Thursday, 28 September 2017

Nothing New Added: Just Watched Movies

Movie-Viewing Experiences  22/9/17 - 28/9/17     
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



ZERO DARK THIRTY (2012)
A   SECOND VIEWING
d: Kathryn Bigelow
CAST: Jessica Chastain; Jason Clarke; Jennifer Ehle; Mark Strong; Kyle Chandler; Chris Evans
> a docudrama about the hunt for, and killing of, Bin Laden; this film achieves the unachievable...it remains suspenseful for 157 minutes (I had to pause it halfway, not only due to a bladder call, but also because I needed a breather); basically a police procedural on a huge scale, this never sags down into flag-waving, Rambo-theatrics or mere action-movie excitement...these people have difficult jobs to do with impossible choices to make (and doubtful morality: torture is used and is appropriately hideous & vile); the temptation to use handheld camera has been largely kept in check (and when it is used, it is steadier than usual), so you observe the goings-on in visual comfort rather than being jostled about (exception: the raid on Bin Laden's stronghold); a perfectly constructed movie about a neverending war


RAW DEAL (1948)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Anthony Mann
CAST: Dennis O'Keefe; Claire Trevor; Marsha Hunt; Raymond Burr; John Ireland
> ultra-gritty film noir that for once deserves the label of "Overlooked Gem"; Dennis is the escaped convict who is torn between two lovers: one who loves him for the man he is, and the other who loves him for the man he could've been; as all three try to get free of the law (and pay back an old partner), the dynamic between them alters constantly, with conscience and loyalty interfering with "the smart thing to do"; the commendable acting by all and the atmospheric cinematography (some of the best I've seen in noir...more than just moody shadows & venetian blinds) overpower the film's low-budget taint; Director Anthony shows why he became a big name in the 50's...and makes you wish he hadn't spent so much time diddling around with Westerns (which admittedly were pretty good...but not like this)



BLOOD ON THE MOON (1948)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Robert Wise
CAST: Robert Mitchum; Barbara Bel Geddes; Robert Preston; Walter Brennan; Phyllis Thaxter
> critics have made claims that this is a "psychological Western with noirish elements" but I musta missed all that...I just thought it was a pretty good cowboy movie; gunman is hired to help homesteaders keep a cattleman's cows off their farming land...but things aren't quite as they seem...; most interesting feature of the film is how four characters change allegiance during the story, but only one of them is spurred to do so by conscience (the others do it for greed, revenge & lust); some striking Ansel Adams style landscape shots in handsome B&W add class; highlights are the two fights: #1 is no-mercy fisticuffs in a bar + #2 is a forest shoot-out in full moonlight (hence the title, I guess)...both battles are brutal and shrouded in shadow to add tension; solid acting by all (esp. Bob Mitchum) and Walter keeps his teeth in



TUMBLEWEEDS (1999)
B+   SECOND VIEWING
d: Gavin O'Connor
CAST: Janet McTeer; Kimberly J. Brown; Jay O. Sanders; Gavin O'Connor
> enjoyable little story about mother & daughter who would like to settle down into a stable, regular family life, but Mum keeps meeting the wrong fella; nothing at all startling in this film (you can easily tell where it's heading and how it's going to end) but the impressive partnership chemistry between the two lead actresses raises it above humdrum predictability...while they look nothing alike, they do come across as parent & child; the supporting players do a uniformly good job, adding little character quirks for colour (and it's great to see Michael J. Pollard and Lois Smith again); Movie Quote for the Ages: "This is way better than a coffee enema!"
Award-Worthy Performances
Janet McTeer & Kimberly J. Brown



MR & MRS SMITH (1941)
B   SECOND VIEWING
d: Alfred Hitchcock
CAST: Carole Lombard; Robert Montgomery; Gene Raymond; Jack Carson
> Alfred the Great tries his hand at a screwball comedy and comes up with something light, pleasant and fairly forgettable; it's the old "married-couple-find-out-they're-not-really-married" plot line, jazzed up with a "now-I-don't-want-you-but-I-really-do" routine; Carole & Robert were the essence of old Hollywood starpower and are a delight together (they make it all look very sophisticated & plausible and add oomph to a borderline bland script)...with Robert displaying a knack for physical comedy (his attempt to give himself a blood nose is a riot!) which I don't recall him using before; I bet Hitch didn't approve of the all-too-jolly music, and his direction is competent (with a couple of camera flourishes) but hardly inspirational; not as funny as The Lady Vanishes or North By Northwest but it'll do



BACK STREET (1932)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: John M. Stahl
CAST: Irene Dunne; John Boles; George Meeker; Zasu Pitts; Jane Darwell
> surprisingly unsavoury (for its time) but still fairly effective melodrama about a nice girl who agrees to become a rich guy's secret mistress...because she really really loves him and he really really loves her; impossible to take this completely seriously from a 2017 perspective, but wearing 1932 goggles, I guess it is quite moving in a the-heart-wants-what-the-heart-wants kinda way (although I still found the woman irritatingly pathetic); beautifully acted by Irene... you can pick up aspects of her character which she later used in The Awful Truth and Penny Serenade; the deathbed / open phone scene gave me an unexpected lump in my throat
Award-Worthy Performance
Irene Dunne



DIE ANOTHER DAY (2002)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Lee Tamahori
CAST: Pierce Brosnan; Halle Berry; Toby Stephens; Rosamund Pike; Judi Dench; John Cleese
> James Bond #20 and Pierce's last (I always considered him to be a compromise between Sean and Roger...I liked him...machismo + humour); while the Bond girls are up to snuff (Halle doing an Ursula Undress ocean appearance is dreamy), the Bond song is nifty (Madonna techno), the Bond villain is acceptable (although North Koreans just aren't as much fun as Ruskies or Nazis) and the Bond fights are effective (loved the Douglas Fairbanks style duel!), something doesn't quite gel; the CGI FX are OTT and push Bond far too close to superhero than secret agent...a mistake that must have been recognised by all and was amended with Casino Royale & Daniel Craig; apparently, there are references to all previous 19 Bond films scattered throughout...a "Where's Wally" for sad lonely over-55 men (I found 8)



CLOUDBURST (1951)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Francis Searle
CAST: Robert Preston; Elizabeth Sellars; Colin Tapley
> efficiently told story which isn't overly exciting: ex WWII codebreaker seeks revenge on the criminal couple who ran down his wife; this is one of the few British films which probably would've been improved had it been made with American sensibilities (faster & more brazen & Action!)... instead, the movie plods along with everybody being emotionally self-controlled (the widower has the shortest & least demonstrative grieving period ever filmed), stretching the British Stiff Upper Lip far too far; Robert Preston was a member of the Burt Lancaster / Kirk Douglas Yell-to-the-Back-Row Club and he is somewhat uncomfortably straightjacketed in this performance; while I am normally not in favour of glee being expressed when committing murder, it would have helped here...sure beats doing it politely



I LOVE YOU, ALICE B. TOKLAS (1968)
     FIRST VIEWING
d: Hy Averback
CAST: Peter Sellers; Leigh Taylor-Young; Jo Van Fleet; Joyce Van Patten
> it is one of the more striking ironies of filmdom that the greatest romantic-comedies were made during the 1930's & 40's (the build-up to, and duration of, the bloodiest worldwide conflict in history) while during the Love & Peace era of the Sixties, they could only manage watery rom-coms like this; Peter is the 35 year old attorney who drops out and becomes a hippie, seeking beauty and enlightenment (mostly through sex); this film starts off promisingly (and there are a few laughs in it), but the ridiculing of the counterculture is sniffy & laboured; the hash brownies scene is a square's idea of being stoned (that much ingestion of dope in one frenzied sitting would have you wide-eyed & zombied rather than hysterically amused & sexually rampant); obviously made by people who only really liked The Beatles' early stuff



THE EMERALD FOREST (1985)
C   SECOND VIEWING
d: John Boorman
CAST: Powers Boothe; Charley Boorman; Meg Foster
> beautiful but boring; essentially a Bomba the Jungle Boy rejig: white kid gets taken by an Amazonian tribe and raised as their own...his birth father, in between raping the land and damming the river, never stops searching for his son; we are expected to believe that after 10 years, father & son just happen to stumble across each other in the Amazon rainforest; while an ecological message is always welcome, it is so thickly laid on here (I expected Sting to pop up), that the story becomes secondary and remains thin; all the usual mystic rituals, hunting, dancing and bathing turn up here, but nothing new is added...natives good / white man bad...which is historically accurate but hardly a plot twist; blowing up the billion dollar dam is paternal love taken to gimme-a-break extremes; nice jaguars, toucans and anteaters help pass the time



THE AMAZING COLOSSAL MAN (1957)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Bert I. Gordon
CAST: Glenn Langan; other people who there's no point in knowing
> an obvious companion piece to the same year's The Incredible Shrinking Man, this is unfortunately no match for that sci-fi gem; soldier gets blasted with plutonium rays and grows toweringly big; when the Shrinking Man shrank, he was instantly vulnerable and afraid...when this Colossal Man becomes huge, he is frightening rather than frightened, and that just isn't as involving; the SFX are pretty crummy (the giant looks quite milky wandering through the desert) and the movie lacks anything as riveting as TISM's scene in the basement with the psycho cat (although TACM's rampage through Las Vegas and stroll atop Boulder Dam had potential); while the film piddles around with jargonish explanations, the main flaw is the muffed climax...too sudden, derivative of King Kong and poorly staged; YES! At last! Small is better than big!



CONFESSIONS OF AN OPIUM EATER aka SOULS FOR SALE aka EVILS OF CHINATOWN (1962)
E   FIRST VIEWING
d: Albert Zugsmith
CAST: Vincent Price; Richard Loo; Philip Ahn
> wow...you don't often get a chance to see a movie as bad as this; Vincent is a sailor who wanders into Chinatown for a night of poppy dreams but gets involved in the sex slave trade instead...he tries vainly to be an action hero whilst delivering a Poe-ish monologue; halfway through, Vince stops rescuing a damsel and finally imbibes in a naughty pipe, which somehow makes him go slo-mo...geez...strong stuff; the stuntwork is laughable (the fights are obviously 1-2-thrust dances with no touching) and sawdust dummies are used when a bad guy needs to fall off something; the depictions of the Chinese characters are all of the dragons / gongs / chop-chop brand (exception: a dwarf); the music pummels you to feel thrilled (I just felt bruised) and it's difficult to work out exactly what the hell is going on; pass the pipe over here...




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Thursday, 21 September 2017

1985 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences  6/9/17 - 21/9/17     
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



THE ENGLISHMAN WHO WENT UP A HILL BUT CAME DOWN A MOUNTAIN (1995)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Christopher Monger
CAST: Hugh Grant; Colm Meaney; Tara Fitzgerald; Ian McNeice; Kenneth Griffith
> what a lovely movie; in the great tradition of The Titfield ThunderboltLocal Hero and Waking Ned Devine comes this piece of uniquely-British whimsy; set during WWI, a pair of English cartographers arrive in a little Welsh town to measure the topography...a mountain is classed as 1000 feet & the town's piece of high ground pride 'n' joy is only 980 feet...hence merely a hill...and the good people are having none of it; gentle and quietly eccentric comedy stiffens its mix with a nod of respect for shellshocked young men of the war and those who will never return home...and is all the better for it; gorgeous cinematography frames the stirring scenery and the story is supported by spot-on acting and an overall irresistible charm; makes you remember how endearing Hugh Grant was before he committed career-icide 



MICKI & MAUDE (1984)
B+   SECOND VIEWING
d: Blake Edwards
CAST: Dudley Moore; Amy Irving; Ann Reinking; Richard Mulligan
> a comedy built on bigamy...and it's actually reasonably funny; Dudley loves and marries Ann and then Amy...and they both become pregnant about the same time; you just know right from the outset that the big comedic climax will be simultaneous births; Dudley does a good job as a dwarfish Cary Grant (it's his best movie performance...he comes across as more than just an Arthur / "10" clown...slapstick plus charm) and he plays well with the two actresses; the film cries out for a stronger (quirkier) supporting cast and the resolution is too drawn out and a bit too soft 'n' cuddly, but for a 1980's attempt at a screwball comedy, it's not bad
Award-Worthy Performance
Dudley Moore



D.O.A. (1949)
B   SECOND VIEWING
d: Rudolph Mate
CAST: Edmond O'Brien; Pamela Britton; Luther Adler; Neville Brand; Beverly Campbell
> highly-regarded by those all-film-noirs-are-Art aficionados, I have always thought this movie was overrated...the first 15 minutes are quite tedious (slide-whistle wolf-whistles? really? and so many? was that ever funny?) + the dialogue is as corny as hell (especially when it deals with the yawnful lurv scenes) + the acting can be generously described as inconsistent (Neville as the obligatory psycho-hoodlum is painfully cartoonish); still, the film picks up a head of steam once the admittedly-brilliant gimmick is revealed: a man is poisoned with some slow-acting-but-still-fatal stuff and tries to track down his killer before he keels over...a walking dead man after payback = instant suspense; with a stronger cast and a more unforgiving whack at the script, this could have joined the ranks of Out of the Past...but it remains a wannabe



LOST IN AMERICA (1985)
B   SECOND VIEWING
d: Albert Brooks
CAST: Albert Brooks; Julie Hagerty; Garry Marshall
> I've always found the standard Albert Brooks persona (whiny loser) to be more annoying than amusing, but he has been compared to Woody Allen in comedic stature...and this film is often referred to as his most successful (artistically rather than financially); story is about a high-paid executive and his wife who quit their jobs, buy a motorhome and do an Easy Rider...drop out of the rat race and attempt to find themselves through freedom; Julie is endearingly quirky (easily the best thing about the movie) while Albert softly mopes around...even his outbursts of sarcastic hysteria are muffled; the Las Vegas gambling catastrophe is the duo's performance highlight (and sardonic Garry is a laugh riot!); film finishes with a great punchline and is mildly pleasant without ever coming close to entering the Wonderful World of Woody



THE LOCKET (1946)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: John Brahm
CAST: Laraine Day; Brian Aherne; Robert Mitchum; Gene Raymond; Katherine Emery
> pretty fair psych-drama that is interestingly constructed: flashback within flashback within flashback; the story is about a lying, thieving, violent woman who has a thing for jewellery (all because she was falsely accused of stealing a coveted locket when she was a child)...her obsession becomes illness and she leaves men's lives ruined in her wake; all the usual psychiatric-babble has been fortunately left out and we are given a near-Hitchcock quality drama which intrigues without ever actually being absorbing; fundamental flaw is that a lead female role involving psychosis & subterfuge & murder requires a far stronger actress than dear Laraine (Olivia de Havilland immediately comes to mind), thus the central premise is never entirely convincing; a commendable effort nonetheless



TIME BOMB aka TERROR ON A TRAIN (1953)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Ted Tetzlaff
CAST: Glenn Ford; Maurice Denham; Anne Vernon; Victor Maddern
> okay little thriller (about a bomb on a rail carriage) which would've been better if the train had been kept moving; British film which features a Yank big-name star for no apparent reason other than to pander to the U.S. market (Aussie films have been doing that for years); dreary personal-life-stuff of lead character does its usual job of dragging the suspense to a halt at various points (his wife, fretting and turning up at the worst possible time of course); the problem with bomb-defusing stories is that the audience feels vaguely cheated if there isn't an explosion at some point; film scoots along under 80 minutes and has the blessed bonus of Brit character actors to lift proceedings and add humour; nicely effective in a small way



BEG, BORROW OR STEAL (1937)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Wilhelm Thiele
CAST: Frank Morgan; Florence Rice; John Beal
> I could watch Frank Morgan do his dithering routine for hours, so perfect is his comedic timing and control of body language...it's a treat (for me anyway) to watch him in a rare leading role; Frank is a conman who plies his trade amongst the rich American visitors to France...his stateside daughter takes him up on his written offer to have her wedding at his (non-existent) chateau...so another con must be put into place; threadbare story is bolstered by wonderful character actors (E.E. Clive & Reginald Denny) but there aren't enough of them to counteract the rather bland young lovers and their boring flirtations; while Frank remains a delight, he is somewhat restrained by his duties as the protagonist around whom the plot spins; a couple of funny scenes (love the orchestra!) help in the film's rescue from dullness



MAN'S FAVOURITE SPORT? (1964)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Howard Hawks
CAST: Rock Hudson; Paula Prentiss; Maria Perschy; John McGiver; Roscoe Karns
> Howard's homage to his own 1938 screwball classic Bringing Up Baby (he even tried to get Cary & Kate for the leads!), I was reminded more of Jack Conway's 1936 screwball classic Libeled Lady (specifically the fly-fishing scene with William Powell)...but the comparisons don't matter...this film isn't up to either lofty standard; Rock is a fishing equipment salesman who has never fished & Paula is the airy dingbat who enters him in a fishing tournament... various slapsticky shenanigans occur before romance blossoms; Rock is a good sport to put up with the barrage of situational silliness (he is more victim than contributor) and Paula is more irritating aggressor than amusing flibbertigibbet; while the film is propped up by some funny scenes (bear on scooter & inflatable waders), at 2 hours it overstays its comedic welcome



IT (2017)
C   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Andy Muschietti
CAST: Jaeden Lieberher; Bill Skarsgard; Sophia Lillis; Jeremy Ray Taylor
> 135 minutes of someone jumping out from behind a door and yelling Boo!; I remember the original 1990 TV mini-series being quite engrossing right up until the big climactic reveal: a crappy giant spider as the embodiment of evil, feeding on children's fear; while this retelling at least ditches that inanity, it relies on a series of jump-scares to fingers-crossed-frighten you...no suspense and no sense of dread...just abrupt cuts to the clown (or one of his cohorts) leaping out accompanied by sudden loud music; so I gotta tell ya...I didn't jump once; while the ensemble cast of kids is good (and they show up how one-note the adult actors are...including the clown) and it looks terrific (love the wellhouse!), I don't understand how this has become such a huge box-office smash; People...our standards are slipping



THE STUFF (1985)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Larry Cohen
CAST: Michael Moriarty; Paul Sorvino; Patrick O'Neal; Alexander Scourby; Danny Aiello
> amateurish schlock cheapie that tries its hardest to be a horror/comedy with something to say; a Blob / Body Snatchers hybrid, this is about a new food product called The Stuff (looks like runny blancmange) which takes America by storm...and turns out to be a highly-addictive, person-devouring substance which evil businessmen still promote anyway; while the commentary on consumerism & advertising & junk food is welcome and correctly pointed, the message is blunted by some dreadful acting, low-level SFX (admittedly by financial necessity), ugly framing and choppy editing; how the director managed to rope in so many relatively big-name actors to appear in both major and minor roles is a mystery; needs to be redone by a craftsman with money and a good sense of gore...ahem...Peter Jackson?



TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT (1972)
C   SECOND VIEWING
d: George Cukor
CAST: Maggie Smith; Alec McCowen; Louis Gossett Jr; Robert Stephens
> story by Graham Greene, directed by George Cukor and starring Maggie Smith...so how did it go so wrong?; really just a gender-altered version of Zorba the Greek, this film trots out the "What good is sitting alone in your room...come hear the music play" approach to living...you are expected to agree (me, I enjoy solitude, a good book and a cup of tea); what deflates this life-affirming-goddammit tale is that rarest of things: a bad Maggie Smith performance (it's gotta be her worst on film)...playing a blowsy old harlot with undeniable charm who blames all of her questionable escapades on romance (would love to have seen Edith Evans or Wendy Hiller have a crack at the part)...Maggie is all too-jerky movements, doddery voice and half-open eyes: an OTT caricature leading the charge through a slack and inappropriately soft narrative



THE INVISIBLE BOY (1957)
D   FIRST VIEWING
d: Herman Hoffman
CAST: Richard Eyer; Robbie the Robot; Philip Abbott; Diane Brewster
> billed as a sequel of sorts to 1956's classic Forbidden Planet, but that's rubbish...it's more like a practice-shot at Will Robinson Meets the Robot; dumb sci-fi movie aimed at kids but is too childish to be particularly enjoyable; tries to tell the story of an annoying brat who just wants to have some fun...his brainiac father runs a military computer (thrice the size of my newly-refurbished bathroom) which reprograms the kid's pet robot into an obedient quisling, hellbent on conquering mankind and, for some reason, turning the kid transparent...but it all turns out nice; usual U.S. 1950's paranoia mixed in with grudging attempts at charm & zero attempts at humour sink the whole shebang...this isn't something you'll look back on with childhood fondness; jumped up a notch because it stars Robbie the Robot and he's forever cool




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