Friday, March 30, 2018

Nosh 103: 'Loveless' & 'Bombshell: Hedy Lamarr


By David Elliott
                                                  
Flix Nosh is a personal movie menu, fresh each Friday.


APPETIZER: Reviews of Loveless and Bombshell: Hedy Lamarr
Loveless
If you are sick of Trump’s wallow in Putin's pig pit, Loveless will not make you feel much better. This very good Russian film, set in 2012, digs into a disintegrating family. At its bleeding heart is the boy Alexei, 11. Actor Matvey Novikov, despite modest screen time, registers totally. There’s a scene of Alexei convulsing with tears while trying to repress it (he’s had stern Russian lessons in “being a man”), as his parents rip each other like crazed animals. They are selling off the family apartment, and turning to sex (with others) for solace.

Mostly we follow mother Zhenya (Maryana Spivak) and father Boris (Alexei Rozin). This is no long, Nordic meditation on the granular follies of marital decay, like Bergman’s Scenes From a Marriage. It is a Slavic rite-of-rage and despair. Beautiful Zhenya is arrogant, spiteful and shallow, looking for salvation from a rich lover. Boris, a sullen bear, appears stupefied on some cheap soul vodka of fury and depression, though enjoying a young, pregnant lover. He is less comfortable than Zhenya with dumping Alexei into a state orphanage, “then the army.” Around them all weather swirls, and the beauty of winter woods taunts the high-rise slabs of dull housing. Director Andrey Zvyagintsev has a gem cutter’s eye, slow-pacing many shots for sustained mood. Of his fine actors, Natalya Potopova as the snarling, bitter grandmother is like a busted Stalin tank of dead Soviet hopes.

When Alexei vanishes, the parents show guilty concern.  Loveless, which has a scene almost lifted from Fellini’s La Dolce Vita, becomes a rough parallel to Kurosawa’s kidnap-and-manhunt film High and Low. The Russian cops slog dutifully, but they never rival the Japanese brains (and suspense) of that 1963 masterwork. Pay attention to a brief, quiet scene as snow falls at a bus stop, and you may get a clue to Alexei’s fate. This somewhat Dostoevskian movie delivers human pain without softening the blows.



Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story
In the zoo park of fauna, flora and fantasia that is Hollywood, Hedy Lamarr was her own species. As an Austrian teen from a Jewish banking family (Judaism had little grip on her), Hedy went from “starring” in the nudist film Ecstasy (simulated orgasm and wink shots became bootleg thrills for decades), to marrying a Jewish munitions maker in biz with Hitler and Mussolini. Bored with him, hating Nazis, she fled Vienna for London, then hopped on the liner Normandie where her mysterious allure wowed everyone in first-class, including MGM chief Louis B. Mayer. When they docked in New York, photographers pounced on Hedy’s sultry, soul-eyed, snow-skinned image.

Alexandra Dean’s documentary Bombshell zooms from baroque (esprit de Kenneth Anger) to rococo (esprit de John Waters). Mayer renamed her Lamarr and, being a crass moralist, considered her a whore for mass exploitation. No trained actor, Hedy dazzled when Charles Boyer got her into Algiers. Though few Lamarr movies were good, her poignantly seductive eyes couldn’t hide an innate, friendly playfulness. Her brains performed more privately. Hedy’s hobby was invention (as a kid she rebuilt a music box).  Howard Hughes, her inadequate lover but fellow techie, respected her ideas for airplane design. In 1942 she and composer George Antheil invented a “frequency-hopping” system to securely guide torpedoes without detection. In time their insights would spawn better rockets, then advance WiFi and much more, but the Navy buried Hedy’s patent while secretly exploiting her ideas. Her movie producing (three films) also brought no money or glory.

With its tasty scrap-stew of clips and interviews (friends, children, Robert Osborne, Mel Brooks, Diane Kruger and, with invaluable audiotapes, Lamarr devotee Fleming Meeks), Bombshell must detonate. We see the coming smash: decline after Samson and Delilah (of Cecil B. De Mille she said “he’s so bad he’s almost good”), dud marriages, fading looks, fortune blown, beloved children often bewildered, a debt-lost Aspen ski lodge she built out of Austrian nostalgia, tabloid headlines, plastic surgeries (her suggestions, says one doc, advanced the profession!). MGM’s use (call it the Garland Regimen) of speed pills for her 60-hour studio weeks led to addiction, mood swings and, finally, seclusion. Modest limelight came before death in 2000, for this smart, brave and creative woman.         

SALAD (A List)
The Best Performances of 27 Great Beauties:
Lillian Gish (The Wind), Greta Garbo (Camille), Gloria Swanson (Sunset Boulevard), Louise Brooks (Pandora’s Box), Katharine Hepburn (Long Day’s Journey Into Night), Joan Crawford (Grand Hotel), Marlene Dietrich (Destry Rides Again), Hedy Lamarr (Algiers),Vivien Leigh (A Streetcar Named Desire), Ingrid Bergman (Notorious), Rita Hayworth (Gilda), Ava Gardner (Pandora and the Flying Dutchman), Lauren Bacall (To Have and Have Not), Alida Valli (The Third Man), Elizabeth Taylor (Giant), Maureen O’Hara (The Quiet Man), Audrey Hepburn (The Nun’s Story), Grace Kelly (Rear Window), Sophia Loren (A Special Day), Marilyn Monroe (Bus Stop), Kim Novak (Vertigo), Sharmila Tagore (The World of Apu), Anita Ekberg (La Dolce Vita), Catherine Deneuve (Belle de Jour), Michelle Pfeiffer (The Russia House), Kim Basinger (L.A. Confidential) and Penelope Cruz (Volver).

WINE (Vin Orsonaire de Chateau Welles)
Grudgingly half-invited by Orson Welles, gossip bee Hedda Hopper buzzed into a 1941 rough-cut showing of Citizen Kane at RKO. Early-deadline writers were dazzled, “but not Hopper. To the columnist, always eager to rush to hasty judgment, there was no question that Kane was in reality William Randolph Hearst. ‘She was violently angry,’ reported publicist Herbert Drake. ‘What I saw appalled me,’ Hopper explained years later. ‘It was an impudent, murderous trick, even for the boy genius, to perpetrate on a newspaper giant.” (If only Welles had wooed her with a cameo, as Billy Wilder cagily did later, for his Hollywood vivisection Sunset Boulevard. Quotes from Harlan Lebo’s Citizen Kane: A Filmmaker’s Journey.)

ENTRÉE (Starlight Rising)
Humphrey Bogart never acted with more feral intensity than when his prospector Fred C. Dobbs turns viciously on partner Bob Curtin (Tim Holt) in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre: “Dobbs even spooks himself. No Dostoevskian pity here, just thorny brush and fire-scarred shadows in Fred’s Mexican hell. He rants and cackles, roping his own gallows of guilt: ‘Conscience! What a thing. If you believe you’ve got a conscience, it’ll pester you to death!’ Six years later, Brando agonized in On the Waterfront: ‘That conscience’ll drive you nuts.” (From the Bogart/Treasure 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.

Hubert de Givenchy, master of Parisian couture whose supreme swan was Audrey Hepburn, died at 91 on March 10. Here they are in 1950s prime.

For previous Noshes, scroll below.

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Nosh 102: 'A Fantastic Woman,' 'Death Wish' & More

By David Elliott
                                                  
Flix Nosh is a personal movie menu, fresh each Friday.



APPETIZER: Reviews of A Fantastic Woman and Death Wish.
A Fantastic Woman
Opening with fantastic images of Iguazu Falls in Brazil, A Fantastic Woman takes us over emotional falls in Santiago, Chile, with the remarkably buoyant Marina Vidal. In transit to womanhood, Marina (once Daniel) has had hormonal treatment but not surgery. I have never seen an actor who uses, with such poised polarity, feminine and masculine qualities quite like trans artist Daniela Vega (born David). Three at least came close, yet more melodramatically: Hilary Swank in Boys Don’t Cry, Jared Leto in Dallas Buyers Club and, way back, Jo Van Fleet in East of Eden.

Lovely in a box-faced way, with the gazing gravity of an Olmec statue, Marina is eagerly moving into a flat with Orlando (Francisco Reyes), 57. Deeply in love, the sensitive businessman has left his razor-edged wife and angry, grown kids (Marina also loves his dog, a key plot figure). I have to spill a spoiler, otherwise I’d be stuck on tiptoes of silence. As their new life begins, Orlando dies (aneurism), unleashing all the wasps of pent-up rage in his family. Grieving Marina must deal not only with the increasingly hostile widow (Aline Küppenheim) but Orlando’s rabidly homophobic son. Lonely in supporting her is Orlando’s brother (actor Luís Gnecco also played poet Pablo Neruda in Pablo Larrain’s Neruda).

Larrain was a producer here, and director Sebastián Lelio, co-scripting with Gonzalo Maza, is Larrain-like in his artful combinations. As with Larrain (Tony Manero, No, Jackie) there is a generous range of sympathy, surprise and invention, along with Benjamín Echazarreta’s sinuous, light-tranced photography. The use of Aretha Franklin’s “(You Make Me Feel Like) a Natural Woman” seems a touch facile and dated. More revealing is Marina’s piping soprano voice. 

The motor for everything is, of course, Vega. At 28 the Chilean actor-singer uses face, body and voice brilliantly, without lathering soap or ducking into transvestite glam (just once, in a dream of emergence). Unforgettable are Marina’s encounter with a mirror in motion, her visit to a crematorium, her delight in the dog, her fierce escape into a dance club, her Hitchcock tensions at a Turkish bath, her striding almost horizontally against a hard wind, her proud passage past a copy of Rosa Bonheur’s painting “The Horse Fair” (a great female vision of male and equine power). Perhaps not since Barbet Schroeder’s Colombian gay drama Our Lady of the Assassins (2001) has a South American movie been so skillfully bold and creatively candid. At first an ode to love, it becomes a declaration of independence. 




Death Wish
Blood provides pump-action lubrication for the new version of  Death Wish. That’s “poetic” because revenge seeker Paul Kersey is no longer a New York architect (Charles Bronson) but a top Chicago surgeon (Bruce Willis). We see him practicing bloody surgery, which sets us up, in a not exactly Proustean way, for a later garage scene: Paul slicing open a screaming thug’s sciatic nerve and pouring in raw brake fluid. That really shoots a hypo into the old Hippocratic oath.

Kersey’s campaign is a more-sado echo of Harrison Ford’s justice-seeking Chicago doctor in The Fugitive. Mainly he must fill the stompin’ boots of Bronson, whose 1974 movie hit like a pulp asteroid (director: flashy hack Michael Winner). Director Eli Roth is another kind of winner, able to split-screen surgical wounds with porny shots of guns and ammo. But Roth is not, like Winner, stuck in the cement bunker of Bronson’s talent. Willis can do alpha-male nuances, registering some terse pathos even as he obtains weapons with stunning ease, masters their use, and unleashes his vigilante spree, egged on by radio talk shows. Now 62, Willis did no runs or stunts worthy of Burt Lancaster’s jolting vitality at 60 in Scorpio.

When his wife is killed by burglars (goodbye, lovely Elisabeth Shue), who put his teen daughter into a coma (complexion and hair remain marvelous), Paul smolders into payback. “Disguised” by a hoodie, he wipes out generic street trash as practice, then tracks down the vile creeps who savaged his family. Veteran homicide cops remain a puzzled step behind him. A bit of violence with a bowling ball belongs in a Roadrunner cartoon. After the slaughter catharsis, the toughest detective gives Paul an NRA-dude smile and commends him for “doing what any man would do.” While his hands perform more surgery, Dr. Kersey’s trigger finger will itch for sequels. Bronson scratched four bad ones.

SALAD (A List)
Fifteen Outstanding Revenge and Payback Movies:
Kind Hearts and Coronets with Dennis Price (1949), Seven Men From Now with Randolph Scott (1956), One-Eyed Jacks with Marlon Brando (1960), Cape Fear with Robert Mitchum (1962), Point Blank with Lee Marvin (1967), Straw Dogs with Dustin Hoffman (1971), Theater of Blood with Vincent Price (1973), Carrie with Sissy Spacek (1976), Deep in the Heart with Karen Young (1983), Unforgiven with Clint Eastwood (1992), The Fugitive with Harrison Ford (1993), The Shawshank Redemption with Tim Robbins (1994), On Guard with Daniel Auteuil (1997), The Limey with Terence Stamp (1999) and Kill Bill with Uma Thurman (2003).

WINE (Vin Orsonaire de Chateau Welles)
Long before there was “American independent cinema” there was, in 1947, Orson Welles making Macbeth on virtual Scotch tape at mongrel Republic Pictures, after a try-out staging in Utah: “This was to be precisely the sort of experiment Orson had protested the money men were not willing to back. If they saw that an experiment like this could be profitable, they might change their minds … Within the strict limitations of time and budget he imposed on himself, he would make a Macbeth absolutely as expressive, and eccentric, as he wished.” Eccentricity proved fatal. OW ordained a Scottish brogue, later dubbed into standard English, and the film had a lousy release. (Quote from Barbara Leaming’s Orson Welles.)

ENTRÉE (Starlight Rising)
The Palmer dance party is one of the great set-pieces of Alice Adams: “Eager Alice keeps nervously smiling. As she arabesques among columns worthy of a state capitol, she is drubbingly snubbed. This is not winsome, like Natasha fretting her first Moscow ball in War and Peace. This is elite sadism. Maybe not since Jane Austen has the fate of a hopeful girl at a chancy dance felt so fraught with burrs and bristles. Hauteur swans glide by, smirking. Tuxed swells ignore her and, like a parody of agony, a sort of poached-egg-in-pants appears: Frank (Grady Sutton, a bulbous specialist in dim bulbs), soon yanked away by his mother.” (From the Katharine Hepburn/Alice Adams 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.


Vincent Price serves revenge with ham, in this promo painting of an image from Theater of Blood (United Artists, 1973; director Douglas Hickox).

For previous Noshes, scroll below.

Friday, March 9, 2018

Nosh 101: 'Red Sparrow' & More

By David Elliott
                                                  
Flix Nosh is a personal movie menu, fresh each Friday.
Note: Nosh 102 will appear on Friday, March 23. 



APPETIZER: Review of Red Sparrow
Whatever Soviet nostalgia Vladimir Putin has mixed into his bloody borscht of Russian nationalism (as in his almost Stalinist displays for the 2014 Olympics in Sochi), it finds a sinister resonance in Red Sparrow, which seems to immerse Cold War vibes in ironic arsenic and cold vodka. At the center they’ve put a fire that won’t douse, and that smart fire is Jennifer Lawrence as Dominika Egorova. She is even more a bubbling samovar of sexuality than Vivien Leigh in Anna Karenina or Michelle Pfeiffer in The Russia House (if not Tatiana Samoilova in The Cranes Are Flying).

The story is post-Soviet, and Lawrence brings modern edge to it. She has a dusting of Slavic accent, the buff build of an athlete (if not quite the silky grace for Moscow ballerina Dominika). Her peachy-pouty beauty and bold, dynamic rhythms are stellar but not show-offy, even in a nude scene (body double?). After a stage injury kills her dance career, Dominika still must support her sick, widowed mother (Joely Richardson). “The state” swoops in like an eagle, or vulture. We sense a ruthless, masculine power hierarchy that Stalin would have happily recognized. It is no coincidence that Dominika’s chief handler and cynical helper, Uncle Vanya (Matthias Schoenaerts), is a suave, official schemer who looks a lot like Putin (better hair).

Dominika becomes a “sparrow,” an agent honed to be sex bait, trained by the Matron (Charlotte Rampling), witch-like heir to  KGB assassin Rosa Klebb (Lotta Lenya) in From Russia With Love. Webbed above her like Kremlin spiders are the purring Vanya, spy master Korchnoi (Jeremy Irons) and sinister boss Zakharov (Ciaran Hinds). By eroticizing but not cheapening Dominika’s motives, strategies and choices, Lawrence makes the woman’s “Russian soul” a stream of tense, shifting options. Although the key American agent (Joel Edgerton) is effective, the actor lacks the force to really challenge Lawrence. With both sex and danger jiving suspense, the track-switching plot requires close adult attention. Some nuances worthy of John Le Carré even inflect a scene of skin-peeling torture (the peeler is  a brute who would have delighted Rosa Klebb).

Francis Lawrence (no relation), who advanced the star with Hunger Games films, has a good sense of pace and place (Budapest, which also subs for Moscow). For all the sparrow’s feeling for poor, sick mom and Mother Russia, Jennifer Lawrence avoids sentimentality. The movie, while violent, avoids the usual bang-bang junk (for that, it’s paying a price at the box office). It  makes us care about tough, driven Dominika, yet without wrapping her in a big Oprah hug of go-girlness. This is not the fun of Lawrence in American Hustle, nor of Lawrence getting drunk (or pretending to) on Stephen Colbert’s show. But, for the most sensually exciting and smartly engaging female star to emerge since Nicole Kidman and Kate Winslet, Red Sparrow is another brave move in an exciting career.

SALAD (A List)
Twelve Major Movie Spy Performances:
Conrad Veidt as Capt. Hardt (The Spy in Black, 1939), Ingrid Bergman as Alicia Huberman (Notorious, 1946), James Mason as Ulysses Diello (Five Fingers, 1952), Alec Guinness as James Wormold (Our Man in Havana, 1959), James Mason as Phillip Vandamm (North by Northwest, 1959), Sean Connery as James Bond (From Russia With Love, 1963), Michael Caine as Harry Palmer (The Ipcress File, 1965), Richard Burton as Alec Leamas (The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, 1965), Donald Sutherland as Faber (The Eye of the Needle, 1981), Geoffrey Rush as Harry Penhel (The Tailor of Panama, 2001), UIrich Mühe as Gerd Wiesler (The Lives of Others, 2006) and Gary Oldman as George Smiley (Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, 2011). And the greatest of all was on BBC-TV: Alec Guinness as Smiley in Tinker, Tailor … and Smiley’s People.  

WINE (Vin Orsonaire de Chateau Welles)
Beyond the biomorphic science dreams of Lamarck, Mendel, even Stalin’s fanatical Lysenko, Orson Welles morphed the genetics of imagination: “If, as Welles insinuates in F for Fake, ‘a magician is just an actor playing the part of a magician,’ then what is an actor? Through all the divergent film and audio manifestations of Mr. Arkadin, the actor is the kingfish, the pooh-bah, the high-muckety-muck. Since Welles portrayed Harry Lime on radio’s The Third Man: The Lives of Harry Lime, the mischievous, crepuscular Lime, and not the austere, calculating Arkadin emerged as the mainspring of the shows. But Welles, of course, played Arkadin in the film, and so Lime … receded to the margins.” (Quote from Robert Polito’s preface to the 2006 reprint of Welles’s novel Mr. Arkadin, issued with the Criterion revival of the 1955 film.)
 
ENTRÉE (Starlight Rising)
“My baptismal splash (of film fever) was in Africa’s Ulanga River, in John Huston’s The African Queen, which I saw in revival. I was thrilled as Charlie (Humphrey Bogart) and Rose (Katharine Hepburn) boat down the Ulanga. For me, their African voyage brought lessons. I learned about framing’s psychological effect – when the Ulanga widens, our expectations expand, and when it narrows into marshes we feel almost suffocated. I perceived how ‘minor’ acting can suddenly feel major – when Rose’s brother (Robert Morley) dies in fevered homesickness. I recognized the wit of an impeccable sight gag – when Rose flings Charlie’s gin overboard, the emptied bottles float away like tipsy giggles. I missed that clue to my future calling, for what is criticism but the tossing of distilled opinions into an endless river of responses?” (From the Introduction to my 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.



Katharine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart take boating to another  level in The African Queen (United Artists, 1951; director John Huston, cinematographer Jack Cardiff).

For previous Noshes, scroll below. 

Friday, March 2, 2018

Nosh 100: 'Annihilation' and Oscars Predictions

By David Elliott
                                                  
Flix Nosh is a personal movie menu, fresh each Friday.



APPETIZER: Review of Annihilation
Any movie called Annihilation is, in today’s market, baited for the boys (and man-boys) hooked on violent video games.A better title for this remarkable sci-horror vision would be Mutation. Or Metamorphosis, with ancestral credit to the great Ovid – there is something Ovidean in the fluency and frequent magic of Alex Garland’s film.

As Lena, a genetic biologist with military training, now widowed, Natalie Portman delivers a nerve-strung, subtle performance that rivals her great work as Mrs. Kennedy in Jackie and surpasses her Oscar’d work in Black Swan. The husband was actually on a secret military op to our Dixie coast, where among the pines and mangroves something alien is growing, not a UFO, more like a MST (Mama Space Tumor). It has already absorbed and mutated much of a county. At the edges it has the drippy, rainbow candle glow of a really rich Sixties head-trip. It gets called The Shimmer, and nobody can shimmy into its fecund interior like an all-female commando team. Gina Rodriguez flaunts fem-machisma power. Tessa Thompson is a softer, dreamy soul. Scientist Lena, already heartbroken, is along for the very dangerous mission.

The team leader is Ventress (Jennifer Jason Leigh), now 56 but still venting that rebel-hippie vibe which often made her seem like a Sixties ambassador to movies of the ‘80s and ‘90s. Ventress packs some tough attitude, sadly little help against the grisly critters that Garland (Ex Machina) and adapter-novelist Jeff VandorMeer mete out at intervals. One seems to be a vile tapeworm, another a hellish sloth-bear, but Annihiliation is better than its shockers. It has mood, suspense, a foreboding that seems to arise from both inside and out. The best aspect, along with Portman, is that the manner and method exactly fit the themes. The film seems to be sprouting and morphing like a fertile dream of, yes, annihilation.

Any viable movie lover can spot the derivation sources, given a new shimmer of bravura gloss and grip, from Alien, The Matrix, Predator, Avatar, Solaris, the 1979 Invasion of the Body Snatchers, even arty spores wafting in from sensual obscurities like Dreamchild and Till Human Voices Wake Us. The film is a sexy fatalist, viscerally sensual and morbidly daring. Yes, the albino deer with flowering antlers are a bit Disney. There is not enough sustained violence for the burning-meat audience, and the studio seems to be wobbling the release. But Annihilation is a full-made thing, and it suffuses our troubled imagination.  



SALAD (A List)
My Choices For the Oscars (the show airs Sunday; please, no wagering):

1. BEST FILM
    The Nominees: Call Me by Your Name, Darkest Hour, Dunkirk, Get Out, Lady Bird, Phantom Thread, The Post, The Shape of Water, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.
    My Favorite: Lady Bird.
    Best Not Nominated: The Florida Project.
    Will Win: Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.

2. DIRECTOR
    The Nominees: Paul Thomas Anderson, Phantom Thread; Guillermo del Toro, The Shape of Water; Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird; Christopher Nolan, Dunkirk; Jordan Peele, Get Out.
    My Favorite: Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird.
    Best Not Nominated: Sean Baker, The Florida Project.
    Will Win: Guillermo del Toro, The Shape of Water.
    
3. ACTOR
    The Nominees: Timothée Chalamet, Call Me by Your Name; Daniel Day Lewis, Phantom Thread; Daniel Kaluuya, Get Out; Gary Oldman, Darkest Hour; Denzel Washington, Roman J. Israel, Esq.
    My Favorite: Gary Oldman, Darkest Hour.
    Best Not Nominated: Richard Gere, Norman.
    Will Win: Gary Oldman, Darkest Hour.

4. ACTRESS
    The Nominees: Sally Hawkins, The Shape of Water; Frances McDormand, Three Billboards Outside …; Margot Robbie, I, Tonya; Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird; Meryl Streep, The Post.
    My Favorite: Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird.
    Best Not Nominated: Annette Bening, Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool.
    Will Win: Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird.

5. SUPPORTING ACTOR
    The Nominees: Willem Dafoe, The Florida Project; Woody Harrelson, Three Billboards Outside …; Richard Jennings, The Shape of Water; Christopher Plummer, All the Money in the World; Sam Rockwell, Three Billboards Outside
    My Favorite: Willem Dafoe, The Florida Project, (though he was the lead actor).
    Best Not Nominated: Michael Stuhlbarg, Call Me by Your Name.
    Will Win: Sam Rockwell, Three Billboards Outside …

6. SUPPORTING ACTRESS
    The Nominees: Mary J. Bilge, Mudbound; Allison Janney, I, Tonya; Lesley Manville, Phantom Thread; Laurie Metcalf, Lady Bird; Octavia Spencer, The Shape of Water.
    My Favorite: Laurie Metcalf, Lady Bird.
    Best Not Nominated: Brooklynn Prince, The Florida Project.   
    Will Win: Laurie Metcalf, Lady Bird.

WINE (Vin Orsonaire de Chateau Welles)
One of the master builders of Citizen Kane was little-known Maurice Seiderman from New York theater, the make-up artist who aged Kane (Welles) from his 20s into a bloated fossil pushing 80, including the fabled time transitions in the breakfast montage.  “I never looked as young as that,’ said Welles of his make-up at age 25. ‘The idea was to look very young indeed, in fact younger than anyone could look.’ He was self-conscious about (as he said) ‘that terrible round moon face’ … ‘Notice how Orson either never smiles on camera,’ Joseph Cotten told writer Gore Vidal, ‘or if he has to, sucks in his cheeks so as not to look like a Halloween pumpkin.” (Quotes from Harlan Lebo’s Citizen Kane: A Filmmaker’s Journey.)
 
ENTRÉE (Starlight Rising)
As radical contrast to The Cruise, “consider a counter-cruise: Martin Clary’s Mid-Manhattan, a big 1929 booster book for a property owners and merchants’s association. It smugly radiates what Salvador Dalí called the ‘pure, vertical, mystical, gothic love of cash.’ The lavish text, classy photos, ‘dignified’ ads and solemn faces of ‘men who have learned the true worth of cooperation’ honor that Mammon god who ‘welcomes the worthwhile’ and ‘exterminates the worthless.’ Weeks later, the Great Crash made their fraternal penthouse fall down the air shaft, with a great shattering of idolatry.” (From the Timothy Levitch/The Cruise chapter in 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.



Hugh Griffith and Charlton Heston each won Oscars for Ben-Hur (MGM, 1959; director William Wyler, cinematographer Robert L. Surtees).

For previous Noshes, scroll below.