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A love letter from Scorsese to the cinema

“Hugo” is unlike any other film Martin Scorsese has ever made, and yet possibly the closest to his heart: a big-budget 3-D family epic, and in some ways a mirror of his own life. We feel a great artist has been given command of the tools and resources he needs to make a movie about – movies. That he also makes it a fable that will be fascinating for (some, not all) children is a measure of what feeling went into it.

In broad terms, the story of his hero, Hugo Cabret, is Scorsese’s own story. A bright young boy spends his childhood looking out at the world from a well-placed window, and schooling himself in the workings of artistic mechanisms. His father was in charge of the clocks at a cavernous Parisian train station. His dream was to complete an automaton, an automated man he found in a museum. He dies with it left unperfected. Rather than be treated as an orphan, the boy hides himself in the maze of ladders, catwalks, passages and gears of the clockworks themselves, keeping them running right on time. He feeds himself with croissants snatched from station shops, and begins to sneak off to the movies.

His life in the station is made complicated by a toy shop owner named Georges Melies. Yes, this grumpy old man, played by Ben Kingsley, is none other than the immortal French film pioneer, who was also the original inventor of the automaton. Hugo has no idea of this. The real Melies was a magician who made his first movies to play tricks on his audiences. Leave it to Scorsese to make his first 3-D movie about the man who invented special effects. There is a parallel with the asthmatic Scorsese, living in Little Italy but not of it, observing life from the windows of his apartment, soaking up the cinema from television and local theaters, adopting great directors as his mentors and in such cases as Michael Powell rescuing their careers after years of neglect.

‘Hugo’
RATED: PG (for mild thematic material, action/peril and smoking)
WHEN: Now showing
WHERE: 2-D, Century Rio 24, Premiere (Rio Rancho); 3-D, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio 24, Premiere; XD 3-D, Century Rio 24

The way “Hugo” deals with Melies is enchanting in itself, but the first half of the film is devoted to the escapades of its young hero. In the way the film uses CGI and other techniques to create the train station and the city, the movie is breathtaking. The opening shot swoops above the vast cityscape of Paris and ends with Hugo (Asa Butterfield) peering out of an opening in a clock face far above the station floor. We follow his Dickensian adventures as he stays one step ahead of the choleric Station Inspector (Sacha Baron Cohen), in chase sequences through crowds of travelers. He always escapes back to his refuge behind the walls and above the ceiling of the station.

His father (Jude Law), seen in flashbacks, has left behind notebooks, including his plans to finish the automaton. Hugo seems somewhat a genius with gears, screws, springs and levers, and the mechanical man is himself a Steampunk masterwork of shining steel and brass. One day Hugo is able to share his secret with a young girl named Isabelle (Chloë Grace Moretz), who also lives in the station and was raised by old Melies and his wife. She is introduced to Hugo’s secret world, and he to hers – the books in the cavernous libraries she explores. These two bright kids are miles apart from the cute little pint-sized goofballs in most family pictures.

For a lover of cinema, the best scenes will come in the second half, as flashbacks trace the history and career of Georges Melies. You may have seen his most famous short film, “A Trip to the Moon” (1898), in which space voyagers enter a ship that is shot from a cannon toward the moon; the vessel pokes the man in the moon in the eye.

Scorsese has made documentaries about great films and directors, and here he brings those skills to storytelling. We see Melies (who built the first movie studio) using fantastical sets and bizarre costumes to make films with magical effects – all of them hand-tinted, frame by frame. And as the plot makes unlikely connections, the old man is able to discover that he is not forgotten, but indeed is honored as worthy of the Pantheon.

Scorsese used 3-D here as it should be used, not as a gimmick but as an enhancement of the total effect. Notice in particular his re-creation of the famous little film “Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat” (1897), by the Lumiere brothers. You’ve probably heard its legend: As a train rushes toward the camera, the audience panics and struggles to get out of its way.

“Hugo” celebrates the birth of the cinema, and dramatizes Scorsese’s personal pet cause, the preservation of old films.


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