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FILM REVIEW: Hannah Takes the Stairs (2007)
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Hannah Takes the Stairs (2007)
Dir. by Joe Swanberg
Starring Greta Gerwig
Dir. by Joe Swanberg
Starring Greta Gerwig
by Seth Rogovoy
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I don't want to give anything away, but Gerwig even seemingly acknowledges her debt to Brando here, inventing a bit of business at one point in the film that comes right out of The Godfather, when she playfully puts something in her mouth that could be Brando's cotton balls and/or the sliced orange peel in the garden death scene.
And the same can be said of the writing in this film -- it's almost 'non-writing' which, in order to pull off (as I think they do -- but that is the question that will obviously split viewers and critics), is as incredibly difficult to do successfully as the acting.
This is an incredibly modest film -- insular, with only a few roles, and less 'plot' rather than 'scenes' that do, in fact, reveal character and change over time.
If it weren't for the compelling performances, the heartbreakingly realistic emotional struggles of the characters, and the wit and ingenuity of the dialogue and the setups, it wouldn't work. But it has them all, and mostly, it has Greta Gerwig, who has an uncanny sense of how the camera sees her, and seemingly totally un-self-consciously uses that to her -- and our -- advantage.
Seth Rogovoy is Berkshire Living’s award-winning editor-in-chief and cultural critic.
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