Friday, February 28, 2020

Bullitt (1968)


BULLITT  (1968)  
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    D: Peter Yates
    Steve McQueen, Robert Vaughn, Jacqueline Bissett,
    Don Gordon, Simon Oakland, Robert Duvall, Norman Fell
A police detective tangles with a slimeball politician while trying to solve the murder of the key witness in a hearing on organized crime. One of the best cop thrillers ever, with a propulsive jazz score by Lalo Schiffrin, sneering villainy by Robert Vaughn, Jacqueline Bissett as eye candy with class, and the wary, tight-lipped coolness of Steve McQueen. And, uh, yeah, there's the car chase, with McQueen driving a legendary Ford Mustang all over San Francisco real fast. Better buckle up, just to be safe.

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

High Life (2018)


HIGH LIFE  (2018)  
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    D: Claire Denis
    Robert Pattinson, Juliette Binoche, André Benjamin,
    Mia Goth, Agnata Buzek, Lars Edinger, Claire Tan,
    Ewan Mitchell, Gloria Obianyo, Jessie Ross
A sci-fi art film about a spaceship and its crew of convicts on a mission that has something to do with exploring black holes and something - the part Dr. Juliette Binoche is obsessed with - to do with reproduction. I'm not sure how much the science in this holds up - I'd be the wrong person to ask about that - but it's thoughtful and deliberate, a space opera that's more concerned with emotions and ideas than pyrotechnics. It risks being ridiculous when it's trying to be profound - masturbation plays a key role in the plot - and the resolution is mystifying. Whatever you think might be going on there at the end, who knows, you could be right. Pattinson's main costar for a lot of it is a baby, and their scenes together are some of the best in the movie.

Monday, February 24, 2020

Quote File / Take 16


Some lines from the movies of Kirk Douglas:

"I'm a thousand-dollar-a-day newspaperman. 

  You can have me for nothing."
  Douglas in "Ace In the Hole"

"Death is the only freedom a slave knows. That's 

  why he's not afraid of it. That's why we'll win."
  Douglas in "Spartacus"

"If I can't have your love, I'll take your hate."
  Douglas to Janet Leigh in "The Vikings"

"Do you always wear a gun over your underwear?"
  Douglas to John Wayne in "The War Wagon"

"This story is pure fiction. Rest assured, you can 

  believe every word of it."
  Douglas in "The Devil's Disciple" 

"If you dream, dream big."
  Douglas in "The Bad and the Beautiful"

Saturday, February 22, 2020

A Guy Named Joe (1943)


A GUY NAMED JOE  (1943)  ¢ ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Victor Fleming
    Spencer Tracy, Irene Dunne, Van Johnson,
    Ward Bond, Lionel Barrymore, James Gleason,
    Barry Nelson, Esther Williams, Don DeFore
The wartime classic from MGM, starring Spencer Tracy as a hotshot Air Force pilot who comes back as the guardian angel to another hotshot pilot played by Van Johnson. Irene Dunne plays the girl who loves both of them, and a flyer herself. Toward the end, Dunne's character does something that pretty much defies belief, but in a story where departed aviators end up in heaven getting their marching orders from Lionel Barrymore, the movie's in fantasyland, anyway. Better just go with it, I'd say. It's more fun that way. Steven Spielberg's remake, "Always", came out in 1989.

Thursday, February 20, 2020

Turbo (2013)


TURBO  (2013)  
¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: David Soren
An animated feature about a snail who competes in the Indianapolis 500. I watched this on a Saturday morning with my nephew Henry, who was six at the time. He loved it. Some movies you should only watch on a Saturday morning in the company of a six-year-old.

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

The Doom Generation (1995)


THE DOOM GENERATION  (1995)  
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    D: Gregg Araki
    Rose McGowan, James Duval, Jonathan Schaech,
    Parker Posey, Dustin Nguyen, Margaret Cho,
    Nicky Katt, Don Galloway, Heidi Fleiss
84 minutes of aimless disaffection about three young people driving around aimlessly being disaffected. That turns out to be about 84 minutes too much, and some of it gets kind of rough. There. You've been warned.

Saturday, February 15, 2020

Lost In Paris (2016)


LOST IN PARIS  (2016)  
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    D: Dominique Abel, Fiona Gordon
    Fiona Gordon, Dominique Abel, Emmanuelle Riva,
    Pierre Richard, Frédéric Meert, Bruno Romy
A Canadian backpacker, an old woman with memory issues and a homeless guy living in a tent find themselves crossing paths and scraping by on the streets of Paris, the banks of the Seine, and finally the Eiffel Tower. Another sweetly eccentric comedy by Fiona Gordon and Dominique Abel, who do sight-gag humor as well as anybody here in the 21st century. Sometimes it's enough just watching them dance.

Thursday, February 13, 2020

Island In the Sky (1953)


ISLAND IN THE SKY  (1953)  
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    D: William A. Wellman
    John Wayne, Lloyd Nolan, Walter Abel,
    James Arness, Andy Devine, Allyn Joslyn,
    Jimmy Lydon, Darryl Hickman, Harry Carey Jr.,
    Hal Baylor, Sean McCrory, Wally Cassell,
    Regis Toomey, Paul Fix, George Chandler
Square-jawed heroics starring John Wayne as an Army transport pilot forced to land his plane in the wintry wastes of Canada. The Duke and his men survive, but now they're stranded in the middle of nowhere, on the edge of a frozen lake, with a dwindling supply of fuel, very little food, a dying radio, and not nearly enough clothing to offset a temperature that's stuck at about 70° below. Will fellow flyboys Lloyd Nolan, James Arness, Allyn Joslin and Andy Devine get to them before they all perish in the snow? Conditions on the ground and in the air don't look good, but remember, this is a John Wayne movie. It's one of Wayne's lesser known mid-career vehicles, a box-office moneymaker that took forever to turn up on video. Keep your eyes peeled for Fess Parker, Mike ("Touch") Connors and a grown-up Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer in the supporting cast.

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Climax (2018)


CLIMAX  (2018)  
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    D: Gaspar Noé
    Sofia Boutella, Souheila Yacoub, Claude Gajan Maull,
    Giselle Palmer, Thea Carla Schott, Romain Guillermic,
    Taylor Kastle, Kiddy Smile, Lea Vlamos, Alaia Alsafir
The members of a modern dance company party down after a rehearsal, not knowing that somebody has spiked the sangria with LSD. This is more like a situation than a story, like "Suspiria" if you just cut to the part where everybody goes to hell. It isn't nearly as much fun to look at, though, and the fusion of bad acid and characters you don't like to begin with does not lead to a real good time. If these folks all want to trip out and kill each other, it's okay with me. It just seems kind of unfair to ask the rest of us to watch.

Saturday, February 8, 2020

Spartacus (1960)


SPARTACUS  (1960)  
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    D: Stanley Kubrick
    Kirk Douglas, Jean Simmons, Laurence Olivier,
    Charles Laughton, Peter Ustinov, Tony Curtis,
    Woody Strode, John Gavin, John Ireland,
    Nina Foch, Charles McGraw, John Dall,
    Herbert Lom, John Hoyt, Harold J. Stone
The movie Kirk Douglas seems likely to be remembered for, a literate, emotionally satisfying epic about the slave revolt against Rome in 73 B.C. Between them, director Stanley Kubrick, screenwriter Dalton Trumbo and producer/star Douglas fill the picture with action, humor and romance, while maintaining a level of intelligence and a passionate sense of purpose that big-budget films sometimes lose track of. The scope is massive (Douglas hired 8,000 men from the Spanish army to stage the climactic battle scene), but the focus invariably centers on the everyday workings of human life. A persuasive argument for both the 70mm process and the continued preservation of older movies. (The restored print contains a now-famous exchange between Laurence Olivier and Tony Curtis that didn't make the cut in 1960.) Anybody who doesn't consider Jean Simmons one of the screen's great beauties has obviously never seen "Spartacus".

Kirk Douglas
(1916-2020)

Thursday, February 6, 2020

King of Jazz (1930)


KING OF JAZZ  (1930)  
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    D: John Murray Anderson
    Paul Whiteman, John Boles, Laura La Plante,
    Walter Brennan, Slim Summerville, The Rhythm Boys
A collection of variety acts from the early sound era, elaborately staged and presided over by bandleader Paul Whiteman. Some bits are more lively than others and the vaudeville novelty acts are kind of quaint, but the production values are spectacular, enhanced by the use of two-strip Technicolor. Highlights: a young Bing Crosby harmonizing with the Rhythm Boys, and the Whiteman orchestra's rendition of "Rhapsody In Blue". Also on the bill: the first-ever color cartoon, directed by Woody Woodpecker's Walter Lantz. The high-kicking Russell Markert Girls, whose legs appear in several numbers, would soon become better known as the Radio City Rockettes.

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

The Dead Don't Die (2019)


THE DEAD DON'T DIE  (2019)  
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    D: Jim Jarmusch
    Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Chloe Sevigny,
    Tilda Swinton, Tom Waits, Steve Buscemi,
    Selena Gomez, Iggy Pop, Carol Kane
Jim Jarmusch pays tribute to George Romero in "The Dead Don't Die", starring Bill Murray, Adam Driver and Chloe Sevigny as small-town cops faced wth a plague of the undead. It seems that polar fracking has knocked the earth off  its axis, causing day and night to be all screwed up and once-buried corpses to (sort of) come to life. Tilda Swinton plays an undertaker. Tom Waits plays a crazy hermit. Steve Buscemi plays a redneck farmer. Iggy Pop plays a zombie who craves coffee and Carol Kane plays one who loves Chardonnay. True to Romero, Jarmusch views zombies as a metaphor for consumerism, and he has an eye for little things that he finds interesting, despite or because of the fact that they're completely incidental. Like when the camera pans along a city street and lands on a white bicycle leaning against a tree. The bicycle has nothing to do with anything in the story, but it's there, and viewers who know about white bicycles will know what that means. Considering that most zombie movies are satires to begin with, a Jim Jarmusch zombie movie makes perfect sense: the Zen master of deadpan and the slightly less deadpan undead.

Sunday, February 2, 2020

Thomas Jefferson (1997)


THOMAS JEFFERSON  (1997)  
¢ ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Ken Burns
A three-hour documentary on the life of America's brilliant and somewhat elusive third president. Like Benjamin Franklin, Jefferson was a product of the Enlightenment, and nobody except Franklin could match his range of skills and interests. As a slave owner who wrote the defining document on human freedom, he was also contradictory. He viewed slavery as a curse on the nation, yet he never freed his own slaves, and according to some sources, fathered several children with one of them. He was a forceful advocate for states' rights, and an equally forceful advocate for the separation of church and state. He spent lavishly (and often went into debt), played music, invented a machine that could reproduce his letters as he wrote them, and did significant work in architecture and horticulture. After retiring from public life, he founded the University of Virginia. He's one of those primal figures you can't imagine American history without. His image is on the nickel and the two-dollar bill. Photography hadn't come along yet in Jefferson's time, which limits what Burns has to work with visually. He uses a few black-and-white photos of slaves (not Jefferson's), but mostly relies on paintings and engravings, idyllically lit pastoral scenes, and footage shot in and around Monticello. Ossie Davis is the narrator. Sam Waterston does the voice of Jefferson. Watching this, you can't help wondering what Jefferson would have to say about the political situation today. And if you should hear a faint whirring sound the next time  president #45 opens his mouth and speaks, that's Thomas Jefferson spinning in his grave.