Tuesday, January 10, 2012

White Hunter Black Heart (1990)


Slow pick-up, but if you appreciate Clint’s “Art” films (like this, or Bird, or Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil—both of which I like a lot) you’ll dig it—especially if you’re familiar with John Huston’s antics or Peter Viertel’s book on the making of The African Queen. (The film is a roman a clef about the making of the film; basically Huston was willing to do it so he could go to Africa and shoot elephants.)

For those who aren’t ardent admirers of El Squinterino, there may be some disappointment that White Hunter Black Heart isn’t as emotional devastating as it needs to be. Personally, I consider the film a fascinating failure—always better than a dull success—and honestly, I’m not exactly sure what happens at the end (so why does the elephant kill Kivu?).

But Clint Eastwood is a director who always intrigues me, one whom I always return to.

For a reviewer that really loves the film, go HERE.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

DRIVE to TRESPASS Spoilers


Finally got around to seeing Nicholas Winding Refn’s DRIVE

It’s a combo of 1970s and 1980s Los Angeles neo-noir aesthetics—Walter Hill and Jacque Deray blended with some Michael Mann—with some copious gore and a fab supporting cast (yes, Albert Brooks is as good as people are saying—and Bryan Cranston was good enough to want to see more of his character, a smarmy but nice loser).

(Deray is the director of the excellent 1972 thriller The Outside Man, a flick I cannot recommend enough and am glad I own—thanks, Toestubber!—and one that I will be watching again soon.
The Outside Man is also referenced heavily in the must-see-for-all-cinephiles documentary Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003), another must-see.)

While I honestly do not think there was enough automobile-centric scenes in the film—they don’t all have to be chases, either—and there was way too much mushy maple-syrup-filtered boy-girl-romance-yawnage—
I do think the first hour of Drive was great, really top flight stuff that had me completely on-board.
But after a while, the flick’s existential Euro-cool bordering on autism shtick started to grind me down.
And I hate, hate, HATE a caper flick (and there’s certainly a caper flick in Drive) where the treasure is thoughtlessly left behind.
Doesn’t Ryan Gosling’s character think that cute Carey Mulligan could use that bread? (Don’t be mad: I warned you there’d be spoilers.)
(And leaving it behind is much different from endings, like Kubrick’s The Killing or Huston’s Treasure of Sierra Madre, where it is thematically important that the loot be lost.)

That said, I will be renting Drive when it becomes available—not only to examine and re-appreciate the movie’s good points, and maybe reassess what I’ve seen and like it more (the photography is fantastic, and I’m glad I saw this in a theater), but also because the gorehound in me NEEDS to slo-mo Big Red’s death scene!

Valhalla Rising is the only other film of Refn’s that I’ve seen, and like Drive is great until roughly the last 10-15 minutes. But I do recommend it! And I intend to hunt down Refn’s old films and keep my eyes peeled for the new ones.

Now, while I’ll be renting Drive when it’s on DVD, I fully intend to buy Walter Hill’s excellent 1978 existential neo-noir car chase thriller The Driver, a movie that surely must have influenced Drive.
Not so much a caper flick, The Driver is a cat-&-mouse struggle between the Driver (Ryan O’Neal) and the Detective, played by an awesome Bruce Dern.

Through the magic of Nflix Streeeeeemin’, I recently caught up with TRESPASS, Hill’s 1992 collaboration with Robert “chasing MoCap till I have a heart attack” Zemeckis and David Gale.
I’m a big fan of Hill’s early work, especially The Driver, The Warriors and Southern Comfort, but after the financial failure of a very personal (for the ultra-reticent Hill) project Streets of Fire, some sort of spark went out of his work—or else being forced to work with a mug like James Belushi in Red Heat killed his soul.
(Despite that, I’m a mega-fan of Hill’s collaboration with John Milius, 1987’s Extreme Prejudice.)

But Trespass is basically remembered as that flick where two guys named Bill face off against two guys named Ice. I can only recommend it for dedicated Hill completists: It’s a long slog, and Hill is strictly director-for-hire, letting bad acting and plot contrivances pile up—Jeez, whatever happened to Hill’s once-incredible screenwriting skills; see: Hickey & Boggs, The Getaway or Alien.

Beneath the Valley of the Astro-Memes for a White Parasol Girl Who Fell From Grace With the Sea and Became Mixed-Up Zombies




While the Venn diagrams of our particular interests only intersect slightly,
The National Film Board of Ivanlandia deeply appreciates The Girl With the White Parasol, a delightful blog that gets its name from one of the most beautiful speeches spoken in one of the greatest movies ever made. (And if you don’t know what I’m talking about, what sort of film fan are you anyway?)

Proprietorized by Rachel, the blog covers “Classic Cinema, 1930-1965,” with genuine affection and detail, and last year, TGWtWP won the second prize in the Roger Corman blogathon for her sharp, but respectful and very detailed review/critique of The Haunted Palace—it’s a good read, check it out!

To celebrate reaching 50 followers—of which I am one—The Girl With the White Parasol is throwing a meme party, and has posted 12 questions for readers and followers to answer.
So let’s go quizzing/memeing
with
The Girl With the White Parasol’s “The New Year's Movie Meme!”

1. What is your all-time favorite Grace Kelly costume?
GK is a stunning goddess, the type of chick that could inspire a barbarian like me to invade a country. She always looked good.
That said,
Her outfit in High Noon, because it looks tight
Or else that sleeveless number she’s got on in Rear Window
Or the nightgown she’s wearing when the dude’s trying to strangle her in Dial “M” for Murder
Or…

2. What classic film would you nominate for a remake?
Von Stroheim’s Greed—but the nine-hour version, as an HBO miniseries.
Michael Shannon would be perfect as McTeague! Dexter’s Jennifer Carpenter would make a good Trina, I think, and for Cousin Marcus, I say go with a wild card: either Patton Oswalt or Edward Norton.

3. Name your favorite femme fatale.
Linda Fiorentino in The Last Seduction.
Jeez, I mean, wow… Yeah, I’d kill for her.
In a fucking heartbeat.
I know I’d be signing my own death warrant, but a woman like that… What do you call her? Only the krauts could come up with the right sort of word to describe her—a word that combined “feral” with “genius” with “soulless” with “oozing sex appeal of the most dangerous sort.”
Yeah, that word would be her.
When you figure that word out, make sure to include it on my morgue form under “cause of death”….

4. Name the best movie with the word "heaven" in its title.
Until they finally make “Martians From Heaven Destroy the Earth,”
my favorite movie with “heaven” in the title is John Huston’s Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison (1957) with Robert Mitchum and Deborah Kerr.
During The Great Pacific War, a shipwrecked marine and a novice nun hide and survive—and struggle with erotic and sexual tension
(Waitaminit! Burt can score Debs, but Bob can’t? No wonder Mitchum blows reefer!)—
on an island overrun by the Japanese.

Meanwhile:
The best song in a movie about “heaven” is the one in Eraserhead that the tumor-faced “Lady in the Radiator” sings.

5. Describe the worst performance by a child actor that you’ve ever seen.
Dakota Fanning looking miserable or screeching horrifically in every damn scene of Spielberg’s excellent, but awful War of the Worlds.

It’s obviously heartfelt—War of the Worlds is Uncle Steve’s reaction to 9/11, and it comes from his gut—unfortunately leapfrogging over his brain, because despite the multitude of incredible action sequence and a nightmarish vision of “war coming home,” the movie is a fucking stupid mess, obviously made from a first draft script, or a bunch of cocktail napkins taped together.

Sneer-inspiring “family” scenes are shoehorned in, imposed by the respective father-trauma-psychoses that Spielberg and star Tom Cruise share;
I never got a feeling that the invasion went beyond the woods and suburbs;
Tim Robbins character mentally breaks down much too quickly;
Not killing any of the children is a bad habit Spielberg’s picked up, and needs to get rid of;
and keeping H.G. Wells’ original ending (germs did it) was not a good idea—or it was not executed well, I’m still not sure.

The death of the Martians in the 2005 version is handled rather ham-fistedly—there’s no build-up, or suspense. It just happens, and the whole “God in his infinite wisdom” bit doesn’t play as well these days, y’know? You need to earn bringing in Gee-Oh-Dee, and this one doesn’t do it.
With Spielberg & Co., the aliens’ lack of immunity to bacteria feels as dopey as the aliens in M. Night Shamalamadingdong’s Signs being allergic to water.

(At least in League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Volume II, Alan Moore has Dr. Moreau splice together anthrax and streptacchocus bacterias to be used against the Martians.)

Personally, I’m against the deus ex machina of bacteria showing up at the conclusion and wiping out the aliens. It work for Wells because people in 1898, when WotW was first published, were unfamiliar with germs and the microscopic world.

Germs saving humanity works in George Pal/Byron Haskin’s WotW (1953) because
A) the flick has been building to a fever pitch, and something has to break (Haskin’s version is actually much better paced than Spielberg’s); and
B) the movie is a Christian film, and calls to the Lord have been made throughout the movie—at the end of the film, God responds.
You don’t think Jehovah is going to just sit there and watch soulless critters vaporize one of his preachers, do you?

Still, I do own a copy of Spielberg’s movie (and a copy of Pal’s version as well), and whenever I need a pick-me-up, I pop it in: the scenes of destruction are magnificent—and infrequent compared to all the “acting” we’re forced to suffer through—with flawless special effects.
There’s about 25 minutes of HOLY SHIT AWESOME in this flick, surrounded by lame blorp-blorp-blorp.
Like I said, excellent, but awful.
And young Ms. Fanning’s attempt to mimic a nail on a blackboard helps the awful.
(BTW, who out there thinks Elle Fanning is a baby Princess Grace? I do.
And I think Dakota is planning to kill her more beautiful younger sister….)

6. Who gets your vote for most tragic movie monster?
Lon Chaney Jr.’s Wolfman is my go-to tragic monster.
Poor Larry Talbot…


7. What is the one Western that you would recommend to anybody?
Shane (1952), because it takes a hot dump on the whole “open range” “macho cowboy” mythos, while using the same to excite and entertain us—but still stressing that the approach of civilization is not only inevitable, but good.

8. Who is your ideal movie-viewing partner?
Honestly, no one. I love it when a theater is almost empty and it becomes my personal screening room.

9. Has a film ever made you want to change your life? If so, what was the film?
2001: A Space Odyssey made me want to know all about this kooky thing called “making movies.”

10. Think of one performer that you truly love. Now think of one scene/movie/performance of theirs that is too uncomfortable for you to watch.
Jack Nicholson in Batman. Not only do I think the flick is paced like sludge, but slapping a fake smile on Nicholson has to be the greatest case of gilding the lily in cinema.
The man has the BEST smile in the world—why hide it under a latex mask? And one that looked so FAKE!

11. On the flip side, think of one really good scene/performance/movie from a performer that you truly loathe.
Sean Penn in Fast Times at Ridgemont High (runners-up: the whiny dope peddler in The Falcon and the Snowman, and his crooked lawyer in Carlito’s Way—both roles which, I feel, are probably the closest to the truth of his actual personality)

12. And finally, do you have any movie or blogging-related resolutions for 2012?
To publish more at Ivanlandia; to work through my insanely long Netflix Streaming list; try and see more movies in the theater; see more revival shows, too! And write about them! Exclamation point!

Thanks for letting me participate!



Saturday, January 7, 2012

The Best Movies (and a little TV) Seen in 2011


The Best/The Silver Medals/Honorable Mentions

These are my faves that I saw this year—it’s impossible for me to see everything on my meager salary, and who in their right mind would want to see every film released in a year?
That’s like saying that a person has to eat in every one of NYC’s restaurants and diners: it’s an almost impossible task that’s sure to make you sick to your stomach.

And if a movie from 1928 that I’ve never seen before turns out to be better than any other film I’ve seen this year, then why not include it on my “Best Of"?

That said, the majority of the films listed are first-time-viewings—unless otherwise indicated.
As for the films listed that I’ve seen before, what can I say?
These flicks are perennial favorites, movies that are, to me, CLASSICS and always deserve to be on a “Best Of” list.
(That might not be fair—what? I’m gonna put Casablanca on my list every year I see it? Maybe…
—but when a masterful old timer stomps some young pup and its new tricks, The National Film Board of Ivanlandia is there to cheer them on.)

Then there are those movies that click so just right with me that I know they’re a “new perennial fave.”

Meanwhile, I am sorry that I never got around to writing up many of these flicks, but that’s what the future is for, right? (Jeez, I’m full of rhetorical questions today, aren’t I?)
And films I have written about have been URL’ed so’s you can have yourself hours of fun! (A few films, like Up Tight!, Crawlspace and The Monitors, have links to sites that covered these worthwhile flicks when I didn’t.)
Enjoy!


THE BESTEST/THE FAVES
(in order of year released)

The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928; Carl Theodor Dreyer)

Shadow of a Doubt (1943; Alfred Hitchcock)

These Are the Damned (1963; Joseph Losey)

Kitten With a Whip (1964; Douglas Heyes)

The Naked Prey (1965; Cornell Wilde) new perennial fave

Skidoo (1968; Otto Preminger) seen before/perennial fave

Up Tight! (1968; Jules Dassin) new perennial fave

The Devils (1971; Ken Russell) seen before/perennial favorite

Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003; Thom Andersen) [Interesting gap in the years there, between this film and the previous one…]

Aachi & Ssipak (2006; Jo Beom-jin)

There Will Be Blood (2007; Paul Thomas Anderson) seen before/ new perennial fave

I Saw the Devil (2010; Kim Ji-woon)

Super (2010; James Gunn)

13 Assassins (2010; Takashi Miike)

Tucker & Dale Vs. Evil (2010; Eli Craig)

Insidious (2011; James Wan)

Rango (2011; Gore Verbinski)


SILVER MEDALS

Macbeth (1948; Orson Welles)

Last Year at Marienbad (1961; Alain Resnais)

A Big Hand for the Little Lady (1966; Fielder Cook)

The Wild Angels (1966; Roger Corman) perennial fave (and an award-winning blog entry! YOWZAH!)

Why Man Creates (1968; Saul Bass; short film)

Brewster McCloud (1971; Robert Altman) seen before/perennial fave [mega-post on this fave in the works…probably ready in a year or so…}

The Outside Man (1972; Jacques Deray)

Assault on Precinct 13 (1976; John Carpenter) seen before/perennial fave

Dreamchild (1985; Gavin Millar) seen before

Alien Abduction: Incident at Lake County (1998; Dean Alioto) seen before

Dream Home (2010; Ho-Cheung Pang)


HONORABLE MENTIONS

My Son John (1952; Leo McCarey) (HINT: replace the word “communist” with “homosexual” and the flick becomes even more inadvertently hilarious—a camp classic that clearly craves a cult!)

Run Silent Run Deep (1958; Robert Wise)

Ikarie XB-1 (1963; Jindřich Polák)

Battle of the Bulge (1965; Ken Annakin)

The Monitors (1969; Jack Shea)

Riot (1969; Buzz Kulik—and produced by William Castle!)

Sometimes a Great Notion (1970; Paul Newman)

Pretty Maids All in a Row (1971; Roger Vadim & Gene Roddenberry)

Crawlspace (1972; John Newland) (Arthur Kennedy, not Klaus Kinski)

ZPG (1972; Michael Campus)

A Cold Night’s Death (1973; Jerrold Freedman) seen before

Cops and Robbers (1973; Aram Avakian) –from an original script by Don Westlake!

Let Sleeping Corpses Lie (1974; Jorge Grau)

Airport ’77 (1977; Jerry Jameson) It’s not so much a disaster movie, as an all-star action-adventure/caper/soap opera (keep your eyes open for a youngish M. Emmet Walsh playing a hero!), with the film’s last third being a high-tech rescue mission.
Most inadvertently interesting scenes from a sociological point of view? James Stewart on the Navy ships: Airport ’77 was made with the cooperation of the DoD, and all the sailors you see are the real deal. Meanwhile, Stewart—although retired by then—was a general in the US Air Force. The respect those swabbies show to Jimmy Stewart is quite genuine!

Fast-Walking (1981; James B. Harris)

Lion of the Desert (1981; Mustapha Akkad)

Pet Sematary (1989; Mary Lambert)

Scandal (1989; Michael Caton-Jones)

G.I. Jane (1997; Ridley Scott) I don’t know why this flick was so hated when it came out—I found it really enjoyable.

Mission to Mars (2000; Brian De Palma) See above—additionally, I found this flick’s conclusion (inside the Martian Head-structure) to be quite moving.

Linda Linda Linda (2005; Nobuhiro Yamashita)

[REC] 2 (2009; Jaume Balagueró & Paco Plaza)

The Other Guys (2010; Adam McKay)

Apollo 18 (2011; Gonzalo López-Gallego)

Ironclad (2011; Jonathan English)

Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011; Rupert Wyatt)

2011’s Best TV
Sons of Anarchy Seasons 1-3 (2008-2010)
Parks and Recreation Seasons 1-3 (2009-2011)
Breaking Bad Seasons 1-3 (2008-2010)
Louie Season 1 (2010)
Downton Abbey Season 1 (2010)
The Shield Season 6-7 (2007-2008);

(No surprises here, really—everybody loves these shows, right? But what’s funny is that, aside from these shows and an occasional episode of Dragnet, Adam-12 or the 1960s version of The Outer Limits, that’s about it for my TV viewing. I don’t have the time to watch TV shows, there are too many movies to see!)

For a look at 2010’s “Best Of,” go HERE

Coming Soon (promises, promises…):
—The Worst of 2011~I swear I’m not being contrarian!
—2011’s Index!
—December’s Movies: time off from work meant plenty of couch time!