Never having gotten around to
subscribing to Filmstruck before it was shut down, I became a charter
subscriber to the Criterion Channel as soon as it was announced. But for the first few months, I barely
watched anything, so now I will devote a month’s worth of viewing to the
channel, to determine whether to keep the subscription going forward.
In watching and showing films
on DVD or Blu-Ray, I always gravitated to Criterion
Collection disks, for classic selection, technical excellence, and impressive
extras. Now they are immediately
available by streaming, and it’s a stupendous resource, but one I have not
delved into much yet.
I’d been looking for Visions
of Eight (CC) for a long time, until it was released in a Criterion
boxed set of Olympic films, which is also available on the Channel. Eight different directors look at different
events at the 1972 Munich Olympics, and the film lived up to my memories of
it. Kon Ichikawa’s Tokyo Olympiad (CC)
from 1964 was almost as good, and from time to time I will look at others of
the hundred years of Olympic documentaries available to stream.
For a little taste of Renoir
in advance of the Clark ’s summer exhibition, I watched Day in the
Country (CC) for the first time in ages, and in preparation for
visiting the H.M.S Victory at Portsmouth , I watched That Hamilton Woman (CC)
with Laurence Olivier as Admiral Nelson and Vivien Leigh as Lady Hamilton. All very good stuff, but hardly enough to
warrant several months’ subscription.
I’ve built up a watchlist to
work through, but first off I took note of films that were leaving the
service at the end of July, part of a “Summer of ’69” collection. So I watched Mazursky’s Bob & Carol
& Ted & Alice and Schlesinger’s Midnight Cowboy,
which certainly evoked the feel of fifty years ago, but not the feeling that
they don’t make movies like that any more.
They do, and better. But you have
to put them in context of what went before, say Doris Day & Rock Hudson
films, or Hud for example, or further back, Of Mice and Men. The films of 1969 are certainly artifacts of a culture
freaking out. Criterion’s other offering
under that rubric was Easy Rider, which I’ve seen more recently, but get
the point of putting those three together, suggesting that the channel’s
programming is a reliable guide to informed viewing.
Well, not entirely
reliable. De gustibus non est
disputandum. The title Something
Wild (CC) caught my eye, though this wasn’t the Jonathan Demme film
with Melanie Griffith, but a Fifties indie that I thought might be a find like The
Little Fugitive. It did have some
notable NYC
street
scenes, edited into a jazzy opening credit sequence by Saul Bass, but devolved
into a claustrophobic melodrama that made no psychological sense at all. Jack Garfein directs his wife Carroll Baker
according to The Method, as a college girl who gets raped and then is “saved”
from suicide by a man who in turn entraps her in his basement apartment. This, however, is not The Collector,
which might read differently today anyway, but at least made some sense at the
time. No, this film is flat-out insane,
about that there can be no dispute, though some may have a taste for the insanity.
I got more old-time-y
gratification out of two Ida Lupino films from the Fifties, when she was
practically the only female director in Hollywood . Edmund
O’Brien is the star of both. In The
Bigamist (CC), he’s very sympathetic as the traveling salesman who has
sincere attachments to his wives in SF and LA, Joan Fontaine and Ida Lupino
respectively. In The Hitch-Hiker (CC),
he’s one of two buddies on their way to a weekend fishing trip, who are taken
captive by a crazed but canny killer on the loose, and forced to drive him on
escape through Mexico . In the former, good acting
makes for more than a potboiler, and in the latter, Ms. Lupino with an all-male
cast creditably becomes the first woman to direct a film noir. She was clearly one of the era’s intelligent
and committed “Filmakers,” as her production company (with hubby) was called.
Since seeing First
Reformed, I’d wanted to take another look at Winter Light (CC),
which I remembered as my favorite of Ingmar Bergman’s faith trilogy of the
early 1960s. As Criterion will do, they
presented an immaculate restoration of Sven Nykvist’s luminous cinematography,
but Bergman’s grim obsession with the death of God no longer spoke to me
directly. Good compare and contrast
exercise with Paul Schrader’s final film, however. Characteristically good performances from
Gunnar Bjornstrand and Ingrid Thulin.
But as much as I admire some of Bergman’s work, his cold and dark
sensibility remains somewhat alien to me (except when made approachable by warm
and life-filled actresses). I will
follow up with some other favorites from his filmography, and maybe even read
his autobiography, which has been on my shelf for decades.
Ask and ye shall receive. In my previous post, I asked
where, oh where could I find Manny & Lo (CC)? Lo and behold, it suddenly turned up on the
Criterion Channel. So that question was
answered, and thereby also the question of whether to continue my subscription. And then the question whether that 1996 film
would live up to my memory of it?
Definitely so. I remembered it
for Scarlett Johansson’s debut, as an observant and thoughtful 11-year-old
runaway on the lam from foster care with her 16-year-old sister, living in
model homes and other hideaways. When
the sister can no longer ignore her pregnancy, they do the sensible thing and
kidnap someone to help them with the birth.
And what a sensible person they pick, working in a childcare store and
wearing a nurse’s outfit, with firm and certain answers to any question about
babies! We never get much of her
backstory, but Mary
Kay Place
lets us in on the desperation behind the certainty, in a finely calibrated
comic role. So the film is funny and
twisty, well-acted, well-shot, and well-directed. So why hasn’t writer/director Lisa Krueger gone
on to make more winning films like this?
I had one answer in hand from the recent documentary Half the Picture
(MC-76, AMZ), in which many female directors lamented how much harder it was to get a
second film made, even when the first was successful. Manny & Lo remains a fine piece of
work, though a more auspicious debut for the star than for the creator, who I
suspect is telling a very personal story in comically exaggerated fashion. So this film confirms my subscription, and
certainly makes a 14-day free trial worth your while.
The program collection that really committed me to CC was "Pre-Code Barbara Stanwyck," which allowed me to add a half-dozen films to my summary of her career.
The program collection that really committed me to CC was "Pre-Code Barbara Stanwyck," which allowed me to add a half-dozen films to my summary of her career.
Filling in another female
star’s filmography, I watched Katharine Hepburn’s second feature, Christopher
Strong (1933, CC), directed by Dorothy Arzner. Bizarre that a film written, directed, and
headlined by women should be named for the main male character, a stodgy
aristocrat and politician who falls for Hepburn’s daring aviatrix, winner of a
round-the-globe flying contest. If you
wanted to watch a Kate Hepburn film, there’s at least a dozen I’d recommend
more, but this one has multiple fascinations, from its pre-Code boldness to its
half-feminist slant, but most amazingly its great young actress.
So now that I'm a confirmed subscriber to the Criterion Channel, I will round off this post with the promise of more commentary on its offerings, especially in the compilation of career summaries, which will become more and more the focus for this blog.
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