Negative reviews are harder for me to write than positive or mixed ones, because I don't like dwelling on disappointments. However, I think it's important to examine why certain projects don't work onscreen, just as it's important to examine the ones that do. Our case in point today is Kogonada's "A Big Bold Beautiful Journey," which is a fantasy fable where two people follow the instructions of a magic GPS to go on an impossible existential road trip into each other's psyches. And I'm the kind of movie watcher who's usually very receptive to heartwarming nonsense like this.
Colin Farrell and Margot Robbie play David and Sarah, two very attractive people who each separately rent cars from a strange rental service being run by cryptic, mysterious people played by Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Kevin Kline. They attend a wedding together, feel an initial spark, and are ready to leave it at that. However, the rental car's magic GPS voiced by Jodie Turner-Smith asks David if he wants to go on a "big, bold, beautiful journey," which leads the pair to a series of magical doors that send them to the past, to impossible liminal places, and of course, inevitably, to each other.
I've liked director Kogonada's previous films, "Columbus" and "After Yang," but those were very small scale, meditative art house films, designed for very limited audiences. "A Big Bold Beautiful Journey" is aiming for a bigger, broader audience, but retains the same sort of slow-paced, melancholy atmosphere and deeply introspective storytelling. There are attempts to jazz up the proceedings with a few brief action sequences, a musical number, and plenty of picturesque cinematography, but in the end the narrative is a gloomy slog that isn't entertaining. David and Sarah are supposed to fall in love, confront their pasts, and heal their wounded hearts so they can go on to live happily ever after together as better human beings. However, neither of them come off as particularly genuine or interesting human beings, and it's tough to care about what happens to them.
Colin Farrell and Margot Robbie are lovely, winning performers who have no chemistry together onscreen. They also frequently feel adrift when trying to navigate scenes where they're supposed to be revisiting episodes from their pasts. There are a few discrete sections that I liked, late in the film, where David and Sarah are forced to confront their exes to discuss their failed relationships, and later have an honest heart-to-heart about their personality flaws. These actually feel substantive and push the characters towards new emotional territory. However, most of the time the film feels meandering and far too self-serious. The magical GPS and rental car employees are clearly fantasy creatures, but seem wary of being too whimsical. The few attempts at abrasive humor aren't funny, and I was surprised that the pushy GPS never became an actual character, who might have lightened up the mood a bit.
This magical realist premise might seem like a challenge, but I can think of several similar films that figured out how to make it work. "All of Us Strangers" and "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" also had love stories that unfolded in metaphysically dubious circumstances. The Ben Stiller version of "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" was less successful, but still managed to generate a kind of propulsive emotional momentum that's utterly missing from "A Big Bold Beautiful Journey." With movies like this, you have to wholly embrace being in a fantasy story, and "A Big Bold Beautiful Journey" displays far too much trepidation to have any fun with itself. I suspect that Kogonada was trying to ensure that this wouldn't be mistaken for a children's fantasy film, and ended up undercutting himself.
And on that note, one interesting aspect of the film is that it appears to be taking a lot of inspiration from Hayao Miyazaki and Makoto Shinkai anime, specifically the way that some of the fantasy and transitional elements are handled. Note that "A Big Bold Beautiful Journey" is longtime Ghibli composer Joe Hisaishi's first score for a Hollywood movie, which adds to the effect. There are multiple scenes that I felt would have worked better in animation, and I can't help wondering what "A Big Bold Beautiful Journey" would have looked like as an anime. Or with non-movie star leads and more go-for-broke fantasy sequences. Or with a director a little more seasoned and a little less closed-in.
The best thing that I can say about "A Big Bold Beautiful Journey" is that it's big and beautiful. Let's work on being a little more bold next time.
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