Monday 18 December 2017

1970 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences  29/11/17 - 18/12/17    
A+ = Adored Masterwork   A = Excellent   A- = Very Good   B+ = Good   B = Nice Try   B- = Tolerable   
C = Significantly Flawed   D = Pretty Bad   E = Truly Dreadful: Looking Into the Void   F = Vile & Repugnant: The Void



GOIN' DOWN THE ROAD (1970)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Donald Shebib
CAST: Doug McGrath; Paul Bradley; Jayne Eastwood
> I approached this film virtually cold, only knowing that it was considered a classic of Canadian cinema; had to pause it partway to check if it was a documentary, so seemingly-realistic is the presentation; tells the tale of a pair of uneducated, uncool Nova Scotian fellas who fall for the Bright Lights Big City dream (in this case, Toronto) and ultimately find nothing there; the amateur acting initially put me off (like guys who self-consciously overdo it for the camera) but the cast grows into their roles and the director (great use of closeups!) quietly makes you care about these Fate-bullied losers; I kept thinking of old Bruce Springsteen lyrics throughout (tramps like us / is a dream a lie if it don't come true / with eyes that hate for just being born etc.); a very human story which is effectively illuminated and shared 



MAD LOVE aka THE HANDS OF ORLAC (1935)
A-   MOVIE JUKEBOX
d: Karl Freund
CAST: Peter Lorre; Frances Drake; Colin Clive; Ted Healy
> the nuttiest of all the 1930's horror classics; Peter's performance in this joins the likes of Colin Clive in Frankenstein and Charles Laughton in Island of Lost Souls for unbridled Ham which somehow still works (shame about Frances though); concert pianist gets his hands lopped off and replaced with those of a knife-thrower...guess who his surgeon is?...Peter wants his patient's woman and even keeps a wax model of her around for kinky kicks; the scene where Peter dresses up as God-Knows-What is one of the classic reveals in cinema, not to mention just a bloody hoot!; great fun from a time when horror meant something quite different to gore
Award-Worthy Performance
Peter Lorre



WINCHESTER '73 (1950)
A-   RE-EVALUATION   Original Grade: B+
d: Anthony Mann
CAST: James Stewart; Shelley Winters; Dan Duryea; Stephen McNally; Millard Mitchell
> a universally-acclaimed Western, I was always slightly put off by its blatant celebration of the gun (specifically, the title character) and the episodic structure (where the gun goes, hand to hand, the story follows); this time round, I noticed the strong acting (gotta be one of underrated Dan's best just-passing-through performances) and just how concentrated & effective the individual episodes actually are; the climactic shootout-for-revenge is one of the genre's better shot (HA!) sequences (and no one plays neurotic-determination-on-the-range better than Jimmy) and Shelley doesn't give me as large a pain as usual; OK...you're right...it is a good Western
Award-Worthy Performances
James Stewart; Dan Duryea



WONDER WHEEL (2017)
A-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Woody Allen
CAST: Kate Winslet; Justin Timberlake; Juno Temple; Jim Belushi; Jack Gore
> this has been classed as Major and Minor Woody...ever the fence-sitter, I would call it Medium Woody; a return to the feel of Match Point and Blue Jasmine, this is set in 1950's Coney Island and involves a carousel-operator, his estranged daughter, his stepson, his wife & her lover and how everybody is ruined as payback for the universal human flaw: The Heart Wants What the Heart Wants; very gabby (more a stageplay than a movie) but it ultimately works due to the sharp performances, the gorgeous cinematography (rich colour, softened by superb lighting) and the inevitability of it all...you can see the trainwreck coming but you can't look away 
Award-Worthy Performances
Kate Winslet; Juno Temple



MONTE WALSH (1970)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: William A. Fraker
CAST: Lee Marvin; Jack Palance; Jeanne Moreau; Mitchell Ryan
> while this is a good "Demise of the Wild West" film (and would make a great double bill with 1962's Ride the High Country), the movie I kept recalling was the 1975 Aussie classic Sunday Too Far Away...equal doses of melancholy, men & mateship and the impending extinction of a lifestyle; Lee and Jack are cowboys, the closest of friends and getting on in years...times are tough and the cowboys are too, but not enough to stop age and resist the temptation to settle down & be like other folk; with some amusing everyday scenes at the beginning, and a handful of exciting action pieces (the man + horse demolition squad!), the film gets sadder and sadder as it goes on, ultimately turning tragic; a special Western: instead of justice or vengeance, it tells a story about loss...and how we've all got it comin', kid



THE STRANGE LOVE OF MARTHA IVERS (1946)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Lewis Milestone
CAST: Barbara Stanwyck; Van Heflin; Kirk Douglas; Lizabeth Scott; Judith Anderson
> a slightly overrated noir-soap that takes a little too long to come to the boil...the sort of yarn that Dallas and Dynasty probably used as inspiration; angry girl kills rich bitch Aunt, watched by boy next door and by true-love who lives on the wrong side of the tracks...everyone grows up and just become older versions of their child personas (what...nobody ever changes after 10?); secrets + greed + power + lust + guilt + ruthlessness...all the usual ingredients are swirled about with the actors doing what they do best (Barb = scheming, Van = likeable, Kirk = heelish, Lizabeth = pouty); the storyline veers too close to Turgid at times, dawdling about with needless romantic guff and occasionally being a little silly (Van gets beaten up by 4 thugs and immediately shrugs it off like it's a beer hangover) but remains enjoyable



WONDER (2017)
B   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Steven Chbosky
CAST: Jacob Tremblay; Julia Roberts; Owen Wilson; Izabela Vidovic
> I was reluctant to go and see this, purely because it sounded like the sort of life-affirming / heart-warming confection which would bring out the grinch in me...however, it scored some pretty good reviews, and it was directed by the Perks of a Wallflower guy (and that film just continues to impress), so I thought, hey...; sure enough, it is a life-affirming / heart-warming confection which is pretty good; 11 year old kid has a facial deformity but his determined mum insists that he attends public school now, regardless of the fear of bullying & ostracisation; yep, the kid gets bullied & ostracised, but life gets better; unusual structure lifts the "Affliction of the Week" story (it is told from the perspective of four kids) and the tearjerking set-ups are kept to a humane minimum; nice kid, surrounded by nice people, and it all turns out nice



IN DREAMS (1999)
B   SECOND VIEWING
d: Neil Jordan
CAST: Annette Bening; Stephen Rea; Aidan Quinn; Robert Downey Jr
> usually considered a dud, I find this psych-horror tale to be fairly engrossing, but is wounded by the build-up being much stronger than the pay-off; Annette has troubling, violent dreams which come true, predicting a series of child-murders...one of whom is her own daughter; insanity awaits, but Annette is made of stronger stuff...she soon realises that she is sharing dreams with the killer; apart from Robert (who gives a slathering performance), the supporting cast is competent but seem to just stand around in awe of Annette, who is stunning; a rare horror film that may have benefited from a longer running time and a slower telling
Award-Worthy Performance
Annette Bening



THE DISASTER ARTIST (2017)
B-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: James Franco
CAST: James Franco; Dave Franco; Seth Rogen; Alison Brie
> I am not a member of the "So Bad It's Good" Club...I don't worship at the shrine of Ed Wood and I don't think that Howard the Duck is a misunderstood gem...crap is crap and should be disposed of accordingly; I also don't think that humiliating oneself in public is amusingly cathartic...I just quietly withdraw and pity the poor schmuck; I have never seen The Room and I never will by choice...Life is just too short, people; this film is about Tommy Wiseau, the no-talent who wrote, produced, directed and starred in awful-icon The Room; Tommy is clearly a bizarre guy who has more money than sense and more self-delusion than friends; I laughed a couple of times...the fat guy in the audience with the jumbo box of popcorn and an aisle to himself laughed a lot more than that...to each their own



FRAGMENT OF FEAR (1970)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Richard C. Sarafian
CAST: David Hemmings; Arthur Lowe; Daniel Massey; Wilfred Hyde-White; Flora Robson
> a fascinating mystery which is utterly destroyed by an awful ending; David is an ex-junkie who has cleaned up his act and written a book about it...then his lovely old Auntie is strangled in Pompeii for no apparent reason...David investigates...and very strange things begin to occur; classy & well-acted (check out that supporting cast!) paranoid / things-aren't-what-they-seem thriller which sucks you in, then, once it has expertly built up the suspense, the Big Climax is a jawdropping letdown...like riding the Orient Express and getting off at Woolworths
Award-Worthy Performance
David Hemmings



MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS (2017)
C   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Kenneth Branagh
CAST: Kenneth Branagh; Olivia Colman; Penelope Cruz; Willem Dafoe; Judi Dench; Johnny Depp; Josh Gad; Derek Jacobi; Leslie Odom Jr; Michelle Pfeiffer
> handsome and dull; impossible not to compare it to the 1974 version...and come to the conclusion that the original is better in every way; Kenneth as Poirot is all moustache and inconsistent accent and, while the updated supporting cast performs well, they take it so seriously and behave so stuffily that all the fun is drained out of the puzzle...the original all-star cast didn't bother acting...they just established caricatures that were cartoonishly memorable, like 2D boardgame suspects; undeniably gorgeous facade (the alpine scenery is wonderful) and the opening scenes in 1934 Istanbul are fascinating but nice clothes can't reanimate a corpse; I'm not looking forward to the threatened Death on the Nile sequel



13 GHOSTS (1960)
D   FIRST VIEWING
d: William Castle
CAST: Charles Herbert; Donald Woods; Martin Milner; Margaret Hamilton
> the silliest of haunted house movies...some episodes of Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? were scarier; poor paleontologist with a great name (Cyrus Zorba) inherits a creepy house from his occultist uncle...the family moves in, along with 12 ghosts, who are awaiting the 13th; another one of Director William's gimmick movies (ref. The Tingler + Homicidal), it's impossible to imagine that this was ever considered an effective horror movie, even in more naive times...far more frightening is the acting (watch the teenage daughter repeatedly put her hands on her hips to express a vast range of emotions); the gimmick this time was special glasses...you put them on to see the hideous apparitions...if you dare...; not even dumb fun, just dumb




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Tuesday 28 November 2017

1956 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences  15/11/17 - 28/11/17     
A+ = Adored Masterwork   A = Excellent   A- = Very Good   B+ = Good   B = Nice Try   B- = Tolerable   
C = Seriously Flawed   D = Pretty Awful   E = Truly Dreadful: Looking Into the Void   F = Vile & Repugnant: The Void



AMERICAN SPLENDOR (2003)
A   MOVIE JUKEBOX
d: Shari Springer Berman; Robert Pulcini
CAST: Paul Giamatti; Hope Davis; Judah Friedlander
> a self-admitted grump, Harvey Pekar from Cleveland wanted to leave his mark on the world, and he did...via comics...he couldn't draw, but he could write, and his subject was himself, his life and view on life; a man you would hate to live with, Harvey is played beautifully by Paul and Hope is his long-suffering (but more than a match for him) wife; this is an amalgamation of film-bio, animation, interviews with real people, old film footage and drawn graphics, stitched together into a coherent and endearing whole; just goes to show how extraordinary ordinary can be...even your life...c'mon...wouldn't you like your existence to have an appreciative audience?
Award-Worthy Performances
Paul Giamatti; Hope Davis



LUCKY (2017)
A   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: John Carroll Lynch
CAST: Harry Dean Stanton; David Lynch; Ron Livingston; James Darren; Ed Begley Jr.
> in the exalted company of 1999's The Straight Story and 2016's Paterson comes this little beauty; Lucky is a 90 year old guy (played to gentle perfection by Harry) who lives in a small desert town...he is surrounded by people he engages with regularly but he is an alone person...a WWII vet, a lifetime chainsmoker, a crossword fan, a cross naughty word fan, a drinker of bloody marys and an eater of not much...and he is aware that his number should have been up long ago...not yet, but soon...; heavy on the existentialism and the charm, this made me openly cry on the basis of two words (you'll know which two); an instant classic 
Award-Worthy Performance
Harry Dean Stanton



BIGGER THAN LIFE (1956)
A-   SECOND VIEWING
d: Nicholas Ray
CAST: James Mason; Barbara Rush; Walter Matthau; Christopher Olsen
> having had kidney stones, snapped three front teeth and torn both shoulders, I have a rough understanding of pain...I would've popped anything to get it to stop; James is a schoolteacher & family man who is suddenly felled by debilitating pain...the only drug that will help him is cortisone, with ghastly side effects; as he self-medicates, Dad becomes a bully, a fascist and a fire 'n' brimstone fatalist; greatest achievement of the film (apart from James' maelstrom of a performance) is the tension which sneaks up on you, all happening within a nice suburban home one weekend; while the ending is inevitably sunshiny, the build-up to it is a gripping trip
Award-Worthy Performance
James Mason



HATTER'S CASTLE (1942)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Lance Comfort
CAST: Robert Newton; Deborah Kerr; James Mason; Emlyn Williams
> superbly acted film version of what I am sure was one helluva page-turner of a novel by A.J. Cronin (of Dr Finlay's Casebook fame); tells the story of a truly reprehensible human being and millinery proprietor (played in fine form by Robert...no Long John Silver twinkling here) who demands that his decree be carried out by all...one by one, his daughter, wife, mistress, son remove themselves from him and his class-envy-fuelled tyranny; cancer & unwed pregnancy & drunkenness & suicide & even a trainwreck (the Tay Bridge disaster) are all added to the mix; special mention of Deborah who is at her sweetest; watch it with crumpets while it rains outside
Award-Worthy Performances
Robert Newton; Deborah Kerr



NIGHT AND THE CITY (1950)
B+   SECOND VIEWING
d: Jules Dassin
CAST: Richard Widmark; Gene Tierney; Googie Withers; Francis L. Sullivan; Herbert Lom
> well-regarded film noir tells the story of Harry (played in full Richard Widmark mode), an obvious loser with big, hustling, dreaming plans which never manage to work out...and it's always somebody else's fault; inevitably, his big chance unexpectedly turns up, but...; Googie is wonderful as a scratch-your-way-up woman and Francis does a spot-on Sydney Greenstreet impersonation as a, er, heavy; 3 flaws hold the film back: Gene is painfully miscast as a doormat nightclub singer + Franz Waxman's music keeps bludgeoning me + the attempt at redemption at the end just doesn't seem to fit; still pretty good company for M and The Third Man though
Award-Worthy Performance
Googie Withers



BEST FRIENDS (1982)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Norman Jewison
CAST: Burt Reynolds; Goldie Hawn; Jessica Tandy; Ron Silver; Barnard Hughes
> a decidedly lightweight romantic comedy that manages to beef itself up enough to ask something interesting about marriage: How do you make the honeymoon period last for the entire relationship?; Goldie hesitantly agrees to marry Burt...they go and visit each other's parents...and discover that long-term marriage makes people go a little strange...the passion fades while the years of compromise alter your self-perceived character...who have I become?; the visit to Goldie's parents is the highlight (Jessica is a hoot!) and nothing else after matches it...but that's really the only significant flaw in a mildly amusing little story; Burt & Goldie work surprisingly well together (Burt has finally discovered the right comic touch), there are some gentle jokes that work and the film largely avoids the cliched rom-com cutes



JUSTICE LEAGUE (2017)
B   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Zack Snyder
CAST: Ben Affleck; Henry Cavill; Gal Gadot; Ezra Miller; Jason Momoa; Ray Fisher; Amy Adams; Ciaran Hinds; Jeremy Irons; Diane Lane; J.K. Simmons
> the handful of reviews I read / heard prior to going to see this (on its opening day) were primarily negative..."same old same old"..."I am sick of superhero movies"..."the villain is crap" etc; well, I sorta liked it, but struggled trying to pinpoint exactly why...because...it is the same old same old (especially the fight scenes) & I am sick of superhero movies & the villain is crap BUT, I finally worked it out...I liked this movie more than most of the other DC produce because this has more smiling in it...not the jokes (although there are some) but more human, friendly SMILING; I enjoyed Henry as Supes for the first time and Gal just grows as WW; I could nitpick-list my fanboy reservations (Aquaman as a bikie? Cyborg over GL?), but...meh. Not bad.



THE KILLING OF A SACRED DEER (2017)
B   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Yorgos Lanthimos
CAST: Colin Farrell; Nicole Kidman; Barry Keoghan; Raffey Cassidy; Sunny Suljic
> very strange and very creepy and very Bleak Art; tough to give a plot synopsis without a major spoil but...Colin the heart surgeon (opening scene is a closeup of a thumping heart during an op...no eating recommended) takes a teenage boy under his wing, supposedly because the kid is interested in becoming a doctor, but that sure ain't the case; difficult to recall at what point it all tumbles into Bizarro World because it pretty much begins weird (people talk in chopped phrases + there's some peculiar sex stuff + everybody's smoking and asking about body hair) and then just gets weirder; imagine the choice Sophie had to make turned into a psychological thriller for 120 minutes and you'd be halfway there; the climactic human roulette scene was unintentionally funny...I think; quite confronting but worth a look



LADIES THEY TALK ABOUT (1933)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Howard Bretherton; William Keighley
CAST: Barbara Stanwyck; Preston Foster; Lyle Talbot; Dorothy Burgess
> the first Women In Prison movie and, while it kickstarted a raincoat exploitation genre (Caged Heat + The Big Doll House + Bad Girls Dormitory etc. etc.), it sure doesn't seem like it; Barb is a gun moll who gets jailed by a D.A. who loves her (he has scruples, y'see) and naturally enough she resents the goody-two-shoes guy...Barb plans a jailbreak with her former gang but the attempt goes awry; one of the very few films where Barbara Stanwyck is unconvincing...she can do tough 'n' brittle in her sleep, but there's no nuance in this...when she reveals her inevitable heart of gold, you demand to know where it suddenly sprang from; the women's prison is more like a Girl Guides' summer camp and the rest of the cast shrivel rather than develop their roles; scoots along at 69 minutes and intermittently holds your interest



THE MOUNTAIN (1956)
C   SECOND VIEWING
d: Edward Dmytryk
CAST: Spencer Tracy; Robert Wagner; Claire Trevor; William Demarest; E.G. Marshall
> one of the most ludicrously cast movies ever made; we are expected to believe that Spencer Tracy and Robert Wagner are brothers (Spence looks so grey and paunchy that he is more like Robert's grandpa...and skinny Robert looks like a bobbysoxer's pin-up); in an action-hero role that cries out for Clark Gable, old & good Spence lumbers himself up a mountain, dragging young & horrible Robert with him...object: rob a planewreck on top; other oddball castings include Claire as a Swiss maid (!) and William as a village priest (!!); a couple of compensations...the French Alps scenery is truly stunning and filmed in Vistavision with lush colour, and the climb up is tense and well-staged (y'know...closeups on fingers stretching for a handhold that isn't quite there); why it was ever filmed with these actors though is an eternal display of silliness



1984 (1956)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Michael Anderson
CAST: Edmond O'Brien; Jan Sterling; Michael Redgrave; Donald Pleasence
> I had to read Orwell's 1984, Huxley's Brave New World and Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 for Year 11 English and compare differences and similarities in the three dystopian worlds...put me off science-fiction novels for 20 years; this adaptation of Orwell's classic is a bit of a mess, most of which is probably unavoidable...the film is dreary, gloomy, slow-paced and a complete downer... but so is the original story, so how do you turn it into something celluloid-bright?; never understood how Edmond was ever put into leading roles like this...he was competent in support, but that's his limit; Jan seems to immediately realise that her agent needs to be fired, Michael is only asked to do a lot of glowering and Donald Pleasence is Donald Pleasence; graded leniently because the message remains valid (and because I love the term "Thought Police")



THE SHOES OF THE FISHERMAN (1968)
D   SECOND VIEWING
d: Michael Anderson
CAST: Anthony Quinn; Leo McKern; Oskar Werner; David Janssen; Laurence Olivier; John Gielgud; Vittorio De Sica; Frank Finlay
> bum-numbingly humdrum; I did Religious Studies in college and enjoyed the history but sludged through the theology...this film is just the sludge; tells the story of a Russian man-of-the-people who gets elected Pope; the film is awash with wet eyes, gentle speaking and men wearing funny hats; attempts to stir global politics into the mix, along with an anemic love triangle involving the most vapid of people; Holy Anthony struggles with his social conscience and the need to conform to Christian tradition...this culminates with the ultimate Vatican fantasy: The Catholic Church distributes its vast wealth & real estate investments to feed the starving masses and prevent a war...try believing that, all ye faithful
BONUS COMMENT - this contains my favourite alliterative movie-quote: "There will be a massacre in a matter of months and I have run out of mathematics." Now...what the bloody hell does that mean?



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