Sunday 31 December 2017

Films of the Year 2017

La La Land, and its ancestor Les Parapluies de Cherbourg.


Cameron Crowe's TV series Roadies.

Le Havre. Our first Aki Kaurismaki won't be our last.

Dunkirk.

The Nice Guys. Ryan Gosling has great comic timing in Shane Black screenplay.

Victoria. Tom Hughes is great, but the chemistry between Jenna Elfman and Rufus Sewell sizzled.

American Honey. Andrea's still got it.

Baby Driver. Their Finest. The Hippopotamus. Carol. Sully. I, Daniel Blake

Sparkle.

Norman for no other reason that the scene between Richard Gere and Michael Sheen is the year's best bit of acting. And Hayley Mills in Sky West and Crooked.

Noah Baumbach films and Greta Gerwig.

Belle.

My Darling Clementine.

Not seen in an age: Leon. The Cider House Rules. Get Shorty. Cookie's Fortune. Shakespeare in Love. Love Soup.

On TV, special mention to Solomon Grey for the music in The Last Post. And to W1A for being generally hilarious and endlessly quotable.

Real Life (1979 Albert Brooks)

In between our two monster musicals we had time to sneak in Brooks's directorial debut in a film written by he, Monica Johnson and Harry Shearer (who has a cameo, as does James L Brooks). It's still highly relevant, looking at how a fly-on-the-wall TV unit affects an average American family - climaxing in Gone With The Wind! Charles Grodin and Frances Lee McCain are mom and pop, Matthew Tobin and J.A. Preston behavioural observers. Film is very dry and funny.


Les Parapluies de Cherbourg (1963 Jacques Demy) and La La Land (2016 Damien Chazelle)

Although we didn't quite watch them back to back, it seemed like a good idea to have a look at these two together, our first viewing of Umbrellas and our - well I thought it was our fourth visit, but it turns out to only have been the third (albeit in seven months).

Les Parapluies de Cherbourg declares itself to be a three act opera, and it's helpful to think about it that way, as all the dialogue is sung (Demy wrote all the lyrics). Like the later film, it's shot on location and - again like the later film - the design of both decor and clothing is superbly and brilliantly colour-matched. They both tell sad stories, the first enacted superbly by Catherine Deneuve (who is outstanding) and Nino Castelnuovo, Anne Vernon, Marc Michel and Ellen Farner, and Michel Legrand's score is one of the greats, mixing a jazzy, big band sound with one of his unmistakably French heartbreakers - this love theme is the main musical event. Act One ends on such a scene (the parting of the lovers), then when Guy learns of the death of his godmother, there's another musical kick in the balls; and by the third act, where the couple meet again after several years, the force of that music is so overwhelming it would make the strongest of us into shivering wrecks - that scene with its miles of unspoken feelings is extremely poignant.






The Cameraman, by the way, is Jean Rabier, who shot many Chabrols. It was nominated for five Oscars, won the Cannes Palme D'Or.

Now, I'm not saying that La La Land is a reworking of the French film, but let's say it's at least a homage or that it uses it as a departure point. Chazelle's brilliant script is more complex but also tells of a sadly doomed relationship between two lovers, but where the first film leaves us with that unspoken scene, Chazelle wonderfully rewinds the film and tells their story differently, better .. Thus they can at least smile to one another as they part. The music is also absolutely essential, actually becoming a plot device, and its main theme is reimagined in numerous (12, according to Q!) different arrangements.

Going back to that screenplay, I loved the way that as Stone meets Gosling in the bar after he's been fired, Chazelle has the balls to say 'Hang on, now let's see what his day's been like'. So it's overall a more complex and subtle work. It fully deserves its six Oscars, but I remembered wrong - I thought both the screenplay and Tom Cross's editing had won (Lonergan won for Manchester By The Sea and John Gilbert for editing on Hacksaw Ridge). On this subject, the sound design and editing (at times in the distinctive Wright-Dickens style) and costumes (Mary Zophres) also should have won - they were fucking robbed!




Justin Hurwitz and Chazelle are now making First Man about Neil Armstrong and the moon landing! This is again shot by Sandgren and edited by Cross, and Ryan Gosling's in it.

And yes, that is the window from Casablanca, on French Street on the Warner Brothers back lot.

Both films have great leading female performances - you can't walk away from Parapluies without seeing the desperately in love 17 year old Deneuve who doesn't want her lover to leave - and the grown up she's become. And somehow those simple settings - the railway station, a petrol station in the snow - are as memorable as La La Land's LA vistas and sun rises.

Saturday 30 December 2017

Saboteur (1942 Alfred Hitchcock)

Has some dazzling moments and crazy vignettes (the contribution of Dorothy Parker) but does become a little stodged down - Hitch himself thought the construction needed work and editing before shooting began. Also, leads Robert Cummings and Priscilla Lane were not first choices but compromises (Otto Kruger too). The villains are all smiley in this - Norman Lloyd makes impression. The musicless ending is a doozey. Great camerawork by Joseph Valentine.

Stand-out visuals are the black smoke against the aircraft factory door (somehow miles ahead of its time) and a shootout in a cinema. Great scene with blind man (Vaughan Glaser) and Ian Wolfe recognisable from Witness for the Prosecution. Universal.

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (2015 Alfonso Gomez-Rejon)

And dedicated to the director's dad. Is this the work of a talented film school grad? How closely was the script and direction worked on together? It's certainly a film which is jam packed full of movie references, not just in the recreations of classics (shades of Be Kind Rewind) but in posters, clips, scores - so moving do I find that Quatre Cents Coups music and ending that it almost overshadowed the rest of the film.


To answer the first question first. Gomez-Rejon worked as personal assistant then second second unit director for people like Nora Ephron, Scorsese and Inarittu. This is his second film as director (The Town That Dreaded Sundown was the first). The screenplay is by Jesse Andrews and is from his own novel, and he did hate high school and make comic films with friends.



The only person in front of or behind the camera I recognised was Brian Eno, who wrote the original music. The actors are Thomas Mann, RJ Cyler (rather good I thought as Earl) and Olivia Cooke, with Nick Offerman, Connie Britton and Molly Shannon.

It's a sad comedy, inventively filmed (wide angles, animation, sideways camera, stuff you tend to grow out of I guess).

Back To The Future II (1989 Bob Zemeckis)

Not the happiest of sequels - Bob Gale and Zemeckis have gone too dark. The recreation of the disco from episode 1 is, though, splendid.

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1938 Norman Taurog)

I personally was not won over by Selznick's discovery Tommy Kelly (the son of an unemployed Bronx fireman - how can you be an unemployed fireman?) nor by the other unwinsome juveniles, though no problem with May Robson, Walter Brennan, Donald Meek etc. Cora Sue Collins, who plays Tom's 'other woman' (quite well, actually), and Ann Gillis (Becky) are the only surviving cast members, both aged 90.

What the hell was the doctor doing there at the grave in the middle of the night anyhow?

Still, the ending in William Cameron Menzies' super-sized cave is exciting.



Ben Hecht was involved in structure and dialogue. James Wong Howe shoots with a soft painterly directed north light and there's the usual assembly of Jack Cosgrove's painted skies.


Friday 29 December 2017

Little Miss Sunshine (2006 Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris)

Written by Michael Arndt, who worked on Toy Story 3, A Walk in the Woods (Redford & Nolte) and Star Wars: The Force Awakens. He won the Oscar. This features a fabulous cast of Abigail Breslin, Alan Arkin (also won his Oscar), Toni Collette, Steve Carrell (OK, he had just been in 40 Year Old Virgin), Paul Dano and Greg Kinnear. With Bryan Cranston and Dean Norris.

This is terrifically well directed too and it's a great shame they have done nothing but Ruby Sparks and the new Battle of the Sexes. Tim Suhrstedt's compositions are great and use the widescreen terrifically well. Even the editing is funny - Pamela Martin (Hitchcock, Ruby Sparks, Youth in Revolt).




French Kiss (1995 Lawrence Kasdan)

"D'you know what? Feel guilty. Swim in it till your fingers are pruny".

Written by Adam Brooks, a largely unsentimental romcom based in France, with great George V footage, with a straight Kevin Kline and gorgeous Meg Ryan, who also produced. Brooks wrote Definitely, Maybe. Timothy Hutton is the idiot who suddenly falls for Suzan Anbeh, Jean Reno the flic and François Cluzet (Untouchable, Tell No One) a criminal.




Photographed by Owen Roizman in Panavision and edited by Joe Hutshing, with Mark Livolsi assisting.

Kline does sing us out with 'La Mer'.

Another film which uses its necklace as a plot point (the other one being Focus),

Thursday 28 December 2017

Focus (2014 John Requa, Glen Ficarra & scr)

You can trace the amorous thief plot back to Trouble in Paradise and The Lady Eve - though this has more in common with The Sting with its long game of double crosses (admittedly, didn't see the last ingenious one coming - well, yes I did in fact). Will Smith and Margot Robbie have chemistry, but we've kinda been here before, down to their own version of the Coates-Soderburgh hotel scene from Out Of Sight.



They wrote Bad Santa and I Love You Philip Morris and directed that and Crazy, Stupid Love. The setting up of player 55 though is ingenious and explains all the audience's objections.

With Adrian Martinez, Gerald McRaney, Rodrigo Santoro, BD Wong.

Brighton Beach Memoirs (1986 Gene Saks)

One of Neil Simon's autobiographical films, set in 1937, with Jonathan Silverman the younger of Blythe Danner's sons, Brian Drillinger the elder and Bob Dishy pop. They also live with Blythe's sister Judith Ivey and her daughters Stacey Glick and Lisa Waltz - with this number of people in the house it's a wonder they're considering also sheltering some immigrant Poles. Danner stands out in cast as strong mum - acute family crises tempered with smart one-liners.

Shot by John Bailey.



"Sh. You might wake the cake."

Pollyanna (1960 David Swift & scr)

Elenor Porter's novel was published in 1913 - Disney wisely chose not to update it - and there's a sequel 'Pollyanna Grows Up'. The film is refreshingly long and could have even been slightly longer, e.g. another scene or two between Adolphe Menjou (was it really him??) and the boy Kevin Corcoran (also Swiss Family Robinson, Bon Voyage!).


Despite other good turns including Agnes Moorehead, Donald Crisp, Jane Wyman, Nancy Olson (Sunset Boulevard) and  Karl Malden the film resolutely belongs to Hayley Mills, her first film for Disney; for this, she became the last actor to win Oscar's Juvenile Award, aged 14 (first given to Shirley Temple).


The scene where Malden revises his sermon tactics is delightful (and this is probably why they spend so long on his earlier hell-fire versions).

Wednesday 27 December 2017

The Eagle Has Landed (1976 John Sturges)



Michael looking rather cool in Nazi regalia (design by Hugo Boss)
Tom Mankiewicz adapted Jack Higgins book. There's rather too many plots going on, for my money, including a pretty unbelievable turn of events between Jenny Agutter (who does some cool bareback riding) and Donald Sutherland, and the Germans are a thoroughly decent lot, saving the life of little girl, freeing hostages etc (not - as Time Out pointed out - the vicar-killing bunch from Went the Day Well?)

Good performances from Michael Caine, Robert Duvall (in eye patch) and Sutherland. With Jean Marsh, Donald Pleasance, Treat Williams, Sven-Bertil Taube, Anthony Quayle, John Standing, Judy Geeson and Larry Hagman.

Efficiently put together by Anthony Richmond and Anne Coates, and uses its Mapledurham location well, but overpadded and not particularly suspenseful. And yet remains watchable despite this through combination of great cast and locations. Interesting score by Lalo Schifrin.

War On Everyone (2016 John Michael McDonagh)

Good to see McDonagh's third movie (without Brendan Gleeson for a change), the same mix of laugh out loud humour, literary characters and dark material. Here, Alexander Skarsgård (son of Stellan, and soon to be in The Little Drummer Girl) and Michael Peña are corrupt immoral cops who get caught up with very bad men Theo James and Caleb Landry Jones (something about the latter and the film as a whole reminds me of Dirty Harry), with Tessa Thompson and Stephanie Sigman, and Paul Reiser.

Well made and shot by Bobby Bukowski - who uses the widescreen properly - and edited by Chris Gill (Calvary, The Guard, Danny Boyle films). You don't hear as much intelligent dialogue in anyone else's films.


We saw Peña in Crash, The Martian, American Hustle, The Lincoln Lawyer, The Lucky Ones and Babel), and Skarsgård in Big Little Lies.

"I got it wrong - it's: how do you prove the chair isn't there."

Bad Santa 2 (2016 Mark Waters)

New writers Johnny Rosenthal and Shauna Cross continue in the deeply crude tradition mapped out by Ficarra / Requa (who were probably busy producing This Is Us), tempered by a little bit of niceness. It's still funny. Billy Bob Thornton is rejoined by Tony Cox and Brett Kelly, and the new recruits are Christina Hendricks, Kathy Bates and Jenny Zigrino, with Octavia Spencer as a hooker.



Tuesday 26 December 2017

The Englishman who went up a Hill but Came Down a Mountain (1995 Christopher Monger)

Written by Monger and Ifor David Monger, this is a very gentle comedy in the Ealing vein, but without their bite. Hugh Grant and Ian McNeice are the cartographers, Colm Meaney the village rebel and Tara Fitzgerlad an eventual love interest. With Ian Hart, Kenneth Griffith (Four Weddings, I'm All Right Jack, Only Two Can Play, Tiger Bay, Lucky Jim, Brothers in Law, much on TV also), Robert Pugh.




Going In Style (2017 Zach Braff)

Written by Theodore Melfi (based on a story by Edward Cannon) and starring a trio of Oscar winners Morgan Freeman (Million Dollar Baby), Alan Arkin (Little Miss Sunshine) and Michael Caine (Hannah and her Sisters, The Cider House Rules), who has worked in the US for thirty years but somehow retained a British Accent (thankfully). Topically, they elect to rob the same bank that is depriving them of their pensions. With Ann-Margret, John Ortiz, Matt Dillon, Joey King (also from Fargo), Christopher Lloyd, Josh Pais, Peter Serafinowicz.

Shot in widescreen by Rodney Charters. Quite clever; fun.


P.S. 19/5/22. Only just realised this is a remake: the original 1979 version starred Art Carney, George Burns and Lee Strasberg

Sunday 24 December 2017

The Holiday (2006 Nancy Meyers & scr)

Some cracks are beginning to show... opening doesn't need a voiceover at all, for example. Some dialogue is overwritten. Where did that dog come from / go to? Kids come and go...

But as a film about film, and the modern state of things, and recognising writers and film composers (and ad makers!) in particular, it still succeeds pungently well.

Back to the Future (1985 Robert Zemeckis)

Zemeckis and Bob Gale were Oscar nominated for their brilliantly clever script... Can't help thinking JK Rowling saw this and a seed stuck for Prisoner of Azkeban - theme of time runs as clearly through it as here. It's tremendous fun with its somewhat risqué story of mother falling for son..

Film predates CGI.. When did that begin - Pleasantville?

Christopher Lloyd is great - I love the video scene (a JVC camera by the way, did anyone notice??) where he says 'I look so young! That hair!' whereas he looks exactly the same. Product placement really took off with this film. Michael J., Lea Thompson, Crispin Glover (a taste I've never acquired), Thomas Wilson (Biff), Claudia Wells, Billy Zane.

Shot by Dean Cundey. Alan Silvestri scored.

Saturday 23 December 2017

The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942 William Keighley)

George Kaufman and Moss Hart play, adapted by Julius and Philip Epstein, is always a delight.

"Shut your nasty little face!"




I Don't Know How She Does It (2011 Douglas McGrath)

Weird that completely coincidentally we have two films back-to-back by the same director.. it's like buses. Aline Brosh Mckenna's script (based on a novel by Allison Pearson) talks about the struggles of working mums, and avoids clichés - manages to be quite fun, with brisk scenes and lots of to-camera interjections. Never really sure about Sarah Jessica Parker, here with reliable cast of Greg Kinnear, Pierce Brosnan, Christina Hendricks, Kelsey Grammer, Olivia Munn.



Shot by Stuart Dryburgh.

Emma (1996 Douglas McGrath & scr)

Slightly stodgy in early scenes, Doug then starts making things interesting by cross-cutting between conversations; last 30 minutes is perky, but we would have liked Gwyneth Paltrow's Emma to have apologised to Sophie Thompson. Cast is fine: Alan Cumming, James Cosmo, Greta Scacchi, Toni Collette, Jeremy Northam, Phyllida Law and Kathleen Byron (both non-parts, unfortunately). Photography is very natural and good - Ian Wilson (And Soon the Darkness, The Crying Game, Backbeat). So, overall, we enjoyed it.



Rachel Portman's music won an Oscar - I didn't even notice it.

Friday 22 December 2017

Love Actually (2003 Richard Curtis & scr)

Lots of people here who he worked with in the early days - Emma Thompson, Rowan Atkinson, Hugh Grant, and interesting to hear his own experiences filtering in to the plot - his crush at four on a girl of twelve, having to drive home a Portuguese maid, even the relationship between Nighy and Fisher resembling his own with Atkinson (in the old days) and latterly producer Duncan Kenworthy. The latter found his original draft too much fun and suggested the introduction of some of the sadder material - not sure he was right, with hindsight. The film would work just as well with a couple of the stories trimmed.

Also - object as plot point - a necklace that turns into a Joni Mitchell CD.

Little gems include Andrew Lincoln after doorstep declaration to Knightley - "Enough"; Freeman "Might get a shag at last"; Firth "You learned English" and Guillory - "Just in cases"... And, coming to the Portuguese father's door - "Who said 'sell'? I'll pay him". And "As Prime Minister, I could have him killed for you".

But - the crotch shot. Really? And who'd fancy Heike Makatsch? She looks like a dirty stick.

Mike Eley - DP on Parade's End and The Selfish Giant - shot the documentary footage.

An Ideal Husband (1999 Oliver Parker & scr)

Oscar Wilde had provided Oliver with a humdinger of a plot, but he's adapted it well..

Is Julianne Moore cast right, I wondered. But she suits character of out and out bitch.. Rupert Everett has one of his most meaty parts. With Jeremy Northam, Minnie Driver, Cate Blanchett, Lindsay Duncan, Neville Phillips, Peter Vaughan (who's not in it quite enough) and Simon Russell Beale.

Its clear message - that power and money begin to feed themselves - unfortunately still needs retelling.

Possessed (1947 Curtis Bernhardt)

Intriguing beginning, with dazed-looking Crawford wandering city streets, searching for 'David'...

But then she's clearly nuts, so we don't really ever have any empathy with her, nor with Van Heflin, who is only out for himself. A few imaginative touches help, bits of Schumann, but film falls flat.

With Raymond Massey, Geraldine Brooks, Erskine Sanford. Shot by Joe Valentine.

Thursday 21 December 2017

Doc Hollywood (1991 Michael Caton-Jones)

Reviewed here. Great visual joke with bearded fence painter Roberts Blossom turning out to be the judge. Nurse Eyde Byrd has some of the best lines.

Samba (2014 Oliver Nakache, Eric Toledano & scr)

Nakache and Toledano's follow-up to Intouchable (which has been remade for the US as The Upside) is about an illegal worker Omar Sy's tribulations and relationship with slightly unstable social worker Charlotte Gainsbourg. Fellow immigrants are Tahar Rahim (The Serpent, The Mauritanian) and Issaka Sawadogo, Yongar Fall is the uncle, and Izia Higelin, Helene Vincent and Christiane Millet are follow workers.

It's good, unusual, often very funny (Sy running for 'his plane') and politically astute.

Their latest film Le Sens de la Fete / C'est la Vie is about a wedding party coming together in seventeenth century France.



Pete Kelly's Blues (1955 Jack Webb & prod)

We're back in the Jazz Age, 1927.. but who's Jack Webb, who also stars? Well he was not a horn player, though was a big jazz lover, and is best known for the hit TV series Dragnet and Emergency!

This is essentially a crime thriller with musical numbers featuring a cool seven piece band and turns by Ella Fitzgerald and Peggy Lee as an alcoholic singer. Janet Leigh is the love interest, Lee Marvin his faithful clarinet player, Andy Devine a copper and Edmond O'Brien the bastard crime boss. So, not uninteresting cast and story (Richard Breen), shot in CinemaScope by Hal Rosson, uncredited music by Ray Heindorf and David Buttolph.

It didn't turn out how I expected.



Wednesday 20 December 2017

His Girl Friday (1939, released 1940, Howard Hawks)

"Can't you hang him at five instead of seven so we can make the first edition?" Clearly showing its theatrical origins - ultra-cynical play written by the legendary Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, adapted by Charles Lederer. Fast-talking, frequently interrupting Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell are perfect in classic role reversal switch on the original. Simple Hawks filming with his distinctive character groupings.

I think my favourite moment is after Helen Mack has shamed the newsroom and there's a moment where none of the cynical press can speak or even look at each other. Great ensemble cast at work here, including Porter Hall, Roscoe Karns, Cliff Edwards, Frank Jenks, Regis Toomey (some of this extremely rapidly edited by Gene Havlick); Gene Lockhart (Miracle on 34th Street) the ineffectual sheriff and Clarence Kolb the mayor, John Qualen, Abner Biberman and Ralph Bellamy (so funny to see him the day after Pretty Woman - this has happened before - "he's the one outside who looks like Ralph Bellamy").

Shot by Joe Walker for Columbia.



The Great Gatsby (2013 Baz Luhrmann)

Made in hyper-kinetic style, Baz and Craig Pearce's script seems faithful to F Scott Fitzgerald in story and mood, and certain lines sound like they're direct quotes (they are). Modern music sits well in roaring twenties party atmosphere, some of the CGI (though frequently astonishing in recreating time) is a bit OTT, notably aerial car scenes, which look like computer games.

Leo and Carey Mulligan and Tobey Maguire are all terrific. With Joel Edgerton, Elizabeth Debicki and Isla Fisher.



Fabulous costumes and production design (both by Catherine Martin, who was also a producer), cinematography (Simon Duggan), editing (Jason Ballantine, Jonathan Redmond, Matt Villa).

It's long and bold.