Sunday, April 26, 2009

104 in 2009 Week 17: Boxcar Bertha and Les Diaboliques

Just two this week, which I suppose makes this week kind of like most weeks I've had so far. It just feels like a bit of a let down after last week.

Boxcar Bertha
Martin Scorsese, 1972

Boxcar Bertha doesn’t start off well – when an 88 minute movie has time to list the cast twice during the opening credits, it’s a good sign that things are going to be stretched to the breaking point. The awkward plane crash that was clearly well beyond the budget of the movie is a bad sign as well. Things eventually do look up, though, and some of Scorsese’s future promise shows through at times, particularly in the surprisingly mobile and dynamic camera. The chemistry between the four members of the gang is comfortable and enjoyable, and is probably the primary strength of the movie – which unfortunately means that the last third, during which Bertha is separated from the others, kind of drags. The final shot is a killer, though – far more poetic and cruel than anything else on display. Not a bad movie, but certainly far from Scorsese’s best.

6/10

Les Diaboliques
Henri-Georges Clouzot, 1955

Les Diaboliques is really two movies in one. The first movie is the passable tale of Christina and Nicole, the wife and mistress of an abusive headmaster at a boarding school, who plot to (and ultimately do) murder him. It’s a little slow, and the characters are drawn pretty broadly, but the murder sequence itself is quite impressive.

The second movie is the much more interesting story of Christina and Nicole, the wife and mistress of an abusive headmaster who, after murdering him and dumping the body in a swimming pool to be discovered by the groundskeeper, are horrified to learn that the body has disappeared, and that the headmaster himself may still be alive and out for revenge. This is the point at which the movie really takes off, and manages to even become a little scary at points. The sequence where Christina what may or may not be the ghost of her husband through the dark corridors of the school is terrific. Unfortunately, it all works out in the most pedestrian way imaginable, and once the explanations start, things are wrapped up so quickly that one gets the impression Clouzot was a little embarrassed by the resolution and wanted to skip past it as quickly as possible. Fortunately, there is also a rather nice little coda that, while feeling like a bit of a cheat, does end things on a high note. I’d tell you what happened, but the title card at the end of the movie instructed me not to, so I suppose I can’t.

7/10

Progress: 37 (Par +3, still)

Sunday, April 19, 2009

104 in 2009 Week 16: Bicycle Thieves, A Woman is a Woman, The Woman in Green, Miracle Mile, and The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (whew)

Ah, what a week we had here. Not one, not two, but five movies to add to the list. And even better, only one real stinker (and, admittedly, one medium bad one). Better still, this week served (effectively) as my introduction to the luminous Anna Karina, which whom I am now totally in love (although if you're paying attention, you'll notice that I have seen her once before). Plus, my faith in Cary Grant and Myrna Loy was restored. There may not have been anything quite as good as Ace in the Hole, but overall, this is definitely the best week I've had so far.

Ladri di Biciclette (Bicycle Thieves)
Vittorio De Sica, 1949

Considered to be one of the seminal films in the Italian neo-realist movement, Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves demonstrates very clearly that neo-realism seems to be, at its heart, no different from film noir. Our hero, Antonio, is cast adrift in a world that doesn’t even begin to care about him, where larger, sinister forces lurk about the edges. He struggles in vain against these forces and is ultimately defeated by his own weakness. I suppose it is a sad commentary on the state of Italy in the 40’s that the term "realism" could be applied to a genre that is, in the most important ways, nigh indistinguishable from the most nightmarish of genres.

In keeping with the formal trappings of neo-realism, the film is shot entirely on location, with no (okay, few) major visual flourishes. The actors are amateurs, even our very solid lead, Lamberto Maggiorani (who appears to be a likeably doofy cross between Charlton Heston and Richard Conte). It all comes together to form a surprisingly effective piece. Really, the only complaint I have is that it seems to drag around the middle, despite the relatively trim 89 minute running time. I suspect this is one that will grow on me over time, although I quite liked it as is. I also think that another viewing, this time of the new Criterion DVD, might help. The print used for the transfer on the Image disc that I watched was beat to hell and back, and they didn’t bother to translate about 20% of the dialogue.

8.5/10

Une Femme est une Femme (A Woman is a Woman)
Jean-Luc Godard, 1961

I almost can’t believe it, but I think I finally get Godard. I’ve seen two of his movies before, Alphaville and Breathless. I hated Alphaville and I thought Breathless was okay, but despite the typical Godardian style, not because of it. This time, though, all of the pieces fell into place. The jarring music and editing, the improvised dialogue, the continued assault on the fourth wall. . .it all contributed to a sense of vitality that was very infectious. I loved it.

Interestingly enough, this is said to be Godard’s tribute to the classical Hollywood musical, which is a genre toward which I am not shy about showing my disdain. I can certainly see the connection – the plot is silly enough for a musical, the colors are vibrant enough. . . . more importantly, though, the staging and editing of many sequences turns them into something that parallels a series of songs without actually being songs. Sometimes it’s the use of score to punctuate breaks in the dialogue, which gives the conversation a musical tone, other times it’s the staging and the content, as is the case with the fantastic silent book argument. And of course, sometimes (infrequently), people actually do sing. What Godard does, essentially, is takes the strengths of the classic musical and strip away the weaknesses.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Anna Karina as well. She has such a strong and appealing presence on screen, as well as a spectacularly expressive face, that even if the rest of the movie had been a complete disaster, she probably could have dragged it into watchability single-handedly. She manages to stay sympathetic and likable even while acting completely insane (and given the levels of crazy on display, that’s no small feat). Her co-stars are solid too, but when she’s on screen (which is nearly the entire movie), it doesn’t really matter. It’s no wonder Godard cast her in seven more of his movies. Not to mention married her.

9/10

The Woman in Green (Sherlock Holmes)
Roy William Neill, 1945

Between 1939 and 1946, Universal and Fox made fourteen Sherlock Holmes movies featuring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce as Holmes and Watson, respectively (yes, that averages out to almost two per year). This is the first of them that I’ve seen, and unfortunately, it didn’t make a particularly good first impression. Part of that may have been the rather poor transfer, which looked like it came from a 16mm source and had a ridiculous level of hiss in the soundtrack. It made the movie look fifteen years older than it is. I know I’ve been complaining a lot about that sort of thing lately, but it makes a difference.

Looking beyond that, though, it’s still no great shakes. The plotting is pedestrian, the camera work perfunctory, and the climax silly. On the other hand, though, Rathbone and Bruce are terrific, and the all-too-brief confrontation between Holmes and Moriarty in Holmes’ flat is magnificent. Those two points bought the movie a lot of leeway with me. I will certainly be giving this series another shot down the line, but next time I’ll rent a DVD instead of streaming it so that I can be sure I get the newer MPI restoration.

3.5/10

Miracle Mile
Steve De Jarnatt, 1989

Four words that should never be seen on a movie screen: Music by Tangerine Dream.

I kid, I kid. The score was pretty bad (especially at the beginning), but it didn’t sink the movie. The movie did that all by itself. It begins atrociously, with a truncated courtship (was it all one day? I think so, but it’s hard to tell) between the bland Anthony Edwards and the curiously unappealing Mare Winningham, all set to the sounds of some horrible TD synths. This is followed by a ridiculously overplotted excuse to have Edwards miss an appointment. Micro-scale overplotting seems to be a recurring problem in this movie, with the gas station confrontation standing as the worst offender. It’s probably a result of allowing a novelist to not only write his own screenplay, but direct it as well. These sequences probably worked on the page, but they’re laughable on screen.

Once the phone call that incites the rest of the plot comes in, and our hero learns that he has an hour until the nukes hit LA, the movie becomes – well, not terrible. Still not good, though. Edwards spends the rest of the movie running around trying to find his new girlfriend, who we don’t know well enough to care about, having not-quite zany misadventures along the way. He also spends a lot of his time randomly running into awesome D-list stars (Denise Crosby! Earl Boen! Robert DoQui! Brian Thompson! Kurt Fuller!), which I did appreciate. Unfortunately, any good will the casting managed to build up is lost over the course of the two climactic scenes in which our two leads sit around in enclosed spaces and discuss the themes of the movie in portentous tones and declare their love for one another over and over again..

2.5/10

The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer
Irving Reis, 1947

Cary Grant is never better than when he’s playing his signature role, the likeably cocky asshole. While that description may be a bit strong in this case, it’s close enough to work. Myrna Loy is never better than when she gets to use her trademark technique of being extremely flustered and superhumanly composed all at the same time, which she has plenty of opportunities to do here. Perhaps that’s why The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer is a fantastic comedy while the last collaboration between the two (at least, the last one I saw) kind of collapsed on itself (That would be Mr. Blandings Builds his Dream House, by the way). To be fair, though, I have to give plenty of credit to Sidney Sheldon’s academy award-winning screenplay, which provides a smorgasbord of crackling dialogue for the actors to pick from. Director Reis should also be applauded for not overselling the comedy, allowing some marvelous setpieces (i.e., the dinner/dance date) to build in an organic fashion, which makes them all the funnier.

All of the mayhem banter almost keeps one from noticing that the central romance is pretty poorly developed and that some of the character contrasts and verbal observations are a bit too cute and on the nose. Not excessively so, though – just typically so. If you’ve ever seen an old romantic and/or screwball comedy, I’m sure you know what I’m talking about. Definitely one of the better examples of the genre.

8.5/10

Progress: 35 (Par +3. 3! 3, I say!)

Saturday, April 18, 2009

104 in 2009 Week 15: What About Bob?

Hey, almost a week late. Once again, I waited too long to write about it and I therefore don't have as much to say. Normally I'd just roll this into the next week, but week 16 is a pretty big update as it is (and as you'll hopefully see tomorrow), so I'll just slip this one out first.

What About Bob?
Frank Oz, 1991

This is a movie with a simple message: don’t be a complete douchebag, or your perfectly reasonable complaints and requests will not be heeded by anyone. Richard Dreyfuss, as a psychiatrist who just wants to be left alone on vacation, is cast very clearly as the villain, even turning homicidal in the last act. If you look at it objectively, though, the way he treats Bill Murray’s Bob throughout the first half of the movie or so is perfectly reasonable, even kinder than it needs to be. It all comes across as horribly cruel and unnecessary, though, because hey – what a douchebag.

What About Bob? basically coasts on its stars, and Dreyfuss and Murray are up to the challenge, keeping things lively and interesting even through a few dry patches, including an ending that is, to be honest, a bit of a mess. It's not going to change the face of comedy (or, more accurately, didn't change the face), but it's a good way to spend an hour and a half.

7.5/10


Progress: 30 (Par)

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

500, Baby!

Sometime when I wasn't paying attention (which I later determined to be Monday), Peephole crossed the big 5-0-0 mark on Vimeo. I think I can safely say that Peephole has been viewed by more people than anything else I've ever made in my life.

I can also say that it has been viewed by more people than anything that anyone has ever made. It would just be a lie, is all.

And don't worry, I won't keep harping on this. You won't hear another word from me about Peephole unless it makes it to the 1K mark one of these days. Then you will hear a lot more words, many of which will probably be made up.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

104 in 2009 Week 14: Stolen Face, 300, West Side Story, and The Secret of NIMH

Four movies this week, which not only catches me up, but puts me one ahead! In addition, I watched a fifth movie - Timecrimes, which I very much enjoyed, but which doesn't count because it is a 2008 release (in the US, at least).

Stolen Face
Terence Fisher, 1952

My, what a fantastically disturbing story we have here. A plastic surgeon falls in love on holiday, is crushed when he finds out the woman he has fallen for is going to marry someone else, and decides that he may as well perform plastic surgery on a criminal in order make her look like his lost love and then marry her. One could make an awfully compelling movie out of that story, but this isn’t it. The plot unfolds in a very straightforward, even plodding fashion, and rather than explore the moral and psychological issues at the heart of the story, we are given a struggle between the “good” doctor and his villainous new wife. And the last line is a real howler.

Terence Fisher, best known for his re-imaginings of classic horror movies with Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee, does his best with a very weak script, adding several nice, moody elements that make the movie seem better than it is. A key montage at the midpoint, contrasting the reconstructive surgery with a concert tour, manages to be both aesthetically interesting and thematically relevant, when most such montages (especially at the time) struggle to pull off one or the other. Unfortunately, it’s just not enough.

3/10

300
Zack Snyder, 2006

I may have gone into this with the wrong attitude, expecting that there was no chance that I would like it. The thing is, though, that despite that, I really did want to like it. I want to like Zack Snyder. I think his heart is in the right place. It’s just that his literalist style of adaptation doesn’t really work. What we wind up with here are plenty of images that, while perfectly pleasing on their own, don’t flow together to make a successful whole. He can recreate panels from the comic book, but he can’t bring them to life.

The source material doesn’t help, either. Frank Miller is a solid artist, but not much of a writer. With Sin City, he found a way to use his weaknesses as strengths. Here. . . not so much.

3/10

West Side Story
Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins

It’s not secret I’m not a fan of musicals, especially after the 1-2 punch of On the Town and Bye Bye Birdie. West Side Story, however, is in a completely different world from those two films. Unbelievably, it’s an actual, honest to god movie, with characters and plot and everything! Not only that, but most of the musical numbers actually accomplish something beyond shouting out “look at me, I sing and dance!” The opening dance number is particularly good in this regard.

In fact, the weaknesses of this movie generally stem from the source material – and yes, I’m referring to Shakespeare’s most well-known play here. Romeo and Juliet has never been one of the bard’s strongest works and is, on the macro plot and character level, pretty terrible. It just happens to get by one some fantastic writing on the micro level. Wet Side Story actually manages to improve on the plot by turning that late-act cosmic coincidences that drive the conclusion into character-driven choices.

All told, this is not a great movie. Much of the dialogue is corny, the central love story is unappealing, the supporting characters steal every damn scene out from under the leads, and it’s a little long. But I have to commend it for not being terrible, as I would expect a musical based on the nadir of Shakespeare to be.

6.5/10

The Secret of NIMH

Don Bluth, 1982

This is one of those magical little movies that probably never should have existed, but I’m pleased that it does. It’s a beautifully animated movie based on a wonderful premise that unfortunately peters out into unexplained mysticism toward the end. It vacillates wildly between disturbingly adult humor and horror and typical childish animated antics, which must have confused the hell out of any kid that watched it. This is, of course, a good thing.

All told, The Secret of NIMH has a lot going for it, but doesn't really add up to much. Still, it's something unique and ridiculous, which is very endearing.

7/10

Progress: 29 (Par +1)