BUILDING ON AN ARCHITECT'S CONSTRUCTIONS.Byline: Glenn Whipp Film Critic Sydney Pollack isn't aiming for huge psychological insights with his deliberately casually titled homage to his architect pal, ``Sketches of Frank Gehry.'' He hasn't come to understand Gehry, so much as to praise him. And, really, with buildings like the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao is a modern and contemporary art museum designed by Canadian-American architect Frank Gehry and located in Bilbao, Basque Country, Spain. It is built alongside the Nervion River, which runs through the city of Bilbao to the Atlantic Coast. in Spain and Los Angeles' own Walt Disney Concert Hall This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please help Wikipedia by adding references. See the for details. This article has been tagged since September 2007. , who can argue with a salute to the man's genius? Still, there are more than a few moments during ``Sketches'' in which you wish Pollack had dug a little deeper. Gehry briefly mentions a failed first marriage that sent him into therapy, talks about changing his surname from Goldberg to Gehry after being on the receiving end of anti-Semitism and shares his thoughts about detractors who see his buildings as being monstrous creations of ego. But, whether out of respect for his friend or a lack of interest, Pollack lets each of these topics disappear without further probing. What excites Pollack, best-known for ``Tootsie'' and his many movies with Robert Redford, is how Gehry takes crumpled crum·ple v. crum·pled, crum·pling, crum·ples v.tr. 1. To crush together or press into wrinkles; rumple. 2. To cause to collapse. v.intr. 1. bits of paper, turns them into cardboard models and then somehow transforms them into breathtaking buildings that manage to be both of and apart from their surrounding environments. Bilbao director Juan Ignacio Vidarte notes that the massive museum seems to have been dropped from outer space a century ago, which is as perfect a summation of Gehry's work as you're ever going to hear. Unfortunately, Pollack populates much of ``Sketches'' with fawning testimony from Hollywood moguls -- Barry Diller, Michael Eisner, Michael Ovitz -- who don't add much to the discussion. And the one naysayer nay·say tr.v. nay·said , nay·say·ing, nay·says To oppose, deny, or take a pessimistic or negative view of: They will naysay any policy that raises taxes. , Princeton art professor Hal Foster, comes off as a simpering sim·per v. sim·pered, sim·per·ing, sim·pers v.intr. To smile in a silly, self-conscious, often coy manner. v.tr. flibbertigibbet flib·ber·ti·gib·bet n. A silly, scatterbrained, or garrulous person. [Middle English flipergebet. . This is the best foe Pollack could find for an iconoclastic i·con·o·clast n. 1. One who attacks and seeks to overthrow traditional or popular ideas or institutions. 2. One who destroys sacred religious images. lightning rod like Gehry? Probably not. Probably Pollack didn't look that hard. He has known Gehry for a good many years, and their friendship, though limiting, does provide the occasional simpatico sim·pa·ti·co adj. 1. Of like mind or temperament; compatible. 2. Having attractive qualities; pleasing. [Italian simpatico (from simpatia, sympathy , aha moment, such as when the two men talk about the difficulties of maintaining an artistic vision in fields dominated by commercial concerns. Gehry, a cheerful, energetic, self-deprecating man closing in on his 80th birthday, makes for an engaging subject. And Pollack, no stranger to being in front of the camera, is a genial host, even if he does insert himself into the movie unnecessarily at times. (Yes, we know you can hold a camera with the best of them, Sydney.) In the movie's most memorable and perceptive moment, Gehry speaks openly about his envy of a painter's ability to immediately, vibrantly create and explore the sheer beauty of surfaces. Gehry sighs, saying he just can't do that. ``Yeah, right,'' Pollack replies, offering the ultimate rejoinder The answer made by a defendant in the second stage of Common-Law Pleading that rebuts or denies the assertions made in the plaintiff's replication. The rejoinder allows a defendant to present a more responsive and specific statement challenging the allegations made , a beautiful montage of Gehry's work, showing the way their surfaces shimmer, grab sunlight and interact with their surroundings in a way that achieves a mutual glory. That sequence justifies the movie -- and then some. Glenn Whipp, (818) 713-3672 glenn.whipp(at)dailynews.com SKETCHES OF FRANK GEHRY - Three stars (PG-13: brief strong language.) Director: Sydney Pollack. Running time: 1 hr. 23 min. Playing: Laemmle's Town Center 5 in Encino; Laemmle's Playhouse 7 in Pasadena; Landmark's Westside Pavilion in West Los Angeles
In a nutshell: Sydney Pollack pays his respects to architect pal Frank Gehry; if anything, he's a bit too respectful. But what the movie lacks in psychological insight, it makes up for with its loving look at Gehry's work. CAPTION(S): photo Photo: Director Sydney Pollack, left, and the famed architect during the making of ``Sketches of Frank Gehry.'' |
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