Monday, August 30, 2010

Love Me Tonight (1932)


LOVE ME TONIGHT  (1932)  ¢ ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Rouben Mamoulian
    Maurice Chevalier, Jeanette MacDonald, Charlie Ruggles,
    Myrna Loy, Charles Butterworth, C. Aubrey Smith
A visually impressive early sound musical, groundbreaking for its integration of music and cinema to tell a story. The story has Maurice as a Paris tailor romancing a princess played by Jeanette MacDonald. Musical highlights include "Mimi", "Isn't It Romantic?" and the opening production number set to the everyday sounds of the city. Lots of playful pre-code dialogue, including the exchange that occurs when MacDonald collapses and somebody asks Myrna Loy if she can go for a doctor. "Certainly," Loy replies. "Bring him right in."

Friday, August 27, 2010

An Education (2009)


AN EDUCATION  (2009)  ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Lone Scherfig
    Carey Mulligan, Peter Sarsgaard, Alfred Molina,
    Dominic Cooper, Olivia Williams, Rosamund Pike,
    Cara Seymour, Emma Thompson, Sally Hawkins
A teenager hoping to get into Oxford hooks up with a real-estate speculator and part-time thief who shows her the ways of the world. The acting's real good in this, and that's partly why it feels so creepy. You can understand why David (Peter Sarsgaard) and Jenny (Carey Mulligan) would be attracted to each other. He's cultured and charming. She's smart and impressionable. As much as you wish she'd just kick him in the balls and walk away, you can kind of see why she doesn't. Both Sarsgaard and Mulligan do a good job with that. The rest of the actors are stuck playing stereotypes, though Alfred Molina as Jenny's blustering father and Olivia Williams as a sympathetic teacher get one scene each late in the film to stretch a little. There's more than a hint of Audrey Hepburn in what Mulligan does here, especially in the scenes set in Paris. It's no guarantee of anything, but she has a look the camera loves and the talent to back it up, and that's a combination that could make a girl a star.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Viking Women and the Sea Serpent (1957)


THE SAGA OF THE VIKING WOMEN
AND THEIR VOYAGE TO THE WATERS
OF THE GREAT SEA SERPENT  (1957)  ¢ ¢
    D: Roger Corman
    Abby Dalton, Susan Cabot,
    Brad Jackson, Jonathan Haze
Curvy Viking babes sail out after their men, who went to sea three years before and never came back. It's a big world out there, but amazingly, the girls get sucked into the same vortex guarded by the same giant reptile and are captured by the same tribe of barbarians who captured their menfolk all that time ago. An early Roger Corman cheapie, made for midnight viewing. Corman once wrote a book called "How I Made a Hundred Movies in Hollywood and Never Lost a Dime". Judging from pictures like this, he never spent more than 10 cents, either. That's some title for a B movie, though, huh?

Monday, August 23, 2010

Flashback: How We Watch Movies


    The first time I saw Charlie Chaplin's "The Great Dictator" was in the Stiftskeller in the Memorial Union in Madison. I don't remember what year. Late '60s would be a good guess. The Stiftskeller was a small room and the screening was packed, standing room only. So I stood. Through the whole movie. I was not alone.
    The thing was, back then, if an old movie you really wanted to see turned up anywhere, you went. There was no guarantee you'd ever get a chance to see it again. It seems unbelievable now, but as recently as the 1970s, that was the deal. A new picture would get a theatrical run, often no more than a week, and then disappear. Maybe it would show up on television eventually. Or maybe not. There was no video release to look forward to a few months down the line. There were no videos.
    In college towns like Madison, film societies helped fill the gap. People with a passion for cinema would band together, scrounge some equipment, rent a hall, and show the kinds of movies that never played anywhere else. Silents. Movies with subtitles. Pornography. Flash Gordon serials from the 1930s. And Charlie Chaplin. That's how I wound up in the Stiftskeller that night.
    But that was then. Our access to films and our options for viewing them keep changing, and they'll change some more, in ways we can't even guess at. Today you could theoretically watch movies 24/7 for years on end and never see the same film twice. (Why you would want to is another question.) I've got my own copy of "The Great Dictator" now. I can watch it any time I like. But it's on VHS, already an antiquated technology.
    Last year for the first time, I watched a feature-length movie from beginning to end on my computer. My old friend Sporgersi sent me the link, and with a few clicks of the mouse, there I was, sitting at my desk, watching "The Saga of the Viking Women and Their Voyage To the Waters of the Great Sea Serpent" (an awesome title if there ever was one, but hard to fit on a marquee). It wasn't quite the same as seeing "The Great Dictator" in the Stiftskeller. There's something about watching a movie in a cramped, stuffy, smoky room with a hundred other cinema junkies that can't be duplicated on a computer screen on a quiet night at home. The Viking Women weren't much of a match for Charlie Chaplin, either. But at least I didn't have to watch the movie standing up.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

The Great Dictator (1940)


THE GREAT DICTATOR  (1940)  ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Charles Chaplin
    Charles Chaplin, Paulette Goddard, Jack Oakie,
    Henry Daniell, Reginald Gardiner, Chester Conklin
Chaplin's controversial spoof on Hitler, released at a time when a lot of people no longer considered Hitler all that funny. The story revolves around a double-edged joke - the fictitious resemblance between a maniacal dictator and a shell-shocked Jewish barber, and the ironic real-life resemblance between Chaplin's screen character and Hitler. Romantic, sentimental, and at times extremely naive. (Chaplin wrote later that if he had known what was going on in the concentration camps, he never could have made the picture.) But it's vintage Chaplin. Some highlights: Chaplin as the dictator, toying with a giant globe. Chaplin as the barber, shaving a customer to classical music. And the performances of Henry Daniell and Jack Oakie as thinly disguised stand-ins for Goebbels and Mussolini. Chaplin's first all-sound film, and the last time he played a character resembling the Little Tramp. Seventy years later, it still has the power to amuse and provoke.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

The Runaways (2010)


THE RUNAWAYS  (2010)  ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Floria Sigismondi
    Kristen Stewart, Dakota Fanning, Michael Shannon,
    Stella Maeve, Alia Shawkat, Riley Keough,
    Scout Taylor-Compton, Tatum O'Neal
In "The Runaways", Kristen Stewart as Joan Jett announces her presence unequivocally the moment she appears. It's 1975, and Joan's a 15-year-old, punked out in jeans and a T-shirt, surreptitiously browsing among the men's items in a small clothing store. The clerk behind the counter is talking to a guy decked out from head to foot in black leather. The clerk tells Joan the women's clothes are on the other side of the store. Joan pauses for a second or two and then walks up to the counter, stands next to the leather guy, dumps out a sackful of change, and says matter-of-factly, "I want what he's wearing." The movie tells how Joan and her fellow Runaways - Cherie Currie, Sandy West, Lita Ford and Jackie Fox - challenged the musical establishment and its prevailing wisdom as an all-girl band playing kick-ass rock & roll. It's based on a memoir by Currie, but its most intriguing character (and the band's most charismatic member) is the combative, androgynous Jett, and the intensity level goes up noticeably whenever Kristen as Joan is on screen. Anybody who's watched the real Joan Jett kick and strut and snarl her way through a live show will appreciate just how good at playing her Kristen Stewart is.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Cookie's Fortune (1999)


COOKIE'S FORTUNE  (1999)  ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Robert Altman
    Charles S. Dutton, Liv Tyler, Glenn Close,
    Julianne Moore, Patricia Neal, Ned Beatty,
    Chris O'Donnell, Lyle Lovett, Donald Moffat
Family ties, old guns, Easter eggs, suicide, Wild Turkey, sex, lies and catfish enchiladas. Robert Altman's laid-back ensemble piece about life in a small Mississippi town and the community of mostly good-natured eccentrics who hang out there. Glenn Close takes her role as a vindictive old maid a few miles over the top, but most of the actors slip into their roles about as comfortably as you'd put on a pair of well-worn overalls. Patricia Neal plays the pipe-smoking title character, and Lyle Lovett does an oddball turn as a fishmonger who lusts after Liv Tyler.

Patricia Neal
(1926-2010)