MOONRISE KINGDOM (2012)
Reviewed by Jerry Saravia
"Moonrise Kingdom" is a such a tightly knit piece of preciousness that it almost chokes itself on its own brand of preciousness. In some ways, it redefines preciousness as something akin to magical sense memories - the kind that only director Wes Anderson could craft. There are no real notes of emotion in the entire film, yet maybe that is by design because I still found myself entranced by "Moonrise Kingdom." It never bored me, unlike Anderson's "Darjeeling Limited," and the cast is appealing enough and the story takes enough twists and turns to keep anyone entertained. But it still might be too precious.Set in the mid-1960's, Wes takes us to some new territory - a New England town called New Penzance. A Khaki Boy Scout is missing and the troop and its Scout Master (Edward Norton) are having trouble locating the boy. It turns out the boy, Sam Shakusky (Jared Gilman), is an orphan and his adopted parents do not want the boy to return to their house, if he is ever located. This being the 1960's where cell phones did not exist and kids were known to roam free for days without causing too much heartbreak, or maybe a little, the search is on by the Troop Master and the Island Police Captain Duffy Sharp (Bruce Willis). There is another disappearance - a 12-year-old girl named Suzy (Kara Hayward), who happens to be pen pals with Sam and they meet and camp together in the most beautiful island you can imagine seeing. Love is in the air and innocence of another kind prevails.
Most of "Moonrise Kingdom" centers on the lovestruck couple and, for a while, Anderson maintains comic momentum and deliciously clever and funny dialogue. Most notable is Edward Norton who demonstrates a gift for comical ebullience, especially when he does a spot check on every Boy Scout before sitting down for breakfast. Gilman and Hayward play the sweetest preteen couple I've seen at the movies in a while - they look and feel like they sprang from a wonderful storybook of summer innocence. The movie made me think back to Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer's adventures with Becky and that is a good thing. When we switch back to the adults, "Moonrise Kingdom" loses its grasp of what it is doing best - exemplifying the idea of a kid being a kid and discovering love and the outdoors. Bruce Willis doesn't register at all - it is like he is stuck in a cocoon though he has some humorous moments when he contacts Social Services (played by Conan - I mean, Tilda Swinton). Frances McDormand and Bill Murray, playing Suzy's eccentric parents, do little to evoke a smile from me - they exist in a frigid world of frigid manners (Anderson's "Royal Tenenbaums" did far better with its own frigid adults by finding their souls). The adults in this film, excepting Norton's Scout Master, are soulless and distance us from the central story. Since they are not always seen from the kids' point-of-view, I do not understand why they need to play such inanimate people.
"Moonrise Kingdom" is warmer and funnier when dealing with Sam and Suzy, two lovebirds who are discovering puberty. There is a sunny disposition about them that felt magical and sweet. As I wrote earlier, the film practically chokes itself on its preciousness - it seems like a world that can't possibly exist and one I would not mind visiting despite everything being too tidy, too perfect in its vision of a magical, precious land where nothing too epic or problematic occurs. The kids make it tangible and Anderson thinks big and crafts his customary widescreen shots where everything is nearly symmetrical. The adults intrude upon the magic yet, despite its lapses and occasional lulls, "Moonrise Kingdom" is still a candy-colored treat.







