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December 26, 2007

If I had the chance to do it all again...

I'd have made my 25-best a 30-best, and I would have added: Syndromes and a Century (pictured), Grindhouse, No End in Sight, The Savages, and a player to be named later Offside. Images
But as I'm still officially on vacation and one of my goals was to catch up on some reading, I'm not going to apply myself to the question overmuch, or defend the choices just now. These reconsiderations were prompted by both my own musings and the suggestions/protestations of some commenters below. Although it's still "no" to American Gangster (distinguished dud) and 3:10 to Yuma (enjoyable but slight with a near-unforgiveable Hannibal Lecter punchline.)

One of the things I wanted to do whilst ensconced in lovely Missouri with My Lovely Wife and Welcoming In-Laws is catch up on my reading, and one of the books in my satchel is the first compilation of movie writing by the great Kent Jones, whose ever-probing acuity illuminates not just individual films and filmmakers but the condition of cinema in the here and now its very self. Physical Evidence: Selected Film Criticism, it's called, Evidenceand reading it is making me eager to re-experience some favorites Jones and I share (various Hou Hsiao-hsien works, for instance) and also to reassess some Jones enthusiasms that didn't really hit me where I or any part of me lived the first time around. That would be Spanglish, and my memory of it is such that I'm not sure another viewing will bring me round—although I appreciate, in part, the specificity Jones cites in its defense, I'm not sure his evocation of Cassavettes in praising the Tea Leoni role/performance really makes it—but he's a forceful enough arguer that I'm willing to spend the time to look at and think about it again...if only to strengthen my own posisiton.

Jones' characterization of the art of Wes Anderson, part of an essay on The Royal Tenenbaums, holds as true now as it did then, and I almost inserted it into the comments section of my best-of-year post, wherein Steve M. of Kinophilia and Don Lewis of Film Threat were having a lively, um, debate. I reproduce a pertinent section of it below the fold:

Continue reading "If I had the chance to do it all again..." »

December 24, 2007

A Very Special Monday Morning Foreign Region DVD Report: 'Christmas Holiday'

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One of the most unusual putatively-hoiday-themed pictures ever made, Robert Siodmak's 1944 Christmas Holiday features beloved child/teen songstress Deanna Durbin in pretty much her first real adult role, and a doozy it is, too. Herman J. Mankiewicz—he of Citizen Kane screenwriting fame—here whittles down Somerset Maugham's novel (a tale of self discovery with the more far-flung tales of its secondary characters folded in, which begins with its hero's titular getaway to Paris, where he meets a mysterious prostitute)—into something more anecdotal and possibly personal. Dean Harens plays an army Lieutenant who, after getting a Dear John letter from his fiancee, decides to waste his Christmas leave by going to San Francisco to confront his jilter; bad weather forces the plane to land in New Orleans, where a sleazebag reporter (Richard Whorf) takes the young officer under his wing...and to a local brothel...oops, sorry Mr. Breen, we mean nightclub...where madame, oh [cough], we mean hostess Gladys George introduces the sad sack to Jackie. That would be Ms. Durbin. Who sings. "Always," among other numbers. She then induces Harens to take her to midnight mass, and after that tells him the sad story, shown to us in flashbacks, of her marriage to no-goodnik Robert Manette (Gene Kelly)...

Continue reading "A Very Special Monday Morning Foreign Region DVD Report: 'Christmas Holiday'" »

December 21, 2007

Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and Many Thanks...

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Both the angel and the Bride of Frankenstein figure at the top of our tree offer the greetings of the season (well, okay, they don't, actually, but you get the idea) to all you loyal and lovable blog readers. It's been quite a year. For one thing, this very blog came into being a year and about two weeks ago...we didn't go "live" until January or so of this year, I think, but if you go back in the archives it's all there. The paper-and-ink version of Premiere, at least the U.S. edition (you know, the one I worked for), ceased to be in March. (And if you think I'm not still mourning the loss, you're sorely mistaken. But times change, and better to be in New Media than out of it...) My Lovely Wife and I celebrated our one-year wedding anniversary in June. And this month we got our very first Christmas tree, for me to place DVDs and dopey figurines of the Bride of Frankenstein on.

And finally, over the year this blog built a loyal, smart, fun following of folks that I constantly look forward to entertaining, informing, and interacting with. Thanks so much to all of you. Blogging's going to be light between now and the New Year but I do have some things in store, including at least one Very Special Monday Morning Foreign Region DVD Report (one hint: Siodmak) and whatever else strikes my fancy. I hope you enjoy the holiday whatever way you spend it, and that the New Year brings more health, happiness and great movies to mix it up about.

A very 'Blade Runner' Christmas...(featuring bonus interview!)

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Coming in pretty much just under the wire of 2007 releases, the Blade Runner "Final Cut" box set briefcase turned up the other night. I made light of the whole multiple-cut Runner thing back when I caught the restoration at the New York Film Festival in the fall, but I've gotta say, this package is pretty mind-blowing. I got mine in the Blu-Ray format, and the quality of its image [publicists please note: potential blurb alert] single-handedly (single-filmedly?) justifies the high-definition DVD. It's really that astonishing. I haven't had time to go through the whole five-disc set yet—only the five-pack, apparently, packs the legendary workprint of the film—but I'm already pretty staggered. The briefcase also includes some amusing geegaws, including an ornamental unicorn...

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Back in September I got to interview Charles de Lauzirika, the producer of the Final Cut and a longtime member of Blade Runner director Ridley Scott's team, along with Isadore Hackett-Dick, daughter of the late Philip K. Dick, whose Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? was the basis for Blade Runner. Blade Runner devotees might find it of interest; if that means you (and why shouldn't it?), then go below the fold...

Continue reading "A very 'Blade Runner' Christmas...(featuring bonus interview!)" »

December 19, 2007

My Best of the Year, or, "I'd like to have an argument, please."

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My pal Stitch and I would like to alert you to the fact that my year's best, 25 in all—a top ten plus fifteen, because what's the web if not FREEDOM!!!!—has been posted on Premiere's "proper" website, here, in slideshow form, with pretty pictures once you click the prescribed geometric shape[s].

Of course, on the "proper" website there's no function wherein you can tell me how brilliant and/or full of it I am, so, for the purposes of encouraging such a discussion, I reproduce the list here, so as you might chime in.

1) There Will Be Blood

Paul Thomas Anderson’s extraordinary fifth feature comes dressed in the trappings of a period epic, but this study of Western oilman Daniel Plainview and his engagement with and retreat from the larger world is in fact an absurdist, blackly comic horror movie. It’s resolutely unlike anything Anderson, or anybody else, has made before. Daniel Day Lewis’ lead performance is as visceral and ruthlessly focused as screen acting ever gets.

2) No Country For Old Men
A genre film with apocalyptic intimations, Joel and Ethan Coen’s adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel features some suspense set pieces that Hitchcock would have been proud to put his name on. And speaking of horror movies, Javier Bardem’s coin-flipping, cattle-gun-toting killer Anton Chigurh is a cinematic baddie for the ages.

3) Killer of Sheep
Charles Burnett’s astonishing, poetic 1977 slice of African-American life in Los Angeles finally got its due this year, with something approaching an actual theatrical release—to call its ’77 exhibition “perfunctory” would be a drastic overstatement—as well as a spectacular DVD. As Melville’s 1969 Army of Shadows did last year, Sheep hit with the force of revelation, earning the right to be treated as a “new” film.

4) Private Fears In Public Spaces
French master Alain Resnais mounts a delicate, studio-bound adaptation of a strangely touching Alan Ayckbourn comedy of interweaving characters and their lonely and sometimes surprising lives. A masterwork of mise-en-scene, it overflows with magical visual touches that always bolster its wistful, moving wisdom.

5) The Darjeeling Limited
Director Wes Anderson earns a bit too much critical disdain for making Wes Anderson movies. That is, movies with sharp style and particularly quirky humor. Actually, the quirks are turned down a bit in this trim, engaging story of three estranged brothers who meet up in India for a too-self-conscious “spiritual journey.” Anderson’s supposed emotional disconnection is in fact detachment, and said detachment gives this story a special resonance.

6) The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Brash artist Julian Schnabel adapts the extraordinary memoir of Jean-Dominique Bauby, the French magazine editor who was completely paralyzed after a massive stroke at age 42. Completely, that is, except for his left eye, which he used to blink out said memoir. Schnabel, working from an excellent script by Ronald Harwood, festoons the tale with ever-pertinent visual detail, and Mathieu Amalric is amazing as “Jean-Do.”

7) Zodiac
Director David Fincher’s chronicle of obsession. Not the twisted obsession of the never-caught Zodiac killer himself, but the obsessions of the men who tried to bring the killer, who terrorized ‘70s San Francisco, to justice. And although these men were the good guys, their obsessions could get pretty twisted themselves. Dense and detailed, Fincher’s film is a procedural par excellence.

8) Ratatouille
After faltering a bit with Cars—a merely excellent feature rather than an extraordinary one—Pixar (and Brad Bird, who also made The Incredibles) came back in a big way with this daring tale of a French rat, yes, rat, who yearns to be a master chef. Eye-popping visuals, great good humor, and a story line that never stops sizzling.

9) I’m Not There
Semiotics stalwart Todd Haynes makes a Dylan biopic with no Dylan in it. Instead, he creates six different characters, each inspired by a different Dylan phase or persona, and puts the blender on “pulse,” and then “high.” The result is a beguiling, sometimes frustrating, always challenging look at Dylan, his music, the times he observed changing and the times he changed.

10) Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Stephen Sondheim’s daring musical—Grand Guignol mugs Brecht and Weill in Tin Pan Alley—finds an ideal interpreter in macabre maestro Tim Burton, while its title character finds a remarkably sensitive portrayer in the always-adventurous Johnny Depp. The bloodiest musical since Monty Python imagined “Sam Peckinpah’s Salad Days,” it’s engrossing, vivid, and strangely, terrifyingly moving.

Continue reading "My Best of the Year, or, "I'd like to have an argument, please."" »

December 18, 2007

More Max.

I recently had the great privilege of interviewing Max von Sydow, one of the true legends and finest performers of the cinema, mainly about his memorable supporting role in The Diving Bell and The Butterfly. The "proper" interview is on the "proper" Premiere website, here. As I allude to in the intro, I did indeed ask him about one of my personal favorite roles of his, this one:

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...in Dave Thomas and Rick Moranis' criminally underrated (as far as I'm concerned) 1983 comedy Strange Brew. It's a film von Sydow remembers well.

Continue reading "More Max." »

Bilbo!

You know, I don't normally do much business blogging, largely because I'm not much of a business guy, but on a day like today I kinda wish I did, because then I'd be able to publicly gloat at my powers of analysis/prognostication instead of asking you to take my word for it.

But I swear, on my honor, that when the box office returns for the first weekend of The Golden Compass came in a couple weeks back, I said to at least half a dozen people of my acquaintance, "Now the only way Bob Shaye and Michael Lynne are gonna keep their jobs is if they make up with Peter Jackson."

And lo, according to my bestest buddy Nikki Finke, it is come to pass. Check it out here, Hobbit-lovers.

UPDATE: The text of the just-sent-out press release is below the fold.
Read it, then break out into song...

Continue reading "Bilbo!" »

a trois

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Amy Adams.

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Amy Ryan.

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Ryan Adams.

My downstairs neighbors just moved out...

and My Lovely Wife is at work. These two factors mean that now is pretty much the only time I'll have for a while to give the below-pictured disc a proper listen.

Modulation

From the catalog description:

This is Otomo Yoshihide's second guitar solo release on doubtmusic. The concept of this work, however, is complely different from that of the first. Here, feedback sound issues from two amplifiers, each connected to one of two guitars placed on a tabletop. Due to this stereo effect, the feedback mutually interferes, producing beatlike fluctuations, creating black holes into which the sound suddenly disappears, sounding completely different depending on the position of the ears, creating the illusion that the sound is coming from only one speaker when the listener is in certain locations, and so on, thus turning into truly interactive music. Because these effects cannot be obtained unless the sound coming from the two amps mutually interferes, we recommend listening without earphones or headphones, through speakers, with the sound as loud as conditions allow. Depending on the positions of the speakers, the interference effect and sound image will surely differ as well.

To which I can only add: kickass!!! And: Ow!

December 17, 2007

Santa's DVD Delivery

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Ho ho ho! Santa's been stopping by early at the Kenny household, and instead of leaving presents under the tree, he's been leaving them IN the tree! And they're not just any DVDs, no sirree!! Why, here's the British import Blu Ray disc (region free, even!) of Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal! The first art-film-canon title to get a release in ANY high-definition DVD format! Whoop-dee-doo!

I just had a look at it...

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