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Tom Hanks & Robin Wright in Zemeckis' NEW Movie 'Here'! Time-Traveling Masterpiece or Tech-Heavy Flop?

Here: A time-Traveling Tale – A Hit or a Miss?

Robert Zemeckis' "Here": A Bold Experiment That Almost Works

Robert Zemeckis, that legendary director of classics like Back to the Future and Forrest Gump, is back with a wild new movie, Here. It’s based on Richard McGuire’s graphic novel and this cinematic adventure takes the classic Hollywood storytelling in a totally new, unexpectedly creative way, generating tons of suspense which culminates in an extremely well-paced final plot conclusion. And the plot itself revolves around exploring a single room across centuries! Think Tree of Life meets Amour (but a little more upbeat!) and this results in those profound reflections on human experience within a family’s timeframe in relation to larger historic narratives.

Forget a normal storyline, this is all about an idea! It explores the many, many people who inhabit the same spot across different generations and timeframes; making this film not a traditional chronological journey; more of an unexpected glimpse across the centuries of many, many different individuals in the same home! It explores how deeply profound life actually is through various seemingly mundane daily routines, struggles, and triumphs.  

Tom Hanks and Robin Wright Reunite – But the De-aging Tech Is… Questionable

‘Here’ Review: Robert Zemeckis Turns Back the Clock on Tom Hanks and Robin Wright, and It Ain’t Pretty Image

Tom Hanks and Robin Wright, that iconic Forrest Gump duo, return for this venture! And their decades-spanning relationship anchors Here’s narrative; their story arcs demonstrate human experience with extreme emotional resonance; and those same feelings generated make for surprising, unexpected depth; exploring intense heartache alongside moments of happiness, making a story completely emotionally engaging despite its unusual plot! However, some technological choices severely hampered some parts of this adventure.

The de-aging technology? (Using Metaphysic AI.) Let's be nice – it's hit-or-miss. Sometimes Hanks and Wright look surprisingly youthful; their younger versions feel perfectly rendered and surprisingly authentic! Those early-stages of technology demonstrated what future generations might easily expect, showcasing an almost impossible integration that almost perfectly works; making it plausible for future audiences to appreciate that kind of technology-fueled plot! In many moments however it completely fails – making them look far too artificial; their bodies clearly still betray their actual age – this feels uncanny and a lot of times this jarring and unbelievable aspect pulls you out of that moment; harming that attempt at creating any necessary emotional connection, further emphasized and explained later in this article.

The Fixed Camera: A Bold Choice with Mixed Results

Tom Hanks on Reuniting Onscreen with His 'Forrest Gump' Costar Robin Wright Image

The director, Robert Zemeckis, employs an incredibly audacious technique! He utilizes a fixed camera which looks very much like what most theatrical audiences are used to. It really emphasizes those story elements which matter most, showing some unusual moments of theatrical staging rarely found within normal movies and creating an unexpectedly fresh feeling compared to most contemporary filmmaking.   This static position frames all of Here’s action; constantly jumping between different storylines of varied timeframes in an intricate array; creating intense feelings which are very unexpected given how much of the plot is based upon a relatively unchanged visual space: a simple room.

It’s pretty effective sometimes; this creates this clever picture-in-picture approach which works to visually highlight that complex storyline without getting overwhelmed, yet its static quality doesn’t entirely suit some storytelling choices and fails to add necessary emotional impact that would've only worked had these elements changed; which is why this movie almost worked; the plot really needed adjustments regarding certain pacing elements which greatly impact emotional involvement for audiences. That overall experience fails as some critical plot points could not properly add their necessary intensity had some of those very specific scenes adjusted, creating those issues of misjudgement.

Multiple Storylines Across Time – A Tapestry of Human Experience

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Here’s storytelling is amazing and uses multiple families occupying that same living room throughout that time. The earliest scenes showed those prehistoric moments and move to early American families! There are indigenous people, colonial scenes– a seemingly endless array spanning those millennia showing various stories with vastly different perspectives. This doesn’t always connect; leaving that emotional connection inconsistent, and several plots not entirely successful! There are amazing, intense family dramas! There's heartfelt tragedy!   And humor too!

Tom Hanks and Robin Wright's storyline takes the forefront; their story serves to showcase the overall thematic concern; it centers their arc upon the family challenges— staying together, coming apart; working and raising a family in tandem with those predictable aspects involving career limitations, financial concerns, health challenges, which results in that extremely heartfelt portrayal; these become the pivotal elements showing why the audience remains captivated throughout its entire narrative. The scenes are compelling!

A Technical Marvel… With Some Rough Patches

‘Here’ Review: ‘Forrest Gump’ Filmmaker Robert Zemeckis Reunites With Tom Hanks & Robin Wright For Complex Family Story Stuck Somewhere In Time – AFI Fest Image

Zemeckis pushes those boundaries! It's an amazing display of that advanced de-aging technology alongside that constant shift across time; creating this very interesting spectacle. The visual aspects feel fresh and exciting; the editing really works and produces very interesting cutting from that constant transition throughout various storylines with seamless ease!

However, there are problems.  That overly-earnest, sentimental score by Alan Silvestri gets grating sometimes; the director’s decision not to really zoom or use close-up shots requires great dramatic performances from its stars; which was overall handled relatively well; those acting chops are clearly strong for everyone; making every detail intensely realized by those talented performers. And a handful of smaller stories lack depth; resulting in some unexpected weaknesses which do really affect how much you like the final film’s product; this almost becomes more of a mixed bag; this technical display feels really high level, the acting choices are really effective yet the overall editing decisions fail in some aspects!

Conclusion: Here's an Ambitious Movie With Huge Potential

Robin Wright looks back at 'Forrest Gump' Image

Here isn’t perfect but is intensely engaging. Those ambitious artistic decisions (de-aging, the fixed camera, those multiple storylines) could’ve had even greater success! The very unique approaches here showcase how filmmaking techniques have progressed.  Some choices did harm certain aspects, that almost perfect blend which ultimately didn't entirely connect, creating these intense flaws and uneven storytelling, It would however make you wonder what a refined version might look like, despite its uneven emotional highs and lows that might’ve impacted your experience!

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