Cinema Salon
Steve Satullo talks about films, video, and media worth talking about. (Use search box at upper left to find films, directors, or performers.)
Friday, November 29, 2024
Net-flix-ations II
Maxed out
I figured I’d never again see enough of interest on Max to warrant an actual survey of their programming, but they recently featured a film I’d been looking for eagerly, The Boy & the Heron (MC-91), the latest from venerable animation master Hayao Miyazaki (and at 83, his last?). I think of the heron as my spirit animal, as well as my sometime neighbor in an adjacent field, so I thrilled to the animated depictions of its flight, and was disappointed when, in a plot development that went right over my head, it was revealed to be a cartoon gnome in a heron costume. Nonetheless the visual wonderments keep coming The story is so deep into Miyazaki’s own personal mythology that it’s likely to be incomprehensible to the uninitiated – or to those who have abdicated their sense of wonder and power of imagination. But the pictorial delights are available to all, frame by frame as artful as any animation ever, a dazzling painterly exhibition. The premise of the film is highly autobiographical, a young boy who loses his mother in a WWII firebombing and goes on a convoluted quest to bring her back to life. Many of Miyazaki’s themes and obsessions (such as flight) recur, in this fine summation of a prodigious career.
I credit Max for also reviving an old Studio Ghibli film about the firebombing of Japan, Grave of the Fireflies (MC-94) which I don’t feel capable of watching again, given its contemporary relevance to the children of Gaza and Ukraine, so I’ll just recommend this admirable work by copying my write-up when I showed it at the Clark sometime back: “Directed by Isao Takahata, Miyazaki’s longtime collaborator, this sensitive, harrowing film depicts the impact of war on children, warranting comparison to all-time classic Forbidden Games. Two orphans, a boy and his younger sister, struggle for survival in the aftermath of the World War II firebombing of Japan, finding evanescent beauty in a terminal landscape. This sad and powerful masterpiece evokes the horror of war and the hope of humanity as well as any live-action film.”
Though Succession recently bumped The Sopranos from my personal list of the top ten tv drama series of all time, I watched the two-part documentary Wise Guy: David Chase and The Sopranos (MC-86) not so much for HBO’s self-promotion as for my appreciation of director Alex Gibney’s track record. And it worked for me on both counts. I was interested to recall the epoch-making show, but moreover admired how well the documentary was put together. It won’t lure me to revisit the entire series (aside from random episodes watched with a newbie, which do rekindle my appreciation) but offered an excellent recap and deep background on its creation, and especially the demons of its creator. Gibney interviews (psychoanalyzes?) Chase on a replica of the set of Dr. Melfi’s office and uncovers the personal backstories, as well as the process, behind the show, which remains a watershed in the landscape of quality television.
The legacy of HBO lives on with the fourth and final season of My Brilliant Friend (MC-89), the adaptation of Elena Ferrante’s quartet of novels. I raved about the first two seasons here, but was rather lukewarm to this finale, with a change of actors for all the characters, which is well-orchestrated but still disorienting. The main problem is that the two lead characters, Lila and Lenu, have been leading separate lives, so that the harsh beauty and intensity of their relationship is not the center of the story. Without their intimate exchange each character becomes harder to understand, though they do come together again in the final episodes, as Lenu returns to their Neapolitan neighborhood, which is show’s main point of interest. Excess narration is also a problem – make a movie, don’t recite the book. Still, I recommend the show as a whole, and the NYT’s lead TV critic wrote an insightful appreciation of the entire series here. But if you feel 34 hours is too much to take for a dense and complicated Italian family saga, I would direct your attention to one of my favorite films, The Best of Youth, which clocks in at a mere six hours. My write-up when I showed it to an appreciative crowd at the Clark is here.
Another prestige remnant of HBO’s pre-Zaslov era concludes with the third season of Somebody Somewhere (MC-88). From the first several episodes, this series about a group of lovable Kansan eccentrics seems to be going out strong, so I stand by my previous recommendation. This show is original, authentic, funny, and heart-felt, sort of the four legs of my appreciation for any film or tv.
I don’t recall anything of Seth Meyers’ stint at the SNL Weekend Update desk, but after seeing his standup routine Lobby Baby, I became a devoted follower of “A Closer Look” segments from his Late Night show. Now he has a new performance piece on Max called Dad Man Walking (MC-84). It’s not as finely honed as the prior piece, more just a sequence of literal dad jokes (his two boys are 8 and 6, his daughter 2), but he remains amusing and endearing, and good company for an hour.
Response to Alex Garland’s Civil War (MC-75) has been appropriately contentious, despite (or because of?) its denatured political stance and ambivalent take on the ethics of journalism. The one thing everyone can agree on is that Kirsten Dunst delivers a knockout performance as a jaded war photographer. Her expressed credo seems to be Garland’s as well, that sending back horrific pictures from a warzone will warn America of the dangers of internecine conflict. But now she’s facing the failure of her efforts and growing numb to the adrenaline rush of action photography. All around the warring States, social and physical structures are crumbling. And the Dunst character joins three other journalists on a circuitous journey to the siege of D.C. by the secessionist Western Forces (that improbable alliance of CA, TX, and FL shows Garland’s indifference to actual politics in this variant on zombie apocalypse). Cailee Spaeny (Priscilla) stands out as a very young woman who emerges as Dunst’s protégé. Technically this is quite a well-made action film, with plenty of tension and horror, if not much meaning.
Love Lies Bleeding (MC-77) is like Thelma and Louise on steroids, literally. This neo-noir thriller from Rose Glass is made watchable by the always-gripping Kristen Stewart and her new-to-me co-star Katy O’Brian. The former runs a gym in the desert Southwest, and the latter is a body builder who stumbles in on her way to a competition in Las Vegas. They soon fall in together through a mixture of lust, need, and circumstance. Stewart is the alienated daughter of spooky local crime boss Ed Harris, and devoted sister of battered housewife Jena Malone, meanwhile introducing O’Brien to the toxic magic of steroids to enhance her chances in competition. Complications ensue, and escalate to violence. Hard to find a redeeming value in these proceedings, but they do elicit a grisly fascination.
I didn’t like Janet Planet (MC-83) as much as I expected or wanted to, given its setting in Western Massachusetts, Julianne Nicholson in the title role, and raves from trusted critics. Most reviewers came to Annie Baker’s debut film with knowledge of her work as a Pulitzer-winning playwright famous for pauses and silences; I did not, and took some time to get on her wavelength. It was not immediately obvious to me how steeped in cinema history her intentions were, how layered her frame of reference. I read the film as mainly autobiographical, about an 11-year-old growing up near Amherst in the summer of 1991, in a close but freighted relationship with her single mother, and the lovers and friends who intrude upon them. Zoe Ziegler plays the owlish, eccentric girl with a mysterious opacity. The luminous Nicholson is subdued but subtly effective. I’m sure a second viewing would reveal deeper connections between scenes of dollhouse play and puppet theater, and background signals from offhand dialogue, but it was mainly the specificity of mood and setting, established from the girl’s perspective, that registered for me.
Okay, so now I’ve maxed out on Max, but since my access remains free, I will keep returning to update the dwindling number of worthwhile new shows on that streaming channel. For now, two postscript recommendations.
I watch very little on Prime Video, but I made an exception for Challengers (MC-82). I’d started watching on a plane, and was glad to revisit and finish this tennis-cum-sex love-triangle, featuring three hot and talented performers: Zendaya (whom I had not seen previously), Josh O’Connor (who has become an actor I will watch in almost anything) and Mike Faist (who impressed as Riff in Spielberg’s West Side Story). They meet at a national juniors championship, where she is a budding superstar, and they are doubles champs who vie for the men’s singles title and her favor. There’s a heavy homoerotic vibe as Zendaya becomes a point of contention greater than any tournament trophy. The narrative is sliced and diced, the camera work is wild if mostly effective, and a loud techno soundtrack pulses the action and overrides the dialogue at points. Nonetheless Luca Guadagnino’s enjoyable film is carried by its stars, its energy, and its humor.
Also on Prime, Aubrey Plaza was enough to draw me to My Old Ass (MC-74); only afterwards did I find out that the writer-director Megan Park was someone I had praised for her debut film, The Fallout. In fact, Aubrey is not very prominent as the title character, the shroom-materialized 39-year-old avatar of the 18-year-old main character played charmingly by Maisy Stella. Also charming is the setting on a Canadian cranberry farm, in the summer before “Elliott” leaves for university in Toronto. The age-exchange set-up is hardly unique, but is handled with surprising authenticity, as both Elliotts learn from each other in making sense of their life. Comic and caring, this film is very likely to surprise and delight.
Saturday, October 26, 2024
Hulu-ciné-shins II
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Hulu-ciné-shins
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
Britbox and the scrapbox
A Britbox special offer paved the way for me to complete my survey of Jane Austen adaptations, starting with the ne plus ultra of Pride and Prejudice (Wiki), starring Jennifer Ehle and Colin Firth, and a host of players just perfect in their roles. In six episodes, this series has plenty of room to breathe; it’s quite true to the text and its innovations are well judged, exemplified by putting the oh-so-famous opening line into Lizzy’s mouth, thrown off as a sarcastic riposte to her mother (a horrifyingly comic portrayal by Alison Steadman). Susannah Harker is a perfect Jane Bennet, and the relationship of the sisters is touchingly similar to that between the writer Jane and her sister Cassandra, though they both remained maiden aunts. After thirty years, the series has been restored digitally to a pristine quality that makes settings and costumes look like new, quite a contrast to my initial viewing, from a VHS tape made by my mother off the original broadcast. Whatever your own pride or prejudice, I defy you not to enjoy this rendition.
I followed up by revisiting two versions of Persuasion. Roger Michell’s from 1995 (Wiki), starring Amanda Root and Ciaran Hinds, remains my favorite by far, second only to the much more expansive P&P, and tied with the contemporaneous S&S. The 2007 version (Wiki) seems barely adequate now that my original moment of being smitten by Sally Hawkins (as Poppy in Mike Leigh’s Happy-Go-Lucky) has passed, since the rest of the production does not come up to her level.
Whilst on Britbox, I took another look at Romola Garai as Emma (Wiki) in a 2009 BBC series that definitely takes liberties in opening out the book, but is not as misleading as some latter-day Austen adaptations and imitations. Romola plays Emma believably but somewhat broadly; Jonny Lee Miller is good, if a little too hunky, as Knightley; but Michael Gambon is perhaps the best Mr. Woodhouse. The period design is pretty reliable, with well-placed emphasis on domestic architecture, and the supporting actors are adequate if not memorable. Going more for the comic than the ironic, the only thing this has over other versions of Emma is the amplitude of four episodes, but it does not come close to the pitch-perfect richness of the 1995 P&P.
To complete my survey, I returned to the 1940 Pride and Prejudice (Wiki) starring Laurence Olivier and Greer Garson, who both perform okay in a ludicrous MGM production that puts the “costume” in “costume drama.” With no taste for verisimilitude, appropriate Regency design, or fidelity to Austen’s text or tone, the film plays for broad domestic comedy and goes for a mid-Victorian look, with absurd leftovers from the Gone with the Wind shoot. The “Golden Age of Hollywood” attempts literature but reduces it to abject formula.
Finally, as I was about to close the book on Austen, I noticed that Hulu was also now offering the canonical 1995 P&P, plus a follow-up that I had never seen, a 2008 BBC/Andrew Davies adaptation of Sense and Sensibility (MC-79). We’re halfway to Bridgerton here, as this two-part series opens with a “tasteful” sex scene with little reference to the book. If Davies’ stated aim was to make viewers forget the Emma Thompson version, this was a woeful failure, with not one of the performers being more memorable than the film’s, though Dan Stevens does a good job imitating Hugh Grant. But – E.T.>Hattie Morahan, Kate Winslet>Charity Wakefield, Alan Rickman>David Morrissey, Greg Wise>Dominic Cooper. Nonetheless, I enjoyed watching this Bronte-like take on our dear proper Jane, and was eventually won over by Morahan’s performance in contrast to dear Emma’s.
This deep immersion in Janeite lore certainly revealed the limited circumference of her world, and the repeated reliance on certain types and tropes, but also the consummate artistry of her self-described “fine brush on two inches of ivory,” and penetrating wit about the personalities within her purview.
So in sum, the Austen adaptations to watch are the Jennifer Ehle P&P, the Amanda Root Persuasion, the Kate Beckinsale Emma, the Emma Thompson-Kate Winslet Sense & Sensibility, the Frances O’Connor Mansfield Park, and the Felicity Jones-Carey Mulligan Northanger Abbey, with Whit Stillman’s Love & Friendship as a bonus.
Also on Britbox, Stonehouse (MC-77) follows in the tradition of the successful Hugh Grant series A Very English Scandal, dealing in three hour-long episodes with the feckless peccadillos of a real British politician. The title character is played enjoyably by Matthew Macfadyen, in a manner much like his performance in Succession, with his real-life spouse Keeley Hawes as the long-suffering wife.
Flying to and from the U.K., I sort-of-watched some so-so films on which I will report briefly. Wicked Little Letters (MC-58) boasts Olivia Colman and Jessie Buckley, two must-see actresses as far as I’m concerned, and a host of familiar British faces, including Anjana Vasan, the star of We Are Lady Parts. Billed as a “black comedy mystery,” it’s mainly a cozy BBC-worthy visit to an actual seaside hamlet a hundred years ago, where two neighbors start out as friends but wind up as courtroom adversaries. But, oh those two.
Coming back, comfortably provided with better screen and headphones, I overlooked poor reviews to watch Bob Marley: One Love (MC-43), which I liked well enough, but nowhere near as much as the 2012 documentary Marley. Kingsley Ben-Adir makes a credible reggae star (more so than as either Malcolm X or a Ken), and Lashana Lynch is good as Rita Marley. Director Reinaldo Marcus Green does what he can with a script by committee and under Marley family supervision, which does not venture far beyond the usual rock musician biopic tropes. But the film does revive a lot of kick-ass music.
High over the Atlantic, I also got halfway into popular recent films Anybody But You and Challengers – do not need to see more of the former, but may look to see the rest of the latter when I can.
The Electrical Life of Louis Wain (MC-63, AMZ) is better than its Metacritic average would suggest, as you might expect of a film that stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Claire Foy, Toby Jones, and Andrea Riseborough, with narration by Olivia Colman. Will Sharpe’s off-kilter tale relates the life of eccentric late-Victorian artist Louis Wain, whose hugely-popular pictures of cats are credited with changing their cultural image from feral ratcatchers to household pets. The film is all over the place, narratively and stylistically, but well-designed, and grounded in the touching if tragic romance between Cumberbatch and Foy. Not nearly as twee as it might have been, absent the admirable acting.
Ethan Hawke has carved out a commendable career for himself, so I ignored poor reviews to watch his directorial effort Wildcat (MC-55, Kanopy), starring his daughter Maya Hawke as Flannery O’Connor. She also plays characters in fragments from some of O’Connor’s stories, in a literal interpretation of their autobiographical impulse. Laura Linney plays her mother, in real life and in the stories. A lot of actors prove willing to pitch in on another actor’s film, so there are several well-known cameos. And the overall look of the film, with its period recreations, does not bespeak a strained indie budget. So I respond to this film as I’ve responded to the work of its subject – interesting, but not really hitting me where I live. Still, a pretty good attempt at making a biopic out of the solitary life of a writer.
After this potpourri, next up will be a lengthy survey of recent offerings on Hulu.
Sunday, July 07, 2024
Second-tier streaming channels
To find HBO under this heading is surprising, but as MAX it has certainly devolved into a channel that is only worthwhile for free, or for the occasional month. The slogan used to be “It’s not TV, it’s HBO,” but now it should be “It’s not HBO, it’s just TV.” Which is not to say it’s worthless, but lacking an identity, and not worth a continuing subscription (though I continue to piggyback on a friend’s cable subscription).
I confess to availing myself of Max’s incongruous live sporting events on occasion, and I’m a dedicated fan of John Oliver (who alternatively is easy to watch on YouTube). And credit where it’s due – the third season of Hacks (MC-86) lived up to, and even exceeded, expectations. MAX also offers a Hannah Einbinder comedy special, Everything Must Go, which confirms her ability as an actress, but is not quite as funny or appealing as the character she plays on Hacks. The channel’s current flagship program, House of the Dragon, stands absolutely no chance with me. I did give Lance Oppenheimer’s Ren Faire a chance to grab me . . . and it didn’t. Established fondness for two performers led me to a couple of films in a line-up that has been MAX-imized
I responded to Am I Okay? (MC-72) with “Yes, you are – not great, but just fine.” This is Tig Notaro’s directorial debut, in tandem with her wife Stephanie Allynne, and she also delivers an amusing cameo. Dakota Johnson plays a 32-year-old near-virgin, a diffident would-be painter but current receptionist at a swank LA spa, who belatedly realizes her erotic tendencies lean toward women. Her long-time best friend (Sonoya Mizuno), a much more confident professional woman, tries to coach her love life but with little success, and then is promoted to a distant job, which leads to friction that proves liberating to the Dakota character. Sweet and funny, with more than a hint of Tig’s dry humor, as well as Stephanie’s lived experience, though the script by Lauren Pomerantz is reputedly quite autobiographical.
I responded to Men (MC-65) with “Aren’t they awful?” Yes, but the woman they are being awful to is Jessie Buckley, so I decided to give Alex Garland’s film a chance. And before the film goes off the rails in the third act, it gives her the opportunity to be her magnetic self, as well as painting a bucolic picture of the English countryside. Her well-off character has rented a large old cottage for a healing getaway, after the ambiguous death of her husband, glimpsed in brief flashbacks. This Covid-era nightmare turns from pastoral to horrific, as Jessie is threatened by a variety of men, all played by Rory Kinnear, with not-so-special effects. The symbolism is laid on so thick it eventually becomes ridiculous, as the monstrous turns into a monstrosity. Rarely have I been so engaged with a film, only to turn against it so vehemently in the last third.
Where HBO shows were once original and inspired, now they’re more like extruded product. Likewise, the true-crime documentaries that have become a staple. But HBO still produces some docs worth seeing, such as Stax: Soulsville U.S.A. (MC-81). It’s an exploration as much as a promotion, since director Jamila Wignot does considerably more than recycle delightful footage from concert films like Monterey Pop and Wattstax. Using an ample archival record of performance and studio scenes, mixed with newsreels and retrospective interviews, she tells the story of the Memphis counterpart to Motown, featuring Booker T. Jones, Otis Redding, and Isaac Hayes among many others. In four hour-long episodes, the music business is situated in the context of race relations in the Sixties and Seventies and of an economy where the big fish devour the little fish, so the nostalgia is balanced by social critique, where the meeting of black and white is co-opted by green.
In the streaming channel shakeout now underway, Paramount+ is in the process of being sold and/or broken up, and consequently is offering a month’s free trial, perfectly timed for the new fourth season of my favorite Showtime series ever, Couples Therapy (Wiki). Rather than beating the drum for this outstanding series yet again, I refer you to my previous comments. I just love this show, it’s reality TV made real and comes with my highest recommendation.
So with a month to peruse P+, I came up with some other worthy viewing. In a round-up of documentaries, I’ll write up Oscar-nominated Chilean film The Eternal Memory. And I was happy to reacquaint myself with The One and Only Dick Gregory (MC-79), a notable figure of my younger days, in a documentary that gives equal weight to his comedy and his activism. You’ll laugh and you’ll be inspired.
Reminded by Hit Man of how much I like Richard Linklater, I was happy to give a second chance to one that initially struck me as a minor disappointment, Everyone Wants Some!! (MC-85). Lo and behold, I discovered it on P+, the house of disappointment. But on this viewing, I found more to like, and missed less of what I like most about Rick. This film pairs nicely with Dazed and Confused, taking his autobiography from the last days of high school to the first days of college. It also marks the emergence of Glenn Powell, who flowered in Hit Man.
Next up I’ll return to the first-tier streaming channel Hulu, and also post my round-up of recent award-worthy documentaries.
Saturday, June 29, 2024
Net-flix-ations
Criterion of judgment
Before I get started on another long celebration of the Criterion Channel, I want to highlight the next best streaming source for wide-ranging classics old and new, foreign and documentary, film and tv, namely Kanopy, which is available free through participating libraries, academic or public. You’ll see the channel cited frequently as the place I found a film, sometimes when available on another channel that I don’t have a subscription to, and sometimes when I haven’t been able to find it any other place at all.
Such as four Eric Rohmer films that follow up nicely on one of my previous Criterion roundups, which led with the revival of Rohmer’s “Tales of Four Seasons” from the 1990s, and now Kanopy popped up with two of his “Comedies & Proverbs” from the 1980s, and two other anthology films from the same period.
First off, The Aviator’s Wife (Wiki), not remembered as one of my favorites, but this time around I appreciated the Rohmeresque irony of the title character never appearing in the film, and I took to Marie Riviere as l’autre femme more in the context of her other roles for Rohmer over the years. It can all seem quite inconsequential unless you are attuned to his wavelength, with its everyday blend of eros, humor, and philosophic insight. As much as Truffaut, Rohmer was a “man who loved women,” though perhaps less of a libertine and more a fond aesthetic admirer of youth and beauty.
It wasn’t till the final scene that I definitely remembered seeing Boyfriends and Girlfriends (Wiki), yet another amorous roundelay among young people looking for a proper mating. Whether in Paris or various vacation venues, Rohmer is always attentive to architecture and environment, and this time it’s a newly-built satellite city around Paris, and a shifting group of young professionals. This film is delightful, even if not memorable, in the long frieze of Rohmer’s portraits of desiring and desirable young people.
Four Adventures of Reinette and Mirabelle (Wiki) was definitely new to me, a country-mouse/city-mouse story of two young women who meet in the countryside and then room together in Paris, in four discrete episodes of understated humor. This print seemed to be substandard, but the film itself is very much of a piece with Rohmer’s other work, and I was happy to see it.
Rendezvous in Paris (Wiki) details three separate anecdotes, in which different young characters meet up in a café, various parks, or the Picasso museum. Each episode seemed fresh to me, even though I showed the third in my own anthology program at the Clark. I’d almost recommend this as an introduction to Rohmer if you aren’t particularly familiar with his work, even before his acknowledged masterpieces. If you like this, there’s plenty more where that came from.
While I was focused on other channels, Criterion accumulated several highly-rated streaming premieres. First off, there was Our Body (MC-93), a Frederick Wiseman-like documentary about a French gynecological hospital, with one of 2023’s highest Metacritic ratings. To tell the truth, for me it went from must-see to can’t-watch, given my squeamishness. An admirable piece of work, but too much for my delicate sensibilities.
Then came two films high on my must-watch list. Tótem (MC-91) is a dense and intimate family portrait as seen through the watchful, empathetic eyes of a 7-year-old girl. It’s the birthday of her father, an artist who is dying of cancer. With her, we are thrown into the maelstrom of an extended Mexican family, breaking down and re-forming around the tragedy of a beloved younger son. The patriarch is a grumpy psychologist with his own medical problems. Two elder sisters are putting on the party for their sick brother, but from clashing perspectives. The central girl, Sol, has younger and older cousins, and a fascination for small living things around her, as she is told not to bother her father, who is resting up for the party. In a tight frame, with long up-close takes, we follow as Sol begins to put together a picture of a family coping with the unstated presence of death in their midst. Her mother drops her off in the morning, leaving her (and us) to spend the day trying to make sense of what is going on around her, and then the mother returns for the party and a stunning celebratory performance they have worked out together. Lila Avilés has crafted a small film of major import, full of life under the shadow of mortality,
A new film from acclaimed Turkish writer-director Nuri Bilge Ceylan is always an event, though sometimes a prospect of endurance more than enjoyment, so I spread the 3¼ hour running time of About Dry Grasses (MC-87) over several evenings. It’s slow-moving and extremely talky, but decidedly interesting, Chekhov filtered through Antonioni. Set in desolate, wintry Eastern Anatolia, it follows three teachers who wind up on this remote posting for differing reasons. One is a discontented art teacher who seems to have an inappropriate relationship with a middle school girl. He and his roommate each form a relationship with a woman from another school who lost her leg in a terrorist bombing (Merve Dizdar won Best Actress at Cannes). The film moves from desolate widescreen landscapes to crowded dark rooms, with long takes, stationary camera, and extended conversations with very little resolution. So – not for everyone, but riveting for anyone who can get on Ceylan’s wavelength.
I missed a dimension of Anselm (MC-82), since Wim Wenders’ portrait of Anselm Kiefer is meant to be seen in 3-D, but I still found it engaging, though I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone unfamiliar with the famous German artist. There’s no narration and little speech altogether. It’s mostly just Kiefer wandering around the large industrial estate where he produces and displays his art, in an installation as monumental as James Turrell’s Roden Crater. For me it was enlivened by prior accounts from a friend who had visited both. Kiefer is played as an 8-year-old boy in reenactments that convey what little is offered of his biography, and for later years there’s news footage of various sorts. This documentary is reliant on how much interest and patience you bring to it.
Amanda (MC-81) is a privileged pain-in-the-ass post-adolescent, returned from college abroad and feeling stifled as she lazes about her parents’ mansion and tries futilely to connect with any other being, human or otherwise. This is the debut film of Carolina Cavalli, and I appreciated its aura of authenticity as well as absurdity, sort of like a Milanese Lady Bird. Amanda, a character made palatable by Benedetta Porcaroli’s portrayal, finally finds a best friend as aberrant and abrasive as herself, a match made in heaven, or some other place.
Unrest (MC-75) is an oddity that intrigued me, but seems unlikely to appeal to many. The matter is significant, but the manner off-putting. The story is set among Swiss watchmakers in the 1870s, when the engine of global capitalism is revving up, while the local workers strive to organize an anarchist commune, under the watchful eye of Pyotr Kropotkin. The workers are primarily craftswomen doing incredibly detailed work, including placement of the all-important “unrest” wheel. Much of the camerawork is off-center, from a security-camera-like distance where the viewer frequently cannot tell who’s speaking, among small figures crowded into a corner of the frame. There are compelling close-ups of the painstaking work, some of the long shots privilege the natural background over the dialogue, and the viewer feels relief and impact when actually able to see the face of the person speaking. But overall, all sorts of interesting notions about politics and economics, about timekeeping and working conditions, are adumbrated indirectly and offhand, some quite humorously. The Swiss director keeps his distance even though (or maybe because) the subject is part of his family history.
The File on Thelma Jordon (Wiki) remakes the story of Double Indemnity, with Stanwyck as the femme fatale luring a supposedly wised-up guy into becoming an accomplice to her own dastardly plot. She is reliably great with whatever material she’s given, but Wendell Corey is no Fred MacMurray. And I might have said that Robert Siodmak is no Billy Wilder, but instead I made a note to look for other films he directed, since this had a very distinctive look and style, even when saddled with a wooden male lead and a fairly nonsensical script. It’s not among Stanwyck’s unmissable performances, but displays her characteristic quality work. And served as an entrée into other viewing from one of my toddler years.
Joan Crawford is not among the old Hollywood divas that I’ve fallen for, but I gave The Damned Don’t Cry (Wiki) a try because it was supposed to reflect her own rise from rural poverty to stardom, and be loved in particular by her fans. God knows it was campy enough to verge on self-caricature, but I had no conception that it was based on the same situation as Warren Beatty’s Bugsy – let’s just say Joan Crawford is no Annette Bening.
I’d watched a few films in a recent John Garfield collection, but didn’t catch The Breaking Point (Wiki) till it appeared in this 1950 collection. A reworking of Hemingway’s To Have and To Have Not, this version is not highjacked by Bogie-Bacall chemistry as it pairs Garfield with Patricia Neal in a smaller but still effective role as a tramp. Michael Curtiz directs with finesse, and Garfield demonstrates why he was a major star, anguished and soulful as a boat owner who must resort to smuggling, with mountingly disastrous results. Within two years, hounded by HUAC, he would be dead of a heart attack at 39.
Caged (Wiki) has been called a “Camp classic,” but is something more than that, coming soon after The Snake Pit and leading to a whole subgenre of Women in Prison pictures (persisting all the way to Orange is the New Black). It’s well-directed by John Cromwell, with a reasonable amount of verisimilitude and a pair of Oscar-nominated performances. Eleanor Parker is surprisingly good in transforming from pregnant teen bride, jailed as accomplice to her husband’s fatal armed robbery, into a hard-bitten criminal in course of her sentence. Hope Emerson plays the Nurse Ratchet-like prison matron, and Agnes Moorehead the reform-minded warden. While not without its preposterous elements, the film is generally a serious-minded affair.
I’ve never really understood why some people consider Nicholas Ray to be a great director, and Born to be Bad (Wiki) does not change that. And I’ve never seen much in Joan Fontaine, and her simpering mendacity here doesn’t change that. Not quite bad enough to be good.
I wrapped up this calendrical cross-section by watching an Alfred Hitchcock film that I hadn’t seen before, Stage Fright (Wiki). His return from Hollywood to England is less a murder mystery than a comedy about stage acting, with Marlene Dietrich as a swan-like chanteuse (whose husband is the victim) and Jane Wyman as the acting student who takes on various real-life roles to try to clear her long-time friend (Richard Todd) of suspicion, while deceiving the police officer (Michael Wilding) who wins her heart. The supporting cast is sterling, and the dialogue witty, though it’s not very stirring as a thriller.
Whoops, one more 1950 film that I’d never seen, Night and the City (Wiki), not to be confused (as I was) with The Naked City, which has Jules Dassin also moving to London, in the midst of being blacklisted in Hollywood. Richard Widmark goes with him as a dreaming and scheming American, a tout scrounging around for money before trying for a big score as a wrestling promoter, where he runs into a rough crowd. As with his earlier film about NYC and his later film about Cleveland (see below), Dassin demonstrates a distinctive, sometimes overwrought thriller style and relies on location shooting for his action scenes. Considered too dark upon release, the film is now taken as an epitome of noir.
(N.B. Many of the films in the “1950 Peak Noir” collection will depart the channel at the end of June, but many will return in other collections, or can be found on other streaming channels.)
While immersed in the era of Hollywood films around the time of my birth, I watched two other noirish films. Undercurrent (Wiki) is not what you expect from director Vincente Minelli or stars Katherine Hepburn and Robert Mitchum. She’s a scientist’s daughter, falling for the businessman who buys his invention, only to discover he is not the man she imagined. And the brother whom he despises (Mitchum) is the opposite of what he claims. It’s all quite implausible, but not offensively so.
In The House on Telegraph Hill (Wiki), Valentina Cortese is another woman married to a man (Richard Basehart, whom she married in real life) who is not what he seems. But then neither is she, having taken the identity of a friend who died in their displaced persons camp after WWII. In this Robert Wise film, the couple comes together for highly mixed motives and goes to live in a scenic San Francisco mansion, where nasty business is afoot. Another white knight emerges to save our beleaguered heroine, in this tale from back in a previous age when gaslighting was à la mode.
I also sampled a couple of films, new to me, in a recent collection called “Hollywood Crack-Up” containing American films from the 1960s depicting societal or psychological breakdown, from The Manchurian Candidate to Pretty Poison.
Uptight (Wiki) is a remarkable document, if not a good film. Jules Dassin imports the plot of The Informer from Dublin in 1922 to Cleveland in 1968, about a Black Panther-like group instead of the IRA. The film is colorful in several senses, and highly stylized, but I was particularly struck by some remarkable location footage in The Flats at the time I was working down there, and around the Hough neighborhood, from when I was driving through that area while the streets were occupied by the National Guard. So I was willing to overlook the film’s declamatory staginess for that window back in time, as it opens with MLK’s funeral and surveys a cross-section of Black responses to the tragedy. Frequently over-the-top and stereotypical, and hampered by the source material, this film is still a worthwhile time capsule.
Pressure Point (Wiki) has a surprisingly current resonance (post-Charlottesville, “very fine people on both sides,” and all the rest), flashing back from 1962 to 1942 as prison psychiatrist Sidney Poitier tries to treat an unrepentant Nazi seditionist, startlingly well played by pop singer Bobby Darin (“Somewhere across the sea . . .”). Based on a case study in Robert Lindner’s The Fifty-Minute Hour, and well directed by Hubert Cornfield, it’s another evocative time capsule, speaking to the state of psychiatry as well as politics. (And also hearkens back to Poitier’s doctor-treating-racist role in No Way Out, included in the “1950 Peak Noir” collection.)
Postcards from the Edge (1990, MC-71) has worn well. Criterion had it in a collection of Shirley MacLaine movies, but I was most interested in Meryl Streep’s acting (and singing). Mike Nichols directs Carrie Fisher’s story, based loosely on her relationship with her mother, Debbie Reynolds. It’s a lively and funny Hollywood story, with many stars and stars-to-be parading through.
Criterion curates 4-8 new collections each month, so there’s always something new to explore in some depth. (Which means some films leave each month as well.) In June, there are new career retrospectives for the likes of Ingmar Bergman, Paul Schrader, and Céline Sciamma, each containing films well worth seeing or re-seeing. There are also clever thematic collections, which combine to make Criterion the one indispensable streaming channel, for which I have a charter annual subscription that comes to $8.33 per month.
In a previous compilation of Criterion reviews, I wrote at some length about my admiration for the filmmaker Mia Hansen-Love, and then on Kanopy I found her precocious first feature film All is Forgiven (MC-85), made in 2007 but not released in the U.S. till 2021. What’s most impressive is how her distinctive observational style was established right from the beginning. This is a bifurcated story about a bifurcated couple, earnest Austrian professional woman and French would-be poet, a layabout devoted to drugs and drink. Inevitably they split up, and the mother forbids any contact between father and daughter. Jumping ahead a dozen years, the girl is a senior in high school (played beautifully by the older sister of the young girl), and her cleaned-up father tries to reconnect. Don’t expect resolution from Hansen-Love, but count on intimate exploration of everyday realities.
That leads me to two other films I caught up with on Kanopy, to use my “tickets” before they expired at the end of the month (with a library card, you get to watch a certain number of films and tv series per month).
I’ve recently been on the lookout for films starring Virginie Efira, so Revoir Paris (MC-71) caught my eye. I didn’t know what it was about, or that the role had won her a César for Best Actress, but Alice Winocour’s film was well worth finding. Directly inspired by Islamist terror attacks in 2015, it follows a survivor who struggles to piece together memories of the event after she had blacked out the experience. Like a detective, she follows clues to recreate the story, and finds a measure of healing by communing with other survivors in solidarity. The horrific event is sensitively handled, and other perspectives amplify the central character’s experience. Politics aside, the film offers immersion in the psychology and sociology of trauma, and another striking performance by Efira, who makes any film she’s in worth your time.
The Royal Hotel (MC-77) is a witty misnomer for a godforsaken bar deep in the Australian outback, where two vagabond American girls wind up when their money runs out. I’d been impressed by director Kitty Green’s #MeToo first feature The Assistant, and my summation applies equally to this film: “This is a horror story of everyday life, relying on suffocating detail and observation, rather than melodrama.” This one also stars Julia Garner, along with Jessica Henwick, as the two women tend bar to earn money to move on, serving a virtually all-male clientele of miners, with sexual harassment a given and the threat of violence always present. Subdued but tense as any thriller, the film suffers from a would-be cathartic ending, like waking up from a bad dream.
You can bet I’ll be back soon with another round-up of Criterion and Kanopy titles, but next I’ll be dipping back into Netflix and then Hulu for updates, with another round-up of recently acclaimed documentaries.