Making my
first start on what are likely to be contenders come Oscar season. I haven’t seen any of the previous versions
of A Star is Born (although I feel
like, at minimum, I really need to see the Judy Garland version,) so I can’t
compare the new version with what came before, but I enjoyed it and found it
well-made.
Jackson Maine,
somewhat-fading music star, is dealing with depression, addiction, and gradual
hearing loss when he stumbles into a bar after a gig one night, dreading going
home and desperate for a drink. There,
he meets Ally, a singer-songwriter who stopped trying to make it after
repeatedly being told that, despite her incredible voice, she’s not attractive
enough for the music industry. The two
form a quick connection, and after Jack arranges one of Ally’s original songs
and cajoles her into joining him onstage, they begin a tumultuous personal and
professional relationship. As Ally’s
star rises and she contends with all that comes with that, Jack is hounded by
his demons, and public scandals and private struggles batter their relationship.
On the
whole, I’d say I wasn’t blown away, but I did find the movie well-done. The music is lovely (obviously, Lady Gaga
sounds amazing as Ally, and Bradley Cooper’s singing as Jack is surprisingly
good,) and while some of it bled together for me on first watch, the
emotional-centerpiece performances are all finely affecting. Likewise, Cooper and Lady Gaga both turn in
strong acting performances. They play
excellently off one another, and while Lady Gaga’s material stays a bit more in
her wheelhouse compared to Cooper’s more challenging role, she delivers when
she needs to – my favorite scene of hers is Ally’s first time onstage with
Jack, all the emotions flooding her face as she tries to process even a fraction
of what’s happening to her.
It’s very
much Cooper and Lady Gaga’s movie (especially Cooper, since he also serves as
director and co-screenwriter in this, a passion project for him,) but the rest
of the cast turns in reliable performances as well. Sam Elliott does a bang-up job as Jack’s
manager/older brother, I enjoyed seeing Anthony Ramos (John Laurens from Hamilton and the recently-announced
Usnavi in the In the Heights
adaptation) as a friend of Ally’s, and I was charmed by the inclusion of both
Greg Grunberg and Ron Rifkin in minor roles when I remembered that Cooper had
been in Alias with them.
But while
I enjoy the acting, the music, and the direction, the story doesn’t feel quite
put together for me. It’s certainly not
badly written, but it’s trying to tackle a lot, and I don’t think all of it is
well-served by the script. In
particular, I feel like Ally’s narrative gets a bit lost in the shuffle
sometimes, especially when it comes to her musical career and the choices that
take her through that story, both the ones she makes and the ones that are made
about her.
Bonus
points for Jack discovering Ally while she’s singing in a drag bar. In what can be a pretty heavy movie, all the
drag-bar scenes are delightfully fun.
Warnings
Drinking/smoking/drug
use, strong thematic elements, brief violence, sexual content, and language.
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