• Home
  • Longform
    • Defanging the Unthinkable
      more
      View more

      Defanging the Unthinkable

      9 years ago
    • A Fitting, Impressive Goodbye
      more
      View more

      A Fitting, Impressive Goodbye

      9 years ago
    • The Ambivalent, Bittersweet "My Life as a Zucchini"
      more
      View more

      The Ambivalent, Bittersweet "My Life as a Zucchini"

      9 years ago
    • The Complex Morality of "No Country for Old Men"
      more
      View more

      The Complex Morality of "No Country for Old Men"

      9 years ago
  • Interviews
    • A New Way of Telling Love Stories
      more
      View more

      A New Way of Telling Love Stories

      9 years ago
    • Breaking Standards with Julian Rosefeldt of "Manifesto"
      more
      View more

      Breaking Standards with Julian Rosefeldt of "Manifesto"

      9 years ago
    • Indulging Mightily with Alex Ross Perry and the "Golden Exits" Cast
      more
      View more

      Indulging Mightily with Alex Ross Perry and the "Golden Exits" Cast

      9 years ago
    • The Ultimate Meta-Performance: Kate Lyn Sheil on "Kate Plays Christine"
      more
      View more

      The Ultimate Meta-Performance: Kate Lyn Sheil on "Kate Plays Christine"

      9 years ago
  • Critic-At-Large
    • Now Playing: "From Nowhere"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "From Nowhere"

      9 years ago
    • Now Playing: "Fifty Shades Darker"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "Fifty Shades Darker"

      9 years ago
    • Now Playing: "War on Everyone"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "War on Everyone"

      9 years ago
    • Now Playing: "The Salesman"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "The Salesman"

      9 years ago
  • Podcast
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 287: "Kundun"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 287: "Kundun"

      9 years ago
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 286: "Pinocchio"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 286: "Pinocchio"

      9 years ago
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 285: "That Darn Cat"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 285: "That Darn Cat"

      9 years ago
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 284: "The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 284: "The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement"

      9 years ago
Movie Mezzanine
  • Home
  • Longform
    • Defanging the Unthinkable
      more
      View more

      Defanging the Unthinkable

      9 years ago
    • A Fitting, Impressive Goodbye
      more
      View more

      A Fitting, Impressive Goodbye

      9 years ago
    • The Ambivalent, Bittersweet "My Life as a Zucchini"
      more
      View more

      The Ambivalent, Bittersweet "My Life as a Zucchini"

      9 years ago
    • The Complex Morality of "No Country for Old Men"
      more
      View more

      The Complex Morality of "No Country for Old Men"

      9 years ago
  • Interviews
    • A New Way of Telling Love Stories
      more
      View more

      A New Way of Telling Love Stories

      9 years ago
    • Breaking Standards with Julian Rosefeldt of "Manifesto"
      more
      View more

      Breaking Standards with Julian Rosefeldt of "Manifesto"

      9 years ago
    • Indulging Mightily with Alex Ross Perry and the "Golden Exits" Cast
      more
      View more

      Indulging Mightily with Alex Ross Perry and the "Golden Exits" Cast

      9 years ago
    • The Ultimate Meta-Performance: Kate Lyn Sheil on "Kate Plays Christine"
      more
      View more

      The Ultimate Meta-Performance: Kate Lyn Sheil on "Kate Plays Christine"

      9 years ago
  • Critic-At-Large
    • Now Playing: "From Nowhere"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "From Nowhere"

      9 years ago
    • Now Playing: "Fifty Shades Darker"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "Fifty Shades Darker"

      9 years ago
    • Now Playing: "War on Everyone"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "War on Everyone"

      9 years ago
    • Now Playing: "The Salesman"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "The Salesman"

      9 years ago
  • Podcast
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 287: "Kundun"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 287: "Kundun"

      9 years ago
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 286: "Pinocchio"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 286: "Pinocchio"

      9 years ago
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 285: "That Darn Cat"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 285: "That Darn Cat"

      9 years ago
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 284: "The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 284: "The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement"

      9 years ago
  • Home
  • Longform
    • Defanging the Unthinkable
      more
      View more

      Defanging the Unthinkable

      9 years ago
    • A Fitting, Impressive Goodbye
      more
      View more

      A Fitting, Impressive Goodbye

      9 years ago
    • The Ambivalent, Bittersweet "My Life as a Zucchini"
      more
      View more

      The Ambivalent, Bittersweet "My Life as a Zucchini"

      9 years ago
    • The Complex Morality of "No Country for Old Men"
      more
      View more

      The Complex Morality of "No Country for Old Men"

      9 years ago
  • Interviews
    • A New Way of Telling Love Stories
      more
      View more

      A New Way of Telling Love Stories

      9 years ago
    • Breaking Standards with Julian Rosefeldt of "Manifesto"
      more
      View more

      Breaking Standards with Julian Rosefeldt of "Manifesto"

      9 years ago
    • Indulging Mightily with Alex Ross Perry and the "Golden Exits" Cast
      more
      View more

      Indulging Mightily with Alex Ross Perry and the "Golden Exits" Cast

      9 years ago
    • The Ultimate Meta-Performance: Kate Lyn Sheil on "Kate Plays Christine"
      more
      View more

      The Ultimate Meta-Performance: Kate Lyn Sheil on "Kate Plays Christine"

      9 years ago
  • Critic-At-Large
    • Now Playing: "From Nowhere"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "From Nowhere"

      9 years ago
    • Now Playing: "Fifty Shades Darker"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "Fifty Shades Darker"

      9 years ago
    • Now Playing: "War on Everyone"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "War on Everyone"

      9 years ago
    • Now Playing: "The Salesman"
      more
      View more

      Now Playing: "The Salesman"

      9 years ago
  • Podcast
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 287: "Kundun"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 287: "Kundun"

      9 years ago
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 286: "Pinocchio"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 286: "Pinocchio"

      9 years ago
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 285: "That Darn Cat"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 285: "That Darn Cat"

      9 years ago
    • Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 284: "The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement"
      more
      View more

      Mousterpiece Cinema, Episode 284: "The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement"

      9 years ago
“Still Life”
  • Theatrical

“Still Life”

  • by Colin Stacy
  • January 16, 2015
  • 0
  • 2540

The title of writer, director, and producer Uberto Pasolini’s new film Still Life is the key to its storytelling. Taking it literally, Pasolini’s direction echoes the title of the film. He allows this story to unfold in quiet compositions of a small, mannered man dwelling within a small, mannered vision of London. Eddie Marsan is John May, a case worker for society’s forgotten and recently deceased. His job is to find the family, inform them of their loss, and coax them to pay the dead their last respects. He’s a lonely man who resembles the people he ushers into the afterlife. Seemingly known by no one, May spends his days alone in a small office, crafting narratives for the deceased. With no one to validate these lives, May crafts nearly wholly lived existences for these individuals to be read at their funerals. He is the stoic watcher, from funeral to funeral bestowing a sense of grace and dignity upon the dead.

When the bureaucracy considers May and his job obsolete, he must make the best of his last case. Seemingly formed by the disappointments of cases past, he focuses his energy and time into this final task. As he seeks out this dead man’s friends and family members, May begins to discover a love of life. He finally sees the world around him and not simply the death and lost memories of the deceased.

Pasolini frames May’s life in almost completely still photography. In most of the compositions, only May moves, dealing with office tasks or walking home, in and out of the frame. Each shot crafts an image of his life, one almost as inert as the dead he ushers into the void. Thus, the cinematography gives the sense of a life verging on boring. Marsan is almost a non-entity here, which is where the film slips. The script paints too broad a portrait of May, reducing him to an observer. Had the film maintained a similar pace, it wouldn’t be so bad. But eventually, May is changed by the grace and life of those whose dead he seeks to see off. In his change, he is made full; if he would’ve stayed an observer, Marsan’s stark face would’ve been a fine portrait of grief, loneliness, and loss.

Pasolini gets a bit overwrought with the premise, too; there are points where the contemplative is subsumed by reaching emotion, made more obvious by an overly melodramatic score, which almost underlines everything we’re meant to feel with each passing moment. For instance, May finds a potential suitor in the daughter of the dead man whom he is assigned to, causing his inner life to be upended by indie-romance cliches within the final act. This shift in tone and focus nearly dismantles the film’s contemplative and emotionally paced first two-thirds.

At the end, Still Life ponders who our neighbors truly are. We watch John May work and attempt to live the right human life – full of empathy and compassion. Most of the emotional beats Marsan and the script channel aren’t pandering but genuinely dwell on the worth of a human life (even when the human is thought of as worthless) and how we should envision death as universal.

The film’s most powerful scenes, which occur before the cliches set in, occur as we watch May presiding over funerals for three different people. He resides in those lonely spaces of death, not scared but loving as he watches the dead be blessed, prayed and sung over. These acts are his calling. He lives the truly still life, pondering each and every individual’s meaning and impact within the cosmos. He wants to send these forgotten into the afterlife with some sort of dignity.

Though the film ends on a very misguided, on-the-nose point, it’s Marsan’s gaze that should inform us on how to truly conceive of the forgotten or disowned. John May’s sight becomes our own, like observing lives as a still-life painting, examing each angle of impact and meaning. Despite its missteps, this film asks us to contemplate the worth of others. Still Life should cause us to look at each human being we come in contact with as a dignified person, deserving of attention and love, whose narratives should never be falsely crafted but genuinely remembered by those who knew them.

Tags
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related posts

  • KenjiF
5
“Anomalisa” Is A Genuinely Enlivening Work of Art

“Anomalisa” Is A Genuinely Enlivening Work of Art

10 years ago
  • JakeCole
16
Back to Basics in “Star Wars: The Force Awakens”

Back to Basics in “Star Wars: The Force Awakens”

10 years ago
  • Tomris Laffly
6
David O. Russell’s Fulfilling “Joy”

David O. Russell’s Fulfilling “Joy”

10 years ago

Comments are closed.

About Us

Movie Mezzanine is an online publication dedicated to covering the medium that connects us all, one film at a time. With writers stationed around the globe, we offer a uniquely diverse perspective on cinema, both old and new. To learn more about us, go here.

Spotlight

Putting the Geek to the Plow

Cleantalk Pixel