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With 3-D CGI, Peter Jackson Makes a One-Dimensional Lovely Bones

A one-film cabinet of curiosities, The Lovely Bones turns the most successful CGI director of the '00s loose on one of the decade's prime literary phenomena: Cults collide as Peter "Lord of the Rings" Jackson tackles Alice Sebold's bestselling New Age gothic, the story of a rape-murder-dismemberment and its aftermath, narrated by its 14-year-old victim from heaven.

This is where you go when you die.
Dreamworks Studios
This is where you go when you die.

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The Lovely Bones
Directed by Peter Jackson
Paramount Pictures
Opens December 11

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A season that has already brought adaptations of a once-controversial classic picture book about a disturbed child, and its grown-up Doomsday evil twin ("normal" child on the road in a disturbed world), is capped by a vision dramatizing the ultimate parental nightmare. In Jackson's hands, The Lovely Bones is doubly appalling. Part Disney's Alice in Wonderland, part Fritz Lang's M, the movie is horrific yet cloying, alternately distended and abrupt, sometimes poignant and often ridiculous.

The Lovely Bones begins with a flurry of activity, both inside the snow globe that's introduced as a metaphor for the afterlife, and outside in the prosaic, comforting suburban universe into which Susie (Saoirse Ronan) was born. The actress, outstanding as the child snitch in Atonement, is engagingly hyper-expressive, and the filmmaking is similarly kinetic, full of floating camera moves and breakneck cross-cutting. Jackson hits the high points of Susie's young life, speeding toward her brutal demise—but not so quickly as to bypass the novel's provocative cautionary setup.

Published in the aftermath of 9/11, The Lovely Bones' adroitly comforting synthesis of Our Town and Anne Frank was widely appreciated as a lyrical tale of grief and reconciliation, but it is also a malign fable of adolescent coming-of-age. Susie's first kiss, about to be delivered by her first crush, is interrupted—and rudely de-romanticized—by the school principal's irate tantrum over the anatomically correct female nude that Susie's weird friend drew for art class. Ignoring this omen and walking on air in anticipation of her first date, Susie is enticed down the rabbit hole that her strenuously innocuous serial-killing neighbor (Stanley Tucci, barely recognizable and supremely creepy) has prepared as her death chamber. She leaves this world horrendously despoiled yet essentially innocent.

Punishing sexual curiosity is not a foreign notion for Jackson, who broke into movies making gross-out horror flicks. Fans will remember the scene in Dead Alive in which a chaste lad's first kiss triggers his mother's transformation into a flesh-eating zombie. Still, he has the tact to omit the gruesome details of Susie's murder—and will later expunge the ludicrous scene in which Sebold allows the girl's ecstatic return to earth.

Unfortunately, he shows no such discretion in literalizing the novel's vague metaphysics. Once upon a time—see his 1994 comedy of adolescent matricide, Heavenly Creatures—Jackson sensationally infused movie naturalism with garish special effects. Here, all is subservient to the digital splendors of Susie's heavenly abode—a constantly mutating realm of spacious skies, purple mountains, and undulating amber waves of grain, not to mention crystal beaches, foggy forests, and the peripatetic cosmic gazebo from which she observes her family and murderer's doings.

All characterizations are sacrificed to steep in Susie's celestial surroundings. Initially touching, her parents (Rachel Weisz and Mark Wahlberg) are dwarfed by the ongoing pyrotechnics. Stealing scenes as Susie's cheerfully dissolute grandma, Susan Sarandon struggles to provide the reality principle—in vain. Although the novel also drowned in a vat of syrup, Sebold got by for nearly 100 pages on the unsentimental clarity of her style and sustained verisimilitude of the narrator's adolescent voice. Jackson demonstrates no such chops. Indeed, he consistently undermines the movie's uncanny elements by over-dramatizing events, such as Susie's fleeting visitations, that have their own inherent power.

As the novel suggests a form of talk therapy, Jackson's adaptation is a misguided tribute to the magic of the movies—which have always specialized in reanimating the dead. But there is something to be said for representing the actual world and there are some things that can only be visualized in the mind's eye. What heaven could have been more radiant than a child's view of her suburban neighborhood—what spectacle more divine than Susan Sarandon's wig?

jhoberman@villagevoice.com

 
  • Sabastian214 01/01/2010 10:17:00 PM

    I'm reading mixed reviews on Lovely Bones. I have just finished the book, and I thought t was done in great taste. The subject of a child including rape and murder are always a sensitive subject. I think the main jest of the story is how she is trying to find justice for herself and her family. I am a publicist for Forgiving Ararat and that, too, is narrated by a young woman, murdered and trying to figure out why. The story comes full circle as she is appointed to present souls for judgement and learns the truth about her murder and the people involved and how they were involved in her life on earth, even though at first she does not know any of them. It is great how it all makes sense in the end. I intend to see both Forgiving Ararat and The Lovely Bones when they come to our area. I think this is a new type of movie experience.

  • cassius123 12/14/2009 12:43:00 AM

    I agree that Forgiving Ararat has such a better resolution and deeper meaning than The Lovely Bones. While it has similarities such as a dead narrator and supernatural imagery, it is much more intellectual - a grown-up version of Bones. For me it was thought-provoking and uplifting. I too am a publicist and fan of the book, so I hope you like my "cheesy" name, lol! But seriously, I look forward to hearing more reader comments on Forgiving Ararat as it was truly a unique reading experience for me.

  • 12/13/2009 12:38:00 AM

    are these comments some literary agent's sock puppets or what? down to the cheesy names.

  • Halle Eavelyn 12/12/2009 8:00:00 AM

    Interesting - of all the reviews I've read, this is the very first one that said Susan Sarandon stole scenes instead of chewing scenery. Well, I see a great thread about Forgiving Ararat going here, LOL! Interesting - most of the complaints I'm reading online comment about the lack of resolution in the film, which is not Jackson's fault, as he's being true to The Lovely Bones book. Just finished reading Forgiving Ararat myself - the themes are remarkably similar, with it starting with a dead woman in her own version of heaven - but there they digress completely and the book's themes are basically justice and resolution, both of which you get in spades in a really remarkable work! In Lovely Bones, things are left much more open, and we have to be content with Susie's blissful version of heaven as her murderer goes free.

  • CalvST 12/12/2009 6:48:00 AM

    I recently heard about Lovely Bones (just had its premiere in Sydney). And I noticed a lot of people had compared Lovely Bones to the likes of Forgiving Ararat by Gita Nazareth and The Shack by William Paul Young. Personally I would give two thumbs up to Forgiving Ararat. It's just like the grown-up version of Lovely Bones, also written from the point of view of a dead person, only in this book, it's a thirty-something lady lawyer. Heavy on politics, religion and history, but style of writing is smart and honest which made it easy to read. As with all book-turned-movie, Lovely Bones fell short on the book which is already not up to expectations.

  • WendiO 12/12/2009 6:42:00 AM

    There are always challenges when the plot involves heaven because none of us knows what heaven is like. But that's precisely what draws me to The Lovely Bones and the latest novel I read called Forgiving Ararat. It is a great read, and if you like The Lovely Bones book and/or movie, you will love it. As a young attorney, wife, and mother, Brek Cuttler�s journey from life to death is so graphic that you feel her fatal wounds and experience her bittersweet memories. While struggling to understand her eternal fate, Brek is tasked with representing individuals who appear to have few redeeming qualities at their Final Judgement. Like The Lovely Bones, Forgiving Ararat makes you reexamine your conscience.

  • AnnCamp 12/12/2009 12:46:00 AM

    This review and others disappoint me, as I really loved this book and am looking forward to seeing Peter Jackson's visual interpretation of it. The Lovely Bones was such a mesmerizing book I didn't want it to end. Skirting the borderlands between human reality and the imagined wonders of heaven, I felt I had been introduced to a world both startlingly tangible yet ethereal all the same. Since then, I have been looking for further excursions into the afterworld, but I haven't found much, until now. Like the previous commentator, recently too I read Gita Nazareth's Forgiving Ararat. This book also explores the interconnections between the land of the living and the land of the dead. As a publicist and a fan of this book, I'm interested to see what parallels are drawn between the two.

  • greatlitlover 12/09/2009 3:55:00 PM

    The criticisms (and praise) about the book here are fair. Some of this was bound to tranfer into the movie. The Lovely Bones did get swallowed in syrup, but the book struck a chord with its depictions of the afterlife and brave exploration of death. A far more complex, evocative, intellecually challenging read that explores these same themes without all the gooey syrup is a new book just out called "Forgiving Ararat" by Gita Nazareth. Supernatural thriller/murder mystery about a young female lawyer who dies and, in heaven, is assigned to defend souls at the Final Judgment...where she eventually confronts her own killer. Gita Nazareth combines Alice Sebold, Scott Turow, John Grisham, Kafta, Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky...you get the point. As a publicist and fan, it's a great read! Read more: http://www.monstersandcritics.com/movies/news/article_1515426.php/First-clip-from-Peter-Jackson-s-The-Lovely-Bones#ixzz0ZBsIXFMO

 

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