I
saw a lot more than the 33 movies (and one TV series) I wrote about last year.
I realize 33 is too much for some people. Five would be a lot for some. But as
a movie buff who writes about movies for a living as well as for love, 33 seems
almost paltry. Between theatrical visits, which are becoming increasingly rare
as I get older and crankier, and streaming services, I see much more than that.
If I haven't written about all of them, it's because life keeps getting in the
way. Sometimes I don't have time to get down my thoughts in a timely manner.
And other times, however much I may enjoy or dislike a film, the words just
don't come.
So
here's a rundown of some of the films I didn't get a chance to share. Originally,
I was going to write about everything I saw, but the list got a little long, so
I'm just going for the highlights. These are quickies —random observations.
I've put them in alphabetical order so you can skim for what interests you.
Clockwise from upper left: Ant-Man and the Wasp, The Bad
and the Beautiful.
City That Never
Sleeps and Boy Erased
Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018) — With Paul Rudd co-writing and
starring (and solid comic support from Michael Peña and Walton Goggins), this
film is so much fun it's easy to lose sight of the plot. It's something about
keeping an evil mutant what's-it from getting the equipment Rudd and the new
Wasp (Evangeline Lily) need to rescue her mother, the original Wasp, from the
microverse. Since that role is played by Michelle Pfeiffer, the sooner they get
to it the better.
Avengers: Infinity War (2018) — Three thoughts on an enjoyable
if over-stuffed film:
1.
What's
the point of casting an actress as good as Carrie Coon as Proxima Midnight if
she's going to be lost behind heavy makeup, with half her performance delivered
by a stunt woman or CGI?
2.
When
you put most of the Marvel Cinematic Universe heroes into one film you begin to
notice the funny ones all sound pretty much the same.
3.
If
you're up on your industry news, the big finish loses some of its impact,
despite Robert Downey, Jr.'s well-played reactions to the carnage. Most of the
people who got ashed are signed for sequels to their own films, so death is as
impermanent in the Marvel Cinematic Universe as it is in their comics.
The Bad and the Beautiful (1952) —Two years after All About Eve (1950), MGM produced a
film equivalent, using wit and blind-item plotting to dissect the worst aspects
of the art form. If you don't take it too seriously (this applies particularly
to the lines about the Lana Turner character's becoming a great actress), it's
a lot of fun. Nobody plays a heel like Kirk Douglas, and if you're surprised
that Gloria Grahame won an Oscar for playing the writer's flighty wife (which
she does very well), remember she had two other big hits that year —The Greatest Show on Earth and Sudden Fear — neither of which had the
cachet of The Bad and the Beautiful.
Begone, Dull Care (1949) —This eight-minute film is more
creative and exciting than most features. Rather than shooting images,
directors Evelyn Lambart and Norman McLaren painted, drew and scratched
directly on celluloid, even including dirt that got on the film while the
strips were drying in the lab. It all plays out to music by jazz great Oscar
Peterson. Made long before computer editing, the whole thing still seems to fit
perfectly. It's Fantasia (1940) for
adults, very sophisticated adults.
Blood Beach (1980) — Back before Syfy, cheapies like
this actually played in movie theatres. Blood
Beach features a mostly unseen thingie lurking under the Santa Monica beach
that keeps sucking people under the sand to eat them. It takes out an old woman,
thereby motivating the romantic plot; her daughter (Marianna Hill) comes home
and renews ties with her childhood sweetheart (David Huffman). The actors are
decent, but the writing for them isn't. After his stewardess girlfriend gets
eaten, Huffman gets back with Hill in record time. As head of the city police
department, John Saxon pops in every so often to register confused disgust,
which seems prescient when the monster is finally revealed. It looks like an
ambulatory vulva.
Boy Erased (2018) — Not having the time to write up
all my thoughts on this one really hurt. In only his second feature as writer
and director, Australian actor Joel Edgerton navigates a tricky script that
plays with time to dramatize Garrard Conley's memoir of his stay in a Christian
rehabilitation center for gay and lesbian youth. Shortly after the young man's arrival, the
camera pans through the group as they pray, revealing ever younger
participants, the last of whom seem to have barely reached puberty. It's one of
the most horrifying sights in any film this year. The entire cast (including
Nicole Kidman, Russell Crowe, singer Troye Sivan and Edgerton, who plays the
rehabilitation center's leader) is strong. As Jared, the fictionalized stand-in
for Conley, Lucas Hedges dominates the film with effortless grace. Hedges has
the perfect face for a middle American everyman. There's an open passivity to
his look that makes him seem like any face in the crowd, but he also has the
emotional depths to break through that. In one scene, he goes running on a
night off from the center. He passes a bus shelter with an ad featuring a male
model posed seductively. It's an amazing moment, and a terrific bit of physical
acting, Without any words, he and Edgerton suggest conflicting feelings about
our sexualized culture that go beyond what a lot of filmmakers try to do with
just dialogue.
City That Never Sleeps (1953) —It's a good thing this Republic
film noir was recently restored. There's a key plot point you can't see in the
print available on YouTube. It would be a pity if print quality kept people
from enjoying this surprising little combination of film noir and fantasy. Gig
Young stars as a Chicago cop tempted to pull off a crooked deal so he can run
off with his mistress (Mala Powers). On what could be his last night out, his
regular partner is replaced by Chill Wills as an officer nobody knows who keeps
spouting folksy wisdom about the city and seems to have inside information on
Young's life. The picture is filled with unusual characters and surprising
performances, with Marie Windsor as a classic noir femme fatale and William
Tallman as a psychopath with a pet rabbit almost walking off with acting honors.
It's imaginatively directed by the Hungarian Joseph H. Auer, who never did
anything comparable in almost 30 years of filmmaking, and beautifully shot by
John L. Russell.
The Cloverfield Paradox (2018) — Dear Return of the Jedi: You are no longer the most disappointing end to
a film trilogy. Sincerely, The
Cloverfield Paradox.
Crazy Rich Asians (2018) — It's wonderful to see a film
showcasing such a strong cast of Asian actors and so many Asian musicians, but
this is one rom-com that's long on the rom and short on the com. And the rom
part is pretty generic. It's your basic spunky girl falls for someone without
realizing how rich he is and then gets rejected by the wealthy family, even
though they're the ones who aren't good enough. Some critics have labeled it
"affluence porn," suggesting the ultimate message is that the only
good Asians are rich Asians. Constance Wu, Michelle Yeoh and Lisa Lu are very
good, while Awkwafina, Ken Jeong and Nico Santos (as the gay cousin who's
tolerated because he can get his aunties anything) carry what little comedy
there is.
Clockwise from upper left: Creep, The 400 Blows,
Diabolique and Games
Creep (2014) — This film could have been made by the people who
preach against the dangers of social media, except few of them are anywhere
near this witty. An aspiring filmmaker (the director, Patrick Brice) answers a
Craigslist ad from a supposedly dying man (Mark Duplass) who wants to record a
video message for his unborn child. Most of the film is improvised, and Duplass
comes up with a series of increasingly threatening provocations, as frightening
as they are silly. Ultimately, the low-budget film is more unsettling than most
mainstream horrors.
The Darkest Minds (2018) — I only mention this because
seeing the simple, clean work of leading man Harris Dickenson led me to the
much better Beach Rats (2017, see
"Closets and Complexes"). He and Amanda Stenberg are fine as the
leads in this tale of teens with super powers being hunted down by a corrupt
government —think of it as "X-Men Lite" — but the whole thing is a
little pat and is very obviously designed to launch a franchise, though the
picture's poor box office would seem to have put an end to that idea.
Diabolique (1955) — What a wonderfully nasty piece
of work it is! Henri-George Clouzot's classic thriller pits abused wife (Vera
Clouzot) and mistress (Simone Signoret) against the nasty headmaster of a boy's
school, or does it? There's not a sympathetic character in sight. Even the
students are little terrors. This film may have the most oppressive mise en
scene on record. There isn't a plain wall or bare table in sight. Clutter
rules!
Enchanted (2007) — Why did it take me so long to
catch up with Disney's goof on its own conventions? Amy Adams, between her
first and second Oscar nominations, is a delight as Giselle, an animated
almost-princess magically transported to New York City. Her confrontations with
the real (at least in comparison to her cartoon reality) world are often very
funny, particularly when she gets to sing.
She's such a good musician she can get away with making fun of musical
conventions. There isn't enough of James Marsden as her animated prince or
Susan Sarandon as the wicked witch, but when he's not being directed by Mike
Leigh, a little bit of Nicholas Spall as the queen's evil accomplice is already
too much.
Excision (2012) — If you don't read the credits,
you won't realize the uptight mother in this comic horror is Traci Lords. After
years of playing overgrown delinquents with more enthusiasm than technique, she
turns in a thoroughly accomplished character turn as a woman whose
perfectionism pushes her misfit daughter (a very good AnnaLynne McCord) to
horrifying ends. Get this woman into an A-budget film, now!
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2016) — The beasts are enchanting.
Eddie Redmayne isn't. For an actor capable of delivering work as good as his
Anthony Baekeland in Savage Grace (2007)
and Stephen Hawkings in The Theory of
Everything (2014), he has a distressing habit of turning into a human-sized
wind-up toy in this film, so mechanical you can't tell if it's real or CGI.
Final Destination 5 (2011) — With this entry, the franchise
becomes the Ring of the Nibelungen of
the horror genre. Five films and seven and a half hours later, and you're right
back where you started.
The First Purge (2018) — The curious thing about the
third Purge film is the opening newscast,
which reveals that the purge (the yearly orgy of legal violence that supposedly
frees the nation of its aggressions) was made possible when a new political
party swept to power thanks to massive donations from the NRA. Amazing to think
a film could be outdated before it even hits home video.
The 400 Blows (1959) — With the demise of FilmStruck,
is it still possible to stream this painful, exquisite portrait of a troubled
young man? Francois Truffaut's semi-autobiographical film remains one of the
most impressive feature directing debuts in the form's history. The conventions
of nouvelle vague filmmaking (hand-held cameras, improvisation, extensive
location footage) give the picture a documentary feel that makes some of its
more melodramatic excesses (the hateful parents) more believable. Jean-Pierre
Leaud, as the young Antoine Doinel, is a great find and would go on to serve as
Truffaut's alter ego in a series of films. The final freeze frame is
shattering.
Games (1967) — One of the great forgotten auteurs, Curtis
Harrington, made the leap from experimental films and B movies to the
mainstream by borrowing plot elements and leading lady Simone Signoret from Diabolique (1955). Heiress Katharine
Ross and trophy husband James Caan collect antique games while playing
practical jokes on friends and each other. When con artist Signoret infiltrates
the household, the stakes rise. Caan does a great job as the pretentious,
nouveau riche husband. He's particularly funny imitating a loutish delivery boy
(Don Stroud) caught up in their games. Stroud plays the role like a young
Brando, so Caan's mimicry, five years before The Godfather, seems oddly prescient.
Clockwise from upper left: Last Train to Busan, The
Giant Claw,
Sometimes Aunt Martha
Does Dreadful Things and Searching
The Giant Claw (1957) — The Earth is attacked by a
giant turkey buzzard from an anti-matter universe. The creature looks as
ridiculous as the plot description makes it sound, but stars Jeff Morrow and
Mara Corday play it so earnestly they're almost endearing, at least when his
behavior doesn't start approaching sexual harassment. In an era when mainstream
features presented women in roles so submissive they bordered on the
masochistic, it's fascinating to think how many horror films gave actresses
like Corday, Faith Domergue, Paula Raymond, Joan Weldon and Julia Adams
opportunities to play empowered women.
Hurricane Bianca: From Russia With Hate (2018) — The sequel to 2016's Hurricane Bianca is so lacking in the
qualities that made the earlier film work it's surprising to realize it was
written and directed by the same man, Matt Kugelman. Within the first few
minutes, Kugelman's script undoes most of the ending of the earlier film,
putting us back to square one. As Bianca Del Rio, Ray Haylock is a dynamic
performer with a gift for delivering insults that's ultimately empowering. The
film robs him of most of his power with a contrived plot that sends his
character, high-school teacher Richard Martinez, to Russia for a series of
jokes that should have gone out with the Cold War. With Bianca robbed of most
of her mojo, the greatest acting energy comes from a new addition, Doug Plaut
as a druggie friend. At first, he's saddled with a bunch of tired jokes about
how stupid he is, but eventually his zonked-out sweetness becomes funnier and
more compelling than anything else in the film.
The Idle Class (1921) — Sublime. Charles Chaplin wrote
and directed this lightweight short in which the Little Tramp is mistaken for a
dissolute society type. In one inspired bit, the wealthy man's wife (Edna
Purviance, of course) leaves him because of his drinking. We see his back as
he's seemingly wracked with sobs. Then he turns around to reveal his heaving
shoulders were actually the result of his shaking a cocktail to celebrate his
newfound freedom. The film is informed with Chaplin's grace as a performer
without any of the rampant sentiment that can get a little heavy in his later
works.
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (2018) — How inept is this sequel to the
more entertaining, if still rather absurd Jurassic
World (2015)? At one point, the film seems to forget that Geraldine Chaplin
is in the cast. Where does she go? What happens to her? Since she's not a cute
kid, a hot redhead, a hunky moron or a villain, nobody seems to care.
Ultimately the film's only sympathetic character is a CGI dinosaur caught in a
volcanic eruption. Pity they couldn't save him or her and kill all the humans.
Justice League (2017) — If the highlights of a
superhero mash-up are the simple scenes in which two characters communicate,
you know you're in trouble. Like Marvel, DC has filled its cinematic universe
with good actors. When Diane Lane's Martha Kent and Amy Adams' Lois Lane
compare notes on how to deal with grief or when Gal Gadot's Wonder Woman and
Ben Affleck's Bruce Wayne discuss leadership qualities, there's a compelling
movie there. When the action starts, however, it's a mess of body blows and
misplaced wisecracks.
The Prowler (1981) — This vintage slasher film has a
nonsensical plot (Can anybody explain the killer's motivation? Go ahead. I dare
you) and most of the standard tropes. But it also has a lot of atmosphere
thanks to its Jersey shore location. I grew up in Philadelphia and spent a lot
of summer vacation time in places like those in the film. They could be pretty
spooky even when there wasn't anybody running around killing teenagers. A
rather sad-looking graduation party is invaded by the return of a killer, a
jilted G.I. who had taken out his faithless girlfriend and her 4F lover 35
years earlier. The leads are appealing and leading lady Vicky Dawson
appropriately spunky. There are two "name" actors slumming in this
one. Lawrence Tierney doesn't have nearly enough to do to justify his powerful
presence (the handsome young actor aged into a virtual special effect), while
Farley Granger looks like he'd rather be back touring with the National Repertory
Theatre, and who can blame him?
Reflections of Horror (1974) — The biggest surprise about this
TV remake of Diabolique (1955, see
above) is how much it doesn't suck. There are the inevitable plot changes, but
they work, particularly with the mistress' nasty tenants transformed into
Lucille Benson's loquacious landlady. Joan Hackett and Tuesday Weld are great
casting as wife and mistress, respectively, and who'd have thought Sam
Waterston would be so good (and so sexy) playing an unredeemable bastard?
Searching (2018) — If John Cho's work on the
second season of The Exorcist or in
the independent drama Columbus (2017)
hasn't already convinced you that he's a star just waiting to happen, I don't
think you're smart enough to play with me. This intriguing thriller takes a
troublesome concept — the entire story is told on computer screens — and whips
it into shape. Cho's a widowed father whose high-school-age daughter suddenly
goes missing. As he trolls through her laptop for clues as to where she might be,
he realizes he's been so isolated by grief he has no idea who the girl really
is. Any objections you might have to the gimmick melt away under the strength
of Cho's performance, and he gets solid support from Debra Messing as a police
detective who picks up the case.
Sometimes Aunt Martha Does Dreadful
Things (1971) — If the
way this low-budget thriller plays with gender is intentional, writer-director
Thomas Casey is one of the great unsung heroes of independent film. If it's
accidental, this remains one of the most interesting exploitation pictures ever
made. Two crooks hide out in Miami after a murder. To throw the police off
their trail, the older (Abe Zwick) masquerades as the younger's (Wayne
Crawford, billed as Scott Lawrence) Aunt Martha. Their relationship is more
than a little unconventional. They bicker like a dysfunctional mother and son.
When Lawrence brings home a date who begins to get too grabby, he calls for his
Aunt Martha, who dispatches the real girl with a kitchen knife. At one point they
have to share a bed, which leads Crawford to joke about Zwick's having his way
with him, but when they make up after a fight, their physical intimacy borders
on the romantic. It's almost as if they were trying to prove that you could
indeed do Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
with an all-male cast. The two leads are surprisingly good. Zwick never made
another film (at least under that name), while Crawford went on to a long
career as a character actor and producer.
Train to Busan (2016) — Korean horror has become a
thing, though this differs from the most popular examples of the type by
eschewing body horror in favor of a good old-fashioned zombie plot. The setting
this time is a train, and director Sang-ho Yeon makes great use of the confined
setting to generate tension. The attack scenes are powerfully kinetic. It's all
grounded in a basic human plot — workaholic father Yoo Gong has to take
daughter Su-an Kim on a train ride to spend time with her mother, his ex-wife.
When the zombie apocalypse breaks out, his drive to protect the girl surprises
him more than anybody. The film did so well there's already a sequel in the
works and talk of a U.S. version. Paging John Cho?
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