Friday 27 October 2017

2003 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences  12/10/17 - 27/10/17     
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 HUNTED (2003)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: William Friedkin
CAST: Tommy Lee Jones; Benicio del Toro; Connie Nielsen
> a superior manhunt movie; a US secret-super-soldier finally snaps and hides out in the wilds of Oregon where he butchers anyone who he thinks is out to get him...his survivalist-trainer is roped in by the FBI to bring him in; most critics bagged this film, branding it a Rambo rip-off, but that's just lazy; clearly anti-war (the opening sequence in Kosovo is one of the best "Hell is War" depictions in cinema) but entirely pro-action, this condensed (94 minutes yay!) rush is brutal without ever being ugly; the fight choreography is snappy with the camera held solid throughout so you can see what is going on; great location choices, natural & urban, and the two actors certainly earned their pay running around in them; not sure what Johnny Cash is doing here, but at least we weren't asked to feel sorry for anyone...just excited



HOLD BACK THE DAWN (1941)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Mitchell Leisen
CAST: Charles Boyer; Olivia de Havilland; Paulette Goddard; Walter Abel
> highly-regarded soapie about a gigolo/cad/swine fleeing WWII-Romania to the USA via Mexico...his only way to gain entry to the Promised Land is to marry a US citizen...so Charles turns on the charm and bags a naive schoolteacher...and ends up falling in love with her for real; engaging enough film with 3 flaws which knock it down a peg or two: #1=it is overlong for such melodramatic/romantic slosh + #2=Paulette as the conniving bitch is just plain awful (and a supposed Polish-Australian mongrel...HA!) + #3=the side-story which bookends it is pretty silly and definitely needless; the two lead actors lift it up again...both are wonderful
Award-Worthy Performances
Charles Boyer; Olivia de Havilland



THE LIFE OF EMILE ZOLA (1937)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: William Dieterle
CAST: Paul Muni; Joseph Schildkraut; Gale Sondergaard; Donald Crisp; Louis Calhern
> The Dreyfus Affair has always held a fascination for me (so blatant and arrogant was the cover-up by the French military); this film, although proclaiming to be about the writer Zola only really kicks in emotionally when dealing with the case of Dreyfus...the build-up (struggling passionate artist finally breaks through) and the aftermath (exiled artist returns home and dies by accident) are barely interesting; while this performance of Paul's is not as hammy as so many of his others, it still baffles me how he ever came to be highly regarded; still, this is a 2 hour movie which holds an 80 minute load of riveting film (as long as you don't mind major historical tampering...and the words "Jewish" or "anti-semitism" never being mentioned)



THE SNOW WALKER (2003)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Charles Martin Smith
CAST: Barry Pepper; Annabella Piugattuk; James Cromwell
> survival film set on a tundra in the Northwest Territories of Canada, 1953; ex-WWII pilot crash lands in the white wilderness with a young female Inuit suffering from tuberculosis...she takes care of him until he is able to take care of himself; absorbing story with engaging characters which teeters on the edge of samey-samey but keeps it brief and adds asides (nasty rivalry + relationship stuff + war flashbacks) for spice; the scenery is flat and bleak and monotonally-coloured so, while it looks majestic & vast, it adds little in the way of dash...but at least it helps to restrict the usual "Perils of Pauline" approach to these kind of stories
Award-Worthy Performances
Barry Pepper & Annabella Piugattuk



LONDON BELONGS TO ME (1948)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Sidney Gilliat
CAST: Richard Attenborough; Alastair Sim; Wylie Watson; Stephen Murray; Susan Shaw
> begins as another slice of pre-war London life of the common people, but surprisingly turns into a crime movie; doesn't seem to entirely have made its mind up as to which endpoint it wants to arrive at...passing through romance, kitchen-sink drama, light comedy, farce, murder & manhunt (the assault is actually quite brutal), family conflict and social commentary...with a touch of impending WWII jitters thrown in; pretty much works though, primarily due to the competent cast (Richard plays a softer version of his young spiv persona + Alastair does his bewildered faux-toff bit + the supporting players carry on as their trademark characters); pleasant British stuff of the good old kind...just try not to mind too much as it hops about



THOR: RAGNAROK (2017)
B   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Taika Waititi
CAST: Chris Hemsworth; Tom Hiddleston; Cate Blanchett; Tessa Thompson; Mark Ruffalo
> the second-funniest Marvel movie (Guardians of the Galaxy still holds the #1 spot); hugely entertaining I admit but, to this unabashed purist, Thor Vol. 3 is chockablock with too many comedy routines, too many character alterations (Thor does NOT say "shit" or "piss" or "arse" + Odin does not wear the clothes of a country squire + Loki is not just a naughty scamp + Valkyrie should be blonde and not a drunk) and too many storyline compressions (Planet Hulk has now been ruined...and probably World War Hulk too); Cate, while not as OTT as she was in Indiana Jones IV and Hanna, still proves that she cannot do essence-of-evil characters without being Charles-Laughton-hammy; having griped about all that, I still had a good time (the battle scenes are awesome and the SFX are...well...y'know...); but, yet again...once it's over... 



BLADE RUNNER 2049 (2017)
B     FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Denis Villeneuve
CAST: Ryan Gosling; Harrison Ford; Ana de Armas; Sylvia Hoeks; Robin Wright; Jared Leto
> not so much a sequel as another way to ask the same two questions: what determines human-ness? + is reality necessary?; ridiculously long (length allowing you to stamp "EPIC" on a film) with far too much brooding & talking and not enough moving & moving, this is an intellectual exercise which owes more to Stanley Kubrick (esp. 2001 / The Shining / even A.I.) than Ridley Scott (or even Philip K. Dick); designed around a colour palette of dirt, bleach and grey (which is more Arty than amazing), the film still manages to intermittently impress despite its over-reach and bleak view of our future; humour only appears once (appropriately when Harrison turns up) to give us a break from the dourness; undeniably great questions though, which, in critical hindsight, may be enough P.S. Are women ALWAYS going to be objectified?



THE MISSING (2003)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Ron Howard
CAST: Cate Blanchett; Tommy Lee Jones; Evan Rachel Wood; Jenna Boyd
> like whittling a stick, this Western starts off with something solid (young girl is kidnapped by rogue Indians...mum & grandpa & sister doggedly carry out a search and rescue) but becomes lesser and lesser as it goes on; a dreadfully long watch (nigh on 140 minutes), this movie dithers around with father-daughter stuff (y'know...he deserted the family & she can't forgive him), adding yeah-yeah natural mysticism (spirits + witchcraft + ghost bushes) and the usual gunplay, stretching out the quest to the limits of interest; redeeming features include beautiful cinematography of a rather brutal landscape, to-be-expected quality performances by all and an early scene of the immediate aftermath of an attack which is quite creepy and stays with you; most likely a victim of the "This Is Gonna Be An Epic, Godammit!" mentality



NOBODY WAVED GOODBYE (1964)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Don Owen
CAST: Peter Kastner; Julie Biggs; Claude Rae; Charmion King
> a landmark Canadian film, this B&W cinema-verite (ie docu-fiction with low budget, handheld camera and amateur actors) movie wants to make you melancholy about a young guy who makes bad choices, but I just felt mad at the arrogant little snot; released 3 years before the Summer of Love and the whole drop-out / turn-on movement, this story affected me the same way Sean Penn's 2007 Into the Wild did (y'know...the true tale about the young guy who dropped out of society to find himself and ended up dying in an old bus in the Alaskan wilderness)...I mean...whaddya expect, dummy?; saving grace is the ensemble of mostly one-shot actors...the improvised dialogue they come up with is impassioned and believable; bloody kid...you scrimp and fret and this is the thanks you get...he ends up stealing your car and playing a banjo...



JAGGED EDGE (1985)
B-   SECOND VIEWING
d: Richard Marquand
CAST: Glenn Close; Jeff Bridges; Robert Loggia; Peter Coyote
> within the first 15 minutes of this courtroom thriller you can see exactly what is going to happen in the next 90...so predictable is this thing that it is a wonder it can generate any tension whatsoever; a husband is accused of the brutal murder of his rich wife...he hires a female attorney and they have a lot of sex together while she gets him off (sorry...unavoidable); Glenn and Jeff are effective in their roles but Robert overdoes the grizzled & old-time investigator (enough with the potty-mouth already); they even use the done-to-death typewriter with the flawed key as the breakthrough clue; so, Director Richard must be congratulated on how well he still manages to maintain our interest (I did a crossword but kept looking up) while it plays out



INVADERS FROM MARS (1953)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: William Cameron Menzies
CAST: Jimmy Hunt; Leif Erickson; Helena Carter; Arthur Franz
> a quaint sci-fi movie of the paranoid U.S. everybody-is-out-to-get-us Cold War kind; kid sees a flying saucer land in a sandpit(!) one dark and stormy night...one by one, people he knows (Mom & Dad, The Girl Next Door) disappear and come back zombified; little quirk is that the spaceship buries itself underground and opens up holes to allow captives to drop down to them...which is admittedly pretty nifty; unfortunately for the movie (and us) we get to see what these Martians look like...and they look like us in dowdy costumes...apart from the alien-in-charge who is a gold head in a jar; luscious colour helps make it look nice, but it remains very silly; the sort of thing 10 year old boys used to watch while they waited for Marvel Comics to be invented



IT'S ALIVE (1974)
D   FIRST VIEWING
d: Larry Cohen
CAST: John P. Ryan; Sharon Farrell; Andrew Duggan
> the only impressive thing about this schlocky horror show is that somehow the great Bernard Herrmann got roped in to do the music (he really must have needed the dough, bad); more ugly than scary, the premise of this thing is that a nice, ordinary married couple from middle-suburbia give birth to a mutant baby with fangs and claws that promptly sets out slashing anybody who gets in its way (all it wants is milk and Mum); while we are never privy to a full-blown view of the little dickens, the glimpses we do get are enough to cause uncontrollable giggles (my fave: what is obviously a plastic doll is pushed out of a sewer pipe as the cops get closer...peekaboo); graded leniently because everyone tries so very hard to make it work, but to no avail...it's just dumb; watch Rosemary's Baby instead if you need your maternal instinct suppressed




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Wednesday 11 October 2017

General Pruning & Maintenance

Movie-Viewing Experiences  29/9/17 - 11/10/17    
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



ANOTHER EARTH (2011)
A   FIRST VIEWING
d: Mike Cahill
CAST: Brit Marling; William Mapother; Kumar Pallana
> very impressive low-budget indie film which combines the sci-fi concept of a parallel Earth with personal tragedy, guilt & redemption; a teenage girl makes a catastrophic mistake one night which ruins lives, as a mirror Earth suddenly appears in space...is there a link?; I love imaginative cleverness and this film hits that and then some; acting by all is superb, with a special mention of Brit who is totally convincing as the young woman trying to fix what she has done; little Arty touches fit here (strange music + fiddling with focus + dashes of handheld) and you're never entirely sure where it is going; a great movie experience, during and afterwards 
Award-Worthy Performance
Brit Marling



THE PURPLE PLAIN (1954)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Robert Parrish
CAST: Gregory Peck; Maurice Denham; Bernard Lee; Brenda de Banzie
> a WWII film where the war is mere backdrop to another story entirely; fighter pilot stationed in Burma is understandably grieving over the bombing-death of his wife back in England...he exhibits self-destructive tendencies and is nearly discharged...he meets a Burmese woman, falls in love, promises to return, but ends up in a plane crash & stranded in the desert; a resolutely little story, the topic of mental illness caused by duress is its main focus (shellshock & depression & suicide are all examined) and adds interest via its rarity in a war movie; Gregory's role pushes him right to his acting limits (that's not far, I grant you) and he comes off fine, with the three British actors providing strong character support; the trek through the desert (did you know Myanmar had a desert?) seems to me to be harrowing-lite but is still effective



AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON (2015)
B+   RE-EVALUATION   Original Grade: B
d: Joss Whedon
CAST: Robert Downey Jr; Chris Evans; Chris Hemsworth; Scarlett Johansson; Mark Ruffalo; Jeremy Renner; Paul Bettany; Elizabeth Olsen; Aaron Taylor-Johnson
> my original criticisms remain: it is too much of a slugfest (seen one robot get ripped to pieces, you've seen them all) & the six lots of prophetic visions seem to be excessive, draggy and too much of an ad for the upcoming movies in the franchise & the 141 minute runtime doesn't scoot by like it did in the first Avengers flick; however, the emotional stuff (Hawkeye's family + the Nat/Bruce romance + the Maximoff tragedy) hit me a little harder this time round and the action scenes are perfectly staged WITH A STEADY CAMERA!!; while none of the jokes in this is up to the Hulk-Punch-Thor or Hulk-Flail-Loki standard, they come thick and fast and gave me a couple of snickers; and James Spader clearly has a voice of pure evil



BATTLE OF THE SEXES (2017)
B+   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Jonathan Dayton; Valerie Faris
CAST: Emma Stone; Steve Carell; Bill Pullman; Andrea Riseborough; Alan Cumming
> the timing of this film is perfect (well...here in Australia anyway): we are postal-voting on a human right + a recent report that women, on average, are still earning less than men for the same job + the death of Hugh "I Objectify Women" Hefner...throw in bitches-do-as-i-say music videos and men outnumbering women in government 10-to-1, and any suggestion of sexual equality is a joke; this film underlines that via what really was a small, ridiculous media stunt between a couple of U.S. tennis players in 1973; however, apart from a stretched running time (coulda lost half an hour, easy), this is a light, enjoyable watch with a sterling lead performance 
Award-Worthy Performance
Emma Stone



FUNNY FACE (1957)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Stanley Donen
CAST: Audrey Hepburn; Fred Astaire; Kay Thompson
> a musical which was a box office flop when first released but became a hit second time round in 1964...I don't understand either reaction...it is clearly an above-average production which should have pleased fans of this stuff...but it is also nothing particularly startling or fresh; wonderful colour palette is used throughout so the film pops, and Audrey (forever charming) + Fred (forever young...up until The Towering Inferno) work well together and convince as lovers, despite the 30 year age gap; out of the 9 songs, I count only 2 classics (and not the title song, which is naff) & out of the 8 dance routines, I count only 1 classic (Fred, accompanied by umbrella and overcoat); still, it is an undeniably pleasant way to spend 103 minutes



REAL LIFE (1979)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Albert Brooks
CAST: Albert Brooks; Charles Grodin; Frances Lee McCain; J.A. Preston
> I have always despised so-called Reality TV (it has made me dislike people even more than a bitter old hermit should) and welcome any attempts at destroying it; this mockumentary is about a filmmaker who wants to spend a year recording a normal family doing normal things...without any interference...but, of course, real life can be pretty boring, so interference is inevitable; best thing about this reasonably funny comedy is that Albert Brooks isn't doing his Master of Mope persona (which I've never really liked)...he does a shallow, increasingly manic narcissist instead... far more entertaining (for one movie); while the story runs out of steam, and the amusing situations are quite hit-and-miss (the ending doesn't work at all), there are small features (the camera-helmets; the horse surgery) which tickle the pleasure centre



GOOD SAM (1948)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Leo McCarey
CAST: Gary Cooper; Ann Sheridan; Ray Collins; Louise Beavers
> echoes of It's a Wonderful Life (even George Bailey's brother turns up in a similar role!); Gary is an excessively-good samaritan, giving his money away to those who hand him a sob-story, at the expense of his own family's needs; while Coop does his patented vaguely-numb underplaying, Ann shines in a role that demands wisecracking, sexiness, tears, anger and hysterical laughter...proving yet again that she was the most underrated actress of the Golden Era; the story outstays its welcome and overdoes the schmaltz, but it has an undeniable if-only-that-were-so charm; bizarrely treats suicide-by-overdose quite flippantly
Award-Worthy Performance
Ann Sheridan



STOP ME BEFORE I KILL! aka THE FULL TREATMENT aka THE TREATMENT (1960)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Val Guest
CAST: Ronald Lewis; Diane Cilento; Claude Dauphin
> tries really really hard to be a Hitchcockian psych-thriller but focusses too much on the pysch rather than the thrills; begins with the immediate aftermath of a car crash...innocent truckie is killed and a very recently-married couple retreats to France to recover...but the husband (who was driving) is now a bit of an angry headcase who fantasies about killing his beloved...thank Freud then for the psychiatrist who just happens to live nearby...; while it cries out for James Stewart + Grace Kelly + James Mason to take over the leads, the actual cast is up to the task; the telling is somewhat sluggish without even a whiff of humour to give us a break from all the melodramatics; the twist ending(s) is borderline silly but at least it's surprising (my guess was completely wrong); it works, but Alfred the Great would've made it a whole lot snappier



FINAL PORTRAIT (2017)
B-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Stanley Tucci
CAST: Geoffrey Rush; Armie Hammer; Tony Shalhoub; Clemence Poesy; Sylvie Testud
> not much more than a filmed version of a Reader's Digest "My Most Unforgettable Character" article; writer James Lord has his portrait painted by great Swiss artist Alberto Giacometti... instead of taking one afternoon, it takes a month...that is the foundational joke/premise, and pretty thin it is, too; Geoffrey gives another larger-than-life portrayal that to me seems to flirt with OTT (like his portrayals of David Helfgott and the Marquis de Sade), painting (hee hee) the artist as the standard difficult, irascible, boozing, whoring genius; handheld camera is used throughout for no apparent reason other than ease of shooting (I felt woozy a couple of times) and is an aggravation; a lightweight, pleasant-enough but rather superficial look at the so-called artistic temperament



THE RUNAWAY BUS (1954)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Val Guest
CAST: Frankie Howerd; Margaret Rutherford; Petula Clark; George Coulouris
> minor British mystery-comedy set in fog-bound England...all the flights are grounded, so a bus tries to take passengers to alternate airport...but thieves have stashed gold bullion aboard...and one passenger is the criminal mastermind; I've always considered Frankie Howerd to be one of the lesser Brit comedians (his endless bitchy exasperation and rambling monologues were always more annoying than funny)...your enjoyment of this film will depend upon him; inevitably, wonderful Margaret overwhelms everybody else, this time playing a billowing old fussbudget who believes in the power of positive thinking; the plot is unnecessarily convoluted (he's the baddie...or is it him...or her...or them?) and nearly grows tiresome but the brief running time saves it



DEAD HEAT ON A MERRY-GO-ROUND (1966)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Bernard Girard
CAST: James Coburn; Camilla Sparv; Aldo Ray; Robert Webber
> a dull heist movie (I didn't think that was even possible); for a heist movie to really work, the build-up to the robbery (first two-thirds) must intrigue...why did they buy that? what does he do? why have they chosen that exact time and place?; then the heist itself should be pacy with the unexpected mixed in with the explained (oh...I know what they're gonna do...); top it off with a coda of some sort...Fate playing an ironic hand or one tiny human error fouling it all up (crime shouldn't pay, after all); in this film, the build-up is boring, full of detail and information that in no way plays a part in the big event...the big event is fairly pedestrian and lacking in action or tension...and the coda (in this case, a punchline) is just dumb; the one minor asset is James...as cocky and smooth as ever; watch The Asphalt Jungle or The Italian Job instead



THE LAST DAYS OF POMPEII (1935)
D   FIRST VIEWING
d: Ernest B. Schoedsack; Merian C. Cooper
CAST: Preston Foster; Basil Rathbone; Alan Hale; John Wood; Louis Calhern
> brought to you by the same guys who made King Kong (I suggest you watch that again instead), this crappy Ancient History drama takes ages to get to Vesuvius blowing its top (1:24:00 in a 1:36:00 runtime!); Preston isn't up to snuff as either an action hero or tragic figure (pity Errol Flynn wasn't available); some bloke named Jesus pops by to save a sick kid and drives his fanclub wild...unavoidably recalling Life of Brian; other giggles include Basil Rathbone as a tightly-curled Pontius Pilate who acts like he needs to eat more fruit and Alan Hale in a toga, reluctantly displaying his flamingo legs; the crushing and burning and collapsing are well done (in a 1935 kinda way) but after all we have had to endure, the sequence is a too-brief and unsatisfying catastrophic volcanic eruption...with no lava!
FYI: the John Wood in this movie (he plays the grown son) was an Australian actor (born in Forbes NSW) working in early Hollywood before the outbreak of the war...he returned home and joined the Australian Army but was captured by the Japanese in Malaya and became a POW in Changi...you can pay your respects HERE and HERE




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GO RIGHT AHEAD:  masted59@gmail.com