Mashable 2024年10月19日
'Bird' review: Andrea Arnold's coming-of-age fable comes up slightly short
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《鸟》是一部以现实主义为基调的青春成长故事,讲述了12岁的女孩贝利与神秘的“鸟”之间在英国东南部的格雷夫森德小镇发生的相遇。该片通过摇晃的镜头语言展现了小镇的破败与混乱,也刻画了贝利在不完整的家庭环境中挣扎成长的困境。影片中,贝利与“鸟”的相遇似乎为她的生活带来了一丝光明与希望,但导演安德烈亚·阿诺德却将这种希望的可能性留给了观众的想象,并未给出明确的答案,这也成为影片最具争议之处。

🐦 **破败的家庭环境与成长中的困境**: 影片以12岁的女孩贝利为中心,展现了她与不负责任的父亲以及充满暴力倾向的哥哥所组成的家庭。他们居住在格雷夫森德小镇破败的公寓楼里,父亲沉迷于无法负担的婚礼计划,哥哥则带领一群少年组成街头帮派,试图通过暴力维护正义。贝利的成长环境充满了暴力、混乱和不确定性,她试图寻找归属感,却又不断被现实所挫败。

🦋 **“鸟”的出现与希望的可能性**: 在贝利的生活中,神秘的“鸟”出现了。他与贝利有着相似之处,都渴望摆脱现实困境,寻求自由和解脱。 “鸟”身上散发着温暖和宁静的气息,与贝利所处的环境形成鲜明对比,他似乎代表着一种理想化的存在,为贝利带来了一丝希望的光芒。然而,影片并没有明确说明“鸟”的真实身份和目的,他是否真的来自天堂,又是否能帮助贝利摆脱困境,留给了观众无尽的遐想。

🕊️ **现实主义与象征主义的交织**: 影片以摇晃的镜头语言,展现了格雷夫森德小镇的破败与混乱,同时也展现了贝利内心的挣扎与困惑。导演安德烈亚·阿诺德通过贝利的视角,将现实与想象、真实与虚幻交织在一起,模糊了界限。影片中的“鸟”既是真实存在的角色,又是象征着希望与救赎的符号。导演似乎在暗示,希望并非总是清晰可见,而是在现实的迷雾中,等待着人们去发现和把握。

🦅 **影片的艺术表现手法**: 影片通过摇晃的镜头语言,展现了格雷夫森德小镇的破败与混乱,以及贝利内心的挣扎与困惑。导演安德烈亚·阿诺德善于运用镜头语言,营造出一种压抑、沉闷的氛围,同时也展现了小镇的真实性和残酷性。影片中,贝利用手机拍摄的“鸟”的照片,以及动物的奇异行为,都暗示了影片中现实与超现实的交织,为影片增添了一丝神秘感。

🦉 **影片的不足**: 尽管影片在艺术表现手法和主题探讨方面都展现了导演的才华,但影片也存在一些不足。例如,影片对“鸟”的身份和目的过于模糊,没有给出明确的答案,这可能会让观众感到困惑和失望。此外,影片的叙事节奏也略显缓慢,缺乏足够的张力,可能会让观众感到乏味。

📽️ **影片的评价**: 《鸟》是一部充满争议的影片,它以现实主义的风格展现了青春成长的困境,同时也探讨了希望和救赎的可能性。影片的艺术表现手法和主题探讨都值得关注,但影片也存在一些不足,例如叙事节奏和主题表达的模糊性。总体而言,影片是一部值得思考和讨论的电影。

Andrea Arnold lobs everything including the kitchen sink at her latest tale of realism, though she can't quite balance its highs and lows. Bird follows a poor 12-year-old's coming-of-age in Southeast England, and her friendship with a mysterious stranger. It's as much about grimy, tangible details as it is about ethereal ideas of what the lens can (and cannot) see, but this self-reflexivity is, at once, the movie's most breathtaking facet, as well as its undoing.

Arnold has long employed a roving lens to explore rural and suburban landscapes. Bird, her first fiction film is nearly a decade, is no exception, though she affords herself too much aesthetic liberty at times. This time around, her handheld style is more chaotic than exploratory. It often obscures more than it reveals. However, her actors help her in capturing just enough vulnerability to make up for this misstep.

The film doesn't quite fit together, but its individual pieces can be dazzling. Some even border on the divine, and they work to remind us that even a lesser Arnold is still a cut above most people's best.

What is Bird about?

Credit: Atsushi Nishijima / Courtesy of MUBI

Hard-as-nails Bailey (newcomer Nykiya Adams), a 12-year-old biracial Black girl, lives with her young, wayward white father, Bug (Barry Keoghan, Saltburn), in a dilapidated apartment project in Kent, England. In fact, their town is called Gravesend, a murky name that echoes their dead-end prospects, though this doesn't stop Bug from planning a wedding celebration he can't afford. To Bailey's chagrin, Bug's girlfriend of three months and now fiancée, Kayleigh (Frankie Box), is about to move into their home with her infant daughter. The pre-teen lashes out, and attempts to join the vigilante gang run by her 14-year-old half-brother, Hunter (Jason Buda).

Arnold often takes an oblique, blink-and-you'll-miss-it approach to establishing some of these relationships, which often come to light through quick and muffled dialogue. This is, in essence, the point. It can be initially hard to tell whether the heavily tattooed, high-energy Bug is Bailey's father or her sibling, or where Bug and Hunter are related at all — they barely share the screen — which speaks to how young and ill-prepared Bug is for fatherhood, and the family's fractured nature.

Hunter and his scrawny friends try to take the law into their own hands by attacking domestic abusers and recording their assaults for social media, and while this could make its own intriguing feature, it's but a passing detail in Arnold's jagged-edged world — for better or worse. While it does eventually pay off in the plot (and has at least glancing thematic relevance), it can't help but feel like a morally intriguing aspect of Bailey's story has gone unexplored.

After Bailey is ousted from these missions for her safety, she comes across an awkward, friendly figure who goes only by the name Bird (Franz Rogowski, Passages). Bird claims to have come to Gravesend to track down his parents, from whom he was separated as a child. In keeping with the film's persistent issue, this saga is also sidelined as soon as it gets interesting, but the ephemeral nature of Bird's arrival is, in its own way, wondrous.

Franz Rogowski brings a shimmering warmth to Bird.

Credit: Robbie Ryan / Courtesy of MUBI

From the moment he appears, Rogowski's soft physicality brings dazzling contrast to Bailey's rough-and-tumble world, building intrigue in the process. Their initial connection is built on commonalities; Bird defies gender binaries with his lengthy skirt, as does Bailey with her short hair and boisterous attitude, and they happen to meet in the wide-open isolation of a lonely field, as if they're each escaping from something. However, Bird also represents a sense of wide-eyed possibility that Bailey's surroundings don't often allow her to feel.

Something as simple as Bird's quiet smile, and his seeming friendly demeanor with no ulterior motives, feels entirely alien to Bailey, though it might to most people. Rogowski plays Bird with one eye towards rejecting all things cynical, whether to maintain optimism about his familial search or simply because this is some innate quality Bird happens to possess.

Bird often rides the line between character and idealistic symbol, especially when Bailey begins capturing him with her phone camera, and projecting his images on her bedroom wall. On occasion, he'll stand perched on the roof of a nearby building, unmoving, looking down at her like an angelic being. The way he carries himself is beautiful and breathtaking. He's a breath of fresh air that Bailey and the movie sorely need.

Bird is almost self-reflexive about its images — but not quite.

Credit: Courtesy of MUBI

Unfortunately, Bailey's proclivity for capturing scenery is yet another idea left unexplored, even though Bird is at its most potent when dipping its toe into her perspective. Her pictures and videos are gentle in a way her surroundings are not, and the question of whether she's projecting this gentleness out into the world or finding it in places others might not seek it remains largely untouched.

Arnold is usually adept at capturing the rhythms and invisible hues of any place she films, but her framing here is often so off-kilter as to be nauseating. Bird is too quick and chaotic to ever ruminate on its images — Arnold's own, or the ones she creates for Bailey — which makes her protagonist's own point of view feel fleeting, even when the movie delves further into her family.  

However, Bird's enigmatic presence, as briefly seen through Bailey's eyes, is just alluring enough, and allows Arnold to keep an observational distance without the movie coming apart at the seams. Along the way, as teenage drama comes to the fore, it's also complemented by strange happenings verging on magical realism, thanks to the strange behavior of animals. While these can be chalked up to coincidental oddities, they're framed with just enough mischief to pose delightful doubts about the movie's true nature.

Whether or not Bird represents or possesses some kind of divinity is practically irrelevant in the face of whether or not Bailey can recognize this or capture it. However, rather than exploring its latent symbolism, the film soon begins straying into awfully literal territory. It can't seem to maintain its sense of mystery for very long. In the process, even its most life-affirming moments tend to lose their impact, even though Rogowski's otherworldliness is a marvel to behold.

Bird was reviewed out of its NewFest premiere in New York. It will be released in theaters Nov. 8.

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现实主义 青春成长 希望 救赎 安德烈亚·阿诺德
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