by Lani
Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)
4/17: Guest Programmer William Daniels
8 PM - 1776 (1972)
11 PM - A Thousand Clowns (1965)
1:15 AM - Dodsworth (1936)
People of my generation will know actor William Daniels as Mr. Feeny from 90s sitcom Boy Meets World (younger folks may know the character from the spin-off series Girl Meets World). Others may recognize him from his Emmy-winning role on 80s hospital drama St. Elsewhere. But, he's also had a long career on the stage and screen, and his programming picks tonight include two of his own films in which he reprised a successful stage role. First up is 1776, a musical about the second Continental Congress and the creation of the Declaration of Independence, in which Daniels stars as founding father John Adams, reworking his acclaimed performance from the Broadway production for film. The numerous and lengthy debates, compromises, and votes are fascinating for any history buff (despite a bit of dramatic invention), though the witty dialogue and snappy songs keep it from feeling like a stale history lesson. The second film of the night, A Thousand Clowns, has a much smaller scope, centering on a New York City bachelor, played by Jason Robards, who is the guardian for his young nephew. When Robards quits his job, his ability to provide for the child is called into question and a social worker, played by Daniels in another reprise of a stage role, threatens to remove the child from his uncle's care. For his final pick of the night, Daniels chose the 1936 drama Dodsworth, starring Walter Huston. Daniels admires Huston's acting here in a role that Huston had previously played onstage (a theme tonight!). Huston's Dodsworth is a successful businessman living a comfortable life in middle age. His frustrated wife begins an affair which provokes Dodsworth to pursue a new life with another woman. It is a mature drama about adult people, with no contrived circumstances. Though times and social expectations have changed since the 30s, the film still plays well today.
4/20: What a Character!
8 PM - On the Town (1949), Florence Bates
10 PM - By the Light of the Silvery Moon (1953), Mary Wickes
12 AM - The Long, Long Trailer (1954), Marjorie Main
2 AM - Rear Window (1954), Thelma Ritter
Throughout the month, TCM is highlighting character actors of Hollywood's golden age - the unsung heroes of many classic films. I singled out this evening's line-up because it features some of the best character actresses of all time. If you don't recognize the names, you'll certainly recognize the faces. These ladies bring texture to many a glossy film with their talent for cracking wise as maids, matrons, nurses, or other supporting characters.
In the energetic musical On the Town, Florence Bates has a small, but memorable turn as Vera Ellen's stern, and apparently inebriated, ballet teacher. Then we get Mary Wickes playing the housekeeper (she was always the housekeeper) for the central family in the quaint musical By the Light of the Silvery Moon. Marjorie Main was well known for her leading role in the Ma and Pa Kettle films, but tonight you see her in a supporting role as a nosy neighbor in The Long, Long Trailer. Finally, we are treated to a performance by Thelma Ritter, an actress who received six Best Supporting Actress Oscar nominations between 1951 and 1963, but never won. She appears as James Stewart's nurse in Rear Window.
4/21, 8 PM - An Affair to Remember (1957)
This film is part of a month-long spotlight on post-WWII melodramas, and it's definitely one of the biggies. The story was originally filmed in 1939 and again in 1994, both times under the title Love Affair. However, the 1957 film, starring Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr, remains the best-known version. From the poster, you'd think that Grant and Kerr are, well, kissing in Italy...across an ocean...and all over New York; but that would be misleading, as the two have a fairly chaste romance. They strike up a friendship on board a Transatlantic ocean liner heading from Europe to New York. Though both are involved with other people back home, Grant and Kerr's relationship blossoms into love. After landing in New York, they agree to reunite in six months at the Empire State Building. But will they? Not before quite a few tears are shed.
The film received four Oscar nominations, for cinematography, costumes, original score, and original song for An Affair to Remember (Our Love Affair), sung by Vic Damone over the opening credits.
4/27, 2:15 AM - Bells Are Ringing (1960)
I saw this film for the first time just last year and it was so charming, I had the experience of thinking, "Oh, why did I wait so long to see this? To think I could have had Bells Are Ringing in my life sooner!" This is a film adaptation of a Broadway musical about an operator for a telephone answering service who gets too involved in the lives of her clients. Judy Holliday won a Tony on Broadway for her portrayal of operator Ella Peterson and reprises that role here. As Ella, she's bubbly, bright, and warm; she has a big heart which gets her into trouble sometimes, but enough pluckiness to pull herself out of any jam. It's possibly the most "Judy Holliday" of any Judy Holliday character, which isn't so surprising when you learn that authors Betty Comden and Adolph Green created the role as an idealized version of their old friend, Judy Holliday. Dean Martin co-stars as a writer who gains new motivation and inspiration after meeting Ella.
This was Holliday's final performance on film; however, her final screen credit came in 1965's A Thousand Clowns (see above). The title song was composed by Holliday's boyfriend Gerry Mulligan with lyrics supplied by Holliday. Unfortunately, she died far too young, of cancer at age 43, before the film was released.
Sunday, April 16, 2017
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Classic Movie Picks: March 2017
by Lani
Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)
3/2, 11 PM - What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962)
I'm sure that many classic movie fans are intrigued by the new TV mini series Feud: Bette and Joan, centered on the tumultuous relationship between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford during the filming of Baby Jane. Feud, starring Susan Sarandon as Davis and Jessica Lange as Crawford, premieres March 5, so this is the perfect chance to see the film at the center of the series.
Davis and Crawford play sisters, Jane and Blanche, who both went into acting and now live together in a decaying Hollywood mansion. While Jane achieved early success as a child star ("Baby Jane"), Blanche eventually surpassed her sister and achieved stardom and respect as an adult. After Blanche is paralyzed in a car accident, she is left in the care of the increasingly unhinged Jane. The two women engage in a psychological battle as Jane torments Blanche while also entertaining hopes of reviving her stardom.
The success of Baby Jane created a brief sub-genre of "grande dame" horror films, in which a glamorous actress-of-a-certain-age is psychologically and physically terrorized or does the tormenting herself. Notable titles included Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte with Olivia de Havilland and Davis, Whatever Happened to Aunt Alice? with Geraldine Page, What's the Matter with Helen? starring Shelley Winters and Debbie Reynolds, and Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? also starring Winters. The genre ran out of steam in the early 70s, or maybe just ran out of questions to use as titles.
However, my favorite coda to the making of this film came at the Academy Awards in 1963, when Davis was nominated for Best Actress, but Crawford was not. Crawford had contacted all the other nominated women and offered to accept the award on their behalf, should they be unable to attend the ceremony. So, when the Best Actress award was announced for Anne Bancroft, who was in New York at the time, it was a glowing Crawford who ascended the stage to accept the Oscar.
The film will also air on 3/22 as part of the "March Malice" programming series spotlighting villains on film. There are a lot of great films in the line up, from noir to westerns to sci-fi.
3/16, 12 AM - The Incredible Journey (1963)
TCM is opening the Disney Vault this month and has programmed four shorts and six movies themed around the great outdoors. The gem of the group is The Incredible Journey, a live-action film starring animals based on a book by Irish author Sheila Burnford. The main characters are Bodger (an old bull terrier), Tao (a Siamese cat), and Luath (a yellow Labrador Retriever), treasured pets of a family living in the Canadian countryside. When the family must travel to England for the summer, the pets are left on a friend's farm in Ontario. Feeling confused and homesick in their new surroundings, the three animals set off to cross over 200 miles of Canadian wilderness to return to the home they know. Of course along the way they have many adventures including encounters with wild animals - including a lynx, a bear, and a porcupine - as well as humans. The two dogs and cat are not provided with voices (as they are in the 1993 remake Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey), but their journey is narrated by the frequent voice of Disney nature documentaries Rex Allen. Author Burnford found inspiration for the story from her own pets and adopted home in Canada. Pet lovers are sure to see their own furry friends in the three main characters and may find themselves tearing up by the end of this one.
3/17: Irish Heroines
1:45 AM - Ryan's Daughter (1970)
5:15 AM - Little Nellie Kelly (1940)
In honor of St. Patrick's Day, TCM has scheduled a day's worth of films which take place in Ireland or feature Irish characters. I'm interested in these two films which both feature an Irish heroine; however, that's about where the similarities between them end.
Ryan's Daughter is an epic following in the footsteps of director David Lean's previous three films Doctor Zhivago, Lawrence of Arabia, and A Bridge on the River Kwai. The film is set in a small coastal Irish village during WWI and centers on three characters caught in a love triangle -- a schoolteacher and his wife, played by Robert Mitchum and Sarah Miles, and a young British officer, played by Christopher Jones -- and pulled apart by conflicting loyalties of Irish nationalism and British rule. The screenplay was written by 3-time Oscar winner Robert Bolt with his wife, Miles, in mind for the title role. Lean's knack for showcasing beautiful imagery while also creating intimate character portraits is on full display. Though a hit in the U.K., the Ryan's Daughter was not as popular in the U.S. as Lean's previous films (and Lean would not complete another film for 14 years!). However, it did receive Academy Awards for its cinematography and supporting actor John Mills, as well as nominations for Best Sound and Best Actress for Sarah Miles.
In Little Nellie Kelly Judy Garland plays dual roles as Irish immigrant Nellie Kelly and her daughter, Little Nellie. It's a light musical in which Garland must patch up differences between her father and grandfather, while also finding romance and becoming the toast of Broadway. Along the way she performs "It's a Great Day for the Irish" and a swinging version of "Singin' in the Rain." Though it was adapted from a George M. Cohan stage musical, the film contains only one Cohan song - "Nellie Kelly, I Love You" - sung by Garland's love interest Douglas McPhail. This was one of Garland's first adult roles and in addition to her impressive singing and dancing, she got a chance to show some dramatic chops with a death scene, a birth scene, and her first on-screen romantic kiss.
3/19: Lesser-Known Lubitsch
8 PM - Cluny Brown (1946)
10 PM - Bluebeard's Eighth Wife (1938)
Ernst Lubitsch directed over 70 feature films in both his native Germany and, beginning in the 1920s, in Hollywood. In his heyday of the 30s and 40s, Lubitsch was considered one of the top comedy directors in Hollywood and he helmed such classics as Trouble in Paradise, Ninotchka, and The Shop Around the Corner. His ability to find moments of sophisticated grace and visual wit was nicknamed "the Lubitsch Touch."
Cluny Brown was the last completed film directed by Lubitsch. Jennifer Jones stars as the title character, a young woman of humble means with a knack for plumbing. Charles Boyer is her love interest, a poor Czech intellectual living off the hospitality of the British upper crust. The two characters create a commotion as they upend social norms at a country estate. The film satirizes the British aristocracy in the pre-WWII years and though it was a hit with American audiences, the Brits were not amused. (So much so, that English actor Sir C. Aubrey Smith felt the need to apologize to his homeland for appearing in the film.)
Bluebeard's Eighth Wife is not often listed among its director's greatest works, but with talents like Lubitsch, Claudette Colbert, Gary Cooper, David Niven, and Edward Everett Horton (and the list goes on) working together, I'd say even an imperfect film is worth watching. Colbert is one of my favorite actresses and here she is doing what Colbert did better than anyone - wearing fabulous clothes and wittily rejecting the advances of a millionaire. Said millionaire, played by Cooper, has been branded a modern-day "Bluebeard" after being married and divorced seven times, each with a hefty settlement for the ex-wife which is certainly better than what Bluebeard's wives got. Colbert sets out to get the best of this inveterate ladies man by agreeing to marry him, but intending to get a divorce and live comfortably on her own settlement. For those keeping score, I'd say the bit with the pajamas is an example of the Lubitsch touch.
Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)
I'm sure that many classic movie fans are intrigued by the new TV mini series Feud: Bette and Joan, centered on the tumultuous relationship between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford during the filming of Baby Jane. Feud, starring Susan Sarandon as Davis and Jessica Lange as Crawford, premieres March 5, so this is the perfect chance to see the film at the center of the series.
Davis and Crawford play sisters, Jane and Blanche, who both went into acting and now live together in a decaying Hollywood mansion. While Jane achieved early success as a child star ("Baby Jane"), Blanche eventually surpassed her sister and achieved stardom and respect as an adult. After Blanche is paralyzed in a car accident, she is left in the care of the increasingly unhinged Jane. The two women engage in a psychological battle as Jane torments Blanche while also entertaining hopes of reviving her stardom.
The success of Baby Jane created a brief sub-genre of "grande dame" horror films, in which a glamorous actress-of-a-certain-age is psychologically and physically terrorized or does the tormenting herself. Notable titles included Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte with Olivia de Havilland and Davis, Whatever Happened to Aunt Alice? with Geraldine Page, What's the Matter with Helen? starring Shelley Winters and Debbie Reynolds, and Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? also starring Winters. The genre ran out of steam in the early 70s, or maybe just ran out of questions to use as titles.
However, my favorite coda to the making of this film came at the Academy Awards in 1963, when Davis was nominated for Best Actress, but Crawford was not. Crawford had contacted all the other nominated women and offered to accept the award on their behalf, should they be unable to attend the ceremony. So, when the Best Actress award was announced for Anne Bancroft, who was in New York at the time, it was a glowing Crawford who ascended the stage to accept the Oscar.
The film will also air on 3/22 as part of the "March Malice" programming series spotlighting villains on film. There are a lot of great films in the line up, from noir to westerns to sci-fi.
3/16, 12 AM - The Incredible Journey (1963)
TCM is opening the Disney Vault this month and has programmed four shorts and six movies themed around the great outdoors. The gem of the group is The Incredible Journey, a live-action film starring animals based on a book by Irish author Sheila Burnford. The main characters are Bodger (an old bull terrier), Tao (a Siamese cat), and Luath (a yellow Labrador Retriever), treasured pets of a family living in the Canadian countryside. When the family must travel to England for the summer, the pets are left on a friend's farm in Ontario. Feeling confused and homesick in their new surroundings, the three animals set off to cross over 200 miles of Canadian wilderness to return to the home they know. Of course along the way they have many adventures including encounters with wild animals - including a lynx, a bear, and a porcupine - as well as humans. The two dogs and cat are not provided with voices (as they are in the 1993 remake Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey), but their journey is narrated by the frequent voice of Disney nature documentaries Rex Allen. Author Burnford found inspiration for the story from her own pets and adopted home in Canada. Pet lovers are sure to see their own furry friends in the three main characters and may find themselves tearing up by the end of this one.
3/17: Irish Heroines
1:45 AM - Ryan's Daughter (1970)
5:15 AM - Little Nellie Kelly (1940)
In honor of St. Patrick's Day, TCM has scheduled a day's worth of films which take place in Ireland or feature Irish characters. I'm interested in these two films which both feature an Irish heroine; however, that's about where the similarities between them end.
Ryan's Daughter is an epic following in the footsteps of director David Lean's previous three films Doctor Zhivago, Lawrence of Arabia, and A Bridge on the River Kwai. The film is set in a small coastal Irish village during WWI and centers on three characters caught in a love triangle -- a schoolteacher and his wife, played by Robert Mitchum and Sarah Miles, and a young British officer, played by Christopher Jones -- and pulled apart by conflicting loyalties of Irish nationalism and British rule. The screenplay was written by 3-time Oscar winner Robert Bolt with his wife, Miles, in mind for the title role. Lean's knack for showcasing beautiful imagery while also creating intimate character portraits is on full display. Though a hit in the U.K., the Ryan's Daughter was not as popular in the U.S. as Lean's previous films (and Lean would not complete another film for 14 years!). However, it did receive Academy Awards for its cinematography and supporting actor John Mills, as well as nominations for Best Sound and Best Actress for Sarah Miles.
In Little Nellie Kelly Judy Garland plays dual roles as Irish immigrant Nellie Kelly and her daughter, Little Nellie. It's a light musical in which Garland must patch up differences between her father and grandfather, while also finding romance and becoming the toast of Broadway. Along the way she performs "It's a Great Day for the Irish" and a swinging version of "Singin' in the Rain." Though it was adapted from a George M. Cohan stage musical, the film contains only one Cohan song - "Nellie Kelly, I Love You" - sung by Garland's love interest Douglas McPhail. This was one of Garland's first adult roles and in addition to her impressive singing and dancing, she got a chance to show some dramatic chops with a death scene, a birth scene, and her first on-screen romantic kiss.
3/19: Lesser-Known Lubitsch
8 PM - Cluny Brown (1946)
10 PM - Bluebeard's Eighth Wife (1938)
Ernst Lubitsch directed over 70 feature films in both his native Germany and, beginning in the 1920s, in Hollywood. In his heyday of the 30s and 40s, Lubitsch was considered one of the top comedy directors in Hollywood and he helmed such classics as Trouble in Paradise, Ninotchka, and The Shop Around the Corner. His ability to find moments of sophisticated grace and visual wit was nicknamed "the Lubitsch Touch."
Cluny Brown was the last completed film directed by Lubitsch. Jennifer Jones stars as the title character, a young woman of humble means with a knack for plumbing. Charles Boyer is her love interest, a poor Czech intellectual living off the hospitality of the British upper crust. The two characters create a commotion as they upend social norms at a country estate. The film satirizes the British aristocracy in the pre-WWII years and though it was a hit with American audiences, the Brits were not amused. (So much so, that English actor Sir C. Aubrey Smith felt the need to apologize to his homeland for appearing in the film.)
Bluebeard's Eighth Wife is not often listed among its director's greatest works, but with talents like Lubitsch, Claudette Colbert, Gary Cooper, David Niven, and Edward Everett Horton (and the list goes on) working together, I'd say even an imperfect film is worth watching. Colbert is one of my favorite actresses and here she is doing what Colbert did better than anyone - wearing fabulous clothes and wittily rejecting the advances of a millionaire. Said millionaire, played by Cooper, has been branded a modern-day "Bluebeard" after being married and divorced seven times, each with a hefty settlement for the ex-wife which is certainly better than what Bluebeard's wives got. Colbert sets out to get the best of this inveterate ladies man by agreeing to marry him, but intending to get a divorce and live comfortably on her own settlement. For those keeping score, I'd say the bit with the pajamas is an example of the Lubitsch touch.
Monday, February 27, 2017
Best Pictures #39: 2016 Academy Awards, My Pick for Best Picture
by A.J.
I didn't respond to any of the 2016 Best Picture nominees the way I responded to Arrival. It's rare that a science fiction film actually focuses on science instead of using the genre as a more interesting background for an action/fantasy story-- exactly what is the science in Star Wars? And, too often, when a science fiction film does focus on science it is to the detriment of the human aspect of the story. This is not the case with Arrival. It is a science fiction film brimming with pathos and thought provoking ideas.
There's so much to enjoy in Arrival: a new take on alien invaders, solid and even restrained filmmaking, and an excellent performance from Amy Adams. I was just as moved when I saw this film a second time as I was the first time I saw it in theaters. Perhaps the main reason for that is Adams' performance. The written language of the aliens is inventive and intriguing, as are the ideas it raises about language and time. The ideas it presents are interesting to ponder and move the story forward. Arrival is a serious science fiction film but it is also very entertaining. Genre conventions and references to other sci-fi movies are in the background, not the foreground, letting audiences enjoy this movie without constantly being reminded of other films in the same genre. Director Denis Villeneuve and screenwriter Eric Heisserer have crafted something poetic and profound.
Best Pictures #39: 2016 Academy Awards
My Pick for Best Picture
The 2017 Academy Awards ceremony for films released in 2016, held on February 26th, will go down in history for its unprecedented, weird, wild twist ending. La La Land, with its 14 nominations, was the front runner in nearly every category according to betting markets, critics, insiders, and amateur prognosticators. The night started out with some surprises, most notably Hacksaw Ridge winning two Oscars for Editing and Sound Mixing--giving veteran sound mixer Kevin O'Connell his first win after a record 21 nominations without a win. Though it took home the most awards of any film at the 89th Academy Awards with a total of six, La La Land unexpectedly underperformed and, most surprising of all, did not take home Best Picture.
Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway were the presenters of the Best Picture award at the end of the night. Beatty opened the envelope looked at the card, looked confused, then checked the empty envelope again, hesitated for a moment, then checked the envelope again. After a long awkward moment, he handed the card to Dunaway who read: La La Land. Two of the three producers of La La Land had gotten through their acceptance speeches and the third was about to speak when there was commotion on stage. The expressions of people on stage in the background were of confusion and disbelief. It was La La Land producer Jordan Horowitz that announced to everyone that, in fact, Moonlight had won Best Picture. Some of the La La Land cast and crew on stage were visibly, and justifiably, upset, but Horowitz was the epitome of class and dignity and graciously turned over the Oscar to the producers of Moonlight.
The accounting firm of PricewaterhouseCoopers counts all the of Oscar ballots and tabulates the winners, which are placed in the official envelopes and put in a locked briefcase handcuffed to a representative from the firm. For practical reasons, there are two sets of envelopes. Should anything happen and an envelope is missing, there is a backup. A close up freeze frame of the envelope in both Beatty and Dunaway's hands reveals that category on the envelope is: Actress in a Leading Role.
They were simply handed the wrong envelope. Beatty said that he opened it, it said "Emma Stone-La La Land" and he didn't know what to do, so when he showed it to Faye Dunaway she just read the name of the movie. Host Jimmy Kimmel tried graciously to take all the blame for the mix up saying that it was his fault and he won't be back next year. In reality, Kimmel was one of the best and liveliest hosts the Oscars has had in quite some time.
They were simply handed the wrong envelope. Beatty said that he opened it, it said "Emma Stone-La La Land" and he didn't know what to do, so when he showed it to Faye Dunaway she just read the name of the movie. Host Jimmy Kimmel tried graciously to take all the blame for the mix up saying that it was his fault and he won't be back next year. In reality, Kimmel was one of the best and liveliest hosts the Oscars has had in quite some time.
Early on in the night I thought: wouldn't it be nice if an independent film with no big name stars, about a troubled gay black man wins over the big Hollywood musical about the greatness of Hollywood? Then it didn't happen and La La Land won...then it did happen! I would not have voted for La La Land, but it would by no means be the Best Picture winner with which I most disagreed. It is a fine movie, but, frankly, I've seen it before, and I've seen it done better before. La La Land is simply another musical. Moonlight is filmmaking that approaches poetry. It takes a step back from the events happening to its main character, Chiron, allowing you to experience what he is experiencing. Moonlight is an art film, but it is open with its emotions and thus engaging. It is a special film that I've grown to like more and more.
I'm very glad that Moonlight won, but it is still not the way I would cast my vote...
My Pick for Best Picture of 2016: Arrival
There's so much to enjoy in Arrival: a new take on alien invaders, solid and even restrained filmmaking, and an excellent performance from Amy Adams. I was just as moved when I saw this film a second time as I was the first time I saw it in theaters. Perhaps the main reason for that is Adams' performance. The written language of the aliens is inventive and intriguing, as are the ideas it raises about language and time. The ideas it presents are interesting to ponder and move the story forward. Arrival is a serious science fiction film but it is also very entertaining. Genre conventions and references to other sci-fi movies are in the background, not the foreground, letting audiences enjoy this movie without constantly being reminded of other films in the same genre. Director Denis Villeneuve and screenwriter Eric Heisserer have crafted something poetic and profound.
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Best Pictures #38: 2016 (89th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee, Hacksaw Ridge
by A.J.
Best Pictures #38:
2016 (89th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee
Hacksaw Ridge is a good film, but too uneven to be a great
film. There is noticeable talent at work both in front of and behind the
camera. It has received a total of six Oscar nominations for Best
Picture, Director (Mel Gibson), Actor (Andrew Garfield), Editing, Sound Mixing,
and Sound Editing. Noticeably, and rightfully, not among those nominations is
the screenplay by Andrew Knight and Robert Schenkkan, which is by far the
clunkiest element in an otherwise well-made, well-acted war film.
It seems like a paradox that a movie about a pacifist should
be so bloody and gory, but the incredible true story of Desmond Doss, the first
conscientious objector to win the Congressional Medal of Honor, is exactly
that. Doss saved the lives of 75 fellow soldiers at the gruesome Battle of
Okinawa in 1945 without even carrying a gun. Andrew Garfield plays
Doss, a Seventh Day Adventist who enlisted as a combat medic during World War
II, despite his vow to never touch a gun or take a life. His beliefs and
refusal to use a weapon—not even for target practice—does not win any favor
with his army superiors or fellow soldiers.
There are two distinct halves to Hacksaw Ridge: Doss’s life
and experiences stateside at home in Virginia and at basic training, and his experience at the
Battle of Okinawa. It isn’t just Doss’s religious beliefs that compel him to
never use firearms. We see him as a child nearly kill his brother with a brick
during a fight. There is also his abusive, alcoholic father, Tom, an emotionally and psychologically scarred veteran of
WWI,
played with a superb performance by Hugo Weaving. A brighter side of his life in Virginia is his sweet romance with a nurse
named Dorothy, played by Teresa Palmer. They marry and he enlists in the army. If
there were so many people taking life in the war, Doss thought, then he would
be one person saving life. The movie stops just shy of making Doss into a saint
thanks to Garfield’s performance. He makes Doss a believable person of strong
conviction and goodwill.
When Doss arrives at basic training we meet characters with
names like: Vito, Tex, Hollywood, Smitty, and Grease. You might think that
Hacksaw Ridge accidentally used the screenplay of a war movie from the 1940s
or 50s (and one that would’ve been clichéd even then). There is scene after scene of
ham-fisted dialogue of people underestimating Doss, then realizing that they
had him all wrong. It’s a bit much, but just as soon as you’re ready to write
off Hacksaw Ridge, it wins you back, usually thanks to one of the strong performances. It’s at basic training that we meet Vince Vaughn (the lone
American in a cast of Brits and Australians) as Doss’s tough and
serious, but somehow hilarious, sergeant. It’s a role that is perfect for Vaughn. He’s great at
delivering amusing insults to the new recruits, but his stern face and
formidable stature, especially when confronting the slender Andrew Garfield—Vaughn
is 6’5” after all—make him quite intimidating. Like Doss, he’s a character you
believe because of the talent of the performer.
Hacksaw Ridge really shines in its second half at the Battle
of Okinawa and the skillful direction of Mel Gibson takes the film to another
level. Frantic, hellish, and horrific violence and battle sequences are what he
excels at, but he never loses the underlying humanity that the first half of
the film builds. The scenes set in Virginia are also well done, but only Gibson
could craft the second half of this movie. Doss spends three days on the
battlefield, day and night, finding wounded and dying soldiers and taking each
one to safety by lowering them down a steep cliff one by one. Each time, Doss
asks God to help him get one more. This film revels in blood and guts but it
does not glorify or make war seem adventurous. It makes war look dirty and
gross and frightening and bloody and scary and awful.
I’m perplexed that the movie telling the true story of
Desmond Doss is steeped in war movie clichés. It’s almost frustrating. These clichéd
scenes with stiff, uncreative dialogue occur throughout the movie. It is the excellently
shot battle scenes and great performances from Andrew Garfield,
Vince Vaughn, and Hugo Weaving that make the film substantial. Despite its
flaws, Hacksaw Ridge has enough quality moments and performances to make it
well worth watching.
Nominees: Bill Mechanic, David Permut, producers
Director: Mel Gibson
Screenplay: Andrew Knight and Robert Schenkkan
Cast: Andrew Garfield, Vince Vaughn, Sam Worthington, Hugo
Weaving
Production Companies: Pandemonium Films, Permut Productions,
Vendian Entertainment, Kylin Pictures
Distributor: Summit Entertainment, Icon Films
Release Date: November 4th, 2016
Total Nominations: 6, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Director-Mel Gibson, Actor-Andrew
Garfield, Editing-John Gilbert, Sound Mixing-Kevin O'Connell, Andy Wright,
Robert Mackenzie, Peter Grace, Sound Editing-Robert Mackenzie, Andy Wright
Saturday, February 25, 2017
Best Pictures #37: 2016 (89th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee, Hidden Figures
by A.J.
Best Pictures #37:
2016 (89th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee
I’m not surprised at all that there are still untold stories
of the early days of the space race and NASA. I’m also not surprised that one
of those stories is of the crucial role played by intelligent African American
women. Hidden Figures is the story of
three of those women: Katherine G. Johnson (Taraji P. Henson), Dorothy Vaughan
(Octavia Spencer), and Mary Jackson (Janelle Monáe) whose work helped send men
into space. The film that tells their inspirational and genuinely interesting
story is, unfortunately, a conventional one.
In the early 1960s NASA was based in Langley, Virginia;
both Virginia and NASA were segregated. Stress and frustration levels are high
at NASA as, at this point in the space race, the U.S. was routinely surpassed by
the Soviet Union. It is in this climate that our three heroines find career and
life changing circumstances. Katherine Johnson, a mathematical prodigy, is
assigned to the elite (and all white and all male) Space Task Group to create
and compute—Johnson’s official title is “computer”—the calculations for Alan
Shepard’s spaceflight and John Glenn’s historic orbit. Mary Jackson is working
with engineers to construct the Mercury capsule, but needs to further her
knowledge of physics to remain with the project. This means she has to seek the
permission of a judge to attend night classes held at an all-white high school. Dorothy Vaughan is
the supervisor of the “colored” computer division at NASA, all she lacks is the
official title and pay. When she discovers that an IBM computer is being
delivered that will make her staff obsolete, she sets about teaching herself
and then her staff computer programming. Each has an overwhelming job to
accomplish and they have to do so in the face of institutional racism and
sexism.
Though this is an ensemble movie, the focus is Henson’s
character, Katherine Johnson. Her scenes working with the Space Task Group are
what keeps the story moving. Kevin Costner plays Al Harrison, head of the Space
Task Group, as a stern man of few words whose main concern is results. Jim Parsons plays the lead member of the group whose main concern is having Johnson
compute his calculations, write up his reports, and expecting her to stay
silent and in the background. She, of course, does not and a big dramatic
speech ensues. Did such a moment actually happen? Perhaps. Many scenes in Hidden Figures feel simultaneously true
and contrived or embellished for the sensibilities of a 21st century
audience. These scenes, however, are still satisfying because the racism and
prejudice, both casual and direct, these women experienced is so awful and
absurd that it feels good to see it confronted. Did Al Harrison really end
segregation at NASA by ripping the steel “colored bathroom” sign down with a
crowbar? I wouldn’t be surprised if this scene was more symbolic than factual,
but it’s very satisfying to see happen.
Hidden Figures is
directed by Theodore Melfi in a very straightforward, conventional way. It is
most concerned with telling a true and inspirational story and making sure the
audience leaves the theater with a warm, happy feeling. It does this quite
well. There are good performances from the three leads (Octavia Spencer has
picked up a Supporting Actress Oscar nomination) and the film moves along at a
steady pace. Snappy one-liners and Johnson’s romance with a Colonel played by Mahershala
Ali (who has a Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for his role in Moonlight), take Hidden Figures to the brink of feeling like a made-for-TV movie,
but thankfully the cast and the Oscar-nominated screenplay by Allison Schroeder
and Theodore Melfi keep the movie on track. As a film, Hidden Figures is nothing out of the ordinary, but its story and
cast make it enjoyable.
Nominees: Peter Chernin, Donna Gigliotti, Theodore Melfi,
Jenno Topping, Pharrell Williams, producers
Director: Theodore Melfi
Screenplay: Allison Schroeder and Theodore Melfi, based on
the book by Margot Lee Shetterly
Cast: Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer, Janelle Monáe
Production Companies: Fox 2000 Pictures, Chernin
Entertainment, Levantine Films, TSG Entertainment
Distributor: 20th Century Fox
Release Date: December 25th, 2016
Total Nominations: 3, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Adapted Screenplay- Allison Schroeder and
Theodore Melfi, Supporting Actress-Octavia Spencer
Friday, February 24, 2017
Best Pictures #36: 2016 (89th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee, Lion
by A.J.
Best Pictures #36:
2016 (89th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee
It’s odd that Lion
is a film based on a true story, yet its premise seems familiar: a young man
searches for the family he was separated from as a young boy. Yet, the events
in Lion are so improbable-but-true
that you can’t help but be surprised and awed at how the life its main
character, Saroo Brierly, unfolded. Lion
tugs at your heartstrings and stirs up emotions in all the ways you would
expect and… it works. If you cry at movies, you’ll likely feel the tears flow
while watching Lion and that’s okay.
There are two distinct parts to Lion. In the first half, we see little Saroo living with his mother
and older brother in a poor rural village in India. His older brother, Guddu,
takes random chores and odd jobs to help support their family. One night, a new
job means traveling by train at night. Saroo is eager and excited to help, and
Guddu reluctantly brings him along. Guddu leaves Saroo at a train station and
tells him to wait while he sees about the job. Saroo falls asleep and wakes up
in the middle of the night to find the train station deserted. He calls out for
his brother and looks for him on an out of service train which springs into
service and takes him thousands of miles away from his home.
Young Sunny Pawar, who plays Saroo as a child, is remarkably
good on screen. His wide-eyed precociousness helps him survive on the streets
of Calcutta where he doesn’t speak the local language and can’t pronounce the
name of his hometown. He finds his way into an orphanage that seems too similar
to a prison, but it is here that he is adopted by an Australian couple played
by Nicole Kidman and David Wenham.
A jump in time takes us to the second part of the film. As a
young man, Saroo, now played by Dev Patel, feels more Australian than Indian.
He is disconnected from his Indian heritage until a chance sense memory
inspires him to track down his original home and mother and brother. It is at
this point that Lion treads close to cliché territory. Dev Patel has many
scenes where he is moody, depressed, and conflicted about his quest. Does
searching for his real mother mean he’s ungrateful to his adoptive mother? The
movie seems more concerned with the mechanics of how he finds out where his
childhood village in India is (with much internet research and Google Earth),
than with what is going on inside of the characters. Older Saroo’s emotions,
which should be driving the second half of Lion,
feel more obligatory than earned. That’s not to say that when the big scenes in
this movie come they don’t bring pathos. The final scenes of Lion are genuinely moving.
I wouldn’t say that Lion
is an uneven film, but from a technical standpoint the best part of Lion is young Saroo’s near dialogue free
journey through the streets of Calcutta. He encounters uncaring adults,
seemingly kind but actually sinister adults, and journeys by foot in a
direction that he hopes will take him home. Director Garth Davis keeps the
camera and the audience at a distance from young Saroo, giving this sequence the
feel of a documentary. Every unlikely encounter young Saroo has seems
unfortunately believable. It is a piece of incredible filmmaking that the rest
of Lion doesn’t equal.
Dev Patel has some good scenes of emotional dialogue with
Kidman and Rooney Mara, playing his supportive girlfriend. Mara is good, as
always, but doesn’t have much else to do aside from be supportive. The actors
handle these scenes well—Patel and Kidman have picked up Supporting Actor and
Actress Oscar nominations, respectively. It is their interactions that keep the
audience engaged. This is ultimately an uplifting and heartwarming story and
the sentiment doesn’t feel forced. You may feel like you’ve seen this kind of
movie before, and I’m sure you have, but Lion
is still worth watching.
Nominees: Iain Canning, Angie Fielder, Emile Sherman,
producers
Director: Garth Davis
Screenplay: Luke Davies, based on the book A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley and
Larry Buttrose
Cast: Dev Patel, Sunny Pawar, Nicole Kidman, Rooney Mara
Production Companies: See-Saw Films, Aquarius Films, Screen
Australia, Sunstar Entertainment, The Weinstein Company
Distributor: The Weinstein Company, Transmission Films,
Entertainment Film Distributors
Release Date: November 25th, 2016
Total Nominations: 6, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Adapted Screenplay-Luke Davies,
Supporting Actor-Dev Patel, Supporting Actress-Nicole Kidman,
Cinematography-Greig Fraser, Original Score-Dustin O'Halloran, Volker
Bertelmann
Labels:
Academy Awards,
Australia,
Best Picture nominee,
Best Pictures,
Dev Patel,
India,
Lion,
Nicole Kidman,
Oscars
Thursday, February 23, 2017
Best Pictures #35: 2016 (89th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee, Arrival
by A.J.
Best Pictures #35:
2016 (89th) Academy Awards Best Picture Nominee
We’ve been lucky enough to have had some excellent science
fiction films recently—Interstellar
in 2014, and last year’s Best Picture nominee, The Martian in 2015—and Arrival
is among them. Those films, like Arrival,
are not just fantasies, they are pro-science. The main characters are
scientists or science minded people that use available information and
resources to solve incredible problems. To borrow a phrase from NASA, they
“work the problem.” This is what Amy Adams does as Louise Banks, a
world-renowned linguist tasked with figuring out how to communicate with
recently arrived alien beings. She doesn’t have much time, as the mysterious
alien spaceships have appeared all over the world and world governments are
nervous and frantic to figure out why the aliens are here.
You’re likely to be reminded of other science fiction films
about “first contact”: Close Encounters of the Third Kind (in which François Truffaut also tries to communicate
with aliens), Contact, and The Day the Earth Stood Still to name a few. The alien
spaceships might even remind you of the monolith in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. The aliens
themselves look like creatures from the fiction of H.P. Lovecraft. But Arrival is far from derivative; it is the
perfect example of what should happen with a new entry to a well tread genre. We’ve
seen movies about aliens arriving on Earth before, but we’ve never seen one
quite like this.
There are of course visual effects and computer generated
images, but this film does not center around effects or spectacle. At the heart
of Arrival is an incredible performance
by Amy Adams that was inexplicably not nominated for Best Actress at this
year’s Academy Awards. Adams excels at using small facial expressions and her eyes
to convey clearly, but quietly what her characters are thinking and
experiencing and that’s exactly what she does here. Her performance makes the
character of Louise relatable and grounds the entire film in genuine emotion
even as it moves into heady sci-fi territory. We have no trouble believing that
Louise is the foremost authority on language and are frustrated when military
and government officials (played by Forest Whitaker and Michael Stuhlbarg,
respectively) stand in her way or won’t listen to her conclusions. We are with
her every step of the way, even if we don’t know what it all means.
Even though Arrival
does not go out of its way to simplify or explain itself, it never becomes
inaccessible and only becomes more intriguing and entertaining as the story
unfolds. Did I understand the intricacies and logic of Arrival’s climax? I think so. Regardless, I understood what was
happening well enough to be thoroughly satisfied and moved emotionally. The
Oscar nominated cinematography by Bradford Young and score by Johann Johannsson
contribute greatly to the movie’s tone and along with skillful direction by Denis Villeneuve, a smart screenplay by Eric Heisserer, and, perhaps most of all, an
amazing performance by Amy Adams elevate Arrival
from just another science fiction film to something profoundly affecting.
Nominees: Shawn Levy, Dan Levine, Aaron Ryder, David Linde, producers
Director: Denis Villeneuve
Screenplay: Eric Heisserer, based on the story “The Story of
Your Life” by Ted Chiang
Cast: Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, Forest Whitaker
Production Companies: Lava Bear Films, 21 Laps
Entertainment, FilmNation Entertainment
Distributor: Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures Releasing
Release Date: November 11th, 2016
Total Nominations: 8, including Best Picture
Other Nominations: Director- Denis Villeneuve, Adapted
Screenplay-Eric Heisserer, Cinematography-Bradford Young, Editing-Joe Walker,
Sound Mixing- Bernard Gariépy Strobl, Claude La Haye, Sound Editing- Sylvain
Bellemare, Production Design- Patrice Vermette (production design) Paul Hotte
(set decoration)
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