Garland’s had something of a blessed life as a writer – his first novel was a best seller, then he was lucky enough to hook up with Danny Boyle. But give the main his due – this is a first-rate script, taut, well structured, tough, believable enough (I have no idea whether the science is real or not but I was convinced – except flying through space, even if only for a short while, that I didn’t quite buy). A review of Variety thought it borrowed too liberally from 2010 but it’s not that close to it. Yes there is another ship that they go on board, but there’s another mission here. And the ending is different. This draft has some changes from the final film – there’s a sex scene/romance between Capa and Cassie, the captain has a non-Japanese name, Mace is more heroic here (Capa saves the day more in the movie), the ending is less confusing in the film. Good changes, really. The theme is still the same – when it comes to the survival of the human race, leave it to computers!!
Various rantings on movies, books about movies, and other things to do with movies
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Movie review – “Mad Bastards” (2011) **1/2
Full of authenticity – the great faces, a non professional cast who look like they’ve been through some of the battles that the film depicts (something confirmed at the end when they talk to camera): the burly, beefy man out of gaol, full of torment and anger; the chubby, hard but decent cop (a terrific performance, I hope he gets lots of work); the angry, wild victim of domestic violence; the old codger constantly asking for a cigarette. The outburst of violence are very well handled. But it’s not really effective as a drama – it’s too long, there’s not enough story, too many scenes of staring into the distance, too much undeveloped. For instance, they set up this idea of some aboriginal men having a men's group – but there’s just scenes of them sitting around not talking. (Until the end). Once is funny but it gets frustrating. I think it needed a bit of meat and potatoes story in there – a secret about something that happened in the past, say. Really good music (Alex Lloyd as a cameo – he’s so chubby).
Radio review – BP – “Uncle Harry” (1952) *** (warning: spoilers)
Radio review – Suspense – “The Blue Hour” (1947) **1/2
In the 1940s you often saw a plucky heroine get involved in shady dealings – here Claire Trevor plays a showgirl who was associated with a gangster who’s been bumped off. People keep pestering her for what she knows. Not really original – her love interest is a guy called Mahoney - but enjoyable enough and Trevor is always good in these wrong-side-of-the-tracks-but-likeable parts.
Book review – “Sun and Shadow” by Jean-Pierre Aumont
Monday, May 30, 2011
Movie review – “Song of the Islands” (1942) ***
Movie review – “Mr Sardonicus” (1961) ***1/2
he Sardonicus make up is effective and I enjoyed the story – with it’s leech torturing of young girls, creepy graveyards, made up European country setting, Oscar Homolka as a hulking servant, decent twists (eg Sardonicus can’t eat or drink at the end), final shot.
Most of all there’s the appearance of Castle himself at the beginning of the film and towards the end announcing a poll whether Sardonicus has been punished enough – what a producer! Dalton is pretty but her character is a bit unsympathetic – I kept expecting her to be punished, too.
Script review – “Indecent Proposal” by Amy Holden Jones
I read an interview where she talked about her original draft for this. She said the married couple started out more working class, which isn’t the case here (the title of the script says “revision”) – but that the character of Gage the billionaire is tougher, which he is here. He’s more ruthless, wanting Diana (the girl) because he can’t have her. And instead of that silly speech about he once saw a girl and fell in love with her, ripped off Citizen Kane, there’s a much better one about how when he was younger he won at a slot machine and has always gotten everything he ever wanted. And instead of the film ending where Gage lies about how many other women he’s done this to, thereby “allowing” Diana to dump him, Diana just dumps him – Gage watches sadly as she’s reunited with her husband at the end.
Some of the things I remember from the film as being very silly are still here – the husband blowing all his million bucks on an animal (here a hippo when from memory the film had a leopard), the couple trying to gamble their way out of trouble, the husband acting like a spoilt brat. But it still works.
I recall first hearing about this plot that the central idea wasn’t very original – hadn’t it been done already with Honeymoon in Vegas? But I was single at the time and didn’t appreciate in actual fact it’s a terrific concept – because you can’t help wondering what you’d do in that situation. It’s also a perfect Hollywood screenplay: three big star parts, one for a hot girl who gets to wear a series of fantastic outfits, one for an elder male star who wants to be sexy and powerful (although Robert Redford apparently didn’t think he was sympathetic enough, requesting silly script changes), one for a hot young male. Plus a series of glamorous locations and a scene stealing comic relief part, David’s lawyer friend. Plus is gives the message that love is better than money so all the poor people in the audience can go home happy.
The script is solid professional work rather than amazing – the characters aren’t of great depth, but then I guess they’re not supposed to be. It was a shame the part of Gage was neutered so, but then the film was a hit so maybe they were right.
Movie review – “Samson and Delilah” (1949) ***
Script review – “Match Point” by Woody Allen
Movie review – “Thief of Bagdad” (1940) ***1/2
Radio review – Best Plays – “Accent on Youth” (1952) **
Samuel Raphaelson’s play has been filmed a number of times, partly one guesses because male stars are attracted to the central idea – an aging playwright (he’s 50 I think) finds his much younger secretary fall in love with him, even though he’s wary of the idea. Oh, it’s such a drama to have fresh poon tang obsessed with you… They throw in a younger man to want the woman and an elder woman to be into the playwright. But who cares about playwrights anyway? Or old men who have young girls into them? Maybe I’ll care more in ten or twenty years time. It might help if there were some decent jokes or charm – it’s all light stuff about people living in apartments talking about running away to Finland.
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Movie review – “17 Girls” (2011) ***
Movie review – “Corman’s Kingdom” (2011) ***1/2
It’s positive about Corman but not uncritical – for instance it’s noted how he couldn’t make the step up to bigger budgeted films in the 70s and how he kind of lost his way as an important filmmaker since the 80s. Some clue for why this happened is given with some observational footage of Corman on location with one of his new films in Mexico – he makes an impatient comment about how long the star takes to get her make up on and is always encouraging the director to shoot faster. I think economy was just too ingrained in his bones.
Best bits: Jack Nicholson crying with emotion over Corman (“I don’t think people realise how much he is loved”), Quentin Tarantino after the Oscars (the "other night" Oscars, when Corman got his special achievement) wondering if speaking at the awards got him in the Roger Corman school, Peter Bogdanovich cracking a smile and laughing when talking about Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (I don't think I've ever seen him smile before!); Polly Platt saying that after Bogdanovoich left her, Corman rang her up and said she could direct a film whenever she felt like it (you should have done it).
Movie review – “How Will You Know” (2010) ***
Movie review – “The Lovely Bones” (2009) **1’/2
Book review – “In and Out in Hollywood” by Charles Higham
Movie review – “Driving Miss Daisy” (1989) ***
Movie review – “The Cockleshell Heroes” (1955) **1/2
Like The Red Beret, this has an imported American star who clashes on screen with his British co-star – here Jose Ferrer and Trevor Howard. It’s hard to remember that Jose Ferrer was a genuine film star in the early 1950s – he featured in a number of hits off the back of a series of big Broadway successes. (A series of flops in the late 50s changed his position). He plays an unconventional, laid-back officer of the marines who clashes with the more by-the-book Howard – a stock clash, but it serves to give some drama.
Ferrer is okay – not as good as Howard, but then Howard gets a big monologue about his life and career (his frustration at not being promoted) whereas Ferrer doesn’t. The support cast includes Anthony Newley, who made a number of films of Warwick, and some females in small roles.
Ferrer does let the side down with his direction, which misses a lot of the excitement in what is a terrific story. There’s too much wacka-wacka comedy during the training sequences (was this the work of Bryan Forbes or Richard Maibaum? It’s not typical of either man, but it feels more English so I’m guessing Forbes).
Maybe it’s not all Ferrer’s fault – there’s music slathered all over the final raid when a bit of silence and suspense would have done the world of good. At the ending when three-quarters of the team are executed you don’t really feel anything – it’s like, they’re shot, it’s over, Ferrer and Anthony Newley just stroll down the street without a care in the world. It’s a shame – they should remake it.
Movie review – “Love and Other Drugs” (2010) ***
Script review – “Taxi Driver” by Paul Schrader
Movie review – “House of Tolerance” (2011) *1/2
Movie review – “The Artist” (2011) **1/2
Movie review – “My Last Valentine in Beirut” (2011) ½
Movie review – “The Reef” (2011) **
Some effective moments, such as Damien Walshe Howling going under water in a capsized boat to look for supplies, and searching for the shark in the vast ocean – but they are too few and far between. Many bewildering decisions – why not give greater impetus for having them swim from the boat to the island? (They could have had the boat sinking? As it was it seems unduly reckless.) Why not give Gyton Grantly and Adrienne Pickering some sort of story? They’re having an affair, breaking up, she’s pregnant – something, anything. Why not have some young chicks in bikinis instead of thirty-somethings? Why so many scenes of Damien Walshe Howling stick his head under the water? A real shame.
Movie review – “The Contender” (2011) ***1/2
Movie review – “The Beaver” (2011) **1/2
Movie review – “The Egyptian” (1954) **
Original story of Zarak Khan
Movie review - “The Next Three Days” (2010) **
Movie review - “True Grit” (2010) **1/2
Friday, May 27, 2011
Radio review – Lux – “Magnificent Obssession” (1937) **
Script review – “Play it Again Sam” by Woody Allen
Movie review – “Zarak Khan” (1956) ***
Interesting cast – Michael Wilding is the British co-star who clashes with the American (another Warwick staple); Anita Ekberg has rarely looked sexier as a woman who’s married to Mature’s dad but loves Mature (she does a fantastic belly dance – it’s awesome); Bonar Colleo, an American who played Stanley Kowalski in the West End and specialised in American roles in British films prior to his death in the car accident; a young Patrick McGoohan; Bernard Miles and Eunice Grayson (as Wilding’s wife) from the Bond films (of course many Warwick behind the scenes personnel made Bond movies); Finlay Currie (as a tribesman).
Mature is believable enough to play a 50s tribesman (by the standards of the time) – I love Errol Flynn, but to be honest Mature’s a lot more virile to do all this action than Flynn would have been. There’s a lot of action – sword fights, horse racing, ambushes, escapes, collapsing bridges – and it fairly spanks along under the sure hand of director Terence Young. Maybe Flynn would have made Zarak’s last act more believable – he gives up his life to save Wilding, which just doesn’t make sense. They try to have him do it as an act of redemption for saving a holy man… but it still doesn’t work. It doesn’t help either that Mature and Wilding don’t have much rapport or screen time together. I get what they’re trying to convey (i.e. adversaries who respect each other – Britain love to admire their enemies) but it doesn’t quite work.
The story isn’t bad, though – while it’s not incredibly deep and is a bit repetitive (Zarak attacks something and escapes) it has pace and life. And the film looks superb, with glorious technicolour and wonderful production design: redcoats against the mountains, colourful mountain men, Ekberg’s costumes, etc.
Michael Wilding isn’t the strongest co-star – he was more comfortable as a light comic than an action man; Patrick McGoohan would have been better in his role. Ekberg’s performance is such that you wish she’d played a Bond girl (she did appear in From Russia With Love – but only on a movie poster for Call Me Bwana). (There’s a camp moment where Mature slaps her after he finds out she’s become an exotic dancer. Why, when she’s so hot?)
Documentary review – “Gene Tierney: A Shattered Portrait” (1999) ***
Accomplished documentary on the famous star, whose main attraction was her haunting, different looks – slightly bucked teeth, devastating eyes, high cheekbones. This enabled her to launch a career on stage, and then get offers from Hollywood – she was plucked from Broadway success to a 20th Century Fox contract. Not very good on screen at first, she worked hard and delivered a couple of outstanding performances, notably in Laura, The Razor’s Edge and Leave Her to Heaven. She might be best remembered nowadays though for her private life – rich father who lost his money and tried to control her; affairs with JFK and Aly Khan; the fan with German measles who kissed her when pregnant, causing her baby to be born retarded (inspiring an Agatha Christie book); the bouts of mental illness, including shock therapy, walking on a balcony, a spell working behind a counter; marriage to an oil man. High quality talking heads including Richard Widmark, Oleg Cassini (first husband, who looks kind of weird with ratty hair), sister and daughter. Good clips too of her romancing with Aly Khan.
Movie review – “A Corner in Wheat” (1909) **
Famous DW Griffith short because of it’s use of cross cutting montage, one of the first films to pioneer this technique. The action is still mostly in the form of theatrical tableuxs. The plot is about a rich tycoon who corners the market in wheat – but ha ha he falls in a silo and dies. Of historical rather than genuine dramatic interest but you could say that about most silent films made before World War I. Lots of gnashing of teeth acting. It is beautifully shot though.
Movie review – “Sundown” (1941) ***
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Movie review – “The Sting” (1973) *** (warning: spoilers)
This won Best Picture Oscar? I can understand why it was a big hit – plenty of twists in the story, humour, two big stars at their peak, period flavour, Scott Joplin’s music – but an Oscar? Each to their own, I suppose. Paul Newman and Robert Redford again work well together, even if Redford’s part really should have been played by a younger actor (Newman keeps calling him “kid” but it doesn’t work) and Newman’s character is so skilled and smart you don’t believe he’s down and out at the beginning. It’s a shame they couldn’t have given Newman and Redford better looking women to bed – maybe they figured that would distract from their bromance.
The support cast is littered with vaguely familiar middle aged character actors, like Ray Walston and Charles Durning. This is very pro-con man – the cons are loveable types who team up to beat a nasty gangster (Robert Shaw). I think of all the professions glamorised by the movies out of proportion to what they are in real life, it would be con men. In reality, they tend to be sociopaths who prey on the elderly, sick and infirm. In movies they’re always taking on people who deserve to be robbed. (As if Redford wouldn't have accepted the money at the end).
It was made by Univeral which might explains why the period detail and costumes, etc looks a little cheap and ugly. Films from that studio never looked as good as those from the others. Best moment: when the girl who's slept with Redford is killed. That was a genuine shock.
Movie review – “Burlesque” (2010) **1/2
Crappy camp fun. Christina Aguilera’s greatest gift is her singing voice so it was probably a mistake to launch her acting career in a film about burlesque, which is a dancing art form – although Christina has shown a tendency to dance trashily in her film clips. They try to get around it by having her play a dancing burlesque artist who breaks into song. Apparently the only other person who dances and sings is Cher – which you feel was changed from an original version “no one can sing” to enable Cher to have a big number. But it wasn’t worth it.
I saw this on a plane and it passed the time but it wasn’t that good. Too bad to be a movie of quality, not over the top enough to be delirious fun. There’s some bright lines, it spanks along, the costumes and dances are terrific, there are some solid songs and it’s got a strong support cast. Cher’s plastic surgery is very distracting, and she isn't much in the part, but she gets to do most of her scenes with Stanley Tucci, who is always good. Kristen Bell is fun as a bitchy vixen (it’s like watching Veronica Mars go undercover at a burlesque house), and there are bits from Alan Cumming (far, far too small a part – he’s wasted), James Brolin, McSteamy, and Diana Argon off Glee (again far too small a part). Christina Aguileria seems to try but she’s a bit bland on screen – her character lacks spark. (Tucci says her character has heart but we never see it). And she has to play most of her scenes opposite a bland guy.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Movie review – “Visit to a Small Planet” (1960) **1/2
Radio review – BBC Drama - "Glengarry Glen Ross" (2005) ***1/2
Solid BBC adaptation of the classic play, which works well on radio because so many of the scenes are two-handers. The swearing I believe has been cut down, but the piece isn’t less effective for that. The cast is fortunately Americans rather than English actors aping the accent, including Alfred Molina, Hector Elizondo, and Bruce Davison (although I’d be curious to hear Englanders play it in their own accent). As devastating a critique on unrestrained capitalism as anything ever written in American theatre, up there with Arthur Miller.
Script review – “Lone Star” by John Sayles (warning: spoilers)
One of Sayles’ biggest successes at the box office, presumably because it has a (seemingly) more conventional structure, being a murder mystery. An old skeleton is discovered outside a Texan town, triggering off various revelations. This is a film about history, really – black, Mexican, white, family (Indians are mentioned but not as prominent as the others), heroes, villains. Lots of oral history, which means long speeches, intercut with flashbacks. Like all top Sayles works the story is solid, the characters are rich – it feels like a genuine town, populated by real people. Also like Sayle’s work, occasionally it falls into essay mode – historical essays, which are interesting to hear but do sound a bit clunky at times. Charlie Wade is one of the few out-and-out unredeemable villains Sayles created – utterly corrupt, ruthless, racist, terrifying. The ending is a bit yuck, with the half brother and sister deciding to continue a romantic relationship with each other.
Movie review – “No Strings” (2010) **1/2
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Orson Welles box office
Alec Coppel Box Office
Sunday, May 08, 2011
Script review – “Escape from New York” (1980 shooting script) by John Carpenter and Nick Castle
Radio review – “Cleopatra – Last Queen of Egypt” (2008) by Joyce Tyldesley
Radio review – BP – “Farmer Takes a Wife” (1952) **
Movie review – “Love the Beast” (2009) **1/2
TV review – “Generation Kill” (2008) ***1/2
When The Hurt Locker came out I had several friends who insisted that Generation Kill did it earlier and better. I’m not sure I’d agree – Hurt Locker was more of a character study and had tremendous suspense. This has a lot of realism – like The Wire and Treme, also by these writers – but the characters aren’t particularly memorable. I had trouble telling them apart, none of the leads died. It looks terrific, there's some fine acting and brilliant dialogue, great bits (the rumour that J-Lo had died prior to invasion, a soldier taking a dump during a battle, accidental shootings of civilians, watching the video at the end). I've got to put my hand up and admit it didn't blow me away.
Movie review – “Rock-a-Bye-Baby” (1958) ***1/2
Saturday, May 07, 2011
Movie review – “The September Issue” (2009) **1/2
There’s a better, more complex movie to be made on the life and times of Anna Wintour than this – but then I’m guessing the makers only got the access they did on the understanding this would be a more sympathetic depiction of her in the wake of The Devil Wears Prada. Still, it’s pretty interesting, as we cover Wintour putting together the September issue for that year. There’s lots of designers and models and fashion people, none of whom I recognised, many of whom you can sense fear from when dealing with the editor. Most of the drama comes from Wintour’s clashing with her long-time colleague, Grace (who, like her boss, was really hot when she was younger; Wintour also has a very good looking daughter). There’s also this editor at large at Vogue, a camp big black dude who reminded me of a similar character in Mannequin. The DVD has all these deleted scenes which add up to a whole other film.
Movie review – “13 Ghosts” (1961) ***
Movie review – “Hollywood or Bust” (1956) ***
Movie review – “Pardners” (1956) ***
Radio review – BP – “Victoria Regina” (1952) **
Radio review – Lux – “Dragowyck” (1946) ***
Book review – “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” by William Goldman
Tuesday, May 03, 2011
Movie review – “I Saw What You Did” (1965) **1/2
Radio review – Lux – “The Man Who Came to Dinner” (1950) ***
Radio review – Suspense – “Community Property” (1947) ***
Monday, May 02, 2011
Random thoughts on Orson Welles radio career
1) This is the one section of Welles’ career that feels fulfilled. In film (especially), theatre and TV there is this aura of unachieved greatness… projects unmade, classics that never came into existence. This may not be actually true (I get the impression he just got sick of theatre, getting satisfaction from lecture tours instead) but that’s the myth. But not for radio. On that medium you feel he accomplished everything he wanted to, and more… Indeed, he probably stuck at it longer than he wanted to in order to make money. Radio was his bread and butter for a long time, paying rent while he did theatre in the 30s, recovered from his film career flaming out in the mid 40s, and when he was seeking to raise funds for his films in the 50s.
2) His productions weren’t super-experimental. Everyone knows War of the Worlds – but this sort of liberty with the text was the exception rather than the rule for Welles on radio. His adaptations tended to be faithful – yes, lots of cutting and jazzing up, but he didn’t turn them on his ear.
3) He was obsessed with Americana. Welles loved – and I mean LOVED – nostalgic tales about America, particularly small town America, in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Whimsical classics, family sagas, gentle comedies: Huckleberry Finn, Our Town, Ah Wilderness, Magnificent Ambersons, Life with Father… He was obsessed. It certainly put the films Citizen Kane and Magnificent Ambersons in context with me. Incidentally, these were often the weakest Welles shows because he was always miscast playing innocent aw shucks boys who come of age.
4) He was a terrific radio actor, which that booming voice and charm, but he like any actor he could be miscast. See above.
5) He longed to play comedy, and could be surprisingly effective, especially in a well constructed piece – this could either be a regular series, like The Jack Benny Show, or a play, like Twentieth Century. If just left to his own resources as comic, he floundered through lack of technique and experience – Orson Welles’ Almanac was a case in point.
6) Harry Lime was a marvellous vehicle - handsome, charismatic, sexy, funny, charming. Perhaps his best "hero" role. If he hadn't gotten so fat surely he would have lasted longer as a Hollywood star, as opposed to character actor - and he might have been able to parlay that into more films as director. But such things never mattered on radio.
Script review – “Last Man Standing” by Walter Hill (1995 draft)
Radio review – Lux – “Samson and Delilah” (1951) ***
Radio review – BP – “The Amazing Dr Clitterhouse” (1953) ***(warning: spoilers)
Fans of the 1938 Edward G Robinson film might be particularly interested in listening to this, since it’s a (I assume faithful) version of the original play starring Cedric Hardwicke, which was popular on the West End and Broadway. Hardwicke is a respected doctor who takes to committing crimes in order to do research on his own reaction, which is quite a bright idea for a black comedy. When trying to meet a fence he falls in with a real life criminal gang who he soon takes over due to his intelligence – much to the annoyance of the gang’s former leader.
The Robinson film version was flashy and jazzy; this is more sedate and laid back - Hardwicke is almost dull, the crooks are (naturally) lower class. It's enjoyable - I bought the premise, including the third act when Hardwicke kills the former gang leader to examine feelings of murder. The story does feel it should wind up then or soon after but goes on for a bit.
Script review – “The Killer” by Walter Hill and David Giler (draft April 1992)
On one hand, John Woo’s action packed, star-geared bloodbaths would seem a natural for Hollywood to remake – but on the other, they also have a peculiar Catholic, homoerotic thing going on, with it’s redemptive killers and bromance involving men trying to kill each other which doesn’t necessarily translate. Which is presumably why this never got off the ground.
The plot is about an assassin, Jeff (the Killer), an American living in Hong Kong, who blinds a girl during a shootout. He feels guilty and they fall in love with each other. An FBI agent (Lee) turns up to arrest Jeff and gets involved in people trying to kill Jeff.
Too much of this didn’t feel real: that the British police would use a visiting American FBI agent to go undercover to help them on his first day in town – and the American agent would go blasting around shooting people willy-nilly; that the agent would then be allowed to stay on as an adviser even after the Killer was wanted for murder; that the Tai Pan, the big baddy, was an English Tai Pan (running a Chinese gang); the FBI agent “sensing” the moves of the Killer; the Killer and the Agent taking a break to go chase down the assassin of the Agent’s Hong Kong contact who the Agent hardly knows; the notion that no one in the Killer’s building would know what he looked like even though he was an American living in Hong Kong.
Also everyone seems to love the killer, Jeff: the singer he renders blind; the FBI agent chasing him; his old contact and mentor who basically dies to keep his promise to him. Why not I suppose when you’re the sort of assassin who only kills corrupt politicians and crooks? The FBI agent, Lee, loves both Jeff and Chan, his Hong Kong contact. Oh, he comes across as an obnoxious American abroad too.
I did like the lean, tight form this was written in – old school Hill – and there’s plenty of action, but it doesn't hang together. I think they should have relocated this to milieu Hill knew (or could fake knowing) better, like Mexico or South America, or the old West.
Movie review – “Straight Jacket” (1964) *** (warning: spoilers)
Book review - Suddenly Last Winter” by Bob Ellis
Movie review – Chaplin#4 – “Between Showers” (1914) **
Charlie and a rival both try to help a girl cross the road after a storm and eventually wind up in a fight over who can help her more. Still very primitive but Chaplin does a bit more physical comedy in this one.
Movie review – Chaplin#3 – “Mabel’s Strange Predicament” (1914) **
Mabel is locked outside her room at a hotel and in the corridor in some (very well clothed) pyjamas – the tramp is downstairs, comes upstairs and tries to help her out. Not very funny. The Tramp does a bit of a walk but disappears for too much of the action.