30 January 2009

Rewinding 2008: Part V

Reviews of Man on Wire, Cloverfield, Slumdog Millionaire, Stop-Loss, and Waltz with Bashir.

As I work on whittling my best-of list for 2008 (set to be published in the near future), I'm pausing to consider releases from the year, both the good and the bad, that I haven't reviewed on Screen Savour.
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The best documentaries are always about their subjects and something else, something ineffable and inescapable that hangs in the air and makes the experience not only educational but viscerally emotional. Director James Marsh has constructed such an experience with his stellar documentary Man On Wire. His subject is a French tightrope walker who envisioned the World Trade Center towers connected by a single line, and who – on the morning of Aug. 7, 1974, after years of planning – stepped out onto that line for a 45-minute dalliance of mysticism. This documentary is a feat: a lively, rambunctious, and engaging examination of Philippe Petit, who may be more alive now than ever. Petit, whose interview is the heart of this film, brings so much of the raw energy from his general demeanor that it is nearly impossible not to become enthralled in his every word. Of course, you also hang on tight to Petit's story because it comes built-in with a million questions: What kind of person would do this? And, for God's sake, how and why? Marsh has these questions as well, and slowly – teasingly, one might say – they are revealed through a beautiful collage of contemporary interviews, skillfully made recreations, archival footage, and still photographs (unfortunately we don't really have any film of Petit out on the wire, but when you consider how dangerous the stunt was, perhaps it's for the best). There is a simultaneous ghostliness and mournfulness in the documentary too, which is where it derives its most forceful element of ineffability. Would Man on Wire have meant as much to us before 2001? You may be tempted to say yes; after all, we were wowed by Petit even before he stepped off the wire and back onto the roof (one NYPD officer calls his routine "dancing," which feels about as right as any other word). But the answer must be no. What Petit did in 1974, when the buildings were fresh and new, was defy those who would impose limitations on the human experience. What Marsh has done in 2008 is something equally impressive: the director wisely knows where our minds will go once we see the images of those two skyscrapers and needn't say anything. Instead, we learn of one man's journey into the air above Manhattan, and we know it can never be duplicated. We learn the value of ceaselessly inhabiting in the present, of appreciating the fragility of life, because tomorrow, or the next day, or twenty-seven years later, there will little warning of how it can all disappear.

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A few critics for whom I have a great deal of respect ranked Cloverfield as a second- or third-tier film in their analyses of 2008, reporting that it surpassed their expectations, which, after seeing the film, I can only assume were apparently low enough to ricochet up from the floor. (To cover my bases, allow me to say most people I respect didn't like it.) I've always been a fan of allegorical B-movies from the 1950s, when the cold war, the bomb, and the space race infused picket-fence American culture and produced many lame but lucid science fiction films. This enjoyment of the genre leads me to believe it's possible to duplicate that joy in present-day cinema, but Cloverfield, which I watched on a whim one afternoon, comes nowhere close to recreating that feeling of B-movie jubilance. I try to consider films as they are, not as they could be, but this film – with its epileptic cinematography, its squandered allegorical power, its hobbling and transparent script, and its let's-make-a-hundred-million-dollars attitude by going as PG-13 – puts its flaws on display so prominently that it becomes more interesting to imagine what could have been instead of watching what is. The decision to film this apocalyptic creature-feature as a shaky hand-held narrative recovered from wreckage ("the area formerly known as Central Park," we are told) is a curious one, chiefly because no matter how dirty director Matt Reeves and producer J.J. Abrams would like Cloverfield to be, it is as glossy and predictable as any other low-brow Hollywood horror release. My assumption is that the camera is meant to make this feel like a documentary and heighten tension by limiting the point-of-view, both of which might be admirable if the script, which hits every cliché you might anticipate, weren't such conventional tripe. (Never mind that once you start to ask questions, the entire set-up falls apart.) If you want to get away with looking like an amateur film that just happened to be a few blocks away from the end of the world, it would help if the substance of your film wasn't overly explanatory, audience-tested, and culled from the trash can of Screenwriting 101. Maybe it would have worked if the stakes were more specific, or at least not a love story. Instead, Cloverfield does it all wrong, and it's painful to watch. (Steven Spielberg had better luck with the allegory in his under-appreciated War of the Worlds.) Here's a horror movie that should have had one-tenth the budget; it should have been done in a purer indie tradition and given a nice solid R-rating; it should have been less concerned with the audience's comfort levels and more concerned with the possible complexities of a script; it should have given itself something legitimate to say, instead grunting along and dining on boring yuppies.

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I'd be lying if I said I was impervious to the charms of Slumdog Millionaire, a Teflon-coated nugget of pure pop art, but I'd also be lying if I said that charm didn't immediately begin to wane the moment the film was over. To the uninitiated or under-prepared like me, Danny Boyle's rags-to-riches fairy tale can be overwhelming – the cinematography is high-octane, the editing is aggressive, the script is temporally incongruous, the emotions calculated and manufactured and somehow sort of pure. I was surprised by much of it, certainly by how thrilling it could be. But the film is not wall-to-wall success, and it only works until its rather ordinary love story consumes the final third of the story. The script, liberally adapted by Simon Beaufoy from Vikas Swarup's novel "Q&A," follows an orphan named Jamal (Dev Patel) from poverty in the streets of Mumbai to a momentous episode of success on the Indian version of "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire." The film is framed with the events following Jamal's appearance on the show; he is accused to cheating, but through a series of strategic flashbacks – which reveals his streetwise brother and the young girl with whom Jamal falls in love – we come to understand how Jamal's life has made him a wiser, weathered, and wounded guy. Beaufoy's script is engaging at first, then it tends to grow a little too familiar. The film is by no means a failure, even if it is jaw-droppingly superficial in its character interactions and depictions of contemporary Indian life. That superficiality seems to be translating nicely into immediate crowd-pleasing, but in terms of long term survival, I'm not sure Slumdog Millionaire has the vibrancy of a film that will demand multiple viewings. I was pleased, but the more I thought about the film, the more it revealed itself to be only something of a novelty. There's the illusion that we're going somewhere special, but the path is well-trodden and the dreaminess grows hazy in hindsight.

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Films in the latter half of the year tend to be most remembered, but the early part of 2008 had one interesting film that, while not great by any stretch, has stayed with me as a curious character study and a strong example of emotional precision: Kimberly Peirce's pro-soldier war story, Stop-Loss. As she showed through her debut feature Boys Don't Cry, Peirce has an enormous capacity for empathy, and the characters of Stop-Loss – traumatized soldiers from the Iraq War – are portraits of raw, powerful, and often uncontrollable energy. Ryan Philippe stars as a man whose retirement from the military is postponed, or "stop-lossed" – essentially voided by a war-time government that demands he report for duty again – and faced with the possibility of returning to war, he goes AWOL. Philippe's performance is dark and convincing, and he's wonderful alongside the exemplary Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Victor Rasuk. The film correctly takes little if no position on the merits of the war itself and instead admirably advocates on the behest of soldiers and families whose morale is in tatters, people who are fundamentally good and what to do the right thing but who come to realize they have been abused for their intentions. Movies about the Iraq War haven't fared well with audiences; the obvious reason is that if it's this depressing in real life, why would it be any better in fiction? But until Peirce's film, they haven't had the ability to elicit serious emotion out of the audience. There are times when the script (written by Peirce and author Mark Richard) and the actors stumble into overdrawn Movie-Of-The-Week mode, and there is something vaguely off-putting about the fact that it was released by MTV Films. But Peirce rises to the occasion, and these bouts of strained melodrama are countered with genuine and stunning bursts of emotional clarity. Perhaps given time and space to heal our artistic responses to the Iraq War will become more focused and more honed, thus ultimately better, but even when they do, Stop-Loss will still be the among the first that got it right.

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One of the most exhilarating sensations a person can have at the movies is the joy that comes when you wholeheartedly embrace a director's vision. Many filmmakers try to capture an effect and fall short, but there are times when the choices seem so visionary that you couldn't imagine how the film could have been made any other way. That is the sensation I felt with Israeli director Ari Folman's animated documentary Waltz with Bashir, an insightful and dazzling study of a soldier's trauma-induced spotty memory and the magnitude of cruelty capable in war – in this case, the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon. The animated documentary is a nascent genre, though not completely new (Richard Linklater worked within it for his great 2001 film, Waking Life). Waltz with Bashir, however, might so far be the most effective documentary told through animation, due to his commitment to the power of emotional truths and the power of animation; together, they are formidable. We follow him as he seeks to reassemble the memories of the war that he has repressed, each friend or comrade painting in elements of their tales (although they too have a great challenge in recollection) and helping Folman find his own. Like Man On Wire, Waltz with Bashir has the opportunity of recreation – each account of the war elicits an animated sequence in which the memory, in all its surreality, is experienced. Creating the film was a monumental, four-year task, and Folman splits with the credit of this towering success with his director of animation, Yoni Goodman, who invented the film's rotoscoping-esque style of animation. It is a beautiful film with powerful undercurrents, another piece of evidence in the ongoing argument that animation has a practical and mature use and that some circles, particularly the Academy Awards, should be more willing to accept its almost infinite possibility. (Of course, a great irony in this is that Waltz with Bashir has been nominated for Best Foreign Language Film and not Best Animation Film.) In his pursuit for the truth in memory and the truth in factuality, what Folman has created is a cross between Tim O'Brien's probing novel "The Things They Carried" and Art Spiegelman's brilliant graphic novel "Maus." It is a tremendous achievement, at once haunting and euphoric, and brought to the screen with such deliberate and delicate craftsmanship.

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29 January 2009

Awards Season: Devouring Cinematography


Just a shameless little self-promotion here, don't worry.

My Oscar column on this year's nominees for Best Cinematography landed today at the Large Association of Movie Blogs as part of its annual "LAMB Devours The Oscars" series. I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.

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26 January 2009

Vertigo (1958)

d. Alfred Hitchcock / USA / 128 mins.


"We could all tell that this was a very important project for Hitch, and that he was feeling this story very deeply, very personally." - Vertigo screenwriter Sam Taylor.

The Alfred Hitchcock film I have screened more often than any other is Vertigo, his 1958 masterpiece that may be the purest cinematic expression of obsession ever made. It is the film often considered to be not only his greatest, but one of the greatest in all of cinema. Although my personal preferences lie with a thriller released four years prior, I won't argue with either of these accolades. Great films, like all great art, are treasures that affect someone differently with each viewing, films that require and reward your frequent participation but are never a burden to experience; they are great and live on because they have reached some truth-filled corner of our psyche, and never grow old. Vertigo lends itself to multiple viewings, each occasion more rewarding than the previous. From the worn VHS copy loaned to me by my high school art teacher, to the film poster that adorned the walls of my dormitory rooms and apartments through college – that tableau of construction-cone orange, the silhouetted cutouts falling into a white spiral vortex – through film classes and repeated viewings on television, it's been a storm cloud surrounding my brain, always thought-provoking, always complicated, always beautiful in its accomplishment. From periphery to upfront analysis, I'll consider myself lucky if I have Vertigo swirling around in my mind for the rest of my life.

Of Hitchcock's Rear Window, Roger Ebert wrote: "I sometimes fancy that various archetypal situations circled tirelessly in Hitchcock's mind, like whales in a tank at the zoo. " Although the comparison was not done for the purposes of discussing Vertigo, perhaps it should have been. Cinema's most obsessive director regarded the film as one of his most personal, yet what we know about him allows us to know that even without this confession. He was a man of phobias, made impotent by his fears and forces he could not control. What he could control were his movies, all meticulously constructed in his head before cameras even rolled. Hitchcock was most controlling with his actresses, his "blondes" as they became known: Joan Fontaine, whom he tore apart emotionally just so she would give the wrought performance he desired; Ingrid Bergman and Grace Kelly, objects of impossible love; Vera Miles and Tippi Hendrin, whose careers he longed to sculpt.

In Vertigo, the Hitchcock proxy is a retired detective crippled by acrophobia named Scottie, played by James Stewart, recruited by college friend Gavin Elster (Tom Helmore) to track the friend's wife, now feared to be suffering from mental illness. Everything after this point is a feat of supreme narrative dexterity: that the woman (Kim Novak) is not who she says she is, that the plot is an elaborate ruse where Scottie functions solely as a cog and a witness, that love and obsession become stronger than anyone can anticipate, that the hired stand-in impersonating Madeleine could be seen later by Scottie and become subservient in love to his molding of her back into Madeleine. If Rear Window is the director's clearest exploration of voyeurism and the cinema, and The Wrong Man his clearest exploration of the nihilism and the unjustly accused, then Vertigo is the director's closest interpretation of what it means to be, of all things, a director – to arrange the pieces in a complex and satisfying way, to make individuals into who you desire them to be at a seemingly unlimited cost, to project your desires and fears onto a blank canvas.

The atmosphere was different in the making of Vertigo, and it's important to consider how this film many say is Hitchcock's best took a course of development unlike any other Hitchcock picture. Between his first Hollywood release in 1940 and his last release before Vertigo in 1956, Hitchcock produced 21 feature films, at a rate of roughly one film every nine months (like children, one might say). He was a director of great efficiency, which rarely translated to a decrease in quality – not all of his films from that period are great, of course, but the great ones were produced with the same rigorousness that many of the lesser ones were. The time devoted to Vertigo, however, would be different. There is no way to know from sure if the extra time spent on Vertigo equates to a superior motion picture, but we do know it allowed numerous revisions of the script and copious notes from the director to himself that included specific camera movements and plans for what emotions the music should evoke. The extra time came from necessary recuperation after Hitchcock suffered a hernia, and by the time Vertigo began production at the end of September in 1957, more than one year had passed from its intended start date. (Once in better health and awaiting the beginning of filming, the director worked on episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents.)

Delays in pre-production came from the process of screenwriting. Early drafts of the Vertigo script are reportedly quite messy – a far cry from the remarkably complex story that unwinds for the audience. (I have lost track of how many times I have seen Vertigo, but still I don't think I understand everything that is going on. Ninety-five to ninety-eight percent, sure, but not everything, and that's exactly the way I like it.) Maxwell Anderson, the playwright who helped pen Hitchcock's most underrated film, The Wrong Man, wrote the first treatment of Vertigo, and that treatment, according to scholar Dan Auiler, was reportedly awful. Long-time Hitchcock friend Angus MacPhail helped after Anderson, but quit the project citing an inability to be particularly imaginative. (MacPhail's is one major contribution, according to scholar Bill Krohn, may be in developing the film's introductory rooftop chase). The two men who ultimately shared screenwriting credit are Alec Coppel and Sam Taylor. Coppel came recommended from his regular work on Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and the version of the script he inherited shows Hitchcock had his most meticulous in terms of planning: "four typed notes about key matters such as the opening rooftop chase, and dictated a list of twenty-three sequences he already had in his head" (per Krohn). Coppel left amicably and Taylor, a playwright, came in to add depth and dimension.

Vertigo became a passionate love of the Cahiers crowd in the 1960s, and the reason not only has to do with the brilliant auteurism of Hitchcock but the direct invocation of French cinema. Biographer Patrick McGilligan notes The Wrong Man exists almost as a cinematic conversation between Hitchcock and the Italian neo-realists, and Vertigo – based on the French novel D'entre les morts by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac and set in Paris and Marseilles during World War II – has a similar conversation with the slower, methodical, character-driven work from France. (As he, Coppel, and Taylor worked on the script, Hitchcock reportedly screened Henri-Georges Clouzot's Les Diaboliques numerous times.) The film's reputation has grown steadily since its 1958 premiere, and today it is the film that duels with Citizen Kane for the top spot in the revered Sight & Sound poll, only five votes short in the most recent survey. Hitchcock, whose feelings on a film were always remarkable transparent even at the time, was quite serious about Vertigo, tinkering with it long into post-production to achieve the perfect effect.

Stewart starred in four Hitchcock productions, matched only by Cary Grant. While Hitchcock always seemed to want to be Grant – debonair, traditionally handsome, prissiness tolerated by nearly all – it was Stewart who was the more analogous counterpart for the director. Vertigo was his last film with Hitchcock, and it is one of his most disturbing performances. Little known is the fact that Stewart worked as a creative partner with Hitchcock. He wanted the role of Scottie in Vertigo, and the richness of his performance is due in large part to conversations he had with Taylor. Stewart's work with Hitchcock and western director Anthony Mann in the 1950s allowed him to dig deeper into the darkness of the human soul, and the actor told Taylor he was willing to go deep to create the hurt and tortured aspects of Scottie. The effect was cyclical: Stewart gave Taylor permission to let the writing become more complex, which only strengthened Stewart's performance. Scottie is dark, psychological, complex, and has such regard for the illusion of Madeleine that he has little regard for Judy's emotions. Like Jeff in Rear Window, he is the protagonist but a difficult man to root for because his goodness is undercut by his more abnormal tendencies. Still, we sympathize with him during the entire movie, even as his darker side emerges; Stewart plays it subtle, close to the chest, and steel-jawed throughout much of the film, and when he becomes prone to episodes of viciousness, we have become so attached to the character we still sympathize with him; he is not angry to mean, but angry to release the pain stored in his emotional valves.

Of course we sympathize with Novak's Judy in this ordeal, too, maybe as much as the audience has ever sympathized with a female lead since Rebecca; while Vertigo straddles the line of patriarchy and misogyny, it is never callous. It is clear Judy does her actions willfully and her love seems real; as much as Scottie seeks to mute the natural for the artifice, her emotions are never muted. The source of her pain is the zigzag course of manipulation: first by Gavin, then of Scottie, then again by Scottie. Most production accounts of the shooting of Vertigo make clear that Novak and Hitchcock never got along. She disagreed with many of his decisions (most notably, she didn't want to wear grey), and she sought counsel and advice from Stewart regularly because she didn't receive the feedback she wanted from Hitchcock. Years later, she said wasn't sure he really liked her. Those on the set with Hitchcock in other productions knew how much he could dote on the men and women he loved, and accounts indicate that attitude was not present for Novak. But her performance in Vertigo is one of the chilliest from a Hitchcock woman: she is a world-class example of restraint, broken and tormented just below the surface. Perhaps not surprisingly, Hitchcock worked her to this successful degree, and in a great coincidence of life-reflecting-art, for the role of Madeleine, Novak was dressed against her will and forced to carry herself in a certain way. If there ever proof needed that Hitchcock thrived on a sordid vicariousness of what the men in his films did, and what the camera was able to capture, it was on the set of Vertigo, where his own treatment of Novak eerily mirrors Scottie's treatment of Madeleine.

The director's team of regulars each played important roles in making Vertigo the masterful film that is, and the man who deserves a large portion of the credit is Robert Burks, Hitchcock's most trusted cinematographer. It is one thing to visualize certain shots, as Hitchcock often did, sometimes sketching them and story-boarding them so tightly the final result hardly deviates from the design; it is a whole other to execute them as flawlessly as Burks does. The cinematographer only won a single Oscar for his body of work – To Catch a Thief, a dazzlingly shot but relatively unremarkable Hitchcock film – but his talents are better displayed in the noirish black-and-white of Strangers on a Train, the claustrophobic complexities of Dial M for Murder and Rear Window, and the highly geometric work on North by Northwest. Of all Hitchcock's color films, however, Vertigo has the best look – luscious reds and greens painted throughout as important emotional symbols, and the hazy shots of an ethereal San Francisco capture the ghostliness and intrigue of the film's mysteries. Thanks to a 1996 restoration project, today we have much of the intended color still popping and humming with electricity. But still, beyond the gorgeous color, there is the issue of the astounding technical wizardry. There is the memorable kiss sequence, where the camera spins around Stewart and Day as they embrace and the dizzying effect creates both bewilderment and ecstasy. And of course, there is the camera shot named for the film: the Vertigo effect, or dolly zoom, developed by Paramount cameraman Irmin Roberts and which beautifully distorts the perspective in the film by zooming and dollying in opposite directions. It is a pièce de résistance in the canon of Hitchcock visuals, and he later discussed it by saying, "I always remember one night at the Chelsea Arts Ball at Albert Hall in London when I got terribly drunk, and I had the sensation that everything was going far away from me."

It is fitting that the film called Hitchcock's best also features some of the best work by his traditional crew. Edith Head worked on costumes, George Tomasini was editor, and Herbert Coleman, a second-unit director and associate producer on many Hitchcock films, was an instrumental part of many post-production discussions. Vertigo was also the first three collaborations Hitchcock with title designer Saul Bass. The opening title sequence, where images of a woman's face overlap with Lissajous spirals, is Hitchcock in one of his most surreal moments. (The orange poster I mentioned earlier was also designed by Bass.) Of all the collaborative successes on Vertigo, however, perhaps none is more important than Hitchcock's work with Bernard Herrmann, who scored the film. Herrmann's Vertigo score is perhaps the best of any of Hitchcock's films, and certainly among the greatest film scores completed. It is instantly chilling with its spiraling notes and mournful repetition, like an addict's return to bad habits. I haven't ever heard the score defined better than by Martin Scorsese, who said in 2004: "Hitchcock's film is about obsession, which means that it's about circling back to the same moment, again and again ... And the music is also built around spirals and circles, fulfilment and despair. Herrmann really understood what Hitchcock was going for — he wanted to penetrate to the heart of obsession." It was a stroke of genius on Hitchcock's part to allow Vertigo to slide along for long stretches without any dialogue at all, only Herrmann's score floating above the actors and locations like a light and spooky fog. The violin strings of Psycho could be Herrmann's most culturally familiar composition, but the entire score of Vertigo, from start to finish, is his magnum opus.

And so Vertigo is commonly referred to as Hitchcock's magnum opus. In a lot of ways, it's difficult to refute that title – there was a strange and heavenly intersection of material, time, desire, and teamwork that went into producing this film. My favorite Hitchcock film, Rear Window, has always been to me a testament in the goal of all moviemaking, but even I must admit the aura on Vertigo is more magnetic than on Rear Window. You cannot learn everything about Hitchcock simply by watching this film (you need to consider him across all his many splendid films), but Vertigo has the feeling of closeness between a great artist and his great art, that kind of feeling that connects Vincent van Gogh with The Starry Night, Miles Davis with Kind of Blue, Frank Lloyd Wright with Fallingwater, F. Scott Fitzgerald with The Great Gatsby, and so on. When we watch Vertigo, we are watching Hitchcock, and what's inside is at once breathtaking and terrifying.

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25 January 2009

Sunday Matinee (Jan. 19 - Jan. 25)

Not half the price, just half the work.

• Wisely noting "If a picture is worth a thousand words then a number is worth one million," Jon Lanthier looks at the dimensions of the best-of list in a really, really great essay called The Gist of Lists.

• Tony at Cinema Viewfinder has his list of the year's 10 best films.


• Daniel at Getafilm examines Trouble the Water, an Oscar nominee for best documentary.

• Sam Juliano writes lovingly about How Green Was My Valley.

• Out 1 has been on a David Lynch kick this past week.

• Reviews of The Wrestler from Farzan and The Dark of the Matinee.

• Reviews of Slumdog Millionaire from The Film Doctor and YDKS Movies.

• Dean at Filmicability has a run-down of the 101 greatest horror films of all time.

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23 January 2009

Rewinding 2008: Part IV

Reviews of Burn After Reading, Changeling, The Edge of Heaven, The Reader, and Tropic Thunder.

As I work on whittling my best-of list for 2008 (set to be published in the near future), I'm pausing to consider releases from the year, both the good and the bad, that I haven't reviewed on Screen Savour.


Burn After Reading, the first venture out from Joel and Ethan Coen since snagging writing, directing, and picture Oscars for No Country for Old Men, is a ridiculous film, meant entirely as a compliment. This is familiar territory for the Coens: a genre-defying plot stuffed with idiotic and strange characters that will cynically shift gears and pull the whole contraption out from underneath you. The joke is rooted in the paranoid political thriller, which is served alongside a mockery of contemporary narcissism. There is a strong comic ensemble at work in the film's (basically) three story lines: George Clooney, Frances McDormand, Richard Jenkins, J.K. Simmons, John Malkovich, Tilda Swinton, and an especially funny Brad Pitt all play characters ranging in importance from a fitness trainer to a top man at the C.I.A., weaving in and out and crossing paths to frequently anarchic returns. This is nowhere near the best work to come from the Coens, but its zaniness is admittedly contagious. The film doesn't stay quite as tightly wound near the end, saved only by the deadpan Simmons in the film's final scene, but mercifully the Coens keep it short (just over 90 minutes). Like an accidentally fired bullet, we're in and out quickly, left only to ponder what the hell just happened to us. That sort of effect can be system-shocking in a drama, but here in an uninhibited comedy and sculpted by the trademark offbeat Coen humor, the joke works.

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There is dissonance between the screenplay and the production values of Clint Eastwood's Changeling, a film that would be easy to dismiss as simply awful if it wasn't well made. Still, it is a bad movie – simplistic and frustrating, with a naive and two-dimensional script that is unbecoming of its otherwise slick and beautiful style (Tom Stern's bleak and muted cinematography is often striking, and the art direction and costumes are first class). Billed as a "true story," Changeling is at least based on the true events surrounding Christine Collins (an overwrought Angelina Jolie) and the disappearance of her nine-year-old son, a case that sends her through the ringer of a corrupt Los Angeles Police Department in 1928. "Corrupt" might not be strong enough of a word; the police bring Collins a boy who is not her son, bully her into accepting the boy for the positive press, and then institutionalize her as she fights. It is a heartbreaking horror story, done no service by its maddening and frustrating lack of depth. Eastwood and screenwriter J. Michael Straczynski oversee a universe of ugly caricatures, where good is good and bad is bad and gigantic neon signs of amateur storytelling have been constructed to enforce these dichotomies. Even characters of potential complexity, such as Gustav Briegleb (John Malkovich), a reverend on a crusade against the police department, don't require any thought because they are hardly emotional creatures. Oddly, both of Eastwood's 2008 releases – this and Gran Torino – suffer from problematic scripts, but of the two, Gran Torino proved Eastwood could still be sprightly in the director's chair despite some writing flaws. Changeling is as heavy as lead, poorly written, and one of the year's least enjoyable offerings.

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The controversial change two years ago to the submission and nomination process for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar has resulted in many good non-English language films following through the cracks, and the way a particular foreign film can straddle two years in its release date makes it significantly more difficult for it to earn the accolades it deserves. I'm not the first person to say Fatih Akin's The Edge of Heaven (Auf der anderen Seite in its native German tongue), a 2007 release overseas and a 2008 release here in the United States, should have had the chance to compete for something. It is an engaging and often surprising film, one that missed the Oscar short-list last year and is ineligible this year, but due to great support among critics and film festivals, is finally getting more of the audience it richly deserves. Like Crash and Babel before it – only much, much better – Akin's film is an exploration of international growth and how lives can overlap and affect each other, even across national boundaries (the film occurs in both Germany and Turkey, as Akin is a German-born man with Turkish ancestry). Its stories are so firmly interlocked that I won't go into them at the risk of exposing even the slightest bit of mystery. Let it be said only that Akin skillfully charts his course and executes it sublimely.

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I'm as much a fan of World War II movies as the next person (hell, I'll almost see any movie that has to do with World War II, no matter how bad it appears), and it is with that declaration of love for the genre that I say Stephen Daldry's The Reader is abysmal as a post-war film, as a love story, and as a parable of moral exploration. It commits the egregious sin of inserting a commentary track right into its drama, where academics say weighty things such as Characters Conceal Their Secrets and What The Hell Is The Point Of Anything, only to have its own characters – gasp! – concealing secrets and pondering the points of things. This overtly instructional approach brings with it feelings of manipulation, which is understandably problematic for a film associated with the Holocaust, where the immorality was so heinous and the failure of humanity was so staggering that should be preferable to leave your audience with room to think for itself instead of blindsiding it with a two-by-four of reducible justice. The Reader is adapted from Bernhard Schlink's novel about a young man (David Kross) who begins a torrid affair with an older woman (Kate Winslet) in Germany during the 1950s, and whose law-school mind is forced to think about Big, Important Ideas when she is revealed to have a former S.S. guard on trial for her involvement in the genocide. The writing plays it ridiculously safe at the shallow end of the pool, and the way the film moves to equate the innocence in an unknown affair with life-long self-torture inside one man seems to defy logic. Winslet is moody, distant, and naked by all definitions the world, and Bruno Ganz (who starred in an infinitely superior WWII film, Downfall) and Lena Olin are strong in supporting roles. All the acting in the world, however, couldn't warm this slice of coldness and banality; what's worse, it's smug enough to have illusions of grandeur and vain enough to think it reaches them.

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I can see why someone in film development approved Tropic Thunder; it sounds like it might be much better than it really is. It is the story of actors filming a war film, left in an actual war zone and trying to claw their way back into their own reality. Directed by Ben Stiller, and co-written by Stiller, Justin Theroux, and Etan Cohen, any pretense that the film might aspire to something larger feels automatically abandoned after fifteen minutes. An approved level of satire should be attainable, however, but the movie is all gums and no teeth. Despite a novel introduction of faux trailers and a pitch that seems as if it might bring the heat, once Tropic Thunder gets rolling it proceeds to hit every cliche in the film-about-a-film genre: a cadre of difficult actors, including a dim-wit (Stiller), a junkie (Jack Black), a musician (Brandon T. Jackson); a mimbo-ish agent (Matthew McConaughey); an ineffectual British director (Steve Coogan); and a foul-mouthed greedy producer (Tom Cruise, under layers of make-up and padding). The only light in any of this Robert Downey, Jr., coming off of a tremendously successful year as Tony Stark in Iron Man and here as Kirk Lazarus, a "five-time" Oscar winning Australian method actor who undergoes a pigment-treatment procedure to play a black sergeant in the film. It's probably no coincidence that Downey receives the film's best lines (there's a one-liner about staying in character until recording a DVD commentary, another long joke about how actors have to strike the right balance of mental deficiency to win an Oscar), and though his black-face should wholly offend my sensibilities, something about being let in on the joke makes the performance the center of attention. The performance is actually some sort of gift – since the film doesn't provide many laughs and stumbles through to its end.

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21 January 2009

Rewinding 2008: Part III

Reviews of Doubt, Religulous, Shotgun Stories, and Vicky Cristina Barcelona.

As I work on whittling my best-of list for 2008 (set to be published in the near future), I'm pausing to consider releases from the year that I haven't reviewed on Screen Savour.


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John Patrick Shanley's cinematic adaptation of Doubt, his own Pulitzer-Prize-winning drama, is a surprisingly sterile motion picture, considering its potentially explosive subject matter. When it was finished, I was let down, not because it was particularly bad, but because it wasn't particularly good. The mystery of its plot – where an iron-jawed Catholic school principal (Meryl Streep) clashes with a priest (Philip Seymour Hoffman) over the possible abuse of a student in the mid-1960s – is enough to keep you watching. Three primary performances (Streep, Hoffman, and Amy Adams as a young nun) are all predictably good, and one (Viola Davis, in an all-too-brief role as the mother of the student in question) is exceptional and show-stealing. Good acting, a good script – what's so wrong then? Shanley's direction, I think, which fits the medium here like a pair of too-short and too-tight Sunday slacks. The symbolism is heavy-handed, and the cinematography is uninspired. The aura that radiates off the film suggests one should pay attention because this is important, but this is really an ordinary film masquerading as something grand – not a waste of time, to be sure, but not the most enjoyable way to spend one's time.

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The feet-to-the-fire satire Religulous is comedian Bill Maher's ode to skepticism, and it follows his journey to ask questions he thinks don't have answers to those who think they do. People of all faiths who push religion at the expense of humanity's other virtues bother Maher, and with subversive director Larry Charles, he is out to show how the steadfastness and unwavering commitment of a one-sided agenda is often hypocritical, corrupted, vulgarized, and ultimately turned into a tool of fear, control, and violence. Its goofy title aside, this is not an anti-religion film, but an anti-fringe film that gleefully preaches to the choir (nothing wrong with that, by the way). It is brash, refreshingly boundless, often funny, but badly assembled, significantly hindered by aggressive and scattershot editing. It is not so much that the film is unfair to its subjects; it seems no less fair than a segment of The Daily Show, and besides, it feels remarkably condescending to "feel sorry" for people who appear willingly and are earnestly expressing their faith. Rather, it is that the lines of thought often seem to ricochet in numerous directions at once. Maher and Charles severely splice in stock footage for cheap and pedestrian laughs, which uncuts any pretense at making a larger philosophical statement. (While at the Creation Museum in Kentucky, the idea of man co-existing with dinosaurs immediately invokes a clip from The Flinstones.) I agree with Maher's inherent thesis, and had a reasonably good time watching him wander the globe in search of someone who will admit no one has all the answers; but slowing everything down and cutting the superfluous junk would have made Religulous the intellectual and comical pursuit it wants to be, instead of a film that comes off like a kid giggling in the back row.

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Shotgun Stories, as its title suggests, eventually comes down to shotguns, but in a skillful and wise decision, it is more about the injured souls standing behind the stocks. The film is a quiet meditation on the pain of physical and emotional violence, but most of the violence has either already happened to the characters or they are desperately trying, and often failing, to keep it from happening again. Set in rural Arkansas, it is the story of two sets of half-brothers who share a father, a so-called horrible man who walked out on the cruelly named Son (a terrific Michael Shannon), Boy (Douglas Ligon), and Kid (Barlow Jacobs) and set up a new family. The father's death ruptures what little peace there ever was, and the new clans find themselves at murderous odds. Jeff Nichols, the film's writer and director, is attuned with the landscape and not only the ebb and flow of rural life, but of general humanity. The film never stops short of delivering the goods, and even when the characters do come to fisticuffs, we know Nichols is reminding us in a static and silent way that sometimes deepest scars are buried within.

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Here is a paragraph of third-person omniscient narration, cut from the screenplay of Woody Allen's Vicky Cristina Barcelona. Remember that as you read. You may be tempted to think it is from a hastily written romance novel, but it's not. It's from the man who produced some of the most brilliant screenwriting in American cinema during the 1970s and 1980s.

Over the next weeks, Cristina became more and more sure of herself as a photographer. Both Juan Antonio and Maria Elena contributed ideas and support when she had doubts. Thanks to their encouragement, photography was becoming a productive interest in her life. By now, she and Juan Antonio and Maria Elena had become lovers. Everything seemed perfectly balanced, perfectly in tune. Maria Elena was calm and relaxed. Juan Antonio was going through a very creative period with his painting. It was only Cristina, as the last days of summer expired, who began to experience an old, familiar stirring ... a growing restlessness that she dreaded, but recognized only too well. Suddenly, thoughts started taking precedence over feelings. Thoughts and questions about life and love. And, as much as she tried to resist these ideas, she could not get them from her mind.
The film, Allen's 41st, is a collection of frequently engaging scenes strung together with turgid, telling-sans-showing narration that sounds more like Post-It notes from the director to himself than anything close to meaningful or illuminating storytelling. There are moments where this film really seems like it's going somewhere, somewhere Allen hasn't been often during the last twenty years. The characters seem destined to reach some greater expanse where something profound about art and emotion can be exposed, but then the droll narrator comes back, speaking in unmistakable Allenese while the director cues a montage to play alongside the ugly prose as a transition to the next scene, cued up for greatness but playing always into mediocrity. The characters are never allowed to develop real emotions or thoughts, only exist inside Allen's masturbatory arboretum of attractive, erudite, upper-class artists with nothing better to do but screw, drink, and pontificate. Vicky (Rebecca Hall) is pragmatic and engaged to be married, while Cristina (Scarlett Johansson) is spontaneous and happy to hop. Vicky knows people who will house them in Barcelona for the summer, and there they meet Juan Antonio (Javier Bardem), a bohemian painter and romancer. Both girls become entangled in his charm and experience a minor earthquake – Vicky as she slouches toward her marriage and Cristina as Juan Antonio's bi-polar ex-wife Maria Elena (Penélope Cruz) reemerges. Hall and Johansson lose all integrity early in the film, but Bardem and Cruz are a sheer delight, particularly the latter, who, like her volatile character, is an exciting acting force to reckon with. Throngs of Allen fans, like myself, are waiting for him to make one more masterpiece before he can no longer make films. Vicky Cristina Barcelona, despite many unwarranted accolades thrust upon it (except the deserved praise for Cruz), is really nothing more a Post-It note telling us to keep waiting.

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18 January 2009

Sunday Matinee (Jan. 12 - Jan. 18)

Not half the price, just half the work.

I had a great week, how about you? I'm up to my philtrum in recent releases, some of which I've been enjoying tremendously. By mid-February I'll have a best-of list for 2008, and until then there's more Hitchcock and Chaplin as well as my "Rewinding" series. I'll definitely have something to say on Thursday if Wall•E lands a Best Picture nomination (and maybe if it doesn't).

Anyway, here's what you must read from this past week:

• The post of the week, if such a thing could exist, would probably be Alexander Coleman's magnificently thoughtful review of The Wrestler. My review of the film will be unveiled here when I recap my favorites from 2008.

• There is a nonpareil examination of Saul Bass from Dean at filmicability. Kudos, Dean.

• Farzan tips us off that director Tom Hooper and screenwriter Christopher Hampton will be, for some reason, bringing John Steinbeck's East of Eden back to the big screen. Be prepared for a chorus of "Whys?" to break out.

• Tony at Cinema Viewfinder, in addition to tagging* me in a wonderful Favorite Actors Meme, has reviews of two movies I have yet to see, Revolutionary Road and Rachel Getting Married. As such, I haven't read the reviews yet, but I have the utmost faith that Tony's thoughts on the films warrant your reading.

• Somehow, last week I forgot to include Sam Juliano's top films of 2008. (A thousand apologies, Sam!)

• Joseph at Cinexcellence runs down his selections for favorite films of 2008.

• Andrew at The Stop Button has a great review of Milk, which I will also be discussing here later alongside The Wrestler.

• Bowen's Cinematic provides sharp commentary on Clint Eastwood in '08.

• The best reviewed film of the year, as voted on by LAMB members, is ... well, go find out.

• The Onion: "Man Gets Into Mess Usually Reserved For Stars Of Silent Film Era."

• My friend David gives a rundown on one of the worst movies I've ever seen, a barely tolerable crapfest called Double Down, which we first watched at an awful-movie night party.


* An earlier version of this post mistakenly credited Tony with the creation of the Favorite Actors Meme. Tony only tagged me in the meme; it was begun, in this circle of the blogosphere at least, by
Dean Treadway.

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16 January 2009

Rewinding 2008: Part II

Reviews of Paranoid Park, Encounters at the End of the World, Pineapple Express, W., and Wendy and Lucy


As I work on whittling my best-of list for 2008, I'm pausing to consider releases from the year that I haven't reviewed on Screen Savour.

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Gus Van Sant's Paranoid Park is a mysterious and oneiric wade through the tall grass of adolescence, expertly filmed and capable of producing the feeling that you are at once tethered to the ground and ethereally lifted. The chief lesson overall might be that more young adult novels should be adapted for the screen by talented directors willing to take risks, be mature, and not condescend to teenagers. The great irony is that Paranoid Park will probably go unseen by many of those same teenagers who demand adults take them more seriously. Oh well: the pleasure can be had by all of us instead. This is the artier side of Van Sant, who had a banner year with this indie release and a mainstream success in Milk; he adapted the screenplay from the novel of the same name, the story of a teenager who is accidentally involved in a death. The director liberally plays with chronology, film medium, and film speed, and he has packed the frames with a cast of (almost all) non-actors – and actual young adults, at that. Their presence gives the film a sense of energy, although to be fair, in terms of pure entertainment, there is a very clear difference between non-actor acting well and a non-actor acting badly, and everyone in Paranoid Park doesn't fit into the former category. But this film isn't about good or bad acting; it's about the way the medium forms a symbiotic relationship with the subject, and few directors working today can translate that as well as Van Sant.

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Encounters at the End of the World, a documentary from quixotic filmmaker Werner Herzog, is a movie equivalent of a jellyfish: loose, free-flowing, and unpredictable, but unlike a jellyfish, it lacks a certain capacity to sting you out of your reverie. The subject is Antarctica, or more specifically, as one of his subjects says, "people who have an urge to jump off the margins of the map," with all lines leading to the South Pole. Or is that the subject? Herzog jumps from person to person, or person to animal to geography, etc., his soft narration constantly reminding us of our impending doom. Where a film like this might not work for other directors, it seems to work under the watchful and nihilistic eye of Herzog, who is among the only filmmakers securely employed who is open about his continual fascination by and simultaneous disappointment with the rest of his species. The documentary could use a little more of a spinal column, though, which would transform the unconnected wondrous moments of elucidation – like the sad and disturbing image of a deranged penguin running away from water and to its own doom on the inner continent – into something even more poignant, something more whole.

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The best films of Judd Apatow – that prolific source of today's best man-as-emotional-boy comedy – are those he has directed (The 40-Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up), but as a producer and co-writer, his record is checkered. He was involved in writing or producing five theatrical releases in 2008, the best of which is Pineapple Express, a film that fuses the genres of '70s stoner-buddy-film with '70s action flick. Apatow is not the director here; that title belongs to indie guru David Gordon Green, who deserves credit for helming what is at times a slick and stylized film occasionally capable of producing great laughter. Those laughs tend to be front-loaded, before the action kicks into gear, and the second half of the film isn't as pleasing as the first. Apatow produced and had a hand in the story, and the screenplay was written by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, with Rogen starring as a process server who becomes ensnared in a gang war along his dealer, Saul (James Franco, who had a very good year and steals this film). Like the über-potent varietal of pot dealt in the film, one hit off this comedy is probably sufficient.

Note: The green band, or MPAA "approved for all audiences," trailer for Pineapple Express contains a line of dialogue about hunting down two men and killing them, images of gunfire, and hand-to-hand combat. But the words "pot" or "marijuana" are conspicuously absent, as are any direct references to the drug outside a title card that reads "4:20 p.m." and presumably could do so for any reason; even the M.I.A. song "Paper Planes" has the word "seed" in place of "weed." Because you're only left to assume this movie might have something to do with marijuana, I'll leave it to you to assume what problems must exist in a society that considers images of murder to be approved for all audiences but seriously believes there's harm in uttering the word "weed."

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Is Oliver Stone's W. a tragedy or a comedy? It is both, unevenly and messily, and as such it does neither very well. In attempting to explore the psyche of George W. Bush, the 43rd president, Stone and screenwriter Stanley Weiser plant us the present, as the nation runs up to the Iraq War, and give us a look back to the man's younger and wilder years, when he was outdone by his own drinking and sense of aimlessness. There is a great deal of novelty when the film begins, a sense that each scene might bring something new to the table, but the novelty soon wears thin and then completely disappears when you begin to release scene after scene is passing without much of an imprint. Mostly W. provides a wide open space for Josh Brolin to wander in his eerily close interpretation of Bush's verbal ticks and swagger. (He is, without a doubt, the film's greatest asset, but his space is largely squandered by innumerable close-ups and constant cinematographic claustrophobia.) While Stone and Weiser are certainly at fault for the film's emotional inconsistency, the most egregious offender is Paul Cantelon, the composer of the score, which either skips along mockingly or amps up the orchestra in an attempt to draw sympathy. Ironically, considering the film's polarizing subject, what W. needed most was to pick a side: be either a straightforward dramatic assessment of a man, or be an outrageous and scandalous satire. The hard lesson learned is that you can't be both and expect to escape unharmed.

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In Kelly Reichardt's Wendy and Lucy, Michelle Williams stars as a melancholic and poor young woman named Wendy who, with her utterly adorable dog Lucy, is on her way to Alaska from Indiana when her car breaks down in a rural Oregon town. Stellar lead performance and cute dog aside, this is not a happy matinee; Reichardt co-wrote the screenplay with Jon Raymond (adapted from his short story, "Train Choir"), which follows as Wendy's life, already in a state of disarray, is finally and almost completely unwound. She is picked up for shoplifting and sent off to the county jail to pay a fine, she loses Lucy and spends the rest of the film trying to stomach the cash-dropping necessary to fix her car and, more importantly, trying to find the most loyal companion she seems to have had in a long time. The film has the unmistakable feel of a short story, from its sparse and unembellished plot to the strict adherence to a traditional narrative arc. The result isn't an entire negative for the screenplay, but its ending became predictable to me. Occasionally I worried the film was a little too manipulative of my emotions (whether you find such a thing grounds for guilt is up to you – I was slightly unnerved), but by the end I couldn't deny how impressed I was with Reichardt's film. It is careful and methodical, but never slow, and although it is frequently sad and upsetting in the continual roadblocks Wendy experiences, the character's life is not without moments of redemption. It is a fascinating character study, definitely good but also not great, and each frame pulses with Reichardt's craftsmanship.

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15 January 2009

The Wrong Man (1956)

d. Alfred Hitchcock / USA / 105 mins.


The Wrong Man is Alfred Hitchcock's bleakest and most discomforting motion picture, and it's also his most underrated. It was not the director's final word on a topic that troubled him his entire life – being accused for a crime one didn't commit – but it is his most claustrophobic exploration of that situation and, considering its foundation in real life, his most plausible. While most Hitchcockian heroes are merely fingered for a crime and forced to go on the run to prove their innocence, the protagonist of The Wrong Man – a jazz musician with one of those faces you'd swear you've seen before – is in an elliptical hell where eyewitnesses think he's guilty, the police think he's guilty, and there is nothing he can do to prove his innocence. When a shadowed Hitchcock struts out in front of the camera at the film's beginning to tell the audience it is a true story, it not only makes what comes after seem all the more horrifying, but it's as if Hitchcock is saying of his own fears, Look! I told you it wasn't just all in my head!

The incident depicted in the film is based on the story of Manny Balestrero, first brought to wide attention in a 1953 article for Life magazine. He was a jazz bassist who, through a case of mistaken identity, was arrested on the charge of stealing from an insurance company. Once in police custody, Balestrero becomes victim to a freakish coincidences that keep aligning him squarely with the description of the suspect, leading to his bizarre trial and his wife experiencinc mental breakdown from the stress. I won't discuss any more details about Balestrero's case; although The Wrong Man doesn't follow "every word" of the story as Hitchcock claims in his introduction, it is similar enough that any more would spoil the film.

Balestrero is played by Henry Fonda – that great Everyman actor, in his only collaboration with Hitchcock. It's difficult to imagine anyone else for this role. Fonda's subtlety fits Balestrero's predicament, stirring a mixture of impotent anger, remorse, sadness, and fear. The immediate connection Fonda had (and continues to have) with audiences makes his selection more effective, too. Essentially The Wrong Man is the story of person sent through the ringer of an imperfect system of justice, where fate and accident can be more powerful forces than rationality and investigation, and our empathy and vicariousness fears occur with ease. Balestrero is by no means a strong man, only a man who has a will to be exonerated, and weaker people would certainly crack under the pressure (as his wife Rose, played here by Vera Miles, does).

Jonathan Rosenbaum has called The Wrong Man "the closest Alfred Hitchcock ever came to making an art film," and indeed, so much of the pleasure here comes from the execution of technique. It is not neorealism in the strictest sense of course, but Hitchcock challenged himself to bring a specific documentary-style to the film that was undoubtedly influenced by the post-war Italian directors. (He frequently screened films from all over the globe, and from Italy he was particularly interested in Roberto Rossellini, who had romanced Ingrid Bergman.) The director tossed out many of his cinematic tricks to give The Wrong Man the closest feeling to reality he could, shooting on location in New York City and filming scenes in a real prison that was housing actual criminals. (In the film one can hear a prisoner refer to Fonda by name.) Hitchcock gave cinematographer Robert Burks the opportunity to leave if he didn't want to be part of the project, but Burks stayed and his black-and-white cinematography is subdued and chilling. Likewise with Bernard Herrmann, whose scores are typically so powerful and identifiable in his films with Hitchcock; Herrmann's score for The Wrong Man is quiet, peppered with hints of jazz to reflect Balestrero's career. Edith Head, known for her extravagant costume design, did uncredited consulting on Miles's simple and monochromatic wardrobe. For a director who relished in the stylistic excesses afforded to him by fame and movie studio cash, The Wrong Man is as low-key as an episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, a filmmaking device the director would utilize to great (some might say incalculable) success four years later in Psycho.

Hitchcock kept the film's screenwriters, Angus MacPhail and playwright Maxwell Anderson, to task with the story and intervened when they drifted too far into fiction or organized elements outside of chronological order. MacPhail and long-time Hitchcock collaborator Herbert Coleman, an associate producer, interviewed numerous people who were involved in the actual Balestrero case, including the judge, the prosecutor, the defense attorney, and psychiatrists. The first half of the film, with its uncomfortable and fatalistic worldview, is as engaging as the best work done by the director. The second half, which shifts to the story to a greater distribution between Manny and Rose, can't quite maintain the intensity. But the film is so unique among Hitchcock's that it's also something that shouldn't be missed; a full assessment of Hitchcock-cum-Experimentalist would not be complete without examining this often ignored film. It is a nightmare of epic proportions, slightly shy of masterpiece status, and delivered to the screen through one of Hitchcock's subtlest maneuvers.

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13 January 2009

Rewinding 2008: Part I

Reviews of Frost/Nixon, Gran Torino, Happy-Go-Lucky, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, and Iron Man.


As I work on assembling my best-of list of 2008, I'm pausing to consider releases from the year that I haven't reviewed on Screen Savour. (Note: None of these particular films will be present on my best-of list.)

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The first two acts of Frost/Nixon, Ron Howard's cinematic interpretation of Peter Morgan's acclaimed play, feel cooked up beyond belief; it's only by the time of its superior final third act that it comes close to rising above mediocrity. The film follows a series of interviews of the disgraced 37th president of the United States, Richard Nixon (Frank Langella), conducted by David Frost (Michael Sheen), the British playboy-slash-journalist who was underestimated by the rest of the media and even his own researchers. The final third, or the equivalent of the final day of interviews when the topic was Watergate, is played out marvelously by Langella and Sheen, who come to life in those moments unlike any other in the film, but overall the film is rather unremarkable. Howard, though perhaps never among the most experimental or visually recognizable of directors, is hardly felt on screen; why his direction has been nominated time and time again for directing awards is mystifying. (If it weren't for the "Directed by Ron Howard," I might have guessed a relative newcomer was behind the film.) The exposition "interview" breakaways, where those on Frost's and Nixon's respective teams are questioned, are too much of a dip into artifice and detract from a story that already teeters precariously on the verge of losing its sense of realism. In the end Langella brings a surprising amount of humanity to Nixon, but it all comes too late. By that point, Frost/Nixon achieves only a modicum of success; the rest, as they might say of Nixon himself, is criminal.
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In Clint Eastwood's Gran Torino, hard-ass Walt Kowalski (Eastwood, in a commanding lead performance) is a widower, an angry father, and a racist Korean War veteran who packs heat, talks in a voice of barbed wire, lacks patience for religion, and has little room for friends. He becomes the inadvertent hero of his depressed neighborhood in Detroit when he fends off a gang from his young and aimless neighbor, Thao (Bee Vang), and although he shuns the thanks of the community, he befriends Thao and his sister, Sue (Ahney Her), becoming something of a father-figure to both. Although I don't think Gran Torino fires on all cylinders, I'm quite a fan of all the performers, particularly Eastwood, and I think the direction is focused, clear, and compelling. At issue here is the script, by Nick Schenk and Dave Johannson, which is at once satisfying and inept. The characters are dynamic, and you just can't beat Eastwood shoving the barrel of a gun into someone's face. (Or in a more disturbing moment, his forefinger and thumb positioned into the shape of a gun, which he ominously fires.) The script switches gear regularly between professional and amateur, with the most egregious offense being the occasionally hackneyed dialogue. There are plenty of clichés, too, including a glass that drops from someone's hand in a moment meant to be serious and shocking. Gran Torino isn't among Eastwood's best, but he is a masterful director and actor and behind the wheel is still quite enjoyable.
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A movie that comes with a built-in defense mechanism, Mike Leigh's Happy-Go-Lucky treats optimism like it's something unexpected and original – an ironic conceit, considering the film's one-note smile becomes something of a circular bore. Sally Hawkins is sweet as elementary educator Poppy Cross, a woman whose primary (or only) character trait is an indefatigable ray of sunshine. In the face of all of the world's negativity, anger, and pain, Poppy continues to giggle riotously, and we come to learn that her happiness isn't defensive, preemptive, or balanced with other thoughts and feelings. While it's all very interesting at first, there is little by way of discerning development, and the film's periphery noticeably falls to waste as we're expected to keep our eyes contently on Hawkins. However, her singular performance doesn't quite have the steam and complexity to adequately fuel this character study. Don't get me wrong: it's a joy to watch her be, well, joyous. But it might work better if were able to see a few more sides to Poppy was slightly more multi-faceted, more of the supporting cast was as strong as Eddie Marsan, who plays Poppy's hot-headed and explosive driving instructor, and if only there weren't so many loose ends to the narrative.
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There was always a question in my mind of whether Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull would lean more toward the atrocious Temple of Doom or the sprightly Last Crusade. (Raiders of the Lost Ark, of course, is in a class all its own, high above many action films regardless of director, series, or year.) Unfortunately, I must report that it's down on the level of Temple of Doom. There is nostalgia in seeing the character brought back to life for this fourth installment, but it is tarnished with the inevitable feeling of distance, like a college reunion where everyone comes back to campus and drinks at the same bars but it is nowhere near the splendor of the old days. To their credit, director Steven Spielberg and producer-writer George Lucas seem to be having tremendous fun, as does Harrison Ford, and early on (before it becomes utterly ridiculous) it is contagious. The franchise has been transplanted into 1957, and the part of the problem is that it seems to take more cues from a '50s B-movie instead of a rollicking '30s serial. The first twenty minutes might be the most "Spielbergian" of the entire franchise – Janusz Kaminski's remarkably graceful camerawork, done in muted palettes as homage to Douglas Slocombe; the cranked-up Elvis on the soundtrack; the presence of Russians, headlined by a sneering Cate Blanchett; a quick action sequence, the powerful magnetic that literally bends metal lamps; a rescue from an A-bomb testing site via a lead-lined refrigerator; "that Air Force fiasco in '47. But unlike Jones's fedora, the fun blows away too easily after those first twenty minutes and what the film turns into by the end is a prescription to induce severe eye-rolling. But, hey, Karen Allen – Marion Ravenwood, from Raiders – makes a cute return.
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It stands to reason that Iron Man, Jon Favreau's adaptation of the Marvel comic book character, is generally successful based on the fact that someone such as myself – who knew only enough of the character to identify him in a police lineup – was not only intrigued when the plot began moving but also entertained for the duration of the running length. It succeeds in many other ways, too, which fortunately outnumber the moments when it falters. The film's great element is Robert Downey, Jr., the snarky innovator and the resilient hero Tony Stark. Downey is effective through and through – scruffy as a man, smooth in a machine, the proper balance of brainy workhorse and casual smart-ass, an outcast who nonetheless seems deftly capable of bedding women. Jeff Bridges is inspired as a corporate (and otherwise) opponent, shiny dome and furry chin aside, but Terrence Howard and Gwyneth Paltrow seem underused as Stark cheerleaders. In many ways Iron Man functions entirely as a layer of primer on what is destined to be a franchise, and that probably made the task of screenwriting go a little easier, as John August et al. didn't have to write against the tremendous amount of cultural knowledge the average viewer would have, say, for Superman, Batman, or Spider-Man. For the most part the screenplay holds, even if it becomes a little anemic and predictable (the generic plot outline of comic-book films has clearly been imported, but it doesn't spin it on its head enough; after the first half-hour, I could see correctly how the rest would go). It doesn't hurt to have Downey on your side, though; even jokes that shouldn't be as funny as they are possess a breezy wit when thrown out by him. Visually, the CGI isn't abused, and the action sequences are well-staged if a little short. Still, for all its fun and smart-alecky traits, the film isn't quite able to scale the restricting walls of genre-work and become a self-sustaining apparatus.

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12 January 2009

20 Actors Meme

ac•tor (ăk' ter) » n. A man who acts in a dramatic production.

Tony at Cinema Viewfinder, who kindly tagged me in a 20 Favorite Actresses meme last month, has tagged me in a 20 Favorite Actors meme. (He received his from Dean over at filmicability.) I mentioned last time how it usually takes me forever to complete a meme, if I ever get around to it, but that the actresses came to me easily – so easily, as a matter of fact, that I went ahead and prepared a tentative list for what I knew was coming: men of cinema.

And once again, I suppose convention is slightly my hallmark, as my favorite actors tend to reinforce my film aesthetic (pre-1960 American cinema). Once again, I'll tag my favorite way possible: if you're reading this, you're it. I'll be looking forward to any feedback you have. As a writer who pours himself into his film reviews and labors over every sentence, but who often finds himself without much time at the end of the day, I can't say I'm surprised that blog posts consisting of 90% photos tend to draw the most feedback from readers.

It's all alphabetical, and the images either come from publicity photos or screen-shots.
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Humphrey Bogart
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Marlon Brando
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Charles Chaplin
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Joseph Cotten
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James Dean
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Clint Eastwood
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Henry Fonda
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Ed Harris
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Anthony Hopkins
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Jack Lemmon
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The Marx Brothers
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Marcello Mastrioanni
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Robert Mitchum
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Bill Murray
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Paul Newman
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Al Pacino
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Gregory Peck
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William Powell
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Robert Redford
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James Stewart

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