Sunday, April 25, 2021

Reviews you can use: "Chicago 7" and "Sound of Metal"

 



Good morning all!


Well it's Oscar day.  Up until this very moment, The Oscars broadcast was a sort of "other Superbowl" for me.  I have always been wrapped up in the pageantry, the fashions (which I typically get "wrong" according to style "experts." Hey, I like what I like.) and the hosting, good, bad or ugly.  Ultimately, in the last several years when I've made a really concerted effort to see all the nominated films, it's been a test, for me, to see if my film appreciation is in line with "the experts."

Typically, it's not.  I would NEVER have picked "Moonlight" "Birdman" or  "Shape of Water."  And there are a ton of movies that got the best picture nominations I would not have nominated and plenty I would have that didn't. Like "Straight Outa Compton."

But I digress. Tonight is the Oscars.  The COVID Oscars. Who knows that that's going to look like?  What I can tell you is that this year's nominees, the five I've seen (of 8) have looked very different from nominated movies of the past.  

Oh there are biopics. There are historical movies.  There are quiet, emotional dramas. I'm not saying the genres aren't there.  It's the attitude that's different.  Maybe it's me, but the stories being told in these movies and they way they are being told feel as if we've gone to a place where the ART of a film is more important than the BOX OFFICE numbers.  (Except for "Mank" which was just terrible.)  

I have not yet seen "The Father," "Judas and the Black Messiah" or "Minari" but I will.  (Especially "Minari" given my absolute passion for recent foreign films like "Parasite" and "Roma.")  I will see those films because of the 5 nominated films I've seen so far, I've seen (Even with "Mank," which is not a good movie) a move toward stronger storytelling. The movies are a focus on the human condition, telling stories about people.  If the point of movies is to uplift, entertain, or educate, I see much of all three points in these nominees.  Because most of these movies were released either on Amazon or on Netflix, more of the masses have access to them.  Stories that would have been drowned out in a sea of Marvel-Star Wars-Anything Disney are now being heard and seen by people in their living rooms. Our eyes are being opened, we are being educated, to a broader world through entertainment. Maybe there is hope for Hollywood yet.


So last night I saw two more of the nominated films. 


"Sound of Metal"


A heavy-metal drummer's life is thrown into freefall when he begins to lose his hearing.


I haven't seen Riz Ahmed in much, but I'll be honest. I'm going to look for him in more parts now.  His portrayal of Ruben, the heavy metal drummer and heroin addict who loses his hearing, is one part gut wrenching raw and one part beautiful. The opening five minutes might be a bit jarring since it's a punk concert and everything is very loud.  Also, the language is very strong.  However, this movie sheds a bright light on the deaf community, a community that is often forgotten and rarely highlighted. Full of real, human drama, Ahmed carries this film and deserves his Best Actor nomination.  Paul Raci is a strong contender for best supporting actor, but I'm not sure one really amazing scene is going to win him the statue. But what do I know?  Judi Dench was on screen for like 9 minutes in "Shakespeare in Love" and she got an Oscar. I doubt this will win Best Picture, but I wouldn't cry if it did.

 "Sound of Metal" is available FREE on Amazon Prime.


See this movie.


"The Trial of the Chicago 7"

The story of 7 people on trial stemming from various charges surrounds the uprising at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, IL.


Let's get this out of the way:  I HATE Eddie Redmayne and Sacha Baron Cohen.  I have never liked their work. I have always maintained the SBC ruined "Les Miserables."  And Eddie, well, he also didn't help "Les Miserables" much and also he's just...weird.

Now that I've gotten that off my chest, let me say this: Sasha Baron Cohen should win Best Supporting Actor tonight for his portrayal of Abbie Hoffman.  And Eddie Redmayne finally managed to give us a performance where, yes, I still want to slap him, but now it's because of his character's actions, not because he's a creepy little white dude.  I would also love to see the ever amazing Aaron Sorkin win best screenplay.  And this movie is a front runner for Best Picture.

Entertaining, stunning, funny, illuminating, this film is everything you could ask for in a movie.  (Stuff even blows up and catches on fire, for all you action film fans.)   Yahya Abdul-Mateen II gives us one of the more memorable performances as Bobby Seale, the lone Black protester on trial. His performance is restrained and strong in a way I haven't seen a Black Panther (the political group, not the Marvel heroes) portrayed.  Bravo to that.

This movie is available FREE on Netflix.  SEE THIS MOVIE.


Of the five films I've seen I believe the real battle, in my mind, is between "Promising Young Woman" and "The Trial of the Chicago 7."  I honestly think, given the society we're in at the moment, these are two very important films to watch and learn from.  I would dearly love to see "Promising Young Woman" win Best Picture because a female centric film dealing with this topic needs to hit mainstream and it needs to be honored.  But I believe "Chicago 7" is going to take home the big prize.  


If you watch the Oscars tonight, enjoy.  Meanwhile, keep watching movies!


Saturday, April 24, 2021

Reviews You Can Use: Three "Best Picture 2021" Nominees

 


Hello and welcome! It's been a while since Linda and I have blogged about movies and mostly that's because it's been a while since Linda and I have watched movies together.  Boooo COVID!


Anyway, this caught me by surprise, because everything has a "new normal" schedule these days, but the Oscars, which are normally in February, are happening TOMORROW, Sunday, the 25th.  Color me shocked!  I've seen exactly two films in the theater since January of 2020 ( when I saw "1917", the last movie I saw in a theater BEFORE Covid) and neither of those two ("Wonder Woman 1984" and "The Little Things") are nominated for the Best Picture.  (I saw them because a friend rented out a theater for both of those and it was a blast watching a big screen flick with 18 people I knew!  I suggest it, it's way cheaper than you think!)


Instead an odd collection of films that may have been overlooked in other years, are getting a shot at the golden statue.  So far I've seen 3 of the 8, with intention to see two more tomorrow.  All of the pictures nominated are available in one form or another on either Netflix or Amazon Prime. (You may have to "rent or buy" some of them.)


"Promising Young Woman"

A young woman, traumatized by a tragic event in her past, seeks out vengeance against those who crossed her path.

Carey Mulligan is beyond stellar in this film that starts as one thing and ends as another.   Mulligan has grown lightyears away from her portrayal as the pretty Ada in "Bleak House," and she well deserves her nomination for Best Actress.  She carries this movie from start to finish.  First a commentary on the danger of the bar scene for single women, this becomes an eye-opening criticism of the "Boys will be boys" mentality that has deep, deep roots in our subconscious when it comes to sexual crimes.  

Shocking, funny, and overall unexpected, this one could be a real contender if it doesn't get shut out by the louder, better promoted films like "Judas and the Black Messiah."  I would love to see this win Best Picture.

See this film.  


"MANK"

1930's Hollywood is reevaluated through the eyes of scathing social critic and alcoholic screen writer Herman J. Mankiecwicz as he races to finish the screenplay of Citizen Kane.


Sigh.  I love me a good biopic as much as the next gal. And heaven knows I love "Citizen Kane."  I also enjoy the work of director David Fincher. But this screenplay, written eons ago by Fincher's father, Jack Fincher (who died in 2003), is, in a word, befuddling.  Based on a two month span of time in which Makiecwicz wrote "Citizen Kane," the first hour and half of the film is a mess of flashbacks and quick scenes about 1930's Californian politics in a society where studio bosses controlled everything.  Normally this would be cool. But for a film that's supposed to be about a washed up writer writing one of the best films in history, this film is neither biopic nor behind the scenes. It's just...befuddling.  You can't just put Gary Oldman in a fat suit and call it an awesome film.  

The last half hour or so picks up the pace and the point of the film is finally, FINALLY made in the last couple minutes, in a radio and TV clip that has nothing to do with the actors or the writer or anything.  And it's the most moving bit of the movie.  


This one is nominated for 10 Oscars. I see Trent Reznor adding to his Oscar shelf for the original score, and there are one or two technical awards this film should pull in.  Amanda Seyfried is likely for best supporting actress.  As for whether or not you should see it, well, you could save yourself a lot of time, and watch the first ten minutes, the last half hour, and then watch "Citizen Kane."


"Nomandland"

A woman in her 60's who, after losing everything in the Great Recession, embarks on a journey through the American West, living as a van-dwelling, modern-day nomad.

Some movies entertain. Some uplift.  Some educate.  "Nomandland," weirdly, does all three, but in reverse order of my list.

Frances McDormand is a national treasure and is well deserving of her nominations this year for Best Actress AND Best Picture.  This is a very strange film at first.  The vibe initially is that of a slow moving documentary.  In fact, at one point, I said out loud (to no one since I was alone) "Why isn't this a documentary?"

Easy answer:  Because once you get into the pacing of the movie, you realize you're seeing real life in a way we've never really seen it before.  And therefore this deserves more eyeballs on it than a documentary might get.

The cast is not Hollywood beautiful.  Could be because much of the cast is made up of actual Nomads, people who travel around the country, living in their vans or their RVs, working seasonal jobs  here and there, and overall living as an earth friendly community that's always on the move.  ("Tiny House Nation" can suck it. These nomads know how to live simply!)  

David Strathairn, a favorite of mine, is a good pair with McDormand. Both play socially awkward, private people trying to reach out for some kind of contact.  Set mostly in the deserts of the American West, there's little to distract the viewer from the truth and longing in each character's face.  

This movie is a possibly a bit slow for many people, but well worth a look. If nothing else, your eyes will be opened to a new American Dream.  Nominated for 6 Oscars, I fear this one is too quiet, too still, to beat out the bigger, noisier films like "The Trial of the Chicago 7."  But after the years of anger and noise and unrest, it was actually nice to watch a community of people who learned how to live in peace and calm.  McDormand is likely for Best Actress. I'm not sure I can pick this over "Promising Young Woman" for my favorite, but if it won Best Picture I wouldn't cry.

Monday, November 9, 2020

Will the BEST "Rebecca" please stand up?

 



    I know I was too young to fully understand the entire point of  Daphne du Maurier's incandescent novel, "Rebecca" the first time I read it.  But the creepy concept of an English manor ruled by the memory of its previous mistress stuck with me and in the last 40 years I've probably reread the book a dozen times.

The same can be said for Alfred Hitchcock's stellar film of the same name, released in 1940.  Starring Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine.  

Thanks to Covid, and the fact that I'm a complete couch potato, I stumbled upon the Netflix 2020 remake this weekend, starring Armie Hammer and the ubiquitous Lily James.  


Now, I'm not a purist.  I believe there are some films that improve with a make over.  ("3:10 to Yuma" comes to mind, as does "Gatsby.")  That said, there are some films I believe are untouchable, and should never be remade:  Gone with the Wind, The Grapes of Wrath, Dr. Zhivago, films like this.  And, up until this weekend, "Rebecca" was on that list. "Rebecca" is on my top 100 list of films of all time. I'm not as glamorous as say, AFI, but I've seen a crap ton of movies, and I know what I'm talking about when it comes to what I like.

Not that I'm entirely sold on the idea of a Rebecca remake.  Even after watching the new film, I'm not sure this was something that should have been done.  However, it's Covid.  Not everyone has access to the classics, but they're looking for something to watch. So let me compare the films side by side.  Grading will be based on what the NEW film improved or failed.  


Let's start with the main characters:


MAXIM

I'm absolutely on board with the new film on this.  I have said many, many times that I think Olivier is woefully overrated and if there is a weak link in Hitchcock's film, it's because no one...and I mean no one...can buy Laurence Olivier as a mysterious romantic stranger who would sweep a young girl off her feet.  Especially with the way he delivers every line as if his mouth is a machine gun and the words are bullets he's firing at...oh...Nazis.  Weirdly, I thought Olivier was in his fifties when he played this role. He was not. He was barely 32.  

Meanwhile...Armie Hammer?  Handsome, charming, can deliver a romantic line without looking like he's in pain.  Oh yeah. UPGRADE!  (And far younger looking and acting at 34.)  


MRS. DE WINTER

(Brilliant and so annoying that du Maurier didn't name her main character.)

Okay, Joan Fontaine does her level best, I'm sure, to be a young, innocent girl. At 23, she pretty much was a young innocent.  But she wanders around with her shoulders hunched like she doesn't know what a basic things are. One almost expects her to look at an omelet and say, "What's an egg?"  She's not bad as the young Mrs. DW, but she's not...well she's a little annoying. It's like, "He's your husband. would you just ask him a question already?"


Lily James is no young innocent at 31, (and is there a British project she isn't in right now?), but she handles the part of Mrs. DW in a far different way. Instead of being a shriveling creature freezing in the headlights, she's a young woman trying to actually improve herself without much help from the outside world.  (The scene where she orders breakfast in French is great.)  She doesn't let the idea of Manderly steamroll her.  She's overwhelmed, but she wants to learn, she's trying to learn, she's trying to be a better wife all the way around. She's young, but you can tell she wants to make it work.  UPGRADE.


THE MUSIC:

I'm a huge fan of movie music and I have to be honest here, I think both movies have just terrible music.  My biggest gripe about old films is that the music is very, very jarring with any kind of subtlety.  Like listening to a junior high orchestra. It's all loud. It's all fast.  But at least for the 1940 film, it fit.  Meanwhile, Rebecca 80 years later stuck some really, really random Irish vibing tune in at just the weirdest times.  Rebecca is not a comedy. But I found the music hilarious and just wrong.  DOWNGRADE.


ROMANCE


I realize acting, like everything else, has evolved over the generations.  That said, I think you can still look at a classic romantic movie and say, "Yeah, I get that romance. They've got a spark."  




I call to mind the scene edited out of the theatrical release, (but in the director's cut which  you have to see) of "Streetcar Named Desire."  It's just Marlon Brando watching Kim Hunter walk down a flight of stairs.  But good lord in the morning it is HOT!  



And then there's the kiss in "Gone with the Wind"  no, not the one where Clark Gable carries Vivien Leigh up a flight of stairs, although that's pretty good. The one I'm talking about is much earlier in the film, where Rhett's leaving Scarlett and a wagon full of weak people on the road to Tara and he's going off to war.  WHEW!


Okay, now let's look at all the steamy kissing we get in 1940's "Rebecca."  Right. There is none. Basically, Maxim and the unnamed young girl get together BECAUSE IT SAYS SO IN THE SCRIPT.  You get zero vibe (and I put this at Olivier's feet as a fail. Maxim is the LEAD in this romance, and he acts like he's about as interested in romance as he is in women's shoes.) from Maxim that he's anything other than rude, abrupt, and just annoyed with life.  And why young miss goes with him?  Well, again...IT SAYS SO IN THE SCRIPT.

Meanwhile, 2020. Now, the romance in the book is hinted at, and honestly by 2020 standards, this film is mild on the spicy meter.  (There's one shot of a couple on a boat making out naked...but it's at a distance and I'm not even sure why it's there, but whatever.) However, you do get the feeling that there's a real attraction between the two and Lily James seems heartbroken at the thought of leaving for New York and never seeing Armie Hammer or his sun kissed pecs ever again.  Hammer, for his part, is a solid romantic lead and while he's not paving any new ground with his performance here, he holds up his end of the bargain, and really does seem like a legitimate romance there in Monte Carlo. UPGRADE


MRS. VAN HOPPER

Florence Bates is brilliant as the employer from hell, Mrs. Van Hopper, but one of my personal faves, Ann Dowd, (only slightly less evil than her "Aunt Lydia" from "A Handmaid's Tale.") gets some extra screen time to take the horror to a new level.   UPGRADE.


MANDERLY

Call me old fashioned, but if a house is supposed to be a creepy, it should feel creepy and not so, oh I don't know, Downton Abby-ish.  The black and white film goes a long way to adding to that creepiness.  DOWNGRADE


THE IN-LAWS

The one tiny, tiny bit of humor in either film comes from Maxim's sister Beatrice and her bumbling husband Giles. While hilarious and just what we need in the 1940 version, 2020 guts the parts and removes the humor.  DOWNGRADE.


JACK FAVELL

George Sanders is oily and urbane and witty and you can't wait to see him on the screen again and again.  Sam Riley...well, I'm not sure what he's trying to do, but he winds up feeling like a dopey frat boy who needs some cash.  DOWNGRADE


MRS. DANVERS

Here's the real crux of the story. It really all hinges on Mrs. Danvers. Seriously, the book, the movie, all of it. She is the real center figure.  So, how did we do?









Judith Anderson is EVERYTHING that is right with the 1940 film.  She is emotionless. She is cold. She is in those creepy long dresses and her hair...well you just know she's not right with that hair.  But what really gets you is that moment...that moment she and the new Mrs. DW are looking out the window...well, you know...if I had her whispering in my ear I'd probably jump.  Her ending is perfection.

Meanwhile...Kistin Scott Thomas...sigh.  She does not rise to the level of creepy needed in this film.  She barely manages "Annoyed headmistress."  And the relationship put together in music montage form (normally I love a good music montage but not here) tries to cover for the fact that she can't get creepy enough to scare anyone.  And her final scene is, in a word, lame. Which is fitting.

DOWNGRADE


Final notes on the new movie:  Armie Hammer is great, but sleepwalking in his boxers, not great.

The actors who play Robert and Clarice look like they just came from a casting call at "American Horror Story: FreakShow."

Some of the added scenes are terrible.  Just really pointless and bad.  Not the ones where Armie Hammer is shirtless though. Those are gold.  (Much like his chest hair in the Monte Carlo sun.)


FINAL ANALYSIS:


The front half of the movie is actually better than the original.  Seriously. The ship sinks, however, the minute we get to Manderly.  The villains (Favell and Danvers) and the terrible casting of those parts, ruin the second half of the film.  (Sam Riley and Kristin Scott Thomas should be fined or have their SAG card suspended or something for a year.)  So here's what you want to do if you want the BEST Rebecca experience. 


Watch the first half of the 2020 movie. Watch the second half of the 1940 movie.


Or, you could just read the book.

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

From Sarah: "Midway" vs. "Pearl Harbor" a Battle of Battles.



Hello Epic War Film Fans!

Over the weekend I finally got to sit down and watch 2019's summer epic (epic fail?), "Midway."  I'm a big fan of war movies in general, but especially World War films, so I ignored (as I generally do) reviews and  box office numbers and watched the film to form my own opinion.  

While watching the movie (and I'll get to some of the finer points in a moment) I could not help but think about another film, "Pearl Harbor," and how that was another big budget war film that's been much maligned over the years.

Neither movie is a complete waste of your time.  What's funny is the biggest issue for both films is time. One is far too long, one is far too short.

But here's what I'm thinking:



Pearl Harbor (2001)   IMDB Metacritic score: 44  Viewer score: 6.2

"Pearl Harbor" is an epic film following two best friends from their rough childhood right up to the edge of World War II.  The two friends fall for the same woman and face a personal battle of their own.  Ben Affleck and Kate Beckinsale lead a wildly attractive cast of fictional characters through this romantic story, ultimately set against the bombing of Pearl Harbor.

The run time on this film is over 3 hours and, while I'm not against long movies, this one is far too long.  The movie suffers from a major identity crisis, which is why it's so long.  Either it's a romantic movie or it's a war movie. I'm sorry, but you can't do justice to either subject if you try to meld them.  There's so much character development, they almost forget to add the Pearl Harbor part into Pearl Harbor. Had the bombing of Pearl been the climax...then maybe, even with all of it's ridiculous fictional action, the movie might be better respected. But then, for reasons I can't fathom...possibly because director Michael Bay suddenly remembered he was directing a war picture, the entire tone of the film changes to epic war with Doolittle's Raid.  But then the action grinds to a halt and we're back to romance...love triangles...pregnancies...ugh.  

Basically, don't call this a World War II movie and then give me two hours of a fictionalized romantic drama with a handful of moments of glorious action.  Trim the film in one direction or the other.  (I should note, that all of my criticisms for this film are exactly the elements I praise in the film "Titanic."  So what's the difference?  Well, Kate Winselt and Leo DiCapprio are super talented actors.  Ben Affleck, Kate Beckinsale, and Josh Hartnett are....not.  And I will die on that hill.)

So, the movie is too long, it doesn't focus enough on the titular topic, and it gets mired in too much focus on fiction. And also the actors are just...terrible.


Then we have:


Midway (2019)  IMDB Metracritic score: 47  Viewer score: 6.7

"Midway" is a war epic covering events in the Pacific from the end of diplomatic relations with Japan to the bombing of Pearl to Doolittle's Raid and finally ending with the unlikely victory over tiny Midway Island.  Patrick Wilson and Dennis Quaid lead a huge cast of less-than-household named actors. Not only is there no love triangle...the very lovely Mandy Moore (who would have done a far better job on "Pearl Harbor" than Kate Becknisale) has virtually the only female uttered lines in all 2 hours and 38 minutes of the movie...and for as little screen time as she gets, I'm mildly shocked her entire role didn't end up on the cutting room floor.

"Midway" is a very earnest film.  You can feel director Roland Emmerich sweating as he yells, "That's now how it really went!" into a megaphone over and over.   And, as Hollywood goes, this movie goes a long way to getting the big picture stuff right.  (There's a laundry list of goofs on IMDB if you're interested.)  That's not the problem with "Midway." The problem with "Midway," as I see it, is twofold:

1)  It needs more time.  

To cover that much American/World history, not in calendar time, but in pure volume of activity, and to do it right, "Midway" should have been a miniseries.  There's so much there and in under 3 hours of run time, something must suffer. Unfortunately for the viewer, because so many big battles are crammed into a short time, you lose the feel of the intensity of time build up. Much of the tension simply isn't there because the plot points hop from Pearl to Doolittle to Midway, and you barely understand that there's time or prep or anything in between. In short, much of "Midway" feels like one very long....very long....dog fight.

2)  Sure, the characters are real...they still have to be developed.

When doing a war picture with many moving parts, it is wise to remember that everyone's going to be dressed the same so you need to give the viewer some kind of cue as to who is talking.  Also, moviemakers, you cannot assume that anyone knows who people in history are. The sad fact is that so much history is NOT being taught anymore.  We're too busy learning how to send naked pictures of ourselves to each other by phone...and then be incensed when those pictures wind up on the internet, that we don't learn any history.  So, yes, Admiral Nimitz was a giant in World War II.  You still need to develop that character for your viewer so that the viewer doesn't just think of him as "the guy Woody Harrelson played."  And again, this takes time.  Now, smaller parts need less time to develop which is why the only character I felt an emotional connection to was played by Nick Jonas (yes, that Nick Jonas).  His character...Bruno Gaido...gets about six minutes of screen time and yet he's given enough dialogue and he does enough that his little bitty part shines beyond anything anyone else did in the film.  (Well, except for Brennan Brown, who plays the code breaker Rochfort...but he's described as wearing fuzzy slippers and the first time we see him, he's got a bathroom on over his uniform...you don't forget a thing like that.  Which is my point...when everyone looks the same, you have to somehow make them stand apart from each other.)

Yes, the characters were all based on real people, which means they had to do the stuff the real people did.  Which limits a writer and director.  You can't just have them first guns at zeros flying over head because it looks cool  (ahem, Pearl Harbor) and you can't just have them flying the planes sideways because it looks cool (again, ahem) when you are trying to make a film based on actual events, you have to depict those actual events.    Quite possibly the best example of how to do this would be 1993's "Gettysburg" which takes the time and uses a number of different techniques to differentiate the characters and keep the story from becoming far too muddled. And that was a three battle movie as well.

All of this, all of the issues that plagued "Midway" and kept it from being a magnificent piece of filmmaking are easily fixed...just give the film makers more time. Not more money...more time. The same cast would have THRIVED in a limited series, or hey, make it a four hour film, so what?  

So which one is a better picture of these two?

If you want flash and dazzle sub par acting, and questionable historical content, but lots of big names and flashy romance and soft filters "Pearl Harbor" is your film.   If you want something in touch with what really happened, even if you have to watch it a couple times to figure out who is who, "Midway" is the one for you.

"Midway" is on my permanent shelf.  "Pearl  Harbor" is going back to the DVD resale shop.


Tuesday, May 26, 2020

From Sarah: A "Horrifying" Weekend!








Hello all!

One this past Memorial Day weekend, I took some time (because my arthritis in my feet forced me on the couch, not that I made much of a fight...) to step outside my comfort zone and watch some horror films from different eras.  Digging deep in a couple cases into what my Amazon Prime membership had to offer, I saw a few things that caught my eye enough to watch from start to finish.  Here's what I found:




Fall of the House of Usher (1948)

I'm a HUGE Edgar Allen Poe fan and I am well acquainted with the Vincent Price version of this particular story. I was not, however, aware (because I'm only now just digging into the deepest recesses of old films, thanks to my many streaming service subscriptions) that there were other, earlier film adaptations of Poe's story about familial insanity.

If you keep IMDB.com handy while watching movies, (which I do) you'll find that the trivia for this particular version is telling. No actor other than Gwen Watford (for whom this was a film debut) made another movie after this one.  Let's think about that.  NO ONE ELSE MADE ANOTHER MOVIE after this one.  Was this going to be the finest work of film EVER? Did the actors finish this one and say, "I simply cannot do any better than this...this is the height of art."

Ummmm, no.

I'm not going to say the film was bad. And I do give them points for having the nerve to attempt to convey that Daddy Usher was into some pretty heavy bondage and sadism in his personal life. That's pretty out there, given the times. However, I have to mention that much of the dialogue was tossed in post production (ponder that) and that film opens...not on a dying mansion, but in a reading room of an exclusive upper crust men's club where dusty old white guys are sitting around talking about books and one of them decides to grab a copy of Poe's completed works and read from it to prove Poe's work is superior to any others.

Well, Poe's work is superior, but this film is not.  Unless you are really into films with zero production value, maybe leave this one alone.





Asylum (1972)

If you've read any of my reviews, you know I believe there is a film DEAD ZONE between 1969 and 1980 where the vast majority of films made are simply unwatchable either because the editing or filming technique is bad or the acting is just awful.

"Asylum" has many great pieces. The opening music is great, the set up for the plot is really, really good. A young psychiatrist goes to a mental asylum to interview for a job. As part of the interview he must meet each of the patients and, after completing his interviews, tell the doctor in charge which of the patients was the now insane head doctor of the asylum, If he gets it right he gets the job.

GREAT set up.  What follows are four separate stories from each of the patients...and this is where the film falls apart. Not in the stories themselves, but in the quality of the filming. Seriously...this was done in 1972. Granted, it's a British film, and their sense of horror/special effects is different, and I'm they weren't working with Hollywood money.  Still, there are moments, especially in the first story, where the effects are so beyond ridiculous, you wind up laughing at the campiness.

That said, with everything "Asylum" had going against it from the outset, I stuck with it and find some moments of real entertainment and an over all sense of time well spent at the end.  This is a very, very, very British film, and the ending is indicative of the bigger problems I find in films in the dead zone.  But, overall, this is a worthy 88 minutes.




Dr. Sleep (2019)

When this movie was first announced both my daughter and I were excited for it. She is a hard core horror film fan, and I love Stephen King's genius novel about a writer completely losing his crap in an empty hotel.  Unlike most of the movie going public, I do not worship at the alter of Stanley Kubrick, so I prefer the 1997 mini series adaptation of the book to the 1980 classic film. All that said, We were excited to see this movie.

Which we watched yesterday.

Friends, I'll be honest. I haven't read the book. But I have read the trivia comments and this film, Dr. Sleep, is a sequel to the Kubrick film...not necessarily the book. And, being a sequel to the film, means, director/screenwriter Mike Flannigan took up some of the film techniques used in the 1980 classic.  Unfortunately, he used the bad elements instead of the good ones.

The movie is too long by about 45 minutes and if you ask my daughter or me, we can tell you exactly what to cut.  We did not need the long intro to the bad characters or the reminder footage using a fake Danny and fake Wendy. Basically, the first half hour is not needed, it's confusing, and, if you've seen the Kubrick film, (and why are you watching Dr. Sleep if you haven't?) then you don't need the bits with fake Danny.  The first half hour drags the film down.  Ewan McGregor and young Kyleigh Curran play well off of each other and Rebecca Ferguson is plausible as a villain.  Once we get to the meat of the plot, the movie starts rolling along nicely, but then Flannigan remembers he's writing a sequel, so once again we get dragged along in a direction that is not necessary and wind up with an ending that is befuddling at best.  This film could have been great, there are many great pieces to it. But it feels way too much like the pieces from two puzzles shuffled together in one box.

If you're a hardcore horror fan, there are some thrills and chills, but really, this is too much of a first draft mess to really bother.

Tuesday, May 12, 2020

From Sarah: "Love Affair" or "An Affair to Remember," a classic movie battle.




Hello everyone!

With COVID-19 limiting just about everyone's entertainment options, I have, it should surprise no one, delved deeply into the lower layers of my streaming services' offerings.  Which is how I ran across the Irene  Dunne/Charles Boyer 1939 movie: Love Affair.

"Love Affair," as some of you may know, is the ORIGINAL film version of "An Affair to Remember," which popped up, with the same director, in 1957 starring Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr.  (And it was the second version made ultra famous in the Nora Ephron masterpiece (Sleepless in Seattle.")

I'm like almost everyone else, I'm sure. I've see "Affair to Remember" several times. And yes, I've cried.

But the 1939 Dunne/Boyer version?  Ummmm, nope, never seen it.

Until this weekend.

So, side by side, how do these two movies compare?  Which one is better?

First of all, the movies have the same director. Which means the pacing, the angles, the basic overall aesthetic is the same. The same. Basically, it's the same movie with different faces.

Except it isn't.

Watching these two movies is the best (and possibly only) chance we movie lovers have to say, "well, if this actor had that part, the movie would have been better," and really get to see if that works. All things being equal, who's better: Boyer or Grant?  Dunne or Kerr?

Because Boyer is French, like really French, he might be a little tiny bit hampered for American audiences with his accent.  And, let's face it, he's not as good looking as Cary Grant. But for those of us who know Cary Grant's work as a comedic actor, it's a little challenging to take him seriously in that final scene.  Which, by the way, Boyer SLAYS.

So...the male lead...complete toss up.

Which brings us to the ladies.  Irene Dunne and Deborah Kerr.  Both are lovely, snarky, and hold up well against their male counterparts. Here's the one difference:  Deborah Kerr didn't sing the songs her character sings in the movie. Irene Dunne did.  BUT...I really didn't love Irene Dunne's singing (I'm not a fan of soprano solos...it's a personal thing.) so that sort of evens out.

Which means...the female lead...toss up.

Since both movies are the same scene for scene and the director is the same, I really found only one other element in the movies I could compare, and it's a tough one:  The orphan choir.

Really, Sarah?  You're judging singing orphans?

Yep, I am.

And the winner is...An Affair to Remember.  Why?  Because their orphan choir sounds like kids.  As opposed to Love Affair which literally has a trio of grammar school girls singing like they're all 20 year old Broadway stars.  And the choir of kids toward the end also sounds pretty much like a college group.  I mean, you're going to try and sell me the idea that those rag tag kindergartners can sing base?  Really?

That said, movie lovers, comedy lovers, romance lovers, you cannot go wrong with either film. I'm not saying you're going to have the same reaction Rosie O'Donnell and Meg Ryan had in "Sleepless in Seattle."  But if you've got a rainy day on your hands and you need something charming and sweet to watch...either of these movie will fit the bill.


Sunday, April 19, 2020

Movie Review by Linda!: The Battle of the Sexes (2017)

 "The Battle of the Sexes," starring Emma Stone and Steve Carell, is about the epic tennis showdown between Billy Jean King and Bobby Riggs back in 1973. Thank you to my trivia team for recommending this film. It is fascinating, has a great cast, and in my humble opinion deserved more award nominations than it received. (Only two Golden Globe nods to Stone and Carell, which they both lost.) 4.5/5 stars.

Reviews you can use: "Chicago 7" and "Sound of Metal"

  Good morning all! Well it's Oscar day.  Up until this very moment, The Oscars broadcast was a sort of "other Superbowl" for ...