Take This Waltz (2011)

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Take This Waltz: Directed by Sarah Polley. With Michelle Williams, Seth Rogen, Luke Kirby, Sarah Silverman. A happily married woman falls for the artist who lives across the street.

“This film shouldnu0026#39;t work nearly as well as it does. Take This Waltz centres around a two-suitors plot that was tired a century ago, takes place in a hipster-utopia version of Toronto, has multiple comedic actors whou0026#39;ve worn out their welcome doing Serious Roles, and its characters are either selfish or dull. But Take This Waltz also has a kind of magic that can wash over the most jaded cinema viewer and make you forget that youu0026#39;ve seen it all before.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eMaybe itu0026#39;s Sarah Polleyu0026#39;s direction, or maybe itu0026#39;s the brilliant performance of Michelle Williams that makes her character likable against all odds. Maybe the thematic statement about the perils of looking for adventure and the need for constant romance is something that we need affirmed more often against the tide of romcoms and gooey melodramas. Maybe itu0026#39;s just that I really want to live in hipster- utopia-Toronto. But this film stuck with me for days afterwards, its scenes playing over and over in my mind, blotting out all the rest of the disposable entertainment. There are so many indelible images here: a public shower scene which plays pranks on the male gaze, that goofy but somehow powerful 360-degree-rotation montage, and of course the final scene, a coda that grants its central character and us along with her a moment of unmediated joy. And itu0026#39;s that joy that the film understands as being something we maybe have to pursue no matter what its cost. Michelle Williamsu0026#39; abashed smile gives us a taste of that adventure, and like the rest of the movie, itu0026#39;s damn hard to resist.”

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