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| Vol. 4, Issue 5 May 2012 |
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Arts & Reviews |
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Cinema Review |
Of Pizza, Love and Elephants
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| Eat Pray Love is an obvious story with no surprises. After Gilbert has eaten and prayed, she will find love |
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Published : 1 October 2010 |
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| T |
HE PRETTY WOMAN is going through a mid-life
crisis and somehow we are supposed to care about
it. There was a time when the thrill of seeing a Julia
Roberts movie would be in looking at her wide
mouthed, somewhat self-conscious smile with sparkling
teeth and loud, awkward laughter. |
Roberts’ decision to act in Eat Pray Love—a film based
on a memoir by Elizabeth Gilbert—is interesting. Although
Roberts and Gilbert did not live similar lives, there is
enough in common between the two—especially the fear of
commitment.
Roberts went through several unhappy relationships
with movie stars. None of them matched the success of her
professional life. Roberts walked out on a near-marriage to
actor Kiefer Sutherland without any explanation. In fact,
her 1999 film Runaway Bride paralleled her personal life at
that time. In 2002 Roberts married cinematographer Daniel
Moder and has had three kids with him. As she turns 47
this year, she has slowed down her acting career.
Gilbert—at least what she writes in her book and what is
reflected in the film directed by Ryan Murphy—also walked
out of what seemed to be a hapless marriage (Billy Crudup
plays her husband in the film) and a subsequent relationship
with a young hottie played by James Franco.
Gilbert then set off on a journey of self discovery—travelling
to Italy, India and Indonesia, knowing well in advance
that these three travel destinations, in that particular order,
will bring a sense of balance to her life. Roberts seems
comfortable with her marriage to Moder, but in the weeks
prior to the film’s release in the US, she told Elle magazine
that she had discovered calmness through her exposure to
Hinduism. In fact, she said that she had converted to Hinduism
and was chanting regularly.
We all fell in love with Roberts in her 1990 hit film Pretty
Woman, but in Eat Pray Love she often forgets to smile.
There are some tears, and a lot of confused sadness—especially
in the beginning of the film, as her character walks
out of the marriage and then the relationship. It is never
quite explained what she feels is lacking in her life. But she
has the luxury of taking a year off to figure it out.
It is not easy to dismiss Eat Pray Love as a story. Gilbert
apparently lived through what she wrote in the book. The
film has already made over 70 million dollars in the US and
has been a decent draw for middle-aged women, despite
tepid reviews. Gilbert’s journeys, especially to Italy and Indonesia,
are the stuff of glossy travel magazines, and under
Murphy’s direction, the film is packed with clichés and often seems rather farfetched.
In one scene, Gilbert walks as Murphy and his cinematographer
track her head with a radiant light. We know that
this woman is blessed, since the director has given her a
halo. She is attractive, financially stable and no matter how
much unhappiness she faces in her life, all will be well for
her at the end of the film’s two-plus hours. Eat Pray Love is
an obvious story with no surprises. After Gilbert has eaten
and prayed, she will find love!
The journey starts in Rome, where Gilbert meets other
attractive men and women, hangs out at sidewalk cafés
and visits the city’s tourist destinations. Between walks
through Rome’s picturesque, narrow, cobblestoned streets,
she eats gelato sitting beside nuns who are also relishing
the Italian ice cream. She eats a lot of pasta and even takes
a trip to Naples to gorge on the city’s famed pizza. The food
photography in the Italy section of Eat Pray Love is a delight
to watch. And this part is sprinkled with Gilbert eating
big family-style meals and drinking wine with random
people she meets during her stay. She eventually learns the first of the three lessons in the film: the sweetness of doing
nothing, something we are told the Italians excel in.
The Italian journey of eating ends, and suddenly Gilbert
is in a small town in India. Her initial reactions are similar
to those of other foreigners who travel to India. After the
calmness and beauty of Italy, India seems like hell—way too
many people, streets crowded with traffic, young beggar
children, and all that heat and dust that foreigners complain
about.
Gilbert enters an ashram in search of a guru, and is disappointed
to learn that the spiritual leader is in New York. If
she had inquired in advance, well, maybe then there would
have been no book or movie.
At the ashram Gilbert meets Richard, an American from
Texas, played with much warmth by Richard Jenkins. Gilbert
initially finds Richard annoying but as time passes he
grows on her. In one of the film’s rare truthful moments,
Richard, a divorced man, talks to Gilbert about how much
he misses his son. Gilbert also befriends a 17-year-old devotee
in the ashram, Tulsi (Rushita Singh), who has to accept
her fate of an arranged marriage.
The India sections have Roberts’ Gilbert wearing a green
sari, remembering and regretting her own marriage and finally learning her second lesson: that God dwells in all of us.
And since the India journey would not be complete without
the ultimate cliché—Gilbert gets to touch an elephant.
And that takes us to Gilbert’s final destination: Bali.
While riding a bicycle she is pushed off the road by a
Brazilian, Felipe—Javier Bardem with constant three-day
stubble. She accidentally meets Felipe a few more times—
she is, after all, now passing through the love chapter
of the film. The local people she meets suggest that every
woman needs a husband. And by examining her knees,
one local woman can also tell that Gilbert has not had sex
for a while. In Eat Pray Love, the people of the East are
indeed wise!
Never mind the fact that Roberts and Bardem have no
chemistry (Roberts also lacks chemistry with her other
two male co-stars in the film, Crudup and Franco), but the
forces of cinema are stronger than anything else. Since
Roberts’ Gilbert has found some form of balance through
the two lessons she picked up in Italy and India, all she has
to do is to give that wide Pretty Woman smile and Felipe
will be hers for the rest of her life.
Eat Pray Love does have a few redeeming qualities, most
important being the soundtrack. Murphy has packed it with
several classic songs and pieces of music that have previously
featured in other films, including ‘The Long Road’ by
Eddie Vedder and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (Dead Man Walking),
Gato Barbieri’s lyrical theme from Last Tango in Paris
and Neil Young’s hit ‘Heart of Gold.’ And the film is beautiful
to look at, other than the section set in India.
But, eventually, Eat Pray Love is a flawed film with too
much emphasis on an American woman who has to learn
the ways of life through ancient European and Asian cultures.
The film strives hard to be respectful of foreign cultures,
but its understanding of all things non-American remains
naïve and superficial.
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Readers' Comments |
Total Comments
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eat pray fact check
15 October 2010 06:12 AM
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she's 42?
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