Archive for Movies & TV

Monday Movie Review: Inglorious Basterds

Inglorious Basterds (2009) 8/10
In World War II, the “Basterds,” led by Lt. Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt), fight a guerrilla war against the Nazis in occupied France. Meanwhile, in Paris, Shosanna Dreyfus (Mélanie Laurent) is the only surviving member of a family slaughtered by the “Jew Hunter” (Christoph Waltz). Fast forward and Shosanna, now living in Paris as a gentile, owns a movie theater that will host a major Nazi propoganda film. Written and directed by Quentin Tarantino.

Inglorious Basterds is a movie so strange, so bold, so gross and yet so engrossing, that I hardly know how to rate it. It is disjointed and disorganized, and yet the running length of two and a half hours seems to fly by. It’s fun, it’s crazy, someone should fix it, and yet exactly as it is, it is indeed glorious, and it’s a perfect expression of Quentin Tarantino. In fact, after thinking about it for a couple of days, I began to feel that Inglorious Basterds is something like the symbolic blueprint to Tarantino’s psyche.

The movie takes place during World War II. The part you’ve seen in previews involves the “Basterds;” a guerrilla team of Americans in occupied France whose mission is to strike terror among the Nazis by killing, torturing, and scalping them. Brad Pitt plays a hillbilly who claims some Apache blood (hence the scalping), but the rest of his team is Jewish. In fact, they are almost all stereotypically Jewish-looking; dark haired with thick eyebrows, it looks like a set of caricatures drawn by anti-Semites, or like the casting call for a Woody Allen memoir. This is not insignificant. The only Basterds who aren’t Jewish looking are the Austrian who escaped the Nazis and went to America, then volunteered to fight his former captors, and a former Nazi who turned violently on his own.

The other, and by far dominant, part of the movie involves Shosanna and her theater. A Nazi soldier (Daniel Brühl) notices Shosanna, and both her beauty and love of film interest him. Zoller (Brühl) is a war hero, and the subject and star of a forthcoming Nazi propoganda film, directed by Joseph Goebbels. Zoller wants the film to premiere at Shosanna’s theater.

With a major film premiere in the offing that all the leaders of the Third Reich will attend, the British army, the Basterds, and Shosanna herself all begin to plot to destroy the theater and the party leaders inside it.

Most critics are quick to note that this is a movie about movies. (It’s clearly not a movie about World War II!) Movies have redemptive power in Inglorious Basterds, and the ability to change history. Movie people are uniformly the most important people in this film, and the most important people love movies. Every pivotal character who is not a Basterd is involved with the movies in some way: A critic, an actress, an actor, a theater owner, and a projectionist are all vital to the goings on, and almost no one is simply an ordinary soldier or officer. Even Goebbels is primarily seen as a film director. A theater, and film itself, serve as the most important weapons.

Some critics argue that this “movie about movies” is Tarantino writing about himself. I’d say it’s the conscious and public side of him. This is Tarantino, for whom life is movies, and here we see that an encyclopedic knowledge of movies (such as Tarantino has) is quite literally a matter of life and death.

The Basterds themselves, though, are something like a map of Tarantino’s subconscious.

Picture it: A kid, maybe eleven years old, wants to make a movie about World War II. He’d talk to himself kind of like this: “What would be cool is if Jews killed the Nazis. But they should kill and torture them. I know! They should scalp Nazis. Yeah. Okay, so their leader is an Indian, who tells them to take Nazi scalps. And there’ll be lots of blood.” This is totally Tarantino as a kid, wanting to make cool, exciting movies that fulfill childish fantasies of right and wrong.

And make no mistake; Tarantino cares deeply about right and wrong. He is not abusing or assaulting the good guys, he treats women with a humanity that can only be described as feminist (while it shouldn’t be feminist to have female characters who aren’t raped, prostituted, or stripped, you and I know that by comparison with the rest of the movie industry, it is), and he cares about who is and who is not good.

Now obviously, if you’re a kid and you’ve decided that a hillbilly/Apache is going to lead a band of Jews to fight Nazis, you’re going to imagine yourself as the Apache. And give him a cool scar. If you wonder what a bonafide movie star is doing hamming it up and having a grand ol’ time within a cast of relative unknowns, I think that’s the answer. The “star” is Tarantino himself. Not the Tarantino the world knows, who can easily be seen as a movie theater owner, or a soldier/film critic (Michael Fassbender), but the subconscious/fantasy Tarantino.

I don’t think the movie makes any sense at all if you can’t see that fantasy component. As it is, I think it kind of goes off the rails at the end, although by closing with the line, “This may very well be my masterpiece,” Tarantino assures the audience that he really doesn’t care what you think, he’s never had so much fun.

[SPOILERS BELOW THE FOLD]
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Monday Movie Review: Blue Velvet

Blue Velvet (1986) 8/10
When Jeffrey (Kyle MacLachlan) finds a severed human ear in a field, he discovers a world of corruption hiding just past the edges of his peaceful community. Written and directed by David Lynch.

I saw this movie a couple of months ago, and haven’t known what to make of it. Its reputation is so big it almost drowns out the experience of seeing it.

There are ways in which it’s all too heavy-handed. OMGZ! Look! There’s filth underneath the pretty suburb! Laura Dern as Jeffrey’s innocent neighbor is a bit too innocent and too baby doll, Isabella Rossellini is too histrionic, throwing herself to the floor, throwing herself, in fact, pretty much to the exclusion of normal movement. And Dennis Hopper is too Dennis Hopper. It’s a garish movie painted in garish colors; very much a painting, something extreme and splashy and full of symbols for art students to discuss.

And yet the images are striking and remarkable. It’s David Lynch, after all, the master of the strange image, and I’m a believer in movies as a medium of images. I loved Mulholland Dr. and didn’t understand it; I kind of feel like understanding the narrative isn’t always necessary. Maybe it’s usually necessary, but the David Lynches of the world are there to be an exception.

The world that Jeffrey spies on through Dorothy (Rossellini) is so dark as to be incomprehensible. It is perverse, violent, and anarchic. It was really hard for me to follow what was going on with the crime plot, even though some of it was pretty simple in retrospect, but it is seen through the eyes of Jeffrey, to whom it is all foreign. The darkness of it is repulsive, and I am left, as I often am, wondering if I’m the only one actually repulsed by repulsiveness. It seems like Frank Booth (Hopper) is a character everyone loves to quote, as if kidnapping, rape, and murder bring the funny. My take on Booth is he is a nightmare, a “monster from the id,” and not at all funny.

Roger Ebert somewhat famously wrote a one-star review of this film. Although I disagree, I see his point; it’s not complicated to see Blue Velvet as hateful. At some level, though, I think he fundamentally misunderstands.

Isabella Rossellini’s husband and son have been kidnapped by Dennis Hopper, who makes her his sexual slave. The twist is that the kidnapping taps into the woman’s deepest feelings: She finds that she is a masochist who responds with great sexual passion to this situation.

I doubt it. Ebert is saying that first Hopper kidnapped Rossellini’s family, using their captivity to get her to bed, and she ultimately became aroused, despite hating him and hating her arousal. No way.

More likely, Rossellini discovered her S&M desires in a consensual relationship with Booth, perhaps seeking him out because of those desires, and then, when she wanted out, he kidnapped her family in order to keep her enslaved. Like Jeffery, Dorothy wanted to toy with the edge of the dark unknown, but she fell in. She’s Dorothy, stuck in Oz, needing a Wizard to free her.

Ebert hates, and is uncomfortable with, the constant contrasts in this film between “nice” and “perverse,” as embodied by the two women; “nice” Sandy (Laura Dern) and “perverse” Dorothy. He sees the nice as snide and satiric, and the perverse as a straight story (ha! see what I did there?). But carrying around a gas canister to suck on while raping a woman and calling yourself Baby at the top of your lungs is really not normal, and is no less exaggerated than the nicey-nice scenes. Both sides are equally broad, and in a way, equally disturbing. The nice is bad because it isn’t real, the dark because it’s bad, and hyper-real. Our hero, Jeffrey, walks between the two worlds, spying on each, before finally making a choice.

Monday Movie Review: Ponyo

Ponyo (2008) 9/10
Ponyo is a magical fish who escapes her wizard father. Sosuke is a five year old boy who finds her and loves her unconditionally. Because of his love, Ponyo turns herself into a little girl, but the magic she unleashes to do so has cataclysmic results. Directed by Hayao Miyazaki.

This is sort of Little Mermaid without the sexism and campy villain. It is the youngest Miyazaki movie I’ve seen, in the sense that it really is for little kids, and one of the most Japanese (compared to, say, Howl’s Moving Castle, which is based on a Welsh story).

There is so much to love about Ponyo. It is one of the most joyful movies I’ve ever seen. A long, almost wordless sequence of Ponyo, in girl form, chasing Sosuke & his mother in a car by running across the back of a giant fish, is exquisite. I mean, happiness isn’t as easy to depict as you’d imagine. She’s happy, she’s full of life, and no words are needed. Later, she runs around a house, exactly as a five year old girl would, so joyful you want to applaud.

Then there is a rich realism. Like I said, Ponyo runs like a girl. Both kids act exactly like kids; not gussied up and fictionalized. On a couple of occasions, Ponyo falls asleep with exactly the entertaining loss of consciousness every parent has seen. Even better, Sosuke’s mother, Lisa, is a wonderfully true character. She gets angry at her husband and pops a beer, then lays on the floor, tipsy and fuming. She’s accepting, she’s playful, she’s disorganized, she’s just…human. Not “Mom” or “Cartoon Mom,” but human. I loved her.

Ponyo is the oldest of a large school of fish, the children of a wizard and magical mother we know little about until later in the film. She has enormous power but is just a little tot, so her father keeps her confined to prevent trouble. Naturally, she hates her confinement and “swims away.” So far, we’re in cliché land. I see a female protagonist being raised by a father, naturally I assume it’s the classic Motherless Girl syndrome. In fact, Ponyo does have a mother, and it’s a delight when we meet her. Since that information is held back in the film, I won’t give it away, but her motherlessness serves as a perfect parallel to Sosuke’s fatherlessness.

There’s also a lot of juxtaposition of youth and age. Lisa works in a Senior Center that is next door to Sosuke’s daycare. A five year-old boy drives the action, largely supported by a group of old ladies.

Needless to say, the film is exquisitely beautiful. Because I like to allow my eyes to focus on the imagery, I prefer dubbing to subtitles, but I know I’m a minority among film buffs. For that reason, I haven’t dwelled on the Western voice actors in the dubbed version, but they do a great job, and they’re quite a pedigreed bunch: Tina Fey, Liam Neeson, Matt Damon, Cate Blanchett, Lily Tomlin, Betty White, Cloris Leachman, and more.

Monday Movie Review: Julie & Julia

Julie & Julia (2009) 8/10
“Based on 2 true stories:” Julia Child (Meryl Streep) and her husband Paul (Stanley Tucci) move to Paris, and Julia struggles to find something that interests her to occupy her time, finally enrolling in the Cordon Bleu; Julie Powell (Amy Adams) writes a blog chronicling her process of working her way through Child’s cookbook over the course of a year. Written & directed by Nora Ephron.

Every single reviewer who has written about this film has remarked that Julia is more interesting than Julie, and that’s true. The Julia sequences have two of the great watchable actors, Streep is astonishing, Tucci is astonishing, it’s like a houseful of astonishing. The Julie sequences have Amy Adams, who is lovely and very good, and Chris Messina who is also good, but come on! The Julia scenes also have world travel, period clothing and settings, and snooty Parisians, so who could compete with that?

But the movie brings something more to the table than simply dividing it into two and comparing sides. It is full of warmth; indeed, it is full of love. Here is a story in which both female leads are married to good, loving men and have okay lives. They’re trying to find themselves and they do so through cooking, but they are not tragic, desperate, ridiculous, or slapstick.

Early on, I was surprised to discover that Julie Powell is a really good cook. This project was not disproportionate to her skill, despite her insecurity. I had expected something more laughable. More of a movie, I guess, and less of a life. I realize that much of Julie’s life is fictionalized, but it feels grounded.

What struck me as I left the theater was that there were no weirdly awkward scenes, no twists, no complicated rom-com goofy switcharoos, no nothing except joy and discovery and hard work and a sense of both its frustrations and rewards. It’s a movie that is not at all dull, and yet not dependent on cinematic situations to keep it interesting. It has good friendships, good conversations, wit, sex, and lots and lots of wonderful food.

I think you should see it.

Monday Movie Review: Kissing Jessica Stein

Kissing Jessica Stein (2001) 10/10
Jessica Stein (Jennifer Westfeldt) is a neurotic, brainy single woman seeking a man. Helen Cooper (Heather Jurgensen) is a sexually voracious woman eager to try the one thing she hasn’t tried: sex with a woman. Despite Jessica’s misgivings, they tentatively enter into a relationship.

This is one of my favorite movies, and I’ve seen it several times. Looking back, I see I’ve included it in Tuesday Trivia no less than three times. Yet I’ve never reviewed it here! It’s come up in conversation lately, since I’m going to L.A. and might be meeting Jon Hamm, (!) and Jennifer Westfeldt is his long-time girlfriend (Hamm has a small role in the movie). So, having said how much I loved it during the day, we sat down and watched it this evening.

It has all the great things you could want in a romantic comedy. It is witty, it is character-driven; populated by real people with real lives; every supporting player has motivation and personality. Take Jessica’s friend Joan (Jackie Hoffman). She’s riotously funny, and moves the plot along in exactly the way a conveniently-placed friend must. She’s also a fleshed-out person with her own trajectory in life.

Speaking of characters, Tovah Feldshuh as Jessica’s mother really enriches this movie. She only ever gets to play the one role in movies, but she’s magical in it every time.

Kissing Jessica Stein is frankly, boldly sexual, and very funny about sex. I have to say that “I was surprised to learn that lesbians accessorized,” is one of my all-time favorite quotes, and there is a funny bit about blow-jobs that brings tears to my eyes.

What gets me most about it is that it’s one of those movies, like The Object of My Affection (but way better), that explores the strange gray region between friendship and romance; between love and “love,” and does it brilliantly.

Monday Movie Review: Coraline

Coraline (2009) 10/10
The Jones family has moved to a new home, a 150 year old Victorian. Coraline (voice by Dakota Fanning) feels neglected and bored. She finds a door behind the wallpaper that leads to a magical alternative house, where her mother (voice by Teri Hatcher) dotes lovingly, the food is delicious, and even the neighbors are delightful. But all is not what it seems.

Recently I saw someone characterize all of Neil Gaiman‘s stories as “hapless young person finds a passage into another world in which he/she has a larger destiny.” You got your Stardust, your Mirrormask, your Neverwhere all supporting that thesis. And truly, I laughed.

Coraline Jones finds a door into another world, but she is not hapless, and she doesn’t have a larger destiny. She is angry, and tough, and longing for more, and for a while, she thinks she’s found it. But, like Pinocchio‘s Pleasure Island, the joys of the Other Mother’s domain are merely enticements designed to ensnare Coraline, and before long she learns other children have been trapped here as well, their ghosts longing for freedom.

She’s a marvelous character, Coraline; annoyed, strong, innocent, and perfectly childlike. She is smart without all that “wise beyond her years” crap. Her life is rooted in reality, her animated stop-motion world is rich in texture. Coraline’s bedroom, her garden, her insane neighbors, are all incredibly detailed.

The terrors of Other Mother’s world sneak up on you. Everyone on the other side has button eyes, and Other Mother wants Coraline to sew buttons into her own eyes as a condition of staying there. Button eyes are creepy. They are just flat-out disturbing. There’s the blankness, the way the perfect roundness defies even the illusion of expression, and let’s not forget, they’re sewn on. With a needle. So there’s that.

I actually had a little trouble sleeping afterwards. These are some seriously disturbing images. Which the film producers apparently fail to understand, since the previews were all for cutesy kid movies. And 9, so apparently all animation is equally cute, no matter the subject.

Oh, yeah, the animation! The beauty of this film is beyond my ability to describe. I’ve simply never seen anything like it. We were sucked in by a DVD sale at Target: 4 free pairs of 3-D glasses! But after about ten minutes, we couldn’t get past the muddy colors, took off the glasses, and switched to 2-D.

So, pretty much a must-see. A rich animation experience, a complex main character, a fully-realized world, and buttons.

Monday Movie Review: Withnail and I

Withnail & I (1987) 10/10
Withnail (Richard E. Grant) and Marwood (Paul McGann) are unemployed actors in 1969, living in drunken squalor. Overwhelmed by London, Marwood persuades Withnail to convince his wealthy uncle Monty (Richard Griffiths) to loan them the key to his summer cottage so they can take a holiday. Written and directed by Bruce Robinson.

This movie is absolutely deranged. Surreal, appalling, hilarious, extraordinary, and deranged.

For ten years now, I’ve spent time on the IMDb message boards. One of its joys is learning about movies from real experts on the subject. At some point in my participation, I noticed that Withnail & I, a movie I had never heard of, kept showing up on people’s lists of favorites. This is exactly the way to find great movies; I am rarely disappointed.

Almost everyone describes this movie in terms of the holiday that Withnail and Marwood take, but the funniest stuff may well be the long sequence before they leave London; their spin into insane despair that drives them to Monty. Withnail has to be pushed pretty hard to visit relatives, and he is; by no money for food, a filthy home that may well have alien creatures growing in the sink, and a relatively normal flatmate nonetheless driven to “the fear” by cold, drink, hunger, drugs, and city life. None of which sounds even remotely funny (and surely living it would not be), which is why Richard E. Grant’s performance is nothing short of brilliant. The movie is held together by his posed, abrasive mania; at the point where he’s rubbing his body head to toe in Deep Heat because they’re cold and haven’t paid the heating bill, half-naked, green-skinned, shouting for BOOZE!, you know you’re on a wild ride and it’s time to just let go and let it take you away.

The actors are funny, the dialogue is hilarious, but the vision is relentlessly dark. And really, I enjoy this; these are young fools carrying a strange combination of cynicism and idealism that in no way equips them for real life. At the country home, everything appears to be falling apart; they still have no food, the rain is ceaseless, the neighbors are rude. When Monty arrives, suddenly the countryside is green and beautiful; it’s as though these guys have brought their own clouds with them. They’re very funny clouds, but I so admire Robinson’s commitment to his vision; he’s not sweetening these men or this situation to make it more palatable. In fact, what makes this movie so great is how entirely unpalatable it all is.

Quite simply, any movie with the line “Don’t threaten me with a dead fish” is a movie worth watching.

Monday Movie Review: The Fountain

The Fountain (2006) 6/10
Tommy (Hugh Jackman) is a research scientist working on brain tumors, and hoping to find a breakthrough in time to save his beloved wife Izzi (Rachel Wiesz). Tomas (Jackman) is a Spanish conquistador seeking the Fountain of Youth on behalf of Queen Isabella (Weisz). Tom (Jackman) is a bald guy in a bubble with a tree. Directed by Darren Aronofsky.

I am so confused.

I am okay with non-linear plots. I adored Memento. I like mysticism. I love romance. But I found this movie very difficult. Visually stunning, kind of engrossing, but ultimately frustrating. I had a sort of a sense of what was going on, but I felt like I was spending too much time trying to figure out what was going on, and it was distracting me from enjoying the movie. My teenagers (my son and my goddaughter) enjoyed the movie a lot more than I did. Arthur in particular didn’t care whether he understood, because he found the palette of light and color, and the repeated motifs of stars and specific shapes, so fascinating. And certainly the movie is like a painting; unfortunately, too much Dali, not enough Monet.

Because The Fountain deals with a man facing the death of his beloved wife, and because it is abstract and laden with symbolism, it lends itself to comparison with What Dreams May Come. The latter movie is weird, otherworldly, and metaphorical, and yet I never had trouble following it.

After watching The Fountain, I started looking at some of the DVD extras, and they started talking about Tom on his spaceship in the future. And I was all like “SPACESHIP? It was a SPACESHIP?” No clue. I had no clue. Because shaved head, lotus position, talking to a tree in a bubble in the stars doesn’t read “spaceship” to me, it reads astral travel or nirvana or something like that. The kids, apparently, knew it was a spaceship, so maybe it was me, but seriously, the teensiest bit of exposition is all I ask.

So what I get is that these two very pretty people with very prominent eyebrows are deeply in love, and this love transcends time, except it doesn’t really, because the whole Spanish conquistador thing may be a novel that Izzi is writing, except maybe it isn’t. But she is dying and he is upset by that so there are intense facial expressions and some hot sex.

Monday Movie Review Rerun: To Have and Have Not

I just got back from Kentucky and I haven’t got time to write a new review, so here’s a review I wrote over three years ago, for one of my favorite films:

To Have and Have Not (1944 ) 9/10
Fishing boat captain Harry Morgan (Humphrey Bogart) and pickpocket Marie (Lauren Bacall) are reluctantly involved in helping the French Resistance. Directed by Howard Hawks.

When people say “They don’t make ‘em like that anymore” they mean To Have and Have Not. » Read more..

Monday Movie Two-fer: The Italian Job (1969) and (2003)

The Italian Job (1969) 6/10
Charlie Croker (Michael Caine) is a thief just out of jail. His former partner has a big heist planned, but is murdered before he can meet with Charlie. With his late partner’s plans, Charlie puts together a complex gold heist in Italy.

There’s a lot of fun ideas here, although the whole thing is kind of thin. Probably the biggest delight, other than the famous Mini-Coopers, is Noel Coward as Mr. Bridger. Bridger is a crook of such power and influence, that he happily stays in jail because he runs the place; every prisoner and every guard does his bidding. Charlie needs Bridger’s help with financing, and it’s charming and silly to see the prisoners acting, not like they’re in jail, but like they have an alternate lifestyle/cult with Bridger as their charismatic leader.

Michael Caine does his best with a thinly-written character. We know little about Charlie except that he’s a ladies man and a crook, and that he’s in charge of an enormously complex scheme. I suspect that the character work that Caine does wasn’t really scripted, but something that he found between the lines. Unfortunately, what he found was a bitchy and unpleasant guy; anxious about details and constantly rude out of nervousness. I found a lot of my natural pleasure in watching a heist drained away.

The overall purpose of the plan, what gets Bridger on board, is to bring down the Italian lira out of English national pride. Not very exciting to an American 40 years later. In addition, a lot of the planning involves talking people into things. Not enough action and not enough fun, despite the movie’s fame.

The Italian Job (2003) 7/10
Charlie Croker (Mark Wahlberg) pulls off a gold heist in Italy with the help of his mentor, John Bridger (Donald Sutherland). But one of the crew is a traitor who murders Bridger, leaves the rest for dead, and keeps the gold for himself. A year later, Charlie gets the gang back together, and persuades Bridger’s daughter (Charlize Theron) to help them rob the gold back.

Mark Wahlberg is no Michael Caine. Let’s just accept that and move on. This movie corrects a lot of the flaws of the original: The murder at the beginning is integral and motivating instead of an aside. The revenge plot is more engaging than economics. The characters are in general more likable. The only woman is there for something other than sex.

There’s a good sense of humor here. Jason Statham and Seth Green are definitely fun, although the whole thing doesn’t have that sense of play that the original had.

Still, it works better, it’s a smart heist (two, actually) without too many stupidities, and it’s entertaining from beginning to end. I ended up surprised at several points, not sure how things would play out. Which is so important in a heist film. I also really enjoyed that the get-things-by-being-sexy character was male—Handsome Rob, played by Statham. Usually when there’s a token woman in the gang she’s the designated seducer, but Theron is cool and collected as Stella Bridger, an expert in safes and locks who normally stays on the right side of the law.

The budding romance fumbled towards by Whalberg and Theron is a waste of time, but very little time is spent on it, so that’s okay.