Thursday, November 13, 2014

Interstellar

            Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar is the movie equivalent of a chef armed with truffles, foie gras, and Wagyu beef grinding it up into meatloaf. The film’s cast is impeccable, the practical effects stunning, and its underlying ideas about space and exploration universal. Yet the outcome is more pedestrian than revelatory. The film unravels because of an overcomplicated plot and underwhelming theme.
            Nolan, as he often does, has assembled a stellar cast. Matthew McConaughey continues his string of strong performances by playing against his hyper-masculine type. In Interstellar, he stars as Cooper, an astronaut-turned-farmer-turned-astronaut. Mackenzie Foy plays Murph, Cooper daughter, and their chemistry drives the emotional beats of the film. Nolan populates the film with actors far too qualified for their roles. Michael Caine’s NASA scientist instigates Cooper’s journey to the stars. Anne Hathaway’s Amelia, another scientist leads the NASA crew on the spaceship Endurance. Bill Irwin voices TARS, a multi-limbed robot, who helps and humors the crew during their journey to a black hole in orbit near Saturn. TARS’s relationship with Cooper is the most grounded and realistic in the entire movie. The rest of the cast includes Jessica Chastain, John Lithgow, Casey Affleck, William Devane, Ellen Burstyn, Wes Bentley, David Gyasi, Topher Grace (looking like he’s just happy to be there) and a surprise unbilled A-list actor.
            The visual effects of Interstellar are remarkable. Nolan mostly eschewed CGI in favor for practical models for his depiction of space travel. His attention to detail pays off in a number of visually striking scenes. Saturn’s rings glitter and as the Endurance approaches its date with an artificially created wormhole. The camera remains fixed as the Endurance glides through space, spinning on its axis. Never has space looked so majestic.  Nolan’s view of space is the opposite of Alfonso Cuarón in Gravity. Where Cuarón stressed the claustrophobic and deadly nature of outer space, Nolan revels in its splendor and beauty. In Gravity, death and emptiness lurked around every corner. Protective spacecraft could easily become a deadly projectile. In Interstellar space is the next stage for mankind’s achievement—challenging, but awe inspiring.
            Interstellar’s themes and plot unravel everything good about the film. It is clear that Nolan is an advocate for mankind’s continued exploration of space. Our future lies out there, the film constantly reminds us. To call his method of delivering this message heavy handed would be an understatement. In a terribly written scene, Cooper laments to his father-in-law (Lithgow) about mankind’s failure to continue its space endeavors. He laments, “We used to look up at the sky and wonder at our place in the stars, now we just look down and worry about our place in the dirt.” On a future version of Earth where ecological disaster has ruined the planet’s food supply, maybe that sentiment is understandable? Later when the film shifts to space the heavy handedness continues. With the Endurance only capable of visiting one of two planets capable of sustaining life, Hathaway’s Amelia opts for the one where her lover is. In defending her position, Amelia argues that “Love is the one thing that transcends time and space.” The power of love and importance of discovery are hardly unique or new themes.
            Further the overstuffed plot dooms these themes further. At two hours and forty nine minutes, the film radically shifts in plot making it seem like three or four movies crammed into one. Interstellar begins as a movie about an ecologically ravaged Earth, struggling for survival. With a radically reduced population mankind has become a people of Dust Bowl era farmers. With Cooper’s discovery of NASA, the film becomes about mankind’s potential salvation through a wormhole. A mission of survival soon yields to easily excised conspiracy thriller. Meanwhile back on Earth, Murph (Chastain), now fully grown, struggles to save humanity from her end. This divided focus drains the plot of momentum as it toggles back and forth between the ever changing Endurance mission and Murph’s efforts to solve the problem of extricating Earth’s population to safety. In the last act, Cooper joins the two plots together by journeying into the black and proving that love does in fact transcend time and space. Love transcends time and space? Fantastic. Glad a film studio spent 165 million dollars on that one.
            Due to his success with the Dark Knight trilogy and other films like Memento, Inception, and The Prestige, Nolan had a rare opportunity in Hollywood to make whatever movie he wanted. He put this freedom to work with dazzling visual effects and reminded us of the wonder and majesty of space.  He surrounded himself with a marvelous and overqualified cast. Instead of putting them to their best use, Nolan squandered them on a heavy handed, simplistic, and ultimately empty film. 

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Fantasy Football: Over and Underachievers

            A few weeks ago I looked at scoring leaders through week 3, this week I’m going to look at one player at each position who have either dramatically over or underperformed relative to his draft value.
Quarterbacks
Phillip Rivers
            In 2013, Rivers threw for 4,478 yards with 32 touchdowns and only 11 picks. He scored 276 fantasy points, finishing 6th among quarterbacks and 7th overall. That performance did not win Rivers much respect from fantasy owners. He was an 11th round pick and the 14th quarterback off the board sandwiched between Johnny Manziel and Eli Manning. This year, under coach Mike McCoy, Rivers has continued his stellar play. He currently sports a 68.3% completion percentage, with 2,213 yards and 20 touchdown passes against only 5 interceptions. His 160 fantasy points place him fourth among quarterbacks. If you loaded up on wide receivers and running backs early and grabbed Rivers late, it’s paying off big time.

Cam Newton
            There are several viable candidates for this spot. I considered Drew Brees, Matthew Stafford, and finally settled on Newton. Last year, Newton finished third among quarterbacks with 282 fantasy points. He passed for 3,379 yards and 24 touchdown passes. Newton’s rushing set him apart as he ran for 585 yards and six rushing touchdowns. He averaged 17.625 points per game. This year, as the Panthers have crumbled, so have Newton’s fantasy numbers. Newton was a fifth round pick and is currently stuck between fellow mid-round QB disappointments Nick Foles and Andy Dalton as the 18th highest scoring QB. He has 214 yards on the ground with only one rushing TD. His average points per game has declined to a barely playable13.25.

Running Backs
Ahmad Bradshaw
            While the Colts continue to hand Trent Richardson the ball, Bradshaw has proven to be the better NFL and fantasy running back. He has scored 101 fantasy points behind 635 all purpose yards and 8 touchdowns. He’s rushed 76 times for an average of 4.88 yards per carry. He’s also caught 31 passes for an average of 15.53 yards per catch. Currently fifth among running backs in fantasy points, Bradshaw was on average a 14th round pick and the 50th running back taken overall. Under Andrew Luck, the Colts have been one of the most prolific offenses in the league, creating scoring opportunities for players like Bradshaw. His touchdown pace is unlikely to continue, but enjoy the ride while it lasts.

LeSean McCoy
            Let’s play a game of blind resumes.


Carries
Yards
TDs
Fantasy Points
McCoy
137
505
1
58
Player B
101
358
2
58
Player C
74
251
3
58
Players B and C are the aforementioned disappointment Trent Richardson and Vikings backup Matt Asiata. McCoy was a top five pick, while Asiata went undrafted. The lack of touchdowns has killed McCoy’s value this season. In ESPN standard scoring McCoy has 4 games of single digit fantasy points. He has rushed for over one hundred yards once, against the Giants in week six. He’s still getting about twenty rushes per game, but his inability to find the endzone has caused a lot of consternation for his owners. McCoy is a reminder that you can’t win your league with the right first round pick, but you can lose it with the wrong one.

Wide Receivers
T.Y. Hilton
            Hilton has emerged this season as Andrew Luck’s favorite wide receiver target. He has scored 96 fantasy points, good for 5th among wide receivers. He leads the NFL in receiving yards with 886. The sheer volume of his receptions, tied for 3rd, make up for his only two touchdowns. Not bad for an eighth round pick and the 26th wide receiver off the board. Hilton has been especially dangerous the last five weeks. He started out slow, with 4, 6, and 8 fantasy points in Weeks 1-3. Since Week 4, however, Hilton has 10, 9, 28, 10, and 21 points. If Hilton can pick up the touchdown pace he might finish in the top 3.

Brandon Marshall
            It worked so well last time, let’s do another batch of blind resumes.


Receptions
Yards
Touchdowns
Fantasy Points
Player A
24
470
3
62
Marshall
34
385
5
62

Player A is San Diego wideout Malcom Floyd. On average, Floyd went undrafted in an ESPN standard 10 team league. Marshall was the fifth wide receiver off the board in the 3rd round. He’s currently tied with Floyd for 22nd in wide receiver scoring. Marshall has surpassed one hundred yards once this year, in week six against Atlanta’s anemic defense. He hasn’t scored a touchdown since Week 4 against Green Bay. His only standout performance was in week 2 against San Francisco when he caught three touchdown passes. If you remove that game Marshall is averaging 5.71 fantasy points per game. Forget starting him, that’s not even worth owning in a standard fantasy league.

Bonus: Seattle Defense
            Every year in fantasy leagues, people draft defenses way too high. They don’t recognize (or they don’t care) that the difference between the 1st and 10th ranked defenses is extraordinarily small.  Nor are teams consistent from year to year. This year was no different. After last year’s historic performance, ESPN drafters fell in love with the Seattle defense. They were drafted on average at the top of the 5th round, right between Matthew Stafford and running back Frank Gore. This year, the Seahawks D has scored 38 fantasy points, tied for 17th. The top three defenses, the Dolphins, Lions, and Bills were 16th, 17th, and 15th defenses drafted on average. Rather than waste a middle round pick on a defense, take somebody like Ahmad Bradshaw or T.Y. Hilton.