Sunday, April 24, 2022

Mini Reviews for April 11 - 24, 2022

Sorry for the week delay! At least I got to see a couple of new movies this week!

Movies

The Northman (2022)
Robert Eggers's newest feature is far and away his most conventional, free from most of the archaic linguistics of The Witch and The Lighthouse and pushing to the margins the folk weirdness and scatological impulses that those previous two movies centered. Actors like Willem Dafoe and Björk carry on the mad-scientist torch of the older, less-studio-financed Eggers, and their eccentricities—both tied to the northern-European pagan mysticism that undergirds the film—are welcome. But for the most part, this is a fairly straightforward revenge saga, starring a bunch of vikings. And it absolutely rips. Pure heavy metal cinema of the highest order, as grisly, gory, and as shouty as you would hope for, performed by a cast that is top-to-bottom completely dialed in to the arch intensity that is this movie's wavelength. It perfectly threads the needle between the self-seriousness requisite in the format and the silliness inherent in taking oneself so seriously, and a lot of this is actually pretty funny while still feeling of a piece with the stone-faced brutality that animates the characters. Also, by virtue of being a movie made by someone with the preoccupations of a man like Robert Eggers, even its more conventional elements are made more interesting than might be otherwise. For example, as a revenge story, it has the expected "When you seek vengeance, you gotta dig two graves" themes, but the meticulous historical and mythological detail present here, however sidelined compared to his previous features, deepens that idea to a treatise on the ways that religion and the personal mythology of "protecting my family" are used as justifications for the cult of masculine violence involved in the endless cycle of death and vengeance. Human beings are not naturally creatures of endless bloodshed but rather creatures who are driven to killing by rationalizing violence post-hoc with elaborate narratives of honor and necessity, and there's something simultaneously moving and horrifying about the deep meaning these characters find in the brutality that the movie goes out of its way to show is functionally nihilistic. It's bleak stuff, but it also involves two characters fighting to the death naked inside of a volcano, which is awesome, so you know, in conclusion, The Northman is a movie of contrasts. Grade: A-

Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022)
The agreeable things about this movie are very agreeable to me. The pseudo-improvised absurdity of the multiverses here feels like a more committed-to-the-bit version of those Rick & Morty interdimensional cable episodes, which I enjoyed quite a bit, and while I certainly understand why people find the Daniels' extremely internet-y sense of humor exhausting, I continue to find it charming and usually hilarious (one particular recurring joke, which was halfway spoiled for me but I won't spoil here, had me in stitches every time it was deployed). There's a home-spun genuineness to both the gags and the effects here that reminds me of Terry Gilliam, a filmmaker who has to be as much of an influence on EEAaO as the Wong Kar-wai and Wachowski connections everybody is already talking about, not just for the practical effects and chaotic surrealism but also for the way that the film uses its aesthetic to blow up its goofiness to a sincere treatise on the nature of reality and meaning-making within the human experience, which feels right out of Time Bandits or Brazil to me. It's not an original idea that life is absurd and only valuable in so much as we are able to find meaningful connections through kindness and empathy (again see: Gilliam, Terry), but it's a powerful one nonetheless that I found movingly rendered here. All of that said, the movie's only real liability for me is such a liability that it knocks the movie considerably out of the top-tier category that the component parts deserve, and that's the length. Friends, two hours and twenty minutes is just tooooo looooong for this movie, and not even barely too long either—I'm talking majorly too long, like 30, 40, maybe even 50 minutes too long. The climax of this movie lasts forever as it makes the same point over and over and over and over and over again, and given the heightened freneticism and naked sentimentality of the film (both of which I like quite a bit in isolation), I felt like I was being bludgeoned with the film until I just went kinda numb after a while. A movie this zippy and energetic deserves a zippy, energetic runtime, and the sad thing is that it doesn't even feel like a lot would have had to have been sacrificed to cut the film down to a more functional length, considering how repetitive pieces of the film (especially the climax) are. Part of the charm of this movie is that it gives the impression that the Daniels were given a blank check to follow any and every filmmaking whim of theirs with absolutely no intervention from any studio suits, and I would hate to spoil that feeling. But maybe someone somewhere could have given some helpful pointers about the runtime? Otherwise, a complete delight. Grade: B+

Viva (2007)
Kinda feeling weird about this one, but, like the other Anna Biller movie I've seen (The Love Witch), it's a marvel of craft, and there's really no denying that, so here's that positive rating. But it is weird that this is using a very exacting pastiche of '70s sexploitation cinema to satirize the patriarchal abuses of the sexual revolution, while at the same time being kind of sexy by virtue of being a pastiche of erotic cinema. And like, it's true that a lot of older sexploitation movies also have this queasy mix of eroticism and gross abuse, but Anna Biller has a hardline moral point of view that very few of those earlier films do, making the queasiness the central intended effect, which is fine—I mean, I hope we all feel queasy about sexual assault! But—and maybe I'm being paranoid here because I'm a fragile heterosexual man (not ruling that out)—there's also this quiet but persistent feeling that Biller's themes are meant to bleed out into a broader conception of sex, wherein heterosexual encounters within a patriarchal society aren't just incidentally abusive but unavoidably abusive by virtue of their inescapable cultural framework. I think it's worth exploring the ways in which our broader social systems override and corrupt even well-meaning ideals to the contrary (and I think Viva is very on-point for criticizing the sexual revolution for not having explored this issue thoroughly enough), so kudos for Viva having the gumption to do so. But also, the sex presented in this movie is just so irredeemably corrupt that it feels like sexual nihilism on a certain level, and I don't know what that means for sexual liberation as a whole. I dunno. The fact that I'm thinking about it this much is probably a good sign that something about these themes is resonating with me, and the film is top-to-bottom a triumph of aesthetic anyway, so maybe I'm just talking myself out of liking this movie as much as I actually do. Grade: B

The Lady from Shanghai (1947)
An utterly bizarre, almost found-object of a movie, an already strange vision (e.g. Welles's "Irish" accent) cut to shreds by the studio with little regard for continuity of tone or coherence of plot, and all we're left with are the scraps that survived. To this end, the film has the feeling of something that's disintegrating as we're watching it, beginning with a fairly conventional noir setup, only to take weirder and weirder pivots to match what seems to be the increased studio interference, including a truly deranged courtroom sequence, until we're at the climactic (and justly iconic) hall of mirrors shootout, and the movie becomes almost entirely abstract, each shot cut to ribbons by its own reflections. Wild stuff—feels of a piece with things like Kiss Me Deadly, i.e. film noirs that feel like they leaked in from a parallel universe. Grade: A-

 

Mr. Bug Goes to Town (1941)
I really hate to hand it to the Disney monopoly, but watching the early non-Disney American animated features (of which this is only the second—and only the sixth American feature overall if you do count Disney features!) really makes it completely obvious and understandable why Disney and only Disney came to dominate the animated feature film market in this country. Walt Disney was in masterpiece mode for the entirely of the pre-WWII output, and not just regular masterpieces but things like Fantasia and Pinocchio, medium-defining moments that remain high water marks in American cinema to this day. Meanwhile, the only major competitor, Fleischer Studios, was making dull crap like this. The sad thing is that the Fleischer short films of the preceding decade are far and away superior to the Disney shorts of the same era, but for whatever reason, the transition to feature filmmaking stripped away all the bizarre and inventive instincts of those shorts and resulted in a film that's running on empty, creatively—this is a film in which someone thought it was a good idea to have its protagonist's only major character trait be that he just says "gee weeds" all the time. The animation is fluid and its characters have that irresistible Fleischer design, but the actual choreography of the animation feels perfunctory at best, all that wonderful rubberiness wasted on the stalest cartoon movements. The Disney features also lack the ingenuity of their earlier shorts, but they replace that loss with a visual grandeur and storytelling mythology that makes them absolutely stunning despite being comparatively staid; Mr. Bug Goes to Town has no ambitions of grandeur, which is fine if it were to go for broke with cartoonish mayhem like the Fleischer shorts do. But instead, it just feels like this animation spends the whole movie revving up to something a lot more kinetic and out-there that we never end up seeing. Really kind of depressing that this is something of a last gasp of one of the greats of early American animation (as I understand it, Paramount basically manufactured the dismantling of Fleischer after acquiring it in the early '40s), because this is far from the swan song that Dave and Max's legacy deserved. Grade: C-

The Seven Ravens (Die sieben Raben) (1937)
There's something about European stop-motion films with puppets that is endlessly fascinating to me. Not fascinating enough to help me not be kinda bored with this, but the uncanniness of the animation does feel particularly well-suited to the rhythms and sensibilities of Grimm fairy tales. A lot of early animation is surprisingly intricate, but this film really has a home-spun feel to it, almost like I'm watching a streetside "Punch and Judy" booth or something of that nature, and considering the improvisatory feel of those fairy tales, this works pretty well. I just wish it were a better, more exciting story. Do "Bluebeard" next time. Grade: C

 

The Black Pirate (1926)
Pretty great sets/costumes, and that two-color Technicolor looks cool. I was completely on-board with this movie in the early-goings when this was about a dude who had pledged bloody revenge against the pirates who murdered his dad, but then he accomplishes this revenge in the first third of the movie and spends the rest of the time tricking the pirates into not doing pirate-y things like sinking ships? Morally, yes, this seems like a good idea, but as a viewer thirsting for pirate content, I feel somewhat let down. Turns out in the end that this guy advocating for moral nobility has been literal nobility the whole time (he's a duke, apparently), so I guess that tracks. Still, nice of him to make sure the pirates didn't rape that one lady; even this pirate-craving viewer can get behind that. Grade: B-

Sunday, April 17, 2022

No Reviews This Week

As a combined effect of having a busy week plus traveling for the holiday, I haven't had time to make a proper post this week. Hopefully I'll be back next week, though! Happy Easter to those who celebrate!

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Mini Reviews for April 4 - 10, 2022

If you're interested, I was on a podcast talking about a trio of Lindsay Ellis videos about the Hobbit movies. It was a good time! You can listen to it here (and it's a better use of your time than actually watching those Hobbit movies).

Movies

Turning Red (2022)
I'm a public advocate of Pixar being capable of producing solid movies that don't necessarily "change your life," as well as Pixar diversifying their animation palette, and I'd say the last few features the studio has made have the future looking pretty bright in that regard (though it'd be a lot brighter if Disney would actually release these in theaters). This movie isn't without its flaws, especially on the screenplay/structural level: there are some howlingly bad lines in the film (the clear worst offender: "My panda, my choice," which was practically an out-of-body experience for me), and the battling pandas is one of the most out-of-place invocations of the "Pixar shoehorns an action setpiece into the third act" trope in the studio's history. But on the whole, this is really rather lovely. The generational conflict between mother and daughter so emotionally precise in a way that feels like a less compromised version of what Brave was going for, and for as much as I just complained about the fight finale, when the movie pushes through that into the much gentler emotional climax immediately following it, it's beautiful and resonant in a specific way that Pixar has never really tried before (and, it bears mentioning, does a much more effective and nuanced rendering of Encanto's clumsily broad-brushed treatment of virtually the same thematic territory). I also like the animation here quite a bit, which, like Luca, is doing this interesting experiment in cartoonishly rounded character models and flattened color gradients which suggest but don't overly conform to the conventions of the modern cel animation you might see on a kids show now (the dreaded "CalArts style," I suppose). Also, the fur animation on the pandas is some of the nicest I've ever seen—the extremely tactile way that you can sense the presence of skin and fat and muscle under the fur is very impressive and also very cuddly-looking. There's been a lot of hand-wringing over the past decade about Pixar's difficulty in producing the same kinds of masterpieces that they did in the '90s/2000s, and while I still stand behind my old assertion that there's value in sturdy formula, it's still exciting to me that it seems like 1) Pixar is no longer automatically chasing that formula (like, not everything has to be built around a high-concept world), and 2) in place of formula, Pixar is allowing for more idiosyncratic, personal stories, even when those stories are considerably messier and less polished than classic Pixar. Unless I'm completely misreading this new era of Pixar, and in a few years, we'll all have realized that the new Pixar formula was a reliance on body transformations, which *counts on fingers* has actually been the focus of the last four Pixar movies, soooo... uh oh. Grade: B+

Apollo 10 1/2: A Space Age Childhood (2022)
A really weird, tricky film, maybe especially so for me. It's set in and dedicated to describing the very Houston suburb where my mom grew up and that I have visited countless times, and moreover, this suburb is depicted at the exact time that my mom (who is just four months older than Richard Linklater, I found out) lived there, too. On one level, it's just kinda surreal to see a major motion picture talking about NASA Road 1 and Clear Lake; but on a deeper level, a movie that is already about the kaleidoscopic nature of nostalgia becomes for me filtered through family history and a second-hand nostalgia from the things that my mom, her sisters, and my grandparents have told me. For a while, this was a major liability for my feelings about the movie; the first 30-40 minutes of this film are a minefield of the cringiest, Forrest-Gump-level Boomer clichés ("we were at war in Vietnam for some reason," Jack Black's entirely too precious narration says with little irony), made even worse for me since I'm hearing them echoed through the often insufferable, usually fairly reactionary way my extended family talks about the past, i.e. with a heavy dose of "back when men were men and people weren't so soft" alongside a tinge of "when [black] people knew their place" and "you kids don't know how easy you have it"—not really the ethos of this movie (hard to imagine Linklater ever buying into any of that) but inescapably linked in my mind. But as the film went on, my attitude got better as I started noticing the accumulation of really interesting, off-the-beaten-path details among the iconic stuff: the brief digression about Whipped Cream & Other Delights, for example, or Joni Mitchell dueting with Johnny Cash on The Johnny Cash Show, or a random snippet of Janis Joplin appearing on Dick Cavett—the kinds of media details that almost never make it into this type of "Boomer's greatest hits" piece. Like, sure, the protagonist goes to 2001: A Space Odyssey, and it blows his mind, but he also goes to the drive-in and sees a John Wayne movie called Hellfighters that I don't think anyone but Richard Linklater remembers, and the protagonist seems just as pumped about that movie as the iconic Kubrick one. As the movie went on, what occurred to me is that this isn't so much about the self-aggrandizing mythology that Boomer movies tend to lean into but instead it's about the interplay between the specific, granular, not particularly memorable experiences that comprise most people's lives and the gigantic collective memories like the Kennedy assassination or the moon landing that end up becoming generational myths. There's a line near the end of the movie (maybe the final line of the movie? I'd have to check) about how even though the protagonist had slept through the actual moon landing on television, the nature of memory is such that he'll remember it anyway: from the longview of an entire lifetime, the moonwalk is just as real (even realer) than schoolyard rounds of Red Rover or a trip to AstroWorld, even if you didn't actually experience it. And for as much as I reflexively rolled my eyes at the way the early goings of this movie reminded me of the irritating aspects of, like, my aunt telling me about "the good old days," the film as a whole kind of moved me because I couldn't stop thinking about how easily my mom or my grandfather or whoever could have populated the edges of this movie, which is not something I'm used to feeling in stories about this era. As always, Linklater has a real facility with making his creations feel lived-in and alive, but it's awfully strange how here he arrives at that through something so arch as a '60s Wonder Years-ish space race movie, and it's really strange that it halfway felt like I was watching my family. Grade: B+

Totally F***ed Up (1993)
I was vibing on this just being a Slackers-by-way-of-Godard-style film essay built out of vignettes, but then the last ten minutes came around, and I realized that there was a plot I was supposed to have been following, which made me feel a little dumb. I should probably watch this again. Grade: B

 

 

 

 

Saint Jack (1979)
If I hadn't seen Peter Bogdanovich's name in the credits, I would have never in a thousand years guessed that he directed and co-wrote this extremely loose hang-out movie: a lot of Altman (specifically The Long Goodbye) in this, and virtually nothing of the melancholic nostalgia of something like Paper Moon or Nickelodeon other than the fact that this is halfway a remake of Casablanca, only with the decision to not cooperate with the CIA replacing the decision to help people escape the Nazis. But for the most part, this is a total change of pace for Bogdanovich, which is fine with me! Spread your wings, Pete! It has a terrific sense of place and an equally terrific central performance from Ben Gazzara, and if it's maybe a little too shaggy for my tastes in parts, those two things make up for that. Grade: B

 

Television

Nathan For You, Season 3 (2015)
As with the second season, it's more of the same, only scaled up. The sheer number of absurd steps that Nathan Fielder has his schemes go through to get his clients to traditional measures of social and commercial success in our capitalist society is never not hilarious to me, and it's also vaguely profound (and even horrifying). It's not just that there's the whiff of desperation in Fielder's plots (though that's there, too)—it's also the broader context that provides the justification for these absurd scenarios: in a society in which validation and actualization is measured via profits and private ownership, any hustle to get you there becomes valid. Wild stuff. Grade: A-

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Mini Reviews for March 28 - April 3, 2022

Nothing to read here.

Movies

Teacher's Pet (2004)
Such an unfetteredly unhinged little feature film, probably made more so by my having zero knowledge of the TV series upon which it is based. But more than any TV-to-film adaptation I've seen, this preserves the rubbery, anything-goes absurdity of children's animated television of the era without ever losing the energy of an 11-minute short over its 74-minute runtime. It's kind of marvelous, something like John K. crossbred with Bill Plympton, and outside of the early Silly Symphony shorts, I can't think of a single Disney animated theatrical project that feels even remotely like this. But also, it turns out there's a reason that you usually only see this kind of animated freneticism in 11-minute shorts, because by the end of 74 minutes, this has so thoroughly burned through its own sensibilities that you can practically smell the engine overheating, and the credits are a merciful reprieve. I felt legitimately tired after watching this. Grade: B

Trigger Man (2007)
The only Ti West feature I hadn't seen at this point, and a major stylistic departure from his later films. If people complained about House of the Devil being a slow burn, I can't imagine what they'd do with this. Literally just people walking around the woods until eventually an unseen sniper starts picking them off. On the "is this Slow Cinema or just empty cinema?" rubric, I think unfortunately West landed on the latter, but on paper, you've gotta admire the purity of concept here. Grade: C-

 

 

Baraka (1992)
The cinematographer for Koyaanisqatsi decided to make a movie, and surprise! It's a beautifully shot, musically minded, non-narrative collage documentary about the dichotomy between humanity's capacity for achievement and destruction. Only this time, it's less about humanity's relationship with nature and more about human communities and the destruction wrought to those communities by capitalism, which should theoretically be more up my alley except that: 1) the New-Age-isms of Michael Stearns's ambient score are no substitute for Philip Glass's towering Koyaanisqatsi score, and 2) this movie leans a little into exoticizing the many indigenous, non-European cultures it depicts here, which is not awesome. Still, the film is frequently stunning, and I'm glad I watched it. Grade: B

The Living End (1992)
This is a lot angrier than the other Gregg Araki movies I've seen, which I wasn't expecting but makes total sense given the subject matter. The way the film flirts with but ultimately eschews the nihilism of the HIV-positive "dead men walking" protagonists is both stunning and also crushingly sad as it becomes apparent that these guys can't die on their own terms even if they set their minds to it—pretty effective at rendering the tragedy of the AIDS pandemic: no amount of cool anger and cavalier self-destruction can nullify the cavernous reality that faced the gay community, as far as I understand it. Brutal, vivacious, beautifully human cinema. Grade: A-