Movie Description Obsession and identity are recurring themes in screenwriter Charlie Kaufman's work, and he draws on them again in his directorial debut, SYNECDOCHE, NEW YORK. Kaufman's film focuses on the wiles of Caden Cotard (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a regional theater director who has won a MacArthur grant to help produce his next project. Cotard's artist wife, Adele Lack (Catherine Keener), subsequently departs with their daughter to Berlin, and he begins a flirtation with box office clerk Hazel (Samantha Morton). Much of the movie revolves around Cotard's ambitious next project, based around his life, which is being constructed in an enormous industrial space in New York City. As the years pass and the project is mired in endless rehearsals that replicate Cotard's existence, the tortured director obsesses over Adele, Hazel, his daughter, his health, and myriad other topics.
The complex and often highly inventive narrative of SYNECDOCHE, NEW YORK is typical of Kaufman's screenplays for features such as BEING JOHN MALKOVICH and ADAPTATION. The film draws heavily on the kind of visual trickery that director Spike Jonze has often used in his adaptations of Kaufman's works, and features a strong performance from Hoffman as Cotard. Occasionally the film is abstract and surreal: Hazel lives in a house that is permanently on fire, while the actors Cotard casts in his play often blur the lines between fantasy and reality. Moviegoers will theorize about the true meaning behind Kaufman's feature: it offers no easy answers. SYNECDOCHE, NEW YORK is a film that requires as much work from its viewers as it does from the resolutely excellent cast that brought it to life, and as the film careers from hilarity to sadness in the blink of an eye, there's little doubt that this is another superlative entry in Kaufman's canon.
Oscar-winning screenwriter Charlie Kaufman makes his directorial debut with this comedy starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, Catherine Keener, Hope Davis, and Michelle Williams. Hoffman stars as theater director Caden Cotard, a man whose talent takes him from upstate New York to the Great White Way, but the transition isn't an easy one. Kaufman was the mind behind such original fare as ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND and ADAPTATION, so film fans are sure to see something innovative with SYNECDOCHE, NEW YORK.
| Credits | | Producer: | Anthony Bregman, Spike Jonze | | Cast: | Emily Watson, Hope Davis, Michelle Williams, Tom Noonan |
Editorial Reviews "SYNECDOCHE, NEW YORK is beautiful....It makes an irrefutable case for the universality of the individual human experience." Los Angeles Times - Carina Chocano (10/24/2008)
"SYNECDOCHE, NEW YORK is as much a cry from the heart as it is an assertion of creative consciousness. It's extravagantly conceptual but also tethered to the here and now..." New York Times - Manohla Dargis (10/24/2008)
"[F]or viewers up for the challenge, it may be the film most likely to stick with you." Premiere - Emily Rems (10/24/2008)
"This is a film with the richness of great fiction....The subject of SYNECDOCHE is nothing less than human life and how it works." Chicago Sun-Times - Roger Ebert (11/05/2008)
"Kaufman provides juicy roles for his actors, including Michelle Williams, Dianne Wiest and Tom Noonan, who get caught in the time war as art imitates something resembling existence." Rolling Stone - Peter Travers (11/13/2008)
"[W]hile deadly serious in theme, the film is frantically playful in its construction, introducing a new surrealist gimmick in nearly every other scene..." Film Comment - Chris Norris (11/01/2008)
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