Saturday, February 28, 2015

Whiplash (2014)


Director:  Damien Chazelle

A work of art is a personal matter to the artist.  To the rest of us, it’s subjective.  We get to decide how we feel about it.  We either connect with something in it or we don’t.  Our opinions are influenced by our own personal baggage.  Often, the best artwork comes from the artist fearlessly digging into his or her experiences and therapeutically exorcising the demons.  That’s the way Whiplash felt to me.  So, after watching the movie, I wasn’t surprised to find that the writer/director, first timer Damien Chazelle, was once an up and coming jazz drummer.  Much like the character Miles Teller plays in the film.  If the story in the film is any indication, it must have been one tough experience.

Every so often, you see a movie that’s so immediate and confident in the storytelling that you just know it has to be influenced heavily by past experiences.  Whiplash is that kind of movie.  The whole thing feels and looks so cool.  Like the big band jazz music the characters are in love with, it’s precisely timed and often shockingly kicks into high emotional gear, then brings it back, then kicks in again.  The story is about drive, ambition, passion, love, anger, fear, containment of fear, teacher, student, pain, and lines of tolerance.  How far is too far to push someone?  What does it take to transcend from being great at something to being “one of the greats” at something.  How close can dedication come to insanity.  Where are the lines?  All this in a little movie about a young man who has thoughts of becoming a great jazz drummer and meets the teacher who might either help him transcend or destroy his drive and opportunity entirely. 

To Miles Teller, J. K. Simmons, Damien Chazelle, and the entire cast and crew of the film, I have only two words for you…Good Job!

(See the movie and you’ll understand that last part.)

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