Monday, January 31, 2005

Sideways

Don’t get me wrong, I really liked this movie, but I can’t jump on the critical bandwagon proclaiming it best picture of the year. It can’t come close to Vera Drake or Maria Full of Grace for emotional power and social significance, which Ray and Kinsey also have in potent combination, and even among romantic comedies it might be bested by Before Sunset and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. I’m a big fan of Alexander Payne, and I’m glad for any recognition he gets, but this isn’t even his best film so far, with Election a near-perfect piece of work. On the other hand, all his films get better on re-viewing, so no telling how this one will ultimately rank. As sharp and funny, touching and real, as Sideways may be, it is ultimately a buddy flick, and hence limited, even stunted. Hey, I’m a guy and I love a guys-on-the-road movie as much as the next man, and I don’t necessarily believe it takes a great theme to make a great movie. It’s very easy to identify with the characters played by Paul Giamatti (son of Yale prez and commish of MLB) and Thomas Haden Church, and both actors give them depth and shading. The supporting women, Virginia Madsen and Sandra Oh (the director’s wife), are also outstanding, though clearly subsidiary. The setting in California wine country is superb in every detail. I want to praise the set design, but it’s hard to imagine it designed and not just found, and lived in by the characters to the seedy state of genuineness it has achieved. The story has plenty of punch lines and twists, as well as shape and symmetry, and the intimate scene between the two wine-loving would-be lovers is justly celebrated. But -- I felt the movie went on too long past the two hour mark, with an unsatisfying resolution. Without spoiling the end for anyone else, I can say I wasn’t happy when the prized wine got drunk, and the final blackout did not have the perfect inevitability of the one in Before Sunset. Still, this is an entirely enjoyable and near-great film that is likely to get greater with time, like the wines it celebrates. (2004, Images, n.) *8* (MC-94, RT-96.)

Glad to see Images getting big crowds for this film. They committed to a two-week run, and then through the vagaries of film distribution, the film opened the same day at the Berkshire Mall. Just as I urge you to patronize independent bookstores instead of the chains, I urge you to support the community-centered efforts of Images Cinema by buying your tickets there.

Born Yesterday

George Cukor is not as swift with the screwball as Hawks or Sturges, but does a nice job of permitting sentiment to show through and also of location shooting in Washington. Garson Kanin’s source play is witty and topical, and the two contrasting male leads, Broderick Crawford as the loutish junk magnate in DC to buy congressmen, and William Holden as the reporter enlisted to sand some of the rough edges off the boss’s dame, are very effective, but of course this is a one-woman show, and Judy Holliday brings it off with Oscar-winning bravura, the grating dumb blond gradually morphing into the touching, smarter-than-she-looks woman of spirit. (1950, dvd, n.) *7+*

Saturday, January 29, 2005

Animal Farm

Britain’s first attempt to answer the domination of Disney in the field of animation, this Halas and Batchelor adaptation of Orwell’s classic is lovely in pastoral patches, but woefully inadequate in pace and characterization. The bar has been raised so high recently in the liveliness of animation as an artform, that this retelling seems quaintly inert, more like an illustrated lecture than a living fable. (1955, dvd, r.) *4*

A reader asked me recently if I ever give negative reviews, and while I don’t shy from criticism or take a pollyannish or film-buff-ish stance, the movies I do watch are rigorously pre-selected for quality. Somebody somewhere has strongly recommended a film or I wouldn’t give it my time.

One of the great beauties of getting your dvd rentals through www.netflix.com is the maintenance of your online queue of films to rent. Everyone hears something about a film that makes them say, “I’d like to see that,” but in the course of things that rarely comes to mind when actually faced with the overpowering though still inadequate choice at the video store. On Netflix, when you hear a recommendation, it’s just a click to put it on the list of films coming to you. My queue, for example, now has 168 films waiting for my viewing pleasure, so by the time a film’s place in line finally arrives, sometimes I’ve forgotten why I wanted it in the first place. This so-so cartoon is an example. Anything under a *5* I generally consider a waste of my time -- and yours.

All That Heaven Allows

That’s it, I’ve drunk the kool-aid, I’m a Douglas Sirk fanatic. Take the last sentence of the previous review, change “very little” to “some,” and you have my take on this film. It doesn’t bother me a bit that Rock Hudson is opaque and ludicrous as the Thoreavian man in nature. It doesn’t bother me a bit that the music is ladled like syrup over every scene (that’s why it’s called melo-drama), or that the Technicolor landscapes and interiors look utterly artificial, an alternation of Currier & Ives lithos and design spreads from a Fifties issue of House and Garden. No, Sirk himself said there is a fine line between trash and fine art, and he has clearly stepped over the line. This was the film that made the whole Cinematic Landscape film series click into place in the planning, and for me, if for no one else, it worked perfectly. I watched the whole film immersed in the byplay between mirrors and windows, indoors and outdoors, society and nature, and revelled in the wish-filling conclusion, when the couple goes into the final clinch, indoors by the fire, where it’s livable, but in front of a wall-sized picture window revealing a dazzling snowscape, into which a young doe wanders to offer a benediction on the deserving (of love and animal passion) widow Jane Wyman and her nature boy. Add that this was the source of two other favorite films of mine, Fassbinder’s Ali: Fear Eats the Soul and Todd Haynes’ Far From Heaven, and only its provenance as pure Hollywood product keeps this film just out of the Pantheon. (1955, dvd@cai, r.) *9-*

The Lady Eve

I’m not as wild about Preston Sturges as many are, but this is clearly his best film, with tight, witty writing and swift, assured direction. A screwball romantic comedy with astonishingly literate and amusing dialogue amidst the hijinks and pratfalls, it rises to a whole other level through the performance of Barbara Stanwyck, who is tough, funny, and touching as the cardsharp who sets out to snare naive millionaire Henry Fonda, and gets snared in turn. Bears very little relationship to the real world, but within its jewel box setting, this is close to a perfect film. (1941, dvd, r.) *8+*

Thursday, January 27, 2005

Coming Attractions: This Summer at the Clark

In conjunction with the Clark's 50th anniversary celebration this summer, I'll be offering samples of my choice as the most exciting filmmakers now coming into their prime in a series called, "A Dozen Directors Under 50: Discovering Distinctive Visions in Film for the Decades Ahead."

I announce the list this far in advance because in coming months I will post mini-essays on each of the directors, their careers to date and why they made my cut. The list is not intended to be exhaustive, and there are a number of honorable mentions I'll get around to eventually.

Films will be shown in Clark auditorium on Fridays at 4:00 pm.

June 10: Joel & Ethan Coen: Fargo. (1996, 97 minutes.)
June 17: Spike Lee: 4 Little Girls. (1997, 102 minutes.)
July 1: Cameron Crowe: Almost Famous. (2000, 162 minutes.)
July 8: David O. Russell: Three Kings. (1999, 115 minutes.)
July 15: Atom Egoyan: Ararat. (2002, 116 minutes.)
July 22: Alexander Payne: Election. (1999, 105 minutes.)
July 29: Richard Linklater: Waking Life. (2001, 99 minutes.)
Aug. 5: Alfonso Cuaron: Great Expectations. (1999, 111 minutes.)
Aug. 12: Michael Winterbottom: Welcome to Sarajevo. (1997, 102 minutes.)
Aug. 19: Lukas Moodysson: Together. (2000, 106 minutes.)
Aug. 26: Sofia Coppola: The Virgin Suicides. (1999, 97 minutes.)
Sept. 2: Gurinder Chadha: What's Cooking? (2000, 109 minutes.)

Waking Life

A dream of a movie about dreaming, this was the penultimate puzzle piece to complete my upcoming summer film series at the Clark, “A Dozen Directors Under 50: Discovering Distinctive Visions in Film for the Decades Ahead.” Within 5 minutes of reviewing, I had confirmed this artfully animated film as my Richard Linklater choice, favorite of my favorites. (I’d been thinking about doing a Before Sunrise/Before Sunset double feature, but this is the neater fit. And this offbeat choice made it easy to pick the documentary 4 Little Girls over a variety of other, more obvious Spike Lee Joints. So my all-star lineup is complete.) Here the dreamy animation from live-action digital video is painterly in kaleidoscopic ways; all the half-crackpot theories espoused by Austin TX savants are intriguing and funny; the dream within a dream structure flows and doubles back in true “oneironaut” fashion. Smart, gorgeous, a compendium of Linklater themes and characters -- what’s not to like? (2001, dvd, r.) *8+* (MC-82, RT-79.)

Bringing Up Baby

The quintessence of screwball comedy. Tell enough old jokes fast enough and even the most tired seem fresh and funny. Howard Hawks directs with unabashed swiftness; Katharine Hepburn is dizzy enough to send the normally suave Cary Grant reeling. The usual Hollywood contract players live up to their contracts, including the dog and the cats. Nothing more than madcap fun, but plenty of it. (1938, TCM/T, r.) *7+*

Monday, January 24, 2005

Kinsey

Bill Condon more than confirms the promise of Gods and Monsters, in this kinetic and moving account of the life of Alfred Kinsey, the famed entomologist turned sex researcher, magnificently embodied by Liam Neeson. Laura Linney as his wife and Peter Saarsgard as his right hand man lead a large and impeccable cast. This biopic sometimes checks off its points in textbook style, but is never less than competent and sometimes quite riveting. The styles and mores of midcentury America are pointedly depicted, but the movie's great achievement is to assert convincingly that the only thing more exciting than sex is science. (2004.) *8*

As usual, Images Cinema is showing a very good film this week, through Thursday, January 27. I happened to catch this film by chance last month in Boston, and recommend it highly. I regretfully missed last week's film at Images, but will by no means miss Sideways when it arrives on Friday.

Carnal Knowledge

It all holds up pretty well -- Jules Feiffer’s barbed if sketchy dialogue, Mike Nichol’s knowing and inventive direction, Jack Nicholson and Art Garfunkel as the two sex-crazed buddies who fail to mature as they move from postwar Amherst to Kennedy-era New York to the brink of the Me Decade, Candice Bergen and Ann-Margret as roadkill in the path of these cockhound hotrodders, who still get to assert their own pungent personalities. The humor of the college scenes is biting but ingratiating, timeless adolescent angst, but the bitter tone of succeeding episodes bespeaks an era of gender war, which may not be over but is certainly at a different stage these days. (1971, dvd, r.) *8-*

The Lovers on the Bridge

Exuberant and cockeyed, Leos Carax’s Les Amants du Pont-Neuf is a punk paean to mad love. Set in the center of Paris during bicentennial celebrations of the French Revolution in 1989, the film matches two homeless people who meet as squatters on the Pont-Neuf while it is closed for restorations. Denis Lavant is a whacked-out street-performing flame-eater; Juliet Binoche is a well-to-do young artist who has lost her love and is losing her sight, and thus lands on the street in despair. Juliet’s radiance is dulled almost enough for you to believe in her as a street person. The intensely combustible, insanely desparate energy the pair bring to their affair lights up a dark, dead-end existence. And the visual energy Carax brings to every frame, the mad movie love that has him quoting both The Graduate and L’Atalante in the final scene, draws the viewer into a grim setting to find an almost-believable hope in the anarchic power of love. (1991, dvd, n.) *7+*

Saturday, January 22, 2005

The Yearling (at the Clark)

This was the first time I programmed a film I’d never seen, and it was amazingly good. The technicolor landscapes of Florida scrubland certainly earned a spot in this "Hop-Skip-&-Jump Across America: In Search of the Cinematic Landscape" film series, and nicely typified the settler era, between last week’s exploration of aboriginal wilderness (Black Robe) and next week’s complete domestication of the wild (All That Heaven Allows.) Makes nice connection to Louisiana Story too, the middle film in the “Heartland” triad. Will also make for superior back-to-back performances by Jane Wyman, here as the stern but loving mother, hardened by a harsh life but with just a touch of the soft showing through. As the father, Gregory Peck warms up for the role of Atticus Finch -- wise, brave, understanding. Claude Jarman is just wonderful as 11-year-old Jody, who adopts and adores the fawn who will become the troublesome yearling -- hard to believe he didn’t have much of a career thereafter, though he did get an honorary Oscar for child performance. The film also got an Oscar for cinematography, as well as other nominations and awards across the board. I was expecting an embalmed “classic” and found a very lively film. Marjorie Kinnan Rawling’s novel obviously has a good deal more going on than just a heart-tugging family story, and Clarence Brown’s direction brings in a lot of truth and beauty, very believable action and emotion. The bear hunt sequence has hardly been surpassed in sixty years of increasingly sophisticated nature documentaries. The family dynamic in the crucible of hardship is well delineated, and loads of local color are artfully interwoven. (1946, dvd@cai, n.) *8*

I heartily thank Michael Cassin, the Clark’s curator of education, for recommending this for the American landscape film series.

Meanwhile, I’ve gotten my first scolding by the p.c. police, in a review in this week’s Williams Record of Black Robe, the first film in the current series. Okay, so she didn’t like the movie, everyone’s entitled to his or her opinion, but the reviewer makes herself ridiculous with overwrought abhorrence of Native American stereotypes -- the mote in her eye prevents her from seeing what’s actually on screen, which is much more astutely balanced than she can credit. She’s “dismayed,” she’s “disturbed,” she thinks such films should not be shown, and concludes, “When museums, as arbiters of standards and culture, show such works as part of an exhibition, they risk conferring undue importance on occasionally ignorant viewpoints.” I am barely stung by what is clearly itself an occasionally ignorant viewpoint. Oh well, I suppose bad publicity is better than no notice at all.

I’ve been on the road for most of a week, but I have managed to watch a few films, and will catch up with my reviews immediately below. I can promise more daily blogging in the future.

Drugstore Cowboy

Gus Van Zant made his first splash with this gritty adaptation of a prison memoir of an addict who survived by knocking over drugstores with his little gang. It’s a well-balanced, truthful, frequently funny look at the pleasures and dangers of drugs and addiction, and also of family. Matt Dillon is outstanding as the “dad” of the gang, with Kelly Lynch as the “mom,” and Heather Graham and James LeGros as the kids. William Burroughs has a memorable cameo as Tom the junkie ex-priest. (1989, dvd, r.) *7*

Collateral

Michael Mann’s sleek vision of night time L.A. is a West Coast Taxi Driver. Jamie Foxx is the cabbie who is hired by Tom Cruise, as a stylishly grizzled hit man, to drive around for a long night of bumping off informants and witnesses in a drug trial to begin the next day. Foxx certainly shows that Ray was no fluke, and Cruise is astoundingly efficient as a vision in gunmetal grey, from his suit to his beard to his hair to his professional philosophy. The noctural episodes have a satisfying arc, with succeeding snappy and tasty characterizations, and all the obligatory thrills, even some thought-provoking dialogue. In the end this is hardly more than another bastard spawn of 48 Hours, the interracial, odd couple buddy flick with all sorts of hurtling metal. But Mann’s flair for melodrama, the hypnotic mix of music and camera movement, makes the film well worth a viewing. (2004, dvd, n.) *7* (MC-71, RT-85.)

The Manchurian Candidate

Never a big fan of the original, I give this remake neither credit nor demerit against the Frankenheimer/Sinatra version. They share flaws and have their separate virtues. Jonathan Demme is a more than competent director, but less that we hoped for in the pre-Silence of the Lambs era, when his filmmaking was infused with New Wave energy, no telling where he might go. Well, now he’s into remakes of studio product. He tries to insert some topicality, but it mostly comes across as lame. The narrative thrust is adequate but there are no scenes nearly as surreal as Frankenheimer’s ChiComm tea party. Though many did not, I enjoyed the Hillary-like Meryl Streep in the Angela Lansbury role. Denzel Washington can always hold his own against Frank Sinatra, and while Liev Schreiber is not as memorably weird as Laurence Harvey he does bring his own coloration to the role of the manipulated son, now the candidate instead of the assassin. The film was overpraised for its anti-Bush relevance, which is hardly more than a Maguffin (as Hitchcock always called the initiating megillah of his thrillers.) (2004, dvd, n.) *6* (MC-76, RT-80.)

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

33 Docs to Watch instead of Michael Moore

I really like documentaries. I really dislike Fahrenheit 9/11. We are in a golden age of documentary filmmaking and this imposter, this agitprop political cartoon, demeans the genre when it's referred to as "the most successful documentary of all time." Cultural lightning rod, perhaps. Documentary, no.

Here's a quick list of documentaries I have watched on dvd in the past few years and rated *7* or better, which is my threshold of confident recommendation. When I get on top of really simple blog technology and transfer over my archives, the list will link to my capsule review for each film. For now it's just titles, but each is available for rental from www.netflix.com where more info is available. This is just a place to start for someone who wants to catch up with the range of superior documentaries being produced these days. The list is not exclusive, and includes only films readily available on dvd (unlike such as, unaccountably, Hoop Dreams.)

32 Short Films about Glenn Gould
4 Little Girls
42 Up
American Movie
Bus 174
Capturing the Friedmans
Control Room
Fog of War
Go Tigers!
Grass
Keep the River on Your Right
Lost in La Mancha
Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision
Moon Over Broadway
Murder on a Sunday Morning
My Architect
One Day in September
Original Cast Album: Company
Rivers and Tides
Running on the Sun
Sherman's March
Sound and Fury
Spellbound
Startup.com
Stevie
Stone Reader
Super Size Me
To Be and To Have
Touching the Void
Wattstax
Weather Underground
Winged Migration
Wonderful Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Black Robe

Not quite as good as I remembered but still a perfect start to the “Cinematic Landscapes” film series at the Clark. I won’t be around to show it this Friday, so I caught an early look. This picture just screams “Hudson River School,” reeks of the elemental majesty of the American wilderness, as experienced by natives, early settlers, and the French missionary denoted by the title. It’s Quebec in 1634, and Father Laforgue sets out on his ambiguous civilizing mission in the canoes of the Algonquin to reinforce a distant Huron outpost, but runs into trouble with the Iroquois on the way. Brian Moore wrote the screenplay from his own novel, so the details are meticulous, convincingly real, but lack a certain movie momentum. I’ve probably rated Bruce Beresford too highly as a director, ever since I fell in love with Tender Mercies. With this, as with Breaker Morant and Driving Miss Daisy, he’s just as good as his material, no better no worse. He’s also made a lot of movies that are undistinguished or less. But oh my goodness, the landscapes. Sit back and drink in that widescreen glory. See it this Friday at 4:00 in the Clark auditorium. Viewers should be aware that the beauty can be quite savage, the wilderness can be feral in a way that Thomas Cole, Frederick Church, and their successors rarely acknowledge. (1991, dvd, r.) *7+*

Open Water

Admirably low-budget but not very good, this digital video feature by Chris Kentis plays effectively on primal fears of abandonment, helplessness in elemental vastness, and of course man-eating sharks, in a tale of two divers left behind by their excursion boat in the open seas. But that’s it as far as the story goes, as emptily “high concept” as any thriller, enough to creep us out for its brisk running time but with insufficient characterization to make us actually care whether the couple is rescued or eaten. (2004, dvd, n.) *5+* (MC-63, RT-72)

Saturday, January 08, 2005

Vera Drake

Almost unbearably well done, this Mike Leigh masterpiece combines the intimate family drama of Secrets and Lies with the meticulous period detail of Topsy Turvy. Dickensian both in his grasp of character and his compassion for working class lives, Leigh is celebrated for his work with actors in long periods of rehearsal to create utterly lived-in performances, and here the ensemble work is flawless and profound. Imelda Staunton will certainly win awards as the title character, but there are a dozen or more brilliant nameless performances in this film. The feel of postwar austerity in the London of 1950 is delineated in detail. Vera is a busy little bundle of tea and sympathy, caring for her family and other shut-ins of the neighborhood, caring for the houses of the careless rich, and caring for young girls in trouble, by applying a soapy solution to their problem, all with no heed to her bother or trouble, humming the whole way. Inevitably the law comes calling, and her world collapses. There's never a doubt where Leigh's sympathies lie, but he is able to extend them to a stunning range of characters. This small domestic tragedy evokes much thought and many tears. It edges ahead of Maria Full of Grace as the best film of 2004 that I've seen so far. (2004, Images Cinema, n.) *9* (MC-83, RT-89)

Let me add a word of praise for the gang at Images. They consistently show the films that need to be seen, and I intend to see and review nearly everything they present, so check in here weekly to get an early take on what's showing.

The Blob

Maybe you had to be there. But I was and I kinda dug it. (And needed the unreality of it all, after overdosing on the reality of the previous film.) On one level it seems nuts for the Criterion Collection to have revived this piece of Fifties schlock, but on another it works brilliantly as a time capsule. The filmmaking is rudimentary in every aspect, from the writing to the lighting, from the acting to the cheesy special effects, but still the melding of teen rebel and Atom-Age-anxiety monster movies is so blatant as to be revelatory. And of course you have the fight against the flesh-eating, ever-expanding glob of red jello led by the wild but ultimately responsible teen Steve, played by Steve McQueen, in the very genesis of "The Tao of Steve." (1958, dvd, r.) *7*

Friday, January 07, 2005

Infinity

Matthew Broderick plays the young physicist Richard Feynman; he also directs and wrote the script with his mother, based on Feynman’s memoirs. Mainly serves to highlight success of Kinsey, which conveys biopic points with much more verve and concision. This scientist’s story is slack and uninflected, with many scenes that go nowhere in particular. The film focuses on Feynman’s early marriage to a tubercular woman played by Patricia Arquette, and when he goes to work at Los Alamos on Manhattan Project, she checks into Albuquerque hospital, where she eventually dies on V-E Day. He takes her home to Queens and then returns for first A-bomb blast, but nothing in the film really connects with anything else. Overall, an honorable but unrealized effort. (1996, dvd, n.) *5+*

They Drive By Night

Half good -- the first half, in which George Raft and Humphrey Bogart play brothers who work as wildcat truckers, until they have an accident in which Bogart loses an arm. Raoul Walsh directs with gritty realism and the dialogue is fast and razor-sharp, especially with Ann Sheridan as a wised-up but still fresh waitress whom Raft falls for. In the second half, Raft gets a dispatching job, and Ida Lupino as the wife of the trucking company owner falls for him, to the point of murdering her husband and making Raft her partner. When he goes ahead with plans to marry Sheridan, Lupino tries to frame him for the murder, but then goes bonkers in the witness box. Until the over-the-top conclusion all the acting is very good, but it’s the on-the-job reality and not the would-be courtroom drama that has any substance. (1940, TCM/T, n.) *6*

Thursday, January 06, 2005

Vincent, Francois, Paul et les Autres

I’d been waiting for this to come out on dvd, but after watching Nelly... decided I had to watch Claude Sautet’s much earlier favorite of mine again right now. Strangely, this story of a group of middle-aged, middle-class men failing at work and at love, but finding some consolation in their own abrasive friendships, did not move me as much as it did thirty years ago, but it was highly watchable, with the always gravely charming Yves Montand, the indispensible Michel Piccoli, and a very young and trim Gerard Depardieu in the cast. Stephane Audran and Marie Dubois provide gracenotes as the ex-wives who love but cannot stand their husbands. Nothing much happens except the friction of real life, but the large cast is artfully choreographed into a pageant of the mundane. (1975, vhs, r.) *7*

A Double Life

I’ve been on a bit of a Ronald Colman kick lately, but it was happenstance that this was another film written by Garson Kanin and directed by George Cukor, quite different from It Should Happen to You, except for the NYC setting, which they render here with a thick theatrical texture -- onstage, backstage, and offstage -- and in surprisingly noirish tones. Colman is a Broadway actor with a tendency to assume the personality of his characters, so there’s trouble afoot when he’s lured into playing Othello. Shelley Winters is a young waitress who suffers Desdemona’s fate and Signe Hasso is Colman’s ex-wife and co-star who almost does the same onstage. Colman’s bravura dual role won him his only Oscar; his performance is hammy but satisfyingly so, like an overstuffed sandwich at the Carnegie deli. (1947, dvd, n.) *7-*

Wednesday, January 05, 2005

Clark Film Series Begins 1/14: American Landscapes

In anticipation of the Clark Art Institute exhibition, "A Walk in the Country: Inness and the Berkshires," which opens February 6, a film series called "A Hop-Skip-&-Jump Across America: In Search of the Cinematic Landscape," will be offered beginning Friday, January 14, at 4:00.

This film series will travel across America through a selection of films in which the landscape is an important character in its own right. Organized in triads, each group of films travels through time as well as space, from distant to recent past to something like the present. All films will show on Fridays at 4:00, projected from dvd in Clark Art Institute auditorium. Admission to film programs at the Clark is always free. The complete schedule follows:

I. Hopping through the East:

January 14: Black Robe. (1991, 101 minutes.) Bruce Beresford directs Brian Moore’s adaptation of his novel about a Jesuit mission to the Huron Indians in the pristine wilderness of “New France” in 1634. Nature is the silent but sublime witness to this savage, shocking clash of civilizations.

January 21: The Yearling. (1946, 128 minutes.) Post-Civil War Florida is the on-location backdrop for this classic family story of a young boy’s love for a fawn. Gregory Peck and Jane Wyman star in Clarence Brown’s film of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings’ novel.

January 28: All That Heaven Allows. (1955, 89 minutes.) Rock Hudson is a landscape gardener and avatar of Thoreau (believe it or not!) who wins the heart of New England widow Jane Wyman, suffocated by suburbia, in Douglas Sirk’s brilliantly expressionistic melodrama.

II. Skipping into the Heartland:

February 25: Days of Heaven.
(1978, 95 minutes.) Terrence Malick mixes stark terror and transcendent beauty in a wide-eyed depiction of farming on the Great Plains a hundred years ago, starring Richard Gere, Brooke Adams, and Sam Shepard. Shown with short, The Plow That Broke the Plains (1936, 25 min.).

March 4: Louisiana Story. (1948, 79 minutes.) Robert Flaherty’s exploration of bayou country was financed by Standard Oil, but resulted in a grand final masterpiece by the father of the documentary form. Shown with documentary short, The River (1937, 31 min.)

March 11: The Straight Story. (1999, 112 minutes.) Director David Lynch dials back his weirdness in this touching tale of an old man driving a lawnmower across Iowa to reconcile with his estranged brother. Richard Farnsworth stars, with superb support from Sissy Spacek and Harry Dean Stanton.

III. Jumping across the West:

April 8: Once Upon a Time in the West.
(1968, 165 minutes.) The ultimate horse opera, the greatest Western of them all -- leave it to the Italians to sing the myth of the Wild West, in this breathtaking aria by Sergio Leone. Claudia Cardinale stars, along with Henry Fonda, Jason Robards, and Charles Bronson.

April 15: The Last Picture Show. (1971, 126 minutes.) The romance of the West is mostly played-out, on the barren windswept flatland of 1950’s Texas, in a stifling small town where a stellar ensemble cast looks for love and escape in Peter Bogdanovich’s masterful rendering of Larry McMurtry’s novel.

April 22: Thelma and Louise. (1991, 127 minutes.) The road beckons again in this latter-day buddy picture with a feminist twist. Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis plunge into the wide open spaces of the modern West in Ridley Scott’s iconic tale of life on the run.

Monday, January 03, 2005

News: Clark to Wrap Up Christo on 2/19

Mark your calendars for a very special art/film event.

On Saturday, February 19, from noon to 5:30 p.m., Clark Art Institute will present a continuous marathon screening of five documentaries made by Albert Maysles and associates over three decades, about the massive but ephemeral art projects of Christo and Jeanne-Claude. The latest environmental project of this challenging pair of artists, “The Gates” in New York City’s Central Park, is scheduled to unfurl on February 13 and transform the center of Manhattan for two weeks.

These five films represent an extraordinary sustained collaboration between artists and filmmakers, and they are the most immediate record imaginable of some of the very greatest works of contemporary art. The Maysles brothers were pioneers of direct cinema, best known for Gimme Shelter and Salesman, and the combination of their intimate access and subtle storytelling skills offers an unprecedented perspective on an immensely complicated artistic process.

The Maysles have noted: “The Christos come up with an idea that at first seems impossible, then let it grow; so do we. . . The Christos’ projects and our films are both outrageous acts of faith.”

Each of these acclaimed films stands as the permanent record of lengthy planning and fleeting beauty, of political wrangles and emotional commitments, and of the transforming effect of the Christos’ projects on their varied sites and various viewers, both rural and urban, both art sophisticates and ordinary skeptics, across many different cultural divides.

The Clark’s program will begin at noon with a brief introduction to Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s career by Lisa Green, Clark assistant director of communication and design. An excerpt will be shown from the Maysles’ film in progress, about “The Gates,” and the lineup of films will follow:

12:30: Christo’s Valley Curtain. (1974, 28 minutes.) Academy Award-nominated short about the hanging of a huge orange curtain between two Colorado mountains.

1:00: Running Fence. (1978, 58 minutes.) The building of a 25-mile, 18-foot-high fence of white fabric across the hills of northern California.

2:00: Islands. (1986, 57 minutes.) The political and physical struggle to surround eleven islands in Miami’s Biscayne Bay with acres of bright pink fabric.

3:00: Christo in Paris. (1990, 58 minutes.) The wrapping of the Pont Neuf across the Seine provides the occasion for Christo and Jeanne-Claude to revisit the history of their relationship.

4:00: Umbrellas. (1995, 81 minutes.) Thousands of immense umbrellas are opened simultaneously, blue in a rice-farming valley of Japan, yellow across the arid hills of southern California.

Admission to film programs at the Clark is always free. “5 Films about Christo and Jeanne-Claude” is available in a boxed set
of 3 DVDs with an informative booklet, and is for sale in the Clark Museum Shop.

Sunday, January 02, 2005

Nelly et Monsieur Arnaud

This is what the term “French film” conjures in popular usage -- talky, witty, sexy. Claude Sautet’s glancing May/December romance holds up well on second viewing, even without the delight of surprise, while Emmanuelle Beart and Michel Serrault are even more amazing in the title roles. She’s a young woman who knows her own mind -- competent, direct, and peremptory; he’s an old man -- judge turned businessman turned memoirist -- equally sure of himself, till the defenses of both break down. He bails her out of a financial and marital bind; she signs on as his amanuensis; and in the course of their long hours of working over his book, they form a cranky emotional bond. The film is both delicate and incisive, funny and heartbreaking. (1995, dvd, r.) *8*

It Should Happen to You

Not a classic by any stretch, but enjoyable from several angles. Garson Kanin’s script and George Cukor’s direction whip a up a tasty froth; Judy Holliday is effective in her usual role of dumb blonde much smarter than she looks; and Jack Lemmon debuts in much the vein he will mine in The Apartment and countless other films. She’s a girdle model just canned for an extra 3/4” on her hips, who meets him in Central Park where he is making a documentary film. Encouraged by his peptalk, she walks out onto Columbus Circle, sees a huge billboard and decides that the way to make a name for herself is to put it up there in letters ten feet high. Soon Gladys Glover anticipates Madonna and so many others by becoming famous for being famous, swept up in a publicity machine in its quaint infancy fifty years ago. Interesting period footage of NYC is a plus. (1953, dvd, n.) *6+*

Saturday, January 01, 2005

The Bourne Supremacy

A silly spy thriller, with the usual double-crosses, gunplay, and car chases, but guided by a sensibility that strives for propulsive realism, even in nonsense. Paul Greengrass, who established himself as director of Bloody Sunday, a documentary-like depiction of the Derry massacre of civil rights marchers by British paratroopers, was recruited for the second film in this Ludlum-derived/Damon-starring franchise, which I never would have been interested in otherwise. The filmmaking is fractured and in your face, but well suited to the situation of the swift thinking CIA assassin caught in a web of deceit and threat, pursuing and pursued in the classic Hitchcock fashion. You have to think along with the protagonist, and do it on the fly, figuring it all out as you hurtle through the story. Matt Damon is surprisingly effective in the lead, a remorseless operative reaching for real remorse, and the reliable Joan Allen and Brian Cox add dimension to their formulaic CIA bosses. If you gotta make this sort of film, you might as well make it smart and fast as a whip. (2004, dvd, n.) *7-* (MC-73, RT-80.)