Showing posts with label Science Fiction Films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science Fiction Films. Show all posts

Friday, February 10, 2017

"Passengers" and The Week in Reviews

[I review the new movie "Passengers" as well as the DVDs "Holy Hell" and "Don't Breathe."  The Book of the Week is songwriter Carole Bayer Sayer's memoir "They're Playing Our Song."   I also bring you up-to-date with "My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project" with "Gertrud"]



Passengers



Jim Preston (Chris Pratt) is one of 5000 passengers in suspended animation on a space ship heading to a new planet over 100 years away to colonize it.  When Jim wakes up, he finds himself the only one awake -- 90 years too early!

***Warning: This review contains what might be considered a spoiler, so if you are one of those people who goes berserk when someone reveals a twist then read no further.  However, the "twist" isn't even really a twist, and you will see it very early in the film and there are still other plot twists to come, so, in my opinion, this isn't really a spoiler.  But like I said, if you like to go into your movies not knowing anything, better not read this because I certainly don't want you going ballistic and blaming me for ruining this film for you.
There, I have done my due diligence.***

Jim Preston is a mechanic hoping to start a new life on another planet.  He and 4,999 other passengers and a crew of over 200 are aboard the Avalon in suspended animation hoping to do the same thing.  Their new planet, Homestead II, is over 100 years away from Earth so not only will these passengers be starting a new life, they will be starting it in a new century.

En route, the ship is hit by a meteor and there are some mysterious malfunctions.  One of those malfunctions affects Jim directly.  It wakes him up and, though initially, everything seems cool - he is greeted by an animated flight attendant, shown the amenities of the ship and led to his cabin - he soon realizes that he is the only one awake.  Well, there is Arthur (Michael Sheen), but he is a robot/bartender. 

Jim does everything he can to try to find out how to save himself and put himself back to sleep.  However, once it has sunk in that he is indeed alone and, since the Avalon won't arrive at its destination for another 90 years, he is likely doomed to die of old age aboard the space ship, Jim accepts his fate, upgrades himself to the best suite, plays basketball, has dance contests with holograms and hangs out with Arthur, getting as drunk as he can.   But after a year has passed, all of that gets old, Jim is lonely, suicidal and a bit nuts and basically lets himself go. He starts looking like Tom Hanks in "Cast Away."  

Then he sees Aurora Lane (Jennifer Lawrence) sleeping in her pod.  He reads her profile and watches her application video about why she wanted to travel to the new planet.  He reads her books and sits next to her pod, talking to her.  Slowly he starts to fall in love with her.  Now he has a moral dilemma.  Should he wake her up so he has a companion, knowing that he is also dooming her to his fate?

He tries to resist, but, well, you know the answer to that or it wouldn't be a movie starring Chris Pratt and Jennifer Lawrence, now would it?  However, what will happen when she finds out he woke her up on purpose thus giving her a death sentence?

This film was hyped as a space movie with a love story, but if you are expecting that, you will be disappointed.  It's actually a love story that just happens to take place in space.  It's your typical boy-meets-girl, boy-loses-girl, boy-tries-to-get-girl-back story, except it's in a space ship.

But this is still an enjoyable movie, at least the first half is engrossing, and there is also some humor when Jim settles into his solitary routine and finds out just what his ticket entitles him to (let's just say that he is not a "gold star" passenger) and the repartee between him and Aurora is just plain good old rom com. The second half falls down a bit, though, as Jim and Aurora realize they must save the spaceship, when it REALLY starts to malfunction. Much has been made about the ending ruining this film.  I didn't get that.  It was about what I expected.

This is basically a two-hander and the weight of the film falls on Pratt and Lawrence. For most of the film, it's just Pratt and Lawrence as they get to know each other and eventually have sex and fall in love.  Though I like both of these actors, I have to say that I found the chemistry between them a bit tepid despite a scene where they have spontaneous sex on a table.  The sex could have been hotter.  If there is going to be sex in a movie, I want it to be hot! But that's just me...

Sheen does a good job as a robot bartender and adds a bit of humor while constantly polishing glasses and acting as de facto counselor as most good bartenders do.  Larry Fishburne shows up unexpectedly, and except for his adding a tiny bit of plotline, doesn't have much face time or much to do.

Directed by Morten Tyldum with a script by John Spaihts, this felt like a space age "Titanic," but without Celine Dion singing "My Heart Will Go on (you might find that a good thing)! The cinematography by Rodrigo Prieto is outstanding as are the special effects and the set decoration.  It's a beautiful film to look at.

Rosy the Reviewer says...it's not "Titanic," but it's an interesting love story starring two of our most popular actors.


 

***Some Movies You Might Have Missed***
(And Some You Will Be Glad You Did)!






Holy Hell (2016)



A documentary about a little known West Hollywood religious cult.

Will Allen, the director and "star" of this documentary, shares his experience as a young man when he was trying to understand his existence and the mystery of the universe.  So what do you do when you are raised Catholic and are questioning life?- why you join a cult, of course!

In 1985, Will was a young film student and he was also gay.  When he came out to his parents, his mother kicked him out of the house.  Will's sister had already joined a cult called "The Buddhafield," a group of people who were looking for "something more" run by the charismatic and mysterious, Michel, who liked to sport Speedos and Ray-Bans, so Will decided to join her.  Michel used your basic Eastern tenets of living in the now and no judgment to guide his followers.  When Will joined, he was made the filmmaker for the group, recording everything for posterity, so he had a birds-eye-view of the goings on.

Everything was going swimmingly - literally, naked pool parties and the like - but in year four, things started to get dark...as these things usually do when the leader gets that old taste of power and realizes he can manipulate his followers any way he wants. No sex was allowed among members, they couldn't read books, watch TV or listen to the radio.

Michel came up with something called "The Knowing Session," a way to find enlightenment.  Gee, I wonder what that could be....Oh, maybe something to do with....SEX?!  As time went by, despite some misgivings by some of the members, a sort of mass hysteria ensued as everyone fell into line with the more and more bizarre practices and demands of Michel.  It became one of those things where no one wants to say that the emperor is not wearing any clothes.

By 2001 people started to question (it took them this long?) and wanted to leave, but when they did, they were demonized, another common practice among groups like this.  Michel told those who wanted to leave that if they left, something bad would happen to them.  And then in 2006, it came to light that Michel had been having sex with all of the young men all along, despite the fact he acted like he was asexual and didn't want anyone else having sex.

Duh...

I couldn't help but yell at the screen, as I am wont to do upon occasion while watching DVDs at home - "WHAT IS THE MATTER WITH YOU PEOPLE???"

I grew up in the 60's and 70's and could have fallen for this kind of thing, though I was such a pragmatist and accused of being judgmental when I actually wanted to do something besides lie in the dark grooving on the latest Led Zeppelin album.  I wasn't very popular with the granola-eating, soul searching types.  Hey, I was in my twenties.  I thought I already knew everything.

As the public became aware of stories like "Heaven's Gate," "cult awareness" brought pressure on Michel and his followers, so he moved the group from L.A. to Austin.  There he decided everyone would build a theatre and learn ballet and put on a show -- a show they worked on for a year and then only performed for each other.

Turns out Michel was once a dancer with the Oakland Ballet.  Did he start out to become a cult leader?  The film doesn't really go there, but I don't think people do.  Did Jim Jones start out to become a cult leader who would eventually urge his followers to kill themselves?  Did David Koresh?  Did Marshall Applewhite?  It's hard to say but in all of those cases, it seems that megalomania set in, and this story is no exception. 

AND THEN...horrors.  Michel hadn't just been a ballet dancer.  Michel had been a PORN ACTOR.  Turns out his real name was Jaime Gomez and he was a wannabe actor who had a bit part in "Rosemary's Baby," until turning to porn.

Then everything really went to hell...holy hell!  The group fell apart and Michel disappeared, but Will eventually tracked him down in Hawaii where he had started ANOTHER CULT, now calling himself Ryji which means God King.  Will is able to confront Michel, who appears to be unrepentant.

During the course of the film, ex-members share why they were drawn in and at the end of the film, there is a montage of those who stayed, those who left and what happened to them.

This is about as close as we will ever get to watching a cult grow and how it all happens.  These were smart, good-looking young people whose search for "something more" led them to a charlatan.  A cautionary tale to be sure.

Rosy the Reviewer says...if you ever shake your head and wonder, how could someone join a cult?  Watch this film.




Don't Breathe (2016)



If you are a petty crook looking for a quick buck and think that breaking into the house of an old blind guy (Stephen Lang) and robbing him is a good idea...DON'T!

Some young people - Rocky (Jane Levy), Alex (Dylan Minnette) and Money (Daniel Zovatto) - think they can break into an old guy's house and rob him.  They want to do one last gig and then get the hell out of the wasteland that is Detroit.  Rocky wants to do it to get money to move to California and Alex loves Rocky.  Money just seems to want to do bad things. They know the old guy is an ex-army vet (that should be a clue right there - "Don't go in there, girl!), and he has gotten a settlement for his disability so they are certain he must have money in the house. 

The old guy may live in inner city Detroit but he lives in a neighborhood where no one else is around.  You know that old saying, "If a tree falls in a forest and there is no one around to hear it, does it make a sound?"  Well the saying for this film might be, "If an old blind guy lives in a house with no one else around, and you break into his house, will anyone hear you scream?"  He may be blind, but once he knows they are in his house and what they are up to, he goes on a rampage and the rest of the film is about those three kids trying to get OUT of the house, with a scary twist.  Don't all horror films have a twist?  How do you hide from a blind man?  You don't breathe!

Directed by Fede Alvarez, this is very much a "B" horror film starring unknown actors. The characters are not particularly fleshed out so it's questionable about whether you care what happens to them, but maybe that's the point.  Who are the bad guys here?  But it was a surprise box office hit and certainly will get your blood going and take your breath away!

Rosy the Reviewer says...moral of the story? Never underestimate us old folks!



 
***My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project***


215 to go!

Have YOU seen this classic film?




Gertrud (1964)


Gertrud (Nina Pens Rode) is a bored Danish housewife who decides to ease her boredom with a lover.

Gertrud, once a promising opera singer gave up her career and is now a bored housewife married to Gustav (Bendt Rothe), a boring lawyer.

The film begins with Gertrud and her husband, Gustav, talking in their drawing room.  The subject of one of Gertrud's old lovers comes up and Gertrud dramatically says, "I'm thinking of all the poor human beings who allow themselves to love..."  She says this looking off just barely into the camera.  In fact Gertrud has this habit of doing that, making some proclamation about love while looking longingly off into space.  In fact all of the characters do it.  They all talk about passion and love and betrayal but never once speak passionately or even look at each other. 

When her husband tries to kiss her, Gertrud pulls away and Gustav says..."I seek your lips and you give me your cheek."  You get the idea. When she complains that her husband works too much and loves his work more than her and says, "I don't want to be an occasional plaything," we know what that means, right?

So after a long drawn out scene, Gertrud eventually tells Gustav that she wants to leave him and that she is in love with another man.  There are actually three men in Gertrud's life: her husband, a young poet and a musician.  They all love her but because none of them is willing to put her before everything else in their lives, she rejects them all and eventually is alone, but still extolling the virtues of having loved.

Adapted from a 1906 play by Swedish playwright Hjalmar Soderberg, this was director Carl Dreyer's last film after a 40 year career in filmmaking, and it is famous as a two hour film that consists of only 90 shots and few set changes.

However, I found it to be very two-dimensional, almost like a cartoon, very staged and passionless for a story about passion.  Even when two people were talking to each other, they both didn't look at each other but instead addressed the camera.  So because of that, it is very difficult to judge the acting because obviously the director wanted it that way.  There is a certain poetry to the dialogue, but I'm sorry to say I was as bored as all of these characters seems to be.

Why it's a Must See:  "At its premiere in Paris, Gertrud was received with uncomprehending hostility by press and public alike.  Since then, it has come to be recognized as the last lapidary statement of one of the most individual of filmmakers -- a film, like its heroine, to be approached on its own terms."
---"1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die"

Rosy the Reviewer says...I agree with the press and the public.  After seeing this, I felt a little hostile.
(b & w, In Danish with English subtitles)





***Book of the Week***




They're Playing Our Song: A Memoir by Carole Bayer Sager (2016)



I am sure you know the songs "Nobody Does it Better," "I'd Rather Leave While I'm in Love" and "That's What Friends Are For," but you might not know who wrote the lyrics for those songs.  Well, it was Carole Bayer Sager, who not only wrote those songs, but hundreds more.  This is her story.

Sager, who I will refer to from time to time as CBS, shares her growing up years where she suffered with crippling, irrational fears about everything from imagined illnesses to flying, and it didn't help that she had an overbearing, overcritical and insensitive mother who passed on her own irrational fears to Carole. She admits in the book that her fears and desire to feel safe lead her to the wrong men.

While still in high school, Carole started writing songs with her girlfriend, Sherry, and they were signed by a publishing company to write songs, but though they worked together for three years, none of their songs were recorded.  However, when Sherry got married and gave up her collaboration with Carole, Carole signed with another company and collaborated with another composer, Toni Wine, which led to Carole's first recorded song, "A Groovy Kind of Love (first recorded by Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders and later by Phil Collins)," and she was off and running.

Though younger, CBS was a contemporary of Carole King who was writing songs in New York with her then husband, Jerry Goffen and their paths crossed briefly early in CBS's career when Carole King was already well-known.  CBS got up the courage to say that they should write a song together to which Carole King politely said, "Sure," but nothing came of it until later in both of their careers, whenthey actually did write some songs together.

As Carole's career progressed, she crossed paths with many famous people and she shares anecdotes.  She was best friends with Elizabeth Taylor (don't call her Liz!), wasn't a personal fan of Dionne Warwick's and has stuff to say about Clint Eastwood, David Foster and others. 

Carole had a three year relationship with Marvin Hamlisch which was more of a song-writing partnership than a romantic one, though marriage was briefly on the table.  However, their relationship will live in musical comedy history because it was the basis for the long-running musical "They're Playing Our Song." She has relatively nice things to say about Hamlisch, but not her husbands, one of whom was Burt Bacharach with whom she also wrote songs. She describes him as a germaphobe and calls him a narcissist. And those are the nice things! She contends that Hamlish didn't have any pop credentials when they met and Bacharach's career, despite his many, many hits in the 60's, was on the wane so she felt they were both attracted to her for her ability to craft pop hits.  Neither relationship lasted (Burt cheated).

She admits to being one of those women who didn't want to be confrontational so she sucked up her feelings, told the men what they wanted to hear, went along with them, all because she feared being alone and wanted to feel safe.  She used her song lyrics to express herself and say what she really felt.

"Alone for the first time, I asked myself why I kept repeating the same dramas with different men I was attracted to in my life.  Men who never really saw me...I kept choosing men I hoped would love me who could only see me as an extension of themselves.  Men who loved me for my talent, but not for myself...I was starting to understand that if I wanted a different result in my life, I couldn't keep walking down the same street and falling into the same hole.  I would have to put more value on myself and begin respecting and loving myself if I ever was going to be deserving of a man who really loved me."

See?  Even celebrities struggle with this stuff.

But happily she found love and a happy marriage later in life, and she finally felt that she was loved for herself and not just her musical talents.

She was not only a writing partner with Hamlisch and Bacharach but also Peter Allen, Barry Manilow, Neil Diamond and many others including Bob Dylan ("Under Your Spell").  She has written the lyrics to some of my favorite pop songs: Diana Ross's "It's My Turn," Patti LaBelle's and Michael McDonald's "On My Own," and the theme from the film "Ice Castles:" "Looking Through the Eyes of Love."

She describes her writing style:

"I prefer being in the same room with the composer.  He or she plays a couple of chords and I start to hear words and one line triggers a melody or a melody line triggers a lyric.  We become one, inspiring each other to write the best song we can, and if something sounds untrue or mundane or tired, we're both there to try for something better together...writing together will alwalys be my favorite way to craft a song."

Rosy the Reviewer says...wannabe songwriters will find this inspiring and those of us who like candid celebrity memoirs will find it juicy.


Thanks for reading!

 
See you next Friday 

 
for my review of


"Fences"


 
and
 
 
The Week in Reviews
(What to See or Read and What to Avoid)


 and the latest on



"My 1001 Movies I Must See Before 

 I Die Project." 


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Check your local library for DVDs and books mentioned.


Next time you are wondering whether or not to watch a particular film, check out my reviews on IMDB (The International Movie Database). 

Go to IMDB.com, find the movie you are interested in.  Once there, click on the link that says "Explore More" on the right side of the screen.  Scroll down to External Reviews and when you get to that page, you will find Rosy the Reviewer alphabetically on the list.

NOTE:  On some entries, this has changed.  If you don't see "Explore More" on the right side of the screen, scroll down just below the description of the film in the middle of the page. Click where it says "Critics." Look for "Rosy the Reviewer" on the list.

Or if you are using a mobile device, look for "Critics Reviews." Click on that and you will find me alphabetically under "Rosy the Reviewer."

Friday, November 18, 2016

"Arrival" and The Week in Reviews

[I review the new movie "Arrival" as well as DVDs "The Legend of Tarzan" and "Indignation."  The Book of the Week is Jeffrey Toobin's take on the Patty Hearst kidnapping "American Heiress: The Wild Saga of the Kidnapping, Crimes and Trial of Patty Hearst."  I also bring you up-to-date on "My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project" with the French classic "The Wages of Fear."]




Arrival


When 12 space ships land in various locations around the world, an American linguist is recruited to try to communicate with the aliens to discover why they have come.

Space ships that look like giant contact lenses have landed at various locations around the world.  There appears to be no rhyme or reason for why they landed where they did nor have the aliens inside announced why they have come or what they want. Task forces in all of the countries where a spaceship has landed have been formed and are in contact with one another, but each country differs on what should happen next.

Amy Adams plays Dr. Louise Banks, a college languages professor who, through a montage, we learn has lost her young daughter to a disease.  Louise lives alone and appears to be very lonely.  Because she is a leading linguist and had worked with the government before, when the space ships arrive, she is approached by Colonel Weber (Forest Whitaker) to be a part of the task force to try to communicate with the aliens.  She and scientist Ian Donnelly (Jeremy Renner) are transported to Montana, where the spaceship has landed in the U.S. and the U.S. military has set up camp.

The aliens don't appear to be hostile and allow the humans to board the spaceship every 18 hours for a 90 minute session with them behind a transparent wall, but since the humans don't speak alien and the aliens don't speak human, these have not been very productive sessions.  Hence we have Louise. 

The aliens are heptapods, which means they have seven legs and look like very tall jellyfish. They communicate by throwing out circular symbols, each circle being just enough different to indicate different words.

Louise starts the arduous task of trying to communicate with the aliens and to break the code of their language.  She holds up a sign that says "Human," points to herself, holds up another sign that says "Louise," points to herself, that kind of thing, and through these painstaking methods, Louise and Ian are able to begin to crack the aliens' language code and communicate with them.  However, it's a very slow process and they still don't have the vocabulary to find out why the aliens have come. 

For a time, all of the countries work together, but as time goes by, the other countries, who have also been trying to communicate with their particular aliens, are getting antsy, and, when one of the communications from the aliens seems to use the word "weapon," China decides it is time to blow their spaceship up.  Time is of the essence and the pressure is on Louise and Ian to avoid a war against the aliens, with whom Louise and Ian have formed a bond, and who they have dubbed "Abbott and Costello."

With a screenplay by Eric Heisserer (based on the short story "Story of Your Life" by Ted Chiang which won a Nebula Award for Best Novella in 2000) and directed by Denis Villeneuve, who directed the well-received "Prisoners" and "Sicario," this is not your typical alien invasion film.  If you are expecting an "Independence Day" type of alien film or even "Close Encounters of a Third Kind (which this film resembles early on), you might be disappointed.

Yes, this film is about spaceships and aliens...but it's much more that. This is more of an intellectual film and more of a sincere human story, more of Louise's story and what she learned about herself while working with the aliens. It's about loss and grief and time and the future and will have you reaching for a hankie at the end. 

However, despite the sincerity of this film, I have to say that I was disappointed, not because I was expecting a typical alien movie which is not my forte anyway, but because I found it to be too slow to get going, and it had too many "huh?" moments for me.  It also plays with time, and I am not a big fan of those kinds of movies, probably because I never understand them. I'm a very linear thinker or maybe I'm just not that smart. Whatever.  I can't say much more about the plot, or I will give it away, because there is a big payoff at the end that will tug at your heart strings, but for me, it just took too long to get there.

However, that said, I would venture to guess that Adams will get an Oscar nod for her performance, because it's very, very good, and Villeneuve could very well get a nod for his direction and/or the film could get a Best Picture nod because it's a beautifully made picture and lovely to look at.

Jeremy Renner is believable as the scientist foil for Louise and Forest Whitaker, is, well, Forest Whitaker.  Does that guy never smile?  I think he has always been like that.  When I saw "Fast Times at Ridgemont High" recently, where he played a high school football player in what looked to be one of his very first film roles, he didn't smile in that one either. 

Now, you might ask, how could I like a kind of silly film like "Mascots," which I reviewed last week, and gave a good review and have qualms about this one, a serious film with a message?  Well, here is my answer. 

First of all, I find Christopher Guest to be a brilliant satirist and commentator on popular culture, but that aside, I hold certain films to a higher standard than others.  My standard for a comedy?  Did I laugh?  My standard for a drama or message film?  Did it accomplish what it set out to do?  Did it move me?  In my opinion, this film did not. Though I could appreciate the acting and the production values, and though I felt something at the very end, most of the film left me cold, and it also left too much unexplained for my taste. 

But I certainly didn't hate it.  It just didn't blow me away like I think it wanted to.  However, others out there are raving about it and loved it, so I am not going to discourage you. I was in the minority on "The Martian" too, so this is one of those films I will not make a major pronouncement about and let you make up your own mind.

Rosy the Reviewer says...Amy Adams' performance is worth the price of a ticket, but as for the film experience, I am going to leave this one up to you. You will either love it or not, so let me know what you think


 
 

***Some Movies You Might Have Missed***
(And Some You Will Be Glad You Did)!

On DVD




The Legend of Tarzan (2016)


Tarzan (Alexander Skarsgaard) has already turned into a posh Londoner since being reunited with his family and his title as Lord Greystoke - real name John Clayton - (you remember he was brought up by apes, right?), but he is compelled to go back to his former home in the jungle to find out what is going on with some mining activities that threaten the environment and his friends.

It's 1884 and Tarzan is now living his rightful life as a lord of the manor in London with Jane after being discovered living amongst apes in Africa.  Remember?  There was a shipwreck, his mother dies, his father is killed by apes, but little baby Greystoke was rescued by a mama gorilla who raised him as her own. 

If you don't know that story, you get a bit of it in the film through flashbacks - the film jumps back and forth between Tarzan's life in the jungle and his life now - but that's mostly so we can see Skarsgaard with his shirt off.  It doesn't dwell much on the original story. So if you want to know more of the backstory, you should probably read the books or go back and see some of those old Johnny Weismuller films.  This film concentrates more on Tarzan's life after he was discovered living in the jungle so you won't get to hear him say, "Me Tarzan. You Jane."  I was very disappointed by that.

Anyway, Tarzan was brought up in the Belgian Congo (by apes, yada yada yada, we know all of that), and now the Belgian King Leopold who runs the Belgian Congo, is dead broke.  He sends his trusted advisor Leon Rom (Christoph Waltz (does he ever play anything but one note villains these days?) to the Congo to find a famous diamond which, if found, will solve the King's financial issues. When they arrive, Rom and members of the Belgian army engage with the natives, and Chief Mbonga (Djimon Hounsou), who doesn't like our Tarzan very much (in fact he hates him and we find out why later), tells Rom that he can have the diamond if he brings him Tarzan.  So Rom concocts a plan to lure Tarzan back to Africa. 

OK, I already have a question. 

How is it that Mbonga speaks English or can talk to Rom? 

Second question - why did Mbonga and his men kill all of the Belgian soldiers and not Rom? 

Obviously my mind is wandering, and I'm already starting to lose interest. 

Anyway, Rom lures Tarzan to the Congo by saying that the King has invited him to tour Africa.  At first Tarzan declines, but Dr. George Washington Williams (Samuel L. Jackson) just happens to be visiting from America and entreats John to go to help him find out if King Leopold is using slavery to keep the Congo running, because everyone knows he doesn't have a dime (this character is actually based on an actual person).  Dr. Williams goes with Tarzan, and so does Jane (Margot Robbie), who manages to talk Tarzan into letting her tag along, much to Rom's chagrin.  He thought Tarzan was going to be alone and easy pickins' but think again Mr. Rom!

Tarzan does get captured but escapes so then Rom kidnaps Jane and now the race is on to save Jane. Naturally Rom lusts after Jane and when she struggles he tells her he admires her spirit. 

Question #3: Why is it that movie bad guys, who lust after beautiful heroines, always say they admire the women's spirit while the women are struggling, spitting in their faces and trying to kick them in the you-know-whats? You would think they would prefer women who wouldn't be such a problem.

Anyway, those kinds of cartoon clichés abound.

However, on the up side, we also get to see Tarzan swinging from the trees and running really fast like the Six Million Dollar Man.  The trio does discover the slaves and when they are finally confronted by Mbonga, Williams entreats him to join forces with them to try to ruin Rom's plans and you can probably figure out how it's all going to go. All in all, nothing new here.

I liked Skarsgaard in "Diary of a Teenage Girl," so he's a good actor with a lovely accent but here his performance is so wooden he sounds like Liam Neeson (in his "Taken" films) playing The Rock

Question #4: So I have to ask. Alex, can I call you that?  What happened?

Robbie is gorgeous as usual and is always good, but doesn't get to do much here.  Samuel L. Jackson actually smiles benignly, as if he is really happy, which kind of shocked me.  I was trying to remember if I have ever seen him truly happy in a film, in a good way (as in not evil gloating). 

Question #5:  Sam, have I?

Directed by David Yates, there is a score that is lush and moody -- almost too lush and moody - and the set design and cinematography are all very dark and atmospheric.  The CGI animals are impressive: there is a wild buffalo stampede, alligators, gorillas, lionesses who Tarzan gets to nuzzle (old friends of Tarzan's). Everyone and everything gets into the act. So the movie is pretty to look at, but that's not enough to save the story itself, written by Craig Brewer and Adam Cozad, which is pretty preposterous. 

But to be fair, this is one of those films that I think was meant to be seen in a movie theatre where you could revel in all of that CGI and beautiful jungle scenery and Skarsgaard's abs and not think too much about the story.  It wasn't meant to be seen on the small screen in our living rooms. 

(Yates is most famous for directing many of the Harry Potter films, which I enjoyed, and most recently the Harry Potter prequel "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them," which opens in theatres today and which I also hope I will enjoy because I am reviewing it here next week).

But here is my main question: Why did we need another Tarzan movie?  And if we are going to have another one, where is Cheeta

Rosy the Reviewer says...if you love all things Tarzan, you might enjoy this, but I have to ask again: Did we really need another Tarzan movie?






Indignation (2016)


Marcus Messner (Logan Lerman), a young working-class Jewish boy from New Jersey, has a scholarship to a Midwestern college and is able to escape the draft for the Korean War but can't escape cultural differences and his own sexual repression.

The film begins in a nursing home where a woman is sitting in a catatonic state.

Flashback to a battlefield in Korea where an American soldier is being pursued by a Korean soldier.  Shots are fired.

Flashback yet again for the funeral of a young Jewish soldier in a Jewish community in Newark, New Jersey. Marcus Messner is attending the fumeral with his family.  He is a sheltered Jewish boy getting ready to go off to college in Ohio on scholarship, thus saving him from being drafted into the Korean War. His mother worries that he won't be able to keep kosher there and his father, the local butcher, worries that he will get into trouble cautioning him that the tiniest misstep can lead to tragedy. The pressure is on for Marcus to hold up his end of the family name.

Marcus is all work and no play, even shunning the Jewish fraternity that wants him.  But then he meets Olivia Hutton (Sarah Gadon), a beautiful blonde girl who is actually interested in him.  Olivia is far more worldly than Marcus and when they go on a date and she performs a sex act on him, he is shocked, judges her and ultimately tries to avoid her, starting a chain of events that show the kinds of sexual repression at work in the 1950's.  Because she did that with him, she must have done it with other boys, right? Olivia is beautiful and worldly, but it becomes clear that she is fragile. She admits to Marcus that she had tried to commit suicide and spent some time in a mental hospital.

When Marcus gets in a fight with his roommates, he asks for a single room, which leads Dean Caldwell (Tracy Letts) to meet with Marcus because he is worried about his isolation and fitting in poorly, a clear nod to the cultural differences at work here. Marcus is indignant that the Dean would dare lecture him and challenges the Dean, saying he has the right to socialize or not.  They also argue about religion (there is a requirement at the college that all students attend 10 chapels per year and Marcus bridles at this because he is an atheist), and the two develop an adversarial relationship where the Dean stands for the rules of the college and the mores of the times and Marcus stands for the freedom to choose one's own way in the world. 

Unfortunately, this adversarial relationship and the seemingly small choices that Marcus makes leads to tragedy, reminding us of what Marcus's father cautioned him about.  At the end of the film, we learn who the woman in the nursing home is, and that she is not catatonic, she is remembering.

Based on a book by Philip Roth and written for the screen and directed by James Schamus, the film feels more like an Arthur Miller play than a movie, but that's not a bad thing. This is a coming of age tale indicative of Roth's usual themes of religion, the sexual mores of the 50's and 60's and the difficulties in connecting to others. 

The actors are largely young unknowns, though Lerman made his mark as Percy Jackson and later in "Fury."  He is one of those actors who underplays and seems like a young Dustin Hoffman in "The Graduate." He is very endearing.  Sarah Gadon as Olivia is also wonderful.

My only complaint: Why is it that when a male writer or filmmaker wants to show us a damaged girl in the 1950's, she almost always shows her angst by being sexually promiscuous? I'm just asking. 

Rosy the Reviewer says...a lovely small film, beautifully acted and presented, that will remind you of "Atonement."



 

***My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project***
 




226 to go!

Have YOU seen this classic film?





Wages of Fear (1953)


In a dusty South American town, four men are recruited to transport barrels of nitroglycerin over treacherous roads.

Unemployed men from various parts of Europe populate an unnamed South American town. Yves Montand is Mario, a Frenchman, who spends his days sitting around talking with other expats, drinking, trying to make a buck here and there and flirting with the local floozy, Linda (Vera Clouzot), who appears to be the only young woman in the whole town and the only one who is overacting like mad (it should be noted that Vera is the director's wife so that explains a lot.  But I will give her a pass.  It was her first film). 

One day Jo (Charles Vanel) arrives by plane, and being another French guy, he and Mario quickly become friends.  Jo is on the run from something and hopped the first plane that would take him $500's-worth away from where he was.  Both Jo and Mario are dead broke, so they try to figure out how to make some money and no matter if it's illegal or not. 

Meanwhile, a big fire breaks out in an American oil field 300 miles away. Bill O'Brien (William Tubbs), the American owner of the local oil business, needs some men to drive some nitroglycerin over a mountain pass to the burning oil field so the workers can set off dynamite to staunch the fires.  Mario and Jo are first in line.  It's a dangerous trip over 300 miles of rugged, mountainous roads where the slightest bump could explode the nitro.  The trip needs to be done quickly and, despite the danger, the men in this town are desperate and willing to risk their lives to make this trek for the money.  And O'Brien is happy to exploit these men because they are considered expendable if something bad happens - "No one will come around causing trouble."

Two trucks will make the journey with two men in each truck.  Mario and Jo are in the first largest truck, with two other lost souls, Bimba (Peter Van Eyck) and Luigi (Folco Lilli), following as back-up in another.  As Jo tries to start the truck, it won't start, clearly an omen of what's to come. T

Thus begins the second half of the film: the tense journey with all kinds of obstacles that need to be overcome.

I am constantly amazed and happy by this little (or big) project I have undertaken (to see all of the movies in the book "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die"), because I am introduced to some really wonderful movies I would never have necessarily wanted to see...and this would be one of them.  As I always say, I don't really like movies about a bunch of men doing manly stuff, but I have to say this film is riveting.  The characterizations are superb (except for Linda) as is the script, and the black and white cinematography is exquisite.

For a two and a half hour movie about guys driving trucks on a dangerous South American road, the film moved along fast and furious and kept my attention throughout.  The ominous music added to the tension and you find yourself rooting for these guys, even though they are not very nice guys, but you do it because they are clearly being exploited (by American oil interests) because of their desperation. The suspense lies in the question, "Will they make it?" And with the money they will make, will they get out of that hell hole of a town?  Where will they go?  What will they do?  Will they turn their lives around? Or will it all be for nothing?"

This showcases some of Yves Montand's early work before he became known as a suave leading man. This role is a far cry from the French bon vivant he became in romantic comedies where he romanced Marilyn Monroe and then broke her heart, and it's a wonderful performance.

(Director William Friedkin remade this film in 1977 ("Sorcerer"), once again getting my dander up about American remakes of perfectly wonderful foreign language films. Difficult to believe that remake could be as wonderful as this film...and it wasn't).

Why it's a Must See: "A withering depiction of greed and the corrupting influence of capitalism disguised as an adventure film, Henri-Georges Clouzot's Wages of Fear is possibly the most tension-filled movie ever made."
---"1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die"

Rosy the Reviewer says...if you like beautifully made, tense macho films with lots of twists and turns (literally), or even if you are just a fan of TV shows like "Ice Road Truckers," this is for you.  You will find this film fascinating. 
(b & w, in English, French and Italian with English subtitles)


 

***Book of the Week***





American Heiress: The Wild Saga of the Kidnapping, Crimes and Trial of Patty Hearst by Jeffrey Toobin (2016)


On February 4, 1974 Patricia Campbell Hearst, a sophomore at U.C. Berkeley and heir to the Hearst family fortune, was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA), a group of self-styled revolutionaries. Her kidnapping and later decision to become one of them gripped the nation. 

Patty Hearst was engaged to a college professor and living a quiet life when she was kidnapped by the SLA.  Over the course of her capture, she appeared to go over to the side of the revolutionaries and become one of them. She put out communiques to the press calling herself Tania (after Che Guevara's lover and fellow revolutionary) and was seen holding a sawed-off shot gun during a robbery of a San Francisco bank. The group demanded that her father, Randy Hearst, feed the poor people of Oakland and San Francisco to secure her release. He did but Patricia was not released.

When most of the members of the group were killed in the largest police shoot-out in American history and the first breaking news event to be broadcast on live television across the country, Patty and the two remaining SLA members, Bill and Emily Harris, went on the run, helped by other ragtag left-wing groups, until they were all captured a year later.  When Patty was captured, she went on trial for her perceived crimes. Though when she was captured she was unrepentant, spouting radical rhetoric, she later said she had been forced to cooperate with the SLA. Was she a victim of the Stockholm Syndrome or a willing participant in the crimes the group perpetrated?

Jeffrey Toobin, whose book about O.J. was the basis for the Emmy Award- winning miniseries "The People vs. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story" turns his excellent eye and writing narrative to the story of Patty Hearst and her involvement with the SLA.  Based on more than 100 interviews and thousands of previously secret documents, this book captures the radical nature of the times (there were an average of 1500 terrorist bombings a year in the 1970's - so many that the news media stopped reporting on them).

Many of you are too young to remember this event, but no doubt you recognize the name. The story was a headline one for many years.  Did Patty become an SLA member on her own or was she brainwashed or coerced?  That is the question Toobin tackles.  He also brings us all up to date on what Patty's life has been like since her capture and trial and his views on the Presidential pardon she received in the 1990's.

I was living in Berkeley at the time of the infamous shoot-out and watched in real time on TV.  It was shocking but also a time when many young people were sympathetic to these kinds of self proclaimed revolutionaries, especially in Berkeley, so it was extremely interesting to relive it all 42 years later with more facts and insight than we all had back then.

I favor nonfiction, especially well written nonfiction, and Toobin is right up there with the best. 

His research is excellent, starting with Hearst's own book "Every Secret Thing," followed by his reading all of the trial testimony and FBI summaries, his viewing press interviews and media appearances and directly interviewing people who knew Patty or who played a major role in the events.  After his release from prison, Bill Harris had obtained the legal and investigative files from the defense teams in all of the prosecutions of the remaining SLA members and their associates, and Toobin was able to purchase those files from Harris.  Those files comprised over 150 boxes of material.

This is no puff piece about Patricia Hearst or an apologist view of the SLA. 

In fact, Toobin appears to not be a fan. Needless to say, Hearst did not cooperate in the publication of the book, though Toobin tried to contact her.  He is also clearly not in support of the Presidential pardon Hearst received in the 1990's. 

"Patricia Hearst was a woman who, through no fault of her own, fell in with bad people but then did bad things; she committed crimes, lots of them...To be sure, following her arrest in 1975, she was unlikely to commit these kinds of crimes again.  If the United States were a country that routinely forgave the trespasses of such people, there would be little remarkable about the mercy she received following her conviction.  But the United States is not such a country; the prisons teem with convicts who were also led astray and who committed lesser crimes than Patricia.  These unfortunate souls have no chance at even a single act of clemency...Rarely have the benefits of wealth, power, and renown been as clear as they were in the aftermath of Patricia's conviction."

Where is Patricia Hearst today? 

Today she is 62, a mother and a grandmother and a widow who likes to show dogs.  Her shih tzu named Rocket won top dog in the toy division at the Westminster Dog Show in 2015.

And such is life.

Rosy the Reviewer says...Baby Boomers will remember this story and Toobin does it justice, vividly bringing it back to life and giving the events context.  Nonfiction at its best.  Highly recommended!



Thanks for reading!
 
See you next Friday 

 
for my review of
 

"Moonlight"

 
and 

  
The Week in Reviews

(What to See or Read and What to Avoid)


 and the latest on



"My 1001 Movies I Must See Before 

 I Die Project." 

 

 
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