The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Directed by: David Fincher
Premise: Benjamin Button (Brad Pitt) is a child
born into the body of an eighty year old man and as he ages his body regresses,
growing younger. The film follows Benjamin’s life as he grows up and his body
grows younger, as witnessed by the love of his life (Cate Blanchette).
What Works: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is another great film by director David Fincher, who consistently delivers
highly crafted films like Se7en, Fight Club,
and Zodiac.
Although much different from those films thematically and tonally, Benjamin
Button showcases Fincher’s talents for production design and narrative
unity. The story of the film deals very skillfully with the theme of mortality
and uses Benjamin’s unique situation to shed some new perspectives on the
subject. It is interesting to compare The Curious Case of Benjamin Button to Seven
Pounds, another recent film also dealing with mortality. Where Seven
Pounds got lost in its own somber tone, Benjamin Button does a
terrific job of transitioning between various points on the timeline, keeping
its focus on the story and the characters, and integrating the theme into the
plot, rather than doing it the other way around. The Curious Case of Benjamin
Button is also very similar to Forrest
Gump in its themes and structure, the romantic subplot, and even the
temperament of its title character. But despite these similarities, Benjamin
Button does manage to step out of Forrest Gump’s shadow. Where Forrest
Gump gave the audience a retrospective on the formative years of the baby
boomer generation, Benjamin Button is subtler, leaving the historical
events mostly in the background and instead focusing on Benjamin’s life and
his relationships and what he learns about life from his predicament and from
the lives and deaths of those around him. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button has some very good performances by Brad Pitt and especially by Cate Blanchette
as Daisy. Blanchette is allowed a lot of the big emotional moments and Pitt
breaks some new ground for himself as an actor, playing a character who is less
in control and less confident than other characters that he usually plays.
What Doesn’t: This is not a conventional film
either for those used to the typical Hollywood fantasy product or for those who
expect a strictly realist film. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is
more of a fable and as that it works wonderfully but viewers should be aware
that the film does not follow many of the usual conventions of storytelling.
Bottom Line: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is a terrific film that manages to deal with a very heavy subject matter but avoids the kind of self-important attitude that usually sinks a film like this. It has some great story construction and a pair of terrific performances that make it one of the best films of David Fincher’s career.