Conjuring up such a spell is essential, considering that the film doesn't have much new to say about any of the big subjects it tackles. Riggin's personal crossroads isn't particularly interesting in its broad strokes, and the movie's satire of Hollywood blockbusters and social media—it's almost as cranky-old-man reactionary about the internet as current festival punching bag Men, Women & Children—is pretty woeful. But Birdman's energy transcends those limitations, especially thanks to the acting.

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On paper, it's an easy joke: Keaton (who used to be Batman and was never as big a star afterward) is playing a guy who used to be Birdman and was never as big a star afterward. But his performance shreds those cheeky art-imitates-life comparisons as he digs into the legitimate pathos of a washed-up actor, melancholy ex-husband, and failed father who's hoping that somehow this Carver play can magically fix everything. Despite trying to be a showbiz satire—there are mediocre, insider-y jabs at Marvel's box-office dominance and Meg Ryan's plastic surgery—Birdman actually cares about Riggan enough to take his anxieties seriously.

There's a persistent loopiness hovering along the edges here—everyone around Riggan is a slightly heightened version of a real person—but the surreality only makes his crisis more vivid. Rather than grounding the proceedings in real time, the movie's single-shot strategy unmoors us from the everyday, leaving us with the giddy impression that just about anything could happen, an impression rewarded by some rather bravura twists in the film's final third.

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If ultimately Birdman is one big show, it's underpinned with enough genuine feeling that it leaves you slightly dazed. Norton has a ball playing this obnoxiously uncompromising actor, but he also has beautifully understated scenes with Riggin's fetching, ex-addict daughter (a very sly Emma Stone) that are romantic and wistful at the same time. And for all its zooming cameras and elaborate blocking, Birdman finds the time for perfectly calibrated moments between Riggan and his ex-wife (Amy Ryan) in which Keaton comes across as a raw wound, the years of his character's creative bankruptcy and spiritual isolation smeared across his face.

Iñárritu has always been a dramatic maximalist, and here he floods the soundtrack with frantic drum solos and, in one scene, throws in an aside of a bit player intoning Macbeth's "sound and fury" soliloquy, because, hey, it kinda fits. Discipline and restraint aren't his thing. But when he finds the right slightly unhinged material, he can make you believe that a bunch of gimmicks (and a man) can fly.

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Grade: A-


Grierson & Leitch is a regular column about the movies. Follow us on Twitter, @griersonleitch.

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