Saturday, May 31, 2014

2014 - MONUMENTS MEN, interesting and disappointing.


Kind of a letdown.  Considering the subject matter and the cast this should have been a much better film.  George Clooney starred, directed, co-wrote and co-produced this film and he probably took on more than he should have.  The film at times really strains to get from point A to point B.

Clooney put together a real charismatic cast, Matt Damon, John Goodman, Bill Murray, that guy from Dowton Abbey Hugh Bonneville, Bob Balban and smiling Frenchman John Durjadin.  Cate Blanchett is also in the film as a French art historian but I'm not really sure why.  She doesn't really bring a thing to the film and her subplot could have been easily cut out of the film.


The whole idea of a group of middle aged art scholars rushing across Europe during World War II to prevent the Nazi's from destroying the cultural history of Europe seems like a great idea for a film.  However the screenplay can't seem to establish a clear story line and and splitting the group of art historians up for some mini adventures just dilutes the film.   

 But, this is a film that is certainly very watchable.  The actors are all very enjoyable  and I have to admit that George Clooney does have a lot of screen presence.

118 minutes.

2012 - CLOUD ATLAS, decent attempt at trying something different


At least everyone involved was trying for something different this time.  From the opening of the film where it is announced that no one likes stories that jump back and forth in time the film proceeds to do just that.  You get five interconnected stories and a prologue and epilogue.  The film also has a cast that plays multiple roles throughout the film.

The film is clearly ambitious.  It wants to say something about the inter-connectivity of man throughout time.  Frequently this comes off as a lot of philosophical babble and is somewhat of an ordeal to get through.  But when was the last time a big budget film even attempted to be about something?


Cloud Atlas is extremely well made from a technical standpoint.  When in comes to integrating special effects in a film, The Wachowskis have the drill down.  There was a lot of criticism of the makeup effects used on the actors playing the multiple roles.  But I believe the idea was not to disguise them beyond the point of recognition.

This is an interesting film that for once does not feature a Marvel superhero.

172 minutes.

1972 - BAD COMPANY, a very dour western

Robert Benton and his writing partner David Newman had written the script for Bonnie and Clyde. With the success of that film, they had enough clout to get one of their personal projects made.  They chose to film a cynical western about a group of young men heading west during the Civil War.  They hired a decent cast in particular Jeff Bridges who was always a likable actor.   The cinematographer Gordon Willis who shot Bad Company had been associated with urban dramas like The Godfather and many of Woody Allen's best films.  The result was a well acted but depressing film story wise and visually.  


Gordon Willis was known for pushing the limits when it came to filming in darkness and shadows and he really pushed it here.  Scenes set inside houses are so dark at times it is almost impossible to tell what is going.  Even when the film goes outdoors filming on some arid Kansas prairie, Willis smothers the film in sepia filters and you still can't see anything.  Bad Company is a pretty ugly looking film.

Bad Company is one of those revisionist westerns.  The film wants to show what the west was really like.  While that is all very good it doesn't actually make for a lot of fun when you have to sit down and watch it.


Bad Company does have a rather amusing in-joke.  The character actor David Huddleston plays an outlaw called "Big Joe."  Big Joe is based on film director Joseph L Mankiewicz who Benton and Newman had worked with on There Was A Crooked Man, another revisionist western.

93 minutes.

Saturday, May 24, 2014

2012 - DJANGO UNCHAINED, more Tarantino more of the same

Guess I wasn't in the mood for another Tarantino genre mash up.  This time Tarantino mixes spaghetti westerns with blaxploitation films in a tale of a bounty hunting ex-slave searching for his wife somewhere down south before the Civil War. The slave Django hooks up with another bounty hunter a German speaking dentist.  They shoot a lot of guys before the even more  bloody climax at some southern plantation called "Candyland. 


As usual Tarantino has loaded the film up with lots of actors most of them who are past their prime.  These actors starred in the exploitation junk that Tarantino grew up on.  Tarantino also has lots of his hipster dialog and situations that he has channeled from watching LOTS of other films.  Tarantino seems to be making some point that slavery in the old South was bad, like I needed to be told that.

The problem I had with this film was the constant over the top violence.  People just don't get shot they get shot and erupt in geysers of blood.  I mean really?  Although it can be fun listening to good actors delivery his dialog, there were long stretches where some of these dialog scenes seemed unusually indulgent even for him.  I'm starting to wonder if Tarantino has finally hit the wall rehashing genre films.

Django by the way is also a restaurant in Des Moines, Iowa,  They specialize in a sort of French cusine, but I looked at the menu and it looks like a mash up of French food, Italian food and burgers. It's kind of like Django Unchained.

165 minutes.

1969 - AGE OF CONSENT, Michael Powell's final feature film

Michael Powell's final film is probably remembered for Helen Mirren's topless scenes.  Mirren is an actor who apparently never had a problem undressing for the camera.  But Powell was too much of an artist who I doubt was interested in filming nude scenes of Helen Mirren just for the sake of it.  


It appears that Powell and James Mason the actor/producer of Age of Consent were interested in exploring the emotional state of a successful painter who is trying to stay relevant and meaningful to his work.


Apparently Powell and Mason's solution to this artistic crisis is to have the painter Bradley Morahan take up residence on a South Pacific island which just happens to have a young buxom blonde girl running and swimming around half nude a lot of the time.  Let's face it the script for this film is not so hot.


Age of Consent isn't a total failure.  It has beautiful photography of The Great Barrier Reef and certain scenes in the film do have some of that old Michael Powell touch.  It sure could have done without the comedy relief that Mason insisted that Powell stick into the film.

106 minutes, written by Peter Yeldham.

1951 - ACE IN THE HOLE, Wilder's tribute to the worst in mankind.

Finally got around to watching this film.  Billy Wilder's very cynical take on just about everything is still really tough stuff even now.  It's kind of amazing this film even got made.  Didn't the studio read the script and realize that the film has almost no redeeming characters in it.  Wilder somehow must have had enough clout to get this film made.  However just watching Ace In The Hole you can't help but realize that it's commercial prospects were going to be very dim.

 

Wilder cast Kirk Douglas as the reporter Chuck Tatum.  Douglas plays him as a clever guy with a nasty sense of humor.  Throughout the film Douglas exploits the situation of the man trapped in a cave to rebuild his career as a reporter and Douglas plays him as a guy with almost next to no problem caring about the situation he has created.  It's a very tough tricky performance.  There clearly was no room for a William Holden or Jack Lemmon type in this Wilder film.


What you really come away with in Ace in the Hole are the crowd scenes and carnival atmosphere that arises as one man's personal tragedy is exploited by just about everyone.  Watching the masses of people get off the train and the line of cars driving to the cave in to be a part of the action is kind of intense.  Did Wilder really think Americans were that horrible?  Apparently so.


Billy Wilder had made some tough films before Ace in the Hole, like Double Indemnity and The Lost Weekend. This film actually did serious harm to his careerWilder pivoted over mostly to comedies for the remainder of this career and never made another film like this.

111 minutes, written by Billy Wilder, Walter Newman and Lesser Samuels.

2014 - GODZILLA - a fun Godzilla film.


Yeah it's kind of a mess of a film.  The script has some big plot holes and doesn't make sense at times.  A very good cast was hired for the film and wasn't really used to it's full potential.  The film is too long.  But, this is a very entertaining reworking of Toho's original Godzilla

If you use the Leonard Maltin "rate o meter"  this is definitely a 2 1/2 star film.  But a 2 1/2 star film can be just as entertaining as a 4 star film.  How many times can someone sit through 12 Years A Slave?


The director Gareth Edwards and the special effects team did a good job on the epic scale action scenes.  Edwards clearly decided to hold off on showing Godzilla until the last half of the film.  This has been somewhat criticized by the Godzilla movie nerds, a select group of individuals that have watched way too many of the Toho films.  But I think Edwards made the right choice, there is only so much suspension of disbelief you can bring to this kind of story. 

Produced by the same studio that tried out another big monster film last year Pacific Rim, for some reason this film worked as a crowd pleaser where that one didn't.

123 minutes

Saturday, May 17, 2014

1946 - A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH, a Powell and Pressburger 40's classic


Viewed this Powell and Pressburger film the other night, for a film almost 70 years old this is still a remarkable achievement.



Filmed in technicolor and black and white with the bulky 3 strip technicolor camera,  Jack Cardiff captured some remarkable images.



The production design by Alfred Junge is very impressive


As an example of film making, this film is a quite a technical achievement.



Finally, credit has to be given to Powell and Pressburger for pulling off this amazing fantasy film.  This is a one of a kind film.
 

104 minutes.

1970 - THE KREMLIN LETTER, complex spy vs spy stuff

In this movie watching era of short attention spans you better be on your game sorting through the very intricate plot of The Kremlin Letter.

This is cold war spy vs spy stuff made during the spy movie craze of the 1960's.  Occasionally a major league director in this case John Huston would take a shot at this genre.  Huston had been one of the five directors who was mixed up in the goofy first version of Casino Royale.  But this time Huston was trying for something different, a complex cynical film about the espionage business.

Cynical can't really describe how bleak this film is.  There isn't one character that the audience can even remotely identify with and it's amazing what Huston gets away with in this film, homosexuality, drug abuse, rape and murder.


The film has a good cast, everyone in it is a first rate professional and gives an excellent performance.  The Kremlin Letter probably ranks up there with some of Billy Wilder's films like, Double Indemnity or Ace in the Hole.  But Huston certainly has one up on Wilder with this really grim film.

121 minutes, screenplay John Huston and Gladys Hill.