Anomalisa (2015) [Blu-ray]
Animation | Comedy | Drama | Romance
From the Oscar-winner who brought you Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind and Being John Malkovich comes a riveting new masterpiece. Michael Stone - husband, father and noted author - travels to Cincinnati to speak at a customer service
conference. But once he's separated from the routine of his daily life, a chance encounter helps him to realize just what, and whom, he's been missing. Love, laughter and loneliness align in Charlie Kaufman's "staggeringly inventive" (Chris
Nashawaty, Entertainment Weekly) stop-motion work of art.
Storyline: Michael Stone, an author that specializes in customer service, is a man who is unable to interact deeply with other people. His low sensitivity to excitement, and his lack of interest made him a man with a repetitive
life on his own perspective. But, when he went on a business trip, he met a stranger - an extraordinary stranger, which slowly became a cure for his negative view on life that possibly will change his mundane life. Written by
Gusde
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman, June 4, 2016 Anomalisa is about a brief moment of clarity and light in an otherwise dark and unimaginative world, at least within one man's perception of it. The film, from
Directors Duke Johnson and Charlie Kaufman, the latter of whom helmed Synecdoche, New York and wrote Being John Malkovich, tells a rather dark tale of exclusion from the world, loneliness, and an inability to find the spark in life. The
film pits two people who are in some ways similar to one another and in others opposite from one another. One is a man who makes his living by helping others but who cannot help himself, and the other a woman who also makes a living helping others but who
cannot or will not help herself. The man is lost in the world, the woman is lost within herself. He bears emotional scars. She bears a physical scar. Both wounds leave the people closed off an unable to find the truth within themselves or the best of the
world around them. It's a fascinating case study with enough psychological depth to fill a textbook and enough re-watchability to sort it out on multiple viewings. But Kaufman and Johnson do a remarkable job of handling the story's complexities with a
perfect blend of easily identifiable overtones, subtle depth, and heavy psychology underneath to make the movie at once both approachable and necessarily complex. This is storytelling and a study of the human condition at their finest.
Michael Stone (voiced by David Thewlis) is a well-known customer service guru. He's a published author and has more than his share of fans within the support service world. He's flown in to Cincinnati for a speech and a quick turn-around back home to Los
Angeles. Michael is a unique individual. He suffers from Fregoli Delusion, meaning he sees and hears everyone as a single person (all voiced by Tom Noonan). He checks into his hotel and settles into his room. He decides to give an old flame a phone call.
The two meet but it quickly turns disastrous. A disillusioned Michael finds hope when he hears a unique female voice in the hallway. After pounding on a few nearby doors, he finds her: she's Lisa (voiced by Jennifer Jason Leigh), a woman who is staying at
the hotel with a co-worker, both of whom are in town to hear Michael speak. The three of them get together for drinks and Michael finds himself increasingly infatuated with Lisa. She's different. She sounds different, she looks different. But she's shy.
She bears a physical scar on her face that she cover with her hair. The two eventually return to Michael's room where they share an intimate moment. But can their newfound attraction break them out of their respective shells and allow them to live the
life they've been missing all these years?
He doesn't know who he is. She is afraid of who she is. Anomalisa offers a contrast between the characters. On one hand is a man who sees everyone the same way -- everyone shares the same face and speaks with the same voice -- but he, somehow, sees
and hears her differently. And it's exciting. Alluring. Something new. There's a spark, a purpose, something about her that sets her apart. Maybe he sees himself in her, just in a different manifestation of the same problem. She is different, too, to the
point that she doesn't want to be seen. She fears her physical scar and is always degrading herself, playfully for the mot part but by doing so only magnifying a deeper trouble underneath. Yet she is the only one he sees. She is the one that stands out,
makes him happy, puts a spring in his step, sets fire to his dormant passion. Her flaw makes her real. And he, too, allows her to slowly, but surely, remove her guard, to allow herself to be praised, loved, and admired for who she is beyond the one thing
she has allowed to come to define her. It's a very interesting juxtaposition, about how one human perceives another and how those perceptions are as much an inward reflection as they are an outward reflection. The movie's final act says much more about
the characters -- him in particular -- but for the sake of not spoiling the movie, it's best to leave it to the audience to sort out what it means and how it all comes to either solidify or redefine what the audience has come to know about Michael
Stone.
Crafting the movie with puppets actually helps to reinforce the story's themes about identity and perception. While Anomalisa is worth a watch for its technical workmanship, the film uses its scale and characters to great effect and, eventually,
the puppetry gives way to the themes and the audience embraces story over visuals, context over flesh and bone. The work here is remarkable. Built to 1/6 scale, everything looks amazing, from characters and locations to small touches like ice cubes, a
meter in a taxi, or a phone in a room. Everything in the film represents a clear labor of love for the material and the craftsmanship necessary to make it live and breathe. The world is amazingly well detailed, down to rain on windows, condensation on a
bathroom mirror, even a urine stream that looks remarkably fluid and lifelike. Characters are a little jerky by design, but again it's the voice talents of David Thewlis, Jennifer Jason Leigh, and Tom Noonan that help overcome the puppetry's inherent
limitations and make the movie soar. The voice talent is remarkable, with the leads giving an incredible sense of life, self, and purpose to the characters and Noonan doing a remarkable job of voicing any number of support characters with the same rhythm
necessary to accentuate Michael's perception of the world. The supplements included on the Blu-ray disc -- particularly the 30-minute making-of -- do a remarkable job of expanding on the intricacies of the production; it's a must-watch compliment to the
movie (more below).
Anomalisa is a powerful, fascinating, and thought-provoking film that's visually unique and thematically rich. It's layered and detailed both visually and dramatically and the intensive labor of love behind its creation is evident in every shot.
The voice acting is terrific and only accentuates the movie's broader story and intimate themes alike. Paramount's Blu-ray release of Anomalisa features solid video and audio. Supplements are few in number but very informative and a must-watch
compliment to the movie. Highly recommended.
[CSW] -3.9- Anomaly and Lisa make Anomalisa. Remember the name "Fregoli", it is the name of the hotel and it is the key to why women and men all seem to speak with the same man's voice. The reference is to the Fregoli delusion, a mental
disorder that makes the sufferer see the rest of the world as populated by multiple versions of a single malevolent individual bent on his or her destruction. This is an unusual movie and definitely not for everyone - it is filmed in stop motion
ADULT animation and is a work of art. It can be a bit disturbing at time with cynical humor and fragile characters but it does a good job of leaving you with the truthful after taste how this type of mental illness manifests itself. For that it
gets a full point added. If you miss or don't understand the Fregoli delusion (which I admit I did not know at first) a lot of the movie won't make complete sense and will leave large question marks in your head. It was only after words that "I got it." I
don't think that knowing this in advance is a spoiler because I would have loved to have known it at the beginning of the film. Understanding any mental illness is a trip in and of itself, so relax and enjoy it.
[V4.0-A3.5] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box.
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