Michael Scott
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Wonder Wheel
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Woody Allen has been known for making some amazing films over the years, but the man has been in a creative slump ever since his last hit (the fantastic Blue Jasmine). Midnight in Paris was good, but then came Magic in the Moonlight , Irrational Man and Cafe Society. All of which were DECENT, but nothing more than that. With Jim Belushi, Kate Winslet, Juno Temple and the criminally underrated Justin Timberlake as his cast, I was really hoping that Woody would pull another Blue Jasmine. But with Woody Allen being Woody Allen, Wonder Wheel is a visually striking affair that just falls remarkably flat due to the director leaving all appearances of mass appeal by the waysides and crafts a film that is just tough to watch, while still showing some remarkable performances.
Ginny (Kate Winslet), is a 39, approaching 40, year old waitress who is down on her luck and feeling miserable. She makes her living as a waitress in a Coney Island diner, while being married to her slovenly husband, Humpty (Jim Belushi), in a loveless marriage. Once an aspiring actress, Ginny’s life fell off the deep end when she had an affair with a fell actor, thus tanking her marriage and leaving her life in free fall. After marrying Humpty (a widower who was just as lost as she was), she was able to right the proverbial ship, but by that time her career and life aspirations were over. She was stuck with a man she didn’t love, and in a job that was destroying her health.
Looking for help, Humpty’s estranged daughter Carolina (Juno Temple) crashes the party in hopes of hiding out from her mobster husband’s hit squad (who want her dead for squealing to the police). Adding another layer into Ginny’s life, it forces the forlorn woman into the arms of a young lifeguard named Mickey (Justin Timberlake, who also narrates the film), and starts a relationship that seems to bring meaning to her worn out life. However, things get ugly when Mickey’s head is turned by the beautiful Caroline, and Ginny’s tenuous hold on reality is threatened when her own insecurities drive the middle aged woman into a frenzy of jealousy and unhinged mental delusions.
Woody Allen has a modicum of an idea for his script, but it careens and veers around so much that you feel seasick by the end. The movie is just tough to watch, and while it emphasizes the “frazzled woman” motif that was introduced in Blue Jasmine, it just doesn’t have the general appeal or focus of most of his better works. The experience is largely frustrating, and while the movie does have some redemptive performances by Kate Winslet and Jim Belushi, it’s just not one of his best works.
Rating:
Rated PG-13 for thematic content including some sexuality, language and smoking
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Wonder Wheel is a gorgeous looking period piece film that is wonderfully stylized to fit in the 1950s motif, but it just doesn’t have the ability to capture the audience with Allen’s trademark dialog. The man has been living with the standard of a “one movie a year” work from the writer/director, but I really think this scrip could have done with a lot more TLC applied to the writing, and more time on the cutting room would have helped tremendously. As is, Wonder Wheel is rushed and leaves you with a bloated and awkward sensation with the melodrama doing what it does best. Audio and video are great, but there is sadly only a single extra on the disc. Personally, I’d leave this as a rental unless you’re a 100% dyed in the wool Woody Allen fan.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Juno Temple, Kate Winslet, Justin Timberlake, Jim Belushi
Directed by: Woody Allen
Written by: Woody Allen
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH
Studio: Universal
Rated: PG-13
Runtime: 101 minutes
Blu-Ray Release Date: March 6th, 2018
Recommendation: Rental