Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Kiss Me (2011)


KISS ME  (2011)  ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Alexandra Therese Keining
    Ruth Vega Fernandez, Liv Mjönes, Krister Henriksen,
    Lena Endre, Joakim Nätterqvist, Josefine Tengblad
Two beautiful young women, hanging out in beautiful surroundings, fall in love, beautifully, but one of them is engaged to be married, so it's complicated. Fortunately, they're in the sort of romantic melodrama where women are sensitive and men are obtuse, so the odds are in their favor. Also, they're Swedish, which helps, and it never hurts to be beautiful.

Monday, November 18, 2024

Mother Joan of the Angels (1981)


MOTHER JOAN OF THE ANGELS  (1961)  ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Jerzy Kawalerowicz 
    Mieczyslaw Voit, Lucyna Winnicka, Anna Ciepielewska, 
    Maria Chwalibóg, Stanislaw Jasiukiewicz, Jerzy Kazmarek
This one's in Latin and Polish and I watched it late at night without subtitles, so I couldn't tell you everything that's going on. There's an itinerant priest who turns up in a remote rural community somewhere in, like, the 17th century. He looks unhappy, and the first thing he does after saying his prayers is, he hangs his whip on the wall, but only after kissing it first, so he can flog himself later. Like I said, he looks like an unhappy man. There's also a cloister of nuns close-by, and the nuns appear to be demonically possessed. And a tavern where the local peasants hang out and drink. And that's the setup, pretty much. It's strikingly filmed in black and white, with lots of point-of-view shots where characters look directly into the camera. And there's a scene where the priest and a rabbi confront each other face-to-face, and the rabbi's played by the same actor who plays the priest. And the nuns' choreography, in those flowing white habits, is really nice. It's based on some of the same events that inspired Ken Russell's "The Devils" and Aldous Huxley's book "The Devils of Loudon", and it reminded me a little of Peter Brook's "Marat/Sade", with all that weird craziness going on. Maybe the next time I watch it, it'll have subtitles. Or maybe I'll just watch it with the sound off and play some Gregorian chant.

Saturday, November 16, 2024

The Poetry Deal: A Film with Diane di Prima (2011)

 
THE POETRY DEAL: A FILM WITH DIANE 
DI PRIMA                                           (2011)  ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Melanie La Rosa 
"A poem can be anything," Diane di Prima sys at about the midpoint of this 27-minute documentary. "You have a blank piece of paper. You can do anything. You can make anything happen." Di Prima spent a lifetime doing that, as one of the few women to crack the mostly boys' club that was the Beat Generation. She was passionate about her work and tenacious in her pursuit of it, because she didn't know any other way to be. "Remember, you can have what you ask for," she says at the end. "Ask for everything."

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

The Life and Times of Allen Ginsberg (1993)

 
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF ALLEN GINSBERG  
    D: Jerry Aranson                                      (1993)  ¢ ¢ ¢
These days, it's hard to imagine a poet reaching the level of acclaim and notoriety that Allen Ginsberg attained in the second half of the 20th century. As a primal figure in the Beat movement of the '40s and '50s, a queer, a Jew, a champion of psychedelics, an activist against the Vietnam War, a student of Eastern mysticism and a cohort of everybody from Jack Kerouac to Timothy Leary to Patti Smith, Ginsberg both defined and symbolized the counterculture for 50 years. This documentary digs into some of that, with William S. Burroughs, Herbert Huncke, Abbie Hoffman, Joan Baez and Ken Kesey all lining up as witnesses, and Ginsberg himself talking about his life and reading from "Howl", "Kaddish" and other works. Required reading for fans of the Beats, and highly recommended for anybody trying to figure out how a poet could ever command that kind of public attention.

Monday, November 11, 2024

The Lost King (2022)


THE LOST KING  (2022)  ¢ ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Stephen Frears 
    Sally Hawkins, Steve Coogan, Harry Lloyd,
    Mark Addy, James Fleet, Julian Firth
An unlikely crowd-pleaser based 0n a true story about an unlikely archeological dig, starring Sally Hawkins as a mad Englishwoman on a personal quest to locate and recover the remains of Richard III. The surprise comes when she finds what she's looking for, under a car park in Leicester. It's a David-vs.-Goliath story, the plucky amateur up against the unscrupulous academics who scoff at her request for funding and then try to horn in on her work. (The bureaucrats and professors do not come off looking too good.) Hawkins gets some great closeups, and how can you not root for Sally Hawkins in a movie like this? Steve Coogan, who plays her estranged husband, produced and cowrote the script. 

Saturday, November 9, 2024

La Poison (1951)

 
LA POISON  (1951)  ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Sacha Guitry
    Michel Simon, Jean Debucourt, Germaine Reuver,
    Jacques Varennes, Jeanne Fusier-Gir, Pauline Carton
A crackup black comedy from France, about a guy who kills his wife to prevent her from killing him. There's a bit of Chaplin's "Monsieur Verdoux" in this, but Guitry's approach feels looser, and why there was never an American remake by somebody like Hitchcock or Wilder or Woody Allen is hard to say. My favorite part was when a bunch of kids, hearing stories about the murder trial from a neighbor, build their own backyard guillotine.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

Saltburn (2023)


SALTBURN  (2023)  ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Emerald Fennell
    Barry Keoghan, Jacob Elordi, Archie Madekwe
    Rosamund Pike, Richard E. Grant, Alison Oliver,
    Carey Mulligan, Paul Rhys, Reece Shearsmith
A devious dark comedy about an impoverished scholarship student who's invited to spend the summer holiday at the posh estate of a much-admired classmate. There are three or four turns in this that not only don't go where you expect them to, they go places you maybe haven't seen before. Barry Keoghan's at the center of it all, proving without a doubt that his Oscar-nominated performance in "The Banshees of Inisherin" was no fluke. Starting out, his character, Oliver, is a socially awkward, fish-out-of-water new kid facing his first term at Oxford. But he's smart and clever and he catches on quick, and his eyes don't miss a thing. He'd be easy too underestimate, and as it turns out, that would be a big mistake. The upper-crust family who take him in - Sir James (Richard E. Grant), wife Elspeth (Rosamund Pike) and daughter Venetia (Alison Oliver) - cover the spectrum from merely eccentric to barking mad, and that doesn't even take in houseguest "Poor Dear Pamela" (Carey Mulligan, who doesn't get nearly enough screen time). From the absurdly ornate opening titles on, Emerald Fennell's direction is both delicate and in-your-face, a high-wire act you've got to be bold to attempt and skilled to pull off. But it all comes back to Keoghan and those knowing, inscrutable eyes. If there was any chance you'd forget him in this, what he does at the end should take care of that.