Sep 5, 2014
Woody Allen turns 79 this year, easily putting him in an age bracket where he could have long since retired. But unlike 84-year-old Clint Eastwood, whose last several films have grown increasingly tedious and uneven, Allen has been enjoying a remarkable career renaissance for the past decade since he finally decided to leave New York City behind and expand his artistic palette to include some of the world’s most glamorous locations, including Barcelona, Paris, London and Rome.
The exhilarating results have also carried him along on the hottest box-office streak of his lengthy career, with “Midnight in Paris” and last year’s “Blue Jasmine” two of his biggest hits ever. His latest film, “Magic in the Moonlight,” hasn’t caught fire with audiences, but with movie buffs trapped in the deadly dull transition period between summer blockbusters and fall prestige pictures, it carries more than enough charm to be worthwhile in addition to engaging viewers in some of Allen’s most personal musings ever on life, death, love and the afterlife.
Not to worry, “Magic” is a long way from a return to Allen’s utterly depressing late-‘70s Ingmar Bergman tribute “Interiors,” which drew critical praise but which the general public found an insufferable bafflement released between his two greatest films, “Annie Hall” and “Manhattan.” Rather, “Magic” is a lighthearted comic and romantic soufflé as it follows the comic yet philosophical battle between an alleged American psychic named Sophie (Emma Stone) and the famous magician Stanley (Colin Firth) who is asked to debunk her seemingly uncanny ability to communicate with the dead.
Stanley is first seen performing in Berlin as his alter ego Chinese illusionist Wei Ling Soo, wowing a crowd in the opening scene before an old magician friend named Howard (Simon McBurney) visits him backstage and asks him to help a family of rich friends. The family has fallen under the spell of Sophie, who travels with her mother to seemingly random places and convinces people along the way that she can communicate with their deceased loved ones via séances.