Archive for April, 2009

 

April 24th, 2009

Steve McQueen, first-time director of the critically praised “Hunger,” engages in The Hollywood Interview with Terry Keefe.

Bowie in Space. Well, his son, at least. Duncan Jones, David Bowie’s son with ex-wife Angela Bowie, transports Sam Rockwell to outer space in “Moon,” which after a successful introduction at Sundance opens across the U.S. in June.

From Armando Iannucci, the creative force behind BBC Four’s devastatingly clever governmental satire “The Thick of It,” comes his feature film debut, “In the Loop,” a skewering of Anglo-American political relations which IFC Films will release in the States in July. The Independent profiles Mr. Merciless while The Guardian chronicles James Gandolfini, who appears as the movie’s major American presence as a Universal Soldier.

Opening almost imperceptibly, John Crowley’s “Is Anybody There?” stars Michael Caine as a nursing home denizen who befriends the managers’ young son fascinated by the afterlife. The indefatigable Caine chats with Newsday about Korean War service, mortality and his obsession with Google.

One Film Wonder: For more than 40 years, Lulu has been a superlative singer and entertainer. She also unleashed her pipes on an undeservedly underrated Bond theme song. But she delivered her only enduring film appearance as “Babs” in “To Sir, with Love,” the charming, heartfelt and human classroom drama notable for Sidney Poitier’s regal presence and her ethereal pop classic.


Crank: High Voltage

Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Nipples

April 24th, 2009

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Three years ago, “Crank” hurtled into theaters as absurdist fun. The taut, lean and gristle-free tale of a poisoned hit man who must keep his heart rate racing used a preposterous premise to concoct a wild, breakneck “D.O.A.” for the devil horns brigade. The sequel, “Crank: High Voltage,” released last weekend, is comparably a corpulent mess. Directors Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor, who in the “Crank” DVD commentary seemed quite pleased with themselves, gorge like stoned college kids at a pizza buffet. No contrivance appears to have been discarded; one can imagine that every wacky idea was met with high fives and fist bumps. This time, Chev Chelios (Jason Statham) has been fixed with an artificial heart and spends the next 96 minutes electrifying himself as he scours Los Angeles for his pilfered organ while the film spends that time searching in vain for the coherence of its predecessor. “Crank: High Voltage” is a potent mix of the good, the bad and the offal.

A cornucopia of extraneous visceral images and self-congratulatory jokes and gestures, “High Voltage“ expresses mood and executes set pieces with less subtlety than the previous film, but what should one expect from a movie helmed by indulgent directors: a high-speed chase is brought to a pause when Chev’s car is blocked by a completely superfluous porn actors’ strike; a strip club shootout ends with a dancer shot in her pneumatic chest, the camera panning repeatedly over her oozing breasts; and a character is afflicted with “Full Body Tourette’s,” which is a gimmick overplayed. In a film in desperate need of felicitous redaction, when a crazed prostitute picks up a dirt bike, she doesn’t thrust it into a baddie’s groin once but over and over until his genitals have been pulverized. “ High Voltage” is littered with racial epithets and vile language as well; there’s a play on words using “Cantonese” that is headshakingly sad in its unfunny pun.

The movie is unrelentingly gratuitous, not morally but aesthetically. The ludicrous and implausible are more than palatable if illustrated with flair but “High Voltage” is so scattershot, so random, with both the camera and story flitting about with such attention deficiency that it begs the question of whether the editing process was completed during an Adderall withdrawal. Cartoonish films ask an audience to suspend disbelief; “Crank“ had you accepting that a dude could leap from a plane, fall from the heavens without a parachute, smack onto the roof of a car, bounce onto the street and survive. Over-the-top, for sure, but the scene was executed with the verve and ingenuity missing from the current incarnation. A sequence used in both films highlights the distinction between the two. In the first film, Chev and his girlfriend Eve (Amy Smart) engage, for medicinal purposes, in a very public (and funny) sex scene in a bustling Chinatown market. But in “High Voltage” they rut on the finish line of a horse track during a race, in front of thousands of spectators, in a myriad of positions. There’s method acting. Welcome to “meth” directing.

Statham is treated well though by the directing duo as his killer is vivified with more humor and presence than he’s bestowed with in the “Transporter“ series. An Olympic diving hopeful in his youth, Statham, with sandpaper stubble and a South London rasp, has the body of a top-level middleweight, and the face of a slightly less successful one. “High Voltage” is well served by his insistence on doing the vast majority of his own stunts. Amy Smart is plucky in the relatively thankless role of Eve. As El Huron, a vengeful gangster who wishes Chev dead, Clifton Collins Jr., so memorable as the vulnerable Perry Smith in “Capote,“ struts with an outlandish manner that an actor of his pedigree can handle. The likable Efren Ramirez, who played Pedro in “Napoleon Dynamite,” returns as the full-bodied twin brother of his deceased character in the first film. Two other roles are just disconcerting. Geri Halliwell appears in a cameo as Chev’s mother but her part is stuck by Neveldine and Taylor in a completely jarring daytime talk show segue. And David Carradine pops up as an insufferably stereotypical gang warlord.

The film ends with a severely burned Chev receiving a heart transplant from Doc Miles, his dubious delicensed surgeon, played with droll insouciance by Dwight Yoakam. After Miles and Eve leave the converted apartment operating theater believing the surgery was not successful, the camera pans closer to Chev’s bandaged face, only a swath across his eyes visible, and his hand rises and he flips the bird at the camera. Right back at ya.


April 17th, 2009

The talented Kelly Macdonald riffs on Marge Simpson, T. Rex and “Back to the Future.”

Ben Walters of The Guardian tags along “When John Waters met the art grannies.”

Thanks to “The Soup” for championing the ingenious and audacious Green Porno shorts devised by Isabella Rossellini and co-director Jody Shapiro for the Sundance Channel. The entire stunning catalogue is located at the network’s site.

“Sugar” is the newly released, acclaimed baseball feature from Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, the directing tandem behind 2006’s superlative “Half Nelson.” Scott Foundas of LA Weekly takes them out to the ball game while Justine Ciarrocchi at Screencrave chats with the directors and lead actor Algenis Perez Soto.

One Film Wonder: In 1984, John Hughes introduced the first of his series of smart, enduring teen comedies and Michael Schoeffling, a physical ringer for James Dean and Matt Dillon, seemed destined for stardom after his buzzworthy turn as Jake Ryan in “Sixteen Candles.” Seven years later he was out of the industry and now reportedly runs a hand-crafted furniture business in Pennsylvania. Coincidentally, the heartthrob’s most iconic scene involves a table.

The clip is dubbed in Spanish, and an English language version can be found here. But you really can’t disagree that it isn’t el final perfecto.


Waltz with Bashir

Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark

April 17th, 2009

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From the opening moments of marauding, snarling dogs to the final harrowing wails of widows, the animated documentary “Waltz with Bashir” is a thunderbolt, visually and emotionally provocative, arresting and riveting.

Director Ari Folman was a 19-year-old solider in the Israeli Defense Forces which invaded Lebanon in the summer of 1982. More than 20 years later, the unsettling dreams of Boaz Rein Buskila, a close friend and fellow solider, prompted the filmmaker to delve into his own murky memories of his war experience, and Folman quickly finds himself especially hounded by one particular, recurring dreamt moment. Told through the recollections of Folman, his military comrades, and the noted Israeli journalist, Ron Ben Yisahi, “Waltz with Bashir” is an eyewitness account of the Lebanese War and the army’s heedless complicity as the Lebanese Christian Phalangists massacred as many as 3,000 defenseless people in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. It is a gripping view into the psychology of the after effects of the war experience. Concrete memory and hallucination coalesce, often tormentingly; and dreams stir before consciousness admits. All the soldiers seem shadowed by the Michel de Montaigne axiom that “nothing fixes a thing so intensely in the memory as the wish to forget it.”

Each of the colleagues that Folman visits conveys a remarkable story of their war remembrances, from his buddy, Carmi Cnaa‘n, who moved to Holland and found untold wealth as a falafel distributor to Shmuel Frenkel, the patchouli-soaked martial arts devotee. But the episode chronicling the experience of Roni Dayg deserves special praise. Combining artistry and pathos in a soldier’s incredible story of survival and then massive survivor’s guilt, the scene begins in daylight as Roni escapes from his flaming tank in a hostile village battlefield until he musters an ingenious getaway by water at nightfall, only to subsequently become consumed by a pall of shame as the sole member of his unit spared. His story is dramatized seamlessly between the moods of the harrowing, in-your-face action and the serene, lovely underwater animation. There is a soulful, evocative air to much of the movie, which is ably accentuated by a luminous score from Max Richter.

The imagery created by the team led by director of animation Yoni Goodman is superlative; at times, the animation carries an almost 3-D intensity. In a scene illustrating exquisite detail, the camera moves through a lush grove as cautious soldiers, slivered with sunlight, scan for combatants who have just attacked their convoy, until, through a raft of thin trunks, they lock onto their attacker. Enhanced by a realistic quality and style, “Waltz with Bashir” is coated with a smoky, dusty, earthy viscosity.

“Waltz with Bashir” ends with a jarring, searing sequence — an indelible memory — and enters the pantheon of the most profound war films.


April 10th, 2009

In Vanity Fair, Mark Seal chronicles the byzantine backstory of the greatest crime film of all in The Godfather Wars. Warren Beatty as Michael Corleone?

Alec Baldwin chats about 30 Rock, evangelical brother Stephen and his roles as star and producer in the independent “Lymelife,” first-time director Derick Martini’s suburban drama set in 1979 Long Island which opens this month across the country.

“Gomorra” director Matteo Garrone delves Inside “The System” with Cineaste’s Richard Porton.

Pedro Almodovar’s latest work, “Broken Embraces,” starring Penelope Cruz, has just opened in Spain, will reportedly compete at Cannes in May, and then appear on U.S. screens much later in the year. The director kept a fascinating and fun multilingual blog during the making of the film.

One Film Wonder: As the crew of the Erebus journey deeper up the Nung River, “Apocalypse Now” becomes more harrowing, trippy and surreal; when they reach the Do Long bridge, they encounter crystalline anarchy.

Herb Rice — who has only one other role in his entire resume, as a “pool player” in “Rumble Fish” — is the intensely tranquilized and badass Roach who lets Captain Willard know exactly who’s in command.


The Great Buck Howard

What the World Needs Now

April 9th, 2009

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The illusionist Buck Howard, played with relish by John Malkovich and inspired by The Amazing Kreskin, scaled to the summit of his career during the age when ventriloquists and plate spinners had a prominent place on prime-time television. In the 1970s, talk shows were still synonymous with variety shows and the last vestiges of vaudeville and cabaret found a spot on the bill. Presently, he boasts loudly that he was a guest 61 times on “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson,” eager to add that he never graced the telecast when the inferior Jay Leno hosted; the irascible Buck, who won’t deign to call himself a “magician,” conveniently conceals that his last appearance on Carson’s couch was a decade before Jay debuted.

In this winning comedy from director and screenwriter Sean McGinly, Buck once again undertakes his mammoth, perpetual touring schedule into the overlooked markets in the unburnished venues where the entertainment of Ed Sullivan and Dinah Shore telecasts still captivates. In a one-man show he performs sleight of hand illusions, group hypnosis and even a lounge act interlude with piano key tinkling while sing whispering Jackie De Shannon’s classic, “What the World Needs Now.” To each audience, even in the most modest of theaters in the most drab of burgs, he gushes, “I love this town.”

Malkovich inhabits the character with great physical zeal with moppish hair, Allen Ludden’s sports coat collection, and enthusiastic, rotator cuff dislocating handshakes. Genial to his fans, his offstage viper delivery underscores a sneery, leery sensibility and a constant befuddlement with modern entertainment tastes. Like his turn in “Burn After Reading” there’s always the hint of menace in Malkovich’s comic characterizations.

Into this seeming time warp enters Troy Gable (Colin Hanks), a young man fleeing mid-semester from law school who answers a print ad and, as someone who’s just absconded from the future his father so carefully planned for him, readily takes up the challenge to circumnavigate the country serving as Buck’s personal assistant. Instead of a predictable generation gap tussle arising between the two, Troy quietly observes the prickly, particular eccentricity of the late middle aged performer on the road.

They are joined by a strong collective of supporting actors with Ricky Jay as Buck’s empathic manager, Emily Blunt as a bemused public relations hack, Griffin Dunne as a curious television star and Steve Zahn as an overzealous, sycophantic fan; no one plays the friendly doofus with as much earnest sincerity as Zahn. Tom Hanks, who served as a producer on the film, fumes, coincidentally, as Troy’s father. The likable and well-cast Colin Hanks comes in a clear second though to his Pops in their on-screen debates.

McGinly keeps “The Great Buck Howard” ticking along with the breezy, finger-snapping tempo of a variety show as an extraordinary stunt catapults Buck back into mainstream consciousness. The film mines several hysterical moments from awkward television appearances with Regis, Kelly, Conan and Jon Stewart. The new found fame leads the itinerant performer to a permanent room in Vegas. But Buck quickly finds that his magical inspiration doesn’t work in Vegas. (Not necessarily such a bad thing.)

But then something quite endearing happens. Buck returns to his exhaustive touring of the hinterlands, Troy leaves Buck’s employ to become a writer, and the irony evaporates. Buck truly appreciates his audience. He doesn’t begrudge or loathe them. They adore him and he reciprocates the ardor. When Troy comes back as an audience member, he finds himself engrossed by Buck’s performance, and rooting for the curmudgeon in a vulnerable career moment. There’s a sweetness to these final scenes; it’s a robust reminder that talent is nestled even in the chintzy, that there’s skill in the schmaltz, and being sappy isn’t necessarily the same thing as being a sap.

Despite a marquee name as a producer and performer, a cast of household faves and a charming story, “The Great Buck Howard” has opened in minuscule fashion, playing to at most 64 theaters during its three weeks in release, with only a modest number to be added in the next month or so. It seems that the film will vanish without much notice; it will be one of the more wistful disappearing acts this year.


April 3rd, 2009

If James Bond’s erection lasts more than four hours, should he consult Dr. No? Scott Murray takes readers In Bed With Bond in his heartily researched examination of 007’s sexual proclivities and conquests in the online film journal, Senses of Cinema.

Ricky Gervais and Elmo: Together at Last

Magnolia Pictures will release Sundance Film Festival fave “Humpday” this summer. Karina Longworth of SpoutBlog chatted with writer/director Lynn Shelton about the “bromantic comedy” with the tantalizing tagline that “Sometimes male bonding can be taken a little too far.”

The world’s most delicious comic provocateur will arrive in theaters in July. Behold the Bruno trailer, from the folks at Trailer Addict.

One Film Wonder: And one of the most auspicious first film cameos in Hollywood history. A 17-year-old Joy Page, the step-daughter of Warner Bros. chief Jack Warner, shimmers with earnest intensity as Annina Brandel, a newlywed with a most bedeviling dilemma in “Casablanca.” The quality of the clip improves quickly, highlighting both Page’s mature portrayal and Humphrey Bogart’s beautiful subtlety.