By David Elliott
Flix Nosh is a personal movie menu,
served fresh each Friday.
APPETIZER (reviews of Our Little Sister and Bridget Jones’s Baby)
Unless
your need is animation or heavy-duty violence, we mostly go to Japanese movies
for a subtle lacing of form and ritual within delicately nuanced drama. That is
also true of some of the best violent ones, as when Akira Kurosawa made some of
the greatest samurai action follow the rhythms of nature and village life in The Seven Samurai (1954), or when the quiet
swordsman of Yoji Yamada’s The Twilight
Samurai (2002) sought refuge from the warrior world in domestic
tranquility. And it dominates bravura works by sensitive male directors devoted
to largely feminine themes, like Kenji Mizoguchi, Yasujiro Ozu and Mikio
Naruse.APPETIZER (reviews of Our Little Sister and Bridget Jones’s Baby)
The
new master in this line is Hirokazu Koreeda, whose Our Little Sister – not to be confused with Sisters, Little Sister or Little
Women – carries forward the beautiful intricacies of his Nobody Knows (2004) and Still Walking (2008). In this picture, adapted
from the graphic manga novel Umimachi Diary by Yoshida Akimi, three
sisters have been raised by their grandmother. Their father left for a woman; their
mother fled as well. The three live in the late granny’s old, wooden home in Kamakura,
a town best known for its Great Buddha statue. Sternly maternal, the elder
sister at 20 is the elegant nurse Sachi (Yoshino Koda). She takes lovely, sexually
adventurous Yoshimi (Ryo Kase), 22, and cute, amusing Chika (Kaho), 19, to
attend the father’s funeral. Ritual and relatives stir up covert feelings, and
the sisters share a revelation: their half-sister Suzu (Suzu Hirose), a pretty
girl of 13 whose gentle eyes are almost pleading.
They
take Suzu home, to live with them, and Koreeda explores the town, its natural
setting, family secrets, and a sisterhood beyond any trendy rhetoric. At times
amusingly, he opens up each sibling, plus some lively side figures. Using a
light palette visually, a light touch dramatically, the movie renders increasingly
layered emotions about domesticity, work, romance and obligation. There is the
Japanese devotion to nature, with a beloved plum tree and the cherry blossom
celebration. Some soft music murmurs “Fifties soaper,” but is under control.
Our Little Sister has an impeccable love for its people, without the somewhat tricky stylization of Kon Ichikawa's The Makioka Sisters (1983). More may remember Tampopo and Jiro Dreams of Sushi, because the "girls" are so often cooking, eating, talking about food, recalling old treats. Chika's "I'm so hungry, can you cook something?" is almost the main theme. Note to theater managers: rent a sushi bar for your vending counter.
Our Little Sister has an impeccable love for its people, without the somewhat tricky stylization of Kon Ichikawa's The Makioka Sisters (1983). More may remember Tampopo and Jiro Dreams of Sushi, because the "girls" are so often cooking, eating, talking about food, recalling old treats. Chika's "I'm so hungry, can you cook something?" is almost the main theme. Note to theater managers: rent a sushi bar for your vending counter.
Bridget Jones’s Baby
At
47, after a six-year break from movies, Renée Zellweger is back as Bridget
Jones, at 43 “the last barren husk in London.” So Bridget says, but who is she
kidding? She is still Zellweger, nicely older, with those peachy cheeks, that
adorable accent, that goofy-dear smile, that floppy way of flailing, failing
but springing right back. Not as sharp as the 2001 original, Bridget Jones’s Baby beats the dumb 2004
sequel. Yes, even with predictable plot turns, mooning, childbirth agony, ethnic
and gender clichés, old songs (“That’s Amore,” “We Are Family,” etc.) to trigger scenes, and Colin Firth looking stern and wary in his return as fabled flame Mark
Darcy.
Past,
rakish suitor Hugh Grant opted out – his better option was Florence Foster Jenkins – and his amiable sub is Patrick Dempsey,
an American biz-hunk courting Bridget while Firth hovers like a rather
magisterial moth. She gets pregnant and, golly, who’s the dad? You may wince, you may laugh. If you prattle about small
signs of Zellweger’s age, you’re a pig. If you grouch about obviousness, you
are ignoring the small, true charms. Zellweger is still an ace actor, and she owns
Jones. Emma Thompson appears wittily, and helped script. There is something OK about
a comedy with zings like “ironic beards” and “Gladolf Hitler.”
SALAD (A List)
For
what it’s worth (loads of yen), here are my Twelve
Favorite Japanese Films, not animated: High
and Low (Kurosawa, 1963), Seven
Samurai (Kurosawa, 1954), Ikiru
(Kurosawa, 1952 ), Ugetsu (Mizoguchi,
1953), Rashomon (Kurosawa, 1950), When a Woman Ascends the Stairs (Naruse,
1962), The Hidden Fortress (Kurosawa,
1958), Tokyo Story (Ozu, 1953), An Actor’s Revenge (Ichikawa, 1963), Yojimbo (Kurosawa, 1961), The Twilight Samurai (Yamada, 2002) and Our Little Sister (Koreeda, 2015). Clearly,
for me the top master is Akira Kurosawa.WINE (Vin Orsonaire de Chateau Welles)
As he knew, Orson Welles never had a better female actor than his old radio reliable Agnes Moorehead. In The Magnificent Ambersons, 1942, “Moorehead conveys Aunt Fanny’s torment in every birdlike gesture of her body, frequently drawing the spectator’s eye into little corners of the frame, where she dominates the screen without saying a word. In later scenes Moorehead’s depiction of the maddened spinster is so intense that it completely overshadows Tim Holt’s performance as George: ‘I believe I’m going crazy!” (From James Naremore’s The Magic World of Orson Welles.)
ENTRÉE (Starlight Rising)
In
essence, La Dolce Vita is a renegade
Catholic film, and “the one bedrock idea is Catholic guilt, engorged by pagan
pleasures. ‘I know that I am a prisoner of 2,000 years of the Catholic Church,’
Fellini confessed, ‘because all Italians are.’ The Church raged, and Fellini
became the pope of cinema.” (From the Marcello Mastroianni/La Dolce Vita chapter of my book Starlight Rising: Acting Up in Movies, available from Amazon, Nook
and Kindle.)
DESSERT (An Image)
A great movie image is more than a still,
it’s a distillation.
Humphrey
Bogart lights up as jealously paranoid Dix Steele, In a
Lonely Place (Columbia Pictures, 1950; director Nicholas Ray, cinematographer
Burnett Guffey)
For previous Flix Nosh meals, scroll
below.