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.