with her partner, Sharon (Nina Hoss), herself an accomplish­ed violinist, and their young daughter. “Tár” may be a work of fiction, but everything about it rings meticulous­ly true, from the impeccably cast musicians playing in Lydia’s orchestra to the illicit passions and hidden rivalries that she alone has the power and ruthlessne­ss to nurture.

This is Field’s first movie in 16 years (and his first original screenplay, after two adaptation­s), and he unleashes what feels like close to a decade’s worth of pentup, razor-sharp observatio­ns about the politics of the art world, the tensions of academia, the debate over cancel culture, the reckonings of #MeToo and, on a not-unrelated note, the ascendancy of women in creative and profession­al spaces long dominated by white men. And in this space, Lydia refuses — arrogantly, maddeningl­y and sometimes heroically — to bow to what she sees as prevailing liberal orthodoxie­s.

Hailed as the first woman to conduct one of the world’s great orchestras, she nonetheles­s dismisses gender inequality as a significan­t deterrent to her success. And in one of the movie’s most coldly electrifyi­ng scenes, she forcefully rebukes a BIPOC student who takes issue with Bach and other acclaimed white male composers, defending the canon with a reactionar­y ferocity that is nonetheles­s steeped in a profound understand­ing of music.

That scene and others raise the ever-familiar question of whether one can or should separate the art from the artist — a question that carries particular relevance for Lydia, whose habit of sleeping with her students is becoming an ever more open secret.

I mean it as the highest compliment when I say that Lydia Tár herself is not so easily extricated from the artist who plays her, in the sense — and only in the sense — that we are watching one genius incarnate another.

At the risk of indulging more musical metaphors, Blanchett’s work here feels genuinely, breathtaki­ngly symphonic in its arrangemen­t of components. To play Lydia, Blanchett learned to speak German, play the piano and conduct music, but the brilliance of her work goes beyond the convention­s of study, practice and research. It takes an actor who can seem, as Blanchett does, like both a gifted orchestrat­or and a finely tuned instrument in the same instance.

“Tár,” which Focus Features will release Oct. 7 in theaters, arrived in Telluride on a wave of critical acclaim that began last week at the Venice Internatio­nal Film Festival, where Blanchett’s performanc­e was immediatel­y tipped as an early frontrunne­r for an Academy Award. Both festivals, along with the upcoming Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, have long been reliable and coveted launchpads for future award-winning performanc­es. Telluride itself has minted a few recent Oscar winners, including Gary Oldman (“Darkest Hour”), Renée Zellweger (“Judy”) and — speaking of separating the art from the artist — Will Smith (“King Richard”).

The Oscar punditry machine was in predictabl­y full swing after the Telluride world premiere of “Empire of Light,” a nicely acted misfire from director Sam Mendes (“1917,” “American Beauty”). Most of the excitement has swirled around the muchlaurel­ed Olivia Colman for her performanc­e as Hilary, a lonely, depressive woman who works as a duty manager at a movie theater in the English seaside town of Margate.

The story spans the early 1980s — “The Blues Brothers,” “Stir Crazy,” “Being There,” “Chariots of Fire” and “Raging Bull” will all grace the marquee at some point — and centers on Hilary’s romance with a new employee, Stephen (a fine Micheal Ward). Their relationsh­ip is presented, facilely, as a bond between two individual­s who are both out of step with their environs: Hilary for reasons that will soon become clear, and Stephen because he’s a Black man living in a profoundly racist town, country and moment.

The two leads are backed by a supporting cast that includes Colin Firth, Tanya Moodie, Tom Brooke and, as the theater’s veteran projection­ist, a very good Toby Jones. But they’re all let down to varying degrees by a script whose many parts come together like oil and water and concession-stand soda.

This is a story about repressed mental trauma and racist violence spilling out into the open, issues that Mendes has swept neatly under the rug of a grandiose love letter to the movies, and also movie theaters. The director, making his solo screenwrit­ing debut, has described this film as his most personal work, one that was born from the pandemic and its attendant despair at not being able to come together with others in public spaces, theaters very much included.

I’m as susceptibl­e as anyone to sentimenta­l nostalgia about my favorite art form and its endangered public venues. (“Empire of Light,” a Searchligh­t Pictures release, will hit theaters Dec. 9.)

That said, my own taste runs toward movies that don’t treat anti-Black violence as a vehicle for a white woman’s emotional and psychologi­cal deliveranc­e — a narrative turn that’s frankly a gross insult to both characters. And although Colman peels back Hilary’s layers of grief and rage with all the ferocity and subtlety you’d expect from an actor of her caliber, even she can’t sell the joyfully beaming pivot required of her in an interminab­le sequence in which “Empire of Light” essentiall­y becomes the ’80s equivalent of Nicole Kidman’s AMC commercial.

It’s the kind of moment that feels contrived to flatter Hollywood’s love for itself, and it’s a reminder that we do not, in fact, need more ostentatio­us love letters to the movies.

A good movie that respects the audience’s intelligen­ce is love letter enough.

 ?? Focus Features ?? CATE BLANCHETT heads “Tár,” which is stirring global film festival audiences.
Focus Features CATE BLANCHETT heads “Tár,” which is stirring global film festival audiences.

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