Sunday 30 July 2017

Keeping Track Added: ABC

Movie-Viewing Experiences  15/7/17 - 30/7/17    
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



DUNKIRK (2017)
A   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Christopher Nolan
CAST: Fionn Whitehead; Mark Rylance; Tom Hardy; Kenneth Branagh; Cillian Murphy
> exceptional film-making; interesting decisions made in structure (3 main threads to the story & no mention or sight of Nazis/Germans so the real enemy is War itself & few depictions of mutual combat, emphasising sudden bursts of attack); tension starts right from the opening scene and never lets up for 2 hours, stoked by the constant industrial-lite soundtrack which thumps like a pulse; stranded soldiers are shown to be ordinary young blokes scared shitless but trying to man-up as best they can; examples of strength and decency and heroism are spread throughout, with absolutely zero schmaltz to soften the brutality of the situation; a war film which is more about the human beings involved rather than the explosions...quite special



BABY DRIVER (2017)
A-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Edgar Wright
CAST: Ansel Elgort; Kevin Spacey; Jon Hamm; Jamie Foxx; Lily James
> oozing Cool from every pore, this fast-paced (with a couple of obligatory lags to establish character motivation and relationships) car-chase 'n' heist movie is a cut above the usual seen-it-all-a-hundred-times action flick; why?...well, first off, the soundtrack is relentless (music is turned up and down but rarely off) and is a real mishmash of styles but the preferred criteria are uptempo and familiar & the structure veers close to motion comicbook rather than take-it-too-seriously drama (this is not Heat) & the action scenes are numerous and filmed with inquisitive viewers in mind...you can clearly see what is going on; all actors play their roles as if they are in on the fun and the whole thing clocks in under 2 hours; it's an undeniable rush



FAR FROM HEAVEN (2002)
A-   RE-EVALUATION  Original Grade: B+
d: Todd Haynes
CAST: Julianne Moore; Dennis Quaid; Dennis Haysbert; Patricia Clarkson; Viola Davis
> last saw this 15 years ago and thought it significantly overrated...I am more appreciative now, but my original criticism remains: while the primary aim is to recreate the Father Knows Best / Magnificent Obsession version of the 1950's, that means that the actors are required to play stereotypes (with twists) rather than full characters...they come across as marionettes controlled by artistic intention rather than being allowed to develop real people in sad & human circumstances; the colour palette used is gorgeous and easily the star of the show; the oppressed love story between lonely white housewife and widowed black gardener is beautifully presented and avoids mere sob-story superficiality; the suggestion that racism will even outlive homophobia is the film's essential sadness



LADY MACBETH (2016)
A-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: William Oldroyd
CAST: Florence Pugh; Cosmo Jarvis; Naomi Ackie; Paul Hilton; Christopher Fairbank
> geez...don't mess with the lady of the house; a cautionary tale for all husbands about the dire consequences if the missus doesn't get proper lovin'; 1865 rural England and poor girl Katherine is forced to marry rich man Alexander...but he isn't up to snuff when it comes to rockin' the casbah...so she takes a lover...and she will not be denied...; empty soundtrack suits the cold surroundings and story; although there is humour in this at times, it is of the blackest ilk imaginable (I almost felt I needed to apologise to my fellow cinema patrons for my every chortle)...but by the time of the third murder, all smirking is done with; the sheer ruthless audacity of the villainess is what makes this an engrossing but bleak tale; steel yourself



GRAND CENTRAL MURDER (1942)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: S. Sylvan Simon
CAST: Van Heflin; Sam Levene; Tom Conway; Stephen McNally; Connie Gilchrist
> traditional-style murder-mystery which manages a jump-up in quality; Broadway dance-show star / cold-hearted gold digger is found murdered in her private railcar in NY Grand Central Station...all the likely suspects are gathered together to talk and talk and talk it all out until the culprit finally cracks; the cast performs with gusto (as usual, each person-of-interest takes a turn to relate their version of events and reveal their possible motive...and basic character traits), combining with a lightly humorous script to deliver a mildly-entertaining whodunnit; occasional plot diversions (drop-down death & punch-up & gun-grab) rescue the step-by-step structure from repetition; not Hercule Poirot or Inspector Morse by any means, but it'll still rope you in



THE PIANIST (2002)
B+   SECOND VIEWING
d: Roman Polanski
CAST: Adrien Brody; Thomas Kretschmann; Frank Finlay; Emilia Fox
> I have a problem with films about the Holocaust...its enormity overwhelms the medium (like a song about a black hole), particularly if the focus is on a horror like the deathcamps or the Warsaw Ghetto...the films with impact tell stories from its edges (1948's The Search & 1960's Conspiracy of Hearts & 1989's Enemies: a Love Story); only the B&W doco footage and the recorded testimonials from survivors have come close to communicating the sheer scale of the abomination; this film focusses on the trevails of one survivor with shocking scenes of devastation and slaughter, but its emotional impact comes at a cost...from narrow escape to narrow escape over a period of nearly six years, it becomes a little bit like The Perils of Pauline...harrowing of course, but for 150 minutes, more "now-what" than affecting



WHIPSAW (1935)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Sam Wood
CAST: Myrna Loy; Spencer Tracy
> a great example of what old Hollywood used to call "Star Power" and how it was often able to lift an otherwise mediocre property into the realms of classy entertainment; starts off as an apparent lightweight jewel-thief comedy, in the vein of Raffles and Trouble in Paradise (and likely would have continued as that if the original choice of male lead - William Powell - had been available) but metamorphoses into an unlikely romance between cop & robber... and Myrna & Spence somehow make it work... they are a charismatic delight together; the story itself is pretty hokey (y'know, bad girl turns good) but it remains a pleasure throughout 
Award-Worthy Performances
Myrna Loy & Spencer Tracy



THE WHALES OF AUGUST (1987)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Lindsay Anderson
CAST: Bette Davis; Lillian Gish; Vincent Price; Ann Sothern; Harry Carey Jr.
> the obvious comparison is to On Golden Pond, with which this film shares shots of sunlight twinkling on tranquil water & a central relationship between a cantankerous old curmudgeon and a sympathetic good-hearted soul; Bette plays the grump of course (and looks like the Ghost of Alice Cooper) and her nice sister is Lillian (who talks to faded photographs and likes the colour blue); it's no small thrill for movie buffs to see these two greats together, but the story is as slow and soft as their footsteps and a little frustrating at times; a warming sentiment of a movie, its target audience must be those people who want to believe that old age is sweet and sad... where's the incontinence?  



THE STRIP (1951)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Laszlo Kardos
CAST: Mickey Rooney; Sally Forrest; William Demarest; James Craig
> typical 50's gangster love story... Mickey is a drummer who plays in a nightclub... falls for the cigarette girl... who has her eye on a crime boss 'cos he can further her movie career... murder is the inevitable result; colour-by-numbers tale is enlivened by (wait for it) Louis Armstrong! Earl 'Fatha' Hines! Jack Teagarden! Barney Bigard! playing in the club's jazz band (with Mickey on too-much-cymbal drums); highlight is the playing of "A Kiss to Build a Dream On", one of Satchmo's greatest hits; hell, even the appearance of Vic Damone singing "Don't Blame Me" is a pleasure; while William is always a plus on screen and Mickey gives the dramatic lead role a good going-over (my, he is a runt though, isn't he?), the story is relatively uninspired and not worthy of the exalted company which has been gathered to deliver it



10 CLOVERFIELD LANE (2016)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Dan Trachtenberg
CAST: Mary Elizabeth Winstead; John Goodman; John Gallagher Jr.
John kidnaps Mary and keeps her in his bunker, explaining that it's for her own good... the world outside is under attack by unknown forces; awkward and ultimately unsatisfying mix of abduction 'n' confinement thriller with alien-invasion-apocalypse horror... imagine The Collector ending with War of the Worlds; this member-of-the-Cloverfield-franchise is really two separate films, both of which have many predecessors and most of these are better than what is shown here...it really should have been one or the other, fellas; this is the sort of thing which M. Night Shyamalan presumably conjured up (and hopefully discarded) during his frantic attempts to reassemble his career; the performances are merely competent (and rather one-note) and the compulsory jump scenes are fairly predictable; nothing flash at all really



MISS TATLOCK'S MILLIONS (1948)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Richard Haydn
CAST: John Lund; Wanda Hendrix; Barry Fitzgerald; Monty Woolley; Robert Stack
> a screwball comedy with no screwball comedians; John the Movie Stunt Man gets roped in to impersonate a family idiot who is in line to inherit a fortune...but the rest of the family connive to get their hands on it instead; John plays a role which absolutely screams out for Red Skelton or Danny Kaye (y'know...blithering halfwit with no understanding of subtlety...no, I can't stand either actor) and consequently demonstrates a total lack of comic timing or even hammy mugging...he is a disaster; Monty is completely wasted in a pop-in / drop a one-liner / bugger-off role; Barry tries to do his supposedly-charming Irish drunk routine but comes across as bored instead; saving grace is the occasional snippet of bitey dialogue...but it's not enough



THE LOST CONTINENT (1968)
D   FIRST & LAST VIEWING
d: Michael Carreras
CAST: Eric Portman; Hildegard Knef; Suzanna Leigh; James Cossins
> really dumb monster movie... H.R. Pufnstuf is far more frightening; freighter with explosive cargo and passengers-with-problems drifts into a weird mist after a mutiny & a hurricane, and comes across...The Spanish Inquisition!!! (oh, and some monsters too... a kraken thing, carnivorous seaweed and my personal fave, a giant hermit crab); takes too long to get to this psychedelic freak show...the characters feel the need to share their hang-ups with us... greed & alcoholism & nymphomania... that kinda thing; the pea soup fog cannot camouflage the silliness of the monsters and the vain attempts by Hildegard & Eric to actually act cannot dilute the sheer bizarreness of what is going on around them; probably best viewed when stoned



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Friday 14 July 2017

1946 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences  20/6/17 - 14/7/17    
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



JUNO (2007)
A   MOVIE JUKEBOX
d: Jason Reitman
CAST: Ellen Page; Michael Cera; Jennifer Garner; Jason Bateman; J.K. Simmons; Allison Janney
> total charmer that, for once, deals with teenage sexuality and first steps into the adult world without resorting to crassness; 16 year old Ellen becomes pregnant by 16 year old boyfriend Michael and she decides to have and adopt out the baby...Jennifer and Jason are the chosen WASPy recipients; title character's dialogue is almost like stand-up, peppered with slangisms and quirky phrasings which are impressively fast 'n' funny; the subsequent events & behaviours are not entirely of this world but have grown from it, like a classic screwball comedy; feelgood and be prepared to smile and like people again...even teenagers
Award-Worthy Performances
Ellen Page; J.K. Simmons



HER (2013)
A   MOVIE JUKEBOX
d: Spike Jonze
CAST: Joaquin Phoenix; Scarlett Johansson; Amy Adams; Rooney Mara; Chris Pratt
> described by Wikipedia as a "romantic science-fiction drama", I think the phrase "gentle comedy" should have been added to the list; set in the not-too-distant future (10 years, tops), the film tells the story of a lonely man who has "woman problems" and subsequently buys the latest female-voiced operating system for his computer which boasts of having "intuitive and empathetic" capabilities...a love affair between man and artificial intelligence begins; told straightfaced, this is a story for our times (you will recognise these people and their worries) and is a wholly convincing and ultimately moving holding-up-a-mirror tale
Award-Worthy Performances
Joaquin Phoenix & Scarlett Johansson



IT COMES AT NIGHT (2017)
A-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Trey Edward Shults
CAST: Joel Edgerton; Christopher Abbott; Carmen Ejogo; Kelvin Harrison Jr; Riley Keough
> a killer plague is upon the land and Mum, Dad & teenage son hole up in a backwoods hut, prepared to do anything to stay alive; a survivalist's "I-told-you-so" utopia, this tale jumps straight into the nightmare scenario (no time wasted on explanations or backstories) of putting your family above everybody else's...and the toll on your humanity that demands; apart from a couple of questionable scenes (a 17 year old's weird sex fantasy... really?) there is no let-up in this, so every second of the 91 minute running time is spent on making you feel very, very nervous; mostly shot in medium and tight close-up (which trebles the paranoia and claustrophobic atmosphere), this is my kinda horror movie: scary, plausible and very human



GREYFRIARS BOBBY (1961)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Don Chaffey
CAST: Laurence Naismith; Donald Crisp; Kay Walsh; Gordon Jackson; Alex Mackenzie
> I give up...everybody who knows me knows that I am a coldblooded bastard with a heart of stone but this Disney doggie movie warmed my cockles; a true-ish story about a terrier whose longtime master suddenly dies...the dog just won't leave the grave at night...I mean, gimme a break, willya?; and how did they turn that lovely but tiny sentiment into a 90 minute movie?; set in 19th Century wee-village Scotland, the film adds an ownership tug-of-war between two gruff old Scotsmen (with obligatory hearts of gold...surprise, surprise), a group of ragamuffins and a canny, bemused judge; one of the few 60's Disney flicks which goes for emotion rather than schmaltz or slapstick...hell, even the cute kids are bearable; go on, tenderise your heart 



A QUIET PASSION (2016)
A-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Terence Davies
CAST: Cynthia Nixon; Jennifer Ehle; Duncan Duff; Keith Carradine; Catherine Bailey
> absorbing study of the life of an "alone" person...in this case, poet Emily Dickinson; I have had ongoing difficulties with Terence's movies (usually, the most gorgeous-looking bleak films ever made), but while this one skirts with depression (taphophobics should avoid it), the fascinating characters and their views on life help compensate; Biggest Asset: the language/dialogue is appropriately lush and a joy to listen to, brimming with true wit and sharpness, the richest I've heard in a movie for a long time; wonderful performances all round with Cynthia (a revelation!) and Catherine (a real hoot!) being the stand-outs 
Award-Worthy Performances
Cynthia Nixon; Catherine Bailey



BEDLAM (1946)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Mark Robson
CAST: Boris Karloff; Anna Lee; Billy House; Richard Fraser
> talk about perfect casting...let's put Boris Karloff in charge of the Bedlam Mental Asylum circa 1761...and let's make him one cruel bastard; enjoyable and classy horror-lite film from producer Val Lewton (I Walked With a Zombie + Cat People + The Body Snatcher etc.); Boris has hatred in his heart for Anna and won't rest until she is locked up with the rest of his "loonies"; the lunatics eventually take over the asylum and Boris gets a lovely dose of "just desserts"; nobody can play a sinister abomination quite like Boris Karloff...he talks in oil
Award-Worthy Performance
Boris Karloff



THE VISIT (2015)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: M. Night Shyamalan
CAST: Olivia DeJonge; Ed Oxenbould; Deanna Dunagan; Peter McRobbie; Kathryn Hahn
> yay! another M Night film that's pretty good!; an engrossing scary comedy about a pair of siblings who go to stay for a week with their never-before-seen grandparents; the two kids are terrific with a special nod to 14 year old Aussie Ed who is a naturally-amusing performer; the two oldies go through the usual horror motions (and with grandpa, that has another meaning) with a few routine fright-jumps which still work; the obligatory twist is simple but effective, and a few mysteries are left unsolved to ponder over afterwards; not a great thriller, but certainly entertaining and admirably clever
Award-Worthy Performance
Ed Oxenbould



THE VERDICT (1946)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Don Siegel
CAST: Sydney Greenstreet; Peter Lorre; Rosalind Ivan; George Coulouris
> ah...Sydney & Peter...two of my all time fave Golden Age character actors...put them in a foggy-olde-streets-of-London murder-mystery (circa 1890)...really, what more could you want?; Sydney is a disgraced police inspector and Peter is his loyal friend...a mutual acquaintance is killed in what seems to be the perfect locked-room murder...can they solve it before an innocent man is hanged?; the plot twists all over the place, especially in the last 15 minutes, but the final twist-to-end-all-twists is a ripper (although, when you look back, it's actually fairly obvious); add Rosalind doing her hysterical-harridan routine, an arrogant bumbler of a detective and a victim who deserves to be done in and you've got minor but enjoyable noir-lite



SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING (2017)
B+   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Jon Watts
CAST: Tom Holland; Michael Keaton; Robert Downey Jr; Marisa Tomei; Jon Favreau
here we go again...another reboot of Spidey...and it's not bad (better than the last reboot anyway); great that they have made him a teenager again and Tom is an ideal choice for the modern-day all-teched-up webslinger (he is clearly a nice kid with brains); lotsa jokes & lotsa action & a smattering of effective character development; Michael as The Vulture (a lesser member of Spidey's Rogue Gallery) doesn't overdo the menace and keeps the Keatonisms blessedly low key; Two Usual Gripes: #1 = 20 minutes too long & #2 = the camera is held too close-up and moved too rapidly during many of the action scenes so you can't always tell what is going on!!!; I had a good fun time but once it was over...hohum...another entry in the MCU



THE DARK CORNER (1946)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Henry Hathaway
CAST: Lucille Ball; Mark Stevens; Clifton Webb; William Bendix; Cathy Downs
> a private eye / murder thriller which nearly tips over into self-parody due to its self-consciously noirish dialogue (y'know..."I'm clean as a peeled egg" and "one thing led to another and he led with his right"...like that), so it comes off as a poor man's Raymond Chandler; while Lucy doesn't belong here (at least she isn't called upon to be vampish), Mark Stevens gives a sharply physical performance (he's terrific in the fight scenes!), proving he was one of Hollywood's underrated actors and certainly better at this kinda thing than the mysteriously overrated Alan Ladd; the plot twist happens halfway through and changes everything for the better; effective but not entirely compelling



A NIGHT IN CASABLANCA (1946)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Archie Mayo
CAST: Groucho, Chico & Harpo Marx; Sig Ruman; Charles Drake
> penultimate Marx Brothers film which has its moments but still comes across as rather anaemic compared to their 1930's classics; biggest flaw is that Groucho's heart just doesn't seem to be in it...most of his wisecracks are tired...he is virtually a supporting player, leaving the comedy up to Harpo, who is more than happy about it (it's his best movie performance); some bizarre & brutal editing cuts (sometimes mid-sentence or action!) nobble the flow; yes, Chico tickles a piano & Harpo gets serious with a harp [optional toilet breaks, both]; there are some laughs to be had here, but clearly the great days of Marxist comic insanity were gone
Award-Worthy Performance
Harpo Marx



DUEL IN THE SUN (1946)
C   SECOND VIEWING
d: King Vidor
CAST: Jennifer Jones; Gregory Peck; Joseph Cotten; Lionel Barrymore; Lillian Gish; Walter Huston; Charles Bickford; Herbert Marshall; Harry Carey; Otto Kruger
> a bloated, oh-brother Western where the only star on the range is the mixed-lolly Technicolor; every actor overdoes their performance, as if they're in an exaggeration contest with Dimitri Tiomkin's inflated music; Jennifer plays the Boys Erector Set and drives two brothers (one good, one bad, of course) savage with desire...no, Gregory Peck is the bad one...HA!; film fanatics Martin Scorcese and David Stratton both cite this as an early childhood favourite...and there is a childlike simplicity to the character motivation, like an Enid Blyton novel with bonus sex bits to interest Mum & Dad; retitled Lust in the Dust by wags, I'd add A Dope With a Rope in a Soap and The Good, The Bad & the Horny to the list of sobriquets




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