Showing posts with label Citizen Kane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Citizen Kane. Show all posts

Friday, January 9, 2015

Nine Directorial Debuts That Blow My Mind




2014 was a great year for first-time directors.  If you’ve been listening to the ITMODCast, you’ve heard Brad and Darren rave about The Babadook, the feature film debut of actress-turned-director Jennifer Kent, and The One I Love, from Charlie McDowell, which Brad described as “marriage therapy as done by Ray Bradbury.” One of my favorites of last year was Dear White People, a searing debut from Justin Simien that hasn’t been talked about much on this blog or the podcast but that I found exceptionally wonderful, with its distinct point-of-view and sprawling cast of characters.  And while it wouldn’t have made my top films list, Obvious Child from Gillian Robespierre holds the promise of films fronted by female characters that feel more real and robust than 99% of what is out there in the market currently.




With so many new directors coming out strong in the last year, I’ve been thinking about directorial debuts throughout film history that have so confidently and surely defined a director and introduced them onto the scene as a force that cannot be ignored.  I’ve come up with a list of nine directorial debuts that I consider the best and must-see films for anyone who considers themselves a film nerd.  


A few notes (because I like rules and structure):  this list is unranked, as I’m looking specifically at the strength of the debut and how it relates to the directors’ filmography and not as interested in comparing or ranking the individual films.  To be included, the film must be the director’s first feature length film with some sort of distribution or release- any shorts or television direction is irrelevant here as are unreleased student films.  This is also purely a list based on my personal preferences and what I’ve seen, so there are definitely films missing.  Please leave a comment or tweet me (@beccagrawl) or the blog (@ITMODCast) or write on the Facebook page to let me know what I’ve missed!

Citizen Kane



There is no way this isn’t the first debut that comes to mind when you think about directors releasing a film that announces that they have arrived.  Citizen Kane has been discussed often on this blog and the podcast (and in the world of film nerdom) ad nauseum but everything that’s said is true.  To think that this film - so beautifully constructed, the characters so richly drawn, the performances so memorable, and the technological aspects of the film so innovative and evocative - came from a first time director is mind-boggling.  

Hard Eight (Sydney)



I love Paul Thomas Anderson and his films.  It is hard to find a director with a body of work that is so overwhelmingly great, without a single true misstep or flop, and PTA has that in spades.  You can debate and discuss the failings and merits of any given film but his entire body of work is some of the best ever put on film ever.  And it all starts with Hard Eight.  It is not big and bold the way other films on the list are but it has compelling, complex characters that feel real and honest and not particularly likeable, which is truly the hallmark of any given PTA film.  

She’s Gotta Have It



Spike Lee is the opposite of PTA for me, in a many ways.  His career has missteps and flops and films where he feels like he’s trying too hard to be “Spike Lee” and films where he feels like he’s trying too hard NOT to be “Spike Lee.”  But he has directed some of my favorite films and some of the greatest American films ever.  His debut, She’s Gotta Have It, gives the audience a great sense of what a “Spike Lee” film will be and what, at his best, that means for us and for society.  Not to mention that this film reminds us that some of the best female film characters can be written by men and directed by male directors, if they take the time and energy to craft real representations of women for their movies.

This Is Spinal Tap



Comedic sensibility is a strange thing.  It’s so specific to an individual - something I find hilarious might leave you cold or something that tickles me yesterday might enrage me tomorrow.  But I’d have to say you’re an idiot or a fool if you don’t find This Is Spinal Tap hilarious.  A lot of folks forget that while it features Christopher Guest and much of the crew who will appear in his films, this one is directed by Rob Reiner.  And while I easily could have chosen The Big Picture (Guest’s debut), I chosen Spinal Tap because A) it still cracks me up after a few dozen viewings and B) it’s a wonderful harbinger of the memorable films Reiner gives us immediately following this one - Stand By Me, The Princess Bride, When Harry Met Sally, Misery, A Few Good Men, The American President.  Reiner comes out strong as a director in this film and he showcases his ability to direct comedy, drama, satire, and just about everything else.

Bottle Rocket



Some might say that Bottle Rocket is the least Wes Anderson-y film that Wes Anderson ever directed and that may be true.  For me, the Wes Anderson elements are clearly fermenting in the film - his particular eye for casting against type or against audience expectations, his enjoyment in luxuriating in visual spaces, and his enjoyment of the comedy l’absurde.  The filmmaking here shows confidence and a specific point-of-view, which defines Anderson’s work and if it’s good enough to be named one of Martin Scorcese’s best films of the 1990s, it’s good enough for me.  (Also, gotta show some support for my fellow Houstonian.)

sex, lies, and videotape



I didn’t watch sex, lies, and videotape until college, so I was definitely experiencing this film through the eyes of “redefines independent film for a new era.”  That doesn’t lessen the fact that Steven Soderbergh does redefine independent film with his debut.  While it’s not my favorite Soderbergh and it might not be to everyone’s tastes, I love how nuanced and mature the script is without being tawdry or cheesy and it’s clear that Soderbergh has a command over his actors and an ability to pull interesting and deep performances from his cast.  

Reservoir Dogs



If you’re about my age and share my interest in film, you usually fall into two categories - those who saw Pulp Fiction first or those who saw Reservoir Dogs first.  I happened to have seen Reservoir Dogs first (a couple years after it came out) before I saw Pulp Fiction, so for me, this is the best Quentin Tarantino film, period.  This film so distinctly showcases who Tarantino is as a director, who his influences are as a filmmaker, and what sort of films he’s going to give us over the course of his career.  It is the defining film for several of the actors who appear and it has a timeless quality that is difficult to achieve for a first time filmmaker.  Talk to anyone involved with this blog or the podcast and Reservoir Dogs will come up in the first 15 minutes, guaranteed.

Badlands



So much about Terrence Malick and his films that don’t connect with viewers and are ripe for criticism.  I have always loved Malick - so much that The Thin Red Line was part of my senior thesis and I hosted a film screening to try to lure people on the Malick train - but regardless of how you feel about the director, you can’t deny that Badlands is a stellar debut.  Malick took a true crime story and spun a dark, gritty, sparse tale about two doomed lovers/killers, played brilliantly by Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek.  This film is unique on this list as I find Badlands to be the least-Malick-y film he ever made, thus making more accessible to viewers and audiences that might not be inclined to connect to his other films.  Many people I know who don’t care for Malick haven’t seen Badlands, and I implore you to check this out if you haven’t.   

Blood Simple



The Coen Brothers make great films.  That’s just the truth of it.  Not every film is a winner but they make great films.  There is so much to love about this film - the debut of the Coens, the first feature for Barry Sonnenfeld, incredible performances from a fantastic cast, and a story that brings neo-Film Noir back in the 1980s.  It might not be your favorite Coens Brothers movie and it isn’t the best Coens Brothers movie but it’s a fantastic introduction to what the Coens Brothers are best at, which is redefining and subverting genre expectations.  It’s equally violent and funny and a film that I find myself constantly recommending to folks who love the Coens but seemed to have missed it. 

-Rebecca
 

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Comic Review: Nemo - Heart of Ice


    League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is right up there at the top of my list of favorite graphic novels.  It taps into all those things I love so much, the wide array of Victorian and pulp adventure fiction, from H.G. Welles, to Jules Verne, to Edgar Rice Burroughs, and beyond.  And of course, one of the coolest characters was Captain Nemo, master of the Nautilus, dashing, suave, and deadly.  With Nemo, we follow his daughter, haunted by his shadow and his deeds, as she tries to find her own path in life.


    In 1925, Princess Janni Dakkar, the new Nemo, lives as a brigand.  When she runs afoul of Aisha and Charles Foster Kane, a chase across the world begins.  She blazes a trail across Antarctica and all the strange wonders it hides, from Present Land to the Mountains of Madness.


    If you’ve read previous League universe books, you’ll know the drill.  It’s sad, dark, full of ugly twists on classic characters.  But it’s also thrilling and strange, and challenges the reader to figure out the reference.  I know there were several I didn’t get.  One of these days, I’m going to have to go back through the whole series with some annotations or something.  I know there’s stuff I’m missing, meaning I’m not catching.


    I’ve never been a huge fan of Kevin O’Neill’s art, but it gets the job done, and helps to set the whole uncomfortable vibe of Moore’s bent literature rollercoaster.  Moore is one of those writers I go back and forth on.  He’s written some of my favorite books, but he’s also written stuff I can’t even force my way through.  He seems like a colossal jackass, and possibly more in love with himself than his rabid fans are.  But he’s also good at capturing the magic of the classic fiction I love so much.  Heart of ice is surprisingly upbeat; still kind of a downer, but for this series, it’s relatively positive.  I could see this being a really nice companion series to the later stuff involving the League.



Nemo: Heart of Ice
Author: Alan Moore
Artist: Kevin O’Neill
Publisher: Top Shelf Productions
ISBN: 978-1-60309-274-6

-Matt

Monday, September 12, 2011

New Release Tuesday (9/13/11)!!!

Must Buy DVD of the Week!


SUPERNATURAL SEASON 6:  I am fully aware that Citizen Kane is coming out today in a really nifty blu ray set, but my Must Buy has to go to Supernatural.  It's a show I never had any real intention of watching, but my sister-in-law kept telling me how great it was and how much I would love it.  I just kept rolling my eyes, sure sure sure.  I eventually picked up the first season for 15 bucks or so, watched a couple episodes, put it away.  A year later I was bored, popped in another episode and two days later I was cranking through the second season.  By the third season I was obsessed.  Supernatural is such a FUN show.  I like to tell people it's the Boston Legal of horror shows.  Fourth Wall breaking left and right, heaps of dork references, and a fantastic bromance...between brothers.  Okay, that sounded weird.  Season 5 saw the Apocalypse and the brothers were left in ruin.  Can't wait to see where they go from here.



Buy!


CITIZEN KANE (BLU RAY):  I had never seen Citizen Kane till two years ago.  I just never bothered, thought it couldn't possibly live up to the hype.  The amazing thing about Citizen Kane is that it totally does.  Amazing.  What else can I say?  Nothing that hasn't been said a billion times before.  A great film and I'm excited to see it in blu.  Rosebud.


THOR:  If you had told me at the start of the year that I would enjoy the Thor movie more than the Captain America movie I would have punched you in the face--"HOW DARE YOU!"  But it's the truth.  Thor was a lot of fun, not just a tired origin story.  Perfectly cast and executed swimmingly with all the proper dutch angles.  And it's been said elsewhere, but Chris Hemsworth is Thor the way Christopher Reeve was Superman; all followers will be compared to him.


THE EXTERMINATOR (BLU RAY):  Managed to snag a copy from the Synapse booth when I was at Horrorfind a few weeks back, and I've already devoured it a couple times.  Just fun, trash cinema with heaps of weird editing and style.  The opening slo-mo explosion is fantastic.


BAD DREAMS/VISITING HOURS DOUBLE FEATURE:  Haven't seen Bad Dreams for over a decade but I remember enjoying it enough.  Richard Lynch is scary as hell.  Now, due to my Shatner love, I've seen Visiting Hours several times and even though it's not as awesome as I want it to be there is still plenty to enjoy.  Shatner and his pudding.  Michael Ironside and his pretty outfits.  Just creepy, hospital shots.  Another solid double feature from Shout Factory.




BIG BANG THEORY SEASON 4:  Another tv show that took some time to grow on me, but once it attached its suction cups I was hooked.  Yeah, too much damn laugh track even if they're in on the joke.  But lots of fun pop culture and math references keep the nerds happy.


HALLOWEEN II (BLU RAY):  Ok, not a good movie.  But I love how this flick picks up immediately after the first one.  No time to breath.  The Shape sits up, starts killing more teenagers.  Simple.  Effective.  Kills could be better.

Rent!


MEEK'S CUTOFF:  A New Western!  Rejoice!  I've heard plenty of good things about Meek's Cutoff but my fear is that it'll be arty for art's sake.  I'm not the biggest fans of either Paul Dano or Michelle Williams but Bruce Greenwood...that's a Grizzly Adams I can get behind.  And Donnor Party horror.  Yes please.




THE TEMPEST:  I really wanted to see this in theaters, but nowhere close to me bothered to plop it on the big screen.  I really enjoy intense, off-the-beaten-path adaptations of Shakespeare like Ian McKellen's Richard III or Akira Kurosawa's Throne of Blood.  Just go for it filmmaking.  Hopefully this is more of the same.


TRUE LEGEND:  More Kung Fu from Yuen Woo Ping.  And this one has yet another one of David Carradine's final performances.  Trailer looks iffy but it looks worthy of a Netflix.




HESHER:  I've heard mixed things and I'm kinda tired of Natalie Portman (except for Your Highness, that movie is stupid awesome).  But Joseph Gordon Levitt as a new metal god legend...that has potential.  But it's probably gonna be some pretentious indie mess.


Avoid:


STAR WARS SAGA (BLU RAY):  I'm putting this here for me as much as you.  The internet has been aflame since learning more of George Lucas' Special Edition tinkerings.  Vader Nooooooos aside, we don't need to buy these films again.  Not until we get a nice print of the original films.  No Gredoo shooting first.  No Boba Fett insertions.  Just the films we saw as kids looking nice on blu.  Until then, don't give the emperor any more of our hard earned cash.

--Brad