Showing posts with label Drama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drama. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly: DVD Review (2008)

“The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”

Cocooned.

Julian Schnabel’s moving, real-life story follows Jean-Dominique Bauby (Mathieu Almaric), who, at 43, suffered a massive stroke that left him with something called "locked-in syndrome.”

Though Bauby’s mind returned to full capacity upon waking from the coma induced by the stroke, his body was paralyzed. The only exception was his left eye, which he was able to use, and which became his only tool for communication.

The film is based on Bauby’s own memoir, published days before his 1997 death.

If it’s the fact that Bauby was able to write a book at all that makes the movie such a testament to the human spirit, then it’s his sometimes sarcastic, other times deeply regretful internal monologue that makes the movie so powerfully complex.

Read the full, unedited review here.

Rated PG-13. Grade: A

Shall We Dance? Blu-ray Review (2008)

“Shall We Dance?” Blu-ray

This remake of Masayauki Suo’s 1996 Japanese romantic comedy of the same name is essentially the same movie charged with an American sensibility.

In this case, that means more drama, more gloss, less grace, less sophistication. It’s a small movie that’s been supersized, but not in a bad way.

Richard Gere is John Clark, a disenfranchised Chicago lawyer unhappy with life’s daily grind and the fact that his wife (Susan Sarandon) is too busy to spend time with him. It’s then that he discovers the joy of dance via Miss Mitzi (Anita Gillette, excellent) and her dance studio.

What he finds there is twofold--the beautiful Paulina (Jennifer Lopez), who’s as cold as a Chicago winter, and his dancing destiny.

A groundswell of schmaltz with no surprises unfolds, but this well-acted, crowdpleasing movie doesn’t fail. It isn’t as rich as the original and the ending slumps into a sleigh of suburban whining, but the dancing has chops, as does the excellent supporting cast.

Read the full, unedited review here.

Rated PG-13. Grade: B

Saturday, May 3, 2008

The Romance Collection: DVD Review (2008)

“The Romance Collection”

From the BBC via A&E, an impressive, 14-disc collection designed to make an Anglophile faint.

The set includes eight films, not the least of which is the heated, 1996 version of Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice,” with Colin Firth as Darcy and Jennifer Ehle as Elizabeth.

Also included are Nigel Hawthorn, Jonathan Pryce, Diana Rigg and Sir Peter Ustinov in 2001’s “Victoria & Albert”; Kate Beckinsale reminding us she can act in 1997’s “Emma”; Ciaran Hinds and Deborah Findlay in 1997’s “Jane Eyre”; and Max Beesley and Samantha Morton in the very good 1998 product of “Tom Jones.”

Hinds appears again in “Ivanhoe”; Richard E. Grant and Elizabeth McGovern star in “The Scarlet Pimpernel”; and challenging “Prejudice” as the best film in the lot is the 2001 production of “Lorna Doon,” with Martin Clunes, Richard Coyle, Aidan Gillen and Amelia Warner.

It doesn’t win, but it comes close.

Grade: A-

Friday, May 2, 2008

The Limey: Movie, DVD Review (2008)

Blimey! The right movie, the right director, the right star

Directed by Steven Soderbergh, written by Lem Dobbs, 89 minutes, rated R.

Even Los Angeles is no match for a limey.

As tough and as unseemly as the city looks in Steven Soderbergh’s outstanding film, “The Limey,” it pales next to the tougher, wild-eyed vision of Wilson (Terrence Stamp), a steely, silver-haired British ex-con who descends on Los Angeles with a gun in his hand, revenge in his heart and a burning mission in his gut: Find the man responsible for his daughter Jenny’s death and make him pay for it.

That man is Terry Valentine (Peter Fonda), a smarmy, super-rich record producer who is just naive enough to believe he can flirt with the big bosses of high crime--and never be touched by it.

If none of this sounds especially new, it isn’t; the film owes its soul to the works of Raymond Chandler and Chester Gould. But Soderbergh nevertheless is able to spark his film by evoking the past--literally.

In an effort to give Wilson a history, Soderbergh lifts key scenes from Ken Loach’s 1967 film, “Poor Cow,” which starred a much younger Stamp. The effect is mesmerizing, seamless --and smart. By wedding the two films, Soderbergh not only shows his audience how Wilson’s thievery impacted his relationship with his daughter, but also, in an unexpectedly gentle scene where Wilson plays his guitar for Jenny and her mother (Carol White), how affable Wilson was before the repercussions of his profession took their toll on him and those in his life.

With superb performances from Stamp, Fonda, Leslie Ann Warren, Barry Newman and Luis Guzman, “The Limey” is more complex, focused and visually assured than Soderbergh’s last film, “Out of Sight.” It’s also more knowing, particularly with Wilson, an older man from an old country whose old ways make mincemeat out of the players in Los Angeles.

Grade: A

(Originally published 1999)



Hilary and Jackie: Movie, DVD Review (2008)

Such devoted sisters

Directed by Anand Tucker, written by Frank Cottrell-Boyce, based on the book “A Genius in the Family,” by Hilary and Piers du Pre, 121 minutes, rated R.

Anand Tucker’s “Hilary and Jackie” puts a bright face to genius, darkens it with madness and then destroys it forever with illness.

The film--gorgeously shot and beautifully told--is an unflinching, uncompromising, unsettling look at the famous cellist Jacqueline du Pre (Emily Watson), who rose to fame in the 1960s while her sister, Hilary (Rachel Griffiths), a talented flutist, was forced to turn her back to the stage and give herself over to marriage and family.

Fate, it seems, was kinder to Hilary, who wrote the film’s source book, “A Genius in the Family,” with her brother Piers (played in the film by Rupert Penry Jones). As a child, it was Hilary, not Jackie, who was the first star of the du Pre family. It was she who received the awards, the accolades from her parents, the broad attention for her musical gifts. But as this complex, sensitive and very well-acted film explores, Jackie was not to be outdone by her older sister, whom she adored with a fierceness that sometimes gave way to great bouts of rivalry.

Consumed by competitiveness and the need to eclipse her sister, Jackie pushed herself relentlessly, eventually achieving meteoric success as one of the world’s greatest musicians.

Her marriage to pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim (James Frain) only heightened her appeal, making her half of a handsome, superstar couple that toured the world.

Lofted throughout by du Pre’s signature piece, Elgar’s Cello Concerto in E Minor, the film explores how Jackie’s hard push for success wasn’t worth it, that it only created loneliness and drove her to emotional despair.

Just as in “Amadeus” and in “Shine,” “Hilary and Jackie” understands the strength and fragility of the artist. It knows that madness is sometimes brimming just beneath the surface of artistic creation, and that it was partly this madness, coupled with her struggle with multiple sclerosis, that caused Jackie to damage what never should have been damaged: the relationship with her sister.

Indeed, when Jackie tells Hilary in one particularly bitchy scene that there’s nothing at all special about her, Hilary’s response, measured and leveling, seems coolly justified: “If you think for one moment that being an ordinary person is any easier than being an extraordinary one,” she says to Jackie, “you’re wrong. If you didn’t have that cello to prop you up, you’d be nothing.”

Such devoted sisters have rarely been this beguiling.

Grade: A-

(Originally published 1999)

The Thief: Movie Review (2008)

Coming to terms with a Russian stronghold

Written and directed by Pavel Chukhrai, 97 minutes, rated R, in Russian with English subtitles.

Of Stalin, Hitler once said: “He’s a beast, but he’s a beast on a grand scale who must command our unconditional respect. In his own way, he’s a hell of a fellow!”

Clearly, it takes one beast to back-slap another, but for post-Soviet Russian filmmakers, finding the nerve to finally come to terms with the bloody history of Stalin’s former stronghold has been a beast in and of itself.

Pavel Chukhrai’s “The Thief” follows Nikita Mikhalkov’s Academy Award-winning “Burnt by the Sun” (1994) in that it takes a successful leap in that direction. Through an extended metaphor that follows its three main characters during the initial throes of the Cold War, his film explores Stalin’s brutal influence with often harrowing results.

Told from the viewpoint of 6-year-old Sanya (the remarkable Misha Philipchuk), the film follows the boy’s relationship with his mother, Katya, (Ekaterina Rednikova) and the dashing soldier, Tolyan (Vladimir Mashkov), who meet on a train and masquerade as husband and wife in an effort to secure communal housing.

But Katya, who is meant to symbolize Mother Russia, has been misled by Tolyan, who represents Stalin: the man is a thief who steals from the poor with complete disregard for the repercussions of his actions.

His treatment of Katya is abusive, yet seductive, even protective--he’s a potent, powerful lover who whispers a mouthful of lies even while providing for mother and child. When his leadership fails and it’s revealed to Katya that this god is nothing but a crook, she and her son nevertheless still love him, which is perhaps the most powerful statement this excellent film makes about Russia’s complex relationship with their former leader.

Grade: A-

(Originally published 1999)

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Charlie Wilson's War: DVD Review (2008)


"Charlie Wilson’s War"

A war movie with winks.

Set in 1980, just after the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, Mike Nichols’ film follows Charlie Wilson (Tom Hanks), the Democratic congressman from Texas who finds himself being urged to help the Afghani people by one Joanna Herring (Julia Roberts), a right-wing Houston socialite whose claim to fame, at least at the time, is that she was the sixth richest person in Texas and Charlie’s part-time lover.

Given those complications, Charlie agrees to her request to supply the Mujahedeen with the guns they need to eliminate the Russians from Afghanistan.

With the help of his assistant Bonnie (Amy Adams) and CIA agent Gust Avrakotos (Philip Seymour Hoffman, a fantastic mess), Wilson raised more than $1 billion in secret CIA funding to help shut the Soviets down.

Of course, history tells us that by doing so, Wilson essentially supported those who formed al-Qaida, but what did he know? He was just working for the woman and doing what he believed was right.

In Nichols’ capable hands, he does so in a movie that’s as comfortable dropping bombs at swank cocktail parties as it is in dodging others tossed overseas.

Read the full, unedited review here.

Rated R. Grade: B+

View the trailer below:

Saturday, April 19, 2008

The Savages: DVD Review (2008)

“The Savages”

Follows a fractured family standing at the intersection of death and dementia.

Laura Linney is Wendy Savage, a difficult, struggling playwright living in New York City who has a cat and a ficus tree that she loves, and a mate (Peter Friedman) 13 years older than she who is physically available to her, though not emotionally--he’s married.

Wendy’s brother Jon (Philip Seymour Hoffman) is a frumpy theater professor living in Buffalo, NY, and he has problems of his own, not the least of which is his fiercely competitive relationship with his sister and his own inability to create a meaningful relationship.

It’s how these two must come together and deal with their abusive, distant and ailing father Lenny (Philip Bosco) that turns this shattered family inside out with guilt, rage and grief over the course of several weeks.

Excellent performances mark "The Savages," with Linney and Hoffman each navigating characters who could have become unlikable had they not been shaded with nuance. They’re damaged people, yes, but they are only savages by name.

Read the full, unedited review here.

Rated R. Grade: B+

View the trailer below:

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Juno: DVD, Blu-ray Review (2008)

“Juno” DVD, Blu-ray

Ellen Page is Juno MacGuff, a precocious, ultra-hip 16-year-old high-school student who makes the decision that she's going to put an end to her virginity and have sex with the shy but bright Paulie Bleeker (Michael Cera).

On a sad-looking, dilapidated chair, they have their moment, which initially appears unremarkable until two months and four days later, Juno realizes just how remarkable it really was.

Faced with the news that she’s pregnant, this wise-cracking kid now must decide whether to abort the child or offer it up to parents who might come to love and nurture it, such as wealthy suburbanites Vanessa (Jennifer Grant) and Mark (Jason Bateman)?

From Diablo Cody’s sharp, Academy Award-winning script, Juno eventually finds herself dealing “with things way beyond my maturity level.”

As her hormones rage and her belly balloons (“I’m a planet!”), her emerging vulnerability takes the movie down a notch from the quirky humor it favors during its electric first half. As such, it becomes more human and real--and easily one of last year’s best films.

Read the full, unedited review here.

Rated PG-13. Grade: A-

Lars and the Real Girl: DVD Review (2008)

“Lars and the Real Girl”

Fake girl, real problems.

This unusual film follows 27-year-old Lars Lindstrom (Ryan Gosling), a shy, God-fearing man who orders a life-size sex doll through the Internet and eventually accepts her not only as a real person, but also as his new girlfriend, Bianca, a half-Brazilian, half-Danish missionary.

Good for Lars, you say? Not so fast.

The trouble is that for Lars, none of this is a joke. He expects everyone in his life to accept Bianca as a living human being, which not only sounds screwy given Bianca’s rubbery mouth, corked gaze and strawlike hooker wig, but also, as far as this movie is concerned, painfully manufactured and a wee bit creepy.

And yet in spite of its awkward opening moments, in which it isn’t clear whether the film is intended to be a comedy or a drama, the movie eventually unfolds with such grace and seriousness, it nudges you into acceptance of the absurd.

It takes time for that to happen--this is a movie that grows on you--but when you come to believe what Lars believes, the movie can be disarmingly powerful.

With Paul Schneider, Emily Mortimer, Patricia Clarkson and the terrific Kelli Garner.

View the unedited review here.

Rated PG-13. Grade: B+

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Penelope: Movie Review (2008)

A Babe in pig's clothing

Directed by Mark Palansky, written by Leslie Caveny, rated PG, 90 minutes.

Mark Palansky’s “Penelope” is the movie in which Christina Ricci is saddled with the face of a pig. More specifically, the wrinkled snout and little floppy ears of a pig.

But don’t cry for Penelope just yet.

While everything else about her face suggests something of a pig hybrid, Ricci’s Penelope appears just human enough to see how beautiful Penelope would look if her wealthy family hadn’t been cursed by a witch so long ago. The good news? That curse can be lifted, though it’s going to be a struggle.

Written by Leslie Caveny, this uneven yet affable fairy tale does a few key things right, starting with getting Ricci back onto the screen in a starring role.

Audiences will see a lot more of her in the upcoming “Speed Racer” movie, which already has the fan boys buzzing and which might restart her career in a big way. But right now, in this much smaller movie, it’s swell to be reminded of how special Ricci is and how necessary it is to have her working. As any fan of “The Opposite of Sex,” “The Ice Storm,” “Pecker,” “Anything Else” and “Monster” knows, there are few others who can tap into the quirky absurd like Christina Ricci.

She’s also one of the very few people who could have played this role well, which is more difficult to pull off than it appears. To succeed, Ricci had to put on a snout every morning, face her part-pig face, and play the part straight, even while so many around her were setting the screen afire with camp.

Chief among those culprits is Catherine O’Hara as Penelope’s well-coiffed, well-meaning yet damaging mother Jessica, who is so personally humiliated by Penelope’s physical appearance, she unwittingly has harmed her daughter’s self-esteem by pushing so hard for her to break the curse. To do so, it’s imperative that Penelope meet a suitor of similar class who is willing to marry her. Trouble is, that’s proving difficult to do, especially since every man who lays eyes on her ends up throwing himself out a window.

Not so for James McAvoy’s Max, a shady gambler who initially is hired by tabloid journalist Lemon (Peter Dinklage) to trick Penelope into having a photo snapped of her face, but who nevertheless comes to feel something for her that is real and meaningful.

Too bad he blows it--and when he does, wounded Penelope decides she’s had enough. Wrapping a scarf around her face, she sets out for the first time into the outside world (in this case, London), where she comes upon a whole host of characters, including sketchy Annie, who is played with brassy slyness by one of the film’s producers, Reese Witherspoon.

Not all goes well in “Penelope.” The uneven use of accents is distracting (at the very least, shouldn’t the English-born Penelope and her mother have English accents and not American accents?), McAvoy is a greasy disconnect and the plot is a predictable, straight shot to the end.

But plenty does go well here. As you’d expect, O’Hara is a hammy, chaos-creating treat, Witherspoon is likable in a small role, and then there’s Ricci, on whom so much of the movie rests. If it didn’t sound condescending, it would be nice to say to her, “That’ll do, pig. That’ll do.” But you get the point.

In this movie, she reminds us why she matters, and why it would be nice to have more of her, please.

Grade: B-

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Hidalgo: DVD, Blu-ray Movie Review (2008)

“Hidalgo” DVD, Blu-ray

A bloated oater, long in the tooth.

Set in the 1890s, this epic horse drama is about Frank T. Hopkins (Viggo Mortensen), the real-life Pony Express rider whose real life isn’t explored here. It’s fictionalized, so much so that the truth is stretched so far, it snaps.

Of course, that wouldn’t matter much if the movie had been consistently entertaining, which it isn’t.

Named after Frank’s heroic mustang, “Hidalgo” finds Hopkins taking on a hive of unseemly types led by Omar Sharif’s Sheikh Riyadh and racing them on one massive, 3,000-mile journey across the Saudi Arabian desert.

In spite of the sandstorms, the locusts, the wildcats, the kidnappings and a host of other dangers, "Hidalgo" isn’t content to just offer robust entertainment.

It also wants to strike serious undertones and form elements of a drama. That’s where it tries to have it all--and that’s where it fails to do so.

Rated PG-13. Grade: C

Lions for Lambs: DVD Review (2008)

“Lions for Lambs”

Robert Redford’s chit-chatty war movie is frustrated by a lot of things--our national complacency on troubling domestic and foreign issues, the dark alleys into which our war efforts have taken us, the corruption of good journalism due to corporate influence, the ridiculous importance the media places on celebrity culture over real news--and it's not going to take it anymore.

In fact, it's going to sit down in comfortable leather chairs and have a good discussion about it.

This dialogue-driven film cuts between three connected storylines that bind together the above themes. Redford, Meryl Streep and Tom Cruise star, with the film generating the most interest between Streep and Cruise.

And not necessarily because of anything they're saying. Since the script is strangled with the refrigerated, academic air of rhetoric, it puts us on the outside, where we watch the real show unfolding here--who is upstaging who? Streep or Cruise?

Since that's the only surprise the movie offers, we’ll leave it for you.

Read the full, unedited review here.

Rated R. Grade: C

Saturday, April 5, 2008

There Will Be Blood: DVD Review (2008)


“There Will Be Blood”

The best movie of Daniel Day-Lewis' career turns out to be in the best movie of Paul Thomas Anderson's career, a nice slice of symmetry that gets even better when you consider that so far, the actor and director have achieved their personal peaks in one of 2007's best films.

Thick with mustache and armed with enough greed and hate to ruin a country, nevermind a town, Day-Lewis’ Daniel Plainview comes to the oil-rich town of Little Boston with his son H.W. (Dillon Freasier) at his side.

He’s there to beat Standard Oil at their own game and buy up as much land as he can.

Meanwhile, he finds in Little Boston an unexpected adversary in Eli Sunday (Paul Dano), a Bible-thumping evangelist who sees in the good book what Plainview sees in oil--absolute power over the people.

Together, these two are pitted against each other in ways that make for stirring, dangerous entertainment, with each actor railing off the other and giving terrific performances in the process.

This is especially true for Day-Lewis, whose unshakable performance won him the Academy Award for Best Actor. His Plainview can be devastatingly cruel and kind in one brushstroke. We watch him with a sense of trepidation and fascination.

In this way, he literally is the face of the emerging West. In all the dirt and suffering that surround Plainview, a groundswell of promise nevertheless bubbles beneath his feet. Blood will be spilled to realize that promise--an element that gives the film its sharp connection to the present--but in this do-or-die culture of creating a secure new culture, the pull of that promise is enough to tip those who seek it into madness.

Just as it is now.

Read the full, unedited review here.

Rated R. Grade: A

View the video review below:

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Bette Davis: Centenary Collections


“The Bette Davis Collection, Vol. 3”
"Bette Davis Centenary Celebration Collection"

On April 5, Bette Davis would have turned 100 years old. Had she lived to see the day, she likely would have blown a bemused puff of smoke and gone about her business pretending it wasn’t important, but awaiting a grand celebration nevertheless.

This is her centenary, and with two new DVD collections just out to celebrate her work, what better time than now to honor all that Davis has given us over the course of her career, and also to reflect upon how she got there in the first place?

Born Ruth Elizabeth Davis in Lowell, Mass., on April 5, 1908, Davis made relatively quick work of joining our best, most iconic movie actors, of which there are precious few. She defied convention. As she rose up through the ranks in early 1930s Hollywood, she hardly was what those in the industry were seeking at a time when the bold curves of Jean Harlow, Carole Lombard and Mae West were commanding the screen.

And yet while Davis may not have had their overt sexuality, what she did have was something arguably more lasting and important--a sense of mischief and mystery, an indomitable spirit that could lay the world flat with a mere glance, and a fierce intelligence that often revealed itself as impatience, particularly when she knew she’d been saddled with dreck.

Much like her Yankee counterpart Katharine Hepburn, Davis became a woman Hollywood--and the world--couldn't do without.

The camera loved her, for sure, as any fan of “Ex-Lady,” “All About Eve” and “Dark Victory” will tell you. But even when she saw in the 1960s what years of heavy drinking and smoking had done to her, she wasn’t one to overlook the opportunity her faded flower offered. Accepting herself as she was, she turned herself into a grotesque in such films as “Hush…Hush, Sweet Charlotte” and “Whatever Happened to Baby Jane,” the latter of which won her her 10th Academy Award nomination. So, you can imagine the cocktails that flowed when that nomination was announced, and those that followed when she lost to Anne Bancroft for her work in “The Miracle Worker.”

Still, it was Davis’ seemingly bottomless talent and her staunch refusal to conform that made her a star. She was a perfectionist and could be so difficult and demanding that her boss, Jack Warner, once called her “an explosive little broad with a sharp left.” That she was completely different from anyone else didn’t hurt her career, either.

What Davis had was a vitality the screen barely could contain--a director like William Wyler, for instance, could shoot her at a distance in a crowded room, as he did in “Jezebel” and “The Little Foxes,” and still she’d be the one you’d pick out and follow. Her presence was that great, a mix of genetics and her formidable will.

In her 1962 autobiography “The Lonely Life,” she wrote about herself: “I have always been driven by some distant music--a battle hymn no doubt--for I have been at war from the beginning. I rode into the field with sword gleaming and standard flying. I was going to conquer the world.”

She wasn’t joking, and she’d be the first to tell you that she did it the hard way. But what results. When she made an entrance in her more fiery films, she seemed to have the world's throat in her hand--or at least her co-star’s. Usually both. Likewise, when she left a room, it wasn’t out of place to hear a door slamming behind her. Audiences liked it that way--so did she.

And yet there was that other side of Davis--the less-intimidating side, as seen in such movies as “Now, Voyager,” “The Old Maid” or “Mr. Skeffington”--which complicated her beyond reason, and which earned her our hearts as well as our respect and admiration. The fact that she was consistently watchable even in her bad movies gets to the core of just how transfixing a figure she was.

In Maine, where she summered as a child, she eventually came to live for several years in the 1950s with her fourth husband, the actor Gary Merrill. They lived in Cape Elizabeth at a house called “Witch-Way.” Guess who named it? The house now is gone, burned down by new owners who wanted one of those garish McMansions cluttering the coast. In doing so, they neatly abolished an important part of Maine history, as well as national history.

Of the two aforementioned DVD collections marking Davis’ birthday, Fox’s “Centenary Celebration Collection” is the best, with 1950’s quintessential “All About Eve,” 1952’s “Phone Call From a Stranger,” 1955’s “The Virgin Queen,” 1964’s “Hush…Hush, Sweet Charlotte” and 1965’s electrifying (literally) “The Nanny” included.

As for “Eve,” it’s my favorite Davis film, and my favorite movie, period. It embodies everything you love about the actress, every reason you come to her for that unique and necessary escape only a great movie and actor can provide. As many times as I’ve watched the movie, it still reveals something new with each viewing, which is the mark of a great film. The writing, the performances, the wit, the directing, the storyline and of course Davis as Margo Channing, the complicated Broadway star for whom love was difficult and career meant everything (sound familiar?), come together with such timing and ease, it’s staggering in how seamless it is. And that isn’t hyperbole.

Warner’s “Bette Davis Collection, Vol. 3” offers some of Davis’ earlier films. When compared to Fox’s collection, you could say this one features Davis’ softer side. Included are 1939’s “The Old Maid,” 1940’s “All This and Heaven Too,” 1941’s “The Great Lie,” 1942’s “In This Our Life,” 1943’s “Watch on the Rhine” and 1946’s very good “Deception.”

Taken as a whole, these collections offer invaluable insight into the savvy way Davis handled her career and especially her complex screen persona. Consider viewing both sets back-to-back over the course of a week, and then consider whether there ever has been an actress as great as Bette Davis.

Grades: “Centenary”: A; “Bette Davis Collection, Vol. 3”: B+

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Original Sin: Movie, DVD Review

A tawdry scrap of soft-core porn

Written and directed by Michael Cristofer, based on the novel "Waltz Into Darkness" by Borness Woolrich, 112 minutes, rated R.

(Originally published 2001)

For fans of camp and truly bad movies, Michael Cristofer's potboiler, "Original Sin," is a treasure, a real find, one of those monolithic mediocrities that's so disastrous, it's badness is a virtue, something that transcends mere rottenness to become one of 2001's biggest jokes.

Whether the film is busy featuring Angelina Jolie naked, harried and unhappy as a conniving Havana harpy out to rip-off the world, or tossing Antonio Banderas onto the floor so he can foam at the mouth after drinking rat poison, or asking its actors to speak this sort of dialogue--"I just killed a man!" "Yes, well, I just bought a hat!"--it's impossible to take any of it seriously, so the only honest reaction is to snort with laughter.

Set in Havana, circa 1900, the film stars Jolie as Julia Russell, a hot-to-trot mail-order bride hauled to Havana to marry the wealthy Cuban coffee planter, Luis Vargas (Banderas).

Or so Vargas thinks. In spite of the fact that this Julia looks nothing like the photo he has of the real Julia, Vargas is so taken by her beauty, he decides to overlook the glaring inconsistencies and marry her anyway.

Big mistake. Before Vargas can cry "liar" and "tramp," Julia has revealed herself to be both, a woman who gleefully rakes men over the coffee grounds so she can fatten her bank account.

The best thing about the movie is that all of this takes place within the first 30 minutes, allowing director Cristofer ample time to focus on what really matters to him--Angelina Jolie's lips, which have become an institution.

Watching them open time and again to devour one of Jolie’s fingers, which she sucks on and nearly swallows in her heroic effort to please the "Emmanuelle" crowd, is one of the more curious moments in recent cinematic memory. Here we have an Academy Award-winning actress willing to sandbag her talent and plunge herself into self-parody all while fueling what's little more than a tawdry scrap of soft core porn.

If the film weren't so damn funny, that might give some people reason to pause.

Grade: F

Domestic Disturbance: Movie, DVD Review

Stepping Off the Mother Ship

Directed by Harold Becker, written by Lewis Colick, 88 minutes, ated PG-13

(Originally published 2001)

Harold Becker's "Domestic Disturbance" is like an old circus animal, one that's performed its tricks so many times, it can barely muster the strength to perform them again.

The film, from a script by Lewis Colick, stars John Travolta as Frank Morrison, a divorced, recovering alcoholic who learns his family's third-generation boat building business is about to go belly up just as his ex-wife, Susan (Teri Polo), is set to marry the local stud, Rick Barnes (Vince Vaughn).

What's remarkable about Frank is that neither of these events seem to phase him. He's so complacent and emotionally removed, so absurdly mild-mannered and detached, he seems less like a man facing a turning point in his life than he does a pod person who just stepped off the mother ship.

Grounding him is his teen-age son, Danny (Matt O'Leary), a troubled liar who wants his parents back together so badly, nobody believes him when he claims he witnessed Rick brutally murder a man.

Is Danny crying wolf? Or could it be that he really did see Rick stab his former business associate, Ray (Steve Buscemi), before roasting him in a brick oven?

As the film moves toward its rushed ending, "Domestic Disturbance" occasionally simmers, but it drops so many clues and telegraphs so many scenes along the way, it also suggests that Becker would rather play it safe than shake up a genre that badly needs to be invigorated.

Grade: C

Life as a House: Movie, DVD Review

A connect-the-dots Lifetime television movie

Directed by Irwin Winkler, written by Mark Andrus, 128 minutes, rated R.

(Originally published 2001)

Irwin Winkler's "Life as a House" stars Kevin Kline as George Munroe, a divorced, middle-aged, out-of-work architect trying to fix his broken relationships before cancer fixes him.

With only four months to live, the task at hand is monumental--George took a wrecking ball to his relationships years ago. But he nevertheless believes that by tearing down his old shack of a house and building his dream home with the help of his 16-year-old son Sam (Hayden Christensen), he can also rebuild what's left of his disappointing life and reconnect with himself and his family before it's too late.

He certainly has a lot of hammering to do. As this well-acted, yet overly sentimental film goes through the range of its melodramatic motions, it makes certain that George has to pound through layers of emotional bedrock before getting through to anyone.

His main problem isn't just the cancer threading through his system or his chilly relationship with his ex-wife, Robin (Kristin Scott Thomas), who's suffering through a conveniently muddy second marriage to a jerk named Peter (Jamey Sheridan). Instead, George's real problem is his relationship with Sam, a troubled, self-loathing, drug-addicted wreck whose idea of fun is to hang himself in his bedroom closet as a means for sexual pleasure--and whose idea of making some quick cash involves becoming a male prostitute.

With Mary Steenburgen as George's neighbor, Coleen, and Jena Malone as Sam's feisty love interest, Alyssa, "Life as a House" has good intentions and a fine supporting cast. But since Winkler is more interested in manufacturing emotions than he is in creating something real, much of his film feels like a connect-the-dot Lifetime television movie that somehow bulldozed its way into theaters--and now into your local video store.

Grade: C

K-Pax: Movie, DVD Review

Mental illness...or alien?

Directed by Iain Softley, written by Charles Leavitt, based on the novel by Gene Brewer, 120 minutes, rated PG-13.

(Originally published 2001)

Iaian Softley's sci-fi drama "K-Pax" works as well as it does because of its two male leads--Kevin Spacey and Jeff Bridges--who keep the story grounded during those moments when it threatens to fly away.

The film is about a mental patient named Prot (Spacey) who may or may not be from another planet. That's its mystery, on which everything is staked.

It's a mix of other movies, from "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" to "Starman." But its true inspiration is the film it mirrors so closely: Eliseo Subiela's 1986 movie "Man Facing Southeast," which also followed a psychiatrist's relationship with a man who claims to be from another world. In Softley's film that otherworld is K-Pax, which may sound like a potent laxative, but which is actually a planet 1,000 light years from Earth. Indeed, it's from K-Pax that Prot (rhymes with float) allegedly hails.

But is he from another planet? After mysteriously appearing in Grand Central Station in a sudden burst of light, it would seem so. But when Prot fails to convince authorities that he's from far, far away, it’s up to Dr. Mark Powell (Bridges) to discern the truth.

"K-Pax" is of the life-affirming genre, which means that a good deal of its story is focused on how Prot's snappy, mischievous charm has the power to lift and change lives. He certainly does so for Powell, whose marriage is a wreck, but also for his fellow mental patients, a colorful group of caricatures who are like teddy bears on Thorazine.

The film never overcomes its insistence that the mentally ill are the equivalent of sheep in a petting zoo, an idea that irritates. But it's also true that big chunks of the movie work, especially those scenes Spacey shares with Bridges, which are so strong, they punch the material into a realm it wouldn't have reached without them.

Grade: B-

Lost & Delirious: Movie, DVD Review


A fitting title

Directed by Lea Pool, written by Judith Thompson, based on the novel "The Wives of Bath" by Susan Swan, 100 minutes, not rated.

(Originally published 2001)

Lea Pool's coming-of-age movie, "Lost & Delirious," proves it isn't easy being young and in love, but then it also proves it isn't easy making a movie about the young and in love. Taking a cue from some teen romances, the film underscores the fact that if one's hormones aren't held in check, all can be lost to melodrama.

To a point, Pool's film is a sincere look at adolescence and adolescent love that has guts. The problem is that, by the final reel, it's wearing so much of its guts on its sleeve, some might want to look away.

Based on Susan Swan's novel, "The Wives of Bath," the film follows Mary Bradford (Mischa Barton), a quiet girl nicknamed Mouse who's recently been shipped to a Montreal boarding school by her indifferent father and his breezy new wife.

At school, Mouse is faced with a new life, something she wasn't exactly seeking ("I felt like a tiny gray mouse heading straight for the mouth of a cat"), but things eventually look up when she meets her roommates Tory (Jessica Pare) and Paulie (Piper Perabo), a fun couple who surprise Mary by revealing they really are a couple.

As Tory and Paulie explore the boundaries of their lesbian relationship, which smashes apart when Tory's sister catches them together in bed, Mary is forced to face the boundaries of her own life--and question how she herself responds to the world.

"Lost & Delirious" wouldn't be nearly as affecting if it weren't for the conviction of its cast; Perabo, in particular, has some terrific moments when Pool isn't insisting that she overact, and Barton grounds the film's overblown midsection and ending with an economy of style that softens the increasingly hysterical mood. But Judith Thompson's script, which initially skirts a number of cliches and seems so promising, inexplicably turns sour.

Indeed, as the nearly destroyed Paulie finds herself shrieking Shakespeare's sonnets while fencing with Tory's male suitors, the film leaves all sense of reality behind--and dissolves into a muddy puddle of camp.

Grade: C-