Thursday, December 29, 2011

2010 - LETTERS TO JULIET is a crummy chick flick.


It's not horrible, it's not terrible, it's not bad, it's just stupid.  A young woman on an Italian vacation helps an old woman find her long lost love blah blah blah.


A starring vehicle for an actor named Amanda Seyfried, she has to be charming enough to carry the entire film.  Seyfried is no Audrey Hepburn, she's just another bland blond who can't work up any charm or chemistry with her costar an equally bland blond named Chris Egan.


This leaves Vanessa Redgrave and her real life significant other Franco Nero to carry the emotional heart of the film, but they have hardly any scenes together.  So that leaves only the Italian scenery worth watching and frankly that's not much of a reason to sit through  Letters to Juliet.


 A film that was made for the express purpose of letting the cast and crew have a free vacation in Italy on the studio's dollar, I'm sure everybody had a nice time.

The star of the film, Amanda Seyfried's lack of charisma sent her back to the kind roles she is best at, hookers and porn stars in films like Chloe and the forthcoming Linda Lovelace biography.

105 minutes.

Monday, December 26, 2011

1959 - THE LETTER NEVER SENT or THE UNSENT LETTER


Four Russian scientists dropped into Siberia search for industrial diamonds for mother Russia, but run afoul of mother nature instead which tries to kill them off.


This is a standard Soviet propaganda piece with the scientists setting aside their differences for the good of  the USSR.  What else can you expect for a late 50's film coming out of a state controlled government film industry.  What sets this film above the usual commie PR propaganda job is the incredible photography that runs throughout the film. 

 

The director Mikhail Kalatozov has put together a striking looking film from the opening shot of the camera tracking back to show the scientists isolated in Siberia to the amazing forest fire sequence where Kalatozov seems determined to burn up his cast along with the forest.  Later as what's left of the cast escapes into the mountains, Kalatozov seems equally determined to freeze them to death, no wimps allowed in this film. 


Whatever the short comings of the film in characterization and story, this is an amazing film with impressive sequences filmed outdoors in what must have been challenging outdoor locations.  

A dazzling film.

97 minutes

Sunday, December 25, 2011

1966 - FUNERAL IN BERLIN, spy vs spy vs spy vs spy etc

Amazingly convoluted 60's spy film.  This is the top of the mountain for a plot so confusing it literally took me many viewings over many years to finally understand what the hell was going on.

Secret agent Harry Palmer is supposed to help a high ranking Russian colonel defect to the west in divided Berlin.  Throw into the mix, Israeli agents hunting for former Nazi's, a secret network dedicated to smuggling people out of East Berlin, and enough double crosses to make the dream within a dream within a dream sequences in Inception seem perfectly understandable and everyone's awake in this film.

The film's got good photography of Berlin, and is worth having around as a historic record of the Cold War especially in the scenes shot near the Berlin Wall, the symbol of the East vs West face.


The Harry Palmer spy series was produced by Harry Saltzman one of the James Bond producers and was clearly supposed to be an alternative to the larger than life Bond series.  However this series never really caught on with the public and deliberately bewildering films like Funeral in Berlin probably helped to kill it off.


Directed by Guy Hamilton who made a lot of James Bond films, but this ain't no Bond film.

102 minutes, screenplay by Evan Jones.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

2011 - THE ADVENTURES OF TINTIN is the on going decline of Steven Spielberg

Another disappointment from Steven Spielberg who seems to be further spiraling down the hole of artistic nothingness from film to film.


The Adventures of Tintin has nothing to do with Herge or Tintin.  Gone are the clever plots and comic book humor of the colorful books.  Instead what we have here is just another Indiana Jones film (and a crummy one at that) with characters that just happened to be named Tintin and Captain Haddock.


If you look at Spielberg's list of films, since the failure of 1941, he has been playing it safe with completely middle brow entertainments.  With the exception of Schindler's List  would anyone really consider The Terminal or Catch Me If You Can as films that contribute to the greater artistic culture?

Even when Spielberg reaches a little higher in films like Saving Private Ryan, A.I. and Minority Report, his middle brow taste and sensibilities defeat his ambitions.

Spielberg knows how to make a movie.  He knows where to place the camera and make the edit but if you look at his technique he's still shooting films the same way he made Amblin',  slick but empty entertainments.

Spielberg with  Peter Jackson

The Adventures of Tintin is particularly annoying because Spielberg has smothered it in weird camera angles, ADD action scenes and wrapped it all in overblown computer enhanced backgrounds.

It's as if he is afraid to tell a story for fear of seeming like an old fogy who can't compete with the hyperactive Michael Bay and Zack Snyder director types.

107 minutes, written by Steven Moffat, Edgar Wright and Joe Cornish.

1975 - THE MAGIC FLUTE, Ingmar Bergman's flm of Mozart's opera.

Ingmar Bergman films The Magic Flute on a sound stage in a TV studio.


Expecting the worst, an opera filmed in a claustrophobic studio emphasizing the theatricality of the production and translated into Swedish from the original German.  Ingmar Bergman, the master of existential despair should have had a major musical disaster on his hands.


However, Bergman was also a very smart director who took this property and with a high level of skill filmed a very lively version of Mozart's opera.  There are so many clever and witty touches through out the film that one tends to forget that Bergman was also a director of very sophisticated comedies during his career.  He was also a noted director of actors and in this version of The Magic Flute, he gets very naturalistic performances out of larger than life opera performers.


In the end the real auteur of The Magic Flute is W.A Mozart. Even if this film had been an absolute disaster, it would have been impossible to screw up the wonderful music in this opera.

This is one of Bergman's finest films.

135 minutes.

Friday, December 23, 2011

1965 - THE RAILRODDER & BUSTER KEATON RIDES AGAIN


The National Film Board of Canada's films about Buster Keaton's railroad ride from the eastern part of Canada to the western border.  Two films were made, The Railrodder, a short film which attempted to recreate the feel of a silent film and a documentary about the making of The Railrodder, Buster Keaton Rides Again.


 The Railrodder has Keaton racing along a railroad track in a maintenance vehicle called a "speeder."  The film has some nice scenery and Keaton the great stone face.  For a 70 year old man, Keaton is remarkably nimble and does an amazing number of his own gags.  The film is moderately entertaining.


Probably more interesting is the documentary Buster Keaton Rides Again.  Here you get a glimpse of Keaton the filmmaker as he takes on the actual director of The Railrodder, Gerald Potterton.  You actually have to feel a little sorry for Potterton as he tries to get Keaton to perform the gags he has devised and generally failing in his attempts to motivate Keaton.  However the reality is that the stunts and gags Keaton thinks up are probably the funniest in the film.


Keaton is considered one of the three great comedy geniuses of silent film along with Chaplin and Harold Lloyd.  But of the three Keaton was probably the one who understood how to use the camera with a sophisticated visual style that completely eluded Chaplin his entire career.

24 minutes The Railrodder.

55 minutes Buster Keaton Rides Again.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

1970 - HATCHET FOR THE HONEYMOON, just in time for Christmas


Psycho killer time once again from Mario Bava.  This version is told from the point of view of the killer as he tries to figure out why he wants to kill.  But in the meantime while he works out his personal issues he slaughters brides to be and burns their bodies.


This is up to the usual high Bava standards, creepy killings and gorgeous gothic photography which Bava did himself


Bava has gone down this road before and Hatchet for the Honeymoon is very reminiscent of his horror classic Blood and Black Lace, particularly with the emphasis on killing beautiful models.


If this kind of film has to be made then I guess it's very well made but there is a "seen it all before" aspect to this film which it can't shake off.

105 minutes.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

2011 - HUGO a lesson in film history from Marty Scorsese


An orphan in a train station in Paris has a lot of adventure and learns about the history of early silent film.


When  it was announced that Marty the Great would make a children's film and in 3D expectations were high.  The resulting film Hugo is not going to appeal to the Madagascar audience.  This is a very specialized film, made more for film buffs than the general public.

Scorsese shot the film in 3D and does employ some clever imagery with this gimmick but overall it's difficult to see what 3D actually adds to the story besides giving me a headache and forcing me to pay more than usual for a movie ticket.


 It's hard to find fault with the cast.  Ben Kingsley probably has the best part that he's had in years.  The kid Asa Butterfield is in just about every scene and is very good.  Christopher Lee show up in a small part and overall the whole cast is up to the usual high Scorsese standard.

The film also looks great too.  Scorsese has a group of collaborators that work with him on just about every film he does so the viewer can expect a high degree of technical skill.


Hugo is a personal film for Scorsese.  The problem is that it will mostly appeal to film historians and buffs hardly the crowd that is going to make this a commercially successful film. 

128 minutes.

1955 - BLOOD ALLEY - John Wayne vs the Chinese Commies

Sea captain John Wayne helps a small community of Chinese villagers escape from the red menace on a rickty steam boat.  Tagging along is improbable love interest Lauren Bacall playing the daughter of an American doctor working in China


Wayne produced Blood Alley but had no intention of appearing in it.  The original lead Robert Mitchum was somewhat of a hell raiser in real life and managed to get himself fired after pissing off William Wellman.  Duke reluctantly stepped in for Mitchum and finished the film.

Wayne and Bacall aren't much of a screen team.  Bacall looks like she belongs back in Los Angeles on the Hollywood cocktail circuit.  Wayne doesn't generate much heat with her, he probably had his hands full producing and acting.


Expecting the worst from yet another John Wayne anti commie rant film, Blood Alley wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. It has the usual oddball 1950's stuff in it.  Western actors playing Chinese peasants, some bad model work of the steamship trapped in a storm and a couple of jingoistic rants from Wayne.  But once you get past all of that this it's a decent adventure film with good wide screen photography. 


William Wellman was winding down a directing career that went back to silent pictures.  Probably his most interesting period was during the 1930's and 40's directing films like, The Ox Bow Incident and The Public Enemy.  Wellman also directed the very weird religious drama The Next Voice You Hear, about God speaking to the world over the radio.

An interesting guy with an interesting career.

115 minutes

Friday, December 16, 2011

1939 - THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES, Rathbone & Bruce


Going down the road once again with Arthur Conan Doyle's story of the devil dog from hell.  This is the version that introduced Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce as Holmes and Watson.


Rathbone's got the drill down as mister know it all Sherlock Holmes.  Nigel Bruce hadn't descended into parody playing Dr Watson as the befuddled sidekick to Holmes.  These guys are British and cool.


A real 1930's film, shot on a sound stage with the fog machines running overtime.  This version of The Hound of the Baskervilles is more like a conventional 1930's murder mystery with everyone sitting around in a room while Holmes explains who did what to whom.


A nice short version of the classic story, Rathbone and Bruce are the whole show.  You gotta love how they snuck that final line past the censors.

80 minutes.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

1968 - AMBLIN' early Spielberg film is kind of an ordeal to sit through


Steven Spielberg's early short film about a couple of hitchhikers in the desert.  The story what there is of it is entirely silent. 


Spielberg says he has great affection for Amblin' and why wouldn't he.  The film was seen by executives at Universal Studios and on the basis of it he was offered a job directing television shows for the studio.  The rest as they say is etc.


This isn't just any early short film by a future big name director.  It was shot in 35 millimeter and had Allen Daviau the cinematographer who would go on to film E.T. and The Color Purple for Spielberg.  It's a highly polished piece of movie making.  This is also a very slick piece of product, without an honest moment in the entire film.


Amblin' is the beginning of Spielberg the director as provider of commercial junk like, Hook, Jurassic Park:  The Lost World, Always, The Terminal and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

For every Schindler's List, the public is expected to sit through something like The Terminal or Amblin'.

26 minutes, written by Steven Spielberg.

1973 - MESSIAH OF EVIL, surprisingly good horror film


A young woman searching for her father, ends up in a small northern California town full of ghouls.


Incredibly this film was made by Willard Huyck and Gloria Katz the screenwriters frequently associated with George Lucas.  After writing American Graffiti, it was all sharply downhill for them with French Postcards, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Howard the Duck, Lucky Lady and Secrets of a Hollywood Nurse.


Messiah of Evil is a low budget horror film with some very effective scenes shot in a small seaside California town.  The film has a very eerie atmosphere and some decent performances.  At times Messiah of Evil has a poetic quality to it much like a Dreyer or Bergman film.


So what happened to the careers of Huyck and Katz?

85 minutes

Saturday, December 10, 2011

1966 - NEVADA SMITH, is a good Western


A young man avenges the death of his parents in this western film from Henry Hathaway.


Hathaway and his cinematographer Lucien Ballard put together a very good looking film on magnificent locations in the Inyo National Forest.  The supporting cast is a great bunch of old school Hollywood actors featuring Karl Malden, Martin Landau, Brian Keith, Suzanne Pleshette, Raf Vallone, Howard De Silva, Iron Eyes Cody, Arthur Kennedy and Paul Fix. 


Probably the only negative things about it are the episodic screenplay from John Michael Hayes, and the "johnny one note" performance of Steve McQueen

Nevada Smith is a starring vehicle for Steve McQueen but he doesn't seem very interesting in starring in it.  He hardly registers any emotion and for a revenge story he doesn't seem very vengeful.  In fact he barely seems to have an interest in anything in the film McQueen's just going through the motions  He always was kind of an oddball personality in the movies.  


Still, this film is entertaining.  Henry Hathaway was a very good director.  Nevada Smith has some good action scenes and an excellent supporting cast backing up McQueen.  To repeat the point, this is a very good looking film shot in widescreen.

128 minutes.

1957 - ZERO HOUR, crisis in the air, un huh, un huh


You can't be in the movie blog biz without knowing that Zero Hour is the film that Airplane used to send up the airplane in danger genre.


All the lines and situations from Airplane are in this film.  The thing that jumps out watching Zero Hour is how serious everyone takes this film which includes the actors, the writer Arthur Hailey and the director Hal Bartlett.  Even the comedy relief is serious.


The director Hal Bartlett was never much of a filmmaker. Besides Zero Hour,  he is responsible for the film version of that atrocity of pop metaphysical spirituality Johnathan Livingston Seagull

The actors are kind of depressing to watch, Linda Darnell and Dana Andrews were on the downside of their careers but they go through the motions like true professionals.

Most entertainingly is Sterling Hayden a guy who never really found his place in Hollywood.  Talk about Mr. Intense, he shouts and yells his way through his entire performance. Hayden is really the whole show.


Zero Hour was made on what is called a modest budget, the airplane set looks really phony, the cockpit in particular looks like it could fit about 50 people.  The film has a lot of model airplane scenes of  planes crashing into each other which are fun to watch.

81 minutes.

Monday, December 5, 2011

1960 - INCIDENT AT A CORNER, 1957 - FOUR O'CLOCK, two TV films from Hitchcock


Two television films from Alfred Hitchcock of extremely variable quality. 


Incident at a Corner is Hitchcock's spin on Kurosawa's Rashomon.  The story of a school crossing guard accused of molesting children is told from three different points of view, with each viewpoint a different version of the incident.  George Peppard and Vera Miles are the couple trying to learn the truth.  Peppard overacts throughout the film like some sort of hysterical nut.

Vera Miles was another actress Hitchcock tried to mold into his ideal blond.  Made up to look like Madeline Elster from Vertigo, she's a little more restrained next to Peppard but then again almost everyone else in the cast looks restrained next to Peppard.


Hard to believe that Hitchcock even directed this film.  It's filmed on a back lot with TV acting and TV storytelling loaded with plot coincidences, poor dialog and that garish look old TV shows had when they first started shooting in color. 


Four O'clock is the real deal from Alfred Hitchcock.  A clever suspense story about a watchmaker who plans to blow up his wife by planting a bomb with a timer in their house during the day.  Trapped and tied up by a couple of burglars in the basement, the watchmaker has to watch the clock with the bomb connected to it tick down.


Hitchcock has a better situation here and a better actor in E.G. Marshall.  He's also able to build suspense very effectively with the large closeups of the timer on the bomb ticking down.  Four O'clock demonstrates what a talented director Hitchcock was even working within the restraints of the early TV series format.

60 minutes (approx) both films.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

1984 - STREETS OF FIRE, a rock and roll fable.

The writer/director Walter Hill shoved everything he thought was cool about 50's films into this film.  Streets of Fire has evil bike gangs, greasers and a cool score by Ry Cooder. 


Diane Lane is supposed to be some tough singer chick maybe a Joan Jett type but she's just a Southern California girl playing dress up.  Michael Pare's a tough solider of fortune but he couldn't pass muster in the West Side Story Jets.  Rick Moranis is the fast talking producer but he's not even up to the standard of one of his SCTV characters.

This cast of relatively unknown actors was a big fail.  Lane's an actor who has never been able to get her career to take off.   She's had a lot of opportunity in films like A Little Romance, The Cotton Club and The Outsiders but she's never made a strong enough impression in any of them.  Pare's the same deal, a pretty boy who never took off in films.  Moranis just goes to show that sketch comedians should probably stick with small comedy parts. 


The other problem with this film is the story.  Streets of Fire is a rehash of Hill's earlier film The Warriors and that film was a little weak on plot,  this one has the same problem.   Hill was good at creating the mood and the atmosphere of the film but couldn't get an interesting plot hook for the film. 


What this film has going for it is very impressive photography, it looks very good and has great atmosphere.  Hill was always a very strong director, he knows how to direct action scenes and knock them out of the park.

The failure of Streets of Fire is the story and the cast.  Audiences looking for a commercial entertainment weren't interested in a stylized tribute to the 1950's even with atmospheric photography and great action scenes.  There wasn't a single character in the film to get interested in.

93 minutes.

1997 - THE LOST WORLD: JURASSIC PARK

I'm sure Universal Studios tossed a whole lot of money at Steve Spielberg to get him to film this sequel.  He probably never had a choice other than saying yes.


The whole gang is back, Spielberg, the writer David Koepp, John Williams, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough and the computer generated dinosaurs.

As the famous movie reviewer Joe Bob Briggs liked to say "if you are going to make a sequel make a sequel, make the exact same movie as the first one."


For a summer popcorn flick a lot of people sure get eaten by dinosaurs, human life is very cheap in this movie.  This contrasts amusingly with the deliberate portrayal by Spielberg to make the dinosaurs lovable.

Towards the end of The Lost World: Jurassic Park one of these computer dinosaurs runs amok in San Diego.  This is where Spielberg's real heart lies, paying tribute to hack Godzilla director Ishiro Honda.


It's easy to hate this film since it's basically crap, but the reality was they were going to make a sequel to Jurassic Park one way or another.

129 minutes.