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Monday, May 06, 2013

seenery

Movies/TV I saw last month...

Another Woman (1988)—Woody Allen comfort classic I must visit periodically. I swear that it is underrated.
Autumn Sonata (1978)—Minor late Bergman. Liv Ullmann is amazing as per the usual. Ingrid Bergman effective enough, but I was often distracted attempting to recognize her.
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (1956)—Elaborate Fritz Lang thought experiment that wears the garb of noir with flair, and typically drives to a dismal but satisfying end. Players and story not that impressive, but the doomy mood makes it.
The Big Sleep (1946)—It used to bug me the way the plot doesn't add up here. I resented the work it made me do for nothing, but I'm mostly past that now. It's vintage Howard Hawks, with a heavy, classic noir vibe thrumming all through, and if that's not enough, there's the chemistry between Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart, which is palpable. And if that's not enough, well, what are you, dead?
Black Sunday (1960)—First time seeing this classic Italian gothic, the first film Mario Bava directed and the vehicle (if "vehicle" is the right word) that launched Barbara Steele. I love the grainy black and white and it's packed with great moments and images, veering between creative, energetic, often chilling, and sometimes high camp.
The Crowd (1928)—King Vidor silent picture with a few very famous images, such as a crane shot into a skyscraper office with endless rows and columns of desks and workers, which Billy Wilder later borrowed for The Apartment. The Crowd is mostly preoccupied with a theme of its time, the transition and tension between urban and rural living. Many dead spots, but goes interesting places, and then there are those amazing shots.


The Darjeeling Limited (2007)—I did enjoy this again. Jason Schwartz particularly good, I thought, and what do you know, Adrien Brody fits right in too. In this universe Owen Wilson, of course, is a rock.
The Eagleman Stag (2010)—An interesting animated short that I learned about from reading the blog Antagony & Ecstasy.
Fanny and Alexander (1982)
The Fisher King (1991)—I think I would have to call this my favorite Terry Gilliam, if only because it's the one I actually like. Oh I appreciate his dogged dystopian constructions and bizarre retro nostalgia riffing, certainly in isolated moments and sequences. But I am also frequently repelled too. I'm still figuring it out. This makes me more open to him. The fantasies, the disgusting underworlds, all feel more appropriate here somehow. The great shock jock comeuppance is so deftly wielded in the early minutes, Jeff Bridges so good all the way (as usual), Robin Williams pretty well used for once, Mercedes Ruehl somehow just right with the Jersey note. It all works for me.
The Gingerbread Man (1998)—Think this could have been better with a different handling of the resolution, but I like it a lot as it is. It's very much a commercial thriller, from a John Grisham screenplay, buoyed by stars! stars! but has director Robert Altman's fingerprints all over it. The detail for Savannah, Georgia, is loving and feels precise, and it climaxes on a great natural disaster, a hurricane this time (compare tornados, earthquakes, political assassination). It's a little silly in places but perfectly entertaining and I think it holds up fine.
The Idiot (1951)—Kurosawa's adaptation of the Dostoevsky novel came out the year after Rashomon and single-handedly cements his reputation for preoccupation with Western culture. It's actually a pretty good treatment of a strange novel, but what it's doing in postwar Japan is anyone's guess.
Ikiru (1952)—One of the best known Kurosawas and deservedly so, one of my favorites by him, a beautiful portrait of a postwar bureaucrat who learns he doesn't have long to live and attempts to find meaning. It actually ranges far and wide across Tokyo with an eccentric structure, odd tones, and redemption on its mind. Not sure Takashi Shimura has ever been better, and he's always good. Definitely recommended.
In a Year With 13 Moons (1978)—From the period when Fassbinder was fully engaged and incredibly prolific. This seems dated now in terms of the outré transvestism in the narrative, but anyway refreshingly clear-eyed for its times about the issues it engages. More important, it is the usual sumptuous visual feast.
In the Land of Women (2007)—An amiable enough mess but surely a mess, from Lawrence Kasdan's nephew Jon. Kristen Stewart nails the agonies of the high school cool chick, which alone almost makes it worthwhile. Proceed with caution.
Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers (2006)—Yes, this is still me going through Bush era documentaries I piled into my Netflix queue some years ago. Produced by Robert Greenwald. Flashbacks. Pain. Sadness. On the other hand, Boston reminded me that it's no longer the Bush/Cheney cartel running things. So there's that.
The Last of the Mohicans (1992)—Still fooling around with Mann. Must say this did not get better the second time I saw it, but all the usual levels of visual power are there. Just that it's altogether a little corny, and that could well be a James Fenimore Cooper problem. But it's definitely a problem.
The Lives of Others (2006)—Actually needed to see this a couple of times to make up my mind, and now can say I like it quite a bit. Understated story and performance, a fascinating window into that now departed second world of the mid-'80s, East Germany specifically, and a consideration of the surveillance state that puts it among the best of them, such as The Conversation, in certain ways.
Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003)—A very interesting (and very illegal) meditation on the use of Los Angeles the city in movies, composed almost entirely of VHS clips from those movies and filmmaker Thom Andersen's brooding, acerbic voiceover. When people talk about essay-films I think Andersen already may be among the best. Admittedly, it's a form I am both intrigued by and may have some problems with (thinking how poorly I took to the Chris Markers I've seen). But I like this a lot. Masterful and idiosyncratic.
Man With a Movie Camera (1929)
Melancholia (2008)—This is seven and a half hours long. It is black and white. And it is in Filipino, a living, breathing mix of English and Tagalog, which often requires subtitles. So there's some aspect to it of endurance test, I can't deny—it's very slow, but it can be almost meditative, reminiscent of Bela Tarr in the length of single shots. It's often weird and freaky and beautiful and even funny too, and always sharply sad, with multiple tones. I like the one-sentence description at IMDb: "Three people engage in a strange therapy to get away from their agonies." That about sums it up but does little to explain what makes it so hypnotic, so easy to go get lost in. I swallowed it up in a day recently, which was a much better experience than breaking it into four consecutive nights as I did the first time. This is not even the longest movie that director, screenwriter, and cinematographer Lav Diaz has made, but it's certainly a very good one.
The Mother and the Whore (1973)—Masterpiece.
Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)—Werner Herzog's reimagining of the 1922 Murnau treatment of Bram Stoker's vampire novel is maybe a little slow, and could not possibly be as groundbreaking as Murnau's original, but holds its own. Klaus Kinski has a lot to do with that.
Private Hell 36 (1954)—Ida Lupino stars and co-wrote the screenplay, so she has nearly as much stake in this noir as director Don Siegel. An over-fevered plot (signaled in the first place by the title) resolves in suitably dark terms. Pretty good overall.
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)—At this point I don't even find this very interesting. Probably would like it more in "right" circumstances, whatever that might be.
Red River (1948)—Howard Hawks Western with John Wayne, Montgomery Clift, and Walter Brennan that I liked more the first time I saw it, but basically solid.
Rock 'n' Roll High School (1979)—Loved this. It's got just the right amount of swagger and a big goofy fun-loving nature but pulls no punches on the punk-rock pedigree. An absolutely perfect vehicle for the Ramones.
Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (2012)—A romantic comedy walks into a bar where it's the apocalypse. Director and writer Lorene Scafaria's first feature actually worked for me more often than I thought it had any right to. It plays its cards shrewdly and gets the job done, and it helps that the principals (Steve Carell and Keira Knightley) have some chemistry.
Seinfeld (s8, 1996-1997)—Funny! Classic! Though slightly off of the Larry David highs and starting to settle into shtick, admittedly.
Shadow of a Doubt (1943)—Currently my favorite Hitchcock. Love the Thornton Wilder elements.
Someone to Watch Over Me (1987)—Another Ridley Scott exercise in the textures of clinical sumptuosity, never quite convincing, but with effective moments in spite of everything (ludicrous story, etc.). I found out via social media that Mimi Rogers is a star with some dedicated followers, though I understand the movie to see with her is Full Body Massage, which I have not (yet). My favorite part was the way this one wove the great Gershwin title theme all through in many unusual and interesting ways. A beautiful song, that one.
The Squid and the Whale (2005)—This is without question my favorite by Noah Baumbach, and seems to get better every time I see. A lot of narrative stitchwork goes into it, such as the Pink Floyd thread, which is worked in skillfully the whole way. And Jesse Eisenberg, Jeff Daniels, Laura Linney—the performances are so good.
The Tree of Wooden Clogs (1978)—Hits all the proper neorealist notes, incidentally suffering from the impulse to use amateur performers. Not many could manage it—Robert Bresson, Jack Webb, Vittorio de Sica occasionally. But there's no denying director and writer Ermanno Olmi knows how to put together a movie.
Uncovered: The War on Iraq (2004)—Another one from Robert Greenwald. Starting to wonder why I do this to myself.
What Dreams Will Come (1998)—Robin Williams vehicle that seriously plays like a parody of Robin Williams vehicles, but it's not. Some calculatedly gorgeous scenery and special effects and a not half bad story about the afterlife. Still, there are many ways to go wrong with such a project, and this wanders into several of them.
Wonders of Life (2013)—The latest BBC science series from physics professor Brian Cox is shorter than his previous "Wonders" looks at the universe and solar system. Here the focus is biology, a different beast, though he keeps attempting to drag it back to physics. But he, or someone, still has an eye for what is amazing and mind-boggling. Some fascinating business in every episode.

3 comments:

  1. Big Sleep. Interesting to watch in light of Long Goodbye, also written by Brackett. Both seem highly disinterested in Chandler's ethos and esprit, and keener on vengeful violence. Have you seen both cuts of Sleep? I think the '46 version, focusing more on romance and banter than faithfulness to mystery and intrigue, is better because more faithful to Hawks' own instincts.

    The Fisher King. Haven't seen this yet, but I'm on a Grail kick so I'll have to soon, though I'm not sure how far the title's allusion extends. Forgot this was Gilliam, and always presumed it was a more straightforward drama.

    Last of the Mohicans. The corniness - which, admittedly, I don't really see - is not a problem for me!

    Los Angeles Plays Itself - Did you see this at the recent Egyptian screening? I was there too and was blown away, what a revelation! I had anticipated the witty deconstruction of he first half, but not the heartfelt and angry ethical essaying of the second. Interestingly, in the talk he gave after the screening, Andersen (who, incidentally, wrote but did not actually speak the voiceover) seemed to indicate the clip use fell under "fair use" though I'd always thought the film was restricted from DVD for its sampling. I totally agree that this may be the first - and best - video essay out there. As one fascinated by, occasionally dabbling in, but really only beginning to explore the video essay form, I'm curious: what are your reservations?

    The Mother and the Whore - Yup.

    Nosferatu the Vampyr - Gonna watch this today. Really looking forward to it after listening to Popul Voh's masterfully moody soundtrack.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark - I think one does have to be in the right mood to properly dig this one. That said, I've slowly come to the conclusion that in fact Last Crusade might in fact be my favorite, for the Connery-Ford banter, for the fact that it was my first Indy film and in some ways the movie that chrystallized my conversion to cinephilia, for its fascination with Western civilization (from Prof. Jones' classicism, to the Knights Templar, to that Hitchcockian utilization of birds as anti-Nazi bullets capped by a quotation of Charlemagne). And since I'm on that aforementioned Grail kick now, I'll be watching that one again soon.

    (rescued via Google + from May 6, 2013 when I originally left it)

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  2. (And here's the rest of the conversation; hopefully you don't mind me re-posting these!)

    Jeff Pike:

    Joel, thanks as always for your comments. Interesting stuff!

    The Big Sleep: Have never sat down to look at both versions side by side, but the DVD I have has a feature comparing some of the differences.

    The Fisher King: There is indeed a Grail, and I like the way Gilliam uses it, among all the other things I like about this one so much.

    Last of the Mohicans: I have my own affinities with corn, but Daniel Day-Lewis under the unbelievable waterfall, declaring himself -- "No matter how long it takes, no matter how far, I will find you," etc. -- would seem to me to qualify and goes too far for me, at least this last time through.

    Los Angeles Plays Itself: The Egyptian?! Are you in Seattle? Thought you were in SoCal. Did not see LAPI there. Did not know that was not Andersen reading. Mostly I think essay-films are tricky to pull off because film is inherently distancing and impersonal, operating on a one-to-many level. Essays more naturally make the connection to readers than film to viewers, drawing on the nature of personal letters and the intimacy between writer and reader. Reading is practically always a one-to-one type of experience.

    Nosferatu the Vampyre: The Popol Vuh is great.

    Joel BockoMay 6, 2013




    Just finished Nosferatu. Was bummed they didn't use more of that great soundtrack.

    Jeff PikeMay 6, 2013




    Also meant to say, re: LAPI, I would definitely tend to agree with Andersen's call on fair use, so probably "illegal" is the wrong word. It's a great model for an essay-film because it personalizes movie viewing and shared experience, while preserving the spectacle. Those clips keep it so alive and interesting. But there's enough evidently legal jeopardy that it will likely not see a wide release for a long time.

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  3. Joel, thank you so much for the rescue mission!

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