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Jean Rochefort |
Symphonie pour un massacre
The Devil and the Daylong Brothers
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Three Brothers: Jordan Bolden, Brendan Bradley and Nican Robinson |
The mythology of The Devil and the Daylong Brothers is Satanic gobbledygook. Three brothers from different mothers are paying off their Dad's debt to his satanic majesty by dispatching those whose time it is to pay for their Faustian bargains. Last on their list is Dad who sold his soul to be the ultimate blues singer. Now that said father is played by a veteran actor/singer most famous for crooning the excruciating "I'm Easy" to various femmes in Nashville is problematic to say the least, but I'm not going to pick the nit of the white bluesman here and Keith Carradine acquits himself extremely well. Most of the acting is quite good for a B movie, though Jordon Bolden seems to be doing a bizarre Rami Malek impression. The best vocals are provided by Rainey Qualley, Margaret's sis and the sole femme (fatale) here, better known in music circles as Rainsford. The Devil and the Daylong Brother has opened to little fanfare by streaming on Apple TV, but it is vigorous cinema for those who don't mind an impaled eyeball or two.
La bestia debe morir
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Narciso Ibáñez Menta and Laura Hidalgo |
Quick Takes, February 2025
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Something is askew in Dos Monjes |
The Zellner Brothers' Sasquatch Sunset feels like an extended, R rated version of the "Messin with Sasquatch" beef jerky advertisements, yet manages to transcend its lowly aspirations with humor and warmth. The flick is a decided advancement over their previous one, the stillborn Damsel. Riley Keough and Jesse Eisenberg and their fellow Bigfoots are to be commended for the all out zeal they bring to their performances. In the tradition of Keaton's Three Ages.
Francis Galluppi's The Last Stop in Yuma County snuck into a few theaters in late 2023 to little notice, but it is a solid B film. Disparate strangers are stranded at a remote diner with two bank robbers in this desert noir which is beholden to Hemingway, The Petrified Forest, Hitchcock, Tarantino, and numerous B pictures from the 1950s. Galluppi's saving grace is a sense of humor and film craft. The fine acting ensemble keeps things from getting too cartoonish, especially Jim Cummings, Jocelin Donahue, and Gene Jones.
Yasujirō Ozu's That Night's Wife, released in 1930, is a silent crime melodrama that features a sickly child, a loving wife and a tortured husband driven to robbery in order provide for his family. The scenario is hokey, undynamic, and bathetic, the pacing extremely slow for a 65 minute picture. A kindly policeman corners the miscreant in his apartment where we are stuck for half of the picture's running time. Intimations of future genius are apparent, but this is lesser Ozu.
Frank Perry's Ladybug Ladybug is nuclear war drama that opened after the Kennedy assassination in 1963. A rural elementary school in Pennsylvania sends its charges home under the threat of annihilation. The film gauges the various reactions as the teachers and students face the prospect of impending doom. Nancy Marchand and Estelle Parsons have their moments, but Perry's juvenile cast is shaky. The film captures the dread and paranoia of the Cold War era, but I found it to be a painfully earnest and thin anti-nuke screed.
The Best of Gene Hackman
Oh, Canada
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Richard Gere |
The Barkleys of Broadway
I wanted to like The Barkleys of Broadway, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers' swan song as a dancing duo and their only film together in color, but could not. MGM and Arthur Freed had coaxed Astaire out of his first retirement in 1948 after a broken ankle forced Gene Kelly to withdraw from Easter Parade. That film was a sizable hit and MGM wanted to reunite the film's stars, Astaire and Judy Garland, with director Charles Walters for a follow-up. Garland was subsequently suspended from the production by Freed for reasons that have been well documented. The studio sought out Ginger Rogers whose career was in decline.
Even with Garland, I doubt The Barkleys of Broadway would have amounted to much. The script, by Betty Comden and Adolph Green with an assist from an uncredited Sydney Sheldon, is irritatingly thin. The Barkleys are a married musical comedy duo with a string of Broadway successes behind them in collaboration with a songwriting friend played by Oscar Levant. However, Rogers' character yearns to be taken seriously as an actress and ends up appearing as the young Sarah Bernhardt in a play by a handsome French playwright (Jacques François). Likewise, Astaire is ostensibly tempted by an young ingenue played by Gale Robbins. Billie Burke is also on hand in her go to part, a ditzy heiress.
Rogers was a gifted comedian and the plot suits her better than it does Astaire. However, no one wants to see these two bicker and the scenes of Rogers playing Bernhardt made my eyes and ears bleed. Levant is given the best one-liners, but, inexplicably, is also given two musical numbers. I enjoyed watching him attack Khachaturian's Sabre Dance for a minute or so, but I was appalled as Levant and an orchestra later launched into a Tchaikovsky piano concerto and went to the kitchen for a beer. Even the numbers between the star duo are below their august standard. I did like the reprise of "They Can't Take That Away From Me", originally sung by Astaire in 1937's Shall We Dance and the shared tap dance. Not so much Fred's number with a chorus of dancing shoes. Such gimmicky special-effect dance numbers (as in Anchors Aweigh and Royal Wedding) were a bane of the post-war era. The nadir is "My One and Only Highland fling", a Scottish number so cutesy that I took it as a slur on ye bonny land.
As for Charles Walters, while he is not a schlockmeister, he is a conveyor of corn. However, The Barkleys of Broadway lacks the story-book pastel beauty of his best films such as Easter Parade or Lili. I would even call important elements of the flick, especially the production design and Irene's dresses, to be strikingly ugly. The Barkleys of Broadway was a moderate hit, but not enough of one to reunite Astaire and Rogers for future pictures. Perhaps they knew when to stop. Their combined talents were certainly more suited to the elegant, black and white, 1.33:1 1930s rather than the garish widescreen, Technicolor extravaganzas of the 1950s.
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OK, not all of this film is ugly |
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Fred and sister Adele Astaire, 1906 |
Emilia Perez
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Zoe Saldaña |
Audiard has written a suitably tragic ending to his film, but does not possess the romantic or expressionistic style that would be suited to his material. His is a realistic approach that fails to match the attempted ambience whether portraying musical numbers or violence. The picture is flat and non-affective whether we are watching half-assed tributes to Busby Berkely or the guignol of severed fingers. The "Mrs. Doubtfire" aspect of the plot's domestic scenes, which should seem creepier, register inappropriately because Audiard is set upon making Emilia a tragic heroine. Audiard refuses to view Emilia with much ambivalence and she never becomes an interesting character. She goes from troubled kingpin to reform minded saint as soon as her testicles are excised. Audiard is willing to absolve his heroine of her past sins, but I cannot shake the bad faith of his conception.
Sly Lives!
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Sly Stone aka Sylvester Stewart |
Indeed, Questlove integrates his talking heads superbly into the flow of his narrative. Sly Lives! never once feels academic or dry. The film deftly illustrates how, through sampling, Sly's rhythms helped underpin the growth of hip-hop. The sequences in which Jimmy Jam and Q-Tip display how they integrated samples of Sly's music into records by, respectively, Janet Jackson and A Tribe Called Quest are a perfect summation of how his music became a bequest to future generations. No documentary on Sly can avoid the role drugs played in his decline and Sly Lives! maintains a strong notion of the difference between recording his excesses and falling into a tabloid mode. That said, the film skirts some of the the unhealthy internal dynamics that caused the band to break up. Bass player Larry Graham's affairs with keyboardist Rose Stone, Sly's sister, and Sly's sister-in-law go unmentioned though they were a deciding factor in Graham's departure from the band. Some behind the scenes managerial wrangling also goes unreported. Still, I would recommend Sly Lives! to anyone with even the slightest interest in the man and his music. The film is currently streaming on Hulu.
Sick of Myself
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Kristine Kujath Thorp |
Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In
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Raymond Lam |
Book Review: Josh Brolin's memoir From Under the Truck
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Josh Brolin |
Storm Fear
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Cornel Wilde and Jean Wallace |
A Woman of Affairs
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John Gilbert and Greta Garbo with Dorothy Sebastian in between |
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Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Garbo |
Nosferatu
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Lily-Rose Depp, foregrounded. |
This project is a lifelong dream of the writer and director, but, in a misguided attempt to modernize the material, I feel he has over thought the project. Eggers foregrounds Mina Harker as the locus of the story. Here she is renamed Ellen and is played by Lily Rose-Depp. Indeed, all the characters are essentially the same as in Stoker's story, but are renamed for this umpteenth version for no apparent reason (it can't be a copyright issue by now). In the film's prelude, Eggers shows Ellen getting a foreshadowing of the menacing vampire years before the main action of the film. He posits Ellen as a Cassandra whose warnings are largely ignored by the men around her. In contrast, Nosferatu is the worst type of patriarchal male, solely bent on possessing and consuming others for his own power.
Now a feminist twist on Stoker's old chestnut is not neccesarily a bad idea, but such a film needs a firm and fierce Cassandra. Alas, Lily Rose-Depp is not up to the challenge. She is up to the physical demands of the role, but I was never convinced she was from the Victorian era in the film's deadening drawing room scenes. Winona Ryder is a good comparison in Coppola's much more successful Bram Stoker's Dracula. Nicholas Hoult, as Ellen's spouse, is over qualified for a role that requires him to dither and cower. He does those just fine. What strikes me is how the film's supporting characters all tend to recede in the background, even the ones inhabited by good actors. Part of this is because Eggers has foregrounded his lead female, but also this is due to the rote nature of the film. We have seen this show before many times. Even Simon McBurney's Renfield can't hold a candle to the bravura work Tom Waits did in the Coppola film. I did enjoy the continental flair of Willem Defoe in the von Helsing role and I liked the two twin girls. Twins are always spooky!
Bill Skarsgård is a fine monster, though he is swaddled in so much prosthetic padding it is hard to tell who is in there. His voice is heavily filtered and Eggers even has him throw away some lines in Dacian, a defunct Balkan language. That effect and, indeed, the whole movie seems academic rather than felt. The Nosferatu of this film is neither exciting nor sympathetic. I think you need a trace of humanity in your monster, even King Kong and Mothra, to help your audience buy into the mechanics of your plot. This Nosferatu is lovingly textured, but unyielding in its hermetic appeal.
Janet Planet
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Zoe Ziegler and Julianne Nicholson |
The Apprentice
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Jeremy Strong and Sebastian Stan |
Something Wicked This Way Comes
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Jonathan Pryce |
Book Review: Lawrence Tierney: Hollywood's Real-Life Tough Guy by Burt Kearns
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Lawrence Tierney |
Only the Animals
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Nadia Tereszkiewicz |
The Beast
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Léa Seydoux |
Bertrand Bonello's La Bête is made up of three variations of Henry James' novella "The Beast in the Jungle", a formal approach that dovetails nicely with Bonello's former career as a session pianist. The James tale features a male protagonist, John Marcher, who ruins his own life and that of his lady love through a lifelong fear that catastrophe is lurking for him like a beast of prey. The protagonist of Bonello's film, in three iterations, is named Gabrielle and is played by screen icon Léa Seydoux. Her would be suitor is named Louis, who is played by George MacKay (1917, Captain Fantastic) in the three time periods covered by the film. In each strain of the film, the ending is tragic.
The three time frames captured by the film allow for variations in story, production design, and locale, but the theme remains pretty much the same. One part is set in the Belle Époque Paris of 1910. In this section, Gabrielle is a married pianist living a complacent existence hinted at by her husband's business, manufacturing baby dolls. Gabrielle is tempted by English expatriate Louis who is privy to her secret fear. This story line is juxtaposed with one set in Paris in 2044. An unexplained plague has decimated the populace. Those who survive wander the streets with protective masks. AI and robotics dominate the landscape. Gabrielle is undergoing a sinister seeming "purification" treatment recommended by her AI medical pooh-bahs. A very different kind of doll is available for humans, Gabrielle's robot is embodied beautifully by Guslagie Malanda (Saint Omer) . Gabrielle meets Louis at a bar that morphs into different periods. She pines for him, but has difficulty tracking him down.
At La Bête's midpoint, Bonello wraps up the 1910 story and sends this version of Gabrielle and Louis to a watery grave. He introduces a story line set in 2014 Los Angeles. There, Gabrielle is a struggling model/actress who is house sitting for a wealthy client. Louis is a menacing incel type who ends up stalking Gabrielle. One of the few off notes of the film for me was MacKay in the 2014 section. He nails his character's cynicism, but seems overly hale for an incel. Otherwise, he is quite good trading je t'aimes in French to the 1910 Gabrielle or apparating in the future in a Pierre Cardin Beatle suit. Even in a dud like Laurent, Bonello has been masterful in exploiting his costume and production designers, coiffeuse, and sound mixers. The technical aspects of La Bête are all top notch. The floral displays and Ms. Seydoux's hairstyles are sublime. The outfits for her also contribute to the film's mise-en-scene in intriguing ways. When Gabrielle invites Louis to her husband's doll factory for a tryst, her red ensemble incinerates the screen with repressed longing before the muted blue and white set literally explodes in flames due to the Paris flood of 1910.
The only other brickbat I could hurl at the film concerns a scene where a forbidding pigeon attacks Gabrielle. The ability to film action scenes does not fit with the Gallic temperament. Otherwise, this is Bonello's best film thus far and one of the best of the past year. Bonello, not surprisingly, excels in his use of music. Patsy Cline's "You Belong to Me" is used for ironic effect as Gabrielle is stalked and Roy Orbison's "Evergreen" is a beautifully appropriate hymn to eternal love. The film, ultimately, belongs to Seydoux. She is onscreen for nearly all of this 145 minute film and handles the subtle modification of the various Gabrielles like the master technician she is. The actor of her generation? Peut-etre.
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