Perhaps one of the most wonderful things about art in general is just how dynamic it is. A work of art can change from one form into another: novels can be adapted into films, pieces of music can be re-written and re-performed, paintings can be modified and adapted in different styles. Something new is created from something older, in turn casting fresh light on the original. That’s one of the coolest things about art, yet it seems to me this has it’s limits.
I went to watch the Invite last night, a new film directed by Olivia Wilde. It is a very, very curious film, and I don’t think I have seen anything so weird since university. By that I mean, it isn’t really a film in the conventional, post-classical Hollywood sense, with its standard narratives and shooting styles. The action of the entire film takes place in one, rather confined house between four characters: it is a extremely dialogue-driven film, so it was blatantly obvious that it was the close offspring of the stage play it was based upon.
The thing is, I’m not sure whether this was a good thing or a bad thing. Of course, films are adapted from plays all the time; yet sometimes stories are best told when they are allowed to remain in their original form. I suspect that might be the case with The Invite, as last night it really felt that I was watching a stage play rather than a film. Having said that, what I saw last night was a masterclass in cinematography: some of the shots, the framing, the reflections off mirrors, were absolutely jaw-dropping. Obviously, the shooting style was used to increase the tension of the text, and the absurd, deranged, even obscene ordeal the characters were being put through; but even so I can’t help suspecting that a compact, social, character-driven text like this may have been better left in it’s original format.
Check out Mark Kermode’s much more detailed review here.




