Various rantings on movies, books about movies, and other things to do with movies
Thursday, June 29, 2006
Movie review - "Nickelodeon" (1976) **1/2
A few things: the film's story covers a significant number of years, which is OK for an epic but not really for a comedy - shooting one film would have kept the story tighter. Also the film strains and seems to try too hard - too consciously zany (NB this was also a problem in the hit What's Up Doc? but that took place over a short period of time) Also old Hollywood had been done a lot around this time, with Hearts of the West and Won Ton Ton the Dog Who Saved Hollywood and Bogdanovich was very much on the nose in Hollywood after At Long Last Love and the critics slaughtered the film. Occasionally the film clicks and it is wonderful - Tatum O'Neal is in fine form and I loved the bit where Reynolds accidentally finds himself playing a member of the Ku Klux Klan.
Wednesday, June 28, 2006
Movie review - "Sweet Sweetback" (2004) ***1/2
Movie review - "Badasss Cinema" (2002) ***
Sunday, June 25, 2006
Movie review - "The Long Goodbye" (1973) ***1/2
Some of Altman's tactics tend to distance the viewer emotionally from the film - me at any rate - so maybe it doesn't have the power it could have. But then it would be less interesting to watch. The story is easy to follow - with all the sexy adaptations of classics we have today it's hard to see what all the fuss was about when this came out, but I guess it was too new back then. Many memorable moments: Gould and his perenially nude neighbours, Rydell and the coke bottle, Hayden and Gould getting drunk together, the climax.
Book review - "When Hollywood Had a King: the Reign of Lew Wasserman" by Connie Bruck
However, everyone's reign comes to an end in Hollywood - it happened to Mayer, Selznick, Zanuck, etc. Wasserman's position slipped in the late 70s - perhaps not coincidentally around the time the emergence of the first super agency since MCA, CAA - but then he went and sold Universal to the Japanese. There are heaps of tycoons who sell their businesses towards the end of their career - they almost always regret it (Zanuck, Sam Arkoff, Frank Packer). You'd think such smart people would realise that about themselves, but I guess if you devote your life to chasing the good deal, its hard to give it up... even when it means destroying yourself.
This book has the advantages of interviews with Wasserman plus access to Stein's unublished memoirs. Occasionally Wasserman gets lost in the stuff about politics and organised crime (there is a lot on organised crime) - I suppose that's inevitable. Also inevitable is that it doesn't focus on films and filmmakers as much as I would have liked (a few get discussed, such as producer Ross Hunter, Isadora, Steven Spielberg). Wasserman doesn't seem to have been as colourful as Mayer or Cohn... but he was married a long time to a wife who would cheat on him even though he knew about it, so he had some kinks. He seems to have been a bit like Kerry Packer in business - ruthless and a bully, sharp and using loyalty when it suited him, but he never did anything the government didn't let him. Which to be honest wasn't a lot!
Bruck has done much research and is written in that easy to read style of New Yorker articles. I enjoyed it immensely.
Book review - "Floor of Heaven" by Richard Wherrett
Book review - "How to be Good" by Nick Hornby
Saturday, June 24, 2006
TV review - "Buck Rogers episode 2: Planet of the Slave Girls" (1979) **
Movie review - "In Good Company" (2006) **
Paul Weitz proved his chops with About a Boy and this had a terrific topic for satire: a middle aged man (Dennis Quaid, perfectly cast) finds himself with a new boss (Topher Grace, also perfect) who is half his age... then finds the new boss pursuing his daughter (Scarlett Johannson, perfectly fine performance wise but too Scarlett Johannson to be ideally cast).
The result is disappointingly flat - the fangs are dulled, the laughs few and far, the drama tepid. It is well acted, but feels like opportunity missed: Quaid has to take out a second mortgage so that Johannson can move out of home... because she feels like it???... So she can study at NYU??? Study creative writing at NYU???
The character of Quaid's wife is under-used, ditto Grace's (Selma Blair, again playing the other woman). The film earns points for not getting Grace and Johannson and the end and for not making Grace's character a stock villain or hero. Its all intelligent, just flat.
TV review - "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century" (1979) **
Movie review - "Steve McQueen: The Essence of Cool" (2005) ****
Book review - "Robert Bolt" by Adrian Turner
I was aware of the big hits of Bolt's career - A Man for All Seasons, the Lean films - but not aware his first hit was in fact something called A Flowering Cherry (a mid life crisis drama similar to Death of a Salesman), and before Seasons he wrote another play, Tiger and the Horse, which was an even bigger hit. Before then he had a substantial reputation as a BBC dramatist.
Despite that he was often held up as a sell out - how can it be a sell out to write for David Lean, but that was the mood of the times. Also it was his agent, Peg Ramsey, (whose reputation Bolt made) who most frequently called him a sell out (John Mortimer wrote a brilliant sketch of Ramsey in his memoirs). To be fair he did kind of sell out when he was arrested for a CND protest in the 1960s - Bolt agreed to promise not to do any more protests so he could get out of gaol and work on Lawrence of Arabia - a compromise (one he needn't have done) he always regretted.
Bolt's life was fascinating: early life in Manchester, war service, joining the Communist Party, discovering his gift for learning and becoming a teacher, shot gun marriage, being an inspirational teacher, the early writing (he knew he wanted to write then stumbled upon play writing).
His life was marked by some tragedies and scandals: in the early 60s his wife left him for a handyman (he was obsessed with his work so it wasn't such a surprise - he came home and his new house was full of cupboards because the wife kept getting the handyman around), he married Sara Miles but they got divorced after the scandal where her personal assistant (and occasional lover) became obsessed with her killed himself - with Miles whispered as his possible murderer; his eldest daughter died in a possible suicide; he had a crippling stroke which permanently debilitated him (people blamed it on David Lean but a 60 cigs a day habit may also have had something to do with it). He married a third time, unsuccessfully - but then blow us all down if he and Miles didn't get remarried, surprising many people who thought it was only a glam match.
What of Bolt the writer? In the 60s he was the leading one in the world, though his final credit list isn't too long - he worked too long on projects. His main credits post stroke, The Bounty and The Mission, were based on scripts written in the 70s before his stroke. Up until the end he remained busy and in demand - you might wonder why as his credits grew increasingly sparse, but the Lean films and Seasons were classics, so why not?
Its a great shame his Bounty scripts were never filmed in the way they were intended, though one can understands studios being wary of them; ditto some of his other scripts such as one on Gandhi. Its a shame some of his unproduced scripts can't be published in some form or another; it's also a shame Bolt didn't write a little more for the stage, though he always tackled decent projects on screen - it's just that the stage stuff would have had more chance of being produced.
It's a marvellous read and highly recommended.
Monday, June 19, 2006
Movie review - "Match Point" (2006) ***
I didn't find this the masterpiece some have claimed, but I enjoyed it - I certainly didn't experience the feeling of disappointment I've had with every new Woody film since the mid 90s. It's wonderful to see Woody outside of New York (if only he'd dump the credits and the music) although he treats London the same cinematically as Manhattan - plenty of restaurants, theatres, art galleries, houses in the country.
The story is basically a remake of the Martin Landau section of Crimes and Misdemeanors, dragged out for two hours (there is even an equivalent of Sam Waterston's rabbi - a tennis pro that Rhys Myers confesses to) - it feels as though it could use a subplot, and that there are too many scenes. It also has occasionally clunky moments of dialogue which feel like "Woody doesn't really know how people talk".
But there are advantages: Scarlett Johanssen and Jonathan Rhys Myers are really good (it's the first time I've liked Rhys Myers in anything); they give the film a genuine sexual charge and some scenes - particularly making love in a rain storm - are the most erotic in any Woody Allen film; there is accomplished acting throughout the cast and a lovely twist at the end.
Movie review "Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift" (2006) **
Basically the film gets off to a poor start where two guys are discussing what to race over and a girl says you can race "over me" - it would have been OK if they pushed this level of ridiculousness but they never do.
OK, the film's problems: the hero is Lucas Black who is OK but isn't as good as Paul Walker - I never thought I would see the day where I would write the words "isn't as good as Paul Walker". The film lacks someone with a charisma of Vin Diesel - although the Japanese male actors are quite impressive and Sonny Chiba plays a yakuza.
Another thing is the hero lacks a decent motivation - he should have been going undercover, or out for revenge. As it is he's a screw up, who goes to work for a crime guy against another crime guy, and spends his time doing dangerous racing just for the fun of it - one day he will kill someone (Paul Walker's death risking driving in the first two was at least motivated to put criminals behind bars).
The film lacks a strong narrative spine - who cares if Black stays in Japan or not? That's the stakes? Also the female lead (Aussie Nathalie Kelly) - isn't she like a willing girlfriend of the baddy? What makes her change her mind?
Most of the film seems to be one of two scenes: a car chase (with lots of jagged camerawork and extreme close ups) or a scene in slow motion with the hero walking through a gathering wear lots of hot chicks dance around to the soundtrack and hang off the arms of guys. This is repeated throughout the films.
OK the positives: the notion of "drift" racing and the Tokyo setting gives the film freshness, some of the car chases are well done, I enjoyed some of the philosophical chats about racing, and the cameo at the end.
Friday, June 16, 2006
Book review - "Backstory 4" Ed Patrick McGilligan
Play review - "The Mayne Inheritance" by Errol O'Neill
Book review - "Dudley Moore: an Intimate Portrait" by Rena Fruchter
Fruchter was a devoted friend to Moore (despite his reptuation as a ladies' man it wasn't romantic, she was married with kids) but not blind to his faults. It seems Moore never got over the insecurity of his club foot and could be a bit hopeless. He never did much with his two children, was not very good at marriage. He strikes me as the sort of person of whom everyone would go "oh, Dudley" but always accompany it with an affectionate laugh, so great was his charm and talent (and his name suited his look so well). His final illness was a horrible tragedy. No one deserves that, but it seems Moore took it on with tremendous bravery. I got a bit teary at the end.
Book review - "Moby - replay"
Book review - "Christopher Lee: the Authorised Screen History" by Jonathan Rigby
No one can deny Rigby has done an excellent job, but the book has an unsurmountable problem: Lee made an incredible amount of crap. I like Christopher Lee, everyone likes Christopher Lee, and its wonderful how he's enjoying an Indian summer to his career, but gosh he was in a lot of schlock. Every now and then you hear people go "oh Lee's been typecast" and "he's never had his dues as an actor" but like another horror star, Boris Karloff, he's had plenty of chances in other sorts of films. He has a presence and can clearly rise to the occasion at the time, but he's not Marlon Brando. He should still be cherished, let's just not get silly about it.
The book is interesting. I didn't realise how easily Lee got his start - coming out of the army he decided to be an actor, and almost straight away got into the Rank charm school - but he put in a decade of hard yards before finding fame with Hammer. He's been a star ever since, though interestingly even after his break through he often appeared well down the cast list.
Lee tried to break away from horror in the 1970s, but has occasionally drifted back. He definitely seems to have been under-utilised by Hollywood, wasted in awful films and television - though to be fair Lee seems to have lousy taste in scripts (or at least a poor choice in young directors): he turned down Halloween, Swamp Thing and The Fog, which I couldn't believe.
I was also surprised how small the percentage of quality films he made: the decent Hammers, of course (Rigby is a fan of the 60s pirate films), The Wicker Man, the first Fu Manchu, an excellent Bond villain in the worst Bond film (The Man with the Golden Gun), The Private Lives of Sherlock Holmes, his recent blockbusters. There's a lot of other chaff.
Still, an icon is an icon and the book is a loving tribute.
DVD review - "The Warriors" (1979) ****
Movie review - "Just Friends" (2006) **1/2
The central story of this struck a chord - a why not, the myth is so strong: a man comes back to his home town ten years after leaving; no longer fat and a loser he's now handsome and successful and the girl of his dreams is still single. So far so good and they add a hilarious character in an Ashlee Simpson type.
The script feels as though it needed another story spine apart from the central relationship and the character of the girl (Amy Smart) I just couldn't warm to: she didn't go out with Ryan Reynolds because he was fat and now he's rich and handsome she's interested in him, and I couldn't see any more depth to the character than that. I kept waiting for the writers to give her a "pat the dog" moment but they never did apart form the fact she is good with children. (In contrast in There's Something About Mary, Cameron Diaz genuinely likes Ben Stiller at the beginning - it's Stiller's fault their date ends so disastrously; so he is an object worthy of affection.)
Ryan Reynolds would have been better off with the Ashlee Simpson character, who seems to genuinely like him, has talent (of a kind) and pays for a trip to Paris. So what if she's a bit mad?
So the film didn't work for me, though the cast give their all, including a funny Chris Klein.