Everyone’s seen doomed relationships. The one in Blue Valentine is doomed six ways from Sunday.
He drinks too much. She needs more than loves him, while he loves her obsessively. She obsesses on troubles and flaws, her’s mostly. He’s childlike; she’s forced to grow up. Doomed? Oh yeah.
Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams’ Dean and Cindy charm as star-crossed lovers, Hall of Fame Lovers. Just doomed. He crazy-loves her. She appreciates him, until she can’t take it anymore.
Then the story deepens, dark turns become clear.
Their deep relationship runs its twisted course, oddly endearing to the end.
Michelle Williams’ perfect nose sits atop world class lips, the rest of her slim and blond, all of which makes her the prettiest girl Ryan Gosling’s Dean has seen.
Her nicely understated performance strews clues in its wake. For instance, why the “no, no, nose” as she hits the big O? Girl’s got troubles.
Gosling is moviestar handsome from some angles, goofy from others, filling out his Guinea T as a cruiser-weight Stallone, Rocky Lite being this great actor’s guise in Blue Valentine. Lars and the Real Girl it ain’t.
Excellent pairing of present and past doubles the slim intensity.
Violence a mere 1.9, Sex and Rudeness almost twice that at Erotic and Nasty, rounds out to nicely sordid.
Smoke and drink that much? Maybe, but not for long.