20090915

The Summer in a Sentence

Time! It flies. My how it has flown this summer. To make up for the lost minutes, the movies for July and August will be outlined in one quick sentence each*. One single, solitary line to expedite the whole shebang and get me away from my computer and back to the movie theater. The summer may be wrapping up, but there are still so many new movies to see. Off we go!

*Note: Not all entries are one sentence.


July 2009

Public Enemies
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Wednesday, July 1, 2009

I saw Michael Mann's latest film on opening night, and was thrilled, as I always am, by the iridescence of his imagery; the culmination of which came in the movie theater scene as Dillinger (Depp) watches W.S. Van Dyke's Manhattan Melodrama (1934), wherein Clark Gable, William Powell and Myrna Loy become sutured into Mann's modern day narrative. Stunning.











Horse Feathers
- (1932) - DVD
Seen: Friday, July 3, 2009

That the film opens with Groucho Marx as the new president of the university without any setup or explanation sets the tone for all that follows: total absurdity, in hilarious Marx fashion.















Manhattan Melodrama
- (1934) - DVD
Seen: Monday, July 6, 2009

A companion screening of W.S. Van Dyke's gangster melodrama on the heels of Mann's Public Enemies, you know, just to be thorough (and to admire William Powell's dashing ways).















Chimes at Midnight
- (1965) - Film
Seen: Saturday, July 11, 2009

Orson Welles's big to-do this summer was Chimes at Midnight, a super-rare 35mm screening of the director's film made in the sixties in Spain, long after his fall from Hollywood grace (if you believe he was ever appreciated there at all), where he's cast as the bumbling and unrefined Falstaff--a man of good humor and appetite even in the most tragic life circumstances. He's sort of like Welles himself. Ebert has a nice paragraph on this in his 2006 review:

Welles was born to play Falstaff, not only because of the physical similarity but because of the rich voice, sonorous and amused, and the shared life experience. Both men lived long and too well, were at odds with the powers at court and were constantly in debt. Both knew disappointment, and one of the most sublime moments in Welles' career is simply the expression on his face at the coronation of Henry V, when he cries out "God save thee, my sweet boy," and the new king replies, "I know thee not, old man."

The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters - (2007) - DVD
Seen: Monday, July 20, 2009

What a great documentary on the tribulations of two competing Donkey Kong gamers, each of such polarizing, yet true, archetypal character. Also, from someone who never made it past the first half of the first level in the Atari 2600 version of Donkey Kong, that the gaming competition exists at all is miraculous.









The Swimming Pool
- (1969) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, July 25, 2009

A movie we might classify under the genre title "French." It's cerebral without saying very much, and even if you don't grow tired of gazing at Alain Delon the story will have you dozing off before long.














August 2009

In The Loop - (2009) - Film
Seen: Sunday, August 2, 2009

Really had fun with this movie (despite the disheartening New Yorker review) and put up a short bit about it on Scarlett Cinema.










(500) Days of Summer
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Wednesday, August 5, 2009

He outgrew his overalls, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt is a welcome addition to the screen as an adult actor; with Zooey Daschanel at his side (500) Days is the free spirit film of the summer. Their chemistry was cute, and I loved the film's framing of the city of LA. I didn't realize LA could look like a busy downtown, but apparently, it can.


Julie & Julia
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Saturday, August 8, 2009

Adored Ms. Ephron's delicious summer delight Julie & Julia. You can read my full song of praise at Scarlett Cinema.









La Promesse
- (1996) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, August 13, 2009

The Darnennes's film La Promesse arrived in time to temper the overflowing joy of Julie & Julia and Beaches of Agnes, which is nice for the sake of emotional balance, I suppose, but then again, the dire life of a boy on the cut-throat streets of Paris who single-handedly tries to save an African immigrant from his father who plans to force her into prostitution was a tough pill to swallow amidst such glee. I think this is my third or fourth Dardennes picture. They employ a quite raw visual aesthetic that looks to me like a hybrid of Barbara Loden, Cassavetes, and old French noir.







Beaches of Agnes
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Sunday, August 16, 2009

The matron of French New Wave cinema, Agnes Varda, made the best movie of the summer (and maybe the year) with her Beaches of Agnes, a wise, playful reflection on both life's victories and pains. Read more of my thoughts on the film at Scarlett Cinema.






The Big Country
- (1958) - DVD
Seen: Friday, August 21, 2009

All this talk for years about John Ford's The Searchers (1956) as the standard-bearer of the Western genre and, lo and behold, I discover William Wyler's little-known The Big Country that gives the former a demanding run for its money. How had I not seen this before? How can wide-angle shots of the land go on forever in spite of the film frame? How? I loved it. Perhaps more thoughts later.












Cold Souls
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Friday, August 21, 2009

All aboard! Next stop: Depressing City, population: Paul Giamatti.

Wonderful performances from both Giamatti and David Strathairn. I wish I felt the same about the story that fell flat.




My Man Godfrey
- (1936) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, August 27, 2009

My Man is my new go-to movie on bored nights that need a quick injection of love and laughter. I've seen this at least five times now, but seeing Lombard and Powell together is always a new experience. And being in ear shot of Eugene Pallette's fatherly grumble is on its own winning.







District 9
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Saturday, August 29, 2009

So it's an allegory about apartheid starring aliens as the discarded members of South African society and the message is clear: segregation is bad. I totally agree, but I wish District 9 had something more politically substantial to say about that. And this one instance where, to avoid motion sickness, I was praying for a Steadycam. Alas...

Inglourious Basterds
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Sunday, August 30, 2009

Months of anticipation leading up to a film by a director I have historically disliked culminated the week before Inglourious Basterds's wide release: the blogosphere was all atwitter. Seriously, Twitter blew up with 140 character debates that made me lose my breath with excitement; J. Rosenbaum called it the "cinematic equivalent of Sarah Palin" and a Holocaust denial; even my bestie who's always been a QT fan gave it a big "meh." However, there is nothing that gets me in the theater quicker than controversy. I have to say, this is not only the first Tarantino picture that I liked, it's also the film that I believe will define the rest of his career; this really is his masterpiece.

For all of the cries about IB's political orientation the truth is this film isn't about politics or history at all, it's about the movies. Merely name-dropping director's names from the silent era (as is done with G.W. Pabst many times here) is not enough to qualify as a discourse on the history of cinema, but engaging with the history of cinematic style does. Looking at this picture felt like a walking tour through the arc of film history. It's a discourse that usually has a default frame around the American system, but Tarantino takes it international. It wasn't just the look of the film's visual variegation across the strata of cinematic styles, but its proud reliance on international languages too. He's probably the only one in Hollywood who can subtitle a film and still attract a big audience. This may sound silly considering how gruesome and bloody IB is, but Tarantino has never felt so transparently playful and deeply admiring of the moving image. I just want to give him a big hug!

20090726

June Ponderables, And Some TV Too

City of Sadness - (1989) - 35mm Film
Seen: Monday, June 1, 2009

Realizing how out of sync I was with the story of Hou Hsiao-hsien's City of Sadness makes perfect sense retroactively, because its narrative follows a four-year period of Taiwanese history that I know very little about. A quick read-though of a handy Wikipedia page filled in a lot of the historical gaps and now it's clearer. Just after the Japanese surrender to the allies in WWII, Taiwan becomes free for the first time in 51 years. Problem is, mainland China has its eyes on the island country, and pitted against the Taiwanese rebel fighters, the stage is set for war, just when Taiwan looked to be free. During these four years of particularly intense strife, Hou Hsiao-hsien follows a family that awaits the return of four brothers from WWII, sees their partial reunion, then deals with their political and social maladjustment. It's a historical film, to be sure. But as a Taiwanese himself, this is a personal film for Hou--and likewise to the Taiwanese people--even more so. Unavailable on DVD, this newly struck 35mm print was on direct loan from Taiwan for its Doc Films screening. The theater packed a full house--marvelous!


Up
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Wednesday, June 3, 2009

It pains me to say it--just look at that lovable, pudgy kid at left, Russell (voiced by Jordan Nagai), from Pixar's latest feature Up--but I can't think of a more disappointing release from the animation giant in its history. Frankly, I don't get it--did I see the same movie as you all? I enjoyed myself enough to say it was a good experience on a few levels: 1) to marvel at its technical prowess; 2) for the introduction to two cute characters, Russell, the boyscout who befriends codgery old Carl (Ed Asner), and a dog named Dug, who with the aid of a special collar is able to narrate his adorably doggie kind of thoughts--pretty priceless; finally, 3) for a sequence that without any dialogue leads us through Carl's life with his wife Ellie. It's a brief montage of their time from kids to Ellie's death, which hits Carl hard, and left me quivering to keep the tears from spilling out. On the other hand, beyond the sequence just described, the rest of the film felt like filler. Carl remained bitter solely for the sake of narrative conflict, it seemed. There was so little redeeming about him, a hard trait to have for a kid's movie that's supposed to portray the elderly as nonthreatening. Also, shouldn't Charles Muntz have died long before Carl was able to catch up with him in the jungle? As a child Carl watched Muntz's adventurous exploits on newsreels that look to make him at least 25 or 3o years his senior. That would make Muntz over 100-years-old by my calculations. Something doesn't add up...(unforgivably terrible pun)


I Heart Huckabees - (2004) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, June 7, 2009

More than anything else I remembered about 2004's I Heart Huckabees was the Film Comment cover in response to its fall release. I remember that cover better than the movie, which can easily be explained away because I never saw I Heart Huckabees in the theater in 2004. The movie slipped away from me. And it's funny, because even though I have no memory of the film itself, I do remember its ad campaign and the miles of critical essays about it upon its release. For some odd reason, I have a place in my heart for I Heart Huckabees as a defining movie of 2004, despite not seeing it until almost five years later.

I have fond memories of the idea of the movie, rather than the movie itself? Do you remember movies like this too? I am glad to report Huckabees, as it is to the future-me now who is now residing in 2009, is cute, and had a fun energy. I really relished Lily Tomlin onscreen, who I don't see nearly enough of anymore. Dustin Hoffman is one of those actors who is able to absorb a character so the audience is not left thinking about "Dustin Hoffman," the star persona; in Huckabees, he is no different, he just lets it all go. Ditto that for Jude Law, spastic and delightful; Naomi Watts, simply mad (and cute); Mark Walberg, hilarious and an impossible companion; and Jason Schwartzman, the oddest comic master. French actress Isabelle Huppert adds extra eclecticism to an already strange brew of existential dilemmas. One of the dulling experiences in life is revisiting movies you loved as a kid that as an adult are bad, or worse, unwatchable. Even though I didn't see Huckabees in 2004, the anticipation I built up for it over the past five years might as well be the proxy for my hypothetical love of it then. What a relief to have the years match my expectations.


The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
- (2008) - DVD
Seen: Monday, June 8, 2009

Andrea at the Spinster Aunt blog saw The Curious Case of Benjamin Button on New Year's Eve. As a holiday devoted entirely to the celebration of the passing of time, it was an apt moment to see it, and as she has noted, it influenced her reception of it very much. I am sure now that my experience with Benjamin Button would have better if I saw it at the same time. My viewing mate at home, here, late in the middle of June, said it reminded him of Forrest Gump. Hearing that, and knowing the movie tastes of my movie companion, I knew right away his thoughts on Benjamin Button were less than satisfactory, but thought maybe that could be chalked up to the circumstances of time, just as it had for Andrea in the inverse manner.

I fell somewhere in between. Remembering the sweet melancholia of Andrea's experience, and being unable to separate myself--physically, we were in the same room--from the spells of dramatic sighs made in disapproval, especially when that little hummingbird whisked into the frame, it was hard to get my intellectual and emotional bearings on the film set straight. Just like the feather wafting along the arc of Forrest Gump, I suppose Button's hummingbird was repeatedly too overt to take sitting down quietly. But, then again, in a movie like Button that is created outside of time, in both character arc--Benjamin Button (Brad Pitt) literally ages in reverse, starting life as an old man in an infant's body, and ending it as a baby with the wisdom of ages--and as a retrospective, a biopic really, that transports us to a different time in history altogether, the hummingbird felt like an acceptable time marker. A little reminder perhaps that the structures of time we adhere to may be just as whimsical as that CGI hummingbird...


The Fisher King
- (1991) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, June 10, 2009

There was sudden buzz about The Fisher King, a movie I have long meant to see, when a friend began tutoring the screenwriter of the film. Ta-da! To the top of the queue it went. From director Terry Gilliam, it has a distinct dsytopic look, like a glance into a steely future that looks a lot like early 1990s New York. Set among gaps between buildings scraping the stratosphere, cramped tenements, and an open stretch of Central Park, its lead character, Jack Lucas (Jeff Bridges), is a slightly meaner version of Howard Stern who inadvertently sends a call-in listener on a murderous rampage to years later befriend Parry (Robin Williams), one victim's husband, after he's lost his job and is relegated to anonymity and working-class status. The tenuous relationship between Jack and Parry--who appears to be a schizophrenic--is analogous to the city scenery Gilliam presents, with the backdrop alternating from metallic, modern edges (Jack, in his rich and famous heyday) to scrappy stoops and storefronts (Jack and Anne, played wonderfully by Mercedes Ruehl, in her cluttered apartment) to the city streets and park lawn (the public places where Jack has the least control over Parry's whims). It's a tightly woven story that in its most basic sense is about action and consequence. But such a moralistic tale has never felt less didactic.


Year One - (2009) - Film
Seen: Saturday, June 20, 2009

Read my capsule review of Harold Ramis's Year One at Scarlett Cinema!


















Maborosi
- (1995) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, June 21, 2009

My thoughts on Hirokazu Kore-eda's Maborosi at Scarlett Cinema...













Duck Soup
- (1933) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, June 24, 2009


As it was spoken on Twitter...













Food, Inc.
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Saturday, June 27, 2009

Another great reminder to be mindful of our food sources. The documentary structure is a little clunky, but forgivable. Read my review on Scarlett Cinema!
















RoboCop
- (1987) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, June 27, 2009

Here is a still from the best scene of the movie. You probably already know this because you've been watching RoboCop since you were 8-years-old, but for those of you who, like me, have not seen the movie before, a man gets mowed down right in the middle of the office by this cumbersome, Jetsons-esque robot cop at left. In the ivory tower, just beside a conference table the capitalist suit is shot to a pulp--Blammo! I liked RoboCop because it's a really good bad movie. As an action flick, it could have been reduced to a cliche if it weren't for its very fun Reaganomics commentary.

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Lastly, I caught up with some brilliant TV shows this month. I wrapped up the last episodes of The Wire, and began an altogether different series, It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia, a show so irreverent and politically incorrect it makes those of us with the darkest senses of humor seem sweet. I love it, naturally. Maybe more on It's Always Sunny in the next post...

20090624

May Movies, Or 3½ Seasons of The Wire

I'm calling May my "free" month. I had my second foot surgery, was out of work for weeks, was out of the movie theater for just as long, and upon my return from Milan early in the month, I was glued to DVD after DVD of The Wire. I was tempted to start beating myself up again for not seeing very many movies, but then, sparing myself from the abuse, I remembered: I watched over 35 episodes of The Wire in their place.

The late HBO series is one of my favorites for its slate of engaging characters, for the landscape in and around the city of Baltimore, for its narrative symmetry, sharp visual aesthetic, and of course, its devotion to real social and political issues. There is Frank Sobotka, above, from season two, clinging to that can like it's the last piece of his life as a Baltimore stevedore. He is one of my favorite characters in the whole series, and it should be said, it's hard to pick a favorite of anything in this show: everything is just so good. But the standout characters are the ones that makes us feel the most ambivalence towards them. Frank Sobotka could be downright cruel, was a corrupt leader, but as the story goes on, we see him as a simple pawn in a much larger societal game. For all of his initially perceived power, he is himself powerless, as the climax and denouement so tragically spell out in this season. As season three began Frank Sobotka, the ever-lasting working man, is practically forgotten. Maybe not forgotten so much as laid to rest in one of the many sedimentary layers of Baltimore life.

Funny, by season two I was entrenched beyond escape from The Wire. It was like I had been watching forever, but there were still three whole seasons of stories and character trials to go! I really powered through, faster than I did with any TV show before. The crew from Entourage came along at a good clip, but they bored me with their surface endeavors and base motivations, and I never did venture past season four's finale. Lo and behold, great things happen when a great show falls onto your platter: you forget all about your social life. It's a fair and enjoyable sacrifice, and one I'm tempted to revisit again for old times' sake. Yeah, I got sentimental about it. I didn't cry. I try to save my tears for the stories themselves these days. It's best not to waste them on the fact that a series is over, like some weird modern postpartum affliction or something.

With The Wire, the power of the show lies in the details: the change of the opening credit montage and the new rendition of the theme song with each successive season; multiple lead characters overlapping each other with separate actions or lines of dialogue in a single shot; subtle notes on serious social issues like gentrification, articulated with a simple cut linking two scenes from the interior of a real estate showing (where wealthier prospects scope the home) to the exterior (where a couple of blue collar workers exit in economic defeat); and most exciting of all, the use of real figures from Baltimore--from police department officials to former drug runners. These characters are wonderfully integrated for an added, unspoken layer of verisimilitude, which reaches its spooky apex in seasons four and five with Marlo's sidekick Snoop (Felicia Pearson). Now she's an actress I want to know more about. She gives a simply amazing performance that paralyzes you with fear.

That's where I'll end my talk of The Wire for now. Let's move on the the May movie list!



La Notte - (1962) - DVD
Seen: Friday, May 8, 2009

Mmm. With this, I almost conclude Antonioni's trilogy of films on modern malaise. La Notte, the second in the series was too academic for me to truly enjoy. I'd be in brighter spirits by the end of the final film, L'eclisse (see below), which is mesmerizing.









Pursued
- (1947) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, May 10, 2009

Random movies sometimes fall into my queue and this, Raoul Walsh's Pursued (1947), is one of them. It's a little noirish, mostly a western, and all Robert Mitchum as a grown adopted son who marries his own sister. They're not related by blood, of course, but isn't there something odd about these kinds of romantic setups? Anything odd about that because they only seem to happen in the movies? And I am sorry to be so curt, but Pursued was an otherwise unremarkable movie. In times like these I end up pondering how society would react to a woman and her adoptive brother getting hitched rather than the movie itself. In any event, I have a tender place in my heart for Robert Mitchum, and I considered this a warm-up for the next Mitchum flick in my queue...


The Night of the Hunter
- (1955) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, May 14, 2009

Now there's my Mitchum! Here's a little write-up I posted on Scarlett Cinema.











Spring in a Small Town
- (1948) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, May 16, 2009

There was some talk at GreenCine about Fei Mu's Spring in a Small Town awhile back. Figuring I was already overdue to see it, I did. It's a wonderful meditation on love and unrealized emotions, or at least of those emotions that creep up on you later when life makes them too complicated to deal with simply.








L'eclisse
- (1962) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Alain! Just look at him. Look at him! It is fair to adore Monica Vitti, too, I'll concede, but Alain Delon is breaking my heart these days. Watching him in Antonioni's final film in the L'Avventura/La Notte/L'eclisse series, well, that breaks it. This is bordering on obsession now. I can't take my eyes of him as it is--no matter what the movie--but you place him in this lovely, dreamy Roman landscape filled with floating emotions of love and lust and the sense that they are all so tenuous, brittle really, and could scatter into nothingness with a lazy turn of a street corner? Forget it. I'm mesmerized. Can I call in sick for that? "Hi boss, I'm at home in a dreamy daze about modern Rome and an irrational affection for an actor who is more than forty years my senior. I don't think I can come in today." Think it will work? Damn, me neither.


I Could Never Be Your Woman
- (2007) - DVD
Seen: Friday, May 22, 2009

Robert Cashill at the Between Productions blog (also at Cineaste mag) tipped me off to this minor piece of Amy Heckerling filmmaking, that perhaps gets that title via self-fulfilling prophecy: is it a minor movie because it doesn't have the wit of a Clueless (1995) or a Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982), or because it recieved absolutely no marketing and went straight to DVD? I'll offer it's a bit of both, leaning towards the no-marketing line of thought. It's a cute and clever story in the way Clueless is--lots of throwaway lines, quirky character traits, and um, Paul Rudd's dreamy set of baby-blues. It also features a fantastic soundtrack (80s music fans will swoon. Read: The Psychedelic Furs!), which Heckerling never seems to skrimp on. It's poppy and bright and colorful, and as Cashill points out, Michelle Pfieffer gives a surprisingly rich comic performance. Check it out.


Win or Lose: A Summer Camp Story
- (2009) - DVD
Seen: Monday, May 25, 2009

Newbie director Louis Lapat made a really good movie. He contacted me out of the blue offering up a screener copy in return for a review. Well, the review is written, but not yet up. I've got plans for it once his movie makes its debut on PBS later this year. Until then, it is safely stowed on my hard drive.

I recommend you contact your local PBS station and request that his film be shown. Programming is tricky, and not always the same from city to city. So if you're ever going to get a chance to see this, give them a ring and say, "Hey, I want to see Louis Lapat's Win or Lose!" It's a neat little documentary feature about a Wisconsin summer camp for boys who duel it out for championship trophies from the (in)famous "Collegiate Week." The 'Week is when teams of very nonathletic boys soldier up for a series of competitive sporting events and brace themselves for a lot of testosterone-fueled yelling from their coaches. It's practically the essence of of "male" movie (you won't find many women lingering in the shots), but it reconciles all of that rough-and-tumble hostility with sweet character profiles, clever animation vignettes, and a tender hearted voice over narration from the filmmaker himself.


The Girlfriend Experience
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Tuesday, May 26, 2009

I enjoyed this for my time in the theater, but somehow as the days of have passed since, my affection has worn off. Perhaps I'll articulate it better later. Suffice it to say for now that it never really hurts to watch a non-Hollywood Soderbergh film, even if it doesn't pan out as a personal favorite. The shots are so damn beautiful!

20090511

April: Back to work, back abroad, and some movies

My movie habits, quantitatively, slowed down in April. I returned to work after a moderately long hiatus that gave me a ton of time to watch in March. And if you scroll below you'll see the insane consequences of having enough time off to plow through a Netflix queue at top speed. Just how much did I see in March? 34 films, an outstanding record. Naturally, April couldn't live up to such stratospheric standards, but the month did define itself with a special twist, westerns--a fine quality to make up for what was lost in numbers!

Enter: The Budd Boetticher box set, a delightful series of films from the short period of Boetticher-Randolph Scott collaborations. Each one--from The Tall T (1957) to Ride Lonesome (1959)--was a jaw-dropping spectacle that spurred hours of conversations with my movie mate on the home front, and was proof positive of Boetticher's status on the level with John Ford and other A listers. Also during the month, I whipped through a short queue of G.W. Pabst pictures, and a smattering of new film and some much needed retrospectives.

I left town for one of those pretentious and indulgent trips to Europe for five days at the end of April, with intentions to catch some screenings abroad. Let's just say repeated doses of limoncello foiled those plans.








Dark City - (1998) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Here's a movie that I've been meaning to see for a whole decade. Yep, I think this one wins the award as the Most Pushed Aside For Unknown Reasons. Ebert ran it at his Overlooked Film Festival in 2000 and it was also slated at the University of Colorado's annual Conference on World Affairs, starring Ebert's own "Cinema Interruptus" in 1998. Having attended two years of the Cinema Interruptus program during my undergrad studies in Boulder and Denver, I was ecstatic to see the film, but...

But I never did! And I wish I hadn't done that, because I think after all these years of build-up it didn't have the kind of heft I thought it would. Crap. I really hate when that happens. Looking at the special effects in Dark City, I can tell also that it would have impressed me more then, in the context of the technological times, than it ever could have now. Still, not a bad picture at all (especially the part about Rufus Sewell). Maybe in another few years I can take another look-see at it and it will reveal itself anew?


The 3 Penny Opera
- (1931) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, April 2, 2009

I emailed my friend Howie Movshovitz right after I finished watching G.W. Pabst's fantastic feature The 3 Penny Opera, because his resemblance to lead character Mackie Messer (Rudolf Forster) is uncanny, and I had a goofy smile on my face through the entire picture anticipating my great email message where I would tell him so. (His response: "I'm just much older than you think. You didn't know I was born in Germany?")

It's kind of a strange scene to sit so contented through this movie about a gangster-murderer who terrorizes the town with his audacious power and the help of paid-off political connections. But looking at Howie/Mackie was only half of what distracted me from the direction of the story itself. The photography is sublime. As it is in the other handful of Pabst picture I've seen so far. More on Pabst below.



Two Lovers
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Saturday, April 4, 2009

I adored this movie. I saw it in the theater alone. Not as the only one in the theater, but as a party of one, and I think that had some effect on how I received it. To sit alone with no distractions or nudges from friends made an already isolating picture even more so. The movie stewed inside me for hours and day after it was over. I wrote a small review about it on Scarlett Cinema, but the part of the movie that still sits with me the most is its depiction of New York City. It's a true New York film with some astonishingly observant shots of the city. Take for instance the view of passing buildings from a car, not shown at street level, no sidewalk bustle is in sight, but we see the simple top third of a building, or the tip-top of a street lamp instead. It's a slight remix of the usual NYC street montages we are used to that adds to the film's tempered energy, beautifully.



The Class
- (2008) - Film
Seen: Sunday, April 5, 2009

Like Dangerous Minds only in French. Okay, it's not really like that at all, but it's nice to see the underprivileged school kids narrative in a setting outside of south central L.A. or the Bronx.

This reminds me of another French school-set picture that I love, a little gem from 2002, To Be and To Have (Être et avoir).




Ivan The Terrible, Part I - (1944) - Film (on 35mm!)
Seen: Tuesday, April 7, 2009

The Film Center ran Sergei Eisenstein's two-part masterpiece Ivan The Terrible on incredible 35mm prints, which, as far as I'm concerned, is the only way you're going to get me to watch these movies. Film school grads will eternally beat themselves up for not seeing this during their days at college, and indeed they should: it's a very difficult movie to watch without a structured context, take advantage of that while you've got it...

Ivan The Terrible, Part II - (1958) - Film (on 35mm!)
Seen: Wednesday, April 8, 2009

...Luckily, the audience was privy to a helpful introduction from critic Jonathan Rosenbaum before the second night's screening, Part II. This was my favorite of the two films, probably for its increased energy and emotion. Each one is beautifully composed, but the assaultive montage technique makes the experience feel more like a forced science experiment than a real exchange with the images. I understand Eisenstien's interest in montage and on paper it's miraculous (and upon deeper inspection, just plain confusing). In person, however, and I hate to sound either blunt or ignorant, it is boring.



The Last Laugh
- (1924) - DVD
Seen: Friday, April 10, 2009

Best movie ever? When a puff of smoke can be so beautiful as to justify the existence of an entire movie, it just might be...









The Tall T
- (1957) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, April 11, 2009

This movie is a miracle. A fantastic B western from Budd Boetticher. Here's a short bulleted list of thoughts taken from my movie notes:

- Wow, great big skies!

- Scott always has a smile on his face, and he sweats!

- Framing and general scenery reminds me of Winchester 73; comedic moments remind me of Hawks and Sturges.

- Woman: "I'm scared." Scott: "Me too." Not often that the rustic male lead admits fear.



The Last Bolshevik
- (1993) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, April 12, 2009


I guess it would have helped to see Happiness before I watched Chris Marker's response to the film, his own The Last Bolshevik. Mmm. Maybe more thoughts on this after I've done that.










Snow Angels - (2006) - DVD
Seen: Monday, April 13, 2009

I'm a big David Gordon Green fan. When Snow Angles premiered at the Sundance Film Festival I was beside myself with grief that I couldn't see it. Patiently awaiting its wide theatrical release was a test of wills, and when it finally did arrive two years later for a brief run at the Landmark theater here in Chicago, by God if I understand the scheduling mishaps I encountered, but somehow I missed it. And on to the Netflix queue it went...

Maybe it was fate that the movie eluded me for as long as it did. When I saw it midway through the month of April, I felt horribly empty. Where was the signature quiet poetry of Green's compositions? Cinematographer Tim Orr was still on board. And I wonder, too, how this story about a broken couple with equally broken careers and relationships struck the director's fancy. It is so unlike any of his previous films, both in setting (many of Green's pictures are set in the south), and in tone. A sense of melancholy pervades all of Green's movies, but they are laced too with an ineffable comic touch. There's a sweetness to his pictures that I didn't get a taste of in Snow Angels.

Setting these queries aside, to look at it simply as a movie, there is a listlessness to it. I haven't seen Lars von Trier's Dancer in the Dark (2000), but from what the masses say, I think Snow Angels follows a similarly dark docket of emotional cues from its story of un-redeeming quality. I get that line from people all the time, "You haven't seen it? Well, prepare to be depressed." They say it with a twist of glee in their voice, like it was a feat in itself to experience misery of the deepest human unhappiness. That's how I slightly feel about Snow Angels, only I can't express any enthusiasm in having felt so terrible for its duration. Maybe using my mood is an unfair tool to assess the picture, but I'm really too bummed about it to say much else.


Decision at Sundown
- (1957) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Randolph Scott is as debonair of a frontiersman as can be. He looks like the Marlboro man wearing a fitted leather jacket broken in to a smooth, body-hugging sheen. It's Scott's own version of body armor. He could be a knight in shining armor swooping into town to save his lady--the one who looks like a cross between Marilyn Monroe and Melanie Griffith wearing red Technicolor lipstick--but he's a bit of an antagonist in this picture. That smile he charmed us with in The Tall T is lessened. It opens with Bart Allison (Randolph Scott) tearing through town and breaking up a wedding in progress before he finally holes himself up in a stable, picking off the sheriff's men and plotting his escape. No introduction, no backstory. The story simply starts. There's never been so much urgency in a western picture! And Boetticher is a man who knows how to set up a shot. In one sequence, we see Bart leave the bar with his partner at a moderate pace; as they reach the background of the same running shot, a woman enters the foreground in a coach; the sheriff (and the camera) are atop the porch with a full view of it all--in one shot!


The Love of Jeanne Ney
- (1928) - DVD
Seen: Friday, April 17, 2009

I'm afraid I wrote no notes on this movie to recall anything significant! I did watch it on the 17th, my mother's birthday though. Happy belated, ma!











Buchanan Rides Alone - (1958) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, April 18, 2009

Buchanan is a real doozy. Like, Decision at Sundown, we get tossed right into the story. This time Scott rolls into a border town run by a band of brothers (literally) who run the city: one is mayor, the other a businessman, another chief of police. All of them have a hand in the town finances, in fact, that's an understatement, they're more like resident bandits. They shoot to kill but old Buchanan (Randolph Scott) doesn't seem to mind. He invites trouble, provokes it, and though you know it would be impossible for one man to stand against their mean, impenetrable forces, that's exactly what makes the show exciting. Because somehow he does.




Rocco and His Brothers
(Rocco e i suoi fratelli)- (1960) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, April 19, 2009

Compare this image with the photo at the top of this post and you'll glean that Rocco was indeed a bit of Milan prep work I assigned myself before the big trip. That's il Duomo in the heart of central Milan. And that's the unspeakably sexy Alain Delon atop the church roof embracing his woman. I want to be her. Really bad. Really, really bad. Anyway, I figured before Alitalia dropped me off in Milan, a city where I had never before been, I might give myself a fun activity and see how it looks on film.

It was a nice pursuit that got me amped up for the trip, and a nice companion to my Lonely Planet guide; seeing the city on film first gives me a connection to it, and as threadbare as that connection might be, it is still significant. And now that I've been to the city it will mean so much more to me when I see it again on film.

Hell, even glimpsing the still at left gets me. I've been there. How could it be? I was there, I even sat on those stone ledges reserved for hot, tired tourists after scaling the hundreds of narrow steps to the top. In theory, my rear touched the same piece of stone as Alian Delon's. Never mind the decades of weather that have worn away his scattered skin cells that were shed there almost 50 years ago. So there are no traces of Delon's DNA left on my clothes or skin. So what? I was there. Alain was there. We were there. Not physically together, but in spirit I was there with him, even if I left my trench coat behind that day (the sun was too mighty for that), though it would have been better if our clothes coordinated, I think.

As I left Milan I was not sad. I knew I would be back, I know I will be back. It's such a marvelously functional city. Energetic in its own manageable way, and friendly, which can be difficult to find in some Italian cities where residents have long ago grown weary of American tourists butchering or ignoring altogether their language. Almost always when traveling in Italy residents can spot me a mile away, as if I were wearing an arm band made of the U.S. flag.

In Florence I received eye rolls in response to my slow, albeit polite questions posed in at least semi-correct Italian. In Rome it was only slightly more of the same, but I did land upon an indignant waiter who insisted my friend and I repeat our order back to him in perfect Italian. He corrected our pronunciation as we went, an especially difficult task for my friend who had never before spoken a word of Italian aloud. I was spared with a little luck from having read through a "Italian in 10-Minutes a Day!" workbook in the preceding months before our pop quiz.

Venice is one of the friendlier cities I've encountered, and before I denounce myself by saying, "PK, you traveled there with a native Venetian!" How could it be hard to get around when you have a fluent tour guide? But even in my time separated from my pal on my first trip to the city, people were nice to me. Upon my second visit, sans native Venetian friend, people still treated me well.

My only awkward moment occurred the night my girlfriend and I wandered into Harry's Bar for a famous (and infamously priced) peach Bellini. As the waiter strolled by I asked for la lista (the menu) when I meant il conto (the check). He jumped on that straight away and the rest of our minimal exchanges happened in English, of course. Even the moody clerks at the vaporetti stands were alright. They gave me a hard stare as I sputtered out my request for two tickets on the water bus, sure, but they were not unfriendly. I surely don't have to tell you, then, that the young fellas running the boats were as sweet as honey to a couple of giddy American girls, do I?

To swing this back around to Milan, and thus Rocco and His Brothers, and thus Alain Delon, let me quickly conclude that my treatment by the resident Milanese men was equally outstanding as it was from our playfully cute vaporetto drivers in Venice. Especially from those in a waiter's uniform. Once I was seated for dinner (La cena per uno, per favore!) I am captive to them. How would I ever escape them, assuming I wanted to? I had to eat. An behold, the onslaught of complimentary drinks--a bottle when I requested a glass, limoncello and grappa to top things off--and for dessert a folded piece of paper with Gionata's number scribbled thereon.

I went home alone, rest assured, but if that Milanese man were the helplessly sweet faced Alain Delon a la Rocco and His Brothers, the night would have played differently. Alain aside--we'll get back to him later as the official Delon Movie Marathon kicks up in the coming weeks--I'll offer a few thoughts on the movie, Rocco e i suoi fratelli (I am additionally proud that this is a title I am able, in my silly broken Italian to translate correctly. Thank you very much!)

You know what? Strike that. This entry will have to suffice as a miniature travelogue instead. I hope you've enjoyed it.



Ride Lonesome
- (1959) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, April 19, 2009

Spookiest image on film?

Favorite lines:

Woman: "You don't seem like the kind of person to hunt a man for money."
Brigade (Randolph Scott): "I am."




Bruce McClure performance series - (2009) - Film
Seen: Friday, April 24, 2009

Williamsburg, Brooklyn-based experimental filmmaker Bruce McClure put on a show this night that might be the best, most exciting cinema experience I've ever had. I wrote up a little bit about it here, at Scarlett Cinema.







Garage Days
- (2002) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, April 25, 2009

This might be the worst movie I've ever seen. I could not watch it to its end!--a rarity. When a movie is bad I almost always push through to the final credits to say I've been there, done that. But the line of advice that kept repeating in my head as I sat dormant on the couch that night with plummeting levels of brain activity was, "I don't have time for this nonsense. My life it too short for this!"

I added it to my queue to catch up on director Alex Proyas's filmography. At the top of this post you saw Dark City, one of Proyas's earlier films, and a highly praised one too (Roger Ebert has been over the moon about it from the start). I thought it might be fun to see everything he has made, also figuring it would be a good balancing mechanism against the string of artier pictures flowing through my queue right now. From the disgrace of Garage Days to I, Robot (which should be coming along soon, just as soon as my addiction to The Wire subsides. Could be awhile, I've just begun season 3 of 5), I committed to see them all. Damn. Another idea that works better on paper than in practice. And now I'm just frustrated at the lost time and money on the rental fee. I'm still going to watch I, Robot--if it's as good as Ben Lyons says, it might be the movie redeemer of a lifetime!
---------------------------------------------

That's 17 movies for April. The May write-up is on the way!

20090423

March was awesome

Hey, so here's the deal. Last March I had this funny foot surgery which was good for me because a) I got my foot fixed, b) I had sick time off from work and got to watch a lot of movies all day, and c) well, point B covers this subset as well, because like I said, I got to watch a lot of movies!

Some days were slow. In the early, say, two or three days immediately following the operation the doc had me pretty hopped up on pain killers, meaning I spend an awful lot of time knocked out in bed. Still very delightful in its own right, no doubt. I have no shame admitting those little white pills worked magical wonders. Pain and anxiety-free for a full 4-6 hours! I know why only one refill was prescribed.

If there was any downside to the movie adventuring in the month of March it stems from the fact that I didn't get to leave the house often to see new films at the theater, being bound up on crutches and all. Once I was off those crutches the masses got too aggressive for me, elbowing their way through grocery store aisles and sidewalks, and the slick, black boot I wore in place of an old-fashioned cast often went unnoticed to the complacent eye; I began to blend in with the masses more every day, but could hardly keep up. So inside on the couch I sat, Vicodin and Trader Joe's Jell-O cup by my side, and for much of the time peering up at a giant projected version of a DVD on our blank living room wall. (Oh, how I love the access my boyfriend has to his university media library!)

Since April is coming to close and this is a March list (as I type this it is April 23rd which I strangely remember is the birthday of an old childhood friend--isn't that curious?), I will be moving fast through the films below. I'll try to keep the list alive with a sugary observations and a few worthwhile, albeit short, thoughts. But the long back log usually defeats me. We'll admit that now. And onward we go.
-------------------------------------------------------

Old Joy
- (2006) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, March 1, 2009

Beautiful, but...? Worth seeing more than once, but something about it left me listless.






The Philadelphia Story
- (1941) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, March 1, 2009

It's one of those movies I revisit once, sometimes twice, a year in order to keep up with it's peppery dialogue and happy-making performances. I could marry either Cary Grant or James Stewart in this picture. Yes, either one will do.







WarGames
- (1983) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, March 1, 2009

Impossibly, impossibly crazy premise for a movie, and yet, there it is, this delicious relic of Reagan's intense influence on the American public. Really, Matthew Broderick? You really knew how to hack into the most top-secret government nuclear arms launcher? And really, they couldn't figure it out that you were doing it? Even had trouble tracking you down in your dull suburban home? Really? Ah, well. Broderick is still a doll, as is his lady Ally Sheedy, and as I see it, any movie with Dabney Coleman cast is worth seeing. It was also a little strange to see WarGames in the full-length version, uninterrupted by commercials--that's the only way I saw it before as a kid, when it ran as the Saturday afternoon movie on secondary stations. Scary stuff for a seven year old.



Bigger Than Life
- (1955) - Film
Seen: Monday, March 2, 2009

On a bright, beautiful 35mm print dripping with saturated red color. Red coats on the kids skipping across the school grounds. Red lipstick on the ladies. Red books and other set accents that look as heavy as oil on canvas. I say, quite a cinema send-off before my surgery just days later. Thanks, Nicholas Ray, you're awesome!



Spirited Away
- (2001) - DVD
Seen: Friday, March 6, 2009

Showed a clip of this to my students during our final class period of the quarter. It had been at least a couple or three years since I've seen it, and upon catching up with a few reviews that bemoan its abstract storytelling, it is plain to me this kids' picture is about as cut-and-dry a narrative as you can get. It's there in every sequence, and very easy to follow. And imagine this, none of the animation cells were drawn on a computer. Huh. I love you, Pixar and Dreamworks, but Miyazaki is my bread and butter.


Russian Ark
- (2002) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, March 7, 2009

The general consensus at my class screening: no consensus. Half found it boring and an empty show of technical achievement, the other half were sympathetic to its feeling and engagement of Russian history. Naturally I fall into the latter camp. As always, I found it emotionally enthralling and heart wrenching as we watched the final moments of the crowd exiting the palace, knowing full well those characters are marching off to their deaths; the memories of whom to be graced only now as they're brought back to life in this one seamless moment. It strikes me as the utmost privilege to have had the chance to experience this movie, there in the depths of the Hermitage where few have shared face-to-face, uninterrupted intimacy with the museum's collection. And our nameless lead character, steeped in sublime mystery? Dear man, take my hand and keep guiding me forever...


Election
- (2005) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, March 8, 2009

Scratch another Johnnie To off the list! I know this is his big film, but personally I much prefer the minor Sparrow (2008).











Half Nelson
- (2006) -DVD
Seen: Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Ick. Ick. Ick. If I believed Ryan Gosling's character, with all of his education, strong family ties, functional relationships, and strong work ethic could ever possibly be as hard off in a drug haze as he is, well, we might have an okay movie. But as it is, we do not. I can't talk about this movie anymore because I reject it's premise. Also, it's not the movie to watch when you're trying to calm yourself the night before surgery.




Shoot The Piano Player
- (1960) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, March 12, 2009

Caught up with this one again for the first time.










Aladdin
- (1992) - VHS
Seen: Thursday, March 12, 2009

Remember when you saw Disney's Aladdin in 8th grade and thought it was fun and funny and full of neat special effects that seemed to heighten your odd attraction to the nonexistent lead character, the animated "street rat" Aladdin? Yeah, it's not like that anymore. Now it's an Americanized, homogenized version of some un-named place in the Middle East with white skinned characters. Who understand Robin Williams's spastic outbursts of American pop-culture references, too? Yes.



Ghostbusters
- (1984) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, March 12, 2009

Yep. Watched it again. First quote that comes to mind as I type right now: "I'm right in the middle of something, Ray!"








Friends With Money
- (2006) - DVD
Seen: Friday, March 13, 2009

This is a good movie! A pleasant surprise. See it for some easy watching, and nice performances too.








Silver Lode
- (1954) - DVD
Seen: Friday, March 13, 2009

Alan Dwan western that is mostly boring. I don't even remember what it's about.
(UPDATE: Boyfriend says it's a High Noon ripoff, but it still doesn't ring a bell somehow. Oh, yes, he says I was falling asleep. This explains things now.)













Jules et Jim
- (1962) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, March 15, 2009

Remember how I said I was going to watch more French New Wave films? Well, la te da, here you go: Truffaut's Jules et Jim is one to live by. It's too bad it took me as long as it did to see it, but now that I finally have I can say in all seriousness, it has changed my entire outlook on life. A movie about life and living! Curiosity and play! Whenever I am blue I'll know what to watch. The Criterion commentary track with Robert Stam and Dudley Andrew is also a wonderful chat to be privy to.







Closely Watched Trains
- (1966) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, March 15, 2009

Here's one from the Czech New Wave that's been sitting on the queue for ages. It's beautiful.









The Others
- (2001) - DVD
Seen: Monday, March 16, 2009

A really sweet coworker, also a movie buff, lent me his DVD copy of this horror flick, even offered to let me keep it he had watched it so many times. Nice gesture to be sure, so it was a melancholy exchange when I finally returned the DVD to him at his cubicle--I didn't think it was scary! Yes, there were moments of anticipation that gave me a few starts, but in sum total, meh.








The Mystery of Picasso
- (1956) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, March 18, 2009

This movie is incredible. You watch Pablo Picasso paint pictures magically before your eyes. There is one wonderful moment when he's in conversation with director Henri-Georges Clouzot, and he emphasizes his frustration with the condensation of real time into film time: "It bothers me that they see only ten minutes. That took me five hours."




The Roaring Twenties
- (1939) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Bogart and Cagney at their finest. Love the dialogue in this movie--swift! The weight of these two actors sitting in a two-shot is almost too heavy and breathtaking for words.







Fury
- (1936) - DVD
Seen: Friday, March 20, 2009

This movie is great. Melodramatic and expressionistic--mwah!











Pierrot Le Fou
- (1965) - DVD
Seen: Friday, March 20, 2009

As part of the French New Wave New Year's resolution. Beautiful.













River of No Return
- (1954) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, March 21, 2009

Oh, snap! This is the best western I've seen in ages. Otto Preminger is, how do you say it...? Otto Preminger is the shit!











Secrets of a Soul
- (1926) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, March 21, 2009

The kick-off of my G.W. Pabst movie marathon! I put all available Pabst films on my Netflix queue, and as of this writing, am about through with them all (there aren't many, so it wasn't very hard). Secrets is another prime example of how clearly the film medium had matured by the time of sound's introduction and has basically not changed since.




I Love You, Man
- (2009) - Film
Seen: Sunday, March 22, 2009

I loved you, too. A few awkward moments a la SNL skit gone on too long, but funny! I did wish for more Joe Lo Truglio. But I'm tempted to say this was Favreau's best role yet, he was fantastic.











Le Samorai
- (1967) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, March 22, 2009

I don't know how to impart on you my overwhelming attraction to Alain Delon. Directed by Jean-Pierre Melville, this film with almost no dialogue, showing the dreary side of Paris (unlike earlier Godard and Truffaut pics), is a new favorite.




La Jetee
- (1962) - DVD
Seen: Monday, March 23, 2009

I have not watched this since the film school days! A screening was long overdue, and my, did my memory fudge so many of the movie's scenes. I had almost completely forgotten how little of it was presented in moving images; just a long series of stills instead. A short and sweet refresher to gear me up for the Chris Marker marathon I've been trying to start up.




Sans Soleil
- (1983) - DVD
Seen: Tuesday, March 24, 2009

This might be my favorite movie ever made. Phrases like "amnesia of the future" stream everywhere. I love that!












The Puffy Chair
- (2005)
Seen: Wednesday, March 25, 2009

It wasn't fair to this movie that I watched it right after Marker's masterpiece, Sans Soleil, but it is definitely one of the better "mumblecore" movies. Actress Kathryn Aselton is one of its greatest assets.










Diary of a Lost Girl
- (1929) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, March 26, 2009

Louise Brooks! More about her here.












L'Enfant
- (2005) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, March 28, 2009

From the Dardennes brothers. Man do I love Paris-set pictures, there's such energy--gritty energy, yes--but a kind of movement you just don't see in American movies. Also, the bonus materials included a nice interview with the brothers.









Cattle Queen of Montana
- (1954) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, March 28, 2009

Speaking of Ronald Reagan (a la WarGames), here he is again in another dull Alan Dwan picture. Who's that strawberry blond dame next to him at right? Barbara Stanwyck--hurrah! Sadly, the fact that Ms. Stanwyck holds a part in this film is really the only redeeming quality it possesses. This was also at a time when Stanwyck's career was winding down and the woman had to take what she could get. She's still as strong and bright as ever, and is clearly putting above par here.


Gomorrah
- (2008) - Film
Seen: Sunday, March 29, 2009

I asked my Italian friend if he could understand the dialect spoken in this movie, and he said no. That made me feel better, because even though I don't speak Italian I am trying to learn the basics, and I didn't either. This is besides the point. I'm ready to see more politically-charged pics like this from Italy. We need to see how this country has changed since the original era of Neorealism, but it seems there aren't a great many films out there in the ether that show this. Correct me if I am wrong, please!



La Chinoise
- (1967) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, March 29, 2009

Again, more French New Wave grist for the 2009 resolution mill. Haven't read much about it yet--was it made as a sequel to Pierrot Le Fou? They're so similar.







Summer Hours
- (2008) - Film
Seen: Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Playing for two nights only at the Gene Siskel Film Center, it was of the utmost urgency that I see this film from director Olivier Assayas. It ran as part of the Film Center's nicely curated European Union Film Festival, Assayas's film being the crown jewel of the event. I loved this movie from start to finish right up until now this second; I seem to carry it with me everywhere, in all of it's light, lovely meditations on life and the inevitability of death.



Hannah Takes the Stairs
- (2007) - DVD
Seen: Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Sometimes I think I like this movie better on paper than I do in practice. I feel at odds with the characters' unrelenting inarticulateness, to the point of confusion at times. But it can't be denied that this movie from director Joe Swanberg--aka King of Mumblecore--is speaking to and thus helping define a generation. Now here's something I am over the moon about: its opening credit sequence! It's really good!






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Wow--that's 34 movies in one month! Hats off, PK, you make me proud of me.

20090405

February Movies!

In order from most to least favored in my belated movie wrap-up for the month of Febraury 2009, is a neatly organized list of the pictures I've seen--with one pretty still atop from the sublime The Battle of Algiers (1966). My former film students will recognize most of these titles because I screened them in class. And for any stragglers from the old Film History 101, I can confidently recommend you see the rest of these movies as well. Enjoy!

The Battle of Algiers - (1965) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Children of Paradise (Les enfants du paradis) - (1945) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, February 1, 2009

Citizen Kane
- (1941) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, February 7, 2009

Bicycled Thieves - (1948) - DVD
Seen: Friday, February 13, 2009 & Saturday, February 14, 2009

Do The Right Thing - (1989) - DVD
Seen: Friday, February 27, 2009 and Saturday, February 28, 2009

Blow Up
- (1966) - DVD
Seen: Saturday, February 21, 2009

Through A Glass Darkly - (1961) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, February 8, 2009

Sparrow - (2008) - Film
Seen: Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Click here for my review on Scarlett Cinema.

Wanda - (1971) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, February 15, 2009

The Wrestler
- (2008) - Film
Seen: Saturday, February 7, 2009

Winchester '73
- (1950) - DVD
Seen: Thursday, February 5, 2009

Bladerunner - (1982) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story - (2007) - DVD
Seen: Sunday, February 15, 2009

Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 - (2009) - Film
Seen: Monday, February 23, 2009
Click here for my review on Scarlett Cinema.

I Shot Jesse James
- (1949) - DVD
Seen: Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Ride the High Country - (1962) - DVD
Seen: Monday, February 16, 2009


And whoa, it's already April! That means my March movie wrap-up is due already too. This one's going to be killer. With the help of my 10 day convalescence I watched 33 movies in March. Put on the coffee, it's is going to be awhile before this is composed...

20090311

Keep on holding on!

Ah, 10 hours until the podiatric surgeon will slice me open, break my bones and put them back together the way God meant them to be!  Or did God intend for my foot bones to be flawed as they currently are?  And if so, what right does mere-mortal-I have to interfere with His divine way?  But God, why would you fuck with me like that?  I question you, G.  And I guess that's why I've arranged to have this flawed and pain-inflicting foot fixed.  I asked the podiatrist if it would be alright to set up taping in the surgery room, but was denied.  "We don't do that," the nurse told me, "but YouTube has foot surgeries if you're curious to see!"  My mother says they won't allow it because I could use it as potential evidence in my potential malpractice suit against them.  She's probably right, but now that I ponder it at this late hour, it does seem like a smart quality control device.

I could be really mean here and embed a video of this foot slicing spectacle, but you're spared for the time being.  For now, I'm going to share with you the first movie I watched in the month of February--a little taste of what to expect from the entire February log of roughly 15 movies.  

Les enfant du paradis (1945)!
Everywhere else this title is indexed by its English translation, Children of Paradise, but this being the only French phrase I can properly pronounce I always ultimately decide to write it thusly.  None of my film history students spoke French so I passed the first public speaking test of its title.  That's fantastic.  And so is the whole movie (I had enough time to show my students only a six minute clip), which I chose as my Superbowl Sunday evening entertainment on Sunday, February 1, 2009.  If you're out there in Internetland, film students, please watch Carne's film and share your thoughts in the comments thread!  Or just watch it.  That will also do fine.

More to come soon!