Sofia Coppola began acting as a baby, in her father, Francis
Ford Coppola’s, film The Godfather. She acted through her teens and late
teens but was met with much criticism. She truly burst onto the scene as a director, when she
made her first feature film The Virgin Suicides, an adaptation of Jeffrey
Eugenides book of the same name. It’s a chilling portrait of adolescence in the 1970's suburbs, and manages to avoid the clichés which tend to ruin most films on this
topic. What stands out most to me about this film is its subtlety.
Cinematographer Edward Lachman, paints the characters in soft diffused light,
the whole movie, which adds to the general ambience. The Virgin Suicides is
very nearly a silent movie. The dialogue that exists is muttered almost in
whispers, something that is a mainstay throughout her films. A muted color palette and simple framing is present through all her films:
These beautiful yet eerie images are interspersed with the film's more disturbing images:
Lost in Translation, was her next and probably most widely
acclaimed film, winning awards around the world. This film sticks to a similar
color scheme and again the subtlety dominates this film. Sofia Coppola has
mastered squeezing the most emotion possible from the simplest gestures. She
uses dialogue as a secondary tool and instead uses the dreamy imagery of each
shot to move the viewer through different stages of emotion. This subtlety
crosses over into the plot as well. The film stars Scarlet Johansson and Bill
Murray who even though they don’t do as much as kiss, manage to involve you in
a deep passionate love story. Handled by another director, this film could have
fallen into sappy, melodramatic mush, but with Sofia Coppola it stands as a
gentle and beautiful statement on loneliness and friendship in Tokyo.
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