Tuesday, 9 January 2018

Let's Make It Legal (1951 Richard Sale)

Claudette Colbert is almost through with rose-loving ex Macdonald Carey and when former beau Zachary Scott comes on the scene, she re-engages. Meanwhile fussbudget daughter Barbara Bates (who doesn't seem grown up enough to have a baby) interferes, much to husband Robert Wagner's annoyance. Wagner has the best cracks (on delivering martinis - "Plasma, anyone?") out of Izzy and F. Hugh Herbert's screenplay (story Mortimer Braus). And Marilyn Monroe is a wannabe model - can't think how she got that part.


Has funny moments e.g. Carey talking to himself in front yard, and lines - "I must be tired after your trip". Scott's character is weird - he isn't interested in dancing with Monroe at all. Bates' character annoying.

Did Fox have a house font?


Shot by Lucien Ballard. Music by Cyril Mockridge.

Sunday, 7 January 2018

The Big Sick (2017 Michael Showalter)

Pakistani Kumail Nanjiani both starred in and co-wrote this film, with Emily Gordon, his wife and a former therapist, so there's some personal relevance to their script (he's also a stand-up comedian). Zoe Kazan is the girl he falls for, her parents being Ray Romano and Holly Hunter, his being Anupam Kher and Zenobia Shroff, with Adeel Akhtar, Bo Burnham, Aidy Bryant and Kurt Braunohler. It's a Judd Apatow production and in line with that tradition is a little longer than it wants to be (2 hours) but is both laugh out loud funny ('I'd call it shit, but I'm worried I might upset some actual shit') and tender.


Love Nest (1951 Joseph M Newman)



Who are all these people? June Haver and William Lundigan are the landlords and tenants include Frank Fay (rather good as charming confidence trickster), Marilyn Monroe (the only name I knew), Leatrice Joy ('Eadie'), Jack Paar and Henry Kulky.




I.A.L. Diamond wrote a rather good screenplay and it's an entertaining and engrossing film. The source was a novel by Scott Corbett 'The Reluctant Landlord' (probably a better title).


Feud (2017 Creators Jaffe Cohen, Michael Zam, Ryan Murphy)

Murphy's a creator / writer of Glee, American Horror Story, Nip Tuck and Eat Pray Love, the other two have much more limited experience, working in education, but writing in partnership. It was originally a feature script called 'Best Actress' and it was Murphy's idea to make it into an eight parter.

Susan Sarandon and Jessica Lange (who both also produced the series) are superb as Bette Davis and Joan Crawford - in an ironic reflection of the events, they were both nominated as best actress for Golden Globes, but both lost to Nicole Kidman in Big Little Lies.

The sterling cast includes Alfred Molina (Aldrich), Judy Davis (Hedda Hopper), Stanley Tucci (Jack Warner), Jackie Hoffman (Mamacita), Alison Wright, Catherine Zeta-Jones (de Havilland), Dominic Burgess (Victor Buono), Kathy Bates (Blondell) and Kiernan Shipka (Bette's daughter B.D.)


Great music is by Mac Quayle (Mr Robot, American Horror Story), Nelson Cragg is the cinematographer (Homeland). Graphic designer Kyle Cooper oversaw the arresting opening animation, which to us invoked Mad Men but was more inspired by Saul Bass and Catch Me If You Can.



That name 'Mamacita' really got under my skin, for some reason! Maybe it was the way Lange said it..

Saturday, 6 January 2018

Aloha (2015 Cameron Crowe & scr)




Film funded by Ray-Ban Aviator!

Throw Momma From The Train (1987 Danny de Vito)

Stu Silver's original screenplay takes Strangers on a Train as its point of departure, with drama writing student de Vito attempting to 'criss cross' with teacher Billy Crystal who's one of those annoying writers who can't write. (We came up with at least thirty ways to continue 'The night was...' with no problem.) The filming is very old school and imaginative - Barry Sonnenfeld on camera became a director four years later. David (brother of Thomas) Newman's score is also classically classy. It was fun to see again after all this time.

With Kim Greist, Anne Ramsey (the mother), Kate Mulgrew and Rob Reiner.




Lars and the Real Girl (2007 Craig Gillespie)

Nancy Oliver's screenplay is about what would happen if an entire community supported someone with a mental problem, and it's very successful. Ryan Gosling is really good and rather sweet as said guy, Paul Schneider (Cafe Society, Elizabethtown, Parks and Recreation, Away We Go) and Emily Mortimer are his family, Patricia Clarkson the doctor. I wasn't able to ascertain who played Bianca (the 'real girl') so well, though apparently she coached Gemma Chan for Humans.


Good music from David Torn. Shot by Adam Kimmel. Oliver worked as a writer on Six Feet Under.

Friday, 5 January 2018

To Rome With Love (2012 Woody Allen & scr)

Oh... Greta Gerwig... I didn't realise (again).

Judy Davis is great, so natural, so real. Ellen Page also wonderful.

"Go ahead, walk into the propeller."

"In the aquatic world, I've been likened to a spineless jellyfish."

"I'm so tempted to make love to you because of my grand-children."

The whole sequence where Alessandra Mastronardi gets lost and what happens subsequently shows a writer who is not running out of ideas. Though maybe has more than a little in common with the early Fellini The White Sheik (1952)..




The episode of the singer in the shower takes on greater significance when you realise it's one of Woody's favourite places to be creative. When he's on location he insists on having a good shower...

The Last Tycoon (2016 Creator & director Billy Ray)

I've no idea actually when we tried watching this on Amazon. Let's say some time around now.

Initial impressions. Matt Bomer isn't quite good enough - needs a John Hamm (he looks a bit like a younger version). It's not quite involving enough (no Feud). It's not quite stylish enough.

Cast includes: Kelsey Grammer, Lily Collins, Dominique McElligott (waitress), Enzo Cilenti (currently in Next of Kin, The Martian, The Theory of Everything, Prisoners' Wives), Koen de Bouw (security head), Mark O'Brien (initially homeless kid), Jessica de Gouw (dead wife), Jennifer Beals, Saul Rubinek (Louis B Mayer), Rosemary de Witt (Kelsey's wife, Rachel Getting Married, Promised Land, My Sister's Sister), Bob Gunton.

Decided not to pursue it. It was cancelled after one season, and besides, I'd rather watch the film - not that that isn't without its own problems...

Thursday, 4 January 2018

Radio Days (1987 Woody Allen & scr)

What a lot of people there are living in one house (Q observes). Indeed there are. Julie Kavner and Michael Tucker are Seth Green's parents. (The repartee between them is great.) Diane Wiest a very unlucky in love aunt. Josh Mostel is the fish-loving uncle, Renee Lippin his wife and Joy Newman the cousin (her rendition of 'South American Way' is one of the film's highlights.) Plus William Magerman and Leah Carrey as grandparents.


Maybe my favourite scene in a succession of many inventive scenes is where Mia Farrow witnesses a gangland shooting by Danny Aiello - he takes her off to his mum's (!) en route to bumping her off but she's from the old neighbourhood, and Aiello concludes she's too thick to spill the beans - a statement perhaps supported by her later question "Who is Pearl Harbor?"

Fab cast also includes Diane Keaton (after Annie Hall, Woody gives her an uninterrupted song routine), Jeff Daniels, Wallace Shawn, Larry David, Tony Roberts, Julie Kurnitz and David Warrilow ('Irene and Roger').

Usual sensational combo of Loquasto and di Palma with costumes by Jeffrey Kurland.


Kate and Leopold (2001 James Mangold)

Original story of (literal) time jumping by Steven Rogers, screenwritten by he and the director, has 1876 Duke Hugh Jackman in modern New York, in the company of Meg Ryan, Liev Schreiber (who falls victim of a pointless sub-plot in which he is institutionalised), Breckin Meyer and Meg's odious boss Bradley Whitford. We watched the theatrical release.

Can't say its particularly well written, not making enough of the fish out of water stuff (loved though that his first viewing of television is the incomprehensible The Prisoner!), not for example using the training of the dog better later on. (Also La Bohème was first performed in 1896.) But the gentlemanly behaviour of the Duke in modern times is where the fun lies.

With Natasha Lyonne, Spalding Grey, Philip Bosco, Viola Davis (policewoman). Shot by Stuart Dryburgh, music by Rolfe Kent.

Meg has an unsuitable hair style, and her lips look funny!


Wednesday, 3 January 2018

The Miniaturist (2017 Guillem Morales)

I had a number of problems with this, which may have emanated from Jessie Burton's bestseller (it was adapted by John Brownlow). Why, in the Rebecca influenced opening, do all the staff (and her new husband's sister Romola Garai) seem to hate her (her being Anya Taylor-Joy)? They all know their master (Alex Hassell) is gay and she will soon find out but that wouldn't be any reason to feel anything but pity for her. This stuff about the elusive woman who makes miniatures (Emily Berrington) is all a load of crap - why would she keep running away like that? If the other woman (Aislin McGucken) is commissioning her to make these miniatures she's also doing the same to her husband Geoffrey Streatfeild - so why doesn't our girl tell him that? Why doesn't she stand up in court and say 'I know how this gay young man (Ziggy Heath)  was injured, and when, because I was there, and I have witnesses'? Why is the miniaturist (who appears for five seconds) the only one to have a stupid accent?

After two and a half hours I think the audience will be getting pissed off about things like this, but worse is to come. The husband, who we've come to like despite his vile and sudden outbursts of temper, is put to death when there were ways listed above in which he could have been saved, and the former friend who has caused the death suffers no retribution. There's no explanation at all why the Romola Garai character is so horrible in her disposition, especially as she hasn't really been deprived of her lover all along, so there's zero audience sympathy / empathy there, in fact she just remains one of the most annoying characters on film.

So aside from some nice Old Masterly lighting from Gavin Finney, it's a no from me.

Tuesday, 2 January 2018

Fargo (1996 Joel Coen)

Marge to hotel receptionist: "Is there a phone down here, d'ya think?" Also loved the guy who related his encounter with the 'funny looking guy' in about one long sentence.

Reviewed here, it's a corker. Filmed in North Dakota and adjacent Minnesota (Fargo being right on the border)



The In-Laws (1979 Arthur Hiller)

Writer Andrew Bergman had written two novels set in forties Hollywood and co-authored the script known as 'Tex X' which became Blazing Saddles. This was his first solo and it's a nutty comedy-thriller with Peter Falk and Alan Arkin, set in New York and Guatemala (which is apparently governed by the 1917 Treaty of Guacamole, or some such nonsense).

With Richard Libertini who we know from All Of Me, Nancy Dussault, Penny Peyser, Arlene Golonka, Ed Begley Jr, James Hong, David Paymer (as a taxi driver).


Andrew Bergman is nothing to do with Alan and Marilyn Bergman.

Carrie's War (2004 Coky Giedroyc)

Mary Rose Helen Giedroyc is Mel's elder sister and much in demand on TV, where she has directed versions of Oliver Twist, Wuthering heights, Fear of Fanny and The Virgin Queen, Spies of Warsaw and The Hour. 'Carrie's War' was written in 1973 by Nina Bawden, who was herself evacuated to Wales during World War II aged 14. (Q was right - it was first televised in 1974.) This adaptation is by Michael Crompton.

Keeley Fawcett plays Carrie (having been At Home with the Braithwaites, she retired after this) and Jack Stanley her brother. With Alun Armstrong, Eddie Cooper, Lesley Sharp, Pauline Quirke, Geraldine McEwan and Jamie Beddard.

I reckon it's Carrie kissing AA that changes everything.


Mansfield Park (1999 Patricia Rozema & scr)

A good job, with some slightly modern flourishes - commentary to camera, slave condition sketches, actors 'freezing', some slightly lesbian hints. And some great sequences - the night horse ride that dissolves into shapes, and the dance montage. Frances O'Connor is great as Fanny - we would have known her for series one of The Missing, also Mr Selfridge  and the 2002 Importance of Being Earnest. Then Jonny Lee Miller, Victoria Hamilton, Justine Waddell, Embeth Davidtz, Alessandro Livola, Lindsay Duncan (intelligently playing both Fanny's mother and aunt), James Purefoy, Sheila Gish and Harold Pinter making an impression as the mercurial head of the household.


Way back in 1987 Rozema made a film called I've Heard the Mermaids Singing, which is highly regarded, and which I think we've seen. I liked her direction, but she hasn't done a lot else but episodic TV work.

Charlestown in Cornwall is the Plymouth location.

Michael Coulter shoots superbly and the music by Lesley Barber is interesting.

I must actually read some Jane Austen one of these days. (I note that certain JA fans don't rate this adaptation...)

Monday, 1 January 2018

Little Women (2017 Vanessa Caswill)

They are Maya Hawke, Kathryn Newton, Willa Fitzgerald and Annes Elwy. Mum and dad are Emily Watson and Dylan Baker. Neighbours are Michael Gambon and Jonah Hauer-King. Nice German is Mark Stanley. With Adrian Scarborough and Angela Lansbury.


It was adapted by Heidi Thomas, who writes Call The Midwife.

We enjoyed it.

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.