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Martin Scorsese’s Hugo Gets a NYFF Sneak Preview
When the Film Society of Lincoln Center announced the secret screening last week, billed as a “work-in-progress from a master filmmaker,” the internet was abuzz with what the movie could possibly be with lots of conjecture, some of it crazier than the next. As festival director Richard Pea mentioned in his introduction before the movie, this is only the second time the Film Society have shown a work-in-progress screening at the New York Film Festival, the first one being Disney’s Beauty and the Beast.
He then introduced Martin Scorsese, who came out to a rapturous standing ovation, but he was mainly there to stress that the audience were about to watch an unfinished film that needed to be color-corrected with unfinished FX and music by Howard Shore. Because of this, we’re not allowed to give you a full or proper review, nor do we have that much we can actually say about it, because we do plan on seeing it a second time before doing so.
The most important thing to know is that Hugo is Scorsese’s love letter to Georges Mlis, the silent film pioneer of the early 1900s who created some of the most innovative films of the time, his A Trip to the Moon, being one of his most iconic and immediately recognized works.
The story follows young Asa Butterfield (The Boy in the Striped Pajamas) as the title character, Hugo Cabret, an ambitious young boy living inside the giant clock in a Paris train station, trying to fix the automaton his father left to him. He steals parts from a local toy shop owner, played by Sir Ben Kingsley, getting on his bad side, but then, with the help of the shop owner’s young daughter (Chlo Moretz of Kick-Ass), Hugo tries to find the last piece needed to get the clockwork robot working which leads to them uncovering a secret about her father.
Looking eerily like Mlis, both in his younger and older days, Sir Ben Kingsley is fantastic as the betrodden filmmaker whose entire body of work, over 500 films, was rendered to chemicals in order to produce shoe heels after the first World War. Kingsley makes up the emotional core of the film and the bits dealing with the history of Milis and showing him at work is the part of the film that’s the most interesting as well. Really though, it’s Sacha Baron Cohen who gets the most laughs as Gustave, the eccentric station master obsessed with finding orphans hiding in the station; it’s a role on par with what he did in Tim Burton’s Sweeney Todd, and there’s a fun subplot involving a light romance with a flower woman, played by Emily Mortimer.
Hugo isn’t quite a fantasy film in the traditional sense and younger kids may be somewhat bored, but there’s certainly something magical and charming about the film. It’s particularly interesting how Hugo continues whatever is currently in the zeitgeist in terms of how filmmakers are paying tribute to the cinema of yesteryear as seen in The Artist and My Week with Marilyn, which is also what made this sneak preview screening a perfect match for the New York Film Festival.
While it’s definitely going to be an acquired taste, especially for kids, the movie is going to be a great way for parents to introduce their older kids to the joys of cinema, which Scorsese so perfectly captures in every frame of his movie. We can’t wait to see it again and write more in-depth about the movie.
Meanwhile,there’s another week to go of the 49th Annual New York Film Festival and Hugo opens nationwide on November 23.