Category Archives: Movies

Facebooktwitterrssinstagram

winters-boneThe Ozark family-gothic thriller Winter’s Bone gets so many things right it feeds the soul of this grumpy moviegoer.

Director Debra Granik has pulled off a small miracle.  Shooting on location in the hills of southwestern Missouri, she immerses us in a perilous world that drips with atmosphere and authenticity.

Jennifer Lawrence (in a star-making performance) plays Ree, a young woman who finds herself, at the age of seventeen, the head of her crumbling household.  Her criminal father is absent, her mother has retreated into a quiet, impenetrable madness, and her younger brother and sister are now her responsibility.  A crisis looms when a sheriff’s deputy (Garret Dillahunt) stops by to inform her that her crank-cooking dad put the house they’re living in up as collateral for his bond.  He’s missing, and about to miss his court date.

Ree has no choice but to scour the hills for her loser father.  The problem is, even though she’s at least somewhat related to half of the folks on the mountain, they do not seem much interested in helping her.

There are all sort of kinds dangerous people, but perhaps the most interesting type is a scared, stupid person with a gun.  Unfortunately for Ree, that description pretty much fits all of the folks she has to try to bully into helping her find her father.

I mentioned that the movie gets important things right.  Let’s list a few of them:

  1.  Details, details, details.  From the tattered towels on the clothesline outside the teetering shacks, to the threadbare animals and hungry dogs that seem to fill the screen, everything you see puts you into this poverty-stricken hillbilly world in which setting up a meth lab is what passes for a promising career opportunity.
  2. Drop-dead casting.  Granik’s cast is full of professional actors, but oh, the faces!  Talk about a ragtag crowd of characters who have been “rode hard and put up wet.”  Each new household of cousins Bree encounters feels more authentic than the last.
  3. Smart script written for adults.  One of the things I most admire about a movie is when it is realistic enough to leave important information out.  Most movies don’t have the confidence to do that, so half of the dialog sounds like artificial exposition:  “So do we expect father home soon from the manor house where he’s worked as a groom for the Earl lo these many years?”  The characters in Winter’s Bone don’t talk as if they know we’re listening.  The dialog is terse and spare, and many seemingly important facts are never cleared up or spelled out.  That’s actually how life is, and it makes the impact of the movie’s story all the stronger.

It would be easy for a movie like this to descend into Dogpatch-esque caricature, but it never does.  Though many scenes crackle with potential danger, Granik keeps us on edge while using remarkable restraint.

The talented Dale Dickey
The talented Dale Dickey

I have to point out two supporting performances.  John Hawkes has long been one of my favorite actors, and he brings a flinty menace to his role as Teardrop, the brother of Ree’s missing father.  Hawkes brings his trademark mercurial intensity to this key role.

I never watched “My Name is Earl, ” so I wasn’t familiar with Dale Dickey until today.  I’m now going to seek her out, because she delivers a knockout, Supporting Actress Academy Award-worthy turn as Merab, a creepy cousin with good manners who nevertheless seems just as likely to stuff Ree into a trunk as to offer her a cup of coffee.  My blood ran cold when she demanded of Bree in an early scene: “Ain’t you got any men can do this for you?”  Her magnificent face looks like something out of a a Walker Evans photograph.  Looks like I’m going to have to start taping “Sordid Lives.”  My hat is off to you, Ms. Dickey.

Also worthy of high praise are Affonso Gonçalves’s tense editing, which gives the movie a mesmerizing sense of pace, and Michael McDonough’s cinematography, which captures the stark, icy beauty of Missouri’s Christian and Taney Counties.

I strongly encourage moviegoers who are weary of explosions and dopey plots to seek out this gorgeous, riveting movie.

Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 187 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter
Facebooktwitterrssinstagram


2009 Movie Awards_

Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 245 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter
Facebooktwitterrssinstagram

Movie Award Preview:  Best Opening Credits

In this era of single-card opening credits, the art of the creative opening credits sequence is an all-but-lost art.  Gone are the glory days of Richard Williams (The Pink Panther Strikes Back, Casino Royale) and the great Saul Bass:  Who can forget the bold graphics that turned into Manhattan skyscrapers at the beginning of North By Northwest and West Side Story, or the sauntering cat that introduced us to Walk on the Wild Side?  And the graffiti and street-sign credits at the end of West Side Story?  Forget about it.  In those movies, the opening sequences were delicious little miniature movies unto themselves.

 

Happily, there are a few filmmakers who still commission such delightful confections to open movies.  There are three notable examples of this lost art this year:

 

In Moon, the words in the sly opening titles slid in front of and behind objects in the picture, setting up that film’s themes of claustrophobia and deceit.  Clint Mansell’s haunting score added to this intriguing opening.

 

In An Education, Nic Benns’ snappy graphics accompanied a jazzy soundtrack, giving us an irresistible invitation to travel back in time half a century.

 

And Up in the Air put us up in the air, showing us a cornucopia of idealized birds-eye views of this great land we fly over.

 

I hope the creative opening sequence will continue to shine, even if rarely.  I would miss it if it were gone forever.

Average Rating: 4.9 out of 5 based on 215 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter
Facebooktwitterrssinstagram

I thought it was over between me and Michael.

I was convinced that his day was over.  That his type of guerrilla filmmaking was passe.

It’s true that he really changed the game for commercial political documentaries.  Before him there wasn’t even such a category of movie.  Now there’s a dozen each year, and it’s all because of his revolutionary series of films, which include Roger and Me, Bowling for Columbine,   Fahrenheit 9/11, Sicko and his most recent efford, Capitalism: A Love Story.

I admired all of these movies, mostly.  I admire their bravery and their very provocative nature.

However, there’s always the issue of Mr. Moore himself.  He’s like me:  obnoxious.  And while I can appreciate that, it doesn’t really help his cause or his films.  Bowling For Columbine was seriously undermined by his ambush interview of Charlton Heston.  And of course he’s been accused of distorting, misleading and outright lying in his movies as well.

His strident presence and juvenile stunts seem as inevitable as his pungent political points. 

So lately I’ve found myself just not that motivated to see his Capitalism.   Mostly because the trailers for the film show him up to his same old stupid stunts:  sectioning off the front of the AIG building with police tape, attempting to make a citizen’s arrest of fat-cat CEOs, attempting to rob a bank for the good of the people, etc. 

It just looked tiresome.

So, was I ever pleasantly surprised when I finally dragged myself to the movie this past weekend.  I loved it.  I think he’s quite brave to attack our national religion, which or course is Capitalism, NOT Christianity.

And the fact is, he really works up to the stunts you see in the trailers.  And what seems silly and childish out of context in the trailers actually feels cathartic and justified in the flow of the actual movie.

I think it’s valuable to have obnoxious punks like Michael Moore.  They do the heavy lifting that the rest of us SHOULD be doing:  questioning the status quo, questioning our leaders, questioning our basic assumptions about how life is supposed to work.  Even when Moore pisses me off, I’m glad he’s around.

He makes a particularly smart move at the very end of the movie, which — beware! — I’m going to spoil right now:

Moore’s point in the movie is that greed and big business have taken over our government.  So at the film’s conclusion when he unambiguously asserts that we should abolish capitalism, what he suggests we replace it with isn’t what you expect him to say — socialism.

No.  He thinks we should replace capitalism with democracy.

And I agree with him.

Average Rating: 5 out of 5 based on 290 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter
Facebooktwitterrssinstagram

Okay, this is driving me crazy.  Everyone should know this now, but let’s review, anyway.

It’s a cliche to say that making a motion picture is a highly collaborative art, but it’s certainly true.  However, it is generally accepted that the person most responsible for the content, tone, style and details of a film is the film’s director.

Another important role in making a film is the producer.  The producer’s role can be many things, but in general she is the person who gathers the money and other resources necessary so that the director can make the movie.

Lorenzo di Medici was Michelangelo’s patron early in his career.  Without him, we wouldn’t have the David.  But we don’t refer to “Medici’s David, ” do we?  No, we acknowledge that its creator is Michelangelo.

The same is true with film.  Some film directors, like Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson, become such big stars themselves that putting their name on a movie (even though they’re only the producer) can help sell the movie.  I don’t spite anyone trying to get their movie seen, but it always depresses me when I see marketing folks counting on the intellectual laziness of the American public.

The other day I was at the Arclight Hollywood catching up on my moviegoing and I overheard a gaggle of theater patrons referring to “that new Tim Burton movie.”  They were discussing, of course, the animated feature 9, which is an interesting film, but NOT A TIM BURTON FILM. 

I almost interrupted them to say, “Actually, it’s a Shane Acker film.  Burton just paid for it, ” but as I am the picture of restraint I said nothing.

But Burton has long gotten away with this.  People still think of The Nightmare Before Christmas as a “Tim Burton film, ” when it’s actually a Henry Selick film.  Burton produced it and wrote the story the screenplay is based on.

If you MUST refer to an animated film as a “Tim Burton film, ” you may do so with The Corpse Bride, which he co-directed. 

I’m glad I could straighten this out for everyone.  Carry on.

Average Rating: 4.5 out of 5 based on 201 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter
Facebooktwitterrssinstagram

I finally saw Quentin Tarantino’s new epic Inglourious Basterds. I really admire three of Tarantino’s films. That is, the first three: Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction and Jackie Brown. I hated Kill Bill and sort of enjoyed his contribution to Grind House.

 

 I didn’t love Inglourious Basterds. It’s okay. It’s very long and talky, and even though Tarantino does talky very well, that doesn’t mean he should indulge himself beyond what makes the movie better.

 

Like everyone else who’s seen the movie, I admired the impressive performance by Christoph Waltz, the quadrilingual Nazi villain.

 

 But for me the big pleasant surprise of the movie was the performance of Michael Fassbender as Lt. Archie Hicox. Hicox goes behind enemy lines posing as a German in order to help set up an ambitious ambush.

 

Hicox is only in a couple of scenes, but his last one is quite long. I’ve only seen Fassbender in one other film, 300, in which I admired his abs, but that movie wasn’t really about acting. And the abs were probably CGI, anyway.

 

Fassbender recently starred as the ill-fated Irish hunger striker Bobby Sands in a movie called Hunger. He was also in the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers, which I tried to watch but had to give up because it was so boring.

 

Fassbender himself is Irish and German, and his fluent German came in handy for his role in Inglourious Basterds. In the movie Fassbender displays an uncommon degree of charisma and intensity. The fairly sleepy movie really woke up when he walked on screen.

 

Fassbender has several new films in the works, and I look forward to seeing him do other things.

Average Rating: 5 out of 5 based on 174 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter
Facebooktwitterrssinstagram

How’s a moviegoer to keep track?

There are three, count’em, THREE movies with nine in the title either in theaters or coming up.

There’s the newly-released District 9, about illegal aliens in South Africa.

 D9-Poster

Then there’s the upcoming September release of 9, the animated post-apocalyptic story starring sock puppets.

9

Finally, there’s the big-budget film adaptation of the Broadway musical Nine, which disappointingly stars Super Thespian Daniel Day-Lewis.

 nine21

All I can say is it’s a good thing that the underrated Ryan Reynolds existential adventure The Nines has already been released, and so doesn’t add to the confusion!

nines

Average Rating: 4.9 out of 5 based on 163 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter
Facebooktwitterrssinstagram

I’m now sharing my movielove at a site called HubPages.   I hope you’ll visit and check them out.  HubPages is actually very cool website.  Maybe you’ll be inspired to create your own pages!

Click here to see the index of movies I profile.  More are being added daily.  If you like what you see, say hello!

 Linky:

grammartroll on HubPages.

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 259 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter
Facebooktwitterrssinstagram

THE YEAR’S 10 BEST

 

 

*The Color Purple

Kiss of the Spider Woman

Brazil

Out of Africa

Witness

The Purple Rose of Cairo

Prizzi’s Honor

Deperately Seeking Susan

Cocoon

Blood Simple

 

 

DIRECTOR

 

 

*Terry Gilliam, Brazil

Woody Allen, The Purple Rose of Cairo

Hector Babenco, Kiss of the Spider Woman

John Huston, Prizzi’s Honor

Sidney Pollock, Out of Africa

 

 

ACTOR

 

 

*William Hurt, Kiss of the Spider Woman

Raul Julia, Kiss of th Spider Woman

Danny Glover, The Color Purple

Jack Nicholson, Prizzi’s Honor

Jon Voight, Runaway Train

 

 

ACTRESS

 

 

Geraldine Page, The Trip to Bountiful

Vanessa Redgrave, Wetherby

Maryl Streep, Out of Africa

*Whoopie Goldberg, The Color Purple

Jessica Lange, Sweet Dreams

 

 

SUPPORTING ACTOR

 

 

Crispin Glover, Back to the Future

Klaus Maria Brandauer, Out of Africa

Charles Dance, Plenty

William Hickey, Prizzi’s Honor

Don Ameche / Wilford Brimley / Brian Dennehy, Cocoon

John Gielgud, Plenty

 

 

SUPPORTING ACTRESS

 

 

Laraine Newman, Perfect

Judith Ivey, Compromising Positions

Tracy Ullman, Plenty

Carlin Glynn, The Trip to Bountiful

*Oprah Winfrey, The Color Purple

 

 

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

 

 

Witness

*The Purple Rose of Cairo

Brazil

Cocoon

Blood Simple

 

 

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

 

 

Compromising Positions

Prizzi’s Honor

The Color Purple

*Kiss of the Spider Woman

Out of Africa

 

 

SNOB DEPT.: THE WORST MOVIES I DIDN’T’ SEE

 

 

Revolution

Target

Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome

Agnes of God

Jewel of the Nile

Secret Admirer

Remo Williams

Mischief

Enemy Mine

Marie

Maxie

The Mean Seaon

Santa Claus: The Movie

One Magic Christmas

Songwriter

My Science Project

Alamo Bay

Bring on the Night

Return to Oz

Godzilla 1985

The Bride

The Man With One Red Shoe

Brewster’s Millions

Red Sonja

Death Wish III

Subway

Spies Like Us

Fever Pitch

Teen Wolf

 

 

I SHOULD HAVE KNOWN BETTER DEPT.:

THE WORST MOVIES I DID SEE

 

 

American Flyers

Lifeforce

Rambo: First Blood II

Baby

King David

St. Elmo’s Fire

Silverado

Volunteers

 

 

MOVIES THAT WERE SURPRISINGLY FUN

 

 

Commando

Compromising Positions

Desperately Seekign Susan

Dawn of the Dead

Return of the Living Dead

A Chorus Line

Into the Night

Day of the Dead

Return of the Living Dead

Cat’s Eye

The Company of Wolves

Pumping Iron II: The Women

Year of the Dragon

Young Sherlock Holmes

Jagged Edge

 

 

THE YEAR’S BEST LINES

 

 

Judith Ivey, in Compromising Positions, discussing a woman who was known to be photographed committing sex acts with certain vegetables:  “Well, if I ever meet her, I’ll remember notto try her cole slaw.”

 

 

The cigarette girl in Desperately Seeking Susan:  “Cigars?  Cigarettes?  Tofutti?”

 

 

Mia Farrow discussing her movie-character-become-flesh boyfriendin The Purple Rose of Cairo: “Sure, he’s fictional, but you can’t have everything.”

 

 

John Wood as the evil bishop in Ladyhawke:  “I believe in miracles.  It’s part of my job.”

 

 

Movie that Made Me Laugh the Loudest the Most Often

 

 

Compromising Positions

 

 

LOOK!  MY INTESTINES!  DEPT.:  BEST CHASE SCENE

 

 

To Live and Die in L.A.

 

 

THE BRITISH ARE YAWNING DEPT.:

NEW HORIZONS IN BORING PRETENTIONS ENGLISH CINEMA

 

 

Dance With a Stranger

A Private Function

The Return of the Soldier

Lily in Love

 

 

THREE REASONS TO SAY GOODBYE TO THE WESTERN FOREVER

 

 

Rustler’s Rhapsody

Silverado

Lust in the Dust

 

 

CAN’T WAIT UNTIL THEY’RE ON PBS DEPT.:

THE YEAR OF THE FABULOUS DOCUMENTARY

 

 

Shoah

George Stevens: A Filmmaker’s Journey

28 Up

Streetwise

Pumping Iron II: The Women

 

 

SHOULD HAVE CALLED GENERAL CASTING DEPT.:

CITATIONS FOR DUBIOUS MARRIAGES OF ACTORS AND ROLES

 

 

Richard Gere as King David

Ann-Margaret as a sexless spinster in The Return of the Soldier

Judd Nelson as a human being in St. Elmo’s Fire

Mickey Roarke as a middle-aged NYC cop in Year of the Dragon

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 174 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter
Facebooktwitterrssinstagram

THE TEN BEST FILMS

1. (tie) *The Right Stuff

Fanny and Alexander (Sweden)

2. Terms of Endearment

3. Zelig

4. Silkwood

5. Risky Business

6. Star 80

7. (tie) Return of the Jedi

The Return of Martin Guerre” (France)

8.  The Big Chill

9. Under Fire

10. Tender Mercies

DIRECTOR

*Philip Kaufman, The Right Stuff

Ingmar Bergman, Fanny and Alexander

James Brooks, Terms of Endearment

Paul Brickman, Risky Business

Woody Allen, Zelig

Bob Fosse, Star 80

Mike Nichols, Silkwood

Robert Altman, Streamers

ACTOR

*Eric Roberts, Star 80

Robert Duvall, Tender Mercies

Michael Caine, Educating Rita

Tom Courtenay, The Dresser

Albert Finney, The Dresser

ACTRESS

*Shirley MacLaine, Terms of Endearment

Debra Winger, Terms of Endearment

Julie Walters, Educating Rita

Meryl Streep, Silkwood

Jane Alexander, Testament

SUPPORTING ACTOR

*Jack Nicholson, Terms of Endearment

Ed Harris, The Right Stuff”/”Under Fire

William Hurt, The Big Chill

Jerry Lewis, The King of Comedy

Fred Ward, The Right Stuff”/”Uncommon Valor”/”Silkwood

SUPPORTING ACTRESS

*Linda Hunt, The Year of Living Dangerously

Sandra Bernhardt, King of Comedy

Cher, Silkwood

Louise Fletcher, Brainstorm” / “Strange Invaders

Betty Buckley, Tender Mercies

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

*Terms of Endearment

Fanny and Alexander

Zelig

Risky Business

Silkwood

Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

*The Right Stuff

Heat and Dust

Star 80

*The Return of Martin Guerre

Streamers

SOUND

*The Right Stuff

Return of the Jedi

Zelig

CINEMATOGRAPHY

*The Right Stuff

Koyaanisqatsi

Zelig

Risky Business

Return of the Jedi

SCORE

*Koyaanisqatsi

Heat and Dust

Risky Business

Zelig

ART DIRECTION

*The Right Stuff

Fanny and Alexander

Risky Business

The Return of Martin Guerre

Heat and Dust

Zelig

COSTUME

*The Right Stuff

Fanny and Alexander

The Return of Martin Guerre

The Draughtsman’s Contract

Heat and Dust

Zelig

Star 80

MOST HILARIOUS

Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life

A Christmas Story

Hercules

MOST DISAPPOINTING

Daniel

LEAST APPRECIATED

Strange Invaders

MOST USELESS SEQUELS

Jaws 3D

Superman III

MOST HILARIOUS REVIEWS

Two of a Kind

MOST WORTHY CANDIDATES FOR EARLY RETIREMENT

John Travolta

Sylvester Stallone

Olivia Newton-John

Jennifer Beals

BEST LINES

You want to see something really scary?”  Dan Aykroyd in “Twilight Zone: The Movie

I’m not like other guys.”  Michael Jackson speaks the truth in “Thriller

They took the train!!”  Louise Fletcher in “Strange Invaders

I’ve got a trig mid-term tomorrow and I’m being chased by Guido, the Killer Pimp!!”  “Risk BusinessWould you prefer white?”  John Cleese’s question to Death after the Grim Reaper ha smashed a proffered glass of red wine

Some peckerwood’s got to take the thing up, and some peckerwood’s gotta land it.  And tha peckerwood is called . . uh . . a pilot.  Kim Stanley in “The Right Stuff

Flap, one of your nicest qualities has always been your ability to recognize your ow shortcomings.  Please don’t lose that quality now when you need it the most.”  Shirley MacLaine in “Terms of Endearment”

Average Rating: 4.9 out of 5 based on 165 user reviews.

Facebooktwitter