NEW YORK, NY.- Francis Ford Coppolas Megalopolis is a bursting-at-the-seams hallucination of a movie; its wonderfully out there. At once a melancholic lament and futuristic fantasy, it invokes different epochs and overflows with entrancing, at times confounding images and ideas that have been playing in my head since I first saw the movie in May at the Cannes Film Festival. There, it was both warmly received and glibly dismissed, a critical divide thats nothing new for Coppola, a restlessly experimental filmmaker with a long habit of going off-Hollywood.
Nothing if not au courant, Megalopolis is a vision of a moribund civilization, though also a great-man story about an architect, Cesar Catilina (Adam Driver), who dreams of a better world. An enigmatic genius (he has a Nobel Prize) with an aristocratic mien and a flair for drama, Catilina lives in a city that resembles todays New York by way of ancient Rome, although it mostly looks like an elaborate soundstage. As familiar as Fifth Avenue and as obscure as the far side of the moon, it is a world that mirrors its real counterpart as a playpen for the wealthy and a prison-house for the destitute. The city haunts Catilina. It also inspires him.
What Catilina dreams of is a perfect school-city, in which people can achieve their better selves. Its an exalted aspiration, as seemingly boundless but also as sheltering as the blue sky, and one that invokes a long line of lofty dreamers and master builders. There are predictable obstacles mostly other people, small-minded types without vision, idealism or maybe just faith. Among these is the mayor, Franklyn Cicero (Giancarlo Esposito), a consummate politician with no patience for fantasies or for Catilina. Their animosity runs through the story, which is narrated by Catilinas aide, Fundi Romaine (Laurence Fishburne), dense with incident and populated by an array of noble souls and posturing fools.
The fools prove better company in Megalopolis than most of the upright types, although with their all-too-human comedy, theyre not always distinguishable. They begin rushing in after the jolting opener, which finds Catilina dressed in inky black and uncertainly climbing out of a window in the crown of the Chrysler Building. Before long, he is standing with one foot firmly planted and the other shakily raised over the edge. He calls out, Time stop, and everything the clouds above, the cars below freezes, only to restart at his command. He looks like a colossus, although he also brings to mind early-cinema clown Harold Lloyd hanging over a different abyss in Safety Last! (a title that could work for this audacious movie).
Its quite the to-be-or-not introduction. Given that filmmakers are in the business of stopping time, Catilinas entrance also reads as an auteurist mission statement. So its a relief when Catilina gets off that precipice, even if Coppola never really does. The filmmaker has a thing for dreamers and their great, big dreams, and its easy to see Megalopolis which he mentioned in interviews as early as 1983 in autobiographical terms. Like Catilina, Coppola has endured and almost been consumed by catastrophic setbacks (most notably with his founding of a film studio that nearly ruined him), only to rise phoenixlike from the ashes. Its one reason that Megalopolis feels like a personal statement on an epic scale.
Much happens, including love, death, a bloody intrigue and a bacchanalia with a three-ring circus, racing chariots and writhing bodies. Amid all this tumult, Catilina falls in love with the mayors daughter, Julia (Nathalie Emmanuel), a party girl who quotes Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius by heart. He also separates from his lover, Wow Platinum, a TV host played by a peerlessly funny Aubrey Plaza with much bling and a perfect deadpan. Wow is soon swept up in a scheme involving Catilinas cousin, Clodio Pulcher (Shia LaBeouf), and a megarich banker, Hamilton Crassus III (Jon Voight). There are diatribes about debt and speeches about utopia, none of which seizes the imagination as strongly as Coppolas filmmaking.
Megalopolis is a tragedy about both a world and a man, which is most poignantly and persuasively expressed through Coppolas ambition and visuals and by the stronger performances, Drivers included. The actor holds the center throughout, making Catilinas existential burden palpable in the downward turn of the characters mouth and the ponderousness with which he moves through the ruins of his world. Its a magnetic turn even when Driver and Emmanuel struggle to put across the romance. Coppola showcases their characters affair beautifully, including for a kiss they share while perilously balanced atop metal girders floating above the city. Its a lush metaphor for falling in love, but the romance itself never achieves liftoff the way that Coppola obviously intends it to.
Even so, the image of Catilina and Julia kissing exerts its own gravitational pull on you, as do so many of the movies other ravishing visuals: a flower stand that vividly brightens a gloomy street (shades of Alfred Hitchcocks flower shop in Vertigo); the citys monumental stone statues coming to life only to collapse in apparent despair; a vestal virgin (Grace VanderWaal) swinging above the fray as she fades. Coppolas delight in the plasticity of the medium is infectious.
The beauty of some of his images is overpowering, as in a brief interlude that shows an enormous pale hand reaching across the screen from a bank of clouds to grab the moon, an image that could be right out of early cinema at its most feverishly untamed.
Throughout Megalopolis, Coppola references different time periods in the story Catilina is a futurist haunted by the past and in his pictorial choices. Coppola clearly had fun using a digital toolbox for some of the movies more far-out imaginings, including the organic shapes that fill Catilinas plans for the city. He repeatedly draws from early cinema and classical Hollywood as well as film spectacles, theater and vaudeville. Both times I watched Megalopolis, a live performer playing a journalist entered the movie theater with a mic, the lights flipped on, and the image on the screen briefly shrank so that the eye lines of the performer and Driver matched. (During the movies theatrical run, some screenings will feature a live performer, while in others, the audience will only hear the journalist.)
Its a funny-ha-ha, funny-odd moment. Although it modestly interrupts the storys flow, the appearance of a live performer doesnt so much break the fourth wall as playfully wave at it, which, in some ways, is what Coppola is doing here. For all its serious talk, grim portends and high ideals, Megalopolis is also an argument for pleasure. Its filled with high and low comedy, bursts of slapstick, mugging faces and even teasing burlesque. In a funny bit that tweaks the vanity and pettiness of men hungry for power, Clodio who tries to take over the city purposefully marches in, throws his hat to the ground and orders one of his men to pick it up. The minion does, only to throw his hat and order the next guy to pick it up.
In its voracious hybridity and daring, in its visual experimentation, sound design and departure from contemporary realist norms, Megalopolis hews closer to the experimental expressionism of Coppola movies such as One From the Heart and Rumble Fish than to the classicism of The Godfather, his most lauded film. In the years that followed Rumble Fish, Coppola continued to shake off convention in films such as his adaptation of Dracula, pushing himself further in aesthetically adventurous, noncommercial movies such as Youth Without Youth. These might have been more generously received, including by critics, if they had been marketed as foreign-language films or if Coppolas name hadnt been attached. Artists who take genuine risks also risk the love of their most passionate fans.
That probably sounds more defensive than I intend it to, but sincere, serious, shoot-for-the-moon ventures such as Megalopolis deserve more than shallow dismissals. After I saw Megalopolis a second time, I flashed on something that critic David Thomson wrote in 1997 in a review of the neo-noir L.A. Confidential. Thomson was enthusiastic about the film, but he wondered if big audiences would find it too demanding. We are out of training, he wrote, an admirably gentle way to address the lament that the mass audience has no interest in putatively difficult movies. (The Godfather Part II, its worth recalling, was once thought difficult by many.) With its dependence on genres and familiar stars and stories, the film industry has long encouraged us trained us, to borrow Thomsons polite verb to not expect too much from movies. Coppola, by contrast, has long asked us to expect everything.
I doubt that Megalopolis has a big audience, much less any Oscars in its future, but Coppola didnt make it to pander to viewers or win more awards. Its a fascinating movie and perhaps his directorial swan song, although I hope not; mostly, it feels like a dream about cinema itself, its past and hoped-for future one that Coppola, now 85, has nurtured for so long that the films commercial prospects seem beside the point (even if Im sure that hed like to make some of his money back). In the end, what matters is the movie a brash, often beautiful, sometimes clotted, nakedly personal testament. Its a little nuts, but our movies could use more craziness, more passion, feeling and nerve. They could use a lot more of the love that Coppola has for cinema, which he continues to pry from the industrys death grip by insisting that film is art.
Megalopolis
Rated R for language and violence. Running time: 2 hours, 18 minutes. In theaters.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.