

To summarize what Birdman is about would probably be impossible. This is a fiercely rich movie dealing with many ideas, subjects, themes and realizations. On one surface it is a story of a washed up, once famous actor, trying to regain his fame but equally as much trying to really be regarded as talented actor. Riggan wants admiration and prestige and his alter ego, Birdman wants fame and popularity.

Thanks to setting the movie close to and during opening night of Riggan's last chance for prestige - the play he is starring in and directing - we get to be inside the mind of an actor as he is battling with either being prestigious or popular while running the risk of being no one at all. His marriage ended, his daughter resents him, his girlfriend can't connect to him. This play becomes Riggan's last shot at fulfilling who he wants to be and actually having something of a value in his life.

According to one view, the movie is a retelling of Shakespeare's "Macbeth". Michael Keaton is Macbeth and Birdman is Lady Macbeth, pushing him to do as he pleases (to be king, or in this case, to be popular and trending). Also Macbeth famously pursues a course of action aimed at blocking a prophecy proclaimed by witches, while here Keaton uses all his money and time to stop his show from failing as predicted by a female critic. There is also a scene when Keaton's character leaves a bar, and lines from "Macbeth" are being spoken by an actor on the street,. Finally, at one point in the play within the movie, dancing trees are seen on stage, just as in Macbeth.(x)

We see different manifestations of what is going on is symbolic way - Riggan lifted up by Birdman's monologue literally starts flying, why can't we be seeing Sam not being horrified and immediately smiling as another manifestation of the inner emotions and not the literal presentation of what is happening? In Birdman anything is possible. That film is the celluloid equivalent of a wonderful, surreal, alive imagination.

I liked that the film is never mean-spirited - it doesn't look down on quirky actors or audiences loving comic book movies. It's in no way mean, or ugly or depressing. It talks about death and hopelessness but it's so rich and full of life and energy. It makes you think without making you feel sad. It's a cinematic joy at its purest form. The only time the film ventures into truly negative territory is in the brilliant scene where Riggan berates a critic set on destroying him. The critic is presented as the villain of the film and another plot device that causes more angst and uncertainty for Riggan. I'm sure it's also the cast and crew way of rage against every single bad and in their minds unfair thing that was ever written about them in a review.

Cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki yet again defies the boundaries of gravity and human comprehension with his work. It is a rare occasion where I cannot grasp how a certain thing was done in the movie but the camera movement here is just mind blowing. There is a certain scene following the rooftop moment and ending with a taxi cab driver's lines you should pay attention to, that is one of the year's best scenes. It's freeing just to witness a scene like that. The visual side of the movie and the rhythmic, pulsing drums of its soundtrack overwhelm but never overshadow the things the movie has to say.

Emma Stone has never been better than she is here - she is such a natural, likable and vivid young actress and while the most talked about scene here is the moment she yells at her father I enjoyed Sam's quiet moments the most - how mesmerized she is at the things Mike says to her and how she still wants to bond with her father in spite of the distance there is between them. With her Sam you can see glimpses of such maturity, heartache and understanding behind the surface.

The key theme in the movie is the subject of how relevant we are in today's world filled with social media where everyone can be popular with sufficiently scandalous - or - idiotic - viral video. We are not irrelevant, contrary to what Sam says. Our stories matter because they are own. But for Riggan? He wants more, he is not even sure what it is but it seems that all that he wants is for someone to genuinely care about him. And it looks that in the end he achieved that. And then escaped the world he no longer - or maybe never - understood.

Perhaps what the film is trying to say is that this proximity of death, the fact that at any moment you can just be gone, not just irrelevant as Sam says, but truly gone forever is what makes all the moments in our lives feel precious. In fact while the story can seem nihilistic - with he use of Macbeth's famous tomorrow and tomorrow part and the moments such as Riggan wiping off 'the human existence' from a tissue I think the film has a whole different outcome.

The titular unexpected virtue of ignorance lies perhaps in that realization - that while you feel you may be failing, the chain reaction of what you do can have impact of others. Riggan may feel he is a failure but he has a daughter who in the end seems so happy to see what her dad managed to achieve. He also brought joy to so many people - not just the audiences but Watts's struggling actress who got her big break because of his play. He may think it will all be a catastrophe but for her it's a dream come true.

Take the scene where Jake lies to Riggan about Scorsese being in the audience - he does this to reassure Riggan everything will be fine. Is it a lie? Yes. Does it work? Yes. The film plays around a very dangerous idea balancing its point on contradictions - lies work but it's only when Riggan does something as real as actually shooting himself on the stage the play becomes a smash hit. Riggan is real and Birdman is a lie. But what really is the answer?

I'm not gonna sit here and argue it's distasteful that the film does show suicide as a happy moment. Mostly it's about my belief that you should be free to decide when you die if you want to die. But there were plenty of people so outraged they could barely got out words saying how Whiplash's ending is 'abusive'. The thing is that these are not universal stories - those films do not make the statements that in order to achieve what you want you have to be self destructive or/and sacrifice your life. Why do people always think that the movies show role models and are claiming that people should follow them? Movies tell stories. Stories you can often relate to, but stories that are not your own.

The card next to Riggan's mirror says 'A thing is a thing, not what is said of that thing'. Riggan's play and his feelings about it won't really change based on what people think, the review, the audience reception of it. Neither will his experiences change for him based on what others say. His feelings of anxiety, his experiences in life and his own emotions in the end allowed him to smile and decide to fly. And I find that beautiful.

Birdman (2014, 119)
Plot: A washed up actor, who once played an iconic superhero, battles his ego and attempts to recover his family, his career and himself in the days leading up to the opening of a Broadway play.
Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu
Writers: Alejandro González Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris & Armando Bo
Stars: Michael Keaton, Zach Galifianakis, Edward Norton






