Friday, June 29, 2018

Nosh 114: 'American Animals,' 'Mountain' & More


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

APPETIZER: Reviews of American Animals and Mountain.


American Animals
To ricochet in one week from the feminist caper romp  Ocean’s 8 to the more reality-bound but also surreal American Animals confirms that the heist formula can still loot our attention. Bart Layton proves himself a daringly crafty writer and director. Instead of eight snappy chicks he has what might be called the Four Stooges. No Metropolitan Museum of Art lures their heist. Their daring debut target is precious rare books at the Transylvania University Library in Lexington (not Romania, but Kentucky). Foremost is a first edition of Audubon’s Birds of America, so massive it almost requires a crane (not the bird).

This bizarre robbery actually happened, in 2004. Layton sticks to known and surmised facts with a double-track scheme. Actors play the college-age crime crew, but the real-life crooks also appear, inserting docu-bits of retrospective gravity (one, Warren Lipka, is more charismatic than the good actor who plays him, Evan Peters). Warren, a hot rod of giddy machismo, prods the fretful young artist Spencer (Barry Keoghan), preening Chas the driver (Blake Jenner), and brainy, sullen Eric (Jared Abrahamson). Studying famous heist films, they remain both procedurally clever and amateurishly wishful. A clip from The Killing (Kubrick, 1955) appears like the Ghost of Screw-ups Past.

Ole B. Birkeland’s photography vividly canvases Lexington, my birth town (Warren calls the bluegrass burg “a disappointment,” which I don’t take personally, having lived there only one infantile year). The suspense is special, like a school project to make male hormones from LSD and Gatorade. Most heist films use buddy bonding as generic dude spackle for the plot, but these four are truly testing their friendships. No Rat Pack will emerge from their criminality, which includes absurd old-man beards and wigs. There is a bow to Reservoir Dogs, and a Rashomon update at the finale, yet the intimate rooting is real characters. One is the smug, then terrified librarian, Mrs. Gooch (ace talent Ann Dowd).

This must be the most personal of heist pictures, its layered charm caught in Warren’s schizzy line as he tries to subdue Mrs. Gooch: “Shut the fuck up! I’m sorry, OK?” The heist, which could be a new formula in chaos theory, is beyond description. There are flavors of the Coen Bros., and Bottle Rocket, and England’s immortally crooked comedy The Ladykillers. These are very human animals.


Mountain
“What are men to rocks and mountains?,” ponders young Elizabeth Bennet in Pride and Prejudice. Nothing, answers Mountain. You don’t need to know Jane Austen’s novel to recognize the vast gap between us and the epic rock piles. Jennifer Peedom’s documentary spans that void on a rope of wonder and death-defiance. It joins the loftiest mountain films (see list below). Peedom also did Sherpa, about the fabled native guides and portagers exploited by the “Everest industry” (the Sherpas don’t thrill to Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “Climb Ev’ry Mountain”).

The titanic peaks (also the Grand Canyon, glaciers, ice caves) induce a certain awe, reinforced by Willem Dafoe’s gravely thoughtful narration. And the high-climbing music (Beethoven, Vivaldi, Part, Grieg, but not Wagner – Werner Herzog must own all Wagner rights above 5,000 feet). There are riffs on daredevil hubris, the explosive ski biz, the summit-climb cult that now rivals the Klondike mob in Chaplin’s The Gold Rush. Even if you have never ski-surfed powder snow, or heard the crack of a calving avalanche, you feel in Mountain the primal disparity between humans and glorious crags, and the elevated elation that risks the vertigo of madness.

SALAD: A List
Outstanding Mountain Movies:
The Gold Rush (Chaplin, 1925), The Holy Mountain (Fanck, 1926), The Blue Light (Riefenstahl, 1932), Lost Horizon (Capra, 1937), High Sierra (Walsh, 1941), Treasure of the Sierra Madre (Huston, 1948), The Far Country (Mann, 1954), Scream of Stone (Herzog, 1991), Alive (Marshall, 1993), Kundun (Scorsese, 1997), Touching the Void (Macdonald, 2003), To the Limit (Danquart, 2007) and Sherpa (Peedom, 2015).  

WINE (Vin Orsonaire de Chateau Welles)
David O. Selznick, producing his florid postwar Western Duel in the Sun (starring Jennifer Jones, Joe Cotten and Gregory Peck), “opted to add a narrative that might cast the film’s trashy story as some kind of prairie legend. So Orson Welles was hired – he hoped for a fat check – (and) Selznick apparently never detected Welles’s elephant-like parody of the work: ‘Deep among the lonely, sun-baked hills of Texas, the great and weather-beaten stone still stands that the Comanches call Squaw’s Head Rock. Time cannot change its impassive face, nor dim the legend of the wild young lovers ….’ (alas, instead of money Orson got) a pair of antique dueling pistols. In respectful satire, Welles gave the mogul every subsequent Christmas two glass pistols filled with candy.” (Quote from David Thomson’s Rosebud: The Story of Orson Welles).

ENTRÉE (Starlight Rising)
Timothy “Speed” Levitch “belongs to Manhattan’s tribe of singular soloists, marginal prophets, unabashed contrarians, yet is no simple eccentric like ‘Miss Delphine Binger who assiduously attends to her collection of several hundred thousand goose, turkey and chicken wishbones, boiled and polished, decorated with charms or ribbons, which she likes to send to well-known people’ (thank you, Jan Morris).” Speed, the utterly unique NYC tour guide of The Cruise, later moved to KCM: Kansas City, Mo. (Quote from the Tim Levitch/The Cruise chapter of my 2016 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.


A pinto horse out-hams Gregory Peck and Jennifer Jones in Duel in the Sun (Selznick, 1946; director King Vidor, cinematographers Lee Garmes, Hal Rosson.)

For previous Noshes, scroll below.


Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Nosh 113: 'Ocean's 8,' 'First Reformed' & More


By David Elliott

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



APPETIZER: Reviews of Ocean’s 8 and First Reformed.
Ocean’s 8
Heist movies became a rococo genre long ago, piling on more plot turns, tech tricks, wild implausibility. Still, they can give delectable pleasure, now free of the old movie code’s “crime doesn’t pay” rule. With our national government being heisted as a klepto casino, why should smart, sexy jewel thieves lose their well-gotten gains? After all, diamonds are a girl’s best friend, and by that Monroe doctrine the “girls” of Ocean’s 8 are friendly all the way.

Swingin’ heister Danny Ocean is gone, though seen in a photo (George Clooney, not Frank Sinatra). His old chum Reuben (Elliott Gould) drops in, and other cameos include Dakota Fanning, Griffin Dunne, Marlo Thomas, Heidi Klum, Zac Posen, Elizabeth Ashley and Anna Wintour. The heist brain is Danny’s sister, Debbie Ocean, played by Sandra Bullock with a hard laser stare. Her team includes tough Cate Blanchett, mom-sweet Sarah Paulson, foxy player Rihanna, Helena Bonham Carter as a ditzy couturier, and the fabulously named Awkwafina (unrelated to Acquanetta, the “Venezuelan volcano” of 1940s B-pix).

Five years in a federal can gave Deb-O time to plan the job: robbing the swank Met Gala for fashion mavens, at the big New York museum, of a $150 million diamond mine conveniently disguised as a six-pound necklace. As in 1999’s The Thomas Crown Affair, New York’s Metropolitan Museum is extravagantly eager to display itself (masterworks line up like mannequins). Alas, Pierce Brosnan, who grabbed Steve McQueen’s Crown, is on holiday exile this summer to Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again.

Director Gary Ross pumps the action, and a payback sub-plot targets the only important male (Richard Armitage plays the jerk). Serious acting from anyone would only gum up the clockwork caper thrills. Ocean’s 8, which makes Sinatra’s Vegas lark of 1960 seem older than Cheops, is a candy box of yums: art, jewelry, fashion, food, the ritzy ball, a crazy toilet scene, Wheaton terriers, brisk riffs of Bach and an after-heist in debt to Topkapi. Supreme among swans is Anne Hathaway, who breezily sends up her vanity princess image. Ocean’s 8 ices its cake so that every karat blings. This fem-frolic is way past Sinatra. It’s all chick kicks now, Frankie.



First Reformed
The absolute opposite of Ocean’s 8 is Paul Schrader’s First Reformed. Ethan Hawke stars as Rev. Toller, who hates himself because his son died in Iraq, his wife left and now he is the lonely pastor (more like curator) of a bone-white, 18th century church in upstate New York. The steepled shrine is pure and stark, its pews laid out like caskets for the End Time. I felt again the penitential vapors that blew through the tormented minister in Ingmar Bergman’s Winter Light, a confessional ordeal of soul-baring.

Schrader’s Calvinist upbringing is the migraine muse of his films, and also motivated his book on austere auteurs (Bresson, Ozu, Dreyer). Touches of those masters haunt the rectilinear compositions, meditative silences, shadow-chilled moods, pause-laden dialog and (for added subtext) Toller’s diary. Ethan Hawke has steadily grown as an actor, often in Richard Linklater’s movies, and yet his sincere, granular agony is a frail nucleus for this torture tempest.

Poor Toller is a butter pat melting in Schrader’s waffle stack of sorrows: child loss, divorce, sexual guilt, a hopeless love (moon-eyed angel Amanda Seyfried), consumerist Christianity (a mega-church minister, well acted by Cedric the Entertainer), corporate pollution with a big CEO villain, eco-terrorism, alcoholism, suicide, cancer, flagellation. The script strives to be both timely and eternal, but you don’t serve Kierkegaard cookies at a church social, and Toller is like a liberal college chaplain who wandered naked into the Book of Apocalypse.

Reaching for the raw force that Scorsese exploded from Schrader’s Taxi Driver script, the story swivels from Bergman brooding into Mad Marty overdrive. The finish veers away from one melodramatic abyss only to fall into another. A midnight mass of sado-masochism, First Reformed won’t sell much popcorn – last year’s Mother! was a carnival ride next to this – but Schrader has nailed down the Calvinist Crucifixion Prize for 2018.  

SALAD: A List
The Ten Best Roles of Frank Sinatra
Conspicuously not including Danny in Ocean’s 11:
1. Frankie Machine in The Man With the Golden Arm (1955), 2. Bennett Marco in The Manchurian Candidate (1952), 3. Angelo Maggio in From Here to Eternity (1953), 4. Dave Hirsh in Some Came Running (1958), 5. Joey Evans in Pal Joey (1957), 6. Sam Loggins in Kings Go Forth (1958), 7. John Baron in Suddenly (1954), 8. Nathan Detroit in Guys and Dolls (1955), 9. Joe Leland in The Detective (1968) and 10. Danny in Meet Danny Wilson (1952). Clearly the 1950s was Frank’s golden time, as actor and singer. 
     
WINE (Vin Orsonaire de Chateau Welles)
The almost forgotten hero of Citizen Kane was and is RKO production chief George Schaefer: “The balancing act of placating his board, negotiations with other studios, and soothing Welles was endless, complicated by the still unsuccessful hunt to identify enough theaters for a profitable run (which) in late January, 1941, produced the decision to distribute as broadly as possible – if theaters were willing to screen it. Unfortunately, the response was not good, thanks to Hearst, (and the option became) an extremely narrow schedule. Eventually, Citizen Kane would open in only a handful of premium theaters in seven cities.” For sticking with Welles, Schaefer lost his job in 1942. (From Harlan Lebo’s Citizen Kane: A Filmmaker’s Journey.)

ENTRÉE (Starlight Rising)
A key moment for Ron (Matthew McConaughey) and Rayon (Jared Leto) in Dallas Buyers Club: “At the market Ron encounters old buddy T.J. (Kevin Rankin), who spots Rayon and snarls about ‘faggots everywhere.’ When he refuses Rayon’s hand, Ron presses him: ‘What’s your problem.’ To the lout’s raised finger and obscenity, Ron turns alpha-male, spinning him into a choke hold, forcing a handshake and releasing him with ‘Go back to your miserable life’ (his own former life). Rayon is awed; her face glows with feminine gratitude. Machismo for a good cause is sweet indeed, but it may occur to us: Ron hasn’t yet shaken Rayon’s hand himself.”(From the Matthew McConaughey/Dallas Buyers Club 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.


Molly (Kim Novak) sizes up drug addict Frankie (Frank Sinatra) in The Man With the Golden Arm (United Artists, 1955; director Otto Preminger, cinematographer Sam Leavitt). 

For previous Noshes, scroll below.


Friday, June 8, 2018

Nosh 112: 'Let the Sunshine In' & More


By David Elliott

Flix Nosh is a personal movie menu, fresh each Friday.
Note: Nosh 113 will appear on Friday, June 22



APPETIZER: Review of Let the Sunshine In.
In bed having sex, the naked Isabelle is asked by her lover in subtitles: “Are you cuming?” Is this a Franglais word, already in the Dictionnaire Larousse? Did Moliere use an equivalent? Such is levity in Let the Sunshine In, a serious and feminist collaboration of two of the more adventurous talents in French film: director Claire Denis (Chocolat, Beau Travail, White Material) and Juliette Binoche, who plays Isabelle with the same supple, intricate intensity she brought to Blue, Certified Copy, The Unbearable Lightness of Being, The English Patient, Clouds of Sils Maria and her own Chocolat (actually, Lasse Hallstrom’s).

If you enjoyed the waking snooze of Book Club, while trying to not drop vanilla wafer crumbs on your doily, then this candid film is not for you. Isabella has various men, so variously that we guess she’s a prostitute. No, she is a Parisian painter, recently broken from a nice husband still disconsolate (their two daughters are barely seen). She is desperate for a deeper connection, and her erotic neediness has a throb of panic, fueled by new middle-aged freedom and fear of growing older. At 54 Binoche is still a beauty, but her real edge has always been risky honesty, armed with searching intelligence. Isabelle doesn’t trust her feelings or judgments, and late-season sexual adventure is a minefield.

She endures bad sex with an arrogant banker (Xavier Beauvois), whom she soon despises. She pinballs to a married actor (sullenly charismatic Nicolas Duvachelle), who seems to enjoy his ambivalence as a seminar in the  Method. She’s frustrated when a sensitive black man (Denis regular Alex Descas) tenderly but warily backs away. The thoughtful advice of friends gains little traction. Isabelle’s hunger for something true and natural leads her to lash out at companions for intellectualizing a walk in the country. Denis might have shown more of Isabelle’s art, since she calls painting her life. The sexiest scene, of Isabelle dancing to Etta James’s “At Last” (Etta’s photo is on her wall earlier) when a gaunt, wolfish seducer (Paul Blain) cuts in rakishly. promises more than is delivered.

Denis is a form-breaker (she assisted Wim Wenders on two of his greatest movies, Paris, Texas and Wings of Desire). The film is a volatile weather of feelings, full of Binoche’s signature nuances. It’s like watching emotive clouds form and disperse. The jumbo cloud floats into view: Gerard Depardieu as a love-therapy soothsayer, dispensing solemn bullshit with Gallic fluency. When he talks about the risks and rewards of men “gourmandizing” Isabelle, she glows. Gazing on Depardieu’s richly fed bulk, we sense that, once again, l’amour fou has found la comédie francaise.     

SALAD: A List
Twelve Classic French Romances:
With year and stars: L’Atalante (Dita Parlo, Jean Dasté, Michel Simon,1934), Port of Shadows (Jean Gabin, Michele Morgan, 1938), Beauty and the Beast (Jean Marais, Josette Day, 1946), Casque d’Or (Simone Signoret, Serge Reggiani, 1952), The Earrings of Madame De … (Charles Boyer, Danielle Darrieux, 1953), The Lovers (Jeanne Moreau, Jean-Marc Bory, 1958), Hiroshima, Mon Amour (Emmanuele Riva, Eiji Okada, 1959), Breathless (Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jean Seberg, 1960), Jules et Jim (Jeanne Moreau, Oskar Werner, 1962), Umbrellas of Cherbourg (Catherine Deneuve, Nino Castelnuovo, 1964), A Man and a Woman (Jean-Louis Trintignant, Anouk Aimee, 1966), Cesar et Rosalie (Yves Montand, Romy Schneider, 1972).
     
WINE (Vin Orsonaire de Chateau Welles)
When a fire consumed his home in the Hollywood hills, destroying precious art, letters, first editions, Aldous Huxley felt the loss, but then liberation. Orson Welles felt the same after his home burned in Spain: “Peter Bogdanovich: ‘You lost a lot didn’t you?’ OW: ‘Manuscripts, letters, a really marvelous long one from Roosevelt, a cup that Lincoln gave my grandfather …’ PB: ‘How terrible.’ OW: ‘I try not to think so. I’ve got a thing about possessions. All my life I’ve tried to avoid letting them possess me.’ ” (Quote from This Is Orson Welles, by Welles and Bogdanovich.)

ENTRÉE (Starlight Rising)
Diane Arbus was small but not shy, and often “the famous felt invaded (by her lens). Mae West vehemently protested her Arbus shots. Feminist firebrand Germaine Greer had a close encounter of the Arbus kind at the Chelsea Hotel: ‘It was tyranny, really tyranny. Diane Arbus ended up straddling me – this frail little person kneeling, keening over my face. I felt completely terrorized. I decided, ‘Damn it, you’re not going to do this to me, lady! I’m not going to be photographed like one of your grotesque freaks!” (From the Nicole Kidman/Fur chapter of my 2016 book Starlight Rising: Acting Up in Movies. To order, go to Amazon, Nook or Kindle.)

DESSERT (An Image)
A great movie image is more than a still, it’s a distillation.


Michel Simon steers the romantic barge in L’Atalante (France, 1934; director Jean Vigo, cinematographer Boris Kaufman).

For previous Noshes, scroll below.


Friday, June 1, 2018

Nosh 111: 'Book Club,' 'The Guardians' & More


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


APPETIZER: Reviews of Book Club and The Guardians
Book Club
Book Club stars, in order of seniority: Jane Fonda, 80; Diane Keaton, 72; Candice Bergen, 72, and perky puppy Mary Steenburgen, 65. They play L.A. chums who meet monthly to discuss their chosen book, yet barely analyze it. Consuming Fifty Shades of Grey, they find one shade: it’s naughty. Which induces quaint palpitations of sex panic.

The women are bathed in flattering light. In posh homes and restaurants, immaculate décor is also enhancing as the  friends exchange sitcom dialog. Perhaps they recall the immortal words of Milton Berle to Eleanor Parker in The Oscar: “You have many good minutes left.” Sadly, the movie has few. There are no actual characters, just the stars who, with creaky pep and waxy twinkle, are enjoying a gilded cruise to the ruins of their talent. Bill Holderman directed, as if re-floating The Love Boat, and we miss all those who didn’t last to make this voyage: Cesar Romero, Soupy Sales, Kitty Carlisle, Shelley Winters, Phyllis Diller, Abe Vigoda, Dick Van Patten …

Bergen, a judge, has an ex-spouse (Ed Begley Jr., 68) who has a trophy bimbo. Steenburgen’s grumpy hubby (Craig T. Nelson, 74) is preoccupied with his vintage motorcycle, but gets to be the victim of an extended Viagra joke. Hotel owner Fonda both lures and shrugs the advances of millionaire Don Johnson, 68, whose fabled Miami vice has withered to a goaty goatee. Widow Keaton acts like a frantic retro-virgin as gentle seducer Andy Garcia, 62, purrs endearments and gives her a fine aerial tour of Monument Valley. Adding cameo flavors, like extra dollops of senior pudding, are Richard Dreyfuss, 70, and Wallace Shawn, 74.

Being a senior, I feel for senior actors and their hunger to work, but extruding this plastic fantasy is make-work piffle. As they putter along, barely tapping their skills, the viewing mind drifts into tiny corners. Gee, that’s a nice repro of Gerald Murphy’s great painting “Watch” on the wall … did Fonda, who now seems a shrunken replica of herself (but still has her voice and timing), begin to miss Lily Tomlin from their show Grace and Frankie? … and isn’t Dreyfuss starting to look like Mickey Rooney in his final, rotund phase? Forty-five years ago Dreyfuss was Curt in American Graffiti, genial teen grad. A smart guy. Too smart for Book Club.   



The Guardians
November 11 marks the 100th anniversary of the end of “the war to end all wars.” It didn’t, but left over 30 million dead and turned Hitler into a fanatic. By now there should be few aspects of World War I left to film. Surprise: Les Gardiennes (The Guardians), about women left to make the farms work in the deeply rural zones known as La France profonde. This earnest, touching movie from Xavier Beauvois (Of Gods and Men) is no Rosie the Riveter rouser. It centers upon an old farm with thick stone buildings, and on the tested bond of two strong women.

Rural matriarch Hortense is a capstone for Nathalie Baye, after over 100 film credits. Hortense is aging but fiercely dedicated, a real draft horse for work (her sweet, older husband tags along).Three sons are in the army, each day tenses from anxiety about them, but there is so much work with the crops and animals and firewood and cooking that pain is stoically repressed. Hortense’s new hired hand is Francine, a red-haired orphan who looks built to last, played with stoical power by Iris Bry. There is a new kind of females-in-charge pride, yet without slogans. The farm prospers, sons come home on leave before returning to the gory trenches, the priest recites the names of new dead, and tall, impudent American soldiers arrive. Francine quickens with love for the youngest son, Georges (Cyril Descours), who wants sexual comfort before returning to battle. He has some presumptive male attitudes.

Often solemnly shot – has a Michel Legrand score ever been so demurely used? – The Guardians has some bucolic, homespun poetry. At church, the camera observes war-worn faces as an organ builds its fugue. Other images echo great paintings by Millet, Courbet, Chardin and, when Francine fills her round bath tub, Degas. But the meditative, almost Bresson-like tone cracks when Beauvois shows a nightmare of George, killing Germans, to trigger his coming choices with obvious psychology. This brings much plot, fateful misunderstandings, prejudicial choices. But the land, the animals and the labor give us a powerful sense of the nation that so cruelly suffered World War I. The torn solidarity of Hortense and Francine, deeply felt by each, keeps the film from ever becoming a soapbox or a memorial statue.     

SALAD:  A List
Remarkable Movies Involving Books:
Fahrenheit 451 (1966), Providence (1977), Educating Rita (1983), Dreamchild (1985), 84 Charing Cross Road (1987), Misery (1990), Prospero's Books (1991), You’ve Got Mail (1998), The Ninth Gate (1999), Wonder Boys (2000), Adaptation (2002), Capote (2005), Joe Gould’s Secret (2005), The Ghost Writer (2010), Genius (2016).  
    
WINE (Vin Orsonaire de Chateau Welles)
“Orson had been talking when I entered (and) held the floor for pretty much the remainder of the evening, with little more time allotted to the rest of us than he needed to catch his breath, swig some drink, or drag on a Havana the size of a baseball bat… The others didn’t mind. They were there to be amused and Orson was more than eager to oblige with a veritable raconteurial cornucopia. My entrance had interrupted an anecdote about the king of Moroco (and) he went on to another and another. Stories about movies, plays, parties, intrigues, famous people, scandalous affairs. It lasted through coffee, cognac, two servings of rum-soaked crepes (three for Orson) … At one point he was going on about dining on camel steaks in Egypt.” (The Orsonian Experience, as richly staged in Theodore Roszak’s movie-mad, noir-spirited novel Flicker).

ENTRÉE (Starlight Rising)
For Pam Grier, the department store changing room scene in Jackie Brown “resonated personally. Her memoir Foxy recalls young Pam shopping in segregated Denver, where stores sent black buyers home to try on clothing rather than share dressing spaces with white women (any not purchased had to be returned spotless). But later at a store in L.A.’s Century City, a white employee showed her the changing room. She was stunned ‘covering my amazement as best I could. I had to catch my breath. My mother would never believe it, neither would my friends back home.’ She was ‘holding back tears’.” (From the Pam Grier/Jackie Brown chapter of my 2016 book Starlight Rising: Acting Up in Movies, available via Amazon, Nook and Kindle.)

DESSERT (An Image)
A great movie image is more than a still, it’s a distillation.



With cig or not, Pam Grier’s Jackie is urban cool personified in Jackie Brown (Miramax Films, 1997; director Quentin Tarantino, cinematographer Guillermo Navarro).

For previous Noshes, scroll  below.