![]() |
| Jean Seberg and Maurice Ronet |
![]() |
| Collective Solidarity |
![]() |
| Jean Seberg and Maurice Ronet |
![]() |
| Collective Solidarity |
![]() |
| Elke Sommer |
![]() |
| Alida Valli |
![]() |
| Rebecca Ferguson |
However, this approach also has its drawbacks. There is so much leaping about from location to location that it tends to flatten out the efforts of the ensemble cast. There are memorable performances in the film, I admired the efforts of Greta Lee, Jared Harris,Tracy Letts, and Gabriel Basso, but too many of the characters come out under drawn and colorless, particularly Rebecca Ferguson's Captain and Idris Elba's President. Zero Dark Thirty did a much better job portraying military and government functionaries. Greta Lee's character, an expert on Korea, is attending a Civil War reenactment at Gettysburg with her young son and this gives Bigelow an opportunity to skewer the American tendency to look back nostalgically on war as spectacle. She makes it clear that America will have no opportunity to look back nostalgically on a nuclear confrontation.
Like Fail Safe and The Bedford Incident, A House of Dynamite bogs down in endless shots of officials intoning portents of doom while standing before video and radar screens. Bigelow and Oppenheim want to be Cassandras here, but this largely inert film will tend to lull viewers rather than spark righteous indignation.
![]() |
| Haydée Politoff and Patrick Bauchau |
![]() |
| Sybil Danning and Jeff Corey |
The Peppard character is the Han Solo role, here named Cowboy. Through this role, Sayles shows the link between cowboys and space heroes in the pantheon of US juvenile mythos, from Woody to Buzz Lightyear. Peppard seems more engaged than usual and is a hoot. The highlight of the film is his character playing "Red River Valley" on his harmonica to the comically disparate mercenaries as they await their final battle. Sayles shows himself to have been ahead of the curve with his takes here on internet dating, AI, and robotics. The score by James Horner wisely avoids aping John Williams, offering a splendid pastiche of Wagner and Debussy. The film's female lead, the late Darlanne Fluegel whose performance in To Live and Die is one of the best in all of 1980s cinema, has little to do except toss her tresses. I like the gravitas of Robert Vaughn's performance and I am not really a fan of his work. He essentially reprises his role The Magnificent Seven in a more mournful vein.
Unfortunately, overall, Battle Beyond the Stars is more crap than craptastic. Jimmy T. Murakami's direction emphasizes the cartoonish nature of the project rather than its mythic reach. It is telling that he went onto greater success as an animator. Like a lot of Corman productions, Battle Beyond the Stars was more successful retrospectively as a film school project than as a piece of film art. James Cameron got his first big professional break as the special effects supervisor of the film. Bill Paxton made important contacts working on the project as a carpenter.
![]() |
| Katharine Isabelle |
![]() |
| Betty Grable and Dan Dailey |
![]() |
| Hume Cronyn and Burt Lancaster |
![]() |
| The proletariat revolts in Brute Force |
![]() |
| Sally Hawkins |
Danny and Michael Philippou's Bring Her Back is the creepiest horror film I've seen in some time, a worthy successor to the brothers' Talk to Me. As in that film, the brothers' success with the juvenile members of the cast is variable. but Sally Hawkins gives a ravening performance as a grieving mother who will stop at nothing to be reunited with her dead daughter. Hawkins plays Laura, a retired therapist who adopts two orphans who have recently lost their father. Twelve years old Piper, who is legally blind, is doted on by Laura, but she treats older teen Andy with disdain. By the time we see Laura dumping her own urine on Andy while he sleeps to make him think he is a bedwetter, we are hip to the fact that something inside Laura doesn't jibe with her happy go lucky facade. That and a remaining child who seems to be catatonic creates a properly sinister atmosphere. The audience waits for Laura to go full bore bonkers and Hawkins and the brothers don't disappoint.
I wasn't fully satisfied with the back story that underpins this flick, but if you are dealing with occult cannibalism then you really cannot produce something that makes rational sense. Like almost all horror, Bring Her Back deals with irrational, unconscious fears. I do wonder if the brothers will ever leave the horror genre and their preferred theme of juvenile trauma. Bring Her Back is a good film on its own terms, but, like Talk to Me, does not transcend its genre. Those with squeamish stomachs should skip this unless they want to indulge in some lunch liberation.
![]() |
| 1946-2025 |
![]() |
| Rutger Hauer |
Andreas shares many traits with Roth, an emigre who lived in Paris from 1934 until his death on the eve of World War 2. Roth was a Jew who became fascinated with Catholicism and may have converted before his demise. He was also a committed drunkard and The Legend of the Holy Drinker, his final work, may be thought of as a prolonged suicide note. Olmi and co-screenwriter Tullio Kezich have made some minor changes to the book. The film is not set in 1934 as the book was, but exists out of time. The book is set in spring while the movie takes advantage of a dour Paris in winter, perhaps a more appropriate choice to film a downbeat tale such as this. What is important is how well Olmi nails the repetitive compulsion of an addict that is at the core of the material. Olmi is also able to picture something more difficult to conjure visually: the mixture of faith and existential despair that is at the crux of magical realism; especially as represented by artists who have a Catholic background. Each week at mass, Catholics have to contemplate a graven image of a crucified Lord, not a serene Buddha. Yet, the message of both faiths is the same, life is suffering.
Olmi is able to capture the duality of the preternatural existing within a cosmic void through a masterful use of image and sound. Sounds in the picture, such as a bottle rolling along cobblestones, create a palpable sense of a tangible reality. The score, consisting of extracts from Igor Stravinsky's compositions of the 1930s. hints at the spiritual, particularly Olmi's use of the despairing Symphony in C. Olmi himself edited The Legend of the Holy Drinker and the film is fruitfully wedded to its score. The cinematography of Dante Spinotti (Manhunter, L.A. Confidential), with its splashes of color and inky black chiaroscuro, paints a canvas of both degradation and sensual possibility. The continued use of mirrors in the film suggests that the memories and dreams visiting Andreas are portals to his past and not a true reflection of his present. Olmi usually favored non-professional actors and those present bring mixed results. Some of the actors seem to be speaking phonetically. Hauer's performance, however, is a triumph. Olmi saw the expressiveness of Hauer's face in stoic appearances in action films and utilizes it to galvanic effect. It is Hauer's most expansive and best performance.
![]() |
| Pavement circa 1994 |
![]() |
| Leonardo DiCaprio |
![]() |
| Chase Infiniti |
![]() |
| Zhao Benshan and Dong Jie |
Zhang Yimou's Happy Times is a comic melodrama first released in China in 2000. The protagonist is an unemployed factory worker named Zhao (Zhao Benshan) who lives in the port city of Dalian. We first meet Zhao as he is courting a zaftig divorcee (Lifan Dong) who lives in a crowded apartment with her corpulent son and a blind stepdaughter, Wu Ying (Dong Jie), who she mistreats. Zhao is posing as a well to do manager of a hotel in order to win the divorcee, but his lies will catch up to him. The divorcee charges him with finding a job and new digs for Wu Ying at his non-existent hotel. Zhao enlists his friends, most of whom are retired, to find a solution. They convert an abandoned bus in a local park into a pad for trysting lovers with the intention of using Wu Ying as a maid to clean up the mess the couples leave.
![]() |
| Raymond Massey and John Wayne |
![]() |
| Barbara Stanwyck, Pre-Code |
The picture proper begins with a wild party at Strong's penthouse. Drunken revelers are thoughtlessly chucking bottles which smash on the pavement below narrowly missing pedestrians. Capra here, and later, uses miniatures to apt effect. The opening accurately reflects the mood of Capra's country in 1930. The effects of the Crash were now being felt in earnest. There was a backlash to, what was then felt were, the wild excesses of the roaring 20s. A return to traditional and homespun values was in process. In part, this led to the institution of the Motion Picture Production Code in 1934. Strong is so disgusted by the actions of his guests that he storms out of his own party to prowl the waterfront in search of his muse. This he finds her, Stanwyck introduced in a leggy long shot.
Stanwyck is playing Kay Arnold, a party girl who has just departed a swank affair on a yacht by borrowing a rowboat. Strong gives her a ride home and asks if she will model for him. She is surprised, impressed, but eventually miffed when he does not try to take advantage of the situation. She admires his values and falls in love with Strong when he shows her an elevated view of life. The formula is the familiar Victorian one of the fallen woman who finds redemption. At one point, Arnold is called a "gold miner", a precursor to the "gold diggers" derided by Dean Martin and Kanye West and countless other rapscallions. On their first film together, Capra had a tough time adjusting to Stanwyck's style. She tended to giver her all on the first take with little remaining for subsequent takes. What remains onscreen are explosions of masochistic hysteria, what would become Stanwyck's trademark. Her fierce energy redeems a trite role and holds this picture together.
![]() |
| Benicio Del Toro and Mia Threapleton |
![]() |
| 1938 - 2025 |
![]() |
| Wera Engels and Erich von Stroheim |