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Monday, February 4, 2013

February 2013

February 2013

Trash (Morrissey, 1970)|||||5
Let Each One Go Where He May (Russell, 2009)|||||7.5
Bike Boy (Warhol, 1967)|||||4.5
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (Lynch, 1992)|||||7
Tomatos Another Day (Watson, 1930) (short)|||||+
Heartbeats (Dolan, 2011)|||||5
The Strange Little Cat (Zürcher, 2013)|||||8.5
Hellzapoppin' (Potter, 1941)|||||7.5
Over Here (Jost, 2007)|||||6.5
God's Step Children (Micheaux, 1938)|||||6.5
Mandingo (Fleischer, 1975)|||||7.5
A film of rot and unsalvageable humanity and unresolvable stakes, so deep in its chaos that - for very clear godforsaken reasons - the big victim here is white women... in a slavery picture.
Secret Ceremony (Losey, 1968)|||||8.5
The Blood of Jesus (Williams, 1941)|||||7.5
Cosmopolis (Cronenberg, 2012)|||||7
Darling (Schlesinger, 1965)|||||6.5
Fahrenheit 451 (Truffaut, 1966)|||||5.5
The Space Children (Arnold, 1958)|||||6.5

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

January 2013

January 2013

Yelling to the Sky (Mahoney, 2011)|||||4.5
The Masseurs and a Woman (Shimizu, 1938)|||||6.5
Mr. Thank You (Shimizu, 1936)|||||6.5
The Deer Hunter (Cimino, 1978)|||||6.5
Bewitched (Gu) (Kuei, 1981)|||||4
Tabu (Gomes, 2012)|||||7.5
Interesting and ponderous. An experimental epic, infusing blood to history, contrasting it with our contemporary malaise of disconnection from the conditions and events around us.
Two Seconds (LeRoy, 1932)|||||6.5
Safe in Hell (Wellman, 1931)|||||8.5
The Manitou (Girdler, 1978)|||||3
Zero Dark Thirty (Bigelow, 2012)|||||7.5
"Her compulsively watchable film brings a global exchange of unthinkable pain down to earth while still retaining the essence of its ineffability. Zero Dark Thirty is ultimately about unknowable cost...  Joseph Jon Lanthier" - Slant's Top 25 of 2012 List
The film's an apology all right. Not for torture, but for recklessness and institutionalized power that is just how the political, operative world works, and seems to have self-realized itself - been compacted into a purest density, a brilliant, malignant diamond - in modern times, as in this decade of drones, air operations, air surveillance, remote detainee camps, and remoteness in general, all to contestable "results." This film has worth as a document - if not in accuracy, in capturing the reality of reality's drab moral chaos. Bigelow's product is perhaps the closest the US has gotten to Assayas.
Dragnet Girl (Ozu, 1933)||||8
Rendez-vous (Techine, 1985)|||||7.5
Five Deadly Venoms (Chang, 1978)|||||6
Demonlover (Assayas, 2002)||||7.5
The Odd Life of Timothy Green (Hedges, 2012)|||||4
Les Miserables (Hooper, 2012)|||||5.5
This will be absolutely excruciating to some, while others - I'd call them those who aren't averse to, or even can appreciate, unashamed sentimentalism - will be moved by the film's earnest aesthetic search for extreme emotion and embrace of melodrama. I am in the latter group, while admitting this film is a nightmare of hollow slavishness to beloved but questionably valuable source material.
But color me surprised by how much I sort of love Hooper's "innovative" stylistic approach to the movie musical. His messy framing, brazen "gritty" mise en scene, handheld camera, proliferate close-ups and insert shots, and rambunctious montage editing of all these things make it seem at times like a musical made by a renegade rock n' roll filmmaker of the 60's/70's, while the "verité" filming doesn't bleed out the theatricality but actually supports the idea of our watching - and being addressed - their emotional appeals on high. This film has a sense of burlesque and theatricality that makes it feel a real honoring of theater traditions, which I'll admit makes Hooper a much more daring and honorary reviver of the ideal of the movie musical than Tim Burton.  Unfortunately this project was largely ridiculous from the word "Go."


Friday, December 7, 2012

December 2012

December 2012

Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (Ceylan, 2011)|||||7
* Jackie Brown (Tarantino, 1997)|||||8
* Kill Bill, Vol. 1 (Tarantino, 2003)|||||7.5
Django Unchained (Tarantino, 2012)|||||6.5
This is Tarantino making the piece of entertainment he's always wanted to make - so, knowing Tarantino's taste, this is an artistic disappointment. It's not a tonal piece or thematic work, it's finally Tarantino doing his honest-to-goodness exploitation flick: pure popcorn-muncher, with no structuralist pretensions, and rhetorical ones bromized to a salty dishwater by sheer dint of all the slackened fun. Tarantino is in Kill Bill mode here - busy, busy filmmaking, trying to channel the energies and capriciousness of the real filmmaking of olde - but without even Kill Bill's vigilant mood, control, and focus.
He tries his absolute damndest to make every minute come straight from the 70's or 90's (or Griffith), which of course results in filmmaking verve and truly palpable mise en scene which we're often starved of nowadays. But, still, all his minor efforts never transcend the lower ambitions set here, and the film's hodgepodge results in many mediocre patches and somehow no scene that equals the heights found in his previous films.

Augment the 70's filmmaking freedom with the scrappy 1990's sense of narrative propulsion (whereas Inglourious Basterds befuddled all expectation with its structural pacing, this film trots or montages along like Corbucci by way of any circa-English Patient historical pageant) and you end up with Django Unchained: a dumb grindhouse flick, or a perfectly conventional period epic - but a particularly intelligent and audacious one... which is the way one wants to describe those 70's pieces of detritus worth remembering (or dated 90's slogs worth remembering). Well done, Quentin, you've realized your dream film with what feels like a throwaway effort, and clearly your most slapdash picture. Also, probably the Tarantino film that moves at the fastest clip - a good sign of its disappointing convention.
But it's a great time - the screenplay is full of high points and some fascinating returns.
Amour (Haneke, 2012)|||||7
Something of a disappointment.  Beyond the inherent merit of Haneke tackling such worthy subject matter with his unsentimental sense of humanity, the screenplay he's written is so simple... it's a Haneke film with no surprises.  Too many inert metaphors, as well - SPOILER a pigeon and a dream sequence threaten to sink the picture. /SPOILER
V/H/S (Various, 2012)|||||4
The Hole (Dante, 2012)|||||6
* Silent Night, Deadly Night Part II (Harry, 1987)|||||3.5
Brilliantly bad. Highly pleasurable gonzo and irresponsible filmmaking.
* Black Christmas (Clark, 1974)|||||7
Holds up.  A tame slasher, but a gripping and dramatically excellent slasher - a rare achievement, worthy of savoring.
Argo (Affleck, 2012)|||||5.5
This is essentially an American film that half takes place in Iran and can pretty much be said to be about Iran, and it has that much going for it.  It's its better self when it is directly depicting the political history and functioning society of Iran.  Hugely uneven, though.  But Affleck remains a visually confident and earnest, even-handed filmmaker.
Oslo, August 31st (Trier, 2012)|||||7.5
The Pact (McCarthy, 2012)|||||4.5 
The Night Porter (Cavani, 1974)|||||5.5
* Tales from the Crypt: Demon Knight (Dickerson, 1994)|||||4.5
Mon Oncle d'Amerique (Resnais, 1980)|||||7.5
Je t'aime, je t'aime (Resnais, 1968)|||||6
* Only Angels Have Wings (Hawks, 1935)|||||8.5
Silver Linings Playbook (Russell, 2012)|||||5
Anna Karenina (Wright, 2012)|||||6
Entrance (Hallam & Horvath, 2012)|||||5
Mississippi Damned (Mabry, 2012)|||||4.5
* South Park: Bigger, Longer, & Uncut (Stone, 1999)|||||5
Le pont du Nord (Rivette, 1981)|||||6.5

Thursday, November 8, 2012

November 2012

November 2012

Looper (Johnson, 2012)|||||6.5
Holy Motors (Carax, 2012)|||||6.5
Intruders (Fresnadillo, 2011)|||||4.5
Beautifully filmed, cinematographically starry-eyed nonsense. An incredibly shaky narrative and thematic narrative, its obvious metaphorical aspirations obviously sending Fresnadillo and/or his screenwriters into an absolutely mad, self-aggrandizing filmmaking frenzy - filmmaking oftentimes awesome, to my begrudging admiration. Hilarious effigy scene.
We Won't Grow Old Together (Pialat, 1972)|||||8
Lincoln (Spielberg, 2012)|||||7
* Dead Man (Jarmusch, 1992)|||||6
* Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans (Murnau, 1927)|||||8
* Ménilmontant (Kirsanoff, 1926)|||||6

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

October 2012

October 2012

A Page of Madness (Kinugasa, 1926)|||||6
I Was Born, But... (Ozu, 1932)|||||7.5
* Paris, Texas (Wenders, 1984)|||||6.5
* Sherlock, Jr. (Keaton, 1924)|||||7
One Week (Cline, Keaton, 1920)|||||++
Helen (Nettelbeck, 2009)|||||3.5
Satantango (Tarr, 1994)|||||7.5
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (Sharman, 1975)|||||5
Paranormal Activity 3 (Joost & Schulman, 2011)|||||4
The slickest, sliest of the bunch, surely. But probably still not better than the first.
Early Summer (Ozu, 1951)|||||7.5
Blues for Willadean (Shores, 2012)|||||5
Brief Encounter (Lean, 1945)|||||7.5
Sinister (Derrickson, 2012)|||||4
A morbid, but pretty useless and moribund piece of weird tale capitalizing: useless in its thematic cocktailing (Fame! Marriage! Something nothing to do with anything!), moribund in its groundless plotting and its valiant effort to adapt the narrative novelty of creepy internet tales and other short-form occult material (instead of Hollywood beginning-middle-endings) but completely failing to be either consistently creepy or much better than that formulaic studio crap.  It's a little better, but the trailer was simply 10x scarier. Derrickson handles a mid-film marriage squabble quite well, though, as well as a general fabric of real drama, which is just kind of really refreshing in today's drama-inept horror output.
* The Man With the Movie Camera (Vertov, 1929) (live accompaniment)|||||??
The live accompaniment was, let's just say, a detriment.
Lawrence of Arabia (Lean, 1962)|||||8.5
"And David Lean. Like Dr. Zhivago and of course Lawrence of Arabia. All of David Lean’s movies blew my mind." - Tobe Hooper
Jules and Jim (Truffaut, 1962)|||||8.5
The Invisible War (Dick, 2012)|||||5.5
F for Fake (Welles, 1973)|||||8
* Brigadoon (Minnelli, 1954)|||||7

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

September 2012

September 2012

Of Time and the City (Davies, 2008)|||||7.5
Offers the pragmatism I missed in The Long Day Closes.  Beautiful digital photography.  The archival footage, though, loses one's interest often.
The Long Day Closes (Davies, 1992)|||||7.5
An unrepentant and ambling nostalgia trip, which can only win me over so far, but it's certainly the most highly astute and achingly poignant of the stripe.  The most beautiful ending I have ever seen.
Broken Blossoms (Griffith, 1919)|||||6
Mamma Roma (Pasolini, 1962)|||||8.5
Lust for Life (Minnelli, 1956)|||||8.5
The Bad and the Beautiful (Minnelli, 1952)|||||8.5
The Music Lovers (Russell, 1970)|||||5
The Hemingway Night (Mairs, 2009) (short)|||||++
Jenny Mi Amor (Severance, 2011) (short)|||||++
The Master (Anderson, 2012)|||||5.5
Paul Thomas Anderson films all have the distinct feel of big, empty, air-filled vessels.  Whereas There Will Be Blood was a big, black, stupidly looming, hot-air-filled Hindenburg, The Master is actually a delicate big red tacky balloon. It's more uneven and far less competent than its predecessor (with pacing issues, lackadaisical scenes, etc.), but it becomes a quietly affirming film by the end, a story of man-as-animal and the suffering and vacant relations that are incurred when we try to delude ourselves otherwise.  *spoilers* Most touching is its allowing our main buddy protagonists Pheonix and Seymour Hoffman to be rather unscathed by its finish, even better off, by virtue of the genuine bond and symbiosis they create with each other, all while shrewdly glimpsing us Amy Adams's imperturbably self-shielded Peggy as the one seemingly capable of breaking apart at the seams with a monster inside.
The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser (Herzog, 1974)|||||7
* Notorious (Hitchcock, 1946)|||||8.5
And Again (Horne, 2010) (short) (non-fiction essay film)|||||+++
Late Spring (Ozu, 1949)|||||8
Amityville II: The Possession (Damiani, 1982)|||||4
Would've been a slightly-intrigued 4.5 if it didn't suddenly turn into The Exorcist at the three-quarter mark. Before then, this is often shockingly effective... in an awful, abusing kind of way.  Even before any evil forces come into the picture, the film is perverse in its presentation of the family unit, with all its repressions and resentments.  Besides the broad caricature of the boorish dad whom no one can possibly sympathize, the film has no sympathy either for the sweet (and dumb, small-minded) Catholic mother, the bright-faced, sexually blossoming young daughter, and the cusp-of-manhood, father-resenting young son.  And that's not to mention its glorious depiction of the innocent children when the family's two toddlers play an adorable game of PLASTIC BAG SUFFOCATION.  Let me applaud Damiani and screenwriter Tommy Lee Wallace (of Halloween III!) right now, they deserve it, and that I really mean.  But before it sounds like I'm recommending this movie... it's not terribly good, it's icky and morally obtuse, and I stopped paying it full attention once Priests: The Documentary began.
Amarcord (Fellini, 1970)|||||7
Father of the Bride (Minnelli, 1950)|||||7
Class Relations (Straub & Huillet, 1984)|||||8
Gothic (Russell, 1986)|||||5.5
Landscapes in the Mist (Angelopoulos, 1988)|||||6
The Tall Man (Laugier, 2012)|||||5.5

Saturday, August 4, 2012

August 2012

August 2012

* Twitch of the Death Nerve (Bava, 1971)|||||5.5
The Turin Horse (Tarr, Hranitzky, 2011)|||||5.5
Torture Garden (Francis, 1967)|||||5.5
ParaNorman (Fell & Butler, 2012)|||||5.5
In Praise of Love (Godard, 2001)|||||8
The Apparition (Lincoln, 2012)|||||1.5
Eventually painful.
Dracula 2000 (Lussier, 1999)|||||3.5
* Raising Cain (De Palma, 1992)|||||6
The entire film is never quite as good as the often sublime last fifteen minutes, but still supreme style and audacious entertainment. The fan re-cut of the film is a fascinating attempt, but it doesn't work at all, IMO, and so I greatly suggest all to stick to the studio cut. Like Touch of Evil and Halloween 2, another case of sometimes, the suits do know best.
Blood for Dracula (Morrissey, 1974)|||||6
Salem's Lot (Salomon, 2004) (TV miniseries)|||||2.5
The Awakening (Murphy, 2011)|||||5
It is no work of singularity, but judged simply as a dramatic work - part generic ghost flick, part character-driven BBC drama - this one is extremely well done.
Murphy has a solid sense of his story and some rich themes of survival-guilt and corporeal self-worth (as manifested in subject matter of wartime, school boy life, and nascent feminism, with a dash of sexual healing and colonialism), and it shows in some very apt mise en scene and striking directorial details - such as early scenes of deathly pale school boys running in packs, or a tit flash that is too good in its aplomb and its succinctness (there's also a penis flash, which makes me think Murphy really thought this through...).
It's pretty derivative of a certain film, but while the convolutions and final twists will annoy many, I don't regret them as they lead to the film's best sequence (of a complex, operatic nature) and a rich emotional ending.

Mill of the Stone Women (Ferroni, 1960)|||||6
* Vampyr (Dreyer, 1932)|||||8.5
The Burrowers (Petty, 2008)|||||5
Sansho the Bailiff (Mizoguchi, 1954)|||||7.5
* Santa Sangre (Jodorowsky, 1989)|||||6.5
Beasts of the Southern Wild (Zeitlin, 2012)|||||4.5
J. Edgar (Eastwood, 2011)|||||7
Eastwood's thought of as a pretty dry filmmaker, and his films generally are, but his camera is actually always quite fanciful. No exception here, where his flighty camera movements and unpretentious dramatic intuitiveness surprisingly fits Dustin Lance Black's screenplay of Todd Haynesian camp poeticism. And he really can pound the conceptual motifs (aka lots and lots of match-cuts) of history in cycle/progression, and institutions in growth/stagnation.
More existential reverie couched in history than plodding biopic, thanks to Black's achronological structuring and concerns of the more personal, emotional, and philosophical nature. Not too political, then, but it's clearly critical of the man and wary of the systems he helped create, if not in the scathing and comprehensive way the historical figure may have deserved.

Noami Watts somewhat steals the film with a subtly affecting performance in a very minimal role
.
Bend of the River (Mann, 1952)|||||7
La Belle Captive (Robbe-Grillet, 1983)|||||6.5
The Perfume of the Lady in Black (Barilli, 1974)|||||4.5