tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-41787673752663954812024-03-04T04:15:19.726-06:00Netflix Instant Play Picks of the MomentA guide to the best movies, TV, and Netflix series and specials on Instant Play.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.comBlogger76125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-46111392254021148642015-02-06T09:53:00.003-06:002015-02-06T10:38:26.907-06:00Bronson (2008)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I tend to see this site as an opportunity to make recommendations—better yet, to offer capsule "appreciations." <i><a href="https://www.netflix.com/WiMovie/70113944?trkid=200250783" target="_blank">Bronson</a></i> is almost the exception. It had been sitting in my Instant Play Queue for so long that I'd forgotten why I'd put it there; my son referred to it vaguely as a movie about a boxer. Well, there I was alone with the TV, and as so often happens when we two have the room to ourselves, I take a little risk.<br />
<br />
Ahem. Calling <i>Bronson</i> "a little risk" is like calling King Kong a big monkey. I had even forgotten it's a Nicolas Winding Refn movie (the mesmerizing <i>Valhalla Rising </i>and the hate-it-or-love-it <i>Drive</i>, not to mention the recent <i>Only God Forgives</i>, which was more hated than loved—except by me); but he was nice enough to get his name up front, so I could steel myself. And for some reason I'd neglected to register even its lead, Tom Hardy, so good in <i>Inception </i>and as Bane in <i>The Dark Knight Rises—</i>and fer Pete's sake, he's the new Mad Max! So the blows started raining down on me pretty quickly.<br />
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And boy, they just don't let up. Hardy is phenomenal, as fluid and scary as De Niro in his Travis Bickle/Rupert Pupkin days. I won't say much more; it is once of those performances you really do have to see to believe. And Refn is not just daring but sure-footed, even fleet. <i>Bronson </i>seems at first to have nothing in common with his last few pictures—until you settle into its<i> Clockwork Orange </i>heart, in which music and frantic movement couple in startling ugliness with precise framing and graceful tracking. It's "beautiful" to watch, if the poem's right and beauty is truth, truth beauty. Because this true story is unremittingly ugly (when it isn't being funny in a lethal-slapstick kind of way), its lead less motivated than Jake LaMotta, its path strewn with senseless violence and energy expended on building an abyss.<br />
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So no, I can't smile and tell you to enjoy. But I couldn't take my eyes off it (despite my streaming cutting off too many times to tell*), and I want to see it again. Just be warned: pick any random half-dozen assortment of dark and dank adjectives, and you can pin them on <i>Bronson </i>as easily as a tail on a donkey, <i>sans </i>blindfold. So I guess you've been sort of encouraged, and warned.<br />
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*And who should we blame? Netflix? Comcast? When oh when will the internet be a public utility?Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-72001318154888456022015-01-22T12:19:00.002-06:002015-01-22T12:19:53.060-06:00The Croods (2013)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Yes, <a href="http://www.netflix.com/WiMovie/70143241?trkid=13462103" target="_blank"><i>The Croods</i></a> was nominated for Oscars and Golden Globes, but I have the feeling it slipped out of sight a bit too quickly. I watched it with other adults, and needed no kid-approval to encourage us to laugh out loud. Fast, funny, smart, great-looking, wonderfully voice-acted—<i>The Croods</i> fits comfortably between the solid child-oriented Pixars and winking <i>Shrek </i>after-comers. And it's no surprise that Nicholas Cage is an amazing voice actor—let alone Emma Stone, Ryan Reynolds, Catherine Keenr, the great Cloris Leachman—and what a treat: <a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0241173/?ref_=tt_cl_t6" target="_blank">Clark Duke</a>, who fared so well in the last season of <i>The Office</i>—to my taste, in no small part because he looks so much like a <a href="http://media.twirlit.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/roger-ebert-young.png" target="_blank">young Roger Ebert</a>. <br />
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The best thing about <i>The Croods </i>is its dedication to the pace of Tex Avery's work for MGM. Like <i>The Incredibles</i>, it trusts our eyes to keep up, and rewards us—both visually and in its many throwaway verbal gags—for doing so. It's a movie I've seen only once, but as soon as it was over I knew I wanted to see it again. "Good boy, Douglas!"Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-37759264586661968632014-04-01T13:14:00.002-05:002014-04-01T13:14:23.884-05:00Cutie and the Boxer (2013)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhbpXQeDClsZ_hKYnjlN-Rn1KgzPu0h66Gq2eiMyGI67Rt-yUbN8NBBxls3feL9XPjMHw1qAndiZeI5le838PgSbytIxzfqp7Q2AeVPGPa1bQzfJhbrIw4oQZU4C-mWdTPRiILcroTE_uhc/s1600/cutie-and-the-boxer-documentary.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhbpXQeDClsZ_hKYnjlN-Rn1KgzPu0h66Gq2eiMyGI67Rt-yUbN8NBBxls3feL9XPjMHw1qAndiZeI5le838PgSbytIxzfqp7Q2AeVPGPa1bQzfJhbrIw4oQZU4C-mWdTPRiILcroTE_uhc/s1600/cutie-and-the-boxer-documentary.jpg" height="215" width="400" /></a></div>
<a href="http://www.netflix.com/WiMovie/Cutie_and_the_Boxer/70267830?trkid=13462103" target="_blank">Cutie and the Boxer</a> is a bittersweet examination of the artist's life: quirky and determined, with a sad backstory and an uncertain future. But the show goes on, the Boxer still treks his way halfway around the world, from NYC to his home country, Japan, just to make a couple thousand dollars, an old man hauling sunsplash canvasses of boxing-glove paint-flowers and wacky fantasy choppers—while his wife, a real Cutie in many ways, turns her bulgy-charming autobiographical comic-book drawings into wild wallpaper that surrounds her beginning to end, from her past to the anxious future.<br />
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It's quite a situation for these two, avant-garde holdovers from the heyday of power Pop Art, still plugging away. Ushio is aptly the Boxer—"Bullie" in his wife's drawings—who dons paint-soaked spongy gloves and jabs his way across the canvas. Noriko has transformed their life together into an ongoing, lifelong graphic novel, in which her surrogate, Cutie, tries mightily with Ushio/Bullie to be, as Noriko puts it, "two flowers in one pot." It is sometimes almost embarrassing to watch; I feel I'm intruding, their relationship is so intimate—and intimately bound with their troubled past, the Boxer lost in alcoholism, Cutie trying to be both a mother and an artist, both of them cramped in a small space—even their grown son, also an artist, a bit trapped, his own drinking problem stumbling around the little apartment with them.<br />
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But in the end, as much as your heart aches, a great triumph emerges: They continue, they still do art, as old and tired as they can get, groaning with the effort to turn their passion into a few dollars, just enough to pay the rent and have something tasty to eat and keep working—and in the process grow young again, their eyes sparkling. The film has the sad air of a fruitless endeavor, but one that revels in the opportunity to try anyway, for love—and, as silly as it sounds (and sorry for you if it feels that way), art.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-6578357184312319382014-03-26T16:46:00.000-05:002014-03-27T12:09:45.581-05:00Super Troopers<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Generally, if you want to kill a movie, pass it through the Basic Cable Heavy Rotation machine a few times. Just ask <i>The Shawshank Redemption</i>, <i>Cast Away</i>, or <i>The Lord of the Rings</i>. And while TNT may be movie hit man #1, Comedy Central also is pretty good at wearing a film down to the nub. Fortunately, perhaps because of its solid R-ratedness, <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/60022689?strkid=1507232969_0_0&trkid=222336&movieid=60022689" target="_blank">Super Troopers</a> has survived every effort to
erode the value of a movie in which a traffic stop punctuated by meows
counts as an iconic moment in cinema history.<br />
<br />
<i>Super Troopers </i>was
the second feature film of Broken Lizard, a
comedy-troupe-turned-production-team that went on to produce, for better
or worse, <i>Club Dread </i>and <i>Beerfest</i>. I'm not here to defend those pictures (although they are defensible, more or less) but to assure the uninitiated that <i>Super Troopers </i>is an amiable sorta-cop, sorta-buddy movie that feels like a really good version of pre-<i>Animal House </i>'70s
comedies—with an amiably ironic wink at the need for plot and
coherence. That's because the movie works like sketch comedy, and it
works most of the time. I'm not going to lay out a string of memorable
moments—I want to, but I'd rather you find them yourself—however, I have the
distinct feeling that, even if the goofy cruelty of <i>Reno 911! </i>or the fearless foolishness of <i>Pineapple Express </i>isn't paying homage to <i>Super Troopers</i>, they should.<br />
<br />
If
you decide to watch it, and you begin to think, "This isn't funny, it's
just stupid," please remember: "These boys get that syrup in 'em, they
get all antsy in their pantsy." Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-49293140029653704842014-03-10T12:15:00.005-05:002014-03-10T13:02:45.021-05:00Cropsey (2009)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I'm not sure whether <i><a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Cropsey/70117040?trkid=13462103" target="_blank">Cropsey</a> </i>is entirely successful as a documentary—but as an evocation of some of the most striking features of post-<i>Blair Witch Project </i>horror, it manages to settle into one's consciousness like <i>X-Files </i>Black Oil. That's not to say that its basic "documentary" premise isn't compelling: Staten Island filmmakers/residents explore an urban legend from their childhood involving accounts of child disappearances and the potential link to a local home for developmentally disabled children. The disappearances occurred, the hospital was a snakepit—Geraldo Rivera earned his place in TV journalism history by exposing it back in the early 1970s—and an appropriately creepy suspect was apprehended and convicted; and the film does a good job of exploring the uneasy intersection between the anxious desire to uncover mysteries and the flights of imagination needed to try.<br />
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However, what stays with me most are the ghostly, straight-to-tape visuals (Rivera's foremost, his cameraman's bright lights smearing across the darkened frame to catch glimpses of the hospital's miserable inmates cowering under lavatory sinks, huddled in corners) and the overall mood of a dream remembered—as both dream and memory wander, circle closer, then end in uncertainty. Again, while the film explores an idea—the limits of understanding—it does so by evoking the shaky-cam grainy aesthetic of "found-footage" horror films. I'm not sure if the filmmakers deliver an entirely ethical film, but it's invaluable as a confrontation with our desire to see horror at odds with our dread of feeling terror. The former entertains, in a sudden-drop-dizzy kind of way, but the latter—ah, that's <b><a href="http://www.bartleby.com/24/2/" target="_blank">Edmund Burke</a></b> territory, the most sublime feeling, the one that tosses us back a few dozen millennia and lets us peer into the cave where we're not the only ones hiding in the corner: Something's in there with us. And it's Something that we may have made, but it lives on its own now, and little movies like <i>Cropsey </i>swing the light bar and give us a glimpse of what it might be.<br />
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It is with some hesitation that I provide a link to Geraldo Rivera's 1972 <i>Eyewitness News</i> piece: <b><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dbiYJkiX-Dg" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dbiYJkiX-Dg</a></b>Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-70330061875014758172013-09-26T10:22:00.001-05:002014-01-22T10:30:32.850-06:00The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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It's been more than a decade, at least, since I've seen <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/The_Little_Girl_Who_Lives_Down_the_Lane/70039225?trkid=13462287" target="_blank"><i>The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane</i></a> (1976)—but, from what I do recall, it's the kind of movie best recommended from a position of uncertainty and in dim recollection. I'm fond of noting the dreamlike quality of many films—of even the act of movie-watching itself—but that may well be a flaw on my part, too willing as I am to fall in love with any bright thing that catches my eye, no matter how dimly.<br />
<br />
But this movie is perfectly suited to the oneiric trance-state: I'm certain that even as you watch it, as it lies right there brand-new on the surface of your eyeballs, it will fall into dreams. Jodie Foster is <i>Taxi Driver</i>-young, but already older than you'd think—or maybe like. And Martin Sheen is in that first surprising period of his career when you're never quite sure what he might do next. The two of them are Dreamers, and this movie is suited to their nodding heads—and your own, if you're willing to peer into the fuzzy spaces this movie jams everyone into, the clammy situations—pedophilia, Oedipal glee, blank loneliness, false magic, all kinds of desperate secrecy and everyday weirdness—that the '70s perfected. <i>The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane</i> was released a year before <i>Eraserhead</i>; David Lynch's picture, though, was four years in the making; he must've exhaled some strange juju across the middle of that decade to encourage all kinds of dank blossoms to bloom, including this one. <br />
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NOTE: This title is no longer available on Instant Play; disc only. Curses! Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-4124706161945367892013-09-05T10:11:00.001-05:002013-09-05T10:11:10.730-05:00Happy-Go-Lucky<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I can't decide whether Mike Leigh's <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Happy-Go-Lucky/70105126?trkid=13573466" target="_blank"><i>Happy-Go-Lucky</i></a> is assertively optimistic or aggressively pessimistic—and I could certainly surrender and write that it's both, and not be dismissed too quickly. After all, while those who set themselves against happy-go-lucky "Poppy" (Sally Hawkins in total immersion mode) are damaged at the least and pure creeps at the worst, they do not necessarily prevail: She continues to be herself, and continues to remold the world as a good place. On the other hand, her attempts to do so often seem painfully naive. In particular, the driving instructor she must deal with because her bike had been stolen is a dangerous lunatic—and not a comic one, not a Danny McBride galoot you can't find yourself able to hate, despite his self-absorbed brutishness. No, Poppy is saddled with a deeply disturbed man (played by the ever-tightly-wound Eddie Marsan, one of the many gems in the British character actor crown). But: She takes to him, she plugs away, she insists that she can be happy—and that he can, too.<br />
<br />
I'll leave this inkblot of a movie up to you. If I must commit to some position, I'd offer that it may be a movie that wants you to reject Poppy's worldview—and then reveals exactly the world you're left with. Whether she's a fool or not, Poppy's paradise seems better than the hell she so doggedly attempts to ignore. Whether she can survive her handmade heaven is another matter.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-6104388717085357952013-08-28T16:38:00.000-05:002013-08-30T12:45:11.011-05:00Safety Not Guaranteed (2012)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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There's a little joke in <i>Safety Not Guaranteed </i>(or it's one I'm imagining) that anyone who's into "hip" network sitcoms and also was into animation in its 1990s-TV heyday might get: The female lead is named "Darius," and to top it off she's played by Aubrey Plaza, who in <i>Parks and Recreation</i> over the past few years has been honing her almost-Goth-but-mostly-bored post-millennial version of the kind of post-adolescent scorn we know so well from <i>Ghost World</i>—and (the point of the little joke) from <i>Daria</i>, the <i>Beavis and Butt-Head </i>MTV spinoff in the late '90s that featured an Aubrey-Plaza-like dark-haired, monotone-voiced young woman who's long been Over It. What "it," you might ask? Well, like Brando's rebel in <i>The Wild Ones</i>, whatever you got.*<br />
<br />
Here, she's ready to have nothing to do with a Silly Season news story that may not be there at all, about a classified ad from someone seeking a time-travel companion who "must bring your own weapons." Let me pause and note that the past decade has seen what may be the Great Time-Travel Movie Renaissance—and not just big-budget near-hits and definite-misses like <i>Hot Tub Time Machine</i> and <i>The Lake House</i>; just scout around, and there's <i>Time Crimes,</i> the ineffable <i>Donnie Darko</i>, and the big-budget, clever-plus-morose <i>Looper</i>—not to mention the mysterious and dense king of the indie time-travel pics, <i>Primer</i>. Even Woody Allen has fun with time-travel as regressive escape in <i>Midnight in Paris</i>. <i>Safety Not Guaranteed </i>actually has more in common with Allen's picture than the others, in that the movie is mostly about states of mind and relationships than it is the usual (and, when done correctly, compelling) paradoxes of tinkering with time.<br />
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The tone of the movie is pure indie-quirky, with equal measures world-weary irony and exasperated risk-taking. Again, let me stress that the fun of the usual time-travel movie is nicely subsumed here into a consideration of the personalities who would indulge in it—and of those who find themselves attracted to such indulgence. Above all, the ongoing skepticism of the reporter and accompanying interns allows the movie its punchline: Is it real? Will someone travel in time? No spoilers here, just a reassurance that things get clear enough at the end to justify Darius' growing conviction that the existence of time travel is not as important as the decision to believe in it.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEdb-Fr5ING4fns5BODMuiSXkzpyLQ2qFMkr5Le9F1U0Je-3hiFnZDbX2ARdW51E-nswyR68IcMWFoslD5AKttGL3VUgz8MhW_oABvqbQ1DTSR623ZoIXr_YDfM6ldE0KuXb0bDAQalYh2/s1600/safety+not+guaranteed.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="167" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEdb-Fr5ING4fns5BODMuiSXkzpyLQ2qFMkr5Le9F1U0Je-3hiFnZDbX2ARdW51E-nswyR68IcMWFoslD5AKttGL3VUgz8MhW_oABvqbQ1DTSR623ZoIXr_YDfM6ldE0KuXb0bDAQalYh2/s400/safety+not+guaranteed.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
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*And just to lean on the cute-hip-o-meter a little more, Plaza's co-star is Jake Johnson from <i>The New Girl</i>, a show that may be the epitome of postmodern screwball, and I mean that as a big fan.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-74528234889563112062012-06-19T23:03:00.002-05:002012-06-19T23:03:57.625-05:00TRAVELLER (1997)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjDlGan6yEzy5W7vAv8mggPEDciyXkmlWkxOFWfIo8dK7nATNr_dRVbBGGmkBHkrKqn2_r390Quk9zXRq2nQDwux-wYb4XZf7MZ4EwBNLCeLNvNDuD-yR64MhLr2mayJhaKHS1xGIrmRWLt/s1600/Traveller_15865_Medium.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="260" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjDlGan6yEzy5W7vAv8mggPEDciyXkmlWkxOFWfIo8dK7nATNr_dRVbBGGmkBHkrKqn2_r390Quk9zXRq2nQDwux-wYb4XZf7MZ4EwBNLCeLNvNDuD-yR64MhLr2mayJhaKHS1xGIrmRWLt/s400/Traveller_15865_Medium.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
<a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Traveller/60001766?trkid=4375098" target="_blank">Traveller</a> is one of those movies you like to keep handy so you can pull it out as a gift. Bill Paxton wanted this one made, and he (along with Mark Wahlberg, among others) does a fine job of evoking Irish "gypsy" culture in the U.S. While over the past decade or so we've caught up with the Travellers—Brad Pitt is hilarious in <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Snatch/60003388?trkid=2361637" target="_blank">Snatch</a> as a Traveller with an accent so impenetrable that not even his fellow Britishers understand him; and I believe there's a reality show about them; but this one has all the heart and rough honesty you need. It reminds me of <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Trucker/70119869?trkid=2361637" target="_blank">Trucker</a>—which I have written about on this blog <a href="http://netflixinstantplaypicks.blogspot.com/2010/06/trucker-2008.html" target="_blank">(HERE)</a>—in its intimacy, but the con-game plot(s) adds more than domestic issues (which it also covers).<br />
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Most online commenters note how under-appreciated <i>Traveller</i> is; well, now's your chance to join the appreciators. At the least, afterwards you'll think twice when someone pulls up and offers to tar your roof at a bargain price.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-4731511877284628642012-06-13T21:40:00.001-05:002012-06-13T22:35:40.839-05:00MAD DOG AND GLORY (1993)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjAYfuBLDdaQZoQaZ5y1KlcP3VkHYKrHJkIYeI7XJOhJsY-Zosc4BFHUvw1PKdk_dgta8kWsVpn7JuG9cSAOPyqKnJIps3bMWeX-l0954LekNBd-yybD4l0rQbnvcvTveh7QEIS2R30Xg_F/s1600/mad+dog+glory.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="221" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjAYfuBLDdaQZoQaZ5y1KlcP3VkHYKrHJkIYeI7XJOhJsY-Zosc4BFHUvw1PKdk_dgta8kWsVpn7JuG9cSAOPyqKnJIps3bMWeX-l0954LekNBd-yybD4l0rQbnvcvTveh7QEIS2R30Xg_F/s400/mad+dog+glory.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
<a href="http://bit.ly/LF5Saw" target="_blank">Mad Dog and Glory</a> is one that I've returned to more than a few times. It's a movie where everything—and everyone—comes together so well that each new viewing just makes me appreciate it more. John McNaughton—and how I wish he could have the career he deserves—finds just the right rhythm to sustain Richard (<i>The Color of Money</i>/<i>Clockers</i>/<i>The Wire</i>) Price's funny, hard-boiled screenplay. And man, the performances: Uma Thurman does more with her proud, scared Glory than Tarantino ever allowed in the endless hours and hours of <i>Kill Bill</i>s; Bill Murray lets everybody know just how charismatic he can be, his Frank Milo a sad and lonely bar of lead to the back of the head; Richard Caruso makes me yearn for that early-'90s moment when he was allowed to escape TV; and dependable Mike Starr gives one of his greatest quirky-mug performances—he still makes me laugh when, after slugging it out with Caruso, he notes in passing to his boss, "That guy bites."<br />
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But this time around, I watched De Niro and saw one of his most nuanced performances, as good as his quiet work in <i>A Bronx Tale</i> (released in the same year!). As Mad Dog, though, he gives himself more than a quiet man but, with the help of Price's remarkable script, a complicated one, part artist, part almost-loser, someone who wants to be somewhere else, as he puts it—and most of all a man waiting to grow up, and in the process getting more than a little help from Uma.<br />
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Again, I guess I've seen this one a half-dozen times or so over the years, in bits and pieces on TV; but this time around I seemed to re-discover it, and reminded myself how deeply satisfying an entertainment a well-made movie can be.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-61448289949454516582012-05-27T12:31:00.003-05:002013-09-13T09:08:17.517-05:00KILLER ELITE (2011)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgIB3cgCBm3HDa9NXXnfL-_paeV4PBeI1oq_cy1PJ1CbyTMFvPvIqkL8GfoqFQQ7O-ZzPSoUwiv6jhCqfXE-gCiUhQ4fdNi7YaTqowW3TTRc3cgGBrHLDkhgVSPX3MiP4V241fnGfJeDhF/s1600/killer-elite-22.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgIB3cgCBm3HDa9NXXnfL-_paeV4PBeI1oq_cy1PJ1CbyTMFvPvIqkL8GfoqFQQ7O-ZzPSoUwiv6jhCqfXE-gCiUhQ4fdNi7YaTqowW3TTRc3cgGBrHLDkhgVSPX3MiP4V241fnGfJeDhF/s400/killer-elite-22.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
<a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Killer_Elite/70202135?trkid=3990682" target="_blank"><b><u><i>Killer Elite</i></u></b></a> has little—well, just about nothing—in common with Sam Peckinpah's 1975 movie of the same name (plus a "the"). Except for some important elements:<br />
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The Machismo-meter. The 1975 movie had James Caan and Robert Duvall. This one has Jason ("When-Will-Someone-Realize-I-Should-Play-Doc-Savage?") Statham, Clive Owen and Robert De Niro. All of them get to have actual characters to work with—plus lots and lots of steely resolve and laser-precise rage. There is almost something French—Jean Gabin or Reno-styled—about their cool under fire. Genuine smoking pleasure.<br />
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The pace: The new one feels like a great '70s movie, willing to take its time—while never stopping, standing still, or sleeping on the job. Things just move along, but without haste. Everything is watched carefully and fully.<br />
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The plot: At once simple and subtle. You don't need to pay attention all the time to every nuance of politics, personal vendetta, and, above all, professional pride; but when you do, you're rewarded with many little touches, both almost-tender and calmly brutal.<br />
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Like the recent <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Drive/70189289?trkid=2361637" target="_blank"><B><U><I>Drive</B></U></I></a> (also on Instant Play; I'll get to it soon), <i>Killer Elite</i>—although it has more plot—is mostly good in its mood, its consistent dedication to entering the Relatively Intelligent American Action Movie canon.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-74428333413884642372012-05-19T21:43:00.001-05:002012-05-19T21:43:10.523-05:00I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK (2006)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2e0xvr8iTRteeL8V6FhRV8yLw5oDRsbeW6p7nehtijhC7jTMmNW4eJ1zrGiPxCZqZ_jhQ0sRZkxu-K6VAWwqnFEhDDp6CgQpp9GMq89UCE6FQFrzR8sYVr75TojxAI1G59iEsTRdutN5B/s1600/im+a+cyborg+poster.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2e0xvr8iTRteeL8V6FhRV8yLw5oDRsbeW6p7nehtijhC7jTMmNW4eJ1zrGiPxCZqZ_jhQ0sRZkxu-K6VAWwqnFEhDDp6CgQpp9GMq89UCE6FQFrzR8sYVr75TojxAI1G59iEsTRdutN5B/s320/im+a+cyborg+poster.jpg" width="224" /></a></div>
I hesitate a little to recommend a movie like <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/I_m_a_Cyborg_but_That_s_Ok/70201179?trkid=4429076" target="_blank">I'm a Cyborg, But That's OK</a>—but I shouldn't. It is so convinced of the rightness of its tone—tones, actually, from comic to psychotic, sentimental to surreal—and so consistent in its dedication to a kind of giddy expressionism (as the unbalanced inner lives of its characters become the outside of the movie—while that imbalance rights itself and becomes normal) that I surrendered to its excesses and stayed with it all the way. <br />
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The director, Chan-wook Park, is no stranger to strangeness. He's directed a number of extreme movies—including a segment of, fittingly enough, <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Three_..._Extremes/70038945?trkid=2361637" target="_blank">Three ... Extremes</a> (2005)—but is best known for the delirious <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Oldboy/70024111?trkid=2361637" target="_blank">Oldboy</a> (2003). The first of his movies I saw was <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Joint_Security_Area/60023559?trkid=2361637" target="_blank">JSA/Joint Security Area</a> (2000; unfortunately, not on Instant Play), a multi-layered examination of friendship and war. (The Bosnian film <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/No_Man_s_Land/60022245?trkid=2361637" target="_blank">No Man's Land</a> released a year later comes close to matching <i>JSA</i>'s ability to mix the political with the personal.)<br />
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But Back to <i>I'm a Cyborg ...</i>. Like Park's other films, this one manages to make us feel deeply for its damaged, other-worldly characters without neglecting its skewed wit and the pure joy of making unforgettable images. It can get pretty brutal, but the movie is so vibrant and malleable that I just rode with it. Like other nuthouse films, it elicits our sympathies—but to feel that sympathy, we must be willing to suspend all kinds of disbelief and allow the movie to do whatever it wants—which it does with a vengeance.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-49677776619166000962012-05-18T10:08:00.001-05:002012-05-18T10:08:37.065-05:00Shallow Grave (1994)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEin7luqqtAtDBXP81MjYBYEVxz1lsIy8yGfsalnx19yUB5KOLOAThEbD00A73Y06Ndre0yVZsByOCnSabRihsRvTHO-o3YDNAC7JIkhsgOebF2fnt6CK2G5clciGG-4_DkmJHc5H67nnh09/s1600/Shallow_Grave.jpeg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="225" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEin7luqqtAtDBXP81MjYBYEVxz1lsIy8yGfsalnx19yUB5KOLOAThEbD00A73Y06Ndre0yVZsByOCnSabRihsRvTHO-o3YDNAC7JIkhsgOebF2fnt6CK2G5clciGG-4_DkmJHc5H67nnh09/s400/Shallow_Grave.jpeg" width="400" /></a></div>
I'm indulging myself here (and maybe pleasing you) because Danny Boyle's first feature film, <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/Movie/Shallow_Grave/70236019?trkid=2361637" target="_blank"><i>Shallow Grave</i></a>, is finally returning to Netflix June 12--but not on Instant Play. Still, despite this site's ray-zohn det-ra (as Nathan Arizona would put it), I couldn't resist. This is a real piece of work, in many senses of the phrase. Imagine a <i>Seinfeld</i> movie directed by post-<i>Frenzy</i> Hitchcock. It's that snarky and brutal, funny and surreal, clever and nasty. Put it on your Queue, and enjoy. Just don't get greedy.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-86891056737052406092012-04-10T22:20:00.003-05:002012-04-12T14:22:19.934-05:0013 Assassins (2010)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgorLGVSUEyniFVF-RxYQFNojrjKEPQzzzq1CiJxRudh19JrYGsOE6GQu0cSCIY_W59egTdFuBzGuMp5EZLuqOOI3f6tl1Ne5gdB8h-frzMYZQQ3rHIxGfdFje-nWJQ5ecnzdD3etEMkT4C/s1600/13Assassins8.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="165" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgorLGVSUEyniFVF-RxYQFNojrjKEPQzzzq1CiJxRudh19JrYGsOE6GQu0cSCIY_W59egTdFuBzGuMp5EZLuqOOI3f6tl1Ne5gdB8h-frzMYZQQ3rHIxGfdFje-nWJQ5ecnzdD3etEMkT4C/s400/13Assassins8.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>You have every right to be afraid of a Takashi Miike movie. He can be ferocious—as in, to name a very few, <i>Three ... Extremes</i>, <i>Gozu</i>, <i>Ichi the Killer</i>, and the infamous <i>Audition</i>. But <a href="http://bit.ly/IfME8d" target="_blank"><i>13 Assassins</i></a> feels more like Kurosawa, or any one of countless samurai pictures that ennobles defeat as only high-minded Japanese action pictures can.<br />
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After an almost leisurely set-up—leisurely for Miike, who along the way still provides some queasy dips and rough jolts to establish the depths of his evil protagonist, an honor-less tyrant who tortures and oppresses the innocent—the movie becomes a monumental, meticulously staged battle sequence—no, more a bloody ballet of strategy and stratagem, as his 13 assassins plow through a horde of henchmen through the streets of a village transformed into one big trap by the wily assassins—all of whom, <i>Seven Samurai/Magnificent Seven</i>-style, are introduced and established—but this time it's thirteen, each a separate personality, each tuned like a Stradivarius meant only for bashing over the heads of evildoers.<br />
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And while Roger Ebert's <a href="http://blogs.suntimes.com/ebert/2012/03/hollywoods_highway_to_hell.html" target="_blank">advance word</a> on <i>The Raid: Redemption</i> signals that new-school action is sheer spectacle, <i>13 Assassins</i> is devoted to more than nonstop mayhem. Don't get me wrong, though: the final third of the film is indeed an extended action set-piece, as the thirteen assassins do all they can to destroy the tyrant's men. But by the time the battle begins, we understand the players, the stakes, and the rules; and so the game itself—as bloody as it certainly gets—has weight and depth. Miike often plays with genre to uncork his splashy moral sensibility; this time, he too plays by the rules, and directs a precise, plotted melee of exceptional grace and satisfying melancholy. After all, it wouldn't be a classic Japanese action picture if, like Lao-tzu's Master (yes, I know he's Chinese, but bear with me), the hero does not "enter a battle gravely, / with sorrow and with great compassion, / as if he were attending a funeral." And while Miike's assassins infrequently show compassion as they flood the village with a crimson tide, they certainly find no "delight in the slaughter of men"—well, not <i>too</i> much.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-86155509494061290842012-04-10T15:49:00.001-05:002012-04-10T21:21:18.983-05:00The Dead Zone (1983)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj6RBCReDtumC2k-tMYmUCCtyhs4jvEoQz9qcEuqHKRWxgntIjKfmnmpK1WOCuIOPvtUhL_7lYMctnUhCqutqPxZH1JuR8rfvC2FdyuByYnxFK5c8p4ujLQus1caz7qssUeOOvaHzD2qcKO/s1600/DeadZone.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="221" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj6RBCReDtumC2k-tMYmUCCtyhs4jvEoQz9qcEuqHKRWxgntIjKfmnmpK1WOCuIOPvtUhL_7lYMctnUhCqutqPxZH1JuR8rfvC2FdyuByYnxFK5c8p4ujLQus1caz7qssUeOOvaHzD2qcKO/s400/DeadZone.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>The list of Stephen King novels, novellas, short stories, stray thoughts, and refrigerator notes that have been made into movies is long and almost as varied as the quality of the source material. In other words, for every decent King adaptation there's a terrible one—and for every terrible one there's a great one, just about. Of course, <i>The Shining</i> may stand at the top of the list—ironic, of course, given King's famous rejection of Kubrick's take on his novel. But a number of other fine films have crawled out of King's It/Id, from <i>Misery</i> to <i>The Shawshank Redemption</i>, from <i>Stand By Me</i> to <i>Christine</i>--and surprisingly the list goes on.<br />
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In my top five, if I had one, would be David Cronenberg's version of <a href="http://bit.ly/Hw1BX7" target="_blank"><i>The Dead Zone</i></a>. Released in the same year as <i>Videodrome</i>, <i>The Dead Zone</i> also benefited from its lead, Christopher Walken (while James Woods goes all the way in the media-nightmare <i>Videodrome</i>). Walken gives Johnny Smith a haunted look and shambling gait that reflects the tragic decline Smith suffers in the novel. I can remember reading the book and thinking of Frankenstein's creation, who learns what it means to be human and is ruined by the knowledge. Johnny also gets a long hard look—and while it contains light, sometimes it's harsh and unforgiving and more than a little insane. The book is a melancholy thing, and the movie shows us Johnny as a Thing, standing alone in the place where evil works its black magic in "the bleak midwinter," cold and true. Walken takes full advantage of Cronenberg's chilly vision, and lurches across the frame in exhausted wisdom. Sad, sad, sad.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-70388446201258514862012-01-21T12:47:00.000-06:002012-01-21T12:47:57.088-06:00Snake Eyes (1998)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjluE5yn7FTZ-l2pfwHczbA0Xtc2NlOtkhpvau2zfqqvyzDetomZL2EH5vMxZocWJHU7Bt5JHrXNI6ekifycUH00zbVzIFn37QIZpa30gLSeaEmL8APKv34b7G5wjQlR4nF55CaCGXY-N98/s1600/snakeeyes1.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="265" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjluE5yn7FTZ-l2pfwHczbA0Xtc2NlOtkhpvau2zfqqvyzDetomZL2EH5vMxZocWJHU7Bt5JHrXNI6ekifycUH00zbVzIFn37QIZpa30gLSeaEmL8APKv34b7G5wjQlR4nF55CaCGXY-N98/s400/snakeeyes1.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>It's easy to roll your eyes or shrug when it comes to, respectively, Nicholas Cage and Brian DePalma. I feel no need to point out their uneven, sometimes reckless careers, their stubborn unwillingness to behave, their bizarre turns as actor and director. But together in <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Snake_Eyes/16915411?trkid=4375097" target="_blank">Snake Eyes</a> something almost perfect happens--and sure it's reckless and bizarre, like the man said; but also (as each has managed before and since) so aggressive in knowing this that I grin and more than bear it. From the famous opening sequence--a continuous shot that could be a pretty good short-subject thriller on its own--to the determined use of space--that mazelike convention center buffeted by winds and bad guys--to Cage's own headlong rush into everything DePalma throws at him--including Gary Sinise, following up his krazy kidnapping kop in 1996's <i>Ransom</i> (where Sinise was able to withstand a ride on another madman's roller coaster, the always-caffeinated Mel Gibson*)--<i>Snake Eyes</i> conjures, one more time, the Cage/DePalma alternate universe of sight, sound, and Outer Limits emoting that means nothing except a little world made deliriously by two of the stalwarts of this kind of good craziness.<br />
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<hr />*And don't look to me if you want Mel-bashing; I'm with Robert Downey, Jr. on this; hug the cactus, people: <a href="http://youtu.be/-zI1V1yQ30U" target="_blank">http://youtu.be/-zI1V1yQ30U</a>Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-73782772857195801592012-01-13T11:08:00.002-06:002012-01-13T11:45:40.344-06:00The Thin Red Line (1998)<span id="goog_1088000878"></span><span id="goog_1088000879"></span><a href="http://www.blogger.com/"></a><br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhg1xaWNh9jyOVe2jwiu2T7-cwd8yfPXFSMFc8jtu_us0gl2mjkfDjNFCc6vJib2kobIY8cBFVR5t0KNmy3j1O0b_gjQAdSUzLinmEuPe3pQPvQciXP44WSOnHJDjCs96je0azscKPXw6RX/s1600/thin-red-line.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="167" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhg1xaWNh9jyOVe2jwiu2T7-cwd8yfPXFSMFc8jtu_us0gl2mjkfDjNFCc6vJib2kobIY8cBFVR5t0KNmy3j1O0b_gjQAdSUzLinmEuPe3pQPvQciXP44WSOnHJDjCs96je0azscKPXw6RX/s400/thin-red-line.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>As we head toward the Oscar nominations, I'm hoping Terence Malick's <a href="http://bit.ly/idHiSn">The Tree of Life</a> isn't overlooked. In some ways it is a "difficult" movie—shifting from the cosmic to the mundane with nary a violin crescendo to warn us, its narrative structure committed to the conceit that what we are seeing is all memory, personal as well as collective-unconsciously. For others, though, it's what Roger Ebert recently in a blog entry on the movie <i>Contact</i> referred to (with some affection) as "New Age woo-woo." I was knocked out by <i>The Tree of Life</i>, joining others who couldn't help comparing it to <i>2001</i>—another acid test of one's tolerance for High Woo-Woo.<br />
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Anyway, in case you're following the Oscars but not Malick's career, you might want to check out <span id="goog_1088000876"></span><span id="goog_1088000877"></span><a href="http://bit.ly/yYNfJC">The Thin Red Line</a>, Malick's 1998 film about, among many other things, the battle for Guadalcanal in the Pacific during WWII. The cast is extensive—including Nick Nolte, Sean Penn, George Clooney, Adrien Brody, James Caviezel, Woody Harrelson, John Cusack, Elias Koteas, John C. Reilly, John Travolta, and Tim Blake Nelson (whew!)—but to this he adds a larger cast, the same one he features in <i>The Tree of Life</i>: Nature herself, cloud and insect, ocean and leaf. This is a "war movie" (almost) in the same way that his current picture is a "family drama"—although <i>The Thin Red Line</i> does seem more grounded in recognizable combat film conventions, from chain-of-command infighting and sweeping battle scenes to G.I. Joes and their stories and hopes and fears. Still, it is almost three hours of meditation on war as much as it is war movie. But, as with all of his (few--five since 1973!) films, one's patience is rewarded. Like any "true" artist, he goes where he will; we follow if we choose, no matter to him.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-43018088093311625472012-01-06T14:28:00.000-06:002012-06-14T21:40:15.860-05:00True Grit (2010)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_1BWgvWrlvQEVte_XBq14fUthtE7gDApKN-TsaZoWphgOMu4I7cwFGzwxzF9o77oFImO5FQUe4-dkrKkJc35i3qhm32KJwOt1Dx9USxHE7v8c3dy-lHZLe55uWNj20zzK_KTDkP-2tozb/s1600/true-grit-review-4.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_1BWgvWrlvQEVte_XBq14fUthtE7gDApKN-TsaZoWphgOMu4I7cwFGzwxzF9o77oFImO5FQUe4-dkrKkJc35i3qhm32KJwOt1Dx9USxHE7v8c3dy-lHZLe55uWNj20zzK_KTDkP-2tozb/s400/true-grit-review-4.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
<strike><strike></strike></strike>Just passing along some good news: one of the best films of recent years, <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/True_Grit/70142543?trkid=2734329"><i>True Grit</i></a>, is on Instant Play. It's a beautiful movie--its landscapes not as dramatic as the 1969 version, but photographed so well, the characters and action framed in spaces that look nothing like "scenery." And it's maybe one of the Coen bros.' most morally complex films, in that the justice enacted is fraught with losses, and the plucky young heroine is forced to see each one, and learn to live with them. Besides, the narration is typically Coen-perfect, and Jeff Bridges rolls himself up into a ball bigger and messier than the Dude's. All in all, one of those rare occasions when a remake makes perfect sense.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-83279564267703884822012-01-05T10:20:00.000-06:002012-01-05T10:20:29.875-06:00Parents (1989)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6Kiqe1k3RZut23Q617tZ2jOtwx6zCZeOu4MN6WQpbtyYtbTL95v1ZCG9OoXHBlcOQJvpNwNIPE9P_fsYc_i3VSCNqfTT8nVl3VPzB5zTzOpramxVuNwapIg2FQjiryXRu3GqFz0vTY98d/s1600/parents.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em"><img border="0" height="178" width="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6Kiqe1k3RZut23Q617tZ2jOtwx6zCZeOu4MN6WQpbtyYtbTL95v1ZCG9OoXHBlcOQJvpNwNIPE9P_fsYc_i3VSCNqfTT8nVl3VPzB5zTzOpramxVuNwapIg2FQjiryXRu3GqFz0vTY98d/s320/parents.jpg" /></a></div><br />
I've decided to revive this site--and the strongest motivation is the return of this dark comedy. <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Parents/842429?trkid=4375101"><i>Parents</i></a> satirizes an easy target--1950s-style suburbia--but does so with an old-school "sick humor" attitude that is reminiscent of not only the '50s but the kind of humor that decade inspired--pure E.C. comics/<i>Mad</i> magazine "humor in a jugular vein." I'm not entirely happy with the climax, but 90% of this movie is as creepy, funny, lurid, and at times downright nightmarish as one could wish--if one harbors such dark wishes.<br />
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Again, it's good to be back--although maybe I've should've chosen a less unsavory movie to kick off the new year. Oh, well: Enjoy Randy Quaid at his skinny-tie (and waistline!) best, along with Mary Beth Hurt as perky as Barbara Billingsley with a cleaver (heh-heh-heh)--and Sandy Dennis, who doesn't even have to try to fit right into this kind of material.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-17075996134557421392011-05-24T08:41:00.003-05:002011-05-30T16:53:41.534-05:00Leaves of Grass (2009)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZwTzyQKFj4QtQH7DAGUQzmt0Y42ABqCyKqrl9knUX0X6rQwRe6WqcocLFMX_YrnevA6-5nxLjUfnxm9kINTQbGsoqNtqOVsbn-lofjsAkC9jz1d1cgFFO3M-FG5UqKKWvyY4Ia6FPjHfX/s1600/leaves-of-grass.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 264px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZwTzyQKFj4QtQH7DAGUQzmt0Y42ABqCyKqrl9knUX0X6rQwRe6WqcocLFMX_YrnevA6-5nxLjUfnxm9kINTQbGsoqNtqOVsbn-lofjsAkC9jz1d1cgFFO3M-FG5UqKKWvyY4Ia6FPjHfX/s400/leaves-of-grass.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610283914325964258" /></a>To call Tim Blake Nelson's <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Leaves_of_Grass/70117307?trkid=2361637#height2559"><i>Leaves of Grass</i></a> a "serio-comedy" touches only the surface of a seriously funny movie. It asks Big Questions from diametrically opposed positions--passionate/impulsive and rational/controlled--and accepts the merits of both sides, resulting in what might be a third view--and I won't bore you with my vague conclusions. Instead, let me point out one of the movie's great treats: two Edward Nortons, the actor playing twins--both geniuses, one a philosophy prof, the other a hydroponic pot-growing wizard. Their lives collide following the prof's self-imposed estrangement from his family--including Susan Sarandon doing what she does so well: playing crazy, just enough to keep her distance from the real world while understanding it all too well. His rocky (and that's putting it mildly) road home makes for what can only be described as a screwball tragedy--maybe.<br /><br />The writer-director behind this bifurcated plan is Tim Blake Nelson, a pitch-perfect character actor--as Delmar in <i>O Brother, Where Art Thou?</i>, delivering one of the great lines of the movies: "Them syreens did this to Pete. They loved him up and turned him into a horny toad"; and the enigmatically pleasant Gideon in <i>Minority Report</i>--among other welcome appearances. We even have the treat of his turn as Bolger, the pot-dealing twin's partner, drawing out his Oklahoma accent like a nice fishing-rod he'd like to show you--got it when he was a boy and it's still in good shape. Nelson is a gifted artist, and his direction matches the swerving tone of <i>Leaves of Grass</i> step by reckless step.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-17631410243165581702011-05-07T20:13:00.003-05:002011-05-07T21:32:59.357-05:00This Is England (2006)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjISigAhBWO_3Rn2At64O4l_e1F3bVuImkdbizM1YdZ0HNNGE1VtVgl2lJvyz3K97te-7p0rCliGe3b8IY_rRIAn_WXBwaPl8tSe63eLwFVBsy94ztScQK4f93U2V60MvkRnS5EAHlazeYt/s1600/this_is_england_4.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 261px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjISigAhBWO_3Rn2At64O4l_e1F3bVuImkdbizM1YdZ0HNNGE1VtVgl2lJvyz3K97te-7p0rCliGe3b8IY_rRIAn_WXBwaPl8tSe63eLwFVBsy94ztScQK4f93U2V60MvkRnS5EAHlazeYt/s400/this_is_england_4.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5604167544665709442" /></a>Who remembers the Falklands War? They're small islands off the coast of Argentina; both Argentina and the U.K. claimed them. The Argentinians occupied them in April 1982, and about two months later the conflict was over, with the U.K. maintaining control, more or less.<br /><br />The victory made Margaret Thatcher popular, but left some scars on both sides. The 2006 movie <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/This_Is_England/70061577?trkid=2361637#height1739"><i>This Is England</i></a> offers one boy's story--his father among the few hundred soldiers who died in the conflict, leaving the boy to navigate grief and adolescence while the punks and rude boys made way for the new skinheads who loved being white more than they did the saving sounds of <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHrECHho14U">Toots and Maytals</a> and turned every town into a <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1WhhSBgd3KI">Ghost Town</a>. The movie charts Shaun's sweet and sad, sometimes harrowing attempts to find his father in the New England that the hard 1980s built. <br /><br />Thomas Turgoose as Shaun is as natural an actor as you could hope for. His early good times with his new, older mates--still playing in the fields, giving Shaun a sense of home, young skins and their pretty girls all the brothers and sisters he needs--are an idyll he certainly deserves, as temporary as it may be.<br /><br />But an old friend of Shaun's new circle returns from prison, his head still shaved but his mind cleaned out, leaving nothing except the half-understood--but full-blown committed--politics of hatred. And sadly, Shaun finds a home here, too, and the film becomes a near-nightmare. Loss and hate and hard times is too strong a mix for Shaun, and he's left with only himself to decide what he's going to become.<br /><br />Don't get me wrong: The early sequence is actually heartwarming, propelled by music and, as The Beatles put it, "that magic feeling--nowhere to go." And this makes the shift downward even more jarring: We want Shaun to mend with his friends. But he has a hard road ahead, and <i>This Is England</i> makes him travel far--almost like Francois Truffaut's alter ego, Antoine Doinel, in <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/The_400_Blows/70048120?trkid=2361637#height2901"><i>The 400 Blows</i></a>, in that both boys are cut loose, and run to the sea. I'll let you decide what Shaun finds there.<hr>Live Clash, <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6KWoKb5-BM&feature=related">"This Is England"</a>: "I got my motorcycle jacket / But I'm walking all the time."Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-83887331821556027092011-05-05T08:36:00.006-05:002011-05-05T13:18:30.153-05:00Mesrine, Part 1: Killer Instinct (2008)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8y7gszVZ4KeWkasqUQOSdXlkz659WY37SQXjfWSaAFoTU__UhxXF91uNZJMizWGqne8X5Gy8wkzK2GQ47cXi1xLdqWs-A8d2i7ZiJmJ_kz_q_qOfRD_xyihfChjgdnwFqyQMS9LFphht3/s1600/Mesrine_Killer_Instinct_movie_stills_5.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 267px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8y7gszVZ4KeWkasqUQOSdXlkz659WY37SQXjfWSaAFoTU__UhxXF91uNZJMizWGqne8X5Gy8wkzK2GQ47cXi1xLdqWs-A8d2i7ZiJmJ_kz_q_qOfRD_xyihfChjgdnwFqyQMS9LFphht3/s400/Mesrine_Killer_Instinct_movie_stills_5.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5603236199953732786" /></a>Jean-François Richet—who directed the tight, tough 2005 remake/re-imagining of John Carpenter's <i>Assault on Precinct 13</i>—presents a big two-part film about Jacques Mesrine, a notorious French criminal (think Dillinger crossed with Joe Pesci's Tommy in <i>Goodfellas</i>) whose exploits (at least in this first part) span much of the globe, from Algeria in the late 1950s to France to Quebec to Arizona—then back again. Along the way, he robs, tortures, kidnaps, murders, goes to prison, gets out, abuses his wife, loves her (and others), all the while inventing himself as a celebrity/political radical, prison reformer (with automatic weapons), and Gallic Clyde Barrow. Vincent Cassel—always good, particularly in <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Brotherhood_of_the_Wolf/60022347?trkid=2361637"><i>Brotherhood of the Wolf</i></a> and <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/The_Crimson_Rivers/60020011?trkid=2361637"><i>The Crimson Rivers</i></a> (in which he manages to be as cool as Jean Reno, and that's saying something)—plays Mesrine without apologies, neither sympathetic nor demonic, his violent temperament constructed without prejudice. We're left to observe Mesrine as-is.<br /><br />The best thing I can write about this movie is that I was sorry it was over. When some people read a good book, they speed up, hungry for each page. Me, I slow down. But I was greedy with <i>Mesrine</i>, and didn't pause it to leave the rest for another day. No, I held out to myself the promise of <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/Mesrine_Part_2_Public_Enemy_1/70117925?trkid=2361637"><i>Part 2: Public Enemy No. 1</i></a> and finished up Part 1, sorry to see it go. I haven't watched Part 2 yet, but let this review stand for both. This is about as straightforward as gangster pictures come, moving with confidence and speed, like Mesrine himself robbing two banks in one minute.<hr>NOTE: In my haste, I neglected to mention the supporting cast, headed by the always-charismatic Gerard Depardieu, along with two women—Elena Anaya (the abused wife) and Cécile De France (Mesrine's steel-plated Bonnie)—who effortlessly match the pace of their ferocious male co-star.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-71649497828632875142011-04-23T16:30:00.003-05:002011-04-23T18:09:16.683-05:00Little Fugitive (1953)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjTMteCx4cmGuKyBn04JvhKU4nhLJeEleP-cwVwBoo1V-lDCyKUXfKe61rZTG0Ur-zgVSVt2FwID5uEsxQRql7rKRuHb5COQuJI_Xv_3psqVqvxLVcUKjWsueFgKe6palHfIWrWMA4Cd_2-/s1600/little+fugitive.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 306px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjTMteCx4cmGuKyBn04JvhKU4nhLJeEleP-cwVwBoo1V-lDCyKUXfKe61rZTG0Ur-zgVSVt2FwID5uEsxQRql7rKRuHb5COQuJI_Xv_3psqVqvxLVcUKjWsueFgKe6palHfIWrWMA4Cd_2-/s400/little+fugitive.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5598919980441494242" /></a>Back in 1953, when <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/The_Little_Fugitive/704254?trkid=2430626#height1690"><i>Little Fugitive</i></a> was a brand-new movie, the <i>New York Times</i> critic Bosley Crowther (for almost thirty years writing (often-enlightening) reviews encased in quaint tut-tuts and dry observations) ended his review with "All hail to 'Little Fugitive' and to those who made it. But count it a photographer's triumph with a limited theme." And he was mostly right, especially for us watching today: the triumph is the film's preservation of early-'50s NYC, particularly Coney Island, as the little boy--tricked by his older brother into thinking the little "tad," as Crowther put it, had murdered him--makes his way through a series of mild adventures, his fears forgotten in a world of shooting galleries, pony rides, and merry-go-rounds--after he collects empties and cashes them in. His adventures are slight, but that's the point: <i>The Little Fugitive</i> is one of a handful of movies that lowers the camera to see kidhood without condescension or (too much ) sentiment.<br /><br />Ray Ashley, Morris Engel, and Ruth Orkin wrote, photographed, directed and produced; the little boy, Joey, is played by a non-actor, Richie Andrusco (as was his brother). And aside from a few NYC stage actors, the rest of the cast plays itself: New York City, that is, and that Island that's as eager to please as <i>Pinocchio</i>'s, but without donkeys.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-55195718291575775992011-04-21T13:47:00.004-05:002011-04-22T10:40:51.304-05:00The Fall (2006)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhblMYjVRGok84RmEiAZ6o39aY54WecThmScFyA30G-iUDAGFeE-KDVJJJSE3s8FxJzdBFyGj6N71okKjav0RwqCC4ekfCKPkLH_OYZNmSzDnUbXGdbkoxza0TRgIYtsnPCoWAu93DIt9oP/s1600/fall-tarsem.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 346px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhblMYjVRGok84RmEiAZ6o39aY54WecThmScFyA30G-iUDAGFeE-KDVJJJSE3s8FxJzdBFyGj6N71okKjav0RwqCC4ekfCKPkLH_OYZNmSzDnUbXGdbkoxza0TRgIYtsnPCoWAu93DIt9oP/s400/fall-tarsem.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5598119243253093858" /></a>Tarsem Singh (or simply "Tarsem" over the last few years) has directed only two pictures since 2000--and that first one was <a href="http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/The_Cell/60001368?trkid=2361637"><i>The Cell</i></a>, a movie whose plot matters infinitely less than the terrible beauty of its images and the astounding commitment of Vincent D'Onofrio to the persona he crafts, like some alternate-universe lead in an opera written by H.P. Lovecraft.<br /><br />With <a href="http://bit.ly/hyXz6y"><i>The Fall</i></a>, Tarsem does not flinch under the threat of his earlier picture, but decides to edge closer to Tim Burton than David Lynch as he explores the most needful thing of all: the yearning for narrative, for life to lose its messy edge and follow a straight line for once. The injured silent-era stuntman and the little girl with the broken arm collaborate on the same story--but to different ends. Of course, the story has its own ideas, and draws everyone in (and here we should turn and give a little bow to Terry Gilliam, who knows more than any of us the value of a ripping yarn-within-a-yarn-within-a-yarn-within ...)--and Tarsem follows the fairytale, building an almost-satiric Wonderland of Extraordinary Gentlemen (including Alexander the Great and Darwin) in a world that Tarsem swears is real--all actual locations, no special effects. If he's telling us the truth, then we really do live in a story, no matter how duplicitous the storyteller/Black Bandit may be, no matter how dangerous the stunts actually are.<br /><br />This is not a film for everyone. Some might find it too weird, others to obvious. But if you look closely and long, and listen to one more story, you'll be reminded of the real draw of the movies--and of paintings and ballads and bedtime tales: They pretend to be windows we can look out of, but are really special mirrors for seeing ourselves and the important things still living behind us.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4178767375266395481.post-65467839876407266532011-04-20T16:15:00.005-05:002011-04-21T00:02:31.562-05:00Restrepo (2010)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi2kXFdlRng3ta5CKBdQ4ojp6vFjkADQXqr9gf8JGlG1xcDvRQtNp_suoO7pM-1q7e_cnJDmWUt91xnUpyzxYtMwzaf9UoVt_5c1hQv2p73wJnJYaUQ88DWVecWxPloI6W9Hclb7GesNF7O/s1600/Restrepo.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 225px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi2kXFdlRng3ta5CKBdQ4ojp6vFjkADQXqr9gf8JGlG1xcDvRQtNp_suoO7pM-1q7e_cnJDmWUt91xnUpyzxYtMwzaf9UoVt_5c1hQv2p73wJnJYaUQ88DWVecWxPloI6W9Hclb7GesNF7O/s400/Restrepo.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5597783498375231058" /></a><b>NOTE: I posted this without knowing that <i>Restrepo</i>'s co-director, Tim Hetherington, had been killed in Libya. My Sicilian grandfather, who was sent to fight in World War I, told me he never killed anyone. "I had no argument with those men," he said, "but they wanted me to shoot. So I shot over the Germans' heads, and everybody was happy." My prayer for Mr. Hetherington and his family and friends is that we should all be so happy. In the meantime, I am sure that everyone who knew him will keep his name in their mouths, "familiar as household words," and "in their flowing cups freshly remembered."</b><br /><br />In <a href="http://bit.ly/eXGrpp"><i>Restrepo</i></a>, Sebastian Junger and Tim Hetherington go to Afghanistan and stick close to, as the Internet Movie Database informs with its usual completeness, "The Men of Battle Company 2nd of the 503rd Infantry Regiment, 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team." And watching them dig in, goof around, freak out, sing and cry and stare into space, I found myself caught between the reality that movies insist on and the one I'll never see--and how, as with scenes of active combat, the two of them are so often the same. That is, what I know of combat I know from the movies--but this is not a "movie" (or a TV series, like the excellent <i>Generation Kill</i>); it's a "documentary." <br /><br />But watching <i>Restrepo</i> is like watching <i>Full Metal Jacket</i> or <i>Jarhead</i> or <i>The Hurt Locker</i>--even <i>Saving Private Ryan</i> or <i>Apocalypse Now</i>, as extravagant as those movies are. <i>Restrepo</i> engenders an interesting confusion: Does it look like a fictional film because I've seen so many, or is it <i>Restrepo</i>'s actual soldiers who've seen the same films and have learned how to behave? This may simply be the most hair-raising home movie ever made--you know how you get when someone turns on the camera at the family get-together: one is "on," so one "acts"--up, usually.<br /><br />But I don't think that's necessarily what happens in <i>Restrepo</i>--actually, I think it's the opposite: the movies have clouded our vision of the real horror and boredom of warfare, and <i>Restrepo</i> brings us face to face with our seen-that-even-though-I-haven't-done-that smugness. This is so much The Real Deal that even that expression sounds phony--as phony as a non-combatant's "understanding" that War Is Hell. The triumph of <i>Restrepo</i> is that it ignores us, chooses instead to let itself be itself. We're just along for the ride, so we better stay out of the way when the shit starts to fly.Paul J. Marasahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08367608635996012511noreply@blogger.com0