23 July 2008

What lies beneath

Giorni e nuvole (Days and clouds)

Quad

Another of those films that we've seen before--male midlife adequacy crisis, patiently suffering wife until she runs out of patience, loving but resentful daughter--but it's all a million times better because (A) it's in Italian, (2) it's set in (and stars) a city we're not used to seeing in Italian films, Genoa, and (iii, and mostly) it manages to transcend the clichés and make them unique to the real people we meet.

Dangerously close to Metaphor Writ Large is the fact that Elsa (Margherita Buy) is a graduate student in art restoration, immersed (until she learns that her husband has been forced out of his company) in uncovering a Renaissance fresco. Thus the film: painstaking and sometimes painful exposure and revelation, as much hindered as facilitated by effort.

And in case you're wondering why just one film in a Manhattan day, and why blogged more than a week late, I had a Mets game that night and was flying to see my granddaughter et al. the next morning.

20 July 2008

"Clarissa, where can we get a drink?" "Now you're talking--c'mon to my place!"

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington

(1939)

This year, I'm not gonna praise Capra or Stewart or Rains or even Thomas Mitchell (the answer to the trivia question Who appeared in three films nominated for the Best Picture Oscar in the best freakin' year of movies ever?). No, this year I'm singing a love song to the one person I can't imagine not filling the role: the absolutely perfect Jean Arthur. On second thought, I'm not going to sing it--some things should be kept private.

19 July 2008

The longest knight

The Dark Knight

Crit

You know how sometimes you see a movie and at the end you say, "I can't believe that was 2½ hours! The time flew past!" Well, you're not going to be saying that for this one--well, maybe the first sentence, with the addition of "only." Kee-rist, what a long freakin' film. And to say that I felt every one of the 152 minutes is to say that I was generally disappointed.

Yes, everything you've heard about Heath Ledger's performance is true, and then some; the problem is that nothing and no one else--well, OK, maybe Michael Caine, but that's it--deserves to be in the same film with that performance. I thought when they were forced to upgrade from the laughably inept (the single rebuttal argument of Pieces of April notwithstanding) Katie Holmes to the solid Maggie Gyllenhaal, perhaps they'd actually give the character something to do, but I should have realized that if they wasted Gary Oldman in the first Nolan-Bale collaboration, the prospects weren't good for Gyllenhaal (or for Aaron Eckhart, for that matter). With the single exception of the villain, this is not about the acting, it's about the dark.

Interesting footnote, though, that Ledger gets one scene of sickly romancing Maggie, having romanced her brother so memorably a few years ago. Other footnotes: Eric Roberts and Anthony Michael Hall sneak into the pic, along with a cameo by Cillian Murphy, reprising his role from the earlier flick.

Trailers

18 July 2008

Narrow miss

Auf der anderen Seite (The edge of heaven)

Crit

OK, look: I don't want to get into another fight, as I did with someone I watched this with who commented on the way out, "That was great," so let me just make it clear right now that whatever I say from here on out, I really liked the film--I was moved by each of the three segments, particularly the last, I responded to the persistent theme of missed connections, and I admired all the acting, particularly that of Nurgül Yesilçay as Ayten/Gül--but come on, Fatih Akin: give yourself some credit for the ability to tell a story without ladling on the irony and spackling it into perfectly symmetrical parts.

A very good film that could have been great, with just a little bit of subtlety.

13 July 2008

Sang impur

Casablanca

(1942)

A year ago, during my annual on-or-about-Bastille Day screening of my all-time favorite film, I vowed that in the coming year I'd learn La Marseillaise (the first verse, mind you; no sense in my knowing more of the French national anthem than of the American one). Naturally, I printed out the text from the Internet, studied a bit early in the year, gave it some thought once every month or two, then crammed during the last week. If tested, I'd probably get a B, maybe a B-.

Now, I was aware that the anthem was not exactly a gentle ode to liberté, egalité, and the campus Greek system, but not until trying to memorize it--and peeking at the English translation to confirm that that was really what it was saying--did I appreciate the irony of my favorite film's favorite scene. Major Strasser and his nasty Nazis have commandeered Sam's piano to sing Die Wacht am Rhein, a stirring World War I march. Enraged, the resistance hero Viktor Laszlo demands that the club's band play the French anthem; the bandleader looks to Rick, Rick nods, and the Germans' musical patriotism is outgunned--a précis for what will happen in the rest of the film: hills of beans, fateful/fatal phone calls, Vichy water, start of a beautiful friendship, and so on.

While it's true that the details of the Final Solution were obscure in 1942, the Reich's attitude toward Untermenschen was hardly a secret, and the screenwriting Rosenberg brothers could hardly have been ignorant of who the unter-est of those Untermenschen were. So was it simply ideological homeopathy to fight the Nazis' racism with images that seem culled from the medieval texts of anti-Semitism, invoking enemies determined to come among us and slit the throats of our wives and children? And is it possible to pray for impure blood to water our fields without contemplating the hell that doctrines of sanguinary purity were fueling?

OK, so what? Would I prefer that they sing Edwin Starr's "War (What Is It Good For?)" or War's (!) "Why Can't We Be Friends?" I dunno--give me another year to think about that one. Could be worse, I suppose: they could sing "Hail to the Victors," which is, essentially, the Marseillaise of college fight songs--impossibly inspiring, but ultimately in the service of wickedness.

Down to the cathedral

Encounters at the End of the World

Crit
I always forget exactly what it is I love about Werner Herzog's documentaries, or maybe I just can't really articulate exactly what it is. But this reminds me: skewed, occasionally brilliant perspective (screw the penguins, let's look at unicellular monsters); non-sequitur interviews (why don't chimpanzees, as intellectually sophisticated as they are, domesticate goats?); and shots as breathtaking as any you'll see (under the ice, e.g., or inside the volcano). If Werner did not exist (and I'm not altogether convinced he does), we would have to invent him.

Bigger, Stronger, Faster*

Crit
At last I go down the corridor to the Criterion's two recently opened screens and discover that screening rooms 8 and 9 seat 24 and 30 patrons, respectively, and the projection seems to originate from DVD. Whatever: the seats are big enough to accommodate what our race evolves into in WALL-E, they recline, and they provide airline-style retractable armrests on one side and solid tables (w/ Big Gulp-sized cupholders) on the other. Could be worse.
The film does an admirable job of acknowledging all the easy truths about steroids, then calling bullshit on them. The filmmaker, Chris Bell, is especially interested in the topic, having for the most part resisted the temptation to juice, despite weightlifting and wrestling ambitions, and having seen his brothers juice for years, with significant but hardly careermaking results.
What this is about more than steroids is the hypocrisy of sports governing organizations and U.S. politicians (Joe Biden in particular is caught in a self-pitying rant of steroidal proportions). And while my perception that Barry Bonds is an asshole, that perception was in place long before the question of whether he's a cheating asshole ever came up.
Trailers

12 July 2008

One crown to rule them all

Hellboy II: The Golden Army

Crit

I idolize Guillermo del Toro, so I'm going to call this an hommage to The Lord of the Rings rather than a ripoff (to Peter Jackson's LOTR, that is, with which I'm infinitely more familiar than with Tolkien's), but gee whiz, it pays its homage generously. Also a lesser debt to Star Wars. Then again, he also rips off--er, pays homage to--his own Laberinto del Fauno and especially to the clockwork creature of Cronos.

Bottom line, as comic-book flicks go, this one's gorgeous and literate, plus, I gotta say that after about a zillion flicks, Selma Blair has really begun to grow on me.

Brick Lane

Crit

This barely reached the downtown bar, but I liked it more than I expected to: goes in an expected direction for a long time, then takes a surprising but legitimate turn in the late going. Haven't read the novel, so I don't know how much credit belongs to Monica Ali, how much to the screenwriter, Laura Jones, and director, Sarah Gavron.

11 July 2008

Make it, take it

He Got Game

(1998)

Ray got game, Denzel got game, Chuck and Chuck both got game, Springfield got role-playing game, Aaron has a surprising quantity of game, Milla got game but can rarely get a decent game, Rosario got budding game, Mookie got mad game.

This marks my earliest record of both "I know, right?" and "True dat." Like Bill Safire in the Times Magazine, I invite earlier citations.

Une femme dédaignée

Post-company picnic French double feature

Le Fils de l'épicier (The grocer's son)

Mad

We see where this is going from the first frame--redemption via mostly unrequited love lost--but hey, it's set in the south of France, and the people are French, and they speak French, and one of them is the irresistible Clotilde Hesme (I can't resist her, anyway; if you can resist her, you might want to get that looked into), so I have pas des plaintes.

Une vieille maîtresse (The last mistress)

Mad

Well, you know from the start that things aren't going to turn out happily here, but the exact character of the disaster is a mystery, and a surprise when it is finally revealed. I always talk about how Alexander Payne really doesn't much like people, but Catherine Breillat really really doesn't much like people. Still, I guess because it's set safely in history, and maybe in part because the Devil is played by the irresistible-in-a-very-different-way-from-Clotilde Hesme Asia Argento, I liked this one a lot more than Romance. Well, let me put that another way: I liked this one; I loathed Romance. Though I guess the main subject--the genital imperative--is not altogether different.

Would be interesting to see a transcript of the meeting where it was decided how to title the film in America. Presumably someone said "No American moviegoer will see a film about "an old mistress"--ugh!

06 July 2008

But my name is Veronkha

Archangel

(1990)

Maddin's second feature, the earliest I've seen, and not the most satisfactory, though of course rife with promising weirdness. It's 1919 at the titular remote port, but the noble Russians and their Allies don't know that the Great War is over, and the inhuman Huns keep attacking, while the even more brutish Bolsheviks cannibalize Mother Russia.

But of course what really matters is the eternal love quadrangle, plus a mistaken-identity angle. At one point, our hero, Canadian Lt. John Boles, asks the icy Russian Veronkha, "What if I were to call you Iris?" to which she replies, quoting a pop song of the previous year, "You can call me anything you like."

05 July 2008

The forks below the forks

Independence Day weekend M4

An M# first: my grad school friend Lisa joins me as a special guest blogger.

My Winnipeg

IFC
On the one hand, you have unambiguously false "facts" about Guy Maddin's childhood and his hometown and his documentary process; on the other, you have perfectly plausible information. But does "plausible" necessarily equal accurate, or is it just a clever misdirection play, a sort of documentary game of three-card monte? And for that matter, does implausible necessarily equal false? Is this a new genre, documentary of the psyche? Clearly, every frame contains Maddin's truth. Still, I'm curious to know whether there really were three vertically stacked and sexually segregated public swimming pools (the topmost--ground level--pool reserved for families), and exactly how much of what the rest of us might recognize as objective truth there is to his account of the 11 thoroughbreds fleeing a racetrack fire only to perish in the river, their frozen heads forming a sculpture garden-cum-trysting ground for curious and horny Winnipeggers.
Perhaps the most ambitious of Maddin's films I've seen (though "ambition" is certainly not something Maddin stacks vertically or arranges in any other easy geometric pattern), and after a slow (intentionally soporific, it seems) start, one of his best.
First of all, let me thank the illustrious Cheeseblab for allowing me to accompany him on his July 4th weekend M4, and for his invitation to add my thoughts about the experience to his blog. I expected to be totally mindblown by the end of the fourth film, but in fact, though I was tired, I was quite exhilarated by the films we'd seen. The breaks between films, including brisk walks from theater to theater and around the Lower East Side and the Village, and the quest for interesting and quick food and refreshment, really helped.

When was the last time someone told you a story? Did you trust the narrator, or did your narrator so skillfully weave together the plausible and the implausible that you didn't know whether to trust him or not? The latter is the case in Guy Maddin's pseudo-memoir/documentary of his hometown, My Winnipeg. This is his Winnipeg, indeed. Maddin's dreamy, black-and-white train ride through this city in the landlocked Canadian province of Manitoba serves as much to reveal as to obscure, and makes Winnipeg as much a place to escape from as to gravitate to, with its magnetic fields, confluence of rivers, and "forks beneath the forks." The "re-enactments" (actors playing his siblings, but his mother, also in fact played by an actor, ostensibly playing herself), which are meant to help the filmmaker make sense of his life, only obfuscate matters more and add to the tall tale/shaggy dog (or, here, the long-dead chihuahua--played in the re-enactments by a pug) nature of the tale. It was a fun and funny film, in a head-scratching, mind-bending sort of way, and it made me want to see more Guy Maddin films.

17 August addition, as Lisa found this: http://www.boston.com/ae/movies/articles/2008/07/13/her_winnipeg_is_pretty_strange_and_surreal_too/. Damn! I was sure the swimming pool thing was true!

Kabluey

CV
This was a late inclusion in the program (sorry, Une vieille maîtresse) on the basis of an enthusiastic Times review when it opened Friday, but while I wouldn't go so far as to call it a disappointment, it does seem to me a thoroughly conventional film aside from the fact that one character works as a corporate logo, wearing a puffy blue costume and a macrocephalus.
Aside from that, we've seen it all many, many times before: misfit who must overcome his own awkwardness to prove his worth to skeptics who come to love him. Fine performances by Scott Prendergast (who also wrote and directed) and the criminally underutilized Lisa Kudrow make it worthwhile. Well, and admittedly the big goofy blue suit helps, too.
Every Man is trapped in his role, whether it's the bored cashier at a grocery store, the unhappy spoiled wife of a rich man, or the hopeless soldier's wife single-handedly raising two hellions. Or so says this movie, which illuminates this message by having an Everyman, Salman, literally trapped in a silly blue corporate mascot costume, giving out flyers advertising rental space at a nearby office building. It's hard to imagine a better person to play this Everyman than Scott Prendergast, the writer and director of the film, with his bewildered, blank, "I don't know where I am or how I got here" stare. Salman and all the other characters seem powerless to change the lives they've been dealt, and overall there's something very sad about this bowing to the inevitable. But sometimes there are breakthroughs, like when Salman figures out how to maneuver in the blue suit, or when he suddenly understands the loneliness of his two nephews, or when his soldier brother comes home from Iraq. The blue suit is some sort of catalyst for these breakthroughs, and wearing it somehow brings order and growth to Salman. It's an odd and endearing little film, with a well-cast Lisa Kudrow as Salman's long-suffering sister-in-law and Teri Garr as an unhinged former employee.


Trumbo

Sun
OK, let's cut to the chase: this fucker was a fucking hero, and everybody who doesn't know his story, or only kinds knows his story, as was the case with me, needs to see this depressingly timely film about speaking the truth to power while refusing to name names.

That said, geez, I wish director Peter Askin had had more faith in the language of Dalton Trumbo's letters that a cast of Hollywood heavyweights (plus, inexplicably, Josh Lucas) read. Askin has his actors act instead of reading, and acting simply isn't called for. The emotion is in the words: we don't need the reader to get up from his chair, fiddle with his water glass, tear up. It reminded me of some of my authors, who insist on using italics to signal emphasis in their sentences. As I tell them, if your language is right, it'll carry the emphasis on its own; if it ain't, typography won't help.
Just when we thought we had enough to be ashamed of, here's a reminder of something else to add to the pile--the blacklist of the late 1940s and 1950s. The creative individuals on this list, many of whom had ties to Hollywood, were humiliated, denied an opportunity to earn a living, ostracized by society, and in many cases driven to suicide for their supposed ties to the Communist Party. This film focuses on one individual on the list, the author and screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, and his experiences leading up to and following his sentencing by the House Committee on Un-American Activities. What stands out most clearly is the terrible waste of talent brought on by this travesty, and the power of one man's words to document and make human the effect this travesty had. Trumbo himself and others appear in segments to describe what was happening, and Trumbo's letters and writings are read (and in some cases dramatized, perhaps unnecessarily) by such actors as Michael Douglas, Liam Neeson, Donald Sutherland, and Nathan Lane. Man's inhumanity to man is perhaps most poignantly illustrated in a letter read by Trumbo describing the effect of the blacklist on his young daughter, who endured
scorn and ridicule every day at school. Have we learned anything from this episode in our history? Ask the detainees at Guantánamo Bay.



Ne le dis à personne (Tell no one)

Sun
A fine, Hitchcockian thriller that ought to be about 15 minutes shorter than its 125. What it does perfectly, though, is invest us in the protagonist's plight, so that not only do we desperately want him to overcome what we know to be unjust suspicions, we want the wife he has been mourning for eight years to prove worthy of his having put his emotional life on the shelf for her memory.
We had to sit in the second row of a crammed theater, and oddly, that position enhanced the early moments of disorientation, after which it just came to seem normal. We sure didn't have any trouble reading the subtitles!
The crowds got progressively larger as the day advanced, and by this fourth of the four films in the M4, the largest theater at the Landmark Sunshine was packed. I thought that sitting in the second row, craning my neck to see the entire screen would impede my enjoyment of the film, but in fact it made the experience rather IMAX-like, and I certainly didn't miss any of the subtitles!

This man-wrongly-accused mystery focuses on the murder of the protagonist's beloved wife. After eight years, Alex, a pediatrician, is a productive, functioning member of society, but he hasn't healed. The discovery of two bodies near the site of the original crime reopens the case, and mysterious emails, a blurry video clip, car chases, mad pursuits down streets, across parks, and through cafés, missing evidence, and a growing body count ensue. We're won over by Alex, played by François Cluzet, a handsome Dustin Hoffman lookalike, and we want things to go well for him; that empathy, and the beautiful scenery and the ear-pleasing French, allow us to forgive the tumble of puzzle-solving and often contrived information delivered in the last ten minutes. This was a great summer Saturday night movie.

Trailers

04 July 2008

Tree of life

PG/G double feature

Kung Fu Panda

Post
Well, the dragass bus driver on the O2 managed to get me to the mall 12 minutes late despite early-morning holiday-light traffic on the Post Road, so if the answer to why the titular panda's father is a goose occurs in the opening titles or the first couple of minutes, I missed it.
What I saw was perfectly OK, perfectly formulaic kung fu kartoon shtick, with a good message for the kids (and for a lot of grown-ups, for that matter: don't expect a deus-ex-machina bailout; the secret ingredient is nothing [faith, really]).
One question that might fairly be asked of animators these days: what's the point of showing gravity-defying martial arts sequences involving cartoon animals when CGI can give us seemingly flesh-and-blood humans doing the same stuff now?
Favorite moment: when fat panda asks master, "How are you going to make me into the Dragon Warrior?" and master admits, "I don't know," but the small insistent voices of Matt and Trey sing, "You gotta have a montage!" Well, I heard 'em, anyway.

WALL·E

Post
Jesus, what a chilling scenario to submit small children to, but by god, we should scare the shit out of the little rugrats and tell them: "This is what your parents and grandparents are leaving you; sorry, but it's gonna be yours to fix."
This is without question the best new studio film I've seen this year, and while I'm not going to scroll back through the year's posts to confirm it, it may well be the best new film I've seen this year, full stop. It is also without a doubt the best and most chilling futuristic dystopia I've ever seen; and it contains one of the most heartwarming/breaking love stories I've ever seen on film; and it may be the funniest film I've seen this year--and certainly the best use of slapstick I've seen in ages. And somehow these disparate parts fit into a nearly perfect whole. (Nearly perfect--no film that has you humming tunes from Hello, Dolly! can be considered perfect.) Oh: and one of the best narrative end-credits sequences ever, too, with one of the most emotionally satisfying climactic images.
There's a lot here that the littlest kids won't have a clue about (they're certainly not going to notice the sizable debts to Minority Report and 2001, e.g.), but there's so much going on visually that even the smallest would probably enjoy it, and while there were a lot of kids at my show, and while they made as much noise as kids must, at the saddest moment, there was zero sound from the seats--everybody got that part.
Oh, and an aside to anyone who may have recently become resigned to the proposition that human life as currently operating is insupportable, and we are all imminently doomed: please see this film. It won't offer any evidence to the contrary, but it will remind you that nonetheless, faith and hope and love are so powerful that even humans can't destroy them.
Trailers
  • Fly Me to the Moon--flies on Apollo 13; looks pretty cloying; 2
  • Beverly Hills Chihuahua--good god, no; 2.
  • Saw three others, but I didn't take notes: there's another one about a dog, a TV superhero who thinks he really has superpowers; and one about a stubbornly fearless French mouse (from a famous kids' book, I gather); and then there's one about humans, but I don't remember anything else about it.
  • Oh, right: the human one is John Cusack voicing Igor, a mad scientist's assistant who wants to invent his own stuff.
  • And IMDb helps me find Bolt--TV dog voiced by Travolta. Still can't find the fearless French mouse, though.
  • Found it: The Tale of Despereaux. Looks promising, by the way.

03 July 2008

Well, Aesop, looks like I've been sleephunting again

Twilight of the Ice Nymphs

(1997)

Love! Betrayal! Shelley Duvall! Cross-dressing! Artificial insemination! Hymeneal blood (correction: turns out to be deceptively displayed pig's blood)! Petrophilia! Ostriches! Arboreal cataloguing! Frank Gorshin! And all in living (sort of) color!

God help me, I loves me some Guy Maddin. Though I would say that at 91 minutes, this one could probably have profited from another 10 minutes' worth of trimming; Maddinesque weirdness works best in 70-80-minute doses, I think. Coming later this weekend: Archangel, on the same disc, and My Winnipeg, during Saturday's M4.

Stuporhero

Hancock

Crit

Maybe it's just me (then again, whose blog is this, anyway?), but what's wrong with a story of an alcoholic, antisocial asshole of a superhero being encouraged by a well-meaning nebbish of a public relations guy to improve his image by becoming a nicer guy? I dunno, I was enjoying that movie, without the revelation of the Big Secret (or BS, as we'll call it henceforth). Yes, the BS coaxed a lot of serious acting from Will and Charlize (and even a hint of cleavage from the latter), and I suppose I have to applaud the effort to keep it from being just another superhero movie. But somehow the BS element just didn't work for me as much, and it certainly wasn't as much fun, as a drunken Hancock first trading insults with his public and then shyly trying to deal with their adulation.