Friday 19 August 2016

1971 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences 5/8/16 - 19/8/16     

GET CARTER (1971)
A   RE-EVALUATION   ORIGINAL GRADE: A-
d: Mike Hodges
CAST: Michael Caine; some other people who appear on British TV a lot
> Michael Caine in right-bastard mode...therefore, at his best; still gotta be the greatest of all British gangster movies; while Michael has many tough scenes (with the nude shotgun bail-up being the highlight), my favourite is the single tear running down his cheek as he watches the depths his beloved niece has been forced into; can you believe that people actually live in ghastly industrial conditions like these...grimy tenement blocks which look like they've been stamped out by some brutal machine; perfect ending
Award-Worthy Performance
Michael Caine



SOMERSAULT (2004)
A   FIRST VIEWING
d: Cate Shortland
CAST: Abbie Cornish; Sam Worthington; Lynette Curran
> essentially sweet film about a sexed-up teenage girl who is clearly somewhere on the Autism Spectrum; runs away from home after doing something very naughty and ends up in the Snowy Mountains town of Jindabyne; makes friends, falls in love, loses friends, loses her love; part way through I became worried that the film was going to wind down with a violent, bleak ending, but I was spared; something just as rare though - forgiveness and growth; Abbie is simply stunning in the lead and Sam manages to do something with a question-mark of a role; an impressive and rewarding movie which just happens to come from Australia
Award-Worthy Performance
Abbie Cornish



McCABE & MRS. MILLER (1971)
A-   THIRD VIEWING
d: Robert Altman
CAST: Warren Beatty; Julie Christie; Rene Auberjonois; Keith Carradine; Michael Murphy
> I know that this is universally regarded as a 70's masterpiece but I've always admired it from arms-length; much to appreciate of course: bitterly cold frontier backdrop & Julie's tough 'n' tender performance as the madam with brains & Leonard Cohen & fascinating faces & the stunning final stretch; but Warren comes across as too modern a man (and a bit too sappy) & while the pace is purposefully languid, that equates to draggy & the incessant chatter becomes an annoyance; still, it is an affecting movie, just not powerfully so
Award-Worthy Performance
Julie Christie



BLACK LEGION (1937)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Archie Mayo
CAST: Humphrey Bogart; Erin O'Brien-Moore; Dick Foran; Ann Sheridan
> social lesson about a working-class machinist who loses a promotion to a "foreigner" and joins KKK kopykats to get his revenge; Bogie makes an unconvincing ordinary family man but a very convincing terrorist; good little performance by Erin in the thankless role of the wife who wrings her hands while her hubbie is out with the bad boys; Nice Scene: Bogie gets a gun and suddenly seems small and pathetic; Wonderful Scene: Bogie hits his wife and she immediately takes the kid and splits; film is a little hysterical & exaggerated, but that's OK
Award-Worthy Performance
Erin O'Brien-Moore



THE HISTORY OF MR. POLLY (1949)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Anthony Pelissier
CAST: John Mills; Betty Ann Davies; Megs Jenkins; Finlay Currie
> very British comedy (based on a H.G. Wells novel) about the life adventures of a hopeless dreamer who is determined to enjoy himself; John overdoes his funny little man routine (he was never as good at it as Alec Guinness) and his mannerisms (walk & talk especially) are too blatantly an artifice to make the character endearing; for some reason, his choice of expletive ("little dog") really annoys me; not a comment on class (like Kipps) or a sci-fi tale, it is a peculiar choice to be the first ever Wells novel to be filmed; tries for a vague Charles Dickens feel but the side characters aren't eccentric enough to qualify; pleasant & mild but it doesn't hang around for long afterwards



CHARLIE CHAN AT THE OLYMPICS (1937)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: H. Bruce Humberstone
CAST: Warner Oland; Keye Luke; some other people
>  I always enjoy the Charlie Chan movies as lightweight entertainment, on the same level as Jessica Fletcher or Father Brown; preferred Warner's Mr Chan over Sidney Toler's (Sid always seemed stoned) although I think most of the really good films were during Toler's run; this one isn't too bad though: some twaddle about a remote-controlled aeroplane thingy being stolen by spies and taken to 1936 Berlin; Mr Chan gets to float in The Hindenberg to Germany which is pretty cool; doco footage of 1936 Olympics woven in but not a single swastika in sight; Sadly Ironic Moment: minor fist-fight breaks out and a German policeman actually says "Things like this cannot happen in Berlin"...1936 and counting...



LET'S SCARE JESSICA TO DEATH (1971)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: John Hancock
CAST: a group of people who I have never seen before and probably won't again
> crude chiller that throws too many seen-a-hundred-times elements into the horror mix: ex-mental patient + creepy old house with a secret + mysterious stranger + weird local townsfolk + scary legend + vampires + mind control + incessant whisperings + drownings & stabbings + headstone etchings + a dead mole; I'm not taken with the "natural" style of acting from all concerned which comes across as First Year Drama Class; good use of sound & music effects; overall, it is effective in making you feel ill at ease right from the get-go and never letting up, but the build-up is too slow and even when things get cranked up, it canters rather than sprints



THINK FAST, MR MOTO (1937)
B-   SECOND VIEWING
d: Norman Foster
CAST: Peter Lorre; Virginia Field; Thomas Beck; Sig Ruman; J. Carrol Naish
> this was the first in the Twentieth Century Fox rip-off of the successful Charlie Chan series; Hungarian Peter is uneasy as the Japanese sleuth (apparently he HATED the role) and the series was understandably shut down when WWII cranked up; Moto is more action hero than Chan (the jujitsu fight scenes are pretty nifty...although not much more than someone being thrown around) but they share the usual-for-the-times Asian inscrutability and cunning; Peter only really grabs your attention when he turns facially cold just as he is about to kill someone (he seems to be a little short in the scruples department) and I love his picket-fence teeth; a passable motion picture version of the detective radio plays much enjoyed in their heyday



WITH SIX YOU GET EGGROLL (1968)
B-   SECOND VIEWING
d: Howard Morris
CAST: Doris Day; Brian Keith; Barbara Hershey; Alice Ghostley
> harmless piece of fluff with a couple of laughs in it; Doris + sons & Brian + daughter do a scaled-back Brady Bunch with much exaggerated hilarity etc; day-glo colours & an English Sheepdog & The Grass Roots in a discotheque add that plastic Sixties feel; never been much of a Doris fan but I always thought she improved as she got older, certainly in her light-comedic touch (this was her last film before she moved into TV); Brian was one of the great under-utilized actors of his time and his trademark underplaying is very appealing here; the kids are a fairly dreary bunch; not as good as Yours, Mine & Ours, released in the same year; you gotta catch Klinger & Father Mulcahy as the grooviest of hippies!



CREATION (2009)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Jon Amiel
CAST: Paul Bettany; Jennifer Connelly; Benedict Cumberbatch; Jeremy Northam
> Charles Darwin's voyage on the Beagle and the purchase, civilization and return of three Tierra del Fuegian children are two of my very favourite stories from history; unfortunately, this film instead focusses on the mental illness suffered by Darwin after the death of his daughter; tragic stuff of course, but hardly riveting 2-hour material; I would've preferred a more straightforward narrative to this dream-sequence laden hodge-podge; the doomed daughter is mere presence to us, so when she finally goes she is not missed...in fact, her constant popping-up becomes annoying; Paul is pretty much the whole show and his numerous agonies are monotonal and ultimately boring; handsomely filmed though



AN AMERICAN ROMANCE (1944)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: King Vidor
CAST: Brian Donlevy; Ann Richards; Walter Abel; John Qualen
> rather pedestrian movie which starts off with the American migrant experience (circa 1890's) and expands into an epic of family, the steel industry and the glories of capitalism; has no connection to reality whatsoever; Western Europeans are the usual Hollywood bumpkin types; Brian is bland with a fluctuating accent and John does his tedious Swedish routine AGAIN; broad comedy + patriotic self-congratulations + really, really nice folk; a father loses his first born son to WWI and then opts to manufacture bombers for WWII???; King Vidor made The Crowd (1928) and Our Daily Bread (1934), both truly wonderful and both anti-capitalism films, so why did he choose to make this red, white & blue schmaltz?



THE DEVILS (1971)
D   FIRST & LAST VIEWING
d: Ken Russell
CAST: Oliver Reed; Vanessa Redgrave; Gemma Jones
> gets my vote as the silliest movie ever made; Plague-Years priest is accused of Satanic sex with a bunch of nuns and is given the usual tortures; this is obviously the Great Lost Monty Python Movie; Vanessa is absolutely awful as the hunchback Mother Superior who starts the whole kerfuffle (and comes out with what is quite possibly the worst laugh ever committed to celluloid); the exorcist looks like he just walked out of Jefferson Airplane; a number of truly revolting scenes with Vanessa sticking her tongue into Ollie's gaping gashes particularly retch-forming; graded leniently due to covert hoot-factor; they sure knew how to throw a wild party back in those days 



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Thursday 4 August 2016

1953 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences 21/7/16 - 4/8/16    

LEON: THE PROFESSIONAL (1994)
A   FIRST VIEWING
d: Luc Besson
CAST: Jean Reno; Natalie Portman; Gary Oldman; Danny Aiello
> in-some-ways naive hitman takes in a violently-orphaned little girl and becomes her mentor / hero / er, crush; Natalie is stunning as the 12 year old adult and Jean impresses as the childlike assassin; Gary's cartoon psycho seems to be channeling 1947 Richard Widmark in Kiss of Death; I really struggle with the ethics of all this (the kid swears, smokes, practises how to kill; wants physical love) but it is leavened by the artificial / fantasy touches (constant emotional music & European feel & comedic implants); it's not entirely of this world just like Leone & Tarantino movies; check out the super-rare Burning Spear LP!
Award-Worthy Performances
Jean Reno; Natalie Portman; Gary Oldman



SHOOTING DOGS aka BEYOND THE GATES (2005)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Michael Caton-Jones
CAST: John Hurt; Hugh Dancy; Clare-Hope Ashitey
> powerful film of the Rwandan Genocide of 1994, focussing on a small Catholic school which was used as a refuge and protected (for a time) by the U.N.; John is the school's veteran priest and Hugh is the young English teacher trying to do their humane best in an impossible and insane situation; gradual build up of war as it unfolds (distant gunfire & ominous broadcasts) leading to the inevitable horrors (you are spared nothing) while the European peacekeepers just watch it happen; no grabs for sentiment & no plot cliches; only criticism is the offering of Christianity as a comfort which comes across as ludicrous in these extreme circumstances (but that may just be my prejudice showing); hideous & confronting


  
THE HIT (1984)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Stephen Frears
CAST: John Hurt; Terence Stamp; Tim Roth; Laura del Sol; Bill Hunter; Fernando Rey
> curious little movie about a pair of hitmen who are hired to bring a Pommy grass back from Spain for execution; starts off very serious but gradually reveals a bone-dry humour; much philosophical waxing-on about the concept of death and what is life etc by target Terence; strong performances all round with Tim really shining as the young halfwit thug who is in it for the money and the glory but changes his mind; a clever variation on a road movie, the film takes its time in the telling but is never boring; nice to see Aussie Bill in a rare international role; refreshingly different
Award-Worthy Performance
Tim Roth



TITANIC (1953)
B+   SECOND VIEWING
d: Jean Negulesco
CAST: Clifton Webb; Barbara Stanwyck; Robert Wagner; Thelma Ritter; Richard Basehart
> far, far prefer this to James Cameron's Titanic (this one is one-tenth the length for a start); still a lot of soap swirling about in the water just like Cameron's, but none of the interminable "Perils of Pauline" stunts which blighted (and made silly) his 1997 bloated masterwork; however, the best Titanic film remains the 1958 British A Night to Remember (no soap opera; slight documentary feel); all the classic Titanic trademarks are here (coward in a lifeboat dressed as a woman; the band playing on; class prejudice etc) and the sinking is impressive; Clif & Barb do a good job with annoying roles and Thelma is reasonably restrained; could've done without the alcoholic priest, but overall it is an affecting entertainment



THE NIGHT OF THE IGUANA (1964)
B+   RE-EVALUATION   ORIGINAL GRADE: B
d: John Huston
CAST: Richard Burton; Ava Gardner; Deborah Kerr; Sue Lyon; Grayson Hall
> I've picked up more humour in this than I did originally; Richard as the unstable priest / tour guide is actually quite brilliant in what is a difficult role, and what I once thought was ham now seems more like Albert Finney in Under the Volcano; Ava is the stand-out (always was) in her best-ever performance; the last 20 minutes should've been hacked back with a pair of shears, and as soon as the tour-group leaves the hotel, the sexual tension (which was what held the interest) is gone; unusually compassionate for a Tennessee Williams play
Award-Worthy Performances
Richard Burton; Ava Gardner 



THE TRIALS OF OSCAR WILDE (1960)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Ken Hughes
CAST: Peter Finch; Yvonne Mitchell; James Mason; Nigel Patrick; John Fraser; Lionel Jeffries
> Peter does a good job as the wit-on-a-stick Oscar (preferable to both the Robert Morley & Stephen Fry versions...to me, even though I have absolutely no idea what Oscar Wilde was really like, Peter comes across as a real artistic person rather than a flamboyant caricature); geez, the Marquess of Queensberry was an angry arsehole...and, as played here by Lionel, he was also a supreme overactor; beautiful colour production; the sad fate and career ruination of Oscar is touchingly portrayed here, as is the overlooked heartache of his wife; just wish it had a bit more of a documentary feel to it, rather than a one-sided melodrama
Award-Worthy Performance
Peter Finch   



HOUDINI (1953)
B+   MOVIE JUKEBOX
d: George Marshall
CAST: Tony Curtis; Janet Leigh
> another one of those movies which only I seem to be a fan of (it's tough being the only person who is right); yes, I admit that if you want an accurate bio of Harry Houdini, there's no point watching this (read the wonderful 2006 biography The Secret Life of Houdini by William Kalush & Larry Sloman instead) but this is just pleasurable entertainment; film has a number of scenes which have stuck in my memory for over 40 years (straightjacket escape & barefooted jailbreak & trapped under the ice & an axe smashing into glass); shame about all the spiritual-afterlife obsession which drags on a bit; Tony & Janet are possibly the most physically gorgeous couple ever to appear on film and they have an obvious joint-charisma



MOTHER (1996)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Albert Brooks
CAST: Albert Brooks; Debbie Reynolds; Rob Morrow
> it took me a while to get used to the near-flatline rhythm of this film...everything seems sorta comatose-lite (dialogue & acting & intention); Woody Allen without the jokes; grown man with relationship issues moves back in with his mother to find out where it all went wrong; Debbie is a dish as Mum and even before she mentions it, you just know that she's still having regular sex; so grateful Debbie's role wasn't a grating Jewish-Mother caricature; Albert plays Albert which is okay but being himself never really resulted in a memorable movie character; overall, the question "so?" is on the tip of my tongue
Award-Worthy Performance
Debbie Reynolds


  
RESISTANCE (2011)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Amit Gupta
CAST: Andrea Riseborough; Tom Wlaschiha; Michael Sheen
> slow and somber "What If" story (as in "What if D-Day was unsuccessful and the Nazis had invaded Britain?"); war-weary band of German soldiers move into tiny Welsh farming community and bunker down for the winter, discovering that all the menfolk have already cleared off; a sort-of combination of 1970's The Last Valley and 1942's Went the Day Well (both ultra-unlikely faves of mine); there are no contrasting moods in the whole piece, so it remains one-note and consequently tedious, despite good acting and intention; while I always appreciate a "War is Bad" message, I need it to be delivered engrossingly or at least with more punch than this



CANDY (2006)
B-   FIRST & PROBABLY LAST VIEWING
d: Neil Armfield
CAST: Heath Ledger; Abbie Cornish; Geoffrey Rush; Noni Hazlehurst; Tony Martin
> a junkie love story; you get the whole harrowing journey: poverty, crime, prostitution, pregnancy, withdrawal, miscarriage, insanity, death; I had a mate once who became a lowlife druggie - he borrowed and sold my $3000 vocals amp & speakers without even pausing - then asked me for some money six months later; Heath & Abbie are pretty good looking heroin addicts, even when they are at their most scummy; admirable acting by both and I especially like the fact that at no point did I feel pity for either of them (only her parents); "Beautiful Loser" stories tend to shit me and this is no exception; even Heath's one long-overdue act of decency / strength at the end didn't endear him to me 



I CONFESS (1953)
B-   SECOND VIEWING
d: Alfred Hitchcock
CAST: Montgomery Clift; Anne Baxter; Karl Malden; Brian Aherne
> a Hitchcock flop...which means that by the standards of other filmmakers, this would be considered okay; more a The Bold and The Beautiful soap opera than a suspense-piece; Hitch is let down by the acting of the three leads, which is merely pedestrian; Anne looks pretty but she spouts some absolute twaddlish dialogue; worst culprit is Dimitri Tiomkin, whose sledgehammer soundtrack kills any attempt at subtlety; not a drop of humour to be found anywhere, which is unusual for a Hitchcock film; the flashback sequence is bloody dreadful; the villain is suitably ghastly and his eventual comeuppance is appropriately satisfying



LIFE DURING WARTIME (2009)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Todd Solondz
CAST: Shirley Henderson; Alison Janney; Ciaran Hinds; Ally Sheedy; Charlotte Rampling
> close to being dreadful; multi-storyline set-up with interconnected characters; usual Todd Solondz topics: pedophilia & sexual perversion & suicide & child dealing with adult subjects & drugs & emotional hauntings & forgiveness no matter what; this time though, there isn't a drop of humour anywhere to dilute the tasteless and contentious stuff; dialogue is awkward and unnatural; acting is merely perfunctory except for Ciaran (the scene where this ex-con pedophile confronts his teenage son is actually quite powerful and easily the highlight of the movie); kind critics call it uncompromising; I call it dreary and unpleasant



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