At this point, nothing more than the musings of a restless English teacher on the pop culture he experiences.
Sunday, September 27, 2020
Mini Reviews for September 21-27, 2020
Movies
Insidious (2010)
I really appreciate just how silly this movie is willing to get. For example, the main villain looks like Darth Maul; he lives inside an alternate-dimension haunted mansion in a room full of puppets and gritty goth pictures, like some Hot Topic edgelord—the movie makes no attempt to rationalize or apologize for any of this, and in fact, it just kind of revels in it. There's a real hucksterish, go-for-broke quality about this movie that makes it feel like you're in an old-school roadside attraction, and while you know all the tricks, it's so earnest and eager and executed with such craft that it's a good time nonetheless. Simultaneously extremely patient and homespun while also being kind of maximalist in its own way. Grade: B
Amour (2012)
Almost every one of my elderly relatives who has died (as well as my still-living grandfather right now) has basically had the same journey as Emmanuelle Riva's character here—an agonizing succession of strokes and dementia that turns them into miserable shells of themselves for the last several years of their lives. I usually welcome movies that make me revel in horrible family memories, but this was honestly a slog and I was bored for long sections, though I think that's probably exactly right: there's nothing engaging or fun or even necessarily profound about the kind of pain depicted here, the pain of feeling yourself slowly become encased inside an empty facsimile of yourself and the pain of watching from the outside that happen to someone you love. If anything, this movie isn't miserable enough, though I'd certainly forgive anyone (even known provocateur of human wretchedness, writer/director Michael Haneke) who didn't want to put onscreen the shouting and screaming and the irrevocable relational rifts among the living family. I'm leaning positively on this, though, because the performances are tremendous, and I don't think I've ever seen such an unsentimental depiction of love. Grade: B
The Sweatbox (2002)
An unusually frank (and hence still unreleased) look at the way that the Disney machine just crushes and squeezes out any sense of authorship or individual vision. I hate the "Disney knows best" mentality that has only gotten worse in the subsequent decades since the release of The Emperor's New Groove, but the weird tension of this documentary is that almost every mandate thrown down by some corporate suit or committee undeniably makes the animated movie in question better; The Emperor's New Groove is the second-to-last great movie produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios thus far (2011's Winnie the Pooh, I haven't forgotten you!), energetic and idiosyncratic and fun in ways that are unlike any other Disney movie out there, and the harsh reality that this documentary shows is that Kingdom of the Sun would have been far inferior. I mean, those character models? Owen Wilson as Pacha? A sincere Prince-and-the-Pauper riff? Music exclusively by Sting??? Disney execs can sit on a tack, but I gotta hand it to them for getting this one right. Sting is actually the best part of this movie. He's got this great arc from being on top of the world being asked to write songs for this prestigious new Disney animated epic to moping around Malibu because hardly any of his compositions worked for the direction the film ended up going. It's a great feeling to see Sting put in his place, and to boot, he ends up embodying the film's central tension between personal integrity and corporate synergy. The most compelling part of the documentary is actually the very end when there is a montage of the movie characters being turned into gross little Happy Meal toys, followed by (in a rich juxtaposition) a bunch of the people involved in the film saying how amazing it is to work on something so majestic as a Disney project. The final line of the movie is Sting, cowed into submission by the Mouse House, telling us that "the process does work." It's weird to watch a movie where everyone is right, at least this once. Grade: B+
Peggy Sue Got Married (1986)
Almost, almost disposable kitsch—I've seen/read so many of these "WHOA, I'm suddenly back in time and can relive my past/predict the then-future!" stories that parts of this basically fade into nothingness because of how familiar they are. But there are other parts of this movie that are disquietingly raw, and it kind of snaps the whole thing back into being. Parts like that scene near the end of the movie where Nicolas Cage's character gives that speech to Cathleen Turner's character—it's like the movie just opens a vein and really digs into just how psychologically tumultuous it would be to have the chance to live your life differently, the possibility to lose everything and everyone you know from the future but to gain a whole new world of possibilities. I've seen people dismiss the ending of this movie as saccharine, but I dunno, I think those earlier intense moments do the work to give weight to the decision made at the ending. Grade: B
Koyaanisqatsi (1982)
It's weird finally seeing this after having been familiar with Philip Glass's score for years (surely among the maybe 5 greatest film scores ever?). I basically already knew this movie by reputation and got pretty much what was advertised, so I can't say I'm really blown away or surprised or anything (though I'll admit that I was not expecting the video game montage). But this was great. Really great. The 30-ish minutes in the middle of the film where it's just urban life in time lapse are probably among the greatest sustained stretches of visual-musical synthesis in film history. The rest of the movie doesn't have quite that level of impact, which I guess is the point—the intoxication of the heights of modern industrialization chased by the bitter comedown of its ramifications. Grade: A
Strike (Стачка) (1925)
The super-depressing tale of an inspiring collectivist movement being crushed by the cops and the capitalists (who, no joke, are just old white dudes chomping enormous cigars the whole movie). I know this is Soviet propaganda and, as such, not meant to be strictly realistic, but golly if the cops in this movie don't act exactly like the cops at the protests this year. Grade: B+
Music
Fleet Foxes - Shore (2020)
Surprise Fleet Foxes album! Hurray! My proclivities as a Fleet Foxes fan are definitely lean toward the group's more adventurous, discursive instincts—think "The Shrine/An Argument" off Helplessness Blues or basically the entirety of Crack-Up—so I have to admit that it's a little disappointing for me that Shore is probably their most straightforward record yet (especially after Crack-Up and the accompanying tour had me expecting Fleet Foxes to dive even further into the prog-folk territory explored there). But it's hard to complain too much when the music is still this good. The rustic-twee sensibilities of Robin Pecknold's early work have basically disappeared, resulting in probably the least-pretentious set of songs Fleet Foxes has yet produced; in some respects, it resembles a modern pop album in the sense that you have a singular artist, Pecknold, as the central persona orbited by a host of collaborators and session musicians who jump in for a track or two (Kevin Morby makes an appearance, as well as Grizzly Bear—and to further the pop analogy, there are even a few samples: there's a Brian Wilson sample, for example). As such, each song feels like a self-contained project, and even if it's not my favorite flavor, there's a real pleasure here in hearing Fleet Foxes' signature instrumental ornateness bent toward such melodic directness and precise songcraft: "Sunblind" and "Young Man's Game" in particular stand out, radiant sonic and songwriting gems. And as always, Pecknold's lyrics remain a comfort, their mix of pastoral wonder and world-weariness always a highlight, none more so than on the closing title track: "I remember hoping I'd remember nothing / now I only hope I'm holding onto something / now the quarter moon is out," Pecknold sings there, and those words just cradle me. So there's a ton to like here; I just wish the album as a unit were more exploratory, to make these crystalline moments of clarity all the clearer. But I'm sure others will like the whole package even more than I did. I may even eventually learn to like the whole package more than I already do. Maybe I'm just a stuck-up nerd for wanting 10-minute prog excursions on a record as lovely as Shore is. Grade: B
Sunday, September 20, 2020
Mini Reviews for September 14-20, 2020
Sitting here in a sweatshirt because fall weather has begun to show its face, by the grace of God.
Movies
Beanpole (Дылда) (2019)
A transcendently difficult watch. I nearly quit the movie when the infant was smothered to death within fifteen minutes of the movie's opening, and while that's far-and-away the most hard-to-watch part of the film, it accurately sets the tone for what kind of movie this is: a movie about the full horror of the psychological fallout of the Soviet Union's having survived WWII. It's a movie full of pain and despair and exceptionally long pauses in dialogue, oftentimes while that pain and despair are occurring, and I somewhat hated it for a while. But by the end, I had circled around to a kind of bruised fascination, not just at the colors and cinematography (which are sumptuous, especially for a movie as otherwise dour as this) but also at its emotional sweep. I certainly don't blame anyone who finds this indulgently miserable, but there are precious few films that look at the way that the trauma of war (even "just" wars like WWII) persist long after peace is declared. Watching its two central couple flail and claw their way toward an acrid, toxic domesticity within a Stalingrad still licking its wounds from Nazi occupation is, by the end, something I found sickeningly resonant by the end of the film. I dunno, I'll probably never watch this again, but it is something. Grade: B
Lovesong (2016)
Meat-and-potatoes indie filmmaking. There are a lot of ellipses and things left unsaid, which feels perfect for its focus on a friendship crumbling as its two principal characters inhabit increasingly irreconcilably different places in life. This movie nails the way that these late-stage friendships can swing unpredictably from familiar intimacy to callous indifferent and disconnection—with the added dimension that these two friends are very clearly in love with one another, not the men they are with. Riley Keough and Jena Malone are terrific as the leads, to say nothing of the pair of sisters who play Keough's daughter, one when she's 3 and one after the three year time jump in the middle of the movie, when she's 6—great use of child acting here. Grade: B
Mur Murs (1981)
A lovely little film essay about the process of making art and that art's role in the artist staking a claim in a community, as well as a great document of L.A.'s mural movement just before it was gentrified. The movie luxuriates in two of my favorite things: gigantic visual art and a vibrant cross-section of human life in the form of a community. Kind of feels like Slacker, only if everyone in that movie were painting big murals. Grade: B+
Documenteur (1981)
The most interesting part of this movie to me is the way that it folds into Mur Murs—reusing some of its footage and also giving a fictional context for that other film (e.g. the protagonist auditions to be the narrator of Mur Murs). Varda also gives us some killer shots here, like the two sex scenes (just pelvises grinding together, abstracted by how close the camera is) and the scene were part of the protagonist's face disappears in the crook of two tilted mirrors. But otherwise, I had a hard time connecting to this movie. I have a cool respect for the way it remixes Varda's own life into itself, but I never really felt the emotional urgency that Varda herself probably feels about the same subject matter. Grade: B-
The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane (1976)
An unnerving little chiller reminiscent of The Beguiled in the sense that it turns the screws on predatory power dynamics (often sexual though not exclusively) until they explode into a kind of queasy yet liberating violence. Terrific central performances from Jodi Foster and Martin Sheen, though I imagine Sheen had to take a long, hot shower after each day on set playing a vile scumbag like that. Grade: B
The Fall of the House of Usher (La Chute de la maison Usher) (1928)
Extremely cool, semi-avant-garde treatment of Poe's story. Special kudos to Roland de Candé's very, very, very excellent score for the film on the 2001 DVD release that I watched—some Cluster-esque experimental grooves here. Grade: A-
Music
Idris Ackamoor & The Pyramids - Shaman! (2020)
Idris Ackamoor & The Pyramids' last album, An Angel Fell, was about the intersection of 21st-century politics and history, a voyage that, stream-of-consciousness style, wove the ancient past into things like the death of Michael Brown. This new album, Shaman!, is doing something similar, only this time replacing the explicit politics with much more personal conduits for which history flows. Instead of national iconography like Michael Brown, we get a eulogy for free-jazz legend Cecil Taylor, who was Ackamoor's mentor; we get love songs blown up to cosmic dimensions by Ackamoor's vast arrangements. It's very cool and moving, the way that music and history and interiority all overlap in this yearning transcendence, and I like it a lot better than An Angel Fell, actually. A primo slice of spiritual jazz. Grade: A-
Sunday, September 13, 2020
Mini Reviews for September 7-13, 2020
Movies
Shirley (2020)
Objectively not nearly as out there as the other Josephine Decker movie I've seen (Madeline's Madeline), but if you grade on a curve that considers that this is ostensibly a Shirley Jackson biopic, then they're just about equals. A very mean, squalid little movie, wherein Elizabeth Moss and Michael Stuhlbarg play an awful, venomous couple who ruin people's lives with bitter pleasure, and these people just happen to be Shirley Jackson and her husband. It's really uncomfortable while (impressively) remaining really entertaining, too. Grade: B+
Lingua Franca (2020)
Soderbergh levels of herculean auteurist involvement from writer/director/producer(!)/editor(!!)/star(!!!) Isabel Sandoval. I do wish it pushed just a little past the lo-fi indie aesthetic, but the narrative itself is very affecting and distinctly lived-in and well-observed. I guess that's what happens when you let trans women and immigrants tell their own stories. Grade: B
David Byrne's American Utopia (2020)
Really interesting choreography and stage setup that I wish I could have seen live. I miss live music. That said, Spike Lee's direction makes the most of having this be rewarding as a film in a way that would have been inaccessible to a normal concert-goer—the overhead shots of the stage are fantastic, for example. Also, I got a lot of joy out of the Spike Lee dolly shot happening for the mobile light fixture instead of an actor. Grade: B
Leap! (2016)
Full disclosure: I watched this movie 100% because of Carly Rae Jespsen's involvement in it. I'm too proud to admit that this was a mistake, but I probably could have saved myself some time by just pulling up "Cut to the Feeling" on YouTube for the 100th time instead. Grade: D+
Youth Without Youth (2007)
I was pretty skeptical about Twixt when I saw it a few years ago, but holy cow is Youth Without Youth tempting me to become one of the late-career-Francis-Ford-Coppola-enthusiast people. Exceptionally strong weird fiction vibes on this one, told extravagantly and opaquely—delightfully indulgent of its pulpy "dude wants to discover the first human language" plot while also being cosmic and inscrutable. The whole movie just kind of keeps folding in on itself until it becomes something impossibly large for the space that contains it. Feels of a piece with Jonathan Glazer's Birth, I think. Grade: A
Raise the Red Lantern (大红灯笼高高挂) (1991)
A great little parable about how systems built on competition breed suffering: in this case, among among the concubines in a palace. I dig the ambient, slow-cinema textures, and some of the editing is very good, but above all, this is a stunning visual experience, even with my having to view it on the notoriously awful Razor Digital Entertainment DVD with the bad transfer and worse subtitles (the word "groovy" makes an appearance in dialogue set in early 20th century China, which I admit is kind of charming). Grade: B+
Black Christmas (1974)
1974, huh? Wild to see a proto-slasher that's so close to the actual fully-formed slashers from a few years later. Only this one is much better than most. In fact, I'm sure I'll immediately regret saying this, but right now I'm feeling like this movie is as good as the original Halloween; both share that feeling of an urban legend come to life, and while Halloween has better music (duh), I think Black Christmas is eerier—the ending especially is one of the more skin-crawling ellipses I've seen in a horror movie. On a separate note entirely, it's a shame that more slashers don't take place at Christmas, because the juxtaposition of caroling and killing yields some majorly good results. It's also a movie about abortion, and, after my post on Never Rarely Sometimes Always, I feel the need to comment that this is like no other abortion movie I've seen. Overall, this is just a really fascinating, complex movie that's a blast all the way through. Grade: A-
Sunday, September 6, 2020
Mini Reviews for August 31 - September 6, 2020
Movies
I'm Thinking of Ending Things (2020)
I thought the novel's ending was a bit too literal and let the air out of the sails a bit, so it's a really great feeling when this movie walks right up to the place where the novel tips its hand and then aggressively jukes left in a way that smudges the specifics of the plot in all the right ways. Like all Kaufman, it's a document of loneliness and self-loathing and existential dread filtered through an unreliable psychology rendered as unreliable cinematic style, and like all Kaufman since Synecdoche, New York, it's intent on condensing the entire breadth of a human life into an improbably small narrative space, which is a project I really, really dig. New for Kaufman, though, is that the arc of the film is an (ultimately unsuccessful) attempt for that psychology to break out of its prison of myopia and truly understand another person, which makes it a lot sadder than it has any right to be. It's definitely a lot sadder than I would have ever expected of more or less a feature-length homage to Oklahoma! I have more thoughts, but I'll save them for a forthcoming review for Cinematary.com. Grade: A
Never Rarely Sometimes Always (2020)
There are so few movies that involve abortion that any time one actually comes along, there seems to be an unspoken assumption that it has to explain every facet of the issue within the text of the film or else risk missing yet another opportunity to explicate the subject. Never Rarely Sometimes Always is maybe the most thorough plot-as-explanation-of-the-abortion-process movie I've seen, to the point where it sometimes feels like it's supposed to represent a kind of universal ur-narrative: a teen with an unsupportive family who may or may not have been coerced into having the sex that got her pregnant goes first to a crisis pregnancy center, then tries to induce an abortion herself because she can't get one locally, then has to cross state lines to get to a clinic that will actually let her get an abortion, has to deal with the fact that she is running out of money but must somehow find lodging in the city because the procedure takes more than one day, etc. There are even a couple very long scenes where employees at the various clinics read out the rules and regulations of getting abortions and go through the required health questionnaires. It's incredibly detailed, and the minor miracle about this movie is that it somehow still feels like a movie. The film has an incredible ability to have its meticulous documenting of procedure also double as stealth characterization, like in the scenes where all the rules are explained and questions are asked, where the protagonist's reactions and answers flesh out her character with an impressive amount of nuance, even at times heartbreaking so. I wish the movie's style didn't feel so resolutely and generically "indie," which I found naggingly uninteresting, but as a feat of screenwriting and acting (the two leads are fantastic, especially Sydney Flanigan as Autumn), it's riveting. Grade: B+
Tito and the Birds (Tito e os Pássaros) (2018)
Absolutely in love with the aesthetic of this movie: dynamic (computer-enhanced?) oil-painted landscapes backgrounding digitally animated characters. It is an endlessly arresting and fascinating blending of the tactile and the pixelated. The rest of the movie is fine, a political allegory about how people like Bolsonaro capitalize on fear—there's an actual pandemic of fear that results in some unnerving bodily mutilations. But I honestly was a little distracted by how incredible the animation looks to get very invested in the story. Grade: B
Bulworth (1998)
Warren Beatty writes/produces/directs/stars in a movie about a milquetoast neoliberal California Democrat who has a psychological breakdown that turns him into basically a socialist whose campaign strategy becomes laying bare the ways in which the Democratic party is an organization that pretends to fight the exploitative capitalist political ecosystem of the USA while it contributes to and feeds off that same system—and he does this by basically acting like a white suburban middle-schooler discovering rap for the first time? Kind of in awe that this movie exists, and it's extremely cathartic to watch in the year of Democratic presidential nominee Joe "You Ain't Black" Biden. If the activists are right and people really can pressure Biden into pivoting to the left, I think we probably need to brace ourselves for the rapping. By the end, Beatty probably gets high on his own supply—for a movie this cynical, I can't believe it's not cynical enough to understand that a guy who "goes Bulworth" would eventually 100% exploit his cred with the Black community. And it's a major misstep that the film gives Beatty's character's romantic entanglement with Halle Berry's character even a smidge of sincerity. But hooooo boy, at the early and middle stages, there are some moments where this movie is just *chef's kiss* Grade: B+
Jerry Maguire (1996)
Cameron Crowe movies have such weird energy. These ungainly plots fueled by endless, almost expressionist runs of semi-related incidents in which characters speak from their mouths what sounds like their actual interior monologues in these weird lay-poetry grasps at street-smart profundity are squeezed into the mold of mainstream Hollywood crowdpleasers. The line that separates a good Cameron Crowe movie from a bad one is so fine and so reliant on the mysteriously unreliable alchemy of Crowe's ludicrous tics and tropes that I'm not sure I can really parse why Jerry Maguire works and something like We Bought a Zoo doesn't work, but man, one sure does and the other sure doesn't. Is it Tom Cruise? Talk about weird energy—Tom Cruise, who plays literally every scene in this movie (literally every scene in any of his movies) with the same intensity that he brings to, like, War of the Worlds. It is legitimately unnerving to see him play the role of a sympathetic romantic lead. This whole thing would work a whole lot better if the movie treated its two major supporting roles (Cuba Gooding Jr. and Renée Zellweger, both very good here) as actual co-leads instead of obvious accessories to Cruise's character's arc—an arc that in the hands of Cruise's performance kind of feels as if Patrick Bateman decided to hang up the ax and pursue sincere domestic bliss. Also, Tom Cruise very loudly shouts, "I love black people!!!" in one of the iconic scenes (I had no idea how packed this movie is with iconic scenes), which uncomfortably highlights the racial subtext of Cuba being an accessory to Cruise; no such moment for the movie's (somewhat less troubling) gender subtext, though we do get a literal highlight reel of women talking about how good Cruise's character is in bed, and it's somehow a big emotional turning point in the film. Like I said, very weird energy here. Compellingly weird, more often than not. Grade: B
Music
Blur - 13 (1999)
I'm not super familiar with Blur's broader body of work (I've always been more of an Oasis guy), so I'm sure this album's stylistic departure doesn't hit me like it would have the fans. But this music is pretty far out for a Britpop band. People talk about Radiohead deconstructing Britpop in the late '90s, but honestly, this albums extended noise passages and electronic jams feels way more openly deconstructive of the genre than OK Computer was. The album's structure is interesting in that it begins with its most conventional tracks (the all-time classic "Tender," the single "Coffee & TV"), after which it slowly lowers its listeners into more and more experimental tracks until we're up to our necks in the space electronica of a late-album track like "Caramel," giving the record the feel of a voyage into increasingly uncharted waters. It also feels like the necessary transition between Blur's '90s days and what Gorillaz would be doing in their first couple albums—it isn't hard to imagine some of those electronic sounds deep in the album being turned into beats for a Gorillaz track. But voyage or transition, Britpop or not, this is some good stuff. Grade: A-