Sunday, June 28, 2020

Mini Reviews for June 22-28, 2020

Blah blah.

Movies

(T)ERROR (2015)
As definitive a document of the simultaneously Kafkaesque and Orwellian horror of the post-9/11 surveillance state as CITIZENFOUR (though to be fair, there's not a lot in this documentary that couldn't also be found in the COINTELPRO days). I'm a little surprised that this didn't have the huge media splash of CITIZENFOUR, given the scale of the horror and the depth of the access the filmmakers get, except that I guess the international heist-ish scope of Snowden's story is just a lot more mass-audience ready than a sad, scary gaze into the mundane and even pathetic interplay between FBI informant and FBI target. Still, the access here is stunning: we see an active FBI case unfold from both the side of the informant (an ex-Black Panther) and the side of the target (basically a random Muslim dude in Pittsburgh with some academic interest in militias). This is probably the most intimate look I've ever seen at the U.S. intelligence state's ground-level methods, and it is, frankly, terrifying. There is a very real sense that American counterterrorism is based on nothing more than a never-ending cycle of manipulating vulnerable people into entrapping other vulnerable people, who then have few choices besides joining this cycle—the informant, for example, was initially approached to become an informant to avoid jail time for his involvement with a radical group, and despite the fact that being an informant has in a very real way destroyed his life, he continues to do so because the FBI pays him, and he needs the money. Pair all this with news like this from just down the road from where I live, and it's really hard not to get paranoid. Grade: A-

Redline (レドライン) (2009)
It's basically an R-rated, animated Speed Racer (2008), and like that movie, the style of this thing is completely wild. These stretchy hand-drawn characters (the whole movie is apparently hand-drawn, though I'd bet money that computers did the inking) whip through their sci-fi world with an abandon so reckless that it nearly breaks the cinematic form. The two racing sequences that bookend this movie are jaw-dropping sensory onslaughts, and I was having a great time as long as we were on the racetrack. Unfortunately, any time there isn't a race going on, this movie is kind of awful. The fifty-ish minutes between the two races are completely dull, fleshing out a narrative that is basically nonexistent during the races into some uninteresting archetypal beats and populating the movie with a convoluted but somehow still flat array of characters and noir-ish plots. This movie's relationship with its female characters is pretty bad, too, and there's like an entire scene where the love interest appears topless for no reason. So there's that, too. But those race sequences... golly, those races. Grade: B

The Ring (2002)
Solidly entertaining, though a little goofier at times than it probably needed to be. I prefer the Japanese one for reasons I can't exactly articulate at the moment except that it strikes me as a cleaner execution than this one. That said, I love how, for all its reputation as a horror movie, the story both versions tell is much more just a Gothic mystery, and kudos to Gore Verbinski's direction for being extremely keyed into that wavelength. Grade: B





Taken for a Ride (1996)
I'm of two minds with this one. On the one hand, the ascendancy of the automobile and highway systems is one of the most vile, destructive things to happen to the American city organism over the past century, and the second half of this movie gives an effective overview of those effects, from the cutting of public transit budgets to the destruction of neighborhoods for highway development. On the other hand, this movie is somewhat misleading in presenting the dismantling of the Los Angeles streetcar system as representative of how the country's mass transit got so terrible, and its nostalgia for the old streetcar systems completely ignores how those were usually private enterprises prone to their own abuses and often run by the very same people who built city suburbs—a ton of trolley lines were simply amenities built by developers, and since these developers were interested in real estate, not transit, they had a real incentive to encourage people to take automobiles instead of the streetcars once it became clear that that was the direction the larger corporate lobbies were leaning. On yet another hand, despite some really solid archival footage, this movie is an extremely 101 take on the history of public transit/car transit in America, and I was really hoping for something a little more detailed—maybe if the movie had just focused on either the Los Angeles streetcar system or the effects of highways on cities, instead of smashing those two topics together into two ungainly halves of a pretty short movie. So for anyone who's counting, that's two minds and three hands I have about this movie, which I think means that I think about urbanism too much and about metaphors too little. But anyway, I hate cars and motor companies, and this movie is great agitprop against those entities, so I'm trending more positively on this one than I should. Grade: B-

Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid (1973)
I don't think I've ever seen a cops-and-outlaws movie be so sad about the cops winning. Sad not just that Pat Garrett gets Billy the Kid, but that the cops win on a societal level: that the cops side with land-owners who abuse immigrants and native people; that the "taming" of the American West means the concentration of power that forms a true underclass as sure as it forms a ruling class. This all requires some dubious American mythology to work as existing within a real historical moment, but taken as a kind of parable, it's a pretty effective little tale about a man whose choice to become law enforcement has caused his soul to rot. A really elegiac bummer with (duh) some contemporary resonance both in '73 (I imagine this is how it felt for Peckinpah to watch the cops win the 1960s) as well as in good ol' 2020 A.D. That said, you've got the typical marginalized/objectified roles for women in a Peckinpah flick, which I'm never a fan of—there's only so many times you can show abused women as shorthand for "gee, masculine scripts sure are violent" before it comes off as a cheap crutch. And even though he's the whole reason that I watched this movie to begin with, I gotta admit that Bob Dylan is pretty distracting here. There isn't a single moment when he's onscreen when I wasn't thinking, "Wow, it's really Bob Dylan," and the fact that his character is super cagey about his real name ("Alias") doesn't help. Someone really needs to isolate the audio of him reading the general store inventory and set it to a sick beat, though. Grade: B+

The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (Le Charme discret de la bourgeoisie) (1972)
A relentless, dryly hilarious satire in which Buñuel justly heaps burning scorn on the titular social class for an hour and forty minutes. SPOILERS—There isn't much charm to the bourgeoisie at all. The central conceit that these clueless rich folks are forever in search of a dinner party but never actually eating is great, but my favorite part is how these people somehow still keep getting invited to dinner parties at all—and who invites them is telling (and damning). Major props to the part where the army sergeant declares war on radicals and then, with his next breath, cordially invites the bourgeoisie to dinner the following week, which feels like Buñuel inventing and then completely torching that Kendall Jenner Pepsi ad—this one moment is probably the most withering takedown of the whole "we could solve systemic social problems if we could just sit down and get to know each other" ethos that I've ever seen. Grade: A-

Hellzapoppin' (1941)
I honestly did not know they made movies like this in the 1940s. The closest contemporaries operating anywhere near this wheelhouse are the Marx Brothers with their vaudevillian anarchy and animators like Chuck Jones and Tex Avery, whose irreverent chaos and rubbery physics somewhat approximate what happens here. But more than anything, this movie feels like a forerunner to the absurd, sarcastic meta-humor of much later film comedy like Mel Brooks, Zucker-Abrams-Zucker and early Robert Zemeckis, though even at their giddiest (Blazing Saddles, Airplane!, and I Wanna Hold Your Hand/1941), those movies are still too beholden to plot to really be quite in the same wheelhouse as Hellzapoppin', whose already tenuous rom-com/musical revue structure is gleefully torn to pieces by its actors, who seem to actively resent the plot they are in. Gremlins 2 is probably the closest I've seen a mainstream studio feature come to this level of delighted self-destruction. It has to be seen to be believed, and maybe even then, you won't believe it. Grade: A

Books

Maus by Art Spiegelman (1980-1991)
The visceral impact of this graphic novel's innovations is mostly lost on me, reading it now almost twenty years after its final volume's publication and having already read a lot of comics that take its approach (most notably Persepolis). That said, this is extremely well-done, and I don't have any substantial critiques other than the anachronistic one that it feels overly familiar because of its influence. The one part that legitimately surprised me, though, was the frame narrative, where Spiegelman captures with admirable frankness the frustrating, often sad process of trying to interview his father to get the Holocaust survival narrative that makes of the bulk of this novel; his father (who died while Spiegelman was finishing the series—another surprising wrinkle) is obstinate and antagonistic and even bigoted himself, all of these characteristics having complicated roots in his survival and the ripple effects it had on his psyche and his family. I can't imagine how difficult it must have been for Spiegelman to wrestle with this, especially in the context of a Holocaust story, and the book, messy and complex, never really tries to reconcile all the threads of his father into a neat thesis; it's all the better for it. Grade: B+

Music

Frédéric D. Oberland & Irena Z. Tomažin - ARBA, DÂK ARBA (2020)
I bought this album entirely on the virtue of its cover art, and I wasn't disappointed. An intoxicating slurry of ambient drone and modern classical—when the vocal chants start up in the back half of the record, I get chills. This probably won't be for everybody, but if you're at all into the genres I named earlier, this is definitely worth a listen. Grade: A-

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Mini Reviews for June 15-21, 2020

Happy Father's Day to all the dads out there, especially my own.

Movies

Black Mother (2018)
A beautiful collage essay on Jamaican identity and the women who inhabit it. The movie's style makes this somewhat of an inherently spiritual film, with on-the-street voiceovers floating over footage of Jamaica like priests giving homilies, all framed by the biological liturgy of pregnancy trimesters, which the movie explicitly structures itself after. But the last fifteen minutes especially are transcendent, an ecstatic prayer by a woman who says that Jesus has called her away from the church into the world, followed by a childbirth sequence intercut with majestic shots of churning water. The rest of the movie is interesting, but those last minutes I found extremely moving. Grade: B+


Mansfield Park (1999)
Probably the most overtly revisionist I've seen a Jane Austen adaptation be: sexually frank (is this the first Jane Austen movie to have a sex scene [with nudity]?), queer leaning (lots of lesbian subtext, plus [I think??] some polyamory at the end), and it uses a somewhat throwaway detail from the novel to make a whole subplot about slavery/abolition. Very cool, interesting stuff. I wish the movie were more adventurous in its form, or even interesting at all—this is some pedestrian filmmaking, and the only thing notable about it is that it has an early incarnation of the "actor talking to the camera to read a letter instead of using voiceover" device that has become apparently the industry standard for Austen adaptations. Grade: B


Delwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (दिलवाले दुल्हनिया ले जायेंगे) (1995)
This is a completely overwhelming sensory experience: stunning music, colors, choreography, locations. Some really interesting ideas about what it means to live in a country as a non-native, too—the movie opens on a lovely lyrical moment of an aging Indian man feeding pigeons in London, reflecting on his alienation within the UK even after decades of living there, and while it seems weird for a while that we open on this character of whom we see maybe five minutes of over the course of the first half of the movie, the importance of that opening scene immediately snaps into focus the instant we see him arrive back in India—his body language changes, his face softens, he even becomes part of one of the dance sequences. I also really like the extremely goofy streak this movie has, like how Shah Rukh Khan's character basically turns into Bugs Bunny for a minute to snare his rival in an elaborate trap in the woods. But speaking of SRK, I hate to say it, but his character is the one keeping me at somewhat of an arm's length from this movie. I had a really hard time feeling anything for his character, and when he's half of the central romance that forms the emotional core of this movie, that means I'm having a hard time accessing that emotional core. This all intersects the fact that I am not at all a part of the Indian culture this movie depicts (or even very familiar with it), so I'm going to pose my feelings as questions rather than make any value statements about the plot, but these two issues are basically what's locking me out: 1. How am I supposed to care about a character who is 100% a douchebag for the part of the movie in which he and Simran (his co-protagonist/love interest, played excellently by Kajol) fall in love? Like, he actively ruins her European vacation, harasses her when she begs him repeatedly to leave her alone, grabs her when she asks him not to, rips her clothes, and "jokes" about having raped her while she was drunk, which gives her a mild panic attack the next morning—I had a difficult time flipping the switch into seeing him as a heartthrob to root for in the second half of the movie, especially since there didn't really seem to be any change-of-heart moment or character development to warrant that switch? 2. Why is it supposed to be romantic that, when not just Simran but also her sister and her mother are begging him to elope with Simran because her father is such a domineering man and will never approve of the marriage, SRK's character is determined to play by the rules and convince Simran's father to "give" her to him in marriage? He's such an anarchic force of nature for most of the movie, and it was jarring to see him play so hard into (patriarchal?) family values in this one aspect, especially when all the other characters we like are telling him to do otherwise and also especially because just like an hour before in the movie, he'd been asking Simran to have an affair with him. Tl;dr - for me, DDLJ is a cinematic feat and a truly captivating experience until I have to engage with SRK's character, but maybe I just don't understand the culture enough? Grade: B

Cape Fear (1991)
People talk about this being Scorsese's B-picture/Hitchcock/DePalma tribute, and it is gloriously that, with the Hermann score and all the camera tricks, the pure pulp of its premise and its thrills-and-chills-style slow-burn-into-literal-burn climax. But I don't see enough people talk about the weirdly ambitious thematic stew that's simmering right below the surface of this movie. Unless I'm forgetting something, this is the only Scorsese movie that deals directly with Protestantism, and the way that he overlays it with the American South (another Scorsese rarity) is fascinating—DeNiro's character, a rapist and inhuman monster, speaks in tongues and snake-handles, quotes the Bible endlessly, and enforces a sadistic atonement-style justice, while at the same time driving a car with one of those "American by birth, Southern by the grace of God" bumper stickers; Confederate flags are all over this movie, usually in association with DeNiro's character, and there's even a scene in which none other than Gregory Peck defends DeNiro in court—an allusion to the original Cape Fear, sure, but with Peck's southern-fried lawyer defending a rapist from vigilante justice, there's no way it's not also a really sick inversion/deconstruction of To Kill a Mockingbird, too. I have no idea if all these elements hang together, but the movie seems to be presenting some sort of idea about the Southern identity as a crucible of religious ecstasy intertwined with fear: of the Other, of the oppressed, and (if you're an Other or an oppressed person) of the monstrous oppressors and the legal/policing system and "civilized" Southern gentility that allow them to continue to create an atmosphere of terror—where the law of the South is defined less by the book (though that book is certainly systemically bent to protect a certain white protestant hegemony—time and again demonstrated by DeNiro doing technically legal things that are still terrifying) than by the overbearing cultural weight of a Christian theology obsessed with pain and judgement (embodied by DeNiro's tattoos). If that's really what this movie is going for, it would probably carry a lot more weight if the central terrorized family were anything other than suburb-y liberal white people. But still, for an ostensible paycheck job from a team just off the height of Hollywood prestige with Goodfellas, this is a weird, wild posture, and an intriguing piece of the ongoing conversation within Scorsese's filmography about Americanism and Christianity. Grade: B+

Winter Soldier (1972)
There isn't much to Winter Soldier besides the experience of for 90 minutes listening to American soldiers confess to the war crimes they and their peers committed in Vietnam. It's nauseating and horrifying, of course, but also, in their testimonies, the soldiers also give one of the starkest and most clear-eyed accounts of the indoctrination of nationalism and white supremacy on a cultural scale that I've ever seen. Consistently, these soldiers talk about how the very structure of the military machine trained them to dehumanize the Vietnamese (not just the Viet Cong): the body count tallies as mission objectives, the language (always slurs and animal vocabulary, never just "the Vietnamese"), the tail-wagging-the-dog logic of the violence ("How do you know they were VC?" "Because they're dead"). These were not just individual soldiers cracking toward sadism (which is what I was taught in school); the whole endeavor from the top down was shaped to produce racist, supremacist, sadistic actions creating senseless slaughter. So obviously, this movie is an essential document of the Vietnam War. But I guess what I'm saying is that what's ultimately profound about it is the way that it also transcends its historical moment and becomes about the whole project of American white supremacy/imperialism in general. Hot take: it's not a good project, y'all! Grade: A

The Story of the Last Chrysanthemum (残菊物語) (1939)
Exquisite style and poignant tragedy—a beautiful 19th-century Japan bent around the abject destruction of a woman who just wants this dude not to suck so much at acting. I never felt that invested in the central romance, but maybe that's the point? Grade: B

I was part of the conversation about this movie on this week's episode of the Cinematary podcast—if you're interested, you can listen here.





A Day at the Races (1937)
Someone should have been fired for making a two-hour-long Marx Bros. movie. Even adjusting for that, it's definitely not their best. Some good bits: I like Chico's book con and the part where Harpo smashes the piano and plays it like a harp. But there's a disappointing shortage of good Groucho material (the horse pill bit notwithstanding), and at two hours long, pieces of this movie just draaaagggggg, which is absolute death for the Marx Bros. style of comedy. As an aside, I spent a good part of this movie wondering if Queen intentionally modeled the Marx Bros. by following up their groundbreaking A Night at the Opera album with the baggy, inconsistent A Day at the Races. Grade: B-



Television

Tuca & Bertie, Season 1 (2019)
Lisa Hanawalt (whose human-animal-hybrid work you probably recognize from BoJack Horseman) has created a show about two Millennial women trying to navigate adulthood in a big city, and that would be a major yawn from me (we have like ten shows with that premise, right?) except that this is like the Looney Tunes version of that concept: a totally buckwild and anarchic execution of urban ennui that keeps the delirious animal puns and "yes, and" escalation of absurd jokes from BoJack Horseman but jettisons any pretensions to realism at all, opting instead for an anything-goes visual aesthetic where reality is rubbery and unpredictable. Character dialogue can appear as words on the screen, whose letters act as objects that the characters interact with; scenes connect to each other with a kind of fevered-dream logic conveyed with phantasmagoric intertitles; characters' bodies stretch and twist into elaborate visual puns. The story itself is just okay, but the animation is the most fun, inventive TV animation I've seen, maybe ever. Between this and The Midnight Gospel, I would say that Netflix has the most exciting television animation happening right now. But then Netflix went and cancelled this. Booooooooooooo. Grade: A-

Music

Yves Tumor - Heaven to a Tortured Mind (2020)
Yves Tumor has shaved off a lot of his experimental impulses for this album, which isn't a bad thing. The result is a record that sounds a lot like peak TV on the Radio, if that band had leaned a little more heavily into neo soul. "Kerosene!", the lush, anthemic fourth track that samples Uriah Heep of all things, is undoubtedly the standout here, and the rest of the album doesn't even get close to that high. But it's all solid throughout. Between this an the new Moses Sumney album, 2020 is turning out to be a pretty good year for ambitious psychedelic soul. Grade: B+

Sunday, June 14, 2020

Mini Reviews for June 8-14, 2020

There are a few things in this post that I would have reviewed last week if I'd had time.

Movies

Da 5 Bloods (2020)
More so than any Vietnam War movie I've seen, Da 5 Bloods goes beyond the psyche-scarring, generational consequences of fighting in an unjust, unjustified war, instead becoming about the psyche-scarring, generational consequences of how imperialism forces its victims to fight one another rather than their oppressors. Out of the mouth of none other than Hanoi Hannah (one of several gigantic middle fingers this movie gives to the mainstream, U.S.-government-approved narrative of the war), Spike Lee broadcasts his electric thesis: that at the very same moment that the United States was crushing the civil rights uprisings of black Americans on its home turf, it was also drafting those same black Americans to crush a Vietnamese uprising that was closely tied to liberation from their French oppressors; this is a fracturing of identity and global solidarity that takes the work of decades to mend, if at all, and the trauma of imperialism (both of the classical European variety represented by the French colonizers and of the modern military-industrial kind represented by the United States armed forces) reverberates through the Vietnamese and the African-American in ways that take the damage inflicted upon them by their oppressors and iterate that damage upon each other. It's an extraordinarily complex piece of filmmaking, even for Spike Lee, and it's filled to the brim with brilliant touches that feed recursively into that thesis, like the way that the camera frames the Western capitalism towering over the modern Vietnamese cities, or the use of "Ride of the Valkyries," Apocalypse Now-style, as the American soldiers take a tourist boat down a river. It's also incredibly uneven in sections, as Spike Lee movies tend to be. The first hour in particular has a lot of material that could easily be cut, I think; maybe this is a hot take, but I actually don't think we need any of the flashbacks to the battle scenes—like, besides the (admittedly cool) aspect-ratio change, what do they add that the present-day meat of the movie doesn't already tackle? But even at its shakiest, Spike maintains a furious focus on his central cause, and by the time we get to the final stage of the film (which begins about fifty minutes from the end) and its thematic threads begin to pull tight, the movie has become flat-out great, at times almost entirely on the back of Delroy Lindo's incendiary performance as a self-loathing Trump supporter—instantly one of Spike Lee's best characters out of a career full of great ones and one whose totemic inferno without a doubt deserves to be ranked beside Brando in Apocalypse Now and Vincent D'Onofrio in Full Metal Jacket as the definitive cinematic portraits of the self-destructive rot that the American military complex in Vietnam wrought on individuals. In this one character rests the most compelling embodiment of the film's ideas about the cyclical violence of imperialism among the oppressed, and a long, almost stream-of-consciousness sequence in which Lindo directly addresses the camera may in fact be the movie's most vital approach to its thesis. Compared to Spike's re-emergence back into the mainstream with BlacKkKlansman, Da 5 Bloods is maybe less conventionally "good," and I don't think it ever arrives at anything as visually arresting as Alec Baldwin in front of the projector or as structurally stunning as the Birth of a Nation cross-cutting. But as an object of cinematic derring-do, it's miles more ambitious, and as a thematic work (and particularly as those themes intersect Lindo's character), it's way knottier and more intricate than BlacKkKlansman could ever hope to be, and ultimately more challenging, too. Appointment viewing, to be sure. Grade: A-

A Hidden Life (2019)
Alongside a few Evangelical films, this is probably the definitive cinematic statement on how following Jesus is an inherently political gesture. The difference is that the politics of those Evangelical films always ultimately manifest themselves as self-defense: protection of the institution of Christianity (or at least their version of it). Though all three God's Not Dead movies focus on different aspects of it (respectively: freedom of thought, freedom of speech, and freedom of assembly), they all hinge on the idea that Christian counter-cultural resistance is about defending the presence of a Christian institution that is """under attack""" in our modern world—even the duty to save souls is always framed in terms of who shows up to the church service or the Newsboys concert (the third God's Not Dead movie is more complicated than this, but for the purposes of this review, oh well). Persecution is, under this framing of the Christian life, to be on the front lines of defending Christianity, and the sad irony of it all is the fundamental idolatry of it: they are followers of Christianity rather than followers of Christ, something Martin Scorsese's film (and Shūsaku Endō's novel) Silence thoroughly explore and ultimately burn to the ground. Contrast that with what Terrence Malick shows of Franz Jägerstätter's resistance in A Hidden Life. Jägerstätter takes a stand not for his Christianity but because of it, and the suffering he undergoes is not the result of people attacking his beliefs or an institution to which he belongs (what Evangelicalism would have you think persecution is) but the result of the political implications of actions he has committed because of his Christian beliefs: namely, that he refuses to fight for an army in service of Nazism. I can see how some people might ding this movie as being a slightly artsier version of the inspirational suffering fetishism that Christians have indulged in for centuries, at least, a la Foxe's Book of Martyrs. Silence is, after all, a much more complex look at Christian persecution, especially compared to the moral certitude of, you know, resisting Nazi Germany. But I can't just dismiss A Hidden Life as that, because in addition to that beatific depiction of persecution, it also functions as the greatest positive declaration of what the Christian life is that the film arts have seen in a very long time. As one character states early in the movie, "Christ's life is a demand," and the movie spends the better part of its three hours exploring just what that demand is. Neighbors and city leaders are seduced by white supremacist nationalism and spread its lies in the commons as the solution to affliction, jackbooted soldiers march through the city demanding patronage, fascist leaders obligate fealty. The bells of the church are melted into bullets, but the echoes of their peals ring across this film, a reminder of what the institution that Evangelical films defend has wrought: complicity in fascism, racism, brutality, subjugation. Jägerstätter's Christian life is one that follows Christ's: refuses complicity, refuses fascism's blathering leader, stands on behalf of the immigrant and the marginalized, stands against oppression. This is a vital part of Malick's declaration of the Christian life, but that declaration is not complete until the final moments of the film, when, echoing the words of John the Revelator describing the New Jerusalem descending to Earth at the Bible's end, Jägerstätter's wife Franziska finishes the film's vision with our great collective hope in Christ: "A time will come when we will know what all this is for, and there will be no mysteries. We will know why we live. We'll come together. We'll plant orchards, fields. We'll build the land back up." This hope is God's Kingdom, our work here on Earth, the two sides of a Christian life: resistance and renewal. Any alternative is idolatry. Grade: A

Ford v Ferrari (2019)
Cars are bad, but this movie is good, for the most part. It's kind of funny that a movie about the difficulty of being a craftsman within the soul-sucking machinations of a gigantic corporation ended up being more of a Ford itself than a Ferrari—which, while I don't know anything about cars (except that they are bad), this movie leads me to believe is a distinction based on vision and artistry (Ferrari) vs. dependability and profitability (Ford). This is like the definition of dependability: the kind of movie that nobody is probably going to say is their favorite but that they will reliably catch an hour of on cable from time to time and enjoy themselves solidly. It's way, way, way too long (2.5 hours? REALLY?? I was restless by the end, for sure), and Caitriona Balfe, who plays Mollie, Christian Bale's character's wife, is given a wildly uneven version of the already uneven trope of the Great Man's Nagging Wife. But generally, this is a pretty good time. Now someone needs to make the Ferrari version of this movie. Or maybe a movie about trains. Grade: B

Allegro non troppo (1976)
It's kind of surprising that there aren't more Fantasia knock-offs; syncing classical music (or music of any kind—still waiting for that progressive rock Fantasia, world) to wordless animated shorts is a very cool idea, and as this movie explicitly says in its opening minutes, it's an animator's dream to be given a blank canvas of the kind that the Fantasia model permits. The movie says this with its tongue unmistakably in its cheek, but I'm serious about it; anything-goes animation coupled with evocative orchestral music is a format with limitless possibilities, and it's a sad fact that the format is not quite commercial enough to get more iterations off the ground. Which is why, I think, that Allegro non troppo positions itself as a parody of Fantasia rather than a child of Fantasia, as that's probably the more marketable angle. And in fairness, it works extremely well as a parody—a satire, even, lobbing relentless scorn at the  sanctimony and labor abuses of Walt Disney, and bravo, I say, especially in this era of the entertainment-industry-gobbling tentacled empire of Disney. From this position of scorn, the movie not only includes but revels in crude punchlines and sexual humor to which stuffy Walt would never have dared "stoop," and the movie is better for it, a light and absurd bit of animated acid (in both the psychedelic and caustic senses) that has the devilish, anti-establishment sensibilities of Looney Tunes or Ralph Bakshi. But at the same time as it's a pretty good skewering of Fantasia, Allegro non troppo is also a great example of the form itself, and for as much as its anarchic personality makes it seem like this is all just a nihilistic farce, there is a real care to the animation that makes its individual sequences stunning, particularly the show-stopping sequence set to Ravel's Boléro, in which life evolves from the sludge at the bottom of a littered bottle of Coke—it's an honest-to-goodness masterpiece, and even if the other shorts were trash, this one piece justifies the existence of the entire endeavor. Luckily, the other shorts are pretty great for the most part, with the exception of the opening sequence, which involves an unfunny and uninteresting parade of sexual imagery as an aging satyr tries to get his groove back. That one's not too good. But on the whole, this is some serious stuff, as irreverent as it can be. Grade: A-

Jeanne Dielman, 23, Quai du Commerce 1080 Bruxelles (1975)
For a 3.5-hour movie that is 95% still shots of a woman doing chores in her own house, Jeanne Dielman is surprisingly riveting. Even before its somewhat infamous turn in its final minutes, it is legitimately fascinating to watch in great detail our protagonist go about her routines, in the same way that Frederick Wiseman's fly-on-the-wall chroniclings of lengthy bureaucratic meetings fascinating: give any procedure enough context and its inherent drama reveals itself. Mundane human life isn't usually boring to those involved in it because those involved tend to have a deep sense of what is at stake in those habits; movies have a hard time capturing these stakes because their necessarily hedged perspective lacks the infinite continuity of a subjectively lived life. Jeanne Dielman (and the work of Frederick Wiseman, for that matter) fixes this somewhat by giving as much immediate context as possible, letting these actions exist within long (for a movie) stretches of time inside lengthy, unedited takes. The more we see of a life, the more interesting it becomes because the importance of these details is magnified by the amount of time we spend with them, and by the accumulation of these details' significance, the gendered and economic dimensions of her life become more immediately lived by the viewer than they would be in a more conventionally edited movie, where the hyper-condensed information of a life necessitates a heavy hand and bold shapes to communicate the same information. That's not to say this movie isn't boring for large stretches; oh lordy, it can be a snooze. But as in so much slow cinema, that boredom is itself a feature of the text by which the movie builds its stakes, and paradoxically, it would be less exciting if it were less boring. Weird, wild stasis. Grade: A-

The Black Cat (1934)
This is waaay plottier than I was expecting from an early-sound feature adapted from a pretty brief Poe short story. You got train rides, you got satanic cults, you got mad scientists, Lugosi and Karloff playing chess over a guy's life, Lugosi and Karloff going fisticuffs, Russian conspiracies—all in an hour and change. A wild, wild movie that probably could have slowed down a tad and played up the atmosphere a hair more (and maybe done a little more with its female characters than make them swoon and die). But some very cool stuff on the whole, no doubt. Grade: B+

I was part of a conversation discussing this movie on the Cinematary podcast, if you're interested in listening.


7th Heaven (1927)
I was really tracking with this movie for its front half, when it's this somewhat kooky fantasy with exaggerated urban landscapes ("I work in the sewers but live in the stars!") that morphs into a slightly less kooky romantic comedy. It completely lost me when it became a WWI melodrama in the back half. The beginning is super good, though, and I don't think I could ever completely lose goodwill for a movie that includes the scene where the protagonist explains that he's an atheist because God owes him 10 francs. Grade: B-





Body and Soul (1925)
In one sense, this movie is fatally compromised by the censor's mandated changes. A story about a literal criminal uses religion to manipulate, exploit, and even assault his congregants that ends with a completely haphazard "but it was all a dream!" twist masking-taped onto the end is a failure at a fundamental level to achieve its goal of criticizing religion. On a meta level, though, this is a gut-punch—the censor's insistence that the very real abuse at the hands of the church is "just a dream" is documentary evidence of the gaslighting that so often happens to suppress allegations of abuse, particularly in church communities. I would have really liked to have seen the unedited version of this movie, but there's something compelling about the fact of this version's existence. Grade: B

Television

Rick and Morty, Season 4 (2019-2020)
There are some standout episodes in this season that indicate there's still plenty of gas in the tank for Rick and Morty: my favorites are "Rattlestar Ricklactica," a hilarious recreation of the first Terminator movie with a race of sentient snakes, and "The Vat of Acid Episode," in which Morty gets a re-do button for life. The show remains unparalleled at creating wildly clever (sometimes even parable-like) sci-fi yarns that double as joke machines. But there is a higher rate of weaker episodes this season than in previous seasons (neither "Chidrick of Mort" nor "Never Ricking Morty" did much for me), and on a more holistic level, the series seems to have run out of ideas for its characters as far as their humanity goes; we're not quite at the point of Flanderization, but for a show that seemed for a while at least nominally interested in delivering character insights and development, this season is curiously free of them. The characters just kind of live in the same stasis as they were left in at the end of Season 3, and any sincere moments they're given don't do much to expand beyond things we already know about them. Or even when there are a few new things, there's just nothing surprising or interesting about any of that. This is especially true of Rick. The show knows one emotional beat for Rick by heart: that his drive toward incredible material and scientific success doubles as both an attempt at connection with his friends and family and a method by which he drives those family and friends away, a destructive contradiction that leaves Rick miserable and bitter. And Season 4 plays this beat over and over again, occasionally to great effect (the end of "The Old Man and the Seat" is maybe the definitive image of this central conflict in Rick) but increasingly to diminishing returns. There are only so many times I can see Rick do something abusive or alienating that he feels bad about as the end credits roll and still be invested in that character trait. I had my complaints with the blunt and overly diagnostic approach to Rick's character in Season 3, but at least that was pushing the character in new directions. I don't see a lot of new direction here, and while I can see how some people may still find those familiar directions engaging (or find the stasis of a character like Rick to be a compelling depiction of how he is stuck in the same psychological cycles), for me it makes the show's character beats feel increasingly like afterthoughts to the main attraction of the wild, irreverent sci-fi adventures. I guess there's a version of the show just settling into a sci-fi adventure comedy that I would enjoy, but under the current version of the show, it kind of feels like if it's not going to engage critically with its characters, especially Rick, then it's just using the (increasingly rote) character moments as justification for its incredibly mean sense of humor. That humor can be funny, but the less it becomes tethered to characters who are developed, the less I'm interested in it. Grade: B-

Steven Universe, Season 1 (2013-2015)
A complete joy. It's very much the child of Adventure Time in the sense that it uses the 11-minute-episode Cartoon Network setup to create a kind of low-stakes sense of absurdity and pre-adolescent happy-go-luckiness within a warm world whose possibilities and format are flexible enough to pivot between serious mythological arcs and standalone bits. It also feels very much post-Adventure Time in the way that it immediately jumps into a fully formed environment (it took the Land of Ooo a couple seasons to really fill out, but this show's Beach City feels fully realized from the jump) and foregrounds the melancholy from the get-go: Steven Universe trades Adventure Time's dadaism for a much more direct engagement with the emotional lives of its characters, who are all dealing indirectly and directly with the loss of Steven's mother, Rose, particularly Steven, who must navigate his life, his family, and his own body without the guidance that his mother would have given him—a potent metaphor for puberty, for queerness, for general childhood heartbreak, but also on a literal level a potent storytelling device. The child's point of view gives the show's stories a beautiful poignancy and a vulnerability that television doesn't always allow in itself. It's also just a really fun time. I'm looking forward to watching the rest of the series. Grade: A-

Books

House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski (2000)
A horror story wrapped in layers of meta-narrative wrapped in a formalist exercise—Lovecraft by way of Borges by way of the language poets. Danielewski is impressively committed to the central bit here (it's basically the novel equivalent of a found-footage film, taking the form of an academic text [complete with footnoted citations!] analyzing a possibly fictional home movie turned Hollywood movie, and there's an argument to be made that this goes up its own rear end in terms of its stylistic flourishes—though some moments are very funny and lack any real pretension of high art, like a sequence in which a lot of famous people (Stanley Kubrick, Jacques Derrida, etc.) are interviewed about what they thought of the home movie in question. But at the core of this novel is both a kind of sweetness paired with a deep sadness, both of which kind of transcend the formalist and pastiche games of the immediate aesthetic of the novel. The core horror story of the house that is (much) bigger on the inside than it is on the outside is more or less the story of a family desperately trying to hold itself together as their own traumas and neuroses tear it apart, and it ends on a note of real love, while the meta stories (i.e. the people compiling the academic analyses) present people plunging into the abyss as encroaching mental illness and obsession isolates and maybe even ultimately kills them. There's both an optimism and a tragedy to this story that feels hard-won. I don't know how much each individual moment works (after a while, the joke about the meticulous literature review and withdrawn tone of academic writing wears thin, and I don't exactly know what to do with the formatting games later in the novel), but this book at least has heart. Grade: B+

Sunday, June 7, 2020

Mini Reviews for June 1-7, 2020

Publishing late and abbreviated because I was out of town. Forgive me.

Movies

Final Destination 3 (2006)
The weakest of this series that I've seen so far, which is too bad because Mary Elizabeth Winstead gives hands-down the best performance of anyone in all three movies. This movie isn't without its charms, and there is at least one deliriously complicated chain-reaction death involving a nail gun (also one hilariously uncomplicated one involving weights). But for the first time in this series, at least one of the killings feels more bullying than impish (the tanning bed), and the stuff with the photographs giving clues for deaths doesn't really do much for me. And the ending is pretty dumb—disappointing, considering that the endings of the previous two movies were pretty good. Grade: B-



White Material (2009)
This is a pretty damning character portrait of a white woman refusing to divest from her complicity within the oppressive system that a (unnamed) de-colonizing African country is rapidly purging. I really like what Isabelle Huppert does with that character, the lean vulnerability overlapping with a keen sense of survival overlaid with a general self-blindness, and as a piece of storytelling, I was pretty caught up. As a cinematic object, though, I don't know if there's much going on, which is unusual for a Claire Denis feature. Maybe I'm missing something, but this seems pretty staid outside of some pretty landscape photography. Grade: B



The Public Enemy (1931)
I've heard a lot discussion about how this movie is groundbreaking in its depiction of urban violence and anti-heroism, but nobody told me just how desperately sad this movie is. Most of The Public Enemy consists of the central character getting swept into the urban underworld by powerful crime leaders who promise him the moon only to use him as an ultimately expendable pawn in their conflicts with other bosses. He's deeply miserable and makes everyone around him whom he doesn't alienate miserable, too; all the while, his family waits expectantly for a redemption that never comes. It's bleak, heartbreaking stuff and not at all the callous, salacious B-picture I was expecting. Grade: B+


Faust (1926)
Just devastatingly beautiful from top to bottom in the way that only late-'20s silent features (esp. German Expressionist late-'20s silent features) could be: genuinely sophisticated, jaw-dropping use of double exposure, evocatively operatic costume design, stunning elaborate sets. Murnau is really not holding back one bit in this movie, and it's a glorious expression of maximalism in the service of one of the most maximalist stories stories in the Western canon. The first forty-five minutes of this movie, involving angels and demons and a raging plague and Faust as an old alchemist are heavy metal to the extreme, and it's great; the final half hour or so is similarly intense, though more with the urgency of a fairy tale or fable. I wish I had kinder things to say about the middle, though, which drops a lot of interesting thematic threads (an exploration of utilitarianism, hedonism, etc.) to do a kind of dull mix of romantic melodrama—Faust is in love with Gretchen, but he's got secrets, man!—and romantic comedy—the devil tries to seduce Gretchen's mother! Any longform version of Faust is going to have to deal with the fact that the structure of the story means interrupting all the epic metaphysical stuff at the beginning and end for a small-scale romance in the middle, which is part of the whole thing that's beautiful about this story, that war for a man's soul takes place simultaneously in biblical and microscopically personal proportions and has such human consequences. Unfortunately, this movie never finds a way to make that juxtaposition work, and there's a good portion of this movie's middle that drags. But the rest! It rocks! Grade: A-