Showing posts with label Robert De Niro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert De Niro. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2013

A Fistful of Metal! (Brad's Picks)


Zack Snyder's Man of Steel has hit, and hopefully, it will leave a massive crater in my lackluster enthusiasm for Superman.  Oh sure, I enjoyed the Donner movies as a kid, and Grant Morrison & Frank Quitely's All-Star Superman has to be one of the greatest comic book series ever printed in four colors, but Big Blue has never been a character that's spoken to my fanboy heart.  It's either The Beatles or The Stones, you're either a Supes fan or a Batman guy.  I've always been the later.

However, that's not what this list is about.  Look to my Week in Dork for all things Not-A-Bird-Not-A-Plane.  This Fistful Friday centers around my favorite encounters with cinematic Heavy Metal.  Maybe not the greatest movies on the planet, but you can certainly bang your head to this list.  Rock on.


5.  Doc Savage - Man of Bronze:  This movie is shit.  No bones about it.  However, the pulp fiction source material birthed from the bored mind of Lester Dent is a treasure trove of Indiana Jones-like adventure.  The Man of Bronze and his team of scientists travel the globe battling evil Russian scientists and ravenous headhunter tribes.  He seems pretty much forgotten these days, but his tales of pseudo-science & flat-out mysticism rival the very best of The Shadow or The Phantom.  Too bad Ron Ely's Man of Bronze can't muster enough energy to break you out of a snooze.  Still, look at that poster, pretty badass huh?


4.  The Nickel Ride:  This is a gem of 70s crime cinema.  Jason Miller is Cooper, a low level kingpin who manages a string of warehouses in Los Angeles.  But then the mob looses interest in their investment and cowboy goon Bo Hopkins shows up on his doorstep.  Not really triumphed these days, The Nickel Ride is a cold, mean, anti-climactic, and eventually heartless film.  Not the type of flick to go down in history, but it's worth your time just to see everyone's favorite Exorcist go up against no one's favorite Bufurd Pusser.


3.  Silver Linings Playbook:  I haven't seen this since the movie theater, but I've been craving a rewatch lately.  Haters love to harp on its completely fantastical interpretation of mental illness and it's Gambling Wins The Day climax, but I say pull that stick outta your ass and enjoy the oddball romance skipping a beat at the center of the film.  Bradley Cooper & Jennifer Lawrence are utterly engaging.  They have no business being together and in a real world situation would probably end their relationship in bloodshed, but this is Hollywood, and in Hollywood the guy gets the girl even when he is batshit crazy with rage.  It's cute.


2.  Cross of Iron:  The man who brought us the moral ambiguity of The Wild Bunch and Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid turns his attention towards The Good War, and the result is a haunting insight into how the other half lives.  James Coburn is Steiner, a German corporal who refuses to execute a captive child which in turn brings down the wrath of his commanding officer Maximilian Schell.  There have been many films that have reveled in the "War Is Hell" pathos, but Cross of Iron is one of the most theatrical and as such it reaches deep into Greek tragedy.  This ain't Spielberg, it's Peckinpah.  'nuff said.


1.  Goldfinger:  Could there be any other choice for the top spot?  Certainly not the best James Bond film (uh, that's From Russia With Love), still Goldfinger has the most iconic moment from the franchise.  Shirley Eaton, having foolishly fallen for Sean Connery's smile, is transformed into the ultimate Bond Girl victim when the diabolical Auric Goldfinger gives her a glittery spray-on tan.  A million fanboys were birthed in that moment.

The Real Man of Steel?

--Brad

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Brad's Week in Dork! (6/2/13-6/8/13)


This was a great week of consumption.  The Wife & I are still plugging away at LOST, and we're finally starting to hit the place that absolutely giddies my brain - The Barge!  With last week's screening of 8 1/2 I plunged back into Roger Ebert's The Great Movies, and I continued that trend this week with Werner Herzog's Aguirre, The Wrath of God.  It's a damn good movie; I'm committed to the rest of the Herzog/Kinski collaboration box set and I've only got three left, but so far, so damn brilliant.  Klaus Kinski, the beautiful monster.  Every expression is a painting for my wall, a grotesque ripped from the finest Renaissance creation.  I also got serious about my Scorsese-A-Thon, cranking out three more of his classics - and yeah, all three are classics.  The De Niro era somewhat comes to a close with After Hours which in turn leads to another grab at the new mainstream of the 1980s, The Color of Money.  The Griffin Dunne nightmare adventure is often forgotten in the canon, but I (& Ebert) consider it to be a highlight within a flood of highlights.

This Pretty Much Sums Up The Night

I made it out to the theater for a pair of Ethan Hawke performances: Before Midnight & The Purge.  Could there possibly be a better example of Night & Day as far as quality is concerned?  Don't think so.  Hawke is an interesting actor - you can't really love the guy, but I'm hard pressed to think of a time in which I utterly loathed a performance.  His tour with Lionsgate is fun even when it's forgettable.  The guy just likes to work.  Respect.


LOST Season 3:  The second season dipped its toe into the pool of genre crazy, and Season 3 wades on into the deep end.  It's a little bit of a slow start as Jack, Kate, & Sawyer bang upon their cages, but once they worm their way out and into the barrack world of Dharma (or the Dharma that once was), LOST finds its story and finally stretches its science-fiction setting.  Michael Emmerson is a great nemesis for Flight 815 and Elizabeth Mitchell's Dr. Juliette is a welcome addition to a cast of morally broken people.  And let's not forget Nestor Carbonell's Richard!  What's his deal?  It's only going to get weirder and more ancient from here.  Plus, just when the flashbacks start to get stale (seriously, at this point, who cares what Sun & Jin were doing in Korea or how much of a tool Charlie was before getting to Gilligan's Island?), the writers find an exciting new device to launch us into the next season.  Finally, we have "Not Penny's Boat!"  Outsiders are on their way and the battle between 815 & The Others barely has time to breath before an even larger threat crests the horizon.


Raging Bull:  "I don't trust you when it comes to her.  I don't trust nobody."  This is a frustrating film for me.  Obviously, the craft and performances are stunning.  Robert De Niro's Jake LaMotta is a hateful brute and he's surrounded by corrupting influences.  Family, friends, lovers.  Everyone wants a piece and he's ready to take a bite.  Martin Scorsese shoots boxing like the horrific ballet that it is, a black & white bloodsport unfit for this "civilized" world we pretend to inhabit.  I could watch those bouts all day long.  But De Niro's LaMotta?  I hate him.  Cathy Moriarty's Vickie is the worst kind of victim, a woman asking for the punishment that is her life.  Joe Pesci's little brother appears good hearted, but he's little more than a punching bag for the bull.  I hate these people.  I recognize the craft of the film - the cinematography, the direction, the performances, the script - but the problems of these mooks are are boring to me.  I imagine a world in which the cast & crew remade Robert Ryan's The Set-Up, and it's a beautiful nirvana filled with heinous blows of genre.  Raging Bull is trying to get to the truth of a man, but Jake LaMotta is a jackass and I don't like living in his skin.


Aguirre - The Wrath of God:  "These savages are hard to convert."  And here is another character filled with hate & violence but one that is absolutely not boring.  Klaus Kinski is Aguirre, the second in command of a doomed expedition through South America in search for the fabled city of gold, El Dorado.  His men follow the conquering footsteps of Cortes, slashing their way through the jungle, capturing the natives, bashing the word of God into their brains, and falling victim to Mother Nature as well as their own black hearts.  What are Aguirre's desires?  I'm still not totally sure.  Domination does not appear to be one even as he sets up a noblemen as the puppet emperor for their expedition.  He appears to be solely concentrated on the destruction of others.  He stands upon a raft of corpses, leader of the dead and the dying.  Success?  I think he may see it that way.  This is certainly a film I'm going to have to go back to a few times.  It's an assault on the senses, but unlike Raging Bull, I enjoy the idiocy of the brutality.  Most must be contributed to Kinski's mad performance.  Is the character off?  Or is the actor the true madman of myth?  How rare to have an actor that convincing.


Aquaman Vol 2 - The Others:  I really, really, really enjoyed Geoff Johns' first entry into the New 52 Aquaman.  It was a fun, frothy story in which the king of Atlantis struggled to find his way between the two worlds of his parents.  Unfortunately, Volume 2 squanders all the high adventure of the first book for some shockingly dull Super Hero brawl.  Some time ago a pirate called Black Manta killed Aquaman's human father and in retaliation Aquaman killed Black Manta's father.  Here we get the very worst imitation of The Wrath of Khan and muddled in the middle are a team of 90s runoffs called The Others.  The book introduces six new characters but only gives you fistfights as a means of character development.  We get beats but not story.  And The Others just get in the way of the characters we actually care about - Aquaman & Mera, a husband and wife super team struggling to make life on dry land.  I know we have to have punch ups but it would be nice if the story didn't Schumacher it up with dead weight villains.  I don't think I'll be going any further with this series.


Before Midnight:  Richard Linklater gives us the third, but possibly not the last chapter in his romantic saga.  I don't want to go into specifics, just know that Before Midnight contains a lot more of walking & talking to camera.  If you've seen the first two then you know the deal.  Honestly, I absolutely adore the first film but was somewhat dismayed by the direction taken by Before Sunset.  Having now just spent six years in absolute bliss with my own significant other, I respond deeply to the heart & romance of Before Sunrise, but Sunset breaks down the "reality" of love, and it tasted cynical rather than truthful.  And Before Midnight continues that trend.  It's impossible to separate my own relationship and my own ideas of love from these films, but I find the conversation to be fascinating and absolutely worth the return trip.  Also, where else (outside of genre) can you find three films that follow the same two actors in the same two characters?  At the very least, the Before films are a magnificent exploration and I look forward to watching them as a whole.


Nosferatu - Phantom Der Nacht:  "Give me some of that love."  Werner Herzog & Klaus Kinski reteam to bring us this romantically haunting remake of the silent classic, this version containing much more of Bram Stoker's original source material minus the drab narration.  Kinski is exceptional in his portrayal of the undead Count and his droopy stares into camera are hypnotizing.  The man is a living sculpture!  Also, Bruno Ganz might very well be the only version of Jonathan Harker I've ever found sympathetic, and Isabelle Adjani is the most pained Mina (or Lucy as this film swaps her) ever filmed.  She is wide-eyed gorgeous, a tragic pet for Kinski's monstrous longings.  And have you ever seen a vampiric seduction of a town so mournfully shot than the one Herzog depicts here?  The town square rat feast!  Terrifying in its banality.


The Vampire Lovers:  "Put some blood back into her."  When I think of the quintessential Hammer Horror I think of The Vampire Lovers.  Sure, the adaptations of The Horror of Dracula or The Curse of Frankenstein might be a touch more iconic thanks to the performances of Christopher Lee, but what I really want from Hammer are the busty ladies tortured by the supernatural.  No one quite does pulp cheesecake quite like Hammer, and Ingrid Pitt is their ultimate pinup girl.  A cheap retelling of Sheridan Le Fanu's Carmilla, that short story donates heaps of sexual subtext to exploit in the world of B Movies, but the success of The Vampire Lovers is Pitt & company's full-hearted acceptance of the material.  There is no sheeping here.  It's cheese - bloody & booby - no apologies.  It's the perfect gift for 13 year old males or the stunted 30 year old.


Blade 2:  "Lock up your daughters, boys and girls, The Dark Knight Returns!"  This is a special film and I don't think enough people give it the credit it so rightfully deserves.  Dropped into the middle of a crappy comic book franchise is a classic of genre filmmaking.  I would go so far as to argue that Blade 2 is the finest hour in Guillermo Del Toro's career and one of the Top 5 comic book movies ever concocted.  Not satisfied with the mewling dreary whelps of the Anne Rice generation, the director set out to return the monstrous to the vampire, and in the process Blade 2 became an epic Blaxploitation remake of The Dirty Dozen.  This is the very finest of kitchen sink cinema.  Coming off of the disastrous Mimic & the rejuvenating Devil's Backbone, Guillermo Del Toro saw this sequel as his great grab at big time Hollywood filmmaking, bending David Goyer's script to his will.  Thankfully, it was a success.  I adore Blade's descent down the villain food chain, exploding a traitor in his midst, punishing an army of security guard lapdogs, slicing racial hate into Ron Perlman's Nazi, buffooning the vampire count, and eventually going toe-to-toe with Luke Goss's genetic abomination.  And each stop along the way of neverending set piece is peppered with winks and nods to comics, movies, and classical illustration.  Del Toro has absorbed it all, but his pop references manage to be more fluid and natural than anything found in the very best of Quentin Tarantino or Martin Scorsese.  Of course, this is just Blade 2 - a violent action film sandwiched between two slices of moldy bread and therefore it will never get the rightful appreciation.  And as much as I love Del Toro, I don't think he's ever come close to capturing the perfection of this film.  Deluded blogger praise?  Maybe.  But you should watch this film again if you doubt me.


The King of Comedy:  Ugh, this film is painful.  Funny at times.  But mostly painful.  Robert De Niro gives his finest performance as Rupert Pupkin, the wannabe comic who kidnaps his way into primetime legend.  Jerry Lewis is the hapless celebrity navigating the cost of fame, and failing his audience's impossible expectations.  The King of Comedy feels like its coming from a great sadness buried deep within its creators, but its beauty is that it never feels like "Woe Is Me" cinema.  This is truth via absurdity.  De Niro's Pupkin is just another sadsack living in his parents basement who fills the void in his life with delusions of celebrity.  If he could only get his act on TV than the high school dream girl would be his and the world would accept his comedy genius.  The film marches to a dark tune and each chuckle that escapes lands with a sick thud.  It's an uncomfortable watch, but one worth having every few years.  It's certainly a great reminder of De Niro's skill, and in the current era of cash-in action/comedy roles The King of Comedy reminds us just how the man got to his iconic status.


Star Trek - "The Cage":  Can you believe I had actually never seen this pilot episode before?  It's true!  Previously, my only connection to "The Cage" were the snippets seen within "The Menagerie."  Jeffery Hunter is a great Captain of the Enterprise.  Don't worry, I'm not ready to abandon Shatner, but I have to admit cool where cool exists.  Pike is certainly a more introspective Starfleet officer than Kirk.  He's been around the rings of Saturn a few too many times and fantasies of Orion Slave Girls plague his mind.  He's ready to toss in the towel.  Then comes a distress signal and the lovely captive Vina.  The Telosians are not the type of villains you punch, they're the type you strangle.  Using their big brains to keep Pike & Vina imprisoned, they desire to breed a perfect race of man but you get the idea that perfection is a mask for simple sandbox play time.  What would the world be like if Hunter remained on the bridge?  Hmmmm, it's an interesting thought.  I certainly think there was a great show here, and maybe not that different from the Star Trek we eventually got.  My whole reasoning for sitting down for the first episode was The Mission Log podcast, a detailed breakdown of every Star Trek episode.  It's prodeced by Gene Roddenberry's son and it's fun Trekkie stuff.


The Purge:  I really love the concept behind this flick - one day a year, the US Government legalizes all forms of crime.  Murder, Rape, Riot.  It's all cool as long as you don't use a weapon classified above a level 4 (whatever the hell that means, no bazookas I guess).  That's a very twisted Twilight Zone kinda thought and I had hopes that this B Movie would do something special with it.  Unfortunately, The Purge never quite rises above the typical stalk & slash and nearly every character falls into those Horror movie tropes we were warned about in the Scream franchise, "I'll be right back!!!!!"  The best moments happen early one before The Purge goes into full effect.  Ethan Hawke's daughter looking down into her neighbor's backyard and seeing him sharpening his machete.  That's damn creepy.  The Haves locking up their doors while the Have-Nots scurry for a hiding place.  There could have been a great film here.  Instead we get a forgettable dolt.


Action Comics - Superman vs The Men of Tomorrow:  Zack Snyder's Man of Steel is nearly upon us, and as the week came to a close I found myself hunting for the perfect Superman comic.  We all know that's Grant Morrison & Frank Quitely's All-Star Superman, but I'm holding off on that till next week's book club.  So, instead, I though I'd give Morrison's New 52 relaunch a try.  It's not as dull or painful as some would have you believe, but it's also nothing more than routine super heroics.  Frankly, I'm tired of being introduced to this character.  Secret Origin, Superman For All Seasons, Red Son, Birthright.  Why do all the classic stories center on his beginnings?  Morrison attempts a half-ass origin here with Lex working for the government, Clark Kent bumbling about The Daily Star, Brainiac bottling cities, and Superman rocking jeans rather than spandex.  The action scenes are solid enough and the dialog all works in that Morrison nostalgia kinda way.  But there is nothing special.  I hear it gets better before it all comes crashing down so I'll stick around for the next volume.


Woyzeck:  "All things of this world are evil."  Of the three Herzog/Kinski collaborations I watched this week, Woyzeck was the one that I found the most punishingly effective.  The story of a meek soldier slowly deteriorating over the course of several days as his wife openly lusts for another man, his doctor makes mockery of his exasperated state, and his commanding officer belittles his uncontrollable rushing.  Klaus Kinski has played brute & monster before, but with Woyzeck the actor reaches new depths of victimization.  Aguirre may have been The Wrath of God, but Woyzeck is the puppet of the Earth, hearing the planet's demand to stab the life from his bride.  Death is on the wind, prick up your ears.  The film's 80 minute runtime is busting with dread; almost from frame one you're waiting for catastrophe to strike.  No wonder the original play was transformed into Opera, Woyzeck is beauty through tragedy.  Not for the Saturday Night crowd, but the cineaste looking to wallow in despair will find plenty of misery to envelope them.


After Hours:  Griffin Dunne is just one more mindless cubical worker, a cog in the machine of capitalism punching his keyboard with as little mental effort as possible.  One night he leaves his office building, finds a diner to read his book, and strikes up a conversation with Rosanna Arquette.  Their brief flirtation sparks a Kafkan quest through the dirty heart of New York City.  Dunne bumps against the stupid and the absurd:  Linda Fiorentino's dominating artist, John Heard's grieving barman, Catherine O'Hara's vigilante ice cream trucker, and the dynamic duo of Cheech & Chong.  It's a gut-bustingly funny saga, but like The King of Comedy, it's often more sad than not.  The circular torment bestowed upon Griffin Dunne is uproarious and I often found myself shaking my head at the horrors forced upon him.  In a lot a ways, After Hours would be the perfect companion to John Landis' Into The Night, another neglected classic centering on the nighttime exploits of an anonymous data head.


--Brad

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Brad's Week In Dork! (4/14/13-4/20/13)

"D'Artagnan, motherfuckers!" by Mike Mitchell

This week finished the first wave of Scorsese flicks.  All solid movies, but I find myself even more excited to get deeper into his career.  Beyond Raging Bull & Goodfellas - I want the glitz & shine of the DiCaprio collaborations.  Does that have more to do with the material (after all Gangs of New York, The Departed, & Shutter Island are far from perfect creations) or the presence of Calvin Candie? The Tuesday release of Django Unchained pretty much took over my week.  I watched a good batch of cinema, but Django currently owns my heart.  After scouring the shopping strip wasteland, I grabbed all three of the exclusives (Wal-Mart, Best Buy, & Target) and spent all of Tuesday drooling over the rather crappy special features.  Target's Steelbook is the obvious winner, but only cuz of it's superior artwork.  The extra discs are pathetic.  However, I stand by my 2012 proclamation, and I'll go one step further in labeling Django Unchained as my absolute favorite Quentin Tarantino flick.  Jackie Brown, I love you, but it's time to stand aside.  


Trance:  "To be angry is to be a victim." Danny Boyle returns to crime cinema with this semi-successful headtrip mystery. James McAvoy steals a Goya painting for gang boss Vincent Cassel. But somewhere in the action there's a switch and McAvoy takes a serious thwack on the noggin. Amnesia time. Grrrgh. One of those flicks, huh. But where fingernail torture fails, Rosario Dawson's slippery hypnotist succeeds. Convoluted with reveals on top of reveals, Trance still manages to be just that - an engrossing bit of flimflam coated in rage and sex.  Who knew pubic hair could be used as a plot device?!?  I'm still not won over to the McAvoy camp, but I certainly appreciated his characters' spiraling arc.  And I'm already a big fan of both Cassel & Dawson. Those two are rarely awarded the opportunity to strut this much on film and that's enough for a recommend.


Mean Streets:  Three films in and Martin Scorsese has completely solidified his style. Depending on which interview you read from the director, Mean Streets is a spiritual or literal sequel to Who's That Knocking At My Door.  "Remake" feels the more appropriate term. But semantics are semantics. Scorsese has more money, more talent, and a more expensive soundtrack. Harvey Keitel is back as Charlie, a collector for his neighborhood big shot Uncle. He's small time and is far too meek for the racket. Robert De Niro is Johnny Boy, a psychotic animal hopelessly doomed to talk his way into his own destruction. Try as he might, Charlie never has a hope of saving his friend from the inevitable. Scorsese's camera is beautifully fluid. He's got the long cutless dollies of Hitchcock, but the freedom of his own inventive savvy - the way he plants Keitel on a floating dance floor or the way he mounts the camera on Keitel himself, as he boozily stumbles into unconsciousness. And then you've got the violence. It's rare, quick, and chaotic. Just like in Boxcar Bertha, when the unstoppable finally arrives at Johnny Boy, the event is still somehow shocking.  Painful.  Tragic.


Mallrats:  Twenty years ago I saw genius where I now see banality. It's a brave new geek world out there, and The Big Bang Theory aggressively mines this territory every week. The script lacks the biting wit found underneath the retail misery of Clerks, and despite a few more bucks, it's painful to witness Kevin Smith's inability to move the frame. Sure, there are still some kernels of geeky glory - Jedi mind tricks, Superman's shotgun sperm, and Stan Lee's epic monologue of romance, but it's mostly chuckles & smiles rather than full on belly laughs.  Jason Lee is disgustingly charming as the alpha comic nerd, but the 90s TV actors surrounding him struggle to find the truth in Smith's reference heavy dialog.


Homicide - Life on the Street Season 4:  "This is not a perfect world, Al.  It's Baltimore."  Another excellent season for the Murder Police.  Frank Pembleton continues his crusade of righteousness, but I was struck by how much of a introspective loser his partner Tim Bayliss can be when placed under Frank's microscope.  Tim started out as the gateway character of the show, but over the course of its 7 seasons & one TV Movie, Kyle Secor's mopey creation morphed into the saddest sack in the squadron.  And this is the season where his downfall begins.  The Adena Watson killing stills weighs heavy on his conscience, his sexuality is confronted while investigating a skin head hate crime, and he even questions his purpose while manning a stakeout.  When I originally experienced this show on the boob tube, Tim was easily one of my favorite characters.  But knowing his outcome, and seeing him fail in his dialog battles with Pembleton, I kinda hate the guy now.  His moral investigations actually expose a weakness in his character.  He is not the knight in shining armor he so desperately wants to be - he's a fool masquerading in costume.  His quandaries are manifestations of his cracking soul, and he really has no business speaking for the dead.    


Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore:  "What's with this broad?" After her husband dies in a truck accident, Ellen Burstyn sells her earthly belongings, packs her son into the car, and heads across America in search of the happiness she once had in Monterey (visualized at the start of the film as a Wizard of Ozish Hollywood dreamscape, but laced with childish potty mouth bluster). Lack of funds force stops along the way. She encounters Harvey Keitel's terrifying switchblade husband, stands by her new man Kris Kristofferson, and drops anchor at a diner destined for sitcom reruns. Burstyn practically made a career out of mother roles (The Last Picture Show, The Exorcist, Requiem for a Dream), but Alice is her ultimate work. Her relationship with her 12 year old brat is simultaneously frustrating and utterly sweet. Alfred Lutter might pull off the greatest child performance I've ever seen - he manages to be frustratingly foul, ready for a smack, and also totally understandable. This kid is trapped in the genetics and teachings of his mother, and she in turn is imprisoned by her spawn. The fact that Kristofferson doesn't buckle under their baggage, but craves their presence is a serious indication of genuine love, even when he's gotta deliver a thwack. Question: "Is Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore still part of the cinematic conversation?" Given that this film has never come up in the millions of movie chats I've had throughout my life, I'm guessing the answer is "No." Which is just not right. This film is one of the finest screenplays Martin Scorsese has ever handled. It definitely appears to be outside his wheelhouse, but it's also obvious that he understands the failings of dreams and the fight that everyday people have in order to incorporate those dreams into the ordinary of their day to day lives. I think it's one of his finest works.


Django Unchained:  "He walks through hellfire because Brunhilda is worth it."  I've watched the film five times now.  (Minor Spoilers Follow) And as easy as it is to be swept away by the scenery chomping performances of Leonardo DiCaprio, Christoph Waltz, and Samuel L Jackson, I think it's a great disservice to ignore the work of Jaime Foxx.  If you compare & contrast the first image you see of Foxx (Django as slave, downtrodden, brutalized, and being dragged across the Texas desert) with the last image (Django as FDR - American Badass, pimped out in Candie's attire, end zone showboating with his horse), you see a grande heroic arc worthy of the classical sagas the film desperately strives to emulate.  And the arc is achieved through Foxx's soulful performance.  Sure, a lot of that is accomplished through script & direction; Tarantino guides him from quiet Bounty Hunter student to violent crusader  - the killer of John Brittle & the wrath of God via the destruction of Candyland.  But Foxx excels in the quiet moments as much as the bits of bravado.  You fall in love with him & his Homeric quest as he sits, childlike, listing to King Schultz's mythic campfire tales.  Then, when he stands angry & proud in his ridiculously blue valet suit, Foxx excels in that transformation into avenger.  However, another aspect I don't read much about is his damnation on the road to Blaxploitation Badass.  His masquerade as the black slaver, those sunglasses plastered on his face during the mutilation of Dartanian.  He not only forfeits his own soul, but makes King Schultz complacent in the murder as well when he forces Schultz's pocketbook back into his pocket.  It's an action that leads Schultz to his own fate.   As great as it is to witness Django's triumph at the fiery climax, I find myself aching at the evil committed along the way.  It's that ache that elevates Django Unchained to the very top of my favorite Tarantino films.  You may complain about the meandering pace (I certainly don't, I love the stop & restart final 30 minutes) and you may squirm at the subject matter and the violence splashing on the Big House walls, but Django Unchained is not absent of morality.  Love costs as much as vengeance.  In the end is it worth it?  For Django (and the husband writing this sentence), damn right.


Taxi Driver:  "Are you a scorpion?"  Who was Travis Bickle before this film starts, and who will he be after the credits roll?  The answer post-credits is certainly more interesting than the pre-credits answer.  The film depicts a few days in the life of a man slowly reaching insanity on the nightmarish streets of Times Square.  When we meet Bickle his mind is filled with hatred for the filth around him - humanity.  He can't sleep.  He takes to hacking to fill the hours.  He encounters one blonde goddess in the form of Cybil Shepherd, but when his impossible porno date goes obviously catastrophic, he sets out to assassinate her politician boss.  His impotence, sadly or thankfully, extends to political killings and he's forced to thrust his violence towards the scum closer to his level.  Harvey Kietel's Sport is the chucklehead pimp with a leash on the broken doll Jodie Foster.  She's not the goddess, but she'll do in a pinch - a damsel he can rescue from the pit of the city.  Taxi Driver is a draining, oppressive little picture.  The type of picture that rules your Best Of lists in high school & college, but one that has waned a touch in my heart.  Don't get me wrong.  It's a brilliant movie.  A thick coat of sadness.  But as I find myself in my 30s, I don't respond as strongly to its dark heart as I once did.  The real treat is rediscovering the lead performance.  Watching the trailer for the latest Robert De Niro paycheck (The Big Wedding) it's hard to remember a time when Bobby D kicked serious ass in front of the camera.  Then you pop in Taxi Driver and "Oh Yeah," De Niro is a beast for drama.


The Last Waltz:  If you are a fan of The Band, do you love this documentary or do you hate it?  I am not a fan.  I barely like the performers that make guest appearances on their farewell stage.  What?  Brad, you don't like Dylan, Clapton, or Young?  I'm not saying that.  Their music is just so iconic that it has existed as "Classic" rock for so long in my brain that they illicit absolutely no emotional response other than technical respect.   And the subjects themselves are just so damn tired on screen.  Their interviews painfully dismissive.  They're done with the road.  They want off.  Fascinating.  But joyless. And not a fun watch.


Hawkeye - My Life As A Weapon:  Friday night was our 11th meeting of The Ultimate Justice League of Extraordinary Book Club.  Half the group enjoyed Hawkeye, and the other half was fairly dismissive.  Reading Matt's review, I feel like I have to defend Matt Fraction & David Aja's hipster masterpiece, but I think the book is the best defense - and frankly, it doesn't need defending as the entire comic book community has pretty much agreed that it's genius.  To say that Clint Barton is one of my least favorite Marvel creations is not quite accurate.  The purple Avenger barely registered on my radar before My Life As A Weapon.  I remember when Bendis killed him off in Avengers: Disassembled and I was utterly perplexed by the internet outcry.  Who gave two rats asses about Hawkeye pre-Bendis?  Certainly not me.  And when all that bonkers (stupid) business with the House of M brought Barton back as Ronin......zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.  I can't even muster the energy to hate on the goofy Marvel Event nonsense .  They're their own brand of comic book crazy.  I only picked up the first couple of issues of Fraction's run cuz Big Planet Comics wouldn't shut up about it, and it really wasn't until the third issue, with its arrow lampooning, that I got hooked.  Early on Fraction cleverly rifts on Hawkeye's ridiculous placement on the A-Team ("I'm an orphan raised by carnies fighting with a stick from the Paleolithic era") and focuses his crusader with the routine setting of an apartment building. Dr. Doom is not gonna be a problem.  Instead, beware the track suit Bros & maybe some scuffle on the fringes of the Kingpin's organization.  The real fun stems from the banter.  Comparisons to Joss Whedon are not far off, but it's also not as cringing or saccharine as that polished wit can be.  You've got the wonderfully awkward friendship with Kate Bishop, a mess load of bass ackwards sexual encounters, and my new favorite Pet Avenger, Pizza Dog.  Aja's half of the book is far cooler and sexier than Pulido's, but I kinda dig his Clowesy indie faces.  Hawkeye is not epic comic book storytelling.  But it's charming, sweet, and badass from time to time.  Curious to see what hell these bumbling Bros are going to unleash, and how Wilson Fisk will handle the pest that is Clint Barton.  Easily one of the most enjoyable books currently on the stands.  


Swamp Thing - Raise Them Bones & Family Tree:  With the good bit of enjoyment being achieved in Scott Snyder's current Batman run, I thought it about time I got acquainted with his interpretation of everyone's favorite veggie monster.  Despite a befuddling appearance of Superman in the first issue (linking Alec Holland to The New 52), Raise Them Bones is an excellent continuation of the mythology defined by Alan Moore's Saga.  But it's little more than a reminder of what makes this character so damn cool.  The story doesn't find it's real footing until Family Tree, where Holland accepts his mantel of The Green and takes on the invading forces of The Rot.  Yannick Paquette's art draws a beautiful beastie, and I love the addition of Swampy's barky crown.  But as much as I dig Paquette, when Francesco Francavilla drops in for a guest-spot I instantly wanted him for a replacement.  His Swamp-Thing is a sad, beautiful figure.  Less the beast and more the plant.  A higher compliment, I do not know.  Snyder's book certainly doesn't match that of Moore's, but it's fun enough and I'm happy to see this character once again get a proper place in the DC Universe.  And I am even more excited to see how this book fits into Jeff Lemire's recent Animal Man.


--Brad

Monday, March 5, 2012

New Release Tuesday!!! (3/6/12)

"Bambi Hunter" by Dave McDowell

Okay.  With Comic Con shockingly and quickly approaching it's time for me to start stashing away cash and not spending the green on every little dvd that comes my way.  I'm determined to only pick up the essentials, no more Two-Headed Shark Attacks or blind buy TV box sets.  So it's with some reservation that I don't offer up any Must Buy!s this week and contemplate only one real...

Buy!


THE DEER HUNTER (BLU):  Wow, it's been way tooooooo long since I've watched The Deer Hunter.  But it's always been one of my favorites, and probably my favorite Vietnam War film...if you don't consider the surreal nightmare that is Apocalypse Now and I really don't see that as a 'Nam flick.  The Deer Hunter is a sad, introspective movie.  And one of the few films to totally deserve it's Best Picture win in 1978-to think that films like Crash, Titanic, and even The Artist (which I love) share that honor just shows the absurdity of the gold statue.  But we've been ranting about that too much lately.  Anyway, Robert DeNiro is great in this film, but not as great as the insane Christopher Walken and this was before he went made with caricature.  His final moments on screen will destroy you.  So yeah, if you haven't seen this one already than you're definitely going to want to snatch up the new Universal 100th Anniversary blu ray.



Rent!


GAME OF THRONES SEASON ONE:  I read the book a long, long time ago.  I remember liking it but I also remember not liking it enough to continue on with the other books.  But people seemed to have lost their minds for this show last year and it's exciting to me to think of a High Fantasy HBO series.  So, I'm looking forward to joining the bandwagon.


IMMORTALS:  Not a great movie or anything but I enjoyed the God Fighting.  Tarsem just needs to get hold of a great script, until then we just have to enjoy the pleasant visuals that accompany his simple scripts.  And I'm enjoying this Blockbuster era of mythology.  If I was 12 years old a film like this or the Clash of the Titans remake would have ruled my tiny brain.


FOOTLOOSE:  It's a little silly, even stupid.  But so was the original.  And this fills the same Dance Can Save The World (of high school) vibe that was so dang important in the 1980s.  Sure, I kinda expected more from Craig Brewer after Hustle & Flow and Black Snake Moan (two films that are not great but genuinely interesting) but I'll take a little cheesecake escape.




THE SKIN I LIVE IN:  I really wanted to check this flick out before 2011 came to a close but I just couldn't make it happen.  I've never really fallen in love with Pedro Almodovar's films but I oh so desperately want to for some reason.  And this has Antonio Banderas doing some crazy science or something.  Okay, I'm down.



Avoid!


REINDEER GAMES (BLU):  I still remember seeing this in the theater.  And I remember thinking to myself, "This Ben Affleck guy is supposed to be the next big thing?"  Cuz Reindeer Games is utter garbage.  It's not Phantoms awful but it's pretty darn close.  The only thing saving it is Charlize Theron's over-the-top-crazy lady acting.  And Gary Sinise's gross little goatee.


JACK AND JILL:  I make a promise to never see this film.  In fact, Adam Sandler will have to pull a pretty damn big rabbit out of a hat for me to care about anything he does ever again.  This looks just offensively bad.  And the fact that Al Pacino has sunken so low to be a part of dreck like this?  Shameful.

--Brad