Sunday, December 7, 2014

Elf

I wrote about this movie after I saw it for the first time in 2011.  Three years (and a lot of personal drama) later, I have grown even more attached to this completely inane story of Buddy the Elf.  The older I have gotten, the more I have realized that there are two completely different holidays being celebrated on and around December 25th.  What is the true meaning of Christmas?  It depends on who you ask and what they are celebrating.  It has been more helpful for me to enjoy the meaningless frivolity that comes with this time of year, and wait until December 25 to truly welcome the Christ child.  In the church, December is a time of waiting, not celebration.  In the US, and in many other parts of the world, December is one long Christmas month.  As it turns out, the Christ in this Christmas happens to mean almost nothing...but there is a lot of warmth and common grace that shines through nevertheless.

With that tangent, back to the movie.  "Elf" makes no bones that Christmas is all about Santa and getting presents (with maple sugar and elves as nice side portions).  Not only that, it is a movie that is fanatically devoted to its premise.  Here goes: Buddy (Will Ferrell) is an orphan who finds his way into Santa's toy bag on Christmas Eve when he is a baby.  When he ends up at the north pole, a bachelor elf (Bob Newhart) decides to adopt him and he raises him as an elf.  As Buddy matures, it becomes clear that he is not an elf, but he still thinks he is, and spiritually, he is an elf.  He loves Christmas, and his utter devotion to Christmas spirit outshines that of the real elves.  When he is finally told of his true origins, he goes on a journey to find his biological father, who Santa informs him, is on the "naughty list."  All this happens during a North Pole energy crisis.  The lack of Christmas spirit (which powers the sleigh) down south has led to the sad circumstance of Santa's sleigh being inoperative.  When Buddy goes to New York to find his father, madness ensues.

I was talking to a friend about this movie the other day and we were trying to think of any other actor who could play this role.  What makes Will Ferrell so great in this role is his total commitment to it.  A lot of actors might play this role with a wink to the camera or with a hint of irony.  Ferrell totally is the character, and his ability to "be Buddy" makes the "fish out of water" scenario work well.  James Caan (who plays Buddy's biological father) also does a good job of showing a man whose world is rocked by this person (who must be insane) who says he is his son.

The movie has enough laughs for adults (I love the paranoid supervisor at the department store), is innocent enough that kids can watch, and it has just enough warmth to make it a sentimental holiday treat.  There are also so any well written small moments that even though it's a silly movie, there is a certain artistry even to that.  Enjoy!

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Monday, December 1, 2014

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2013)




I had to make sure that I included the year of release in my post title, because I grew up with the film version starring Danny Kaye that was released in the late 1940's.  Neither that movie nor this movie (which stars Ben Stiller in the title role) stay totally faithful the James Thurber's original short story.  Furthermore, these two films are in themselves very different.  However, having seen both of them, they are both fine films, for very different reasons.

In this present day version, Walter Mitty works at Life magazine in the photography department.  He is in charge of the processing and use of negatives.  In the film, Life magazine has decided to release one final print edition before switching over to all online.  Walter Mitty has worked for Life magazine for 16 years, and he loves the company.  All the while, he has slipped into his share of daydreams, as he seeks to augment his humdrum life with adventure.  He has become working friends with a great photographer named Sean O'Connell (Sean Penn), whose photographs have been used by the magazine regularly.  Strangely, though the two have worked on photos together, they have never met in person.  O'Connell seems to live the life of discovery and adventure for which Mitty yearns.  When Sean sends him one roll of negatives and claims that negative #25 captures "the quintessence of life", Mitty is horrified to realize that he has misplaced the negative.  When a new corporate hatchet man (Adam Scott) is brought in by Life to lay off all its unnecessary employees, he finds out about this "quintessential" picture and demands that Mitty provide it so it can be considered for the final cover.  When Mitty is unable to find the negative, Mitty sets off on a journey to find the negative.  Thus far, his life has been somewhat mundane.  But this new quest gives his life a new purpose.  This is helped along by the presence of a new attractive worker in the office named Cheryl (Kristen Wiig).

This movie kind of snuck up on me.  The first half of the movie incorporates Walter's fantasy life very well, but is a bit slow.  Only after the movie's end did I come to see that the movie has a deliberately slow pace at times.  Its pace lends itself to the movie's being a sort of meditation on life.  Ben Stiller's vision works very well.  The fantasy world of Mitty is contrasted very well by the new places Mitty actually sees.  His passport is finally put to use, and the vistas and people from such faraway places as Greenland, Iceland and Afghanistan show a great wonder to the real world.  As Walter begins to explore the real world and relate to, his fantasy world begins to subside.  The new experience of faraway places as well as relating to Cheryl give him not only new reasons to be excited, but also a new sense of courage, especially as his new boss proves to be a difficult person.

There is a slight sadness to this movie that breathes life into it.  Perhaps its the initial dullness of Walter's life.  Perhaps its his father's absence (Walter brings up a couple of times in the movie that his father died when he was 17) that gives the film an air of melancholy.  Whatever it is, the melancholy is augmented by Walter's impending job loss, and his sadness over what he sees as the new management's failure to live up to Life magazine's values.  In many ways, this movie reminded me of one of my favorite movies of the past ten years, "Stranger Than Fiction".  Both films star actors primarily known for comic work, but do fine dramatic work in their respective roles.  Both films involve shaking the protagonist out of a sort of permanent day dream to live their lives more fully.  And both films have a secret that keeps the viewer guessing until the very last shot.  The ability of both of these films to make us laugh and think while also tapping into our emotions sets both of them apart.  But what makes them both exciting and dramatic show both films have a great plot twist that is only revealed in the closing shots.  This is a movie about celebrating real life.  Whatever trials we face in this life, there is a lot to celebrate.


Saturday, November 29, 2014

Star Wars Trailer: Lego Version

What scares me about this is that someone already did it...impressive...most impressive...


Friday, November 28, 2014

STAR WARS TRAILER!!

Not that any of you haven't already seen this, but how about another look?  The shot of the Falcon is pretty awesome...


Wednesday, November 19, 2014

St. Vincent



It's always good to see Bill Murray on screen, even when the character he is playing is unattractive.  In the character Vincent in this movie, we have a man who is a drunk, a gambler, and a man who hires a pregnant prostitute because he likes her belly.  There would be no movie to speak of here if something didn't come into Vincent's world to change things.  Vincent's new neighbor Maggie (Melissa McCarthy, in a refreshingly non-crazy role) has found herself unable to care for her son Oliver after school.  In desperation, she agrees to begin paying Vincent to watch Oliver so she can continue to earn an income and support her son.  As a single mother, Maggie is in a bind, but the person she picks seems to defy her own better judgement.

The first 15 minutes or so of this movie show us one anecdote after another to establish Vincent as a cretin.  This is a set up to see the fireworks once the crisis that we know is coming does indeed come. While Oliver is at school, two chief things are happening.  First, as an outsider at a new school, he is faced with bullying and teasing.  Second, he is given an assignment to do a project about a Catholic Saint of the past, and to augment that through writing about a saint in his own life.  As Oliver spends more time with Vincent, the layers of Vincent's life are peeled back, and we begin to see through the hard shell the man has built for himself (or has been put upon him through suffering).  We begin to see him in his totality.  He doesn't suddenly become, well, a saint.  But the complicated realities of his life come to bare, and his predicament could help but bring sympathy and emotion from me as I watch the story unfold.

I don't think there is anything terribly unique about this movie.  The chief hole in the ploy is so great that the film itself ends up having to address it.  Once the viewer can get past the absurdity of Maggie paying Vincent to watch her son, the film begins to work really well.  I cannot help but have admiration for the fine performances in this movie.  Bill Murray is great as always.  The first and last images of him in the movie are both unique, and they serve as remarkable bookends for his character.  Furthermore, I think movie directors should take this movie's example and use the closing credits to keep the audience in the seats (Pixar has also done this well).  Melissa McCarthy is a fine actress. and it is wonderful to see her outside of her slapstick comic persona (as much as that persona is great).  She creates a character here who is world weary and backed into a corner.  She is out of options, so she makes Vincent her son's caregiver, even though she knows he is less than savory.  The young actor who plays Oliver (Jaeden Lieberher) is also very convincing.  He brings this outsider to life and makes us sympathize with him.  Oliver's character is the backbone of the film.  When the emotional payoff takes place at the end of the movie, it is made possible largely because of how believable Lieberher has made him.

The theme of the film really comes down to the question of what makes a saint.  As a Christian, I found the theme to be so applicable.  We live in a world corrupted by sin and human folly, and the notion that any human is a saint can be laughable.  This movie brings to the forefront the idea that ugly people can do saintly things.  How that happens is a matter of debate.  I think it shows us that any human can, by grace, be called a saint.

Monday, August 18, 2014

Good Will Hunting

Why is it that there are certain movies that one can watch again and again and they never grow old?  The chemistry has always proved to be perfect for my wife and I, so we have returned to this movie several times over the years.  Now, since Robin Williams has died, the time seems to have come to watch this movie again, which I am sure we will do int he near future.  What is it about this movie that makes it so watchable for us?  Why can we go back to it repeatedly and it doesn't get old?  There are several reasons.

First, to watch this movie is to capture a moment of time of two young performers who have ended up being significant players in the movies.  Ben Affleck and Matt Damon have gone on to be be two of the most accomplished performers in Hollywood, and this movie is really where they got their start.  To watch this movie again is to have a glimpse into why they have been so successful, each of them in their own way.  They create characters in this movie (both by acting and writing, since they wrote this movie) that are funny, vulnerable and real.  As two young men from South Boston, they are rough around the edges but share a core of loyalty and honesty that is refreshing.  Two scenes come to mind.  The classic scene wherein Will (Damon) blows away a pompous Harvard student with his intellect is a classic.  Part of the reason for that is not only Matt Damon's scene wherein he recites the history books, but also Affleck's clear role as a wingman/set up man.  As a side note, the gang of four friends that Damon and Affleck wrote is a classic case of using a group of friends to create a world where the viewer feels a certain belonging to a group.  As a viewer of this movie, you care about this group of young men.  The viewer laughs with them, hurts with them, and even shakes their head at them when they stray off the path and get in trouble.  The creation of this group of hoodlums is one of the pillars of tho movie.

Second, the movie gives as a tremendous amount of depth to every significant character.  For examples, as Will's mathematic genius begins to reveal itself, Jerry (Stellan Skarsgaard), an accomplished mathematician at MIT, takes an interest in him.  Jerry keeps Will out of jail, but them wishes to take him under his wing.  Jerry promises the judge that he will get Will therapy, and that brings Sean (Robin Williams) into the mix.  Sean is a professor of psychology at a community college.  Jerry insightfully believes that Sean will understand Will, and after some rough early sessions, it becomes clear that Sean can indeed help Will.  The depth of character to which I refer comes to light not only with Sean and Will's interactions, but also in the interactions of Sean and Jerry.  As the story moves along, it becomes clear that Sean and Jerry have a past as well, being friends and rivals at MIT during their college days.  This tension between them is handled masterfully in the screenplay.  The subtext of their relationship os assumed by the characters, but it is never awkwardly belabored.  Sean and Jerry talk to each other in a real way, not in a way that artificially reveals their past.  I have always thought that the relationship between Sean and Jerry could make for a great movie of its own, and that is part of what makes this film so rich.

Finally, the joys and losses of the characters prove to be relatable to the audience.  It is easy Will to put his girlfriend Skylar (Minnie Driver) in a privileged box because she goes to Harvard.  It is only when he begins to become vulnerable to her that she reveals her pain to him.  The only reason she can go to Harvard is because her father died and left her the money to do so.  The emotions that come from these confrontations cause Will to be scared and flee from intimacy.  This sets up the wonderful interactions Will has with Sean.  Robin Williams' character in this film proves to be a challenge to Will's world.  He pushes Will to become vulnerable, even though Will has been abused or abandoned by nearly everyone who has been close to him, except his circle of friends.  At the same time, Will challenges Sean as well, since Sean has had his own share of deep pain.  Sean's wife has died of cancer, and he is also reticent to be vulnerable again.  The scenes between Matt Damon and Robin Williams are the heart of the movie.  Williams' comic persona is almost absent here, though it does show itself a few times.  It is in a performance such as this that Williams showed, to me, the extent of his talent.  Of course his comedy was in its own world, but his ability to create a character here and interact with the other actors in the cast is noteworthy.  The subtext of his relationship with Jerry is rich, and the challenge both that he gives to will and receives from him is wonderfully executed in his performance.  Sean's life is in shambles, and this young man seems to give him a purpose as well as a challenge.

Since Williams is a supporting character in this movie, it can be lost how good Matt Damon is in the central role.  He is in most every shot, and he carries the title character with verity.  Robin Williams adds a great deal to this movie, and his ability to do this kind of work will be missed by all of us.  His best scene is a wonderful scene wherein he challenges young Will to open up to him.  If I could have bookends that would encapsulate this man's career, I would show this clip, and the clip I shared in my last blog entry about Williams.  This is a wonderfully written and performed scene, and I think it shows how good Williams could be (word to the wise...some ROUGH LANGUAGE AHEAD).  We will miss his performances...

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Robin Williams

I have been out of town for a few days, but I did hear about Robin Williams' death while away.  When I returned home today, I was somewhat surprised by the outpouring on the social media.  So many people my age were profoundly affected by his life and work, and it showed as I scanned through the tributes on Facebook and Twitter.  Through this little blog of mine, I wanted to add my voice to the chorus.

I can't comment much on the issue of depression.  I have very little experience with it, so anything I would say would be sophomoric and throw away.  Many others have shared their thoughts on depression, and there are lots of helpful and sympathetic words floating around that speak to that angle on this.  His death was shocking (as almost any early death is), but not surprising at the same time.

What I can comment on is my reaction to him as an audience member and as one who observed some of his work.  His finest films, to me, were his dramatic ones.  "Awakenings" is a wonderful film, and his performance in it (as an introverted, left-brained research doctor who ends up aiding patients with a nervous system disorder) is heartfelt and true.  "Good Will Hunting" is hardly a unique work, but it feels like it is, partly because of his presence in it.  "Good Morning Viet Nam" is great not only because one sees his comic largesse, but also because it is a story rooted in the tragic realities of war and his character's reaction to that.

Where he always truly shined, to me, was in talk show interviews, particularly when he visited Johnny Carson.  It was only there that the confines not only of the medium but also of the host could be truly obliterated by his comic genius.  The reason he was at his best with Carson is that Johnny was the best host at truly being a spectator along with the rest of us.  When Jonathan Winters died last year, I watched the clip of him and Robin Williams together on Carson several times.  My wife truly got sick of it.

There was a searching for God in his humor as well.  Whether he mocked religion or merely toyed with some of its implications, it always seemed like he had a mind that was partly focused on the spiritual.

As my own little tribute, I will share that clip of him and Winters which aired in 1991...


Friday, July 25, 2014

12 Years a Slave



"Now there arose a new king over Egypt, who did not know Joseph."-Exodus 1:8

"I don't want to survive, I want to live."-Solomon Northup, "12 Years a Slave"

The human race is puzzling in many ways.  Sometimes I think that what truly is shocking is not the horrible things we do to each other, but how sometimes we see how horrible they are.  Human history is filled with so much cruelty that when we recognize the suffering and injustice of a particular person or group, it is almost miraculous.  This has begun to happen in the United States and Britain with our heritage of slavery, and this movie is another sign of that.  What is shocking is not so much the graphic portrayal of what must have gone on in the slave trade, but how commonplace it was to the people of the time.  This is the movie's strongest point.  It depicts a culture where slavery is a reality that all of its citizens simply are made to accept.  Within that acceptance there is great variety.  Some slave owners were kind to their slaves, while others were terribly cruel.  However, even the kind slave owners accept the fact that the slaves of African descent were inferior beings.  My view of humanity leads be to be impressed whenever we can see that there is something wrong, and being able to look at a subject from a new angle gives the story and the experience of our heritage more texture.

The different angle here (though the film is based on a book that was written in 1853) is that of an African American who is a free man, but who is kidnapped away from his wife and children and sold into slavery.  Perhaps the most effective and affecting scene in the whole movie depicts the first moments when Solomon discovers he is in bondage.  The men who sold him into slavery had made him drunk, and Solomon awakens in a prison in shackles, and is immediately given a painful and shocking beating.  Solomon is not only in pain, but is completely confused by his circumstances.  The more he insists upon declaring his true identity, the more trouble he gets into, so he begins to be compliant and relatively obedient, hoping that an opportunity will arise for him to gain back his freedom and his dignity.

On his journey, Solomon meets many other slaves who have never known freedom.  When he comes into the hands of Epps, a brutal owner that reminded me of Simon Legree from Uncle Tom's Cabin.  He is greedy and ruthless, and uses the Bible to justify his methods, as so many people over the years have done.  Epps cannot even love up to his own crooked standards (the Bible commands masters and owners to treat their servants and employees well-a fact that those who used the Bible to justify their lifestyle tended to overlook), and he lusts after his slave woman Patsey (Lupita N'yongo), whom he greedily treasures in an almost Gollum like fashion.  Epps is a sadistic man, and it is this man who provides the greatest challenge to Solomon.  Solomon's struggle to find freedom is made more real by the powerful performance of Chiwetel Eijofar.  Other wonderful actors add great texture to the film as well (Brad Pitt, Benedict Cumberbatch, Paul Giamatti, and others).

Though the movie never goes into much theological idealism, I couldn't help but reflect upon my own faith and how it deals with injustice and suffering.  The book of Exodus is about the deliverance of the Israelites from the house of slavery in Egypt.  But the story begins with the forgotten fact of the vital role that Israel played in the survival of Egypt.  Humanity always finds ways to deliver others of its kind into deep and excruciating pain.  In that light, it is both common and shocking what humans can do to each other.  Also, human history is littered with stories of new ways that humanity learns to do evil.  Almost as soon as Europe began to colonize other parts of the world, the evil of the African slave trade was introduced.  Slavery is as old as humanity, but is timeless and an ever changing story.  We must learn from the story of Exodus, and it is vital that we understand our own history.  How we correct the breach and how we reconcile and heal is beyond the scope here, but one thing is certain-stories like this must be told if we are to understand that humanity does not progress on its own.  We are broken.  Specifically, the story of Christianity is humans finding a way to brutally murder God Himself.  The human story is replete with this kind of cruelty.  But the central strength of Christianity also is grace, and the suffering Christ undergoes has meaning.  It was horrible, yet it atones for sin. Why some people or races struggle or are abused is a mystery.  Hiding from the struggle helps no one.  Acknowledging the pain and understanding that is vital.  Here, Solomon never sees any meaning behind his suffering.  He has simply loses 12 years of his life.  Like Job in the Bible, the people in humanity often never know why they suffer so.  But the redemptive truth is that somehow Christ came not to save only the well to do or those who"deserve" it.  He came to save the poor and the oppressed.  He came to save those who can recognize their own total need for him.  The art of the spiritual that the slaves sung speaks to the truth that the slaves believed that even though man had forsaken them, God was with them.

While the theological theories here may be off topic, they are what occurred to me as I watched this movie and reflected upon it.  It is a movie of unflinching power.  I can see why it won Best Picture.  It is the kind of movie that wins-it is not only well done, but it also reminds us of the role that cinema can have in informing us and moving us.

Saturday, July 12, 2014

"Unbroken" Trailer

I was able to read this book last year.  Louis Zamperini just died last week after a long life of joy, struggle, and in the end, a life lived to God's glory.  I look forward to how his life is handled in this film, especially as Joel and Ethan Coen share screenwriting credit.


Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Her



This is a movie about intimacy.  I cannot think of too many movies wherein that is the theme.  Because of that, I found this movie to be both brilliant and uncomfortable.  When a movie is depicting the most raw of human emotions, I think that movie wants the viewer to be uncomfortable.  This movie plumbs the depth of human emotion, and finds all of the messiness and hope that is to be found in opening oneself up to other people.

The movies of Spike Jonze have a tendency toward the unusual.  This is only the fourth movie he has directed, and all four movies are striking in their originality.  For instance, his first film follows a puppeteer who stumbles into a portal which takes the entrant into the mind of actor John Malkovich.  With that film as his debut, a viewer knows that any Spike Jonze movie is going to have its own perspective.  The movie here begins with a bizarre (but perhaps too close to reality) premise, but plays out the premise so skillfully that I found myself feeling that I was almost watching real life.  Joaquin Phoenix plays Theo, a man whose marriage is just coming to an end.  He works for a company which composes authentic, emotional notes for people.  Theo is hired by people who want to send a special thought to someone they love, he composes the note for them (in their handwriting, using modern computer technology to reproduce a genuine handwritten note).  Theo spends his days in other peoples' thoughts.  Their thoughts are deeply personal and heart wrenching, but it is just every day business for him.  Theo makes the rounds on social networks.  Since this movie is set somewhere in the future, the technology of social networks has advanced significantly, and Theo is able to hook up with people in ways that are still a ways a way for us today.  However, when a social network sexual encounter goes awry, Theo looks for another alternative.

Theo ends up buying an OS with artificial intelligence.  He begins to develop a relationship with the OS (whose name is Samantha, and is voiced by Scarlett Johansson), and he is surprised at how well Samantha relates to him, and how responsive she is to his feelings.  The only other significant relationship Theo seems to have is with his friends Amy and Charles (Amy Adams and Charles Letscher), and when their marriage falls apart, Amy also begins a relationship with an OS.  Amy and Theo have different relationships with their OS friends.  While Amy sees the OS as almost a girlfriend with whom she can gossip and joke, Theo begins to have what he sees as a deep and intimate relationship with Samantha.  This is seen in many different ways which I will not here relate, but the deep longing Theo has for intimacy is mirrored only by his complete inability to actually have such intimacy.  This sets the stage for unpredictable developments which have a lot to say about what we yearn for as humans.

As the OS hits the market and more and more people begin to buy them, the movie depicts nearly everyone interacting with their OS as they walk down the street.  Therefore, we see an entire city of people (the movie is set mainly in a future but very familiar downtown Los Angeles) talking to their hand held devices rather than to each other.  As someone who owns an iphone, I know how captivating these little devices can be.  This movie does a good job of making a point through taking the technology to an extreme.  What would happen if each of us had a companion that not only was tailored to us, but who we could continue to tailor to our needs?  Would we be happier?  Is part of what makes relationships so captivating is the fact that other people are never in our control?  This movie asks these questions are many others.  But, I think what makes it so timely and powerful is how normal the lives depicted in the movie are.  While the movie is set in the future and the technology is so exotic, the lives in the movie itself could not be more ordinary, and that is part of what is kind of terrifying about the movie.  This is by no means one for the kids.  It deals with intimacy and sexuality in a raw and uncomfortable way.  Having said that, since relationships are the one thing which we never master as humans, how fascinating it is to see a movie which shows humans attempting to master that, and what happens in that case.  It takes me back to Spike Jonze's last movie, "Where the Wild Things Are," wherein Max seeks to make a world where people don't hurt and things aren't broken.  The harder he tries, the worse things get for Max.  We cannot control others, and both of these movies show that heartbreaking but important truth very well.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Belle



One of the things my wife Stephanie and I love to do when we get away is go to see a movie.  Last week, we had the opportunity to spend most of a week in Montréal, and we ended up seeing this movie.  This is one of those movies that sneaks up on the viewer.  The first half of the movie, while good, was not terribly engrossing to me.  However, as I got to know the characters better and story began to evolve, I found myself quite moved by both the story and the struggle of the title character.

Belle refers to the main character in this story.  She is a mixed race girl who comes into the care of a prominent justice in the English court, Lord William Murray (Tom Wilkenson).  She is brought to Lord Murray by his nephew, an officer in the Navy who cannot care for her.  Her full name is Dido Elizabeth Belle, and Lord Murray and his wife and family (they have a daughter as well) end up raising her as their own child.  As she grows older, many things happen at once which end up causing great intrigue.

First, Lord Murray has a case set before him which is very much about the nature of slavery and its place in England at that time.  It concerns the Zong Massacre, about which I have cited a wikipedia article here.  Briefly, the case involved a slave ship which had been forced (according to the ship owners) to throw a cargo of slaves into the water, and now they sought insurance compensation for the slaves.  Murray is given this case, and he has to weigh the merits of it, all the while having a slave's descendant as an adopted daughter.

Second, Belle herself is becoming more and more aware of the injustice of her situation.  She is unable to sit with the rest of her family in society, and she feels awkward when she is in the company of slaves.  She feels completely without a home.  She is not a slave, but a free woman.  She is not totally a free woman, because she is still subject to certain indignities due to her skin color.  Finally, she is also a woman, and that by itself takes away from her many of the rights that women have come to gain in our modern society.  All of this, coupled with Dido's awareness of the case that is before her adopted father, cause quite a mental crisis for Dido.

Third, Dido unexpectedly becomes a target for young men.  While beautiful, she is still not an equal, and her prospects for marriage are not good.  However, as she finds herself with a generous dowry, she suddenly merits the attention of young men seeking financial security.  Oliver Ashford becomes "interested" in Dido, and things look as though Dido may find a husband after all.  Ironically, Dido's adopted sister Elizabeth has no such prowess in the dowry department, and she is left to watch while Dido entertains suitors.  Into this mix comes John Davinier, a vicar's son who is a passionate opponent of the slave trade.  His idealism is a breath of fresh air for Dido, but her father thinks the match beneath her.

These three elements combine for a story with many layers.  The story has a lot to say about racism, but it also reminds one of a Jane Austen tale, as women (and men) are forced to marry for reasons other than their wishes.  Oliver Ashford, who becomes engaged to Dido in the movie, is an interesting character.  While his scheming mother and lecherous brother barely tolerate Dido, Oliver seems to be caught in the crossfire.  He might care for Dido, but is influenced by his family, who sees the match as profitable, despite the fact that his match is a black woman.  As the film works toward its climax, all of the different layers of the movie come together skillfully, and the movie delivers a satisfying conclusion.  This movie is a very satisfying piece of drama.  As we continue to struggle with race and all its implications, the ideals of this movie give us something to strive toward, even though it takes place in a world where slavery is still legal in the US and Britain.

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

ESPN's 30 for 30



A couple of months ago, I noticed a great deal on Groupon.  If I spent $30, I could get the entire 30 film collection of the original ESPN 30 for 30.  For those who don't know, ESPN decided (on the occasion of their 30th anniversary) to make 30 films about various sports stories that have taken place over the last 30 years.  So far, I have watched 18 of the original films, and I have been very impressed by their quality.  ESPN has gone on to make other films in this vein, but these 30 are the originals.  There are a lot of things about which to comment on, but one thing is certain.  Sports are incredibly important not only to Americans, but to all people.  Sometimes, as some of these films show, they are far too important, but that is part of what makes sports so captivating.  They can be a reflection of the triumph of the human spirit.  They can speak of the longing we have as a race for something deeper that connects us to others.  They can also show how deeply sick and depraved we are as a race.  All of these things come together in the different films, which are expertly directed and realized by some renowned film makers.  The films also cover many different sports, so there is much to learn and also much that can be familiar to a casual sports fan.

As a baseball fan, I am drawn, of course, to the films which focus on my favorite sport.  One film that proved very close to my heart was "Fernando Nation", an hour long film tracing the rise of Fernando Valenzuela in Los Angeles.  I saw Fernando pitch at Dodger Stadium for the first time in 1980, with my dad, at the age of 5.  The film does a great job of showing how important to it was to the Mexican-American community in Los Angeles to have a wonderful ball player to cheer.  The sad history of the Chavez Ravine property (the sight upon which Dodger Stadium was built) is brought to light, complete with footage of poor families being forcibly evicted for their shanties in order to make way for the new ballpark.  With this bitter past, the Hispanic community in LA was not too keen on the Dodgers.  When a Mexican who spoke no English shut out the Houston Astros on Opening Day in 1981, the Hispanic community in LA had a new hero.  This film does an outstanding job of tracing that deep history, but also of showing the triumphs of Fernando's early career, as he led to Dodgers to a World Series victory in 1981.

Another baseball film that is great is a film entitled "Four Days in October".  This film recounts the dramatic rebound made by the Boston Red Sox in the 2004 American League Championship Series.  The Boston Red Sox found themselves down to the three games to none to the New York Yankees, their hated rivals.  As it was a best of seven game series, the Red Sox found themselves in a situation where they had to win four games in a row against the Yankees, or their season would be over.  Through footage of the games and interviews with players and Red Sox fans, the dramatic reversal of fortune is recounted, and it makes for an enthralling story.  As someone who watched these games and was caught up in the drama at the time, living through it again in this movie was a great experience.

Some of the stories I have seen involve sports about which I know very little.  For instance, in "The Birth of Big Air", filmmakers take a look at the life and career of Mat Hoffman.  Hoffman is a BMX daredevil who brought his sport to prominence.  His influence is seen in the ascendancy of the X Games and BMX riding in general.  I had never heard this man's name before I watched this film, but I found his story to be very engaging.  Through interviews with other riders, his wife, and Evel Knievel, his bravery (some would say insanity) is chronicled.  Also chronicled is his claim to have been the first BMX rider to achieve 20 feet of air off a jump.  This is a great story, with all of what makes sports stories great, but in a different sport than I am used to watching.

Finally, one film truly show the hold the sports have on humanity.  In "The Two Escobars", the tragic story of Andres Escobar is told.  Andres Escobar was a member of the 1994 Columbian World Cup team.  This team had been funded in large part through drug money, especially from the wealth of drug kingpin Pablo Escobar.  The film, though about soccer in many ways, spends just as much time showing the political situation in Columbia in the 80's and 90's.  Pablo Escobar offered help to the poor, and through the soccer team that Columbia put together, a sort of national unity.  The team went into the '94 World Cup in the USA as heavily favored.  However, when they lost their first game, everything rode on the next game that they had against the host American team.  The Columbians lost that game the the USA, in part due to a goal that Andres Escobar accidentally kicked into his own goal.  My late father and I happened to be spectators in the crowd that scorching day in Pasadena at the Rose Bowl, and all I knew to do was go nuts that my home country had pulled off such an upset.  Only days after this loss did the tragic news come that Andres Escobar had been murdered back in Columbia due to his mistake.  All people tend to get judgmental after something like that.  Truly this was a case of fanaticism.  But, don't many of us take sports too seriously?

For someone like myself, sports are a wonderful past time, but they also are something deeper.  For me, as my dad has been gone a couple of years, sports are a connection that I had with him, and that I have now with my kids.  He was with me at Dodger Stadium when I was 5 years old and I saw Fernando confound the Astro hitters.  He was going nuts in the crowd with me at the 1994 USA/Columbia match.  These stories (and, as the title suggests, there are many others), are a great way to study our devotion to sports and what they mean.  They do mean too much to us at times.  We all need to monitor how much time, energy and money we devote to them.  At the same time, just like other forms of entertainment (art, music, film), they offer a human connection.  They give us camaraderie.  They give us a drama that whose ending is a surprise not only to those who watch them, but also to those who participate.  This is a great series of films.

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Philomena



This is a simple movie about a person dealing with complex emotions and crises.  The two principle characters are very different people, and their journey together is both unlikely and moving.  This is a moving piece of work that concerns itself with faith, doubt, maternal love and friendship.  It features two wonderful performances by Steve Coogan and Judi Dench, and I think it was only right for it to be included in the running for Best Picture last month.

Judi Dench stars in the title role as a woman with a daughter and a secret.  She has held on to this secret for some 50 years.  One day, as Philomena's daughter comes upon her in an emotional state, she finally lets the secret out to her daughter.  When Philomena was a young woman, she had a baby boy out of wedlock.  Philomena's daughter has found her in this emotional state holding a wallet sized picture of the boy, who would be 50 years old now.  As a young, unmarried woman, Philomena had sought shelter at a convent, where she was taken in by a group of nuns.  There, she gives birth to the boy, and begins working for penance.  The nuns end up exploiting her and the other moms, and it turns out that they are "adopting" out the babies that the young unwed mothers are bringing to them.  This story comes to the notice of writer Martin Sixsmith(Steve Coogan) whose career is in a lull.  He had worked for the British government, but his career has hit a dead end, and he sees this human interest story as a fascinating little  anecdote that will make for a good story.  Together, Philomena and Martin begin a quest to find Philomena's long lost son, and see what has become of him.

The movie works on two different levels.  First, the search the Philomena is on is itself quite captivating.  Her son was taken from her when he was no more than 2 or 3 years old, and she has wondered ever since what has become of him.  Because she was emotionally abused by members of a church order, it would be very easy for this movie to fall into knee jerk anti religious sentiments.  Instead, it confronts the evils head on, but still gives us a character in Philomena who hangs on to her faith, in spite of the difficult experiences she has had.  For Philomena, the representatives of the church have deeply disappointed her, but that does not take away her faith in something higher.  The second way that this movie works so well is how it depicts the relationship between Philomena and Martin.  Martin is a confirmed, worldly skeptic who doesn't buy into Philomena's faith.  He is also much younger than Philomena, and at times he seems to think that he is humoring the poor old woman.  In the end, Philomena, while no spring chicken, is sharper than he first thinks, and her depth of feeling and faith somehow captivates him.  While he seethes at the moral failings of the church, Philomena is forced to take a tough look inside and find out what she thinks about forgiveness and grace.  While Martin doesn't seem to come around to Philomena's way of thinking, he does seem to be a bit wiser by the end of the film, and he might be forced to think about the nature of forgiveness, and what we do when people (especially those in the church) turn out to be moral failures.

The performances are great.  The actors are given material that is highly complicated and emotional, and both of the lead actors are believable in their roles.  Judi Dench has become a highly respected actress in America, an honor she has had in her homeland for decades.  Here, she plays her role with great care, as she depicts an older woman who has her quirks, but is sharp as a tack.  Steve Coogan is with her every step of the way.  He plays a role where is isn't quite sure "with it" Philomena is, but ends up being constantly surprised by her insight and her intelligence.  This is a movie about real people, and it comes across as a very true and genuine work.  I still haven't seen the Best Picture winner yet (12 Years A Slave), but this is another film that was very good, and I look forward to seeing the film that beat it out.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Cool Star Wars Pic

The cast for the 7th Star Wars movie was announced today-here's a link with a cool picture of the cast and crew all seated together...excited to see what comes of this...

http://starwars.com/news/star-wars-episode-7-cast-announced.html

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Gravity




I did myself a great disservice when I sat down in my living room to watch this movie.  Namely, I sat down in my living room and watched this film, and did not see it in a movie theater.  With that in mind, this is still a startling piece of work.  What makes it stand out to me is its simplicity.  This is a work of cinematic minimalism (if that is a category that actually exists).  Alfonso Cuaron brings us a movie with a singular title and a singular purpose.  Few times have I watched a movie that is so well summed up by its title.  The only other title I can think of for this movie would be "survival".  It is a simple story, told remarkably well.

Sandra Bullock stars as Ryan Stone, a scientist in space for the first time.  She is accompanied by two other astronauts.  One of them is Matt Kowalski, played by George Clooney.  Kowalski is a seasoned astronaut, and his experience is vital to Ryan Stone.  Within minutes of the film's beginning, the principal characters are told of a shower of debris that is headed straight for their space shuttle.  The debris completely destroys their spacecraft, and Kowalski and Stone are forced into survival mode.  This is the set up for the movie, and the rest of the movie really is about what happens next.

The movie is very short.  In this case, that actually helps it to be a cohesive work of art.  This is a simple movie, brilliantly realized.  In some ways it reminds me of a student film with a big budget.  We only see two living faces in this whole movie, and we hear only a couple more voices.  Part of the theme of this movie is survival in the face of being alone as well as being in danger, and the presence of so few actors assists us in seeing that theme.  Any discussion of this movie would also be incomplete without a thorough regard for its visual imagination.  Though I know that I am seeing unreal images, the images in this movie made me believe I was watching something quite real.  At the same time, paradoxically, the movie's images were just fanciful enough that I still was able to see great visual imagination rather than simple documentary style film making.

This movie received great accolades upon its release, and it actually went on to win more Oscars (7) than any other movie in 2014.  I have not yet seen "12 Years A Slave", so I will have to withhold judgement as to which of these movies "deserve" the award more.  It certainly becomes an interesting thing to debate when two movies with such different content are up for awards.  This movie certainly has a universal theme.  While it is set in space, the universal will of humans to survive (and the despair that can come when hope for survival seems lost) is a theme in many great works of art.  It also is worth noting that so many great works of suspense never fully receive their due (Alfred Hitchcock, after all, never won a best director Oscar).  This movie is a cinematic wonder, but I failed to be as wrapped up in it as I am with a Hitchcock film or other works of suspense.  As I mentioned above, I do think I lost something significant by seeing this at home (though I do have a sporty flat screen TV).  As my children continue to mature, I am sure I will begin to be able to be less selective of which movies I can get out to see.  However, there is a fine line between something which is artistically minimal and something which is predictable.  I knew before it was mentioned in the movie that the mission in question was probably Kowalski's last, because that seemed to fit with the genre I was watching.  Fortunately, the movie more than makes up for some of the predictability by many surprises, and by a basic humanity.  It gives every viewer a way to identify with its principle character.  I have not seen such effective uses of silence in a movie in quite some time (possibly since "2001: A Space Odyssey).  The silence serves a dual purpose.  It's awkwardness creates more tension, but it also reminds us of where the movie is set.  Space is silent, and the use of the lack of noise helps us feel Stone's danger all the more.  It may be that the Oscars got it right this year by giving the technical award to Cuaron and the grand prize to Steve McQueen (the director and producer of "12 Years A Slave).  When I see McQueen's work, it will let you all know what I think.


Sunday, April 20, 2014

Ben Hur Revisited


I wrote an entry on "Ben Hur" 3 years ago.  I still have not watched it again, though the time may well be prime to watch it with my kids.  Two years ago, we celebrated Easter in Southern California with my family, and we did not know then how significant it would be.  My father died two months later, leaving me with an emotional resonance during this holiday that has begun to supersede other holidays.  Dad loved this movie, so I think I will always associate this movie with Easter and with him.  I rejoice in the hope we have in the resurrection of Christ.  This movie can remind us of how great an impact Christ's life had on one family.  This is the type of impact He has on all those who follow Him.  Here's my entry:


I remember watching this movie every year growing up, and I always loved it.  Whether you are religious or not, the epic scope of the film and the wonderful story certainly carry the day.  The film tells the story of two young men: Judah Ben-Hur, a young Jew from Jerusalem, and his boyhood friend Masala, a loyal Roman soldier who attempts to recruit his old friend in an attempt to bring the Jewish people into allegiance with the Roman Empire.  When Judah refuses to turn his back on his faith and his people, Masala casts off any loyalty to his old friend, and allows his to suffer in an almost Job-like manner.  Most of the film is Judah's story of how he survives imprisonment to come back and seek his revenge on Masala.  All of this takes place at the same time that a young teacher from Nazereth is beginning to gain a following.

The Christ of this film is seen as a powerful moral example.  The filmmakers make a  decision of never showing his face, only shooting him from the back or from a distance.  This is a very effective portrayal of Christ.  One of the most powerful scenes in the film is a foreshadowing piece.  As Judah is being led off to imprisonment through the desert, he staggers and falls in weakness.  There, he is met by Christ, who gives him a miraculously endless supply of water.  Judah never forgets this act of kindness, and when he sees this same man who gave him water fall under the weight of a heavy cross near a well in Jerusalem, there is only one thing he can do.

The film preaches the power of Christ's teaching of forgiveness.  Judah has to learn what he should do to Masala in the face of horrible injustice.  The injustice that has been done to Judah is enormous, and Masala does deserve recompense.  The question Judah has to come to grips with as his bitterness increases is what is he to do with the teachings of this young man from Nazereth?  Should he hold onto his anger, or should he let it go before it consumes him?

As a Christian myself, it is always wonderful to see elements of my faith brought to the screen well.  It seems that many times, elements of the faith are brought to the screen that are far too didactic.  In other words, why make a movie when the filmmaker would rather just deliver a lecture?  It has been years since I have seen this film, and I noticed that a new Blu-Ray is on its way this fall...maybe it's time to take another look.  Happy Easter.

Thursday, April 17, 2014

1000 Greatest Movies

I found this fun list while surfing the web the other night.  It was published 10 years ago, so I'm sure there are lots of movies over the past few years that would be on it.  I have seen about 1/4 of them (257, to be exact).  It makes me realize just how much I haven't seen!

https://www.nytimes.com/ref/movies/1000best.html#G

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Life of Pi



I really enjoyed the book upon which this film was based, so I have looked forward a to seeing this movie since the day it was released.  I was not only intrigued by the story, but also by the presence of Ang Lee as the director intrigued me greatly.  If ever a director works like a painter, it is Ang Lee.  I have not seen all of his films, but the ones I have seen are exquisite visual works.  Not only that, they also depict human emotion and struggle very well.  Here, we are given a story that is laced with tragedy and survival, pain and hope.  Furthermore, it is an adventure, and the multifaceted spirit of the book is depicted in the film very well.


Piscine Patel is a young boy growing up in a part of India called Ponticherry, an area which was colonized by France.  He is named after a swimming pool in Paris, but because his name sounds like a crude word describing a bodily function, he shortens his name to Pi.  He grows up as a Hindu, but along the way comes to fall in love with elements both in Christianity and Islam.  While his rationalist father mocks his faith, Pi attempts to maintain his Hindu-Chrisitan-Islam-ness.  Pi's Father owns and runs a zoo, so Pi grows up with animals around him, and learns to both appreciate them and have a healthy respect for them.  When his family begins to encounter financial trouble, they decide to move to Canada.  They board an ocean liner with the animals (which they have sold), and head to North America.  Tragically, the ocean liner sinks, and Pi alone survives the wreck, along with several of the animals on the ship.  The story then becomes one of survival, as Pi is force do coexist on a life boat with 4 animals-a zebra, orangutan, hyena and a fearsome tiger named Richard Parker.  This whole story is told in flashback by a middle aged Pi, who is recounting his story to a man suffering from writer's bloc.

The story that originally comes from the book is one that is tough to visualize outside of the imagination.  That is what makes the film rendering of it so special.  Ang Lee uses brilliant colors in this movie almost as if they themselves are characters.  There is also such extraordinary imagination in his use of the camera and the shots he uses to communicate the story.  There is a stunning shot early on in the movie which surrounds adult Pi's recounting of the pool in Paris which was his namesake.  The pool is described as containing crystal clear water, but the shot that Lee uses to communicate that is so wonderful that we hardly needed the spoken description of Pi.  The visual imagination of the movie pairs well with the story it tells.  This is not merely a special effects piece.  The movie gives us living, breathing characters who have struggles, doubts and triumphs.  Their story is every bit as captivating as the visuals themselves.  It also deals in ways with faith and doubt that few films approach.  Its depiction of religion is somewhat positive, as Pi finds his own faith, even as it is criticized and mocked by his father.  Whether the viewer is a person of faith or not, the film deals with people's faith, which is a major part of the human experience which is not dealt with in film as much as I would like.  To be able to balance such extraordinary visuals with a great story and the deep pondering of the big questions is a noteworthy achievement.

There are always healthy debates about movies made from books.  I cannot think of too many movies that realize books better than this.  Perhaps "To Kill a Mockingbird", "Lord of the Rings", and the "Harry Potter" series are in this category.  This movie does what the best movies made from books do.  It honors the story told in the book, and brings a visual imagination to the words in the book that in no way diminish the book.  This movie is one person's recounting of a novel.  It shows Ang Lee's (and his collaborators) mental picture of the words found in Yann Martel's novel.  I still can have my own mental images of the novel, but being able to see a fine film maker like Lee's vision is equally captivating.  Ang Lee won the best director Oscar for this film while his film lost to "Argo" for Best Picture.  While "Argo" was an enjoyable caper, this movie is in a different category.  What a profound work of vision and imagination it is.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Mickey Rooney

We all grew up watching Mickey Rooney, in one way or another.  I have two major memories.  One is his work in "The Black Stallion", a film that came out when I was 5, and in which he figured prominently.  The other is as one of the ensemble in It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World, in which he played one of the desperate treasure hunters who ends up on a plane with a drunk pilot.  He was a great talent.  He started making movies at such a young age that he really was a final link to a bygone era.  Here are the words of the LA Times' Kenneth Turan:


http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/moviesnow/la-et-mn-mickey-rooney-appreciation-20140408,0,4196162.story#axzz2yCxWDN5a

Sunday, April 6, 2014

20 Feet From Stardom



I have always been entertained and fascinated by anything about the history of Rock and Roll.  This documentary (which just won the Oscar for Best Documentary a few weeks ago) not only is about Rock and Roll, but it tells a great story as well.  It examines the lives and careers of several people (mostly women) who have served as background singers to major stars.  Some of the people we hear from are people whose voices we have heard for years, but we have not had a name and a face to match the voice.

The principle character in this film ends up being Darlene Love, who ended up becoming a star in her own right, after years of being not only a background singer, but also being used by Phil Spector for her voice, all the while pushing other a "artists" who lip synced using her vocals.  Darlene Love has gone on to be a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and has become a legend as a solo artist.  The other singers about whom this film focuses all have had varying levels of success with solo artistry, and the movie does a good job of showing their different stories.

Merry Clayton rose to fame being the female vocalist on the Rolling Stones "Gimme Shelter".  She tells a funny story about how she sang the vocal with curlers in her hair.  Anyone who has heard the song and the words of her vocal can get a chuckle out of the notion that she sang the words with curlers in her hair.  Merry dreamed of having a solo career, but despite several efforts to make her dream come true, her solo work never sold albums.  She seems to be fairly comfortable in her own skin, but one cannot help but see some of the disappointment she still feels about not having more success with her solo career.

The most interesting person that I learned about in this movie was Lisa Fischer.  As is the case with everyone in this film, her vocals are familiar to me (she has worked with Sting, and now, she tours permanently with the Rolling Stones, and has for years), but I did not know her story.  Fischer was able to make it as a solo artist.  She won a Grammy in the early 90's for her solo work, but she opted instead to work in relative obscurity as a background vocalist.  She explains at one point in the movie that one of the reasons she does what she does is that she wants to be able to go to restaurants and not be recognized.  Fischer comes across as someone who is quite comfortable in her own skin.  She has tasted fame and glory, and is comfortable using her amazing voice in a way that takes the spot light off of her.

Judith Hill (a fellow Biola Eagle) rose to fame by working side by side with Michael Jackson on "This Is It."  She was working closely with him when he died, and the movie uses her in a way that is different from the other artists.  Since she is still young (the age when the other singers were doing their most famous work), she is at the stage where she is figuring out where she wants to go with her career. She wants a solo career, because that has been her dream.  Since she presently is pursuing that, the viewers don't know the end of her story.  Her story ends up reminding us that this dynamic is current as well.  As long as the need for background singers remains, there will be highly skilled people who can fill that role.  Furthermore, as long as the role of background singer remains, there will be singers who dream of being in the lime light.

I have written before on this blog about the fact that the best documentaries are not so different from other kinds of movies.  They tell a story that is every bit as engaging as fiction, and they use real life to tell their story.  The artistry that is brought to this film is effective because it gives us real people whose life has real drama.  Though we might not view these singer's plight as the tragedy that they do, their humanity shines through and we do feel sympathy for them.  The movie allows us to walk a mile in their shoes, and anytime we can do that, it is a credit to the film maker.  I walked away from this film feeling genuine sympathy for the singer's who have been ignored.  There is a great scene wherein Darlene Love talks about hearing one of her most famous songs on the radio while she was cleaning a house.  She had begun cleaning houses to make ends meet, and when she heard "Christmas (Please Come Home)", she realized she wasn't doing what she was supposed to be doing.  To me, it wasn't that cleaning was beneath her dignity.  It was more that she had been given a voice and an opportunity to use it that others would die for.  To see her go back to her craft and pursue it was great, and her story makes up a major part of the heart of this wonderful story.

Sunday, March 30, 2014

The Grand Budapest Hotel



As a fan of Wes Anderson's movies, it is always possible that I will become too repetitive in my fawning of his work.  There are certain artists that, for whatever reason, feel special to us.  It may be, in part, that even though he has amassed quite a following over the past 18 years (has it really been that long?), his appeal is still somewhat selective.  His movies do not hit the ground in thousands of theaters, and they never make a whole lot of money.  It could be that therein lies some his appeal.  To those of us who love his work, we feel that we have found something special that has not gained universal popularity.

The movie follows a story in flashback told by Zero (F. Murray Abraham).  He tells the story of how he came to be the owner of the Grand Budapest Hotel, since he came to the country as a poor immigrant refugee.  In the years before "the war", Zero comes under the tutelage of Gustave (Ralph Fiennes), the concierge at the hotel.  Gustave is the master of the house, knowing every inch of the hotel, and providing exemplary service to all his customers (for some customers, even a little too exemplary).  One of his elderly customers (an almost unrecognizable Tilda Swinton) dies and leaves a valuable painting to Gustave in her will.  The customer's greedy son Dmitiri (Adrian Brody) wants the painting, and when Gustave takes the painting and replaces it with a painting with a sexually graphic image, a caper of sorts ensues.

The plot actually sounds rather standard, but this is a Wes Anderson film, and the journey and the scenery are every but as much a character in the movie as the people themselves.  The settings in all of Wes Anderson's movies are evocative of a certain geographical place, but they are never specifically set anywhere.  For instance, "The Royal Tennenbaums" is clearly set in New York, but there is almost no familiar New York imagery in the movie.  This gives Anderson's work the advantage of being otherworldly and familiar at the same time.  The story in "Hotel" is set in the 1930s just before World War 2, or at least, the setting and situations in the movie call that period of our history to mind.  The countries' names are changed to fictional names, and a harsh looking image which is not a swastika is hung all over the hotel once the brutal occupying force has arrived.  The name of the hotel gives us a certain permission to think about Eastern Europe, but some of the Alpine imagery makes us think of Austria and Switzerland as well.

If one watches all of Anderson's movies, each one seems to become more elaborate.  The set designs and characters become increasingly complicated and intricate.  What astounds me as I watch his movies is how much is still emotionally invested in his characters as well.  Whether its the lonely high schooler Max Fischer living with his widowed father in "Rushmore", the estranged father Royal in "Royal Tennenbaums, or the lonely lobby boy Zero here in this film, Anderson injects genuine emotion into his characters, and that is what elevates these movies from being merely quirky to being genuinely moving experiences. 

The intricate sets and world in which this film is set live side by side with characters who are equally obsessed with details.  Gustave is highly interested with the details of his hotel.  He walks through its lobby much as a king, and this level of control is important to him, as he seeks to maintain the high reputation of the Grand Budapest.  In the end, Zero has held onto the hotel for very different reasons, and Zero's reasons for that (plus his relationship with Gustave) is the place where this movie truly finds its heart. 

The ability of Anderson to balance wacky and dry comedy, human drama and a mystery caper is what I find special about him.  It is also what seems so true to me about his work.  Even though his films are almost surreal at times, the truth of his work always rises to the top.  The characters in this movie are obsessive and funny, to be sure.  But they are also people with deep pain, regrets, and their own share of faults.  The combination of the fanciful elements of the plot with the humanity of the characters are a huge strength of this movie.  Anderson has also managed to assemble casts in his movies that are second to none.  Bill Murray and Owen Wilson are only on the screen for minutes in this movie, but they contribute so much to the texture of the work.  This holds true for all of the fine actors who have parts in this movie, both big and small.  Add to all that the beautiful and complex composition of each frame of the movie, and I find myself genuinely invigorated about what I am watching. 

Monday, March 24, 2014

The Lego Movie


Going to the movies with one's children is almost always a good idea.  Saturday, my wife and daughter had an outing with some friends, so I took my two sons to see this movie.  My boys (like so many others) love Legos, and this movie not only offered the draw of seeing moving Legos on screen, but also a fun gimmick.  There were times in the movie where I felt it was trying to be a little too smug and culturally relevant for its own good (sort of how I feel about some of Pixar's work), but it still was a smart, funny piece of work.  Further, the resolution of the movie showed that it had more going on than I originally thought, as a plot twist of sorts which broke down the fourth wall provided a fresh idea that more than made up for some of what I felt were dull pyrotechnics earlier in the movie.

Emmett is a normal Lego construction worker.  However, a Lego wizard (Morgan Freeman) has declared him to be special, and he will bring Lord Business (Will Ferrell) and his "Kragle" weapon down with a special "piece of resistance".  Lord Business ends up blinding the prophet/wizard, but his prophecy lives.  Years later, Emmett lives a dull but tranquil life as a construction worker.  As the time of Lord Business' use of the Kragle to destroy the world draws near, the wizard brings together a group of "master builders" together in an attempt to stop Lord Business.  Emmett's talent pales in comparison to the rest of the builders, and it becomes clear to him that he isn't that special.  From there, the story kicks into gear as Emmett discovers what he can bring to the team along side Batman, Wild Style, and a host of other familiar Lego characters.

The story rises above the norm by its ending, which I will not give away here.  One of the things that a lot of modern animated stories struggle with is how much they try to appeal to both adults and kids.  Simply good storytelling should appeal to any adult, but many of these movies tack on bells and whistles that, while definitely entertaining, make the movies less universal.  A good example is a hilarious Star Wars joke.  It certainly got the biggest laugh from the adults during the movie (and my boys also loved it), but how will that joke play in 30 years?  Only time will tell, since Star Wars has also become such a well known story that many people will get the joke.  In any case, this style of inside and allusion laden jokes is a point of difficulty for me.  The jokes are very funny and work (and I suppose that's all that should matter), but I find the story to be less engaging.  The best of the Pixar and Dreamworks movies are able to walk the line between gimmick and storytelling very well.  This movie doesn't walk it as well, but still does a great job of giving the crowd a great story in the end.  The story is not what we think it is, and only in the end do we see how good this story is.  It is a story that both children and adults can appreciate, because it speaks to both.

In the end, my critical thoughts can be overlooked.  This may not be prove to be the classic that some movies are, but does it need to be?  It has wonderful animation, lots of familiar voices, and a lot of great gags.  My boys loved it, and I loved going to see it with them.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Inside Llewyn Davis



Each movie that we watch is a little world unto itself.  Having said that, some movie makers do a particularly good job at creating worlds with every movie they make.  I can think of no other filmmakers who do this better than Joel and Ethan Coen.  They always choose distinct settings for their stories, and that lends itself to the creation of worlds.  However, they seem to inhabit each little world that they make so well that I always feel that I am being transported to that world.

The world in which "Inside Llewyn Davis" is set is Greenwich village in the early 1960's.  Specifically, the folk world of that era is depicted, and Greenwich village was so important to that scene that it is the most obvious place for this story's setting.  Llewyn Davis (Oscar Isaac) is a struggling folk singer who has lost is partner to suicide and is having trouble selling his solo album.  He spends every night on the couch of friends, family or fans as he attempts to piece a life together.  His close friends and colleagues Jim and Jean Berkey (Justin Timberlake and Carey Mulligan) are beginning to meet with some success.  However, Jean is pregnant, and is not sure who the father is, since she had been involved with Llewyn.  This sets off a chain of events that lead to an almost Ecclesiastes type story.  For Llewyn, the more things change, the more they stay the same.

The film is stylized but also quite real.  Having spent time in Greenwich village, some of the street were familiar to me.  I felt that I was a fly on the wall actually experiencing life as it was in the early 60's.  The film is shot with almost a slight sepia tone, so it ends up having a vintage-type look, even though it is a totally modern picture.  Since I am a casual fan of the Greenwich scene (I am a big Bob Dylan fan-a man who emerged from the scene in the Village), I was probably able to view the details of the movie with a less critical eye than others.  However, as I mentioned above, the distinctness of the setting is important to the movie, and the Coens realize the world very well.  The fact that the place wherein the movie is set is a real place with a real history only makes the world more engaging.  New York emerges as a major character in the film, and the camera loves the city.  The bleak winter is also a major character, and it acts as a catalyst to much of the action.

As Llewyn continues to encounter heartbreak and lack of success, there are some deeper lessons that he learns.  However, there is a restlessness to the character that seems to be part of the point.  He is an uncompromising artist, and that ends up costing him money and success.  And while some movies might glory in that, this movie simply shows an artist who has no success, but dwells almost in the shadow of people like Dylan and Peter Paul and Mary.  The movie gives us enough glimpses into Llewyn's life that we ache for some of the losses that he endures, but we also know that his loneliness is self imposed.  He is a sort of Vincent Van Gogh of Bleeker Street...the uncompromising, struggling artist who ends up with barely a livelihood.

The Coens have been creating worlds like this for so long that it can be easy to take it for granted.  This is a film whose world and details are every bit as real and poignant as those in the Twin Cities ("Fargo" and "Serious Man"), Arizona ("Raising Arizona"), Texas ("Blood Simple"), Mississippi ("O Brother, Where Art Thou?") or any other place the Coens happen to make a film about.  They are impressionists with a movie camera and a screenplay, and they capture hints of truth in every world that they depict.  They accomplish this through accuracy, humor, exaggeration, and a marvelous investment in the characters they create.  Some day they will stop building these little worlds in their sandbox, and we will all be the poorer for it.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Nebraska




I have become something of a fan of Alexander Payne, who directed this slightly eccentric slice of Midwestern life.  While there is at least one of this movies that I did not like ("Sideways", for those keeping score), even that film had a lot of great substance to it.  His last three films ("About Schmidt", "The Descendants", and "Nebraska") have all had significant things to say regarding parental relationships, particularly with fathers.  All three of them also dwell in the shadow of death.  In "About Schmidt" and "The Descendants", the principle character is a widower dealing with the death of his wife.  Here, death plays a more subtle role, but it is no less present as the main characters in the film are living their lives knowing that time is growing short.

Woody Grant (Bruce Dern) is a Korean War Vet who has lived a blue collar life tainted by alcoholism.  The beginning of the film depicts scenes which make clear that he is beginning to lose his faculties.  Woody becomes convinced that he has won $1 million in a publisher's sweepstakes, and is continuing to try to make the trip to Lincoln, Nebraska, to claim his prize.  The problem is that Woody lives in Billings, Montana, which is hundreds of miles from Lincoln.  After many failed attempts at thwarting his dad, Woody's son David (Will Forte, who makes a nice transition here away from comedy) finally agrees to humor his old man and drive him to Lincoln.  On the way to Lincoln, they end up stopping for a visit in Hawthorne, Nebraska, the town where Woody grew up.  Much of Woody's family is still there, as well as old friends and business partners.  The residents of Hawthorne come to believe that Woody has actually won the money, and many of Woody's family and friends begin to scheme ways to get a piece of his supposed wealth.

The premise of the movie is a simple one.  The movie ends up being a study of its characters.  It is mostly a study of David, and his journey to not only discover more about his father, but also about the dynamics of his whole family.  For example, at first, Woody's wife comes across as nagging and abrasive.  While David's and our journey don't totally change her personality, her behavior begins to make more sense as we see not only Woody's alcoholism, but also how he has been treated by the people in his past.  In the end, it is clear that even though theirs isn't a marriage of bliss, the partnership does have deep loyalties and history that is only seen better as the complexities of Woody's life become more clear.  As David makes the journey with his father, he ends up having to come to grips with some of his own frustrations with his father, but he also learns to appreciate his father more.  There is a famous line from the book (and the movie) "To Kill a Mockingbird" wherein the protagonist, Atticus Finch, tells her daughter that no one can really judge anyone else until they get inside their skin and walk around in it.  As David looks at life more through his father's eyes, there only seems to be a sense of appreciation mixed with regret.  His father was distant and fallible, but David does seem to have some kind of appreciation for him.  As Woody's entire nuclear family (which becomes complete when David's news anchor brother Ross shows up in Hawthorne) comes together, the bond that is between them (however distant and different they are as people) is felt palpably by the viewer. 

The choice to shoot the film in black and white works on many levels.  The starkness of the landscape creates a reflective picture of the lives of the people in the story.  The Midwest is a part of the country that has a character and culture all its own, and the black and white photography bring out the feel of that classic American culture that is found in the Midwest.  Finally, the particular lives of the people in the film have stark realities that black and white help bring out.  Part of the reality of Woody's life is that his time is growing short, and there is a lot of regret not only to his own life, but his family clearly have regrets as well.  Payne's last three movies have all dealt with uncomfortable family dynamics, and that conflict is skillfully executed.  They remind us of our common humanity and common struggles, but also of some of the comforts we find in family.

Friday, March 7, 2014

New Wes Anderson Movie Today

A new movie opens in limited release from one of my favorite directors!  Here's a link to the website:

http://www.grandbudapesthotel.com/

Here's hoping it makes it the us peons in the middle of the country soon!

Monday, March 3, 2014

Saving Mr. Banks



It is a credit to this movie that even though it is totally Disney-fied (after all, Disney made it and it is about Disney), it still works pretty well, and even has something of an edge to it.  It follows two paths.  One path follows the young PL Travers (the author of the popular "Mary Poppins" books) as she grows up in Australia.  The second path follows PL Travers as an adult (played by Emma Thompson), as she negotiates terms with Walt Disney (Tom Hanks) to make a movie based on the Mary Poppins books.  One of the interesting things in reading the reviews of this movie was how varied the opinions were, not simply as to whether or not the film had quality, but what it was trying to say.  Some writers thought it worshiped at the feet of Disney, and that it showed the world of Travers being gutted by the Disney machine.  There was also plenty of banter regarding the "negative portrayal" of Travers.  Amazingly, even though the movie was indeed made by the Disney machine, with all of the accompanying bells and whistles, I actually thought it told a good story, and even made some moving statements about why we make art and how little we know about what is behind the art of others.

What makes the business of making "Mary Poppins" so difficult for Walt Disney is the author of the books upon which he wants to base his film.  PL Travers is only considering allowing this adaptation because she is hurting for money.  As she begins the meetings with the screenwriter and the song composers, she makes it very clear that what is to follow will be a battle.  She even goes so far as to insist that each of their meetings be taped in their entirety.  Upon her arrival in Southern California, Travers has no intention of being seduced by the Disney spell.  Her hotel room has been decorated with mountains of Disney memorabilia,which she promptly shoves into her closet.  She dislike the heat in Southern California.  She bristles at the familiar tone all of the Americans take with her.  As the work on the film begins, the film's director parallels that action with vignettes from Travers' childhood.  Her father (Colin Farrel) is a banker (sound familiar?), but he has trouble holding down a job due to is unreliability and his alcoholism.  Many of the details seen in Travers childhood come back to inform her eccentricities as an adult.  The poignancy of these scenes is palatable, but they are made even more so as we see the more modern day story play out.

Walt Disney eventually gets his movie made, after countless hours of haggling and complaining.  There are tremendous scenes as Travers watches the film, and some of the themes she sees on screen hit too close to home for her.  From historical anecdotes about the film's making, it is clear that Travers never liked the finished product.  What I found touching about the movie was how it gave the Travers character reasons for being the difficult person she was.  It would be easy to make a film and depict her as a stuck up prima donna.  Instead, this film shows the pain of her childhood, and how some of the details Disney wants to change in her story were informed by deep memories of her own father.  The depth of emotion that accompanies those details make tinkering with them very difficult for Travers.  This nuance is lost on Disney and his cohorts, and they are left frustrated.  The film also shows Disney as a playful showboat/conman, who is obsessed with creating his movies.  There was a dark side to this kind of creative imperialism, and that underbelly is not lost in this movie.  The performances are all great, and even when the story veers into the saccharine realms where only Disney can go, it still works pretty well.