There is a somewhat blaring, metaphorical insinuation present in the trailer (and title) of the upcoming film All is Lost. Its a movie that features a lone-man performance by one of the remaining celluloid icons and festival forefathers, Robert Redford, alone and lost at sea with the very possible prospect that he may not make it in the end.
Cue the nervous, tear-welling laughter.
Here is the trailer:
While the film's literal plot seems terrifying and tragic, the allegorical undertones of what this trailer suggests about the actual state of the film industry, and the crippling nostalgia and negligence of it's medium, aggressively looms like an unavoidably swollen elephant that will not leave the room (and who likes to remind us that TV is winning).
However, our cynical giants are not saying that film is completely dead, but that it has surpassed irreparable corrosion. Cinema's first imminent decline will be the disappearance of films like All is Lost, the character-driven, "mid-level" indie. All is Lost (a title that makes me want to put on a black turtleneck and stare out of a seaside window with a forlorn expression a la Bibi Andersson) is a film that the studio systems are terrified of (did I mention the film has no dialogue nor any volleyballs for Redford to talk to). There's too limited of a budget, too limited of a cast (sure its Robert Redford...but one guy in a boat without an analogous CGI tiger is a tough sell...) and too much dependency on character and story. It's not just the independent film that has reached its peak but also the niche, story-driven film with a high yet modest budget (seven to eight figures, not the backbreaking nine), films that have been delivered by Redford (and through Redford's Sundance Film Festival), Soderbergh, Tarantino and Weinstein over the past three decades. Even with the power of remaining "indie curators"-distributors Fox Searchlight, The Weinstein Company and Lionsgate (the distributor of All is Lost), there is the great possibility that these mid-level films will be quarantined by studios as a stagnant product, if not, a risk. Or...they'll just be passed on to cable TV...so, maybe not all is actually lost...completely. -MTK