Munchausen (2013) Poster

(2013)

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8/10
Clever and dark
I_Ailurophile23 June 2021
Ari Aster has very well demonstrated his capabilities as an up-and-coming filmmaker, and I hope to see many more features from him. 'Munchausen' precedes his full-length movies by a few years, but even here we see his burgeoning prowess as both writer and director.

It's a simple story at hand; the most basic premise effectively describes the whole: A loving mother, sad at her son's pending departure for college, makes him ill to keep him at home, but with dire consequences. The tongue-in-cheek fun is in how this small tale is told, and it's quite smart.

There is no sound or dialogue underneath Daniel Walter's complementary original music, only visuals. First we get a bittersweet montage as the mother watches her son packing boxes, then going on to find great success at university: hard work, great academic skills, extracurricular achievements, falling in love. The mother's joy at this conventional but fulfilling future for her son is stymied by her loneliness - and then she snaps out of her day-dreaming, and sees her son continuing to pack.

The film cuts from one scene to another in this montage mostly by zooming in on a particular item, then zooming back out to show a shift in setting and time. The story is lent a slightly fantastical, nostalgic air not just through the sequence of scenes with only music for audio, but also with the soft colors brought out in the picture.

That happier sensibility is rocked when the mother makes her son ill, with terrible results. The soft, bright colors during the daydream turn more hard and shaded as the story advances toward its conclusion, and not even the appearance of ubiquitous character actor Richard Riehle, as an attending physician, can lighten the mood.

There's a hint of sardonic playfulness in the short in the contrast between the sentimental, wistful tone and the actual events of the narrative as it unfolds. It's an intentional disparity in presentation and style that makes this all the more grabbing, even for its simplicity and brief runtime. I'm certainly reminded of Aster's outstanding film 'Midsommar,' where he employs a similarly striking divergence to paint over the horror of the story with an inescapably warm, jubilant atmosphere. It's a difficult balance to manage, but Aster has proven himself. Enjoyable as 'Munchausen' is generally, at least in my mind this is the most noteworthy aspect.

It's always interesting to watch the early works of filmmakers as they developed their craft, and sometimes it's very revealing. With 'Munchausen' we see that Ari Aster already had a clear knack for storytelling that he refined further before stepping forward with full-length features. These are sixteen minutes that are fun, if dark, and worth checking out.
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8/10
Oof!
Jeremy_Urquhart1 October 2023
The Strange Thing About the Johnsons gets all the attention among Ari Aster short films, because it has the most alarming premise and is perhaps the most disturbing as a result. But I think of the ones I've seen so far, Munchausen feels like the best. It's Aster doing a silent movie, and using sweeping music and bold, saturated colors to tell a bleak and tragic family drama story. The effect of it all felt striking to me, and I liked it a lot more than I thought I would.

Going through some of his films chronologically at the moment, this might be the one where his style was really starting to take shape, and it feels like it deals with the sorts of family issues particularly found/explored in Hereditary and Beau is Afraid (and often feels like it foreshadows the visual style of the latter). It's disturbing and downbeat in its own way, but I think benefits from not going quite as far in that department as The Strange Thing About the Johnsons (which I still like, or at least have a certain amount of respect for).
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8/10
The lost of a son
AvionPrince1626 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Wow! It was pretty interesting; im not gonna lie. We can see the anticipation of a mother when his son is going to leave that family house to make his life. So we can see all the pain of the mother and of her imagination about the fact that he could love another woman than her. I think all that thoughts lead her mother to act and to not let her kid live afraid of her own suffereing due to the lost of her kid and the anticipation of it. I found it pretty extreme but because in term of the feeling and the desire and the fear of a mother and it was pretty an honest portrait of the life of a mom when she will let her son live his life.
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6/10
The trouble with mom
Fernando-Rodrigues9 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Nothing i haven't seen yet, but cool. I'll rate 3/10 bc i really like Aster's works, but this one is just weak.
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4/10
Eventually more about the style and story-wise a bit empty
Horst_In_Translation28 August 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"Munchausen" is an American 17-minute short film from 2015, so it has its 5th anniverary this year and the star is of course Bonnie Bedelia, who you see on the photo and who is a Golden Gilobe nominee, probably not too far away from an oscar nomination back in the 80s. Writer and director is Ari Aster, who is of course known for Hereditary now, his first full feature film and a huge success after a series of short films including this one. It is about a mother who does not want to let her son go to college, so she poisons him that he has to stay home because he is in need of care from his mother unknowing that she is the one causing all this harm to him. It's basically two films in one, the first half is the happy way, at least for the son and how things could have turned out right for him and wrong for his mother and the second half is her reaction to the first half that is basically going on entirely in her mind and how it turns things round into unhappiness for him and happiness for her. Or does it really? Wait until the ending to find out. Karma can be rough sometimes. But sadly I must say that the first half is way too long, even if it has its moments, and so is the film in general. Even under 10 minutes would still have been too much given the plot and substance here in my opinion. It's all about the style, the lack of voices and dialogues and the dominant force of music and the sound track and how it is used frequently for exaggeration purposes. The real connection with Pixar or Up is not really one that came to my mind here. But yeah, maybe it's there. sadly, story-wise all in all I was fairly underwhelmed I must admit and I definitely wanted to like it more than I did. The acting, especially Bedelia's isn't too shabby, but it's overall not enough to let me give this one a positive recommendation. I suggest you skip the watch here. Thumbs-down.
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