Thursday, September 19, 2024

The Last Picture Show (1971)


THE LAST PICTURE SHOW  (1971)  ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Peter Bogdanovich 
    Timothy Bottoms, Jeff Bridges, Cybil Shepherd,
    Ben Johnson, Cloris Leachman, Ellen Burstyn,
    Eileen Brennan, Clu Gulager, Sam Bottoms,
    Randy Quaid, Sharon Taggart, Kimberly Hyde
Lives going nowhere in a dead-end town, based on the novel by Larry McMurtry and brought to the screen with sepia-tone mastery by Peter Bogdanovich. The year is 1951. The place is a desolate, dot-on-the-map crossroads in West Texas. There's not much to do there, and way too much time to do it in, but when you're a high-school senior, you'll find a way to fill in the gaps. (And when you're on the football team that just lost Friday night's game 121-14, you can expect a certain amount of abuse.) Timothy Bottoms, Jeff Bridges and Cybil Shepherd are the young leads. Ben Johnson and Cloris Leachman won Academy Awards, and the entire ensemble is solid, but if I was going to pick somebody to keep an eye on, that'd be Eileen Brennan as a cafe waitress who's seen it all and can freeze you with a look. The spirit is mournful, but sometimes so is life. 

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

France (2021)

 
FRANCE  (2021)  ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Bruno Dumont
    Léa Seydoux, Benjamin Biolay, Emanuele Arioli, 
    Jawad Zemmar, Noura Benbahlouli, Blanche Gardin
A high-end, high-maintenance television journalist starts to unravel big-time when she injures a kid in a traffic accident on a Paris Street. The movie's kind of strung-out, too, and at 2 hours and 13 minutes, it feels a little long. But it looks real nice, and Léa Seydoux has some arresting closeups that seem to go on forever and then some, usually with the actress looking straight into the camera. It's all kind of outlandish - the journalist and her family live in an apartment the size of the Louvre - but as satire it's not half as funny as it thinks it is, and as melodrama it's not that involving. Most of us will never know, of course, but apparently it's not always enough to be beautiful, famous and rich.

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Full Time (2021)

 
FULL TIME  (2021)  ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Eric Gravel
    Laure Calamy, Anne Suarez, Geneviève Mnich,
    Nolan Arizmendi, Sasha Lemaitre Cremaschi,
    Cyril Gueï, Lucie Gallo Agathe Dronne
This movie has drawn comparisons to Tom Tykwer's "Run Lola Run", and while the narrative operates on a slightly different track, it moves just about as fast. It's about a Paris hotel maid frantically trying to juggle her job, her kids, her commute and a crucial upcoming interview, all of it complicated by an ex who's late with the alimony payment and a crippling transit strike. For the length of the movie and the four or five days over which the story plays out, she barely has time to breathe. Laure Calamy plays the frazzled heroine, struggling to hold it together in the face of what appears to be never-ending chaos. It's a terrific performance as the kind of person you see all the time and never really notice, suggesting that just getting by from one day to the next, when the fates are lined up against you, can be an act of extraordinary courage.

Friday, September 13, 2024

The Furies (1950)

 
THE FURIES  (1950)  ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Anthony Mann
    Barbara Stanwyck, Walter Huston, Wendell Corey, 
    Judith Anderson, Gilbert Roland, Thomas Gomez, 
    Beulah Bondi, Albert Dekker, Frank Ferguson
Walter Huston plays a cattlemen whose ranch covers the open range as far as he can see. Barbara Stanwyck plays his ambitious daughter, who thinks she could run the place as well as he can, and maybe better. Wendell Corey plays a gambler-turned-banker who Stanwyck unaccountably takes a shine to and who ends up holding the deed to the ranch. It's one of those movies that you always want to be better than it is. Huston (in his last screen role) chews the scenery. Corey, who had less natural charm than just about any actor ever, seems miscast. Stanwyck provides the star power, but there's just not enough there for her to grab on to. You keep wanting her to hook up with good-guy Mexican cowboy Gilbert Roland, but instead, the old man has him hanged. Sometimes things just don't work out. 

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things (2004)

 
THE HEART IS DECEITFUL ABOVE ALL THINGS
    D: Asia Argento                                                 (2024)  ¢ ¢ ¢
    Asia Argento, Jimmy Bennett, Dylan Sprouse,
    Cole Sprouse, Jeremy Renner, Peter Fonda,
    Lydia Lunch, Ben Foster, Marilyn Manson
A young boy has his life uprooted when he's whisked away from the foster parents he loves and deposited with his mother, whose parenting skills, let's just say, are not the best. It's an escalating chronicle of abuse. Every time you think the kid's life can't get any more fucked up, guess what, it does. It's borderline comical. At the time the movie was shot, the book it's based on was thought to be nonfiction, a publishing ploy that turned out to be a hoax. Argento's effectively scary as the mother, a woman who arguably ought to be put away somewhere, but at the very least kept away from raising children.  A depressing, back-alley, truck-stop, dive-bar vision of American life, with a painfully real performance by Jimmy Bennett as the troubled but resilient kid.

Saturday, September 7, 2024

Conrad Veidt: My Life (2020)


CONRAD VEIDT: MY LIFE  (2020)  ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Mark Rappaport 
As the first-person, beyond-the-grave narrator of this documentary points out, the two roles Conrad Veidt is most noted for are the bookends of his career: Cesare, the somnambulist in "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" (1919) and Major Strasser, the Nazi who tangles with Humphrey Bogart in "Casablanca" (1942). The movie says almost nothing about Veidt's life before "Caligari", and the focus wanders sometimes to the point where you wonder whether maybe the filmmakers have forgotten that their picture is supposed to be about Conrad Veidt. As with his previous documentary on Jean Seberg, Rappaport's subjective approach can be more distracting than illuminating. Good clips, though, some from movies you've probably never heard of. Veidt worked in Germany into the sound era, and got away to Britain and then Hollywood after clashing with Josef Goebbels. (Veidt's wife was Jewish.) He died from a heart attack on a golf course in 1943 (the 11th hole, if the information in this movie is correct). He was 50.

Thursday, September 5, 2024

Clerks III (2022)

 
CLERKS III  (2022)  ¢ ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Kevin Smith
    Brian O'Halloran, Jeff Anderson, Jason Mewes,
    Kevin Smith, Trevor Fehrman, Austin Zajur,
    Amy Sedaris, Rosario Dawson, Fred Armison,
    Danny Trejo, Kate Micucci, Ben Affleck
Kevin Smith closes out his "Clerks" trilogy with working-class heroes Dante and Randal now the owners of the Quick Stop store where their adventures began back in 1994. They're still selling groceries and cigarettes, and playing hockey with the gang up on the roof, but they're approaching 50 now and mortality is creeping up on them. Also hanging around (of course) are Jay and Silent Bob, who have moved into Randal's old video store, which is now (of course) a pot shop. Other familiar (but older) faces from the previous Clerks movies show up, too. For anybody who's a fan of what Smith does, a good time is pretty much guaranteed, the emotional center, as always, being Jeff Anderson's Randal, a misanthropic wiseguy who hides his sensitivity behind a wall of cynicism, which is kind of what the Clerks movies are all about: laughter in the face of a world you know is going to screw you, and somewhere underneath it all, a heart.

Tuesday, September 3, 2024

The Hit List: Louise Brooks


                   "There is no Garbo!
                     There is no Dietrich!
                     There is only Louise Brooks!"

                                                          Henri Langlois  
 
    Like James Dean, Louise Brooks had an impact on popular culture that transcended her relatively brief career. Unlike Dean, Brooks lived a long time after her movie career was over. 
    She was born into a middle-class family in Kansas in 1906. Her father was a lawyer. A precocious kid and a dancing prodigy, she was shipped off to New York at 15, and performed with a modern dance company before moving on to George White's Scandals and the Ziegfeld Follies. She was also a party girl, a fun-loving flapper whose sexual adventures included a legendary encounter with Charlie Chaplin while he was in New York to promote "The Gold Rush". 
    She started getting small parts in films, and the parts were getting bigger when Austrian director G.W. Pabst spotted her and decided she'd be perfect to play Lulu, the self-destructive heroine in "Pandora's Box". She made two pictures for Pabst in Berlin and another movie in Paris, but when she got back to Hollywood, she found she'd burned a few too many bridges and nobody would hire her. She played bit parts and made a couple of B westerns, and in 1938, she quit. 
    On screen, with her trademark helmet hairdo and uninhibited sexuality, she was incandescent, and her acting stands out in the silent era for its instinctive minimalism. She appeared in about two dozen movies. In some, her roles are so tiny, they hardly matter, and some of her pictures are lost. Here's a selection:

"The Show Off"  (1926/Malcolm St. Clair)
Brooks has a key supporting role in a comedy starring Ford Sterling, the former Keystone Kop.
"It's the Old Army Game"  (1926/A. Edward Sutherland)
Brooks shares the screen with W.C. Fields, her pal from the Ziegfeld Follies. Fields remade this in the sound era as "It's a Gift".
"Beggars of Life"  (1928/William Wellman)
Brooks plays a woman on the run from the law, riding the rails and memorably disguised as a boy.
"A Girl In Every Port"  (1928/Howard Hawks)
Robert Armstrong and Victor McLaglen play sailors. Brooks plays the carnival artist who comes between them. This is the movie that made Pabst cast Brooks as Lulu.
"The Canary Murder Case"  (1929/Malcolm St. Clair)
Brooks plays a blackmailing showgirl in a murder mystery starring William Powell as Philo Vance.
"Pandora's Box"  (1929/G.W. Pabst)
Brooks plays Lulu, a seductive free spirit whose life spirals down through a series of reckless relationships, the last of them with Jack the Ripper. Her signature role. 
"Diary of a Lost Girl" (1929/G.W. Pabst)
Brooks goes through even more hell in her second movie for Pabst.
"Prix de Beauté"  (1930/Augusto Genina)
An early French sound film with Brooks as a typist who wins the Miss France beauty contest. Quentin Tarantino reworked its ironic conclusion toward the end of "Inglourious Basterds".
"Windy Riley Goes Hollywood" (1931/Roscoe Arbuckle)
A dismal two-reel comedy with Louise as a movie star whose tabloid life off-camera could derail her career. She and her director could both relate to that.
"Overland Stage Raiders" (1938/George Sherman)
Brooks' last screen appearance, a routine, low-budget western starring John Wayne.

    After Hollywood, things fell apart. She toured as a dancer, married and divorced, opened a dance studio in Wichita, and eventually found herself back in New York, working as a sales clerk at Saks Fifth Avenue. She became a recluse and slipped into a marginal existence whose main components were alcohol and prostitution, a dark period that lasted several years. (When Pabst predicted that Brooks would end up like Lulu, he wasn't far off the mark.)
    Then, in the mid-1950s, the French rediscovered her movies, and eventually the word reached the States. The film historian James Card tracked her down and got her to move to Rochester, New York, where she embarked on a new career, writing about film. Her writing was sharp, and her book of essays, "Lulu In Hollywood", is a classic. 
    Several documentaries have been made about Brooks. "Looking For Lulu", written by Barry Paris and narrated by Shirley MacLaine, is a good one. Her life story would be great material for a biopic, but except for "The Chaperone", a 2018 film about her early days in New York, nobody has tried to do that, and finding an actress who could bring to the screen what she did would be tough. 
    It's been said that there are no second acts in American life, but Louise Brooks contradicts that. She died in Rochester in 1985. She was 78.

          "I learned how to act by watching Martha 
            Graham dance, and I learned how to 
            dance by watching Charlie Chaplin act."

                                                                        Louise Brooks

Monday, September 2, 2024

Feast (2005)

 
FEAST  (2005)  ¢ ¢
    D: John Gulager
    Krista Allen, Navi Rawat, Balthazar Getty,
    Judah Friedlander, Duane Whitaker, Clu Gulager,
    Josh Zuckerman, Henry Rollins, Jenny Wade,
    Diana Ayala Goldner, Eileen Ryan, Jason Mewes
Alien monsters attack a country bar. Maybe the bartender should just get them all a zombie.