Ordinary People

Just another Rang De Basanti Blogs weblog

Feb
16

Howard the Duck (1986)

Posted by ordinarypeople

Howard T Duck, of Marvel Comics, might well demand a beef against Lucasfilm pro transforming his magnetic comic strip personality into a zipperless polyester duck-suit (filled interchangeably by eight different actors, each apparently guardianship four feet in height) in this vagrant moving picture. As it begins, its principal is zapped out of his tranquil life in Duck World and mysteriously transported to Cleveland, Ohio, where he meets the cue singer (Thompson) of an all-girl inferior league together. Moved by the violent, anarchic lyrics which flag to depths of depravity only previously reached by the kids from Repute, Howard takes an significance in the damsel. But the completing of their love must intermission, as the same forces which brought him to earth now put at risk the planet iself. In the final analysis, some wonderful special effects mercifully occupied in over as Jeffrey Jones is transformed into the destruction ‘Dark Overlord’ and slugs it effectively with one of the avoid-suited thespians.

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Feb
13

Jack the Bear review

Posted by ordinarypeople

In “Jack the Bear,” frightfulness-large screen TV host Danny DeVito introduces such uneasiness classics as “The Wolfman” and “The Fly” with growling relish. He brings the shtick home too, playing monster pro his two sons and the kids in the neighborhood. In this klutzy tearjerker, he’s justifiable one of myriad human beasts. Director Marshall Herskovitz takes this theme and tramps with it. You’d be wise to lift your feet or feel the crunch of poignance.

The year is 1972. DeVito and sons (12-year-old Robert J. Steinmiller Jr. and 3 1/2-year-old Miko Hughes) have just moved to Oakland, Calif., after the tragic death of DeVito’s wife. But they’ve merely exchanged one demon for a whole set of monsters.

On their new street, everyone seems to have been recruited from Central Casting’s Kooks & Psychos Department. Scowling neighbor Gary Sinise (John Malkovich’s protective companion in “Of Mice and Men”) mangled his leg in an auto accident. He shuffles menacingly around his yard with a walking stick, his car up on bricks.

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Bespectacled and strange kid Justin Mosley Spink lives with his grandparents because his parents deserted him. Irascible neighbor Art LaFleur yells all day at his retarded son. In this Bay Area neighborhood, the folks rant, rave, glare or hobble.

“I didn’t know yet what I was going to learn — that monsters are real,” says narrator Steinmiller.

You ain’t seen nothing yet, Steinie. Wait till Halloween, when little Spink knocks on your door dressed like a Nazi — costume courtesy of Sinise.

“Jack the Bear” isn’t a tearjerker. It’s a ball-and-chain jerker. Although DeVito puts emotional strength into his role, his heart-of-a-beast personality is a horse pill to swallow. He drinks too much. He bellows alarmingly at his wife’s meddlesome parents. When he finds out Sinise is a card-carrying goose-stepper, he drunkenly denounces him on television — embarrassing everyone. When Sinise takes further revenge, DeVito takes a baseball bat to Sinise’s car. But his heart’s in the right place.

Although similarly ankle-chained by bathos, Steinmiller is a likable personality. When he falls in love with classmate Reese Witherspoon, he stares into her eyes with gawky, touching rapture. But there’s only so much to be done with this ineptly mounted drama.

As for contrived coincidence, this movie is engorged with it. After a separation — in which those meddling grandparents (Stefan Gierasch and Erica Yohn) temporarily take away DeVito’s kids — Steinmiller decides to return to Dad. He happens to arrive on the same night that Sinise (who’s been missing for some time) decides to creep into the house for his final revenge. This is also one of those movies that uses stale baby-boomer rock hits (”Gimme Some Lovin’,” “Can’t Find My Way Home,” etc.) to comment on the story. It’s more than enough to Bear.

Feb
11

On Dangerous Ground (1951)

Posted by ordinarypeople

Jim Wilson, a tough New Zealand urban area cop, is on duty to investigate the extermination of a miss in countryside. There he meets Mary Malden, a unreasoning, attractive, and unearned girl. Unfortunately, things go wrong when her brother is the main suspect of the killing case.

Feb
10

A Mongolian nomad family find…

Posted by ordinarypeople

A Mongolian nomad ancestors find themselves in discordancy when the oldest daughter, Nansal, finds a dog and brings it home. Believing that it is accountable for attacking his sheep, her creator refuses to allow her to upkeep it. When it’s dead for now for the family to move on, Nansal must decide whether to repel her father and do the trick her additional partner with them. Oscar-nominated director Byambasuren’s reflect up to the hugely eminent THE EPIC OF THE WEEPING CAMEL is a thought provoking hobnob of documentary and drama that tells the dispatch of the years-old bond between man and dog, a bond which experiences a new twist through the eternal circle of reincarnation in Mongolia.

Feb
09

In the early 1970s, the Ameri…

Posted by ordinarypeople

In the early 1970s, the American talkie industry turned out a large number of “black exploitation” pictures, often directed by white filmmakers and populated by stereotypical images of African-Americans. These movies were doubtful, and in due course ceased production under animation from the NAACP and society at large, but they provided black audiences with cinematic heroes unseen in most Hollywood pictures prior to that time. Following the star of Black Caesar, released in early 1973, the executives at American International Pictures prevailed upon writer/director Larry Cohen to produce a sequel as quickly as possible. AIP guide Samuel Z. Arkoff insisted that the movie not be titled Black Caesar II, in requirement to avoid marketing confusion with the first film. This proved to be a shrewd decision, as the primordial was still in release when Hell Up In Harlem arrived, having been written, shot and released before the end of the same year.

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Fred Williamson returns as Black Caesar, a.k.a. Tommy Gibbs, a crime Christ in possession of damning ledgers listing payouts to dishonourable Uncharted York City officials. An assassination attempt on Gibbs at the cut off of Black Caesar leads at once into this supplement, as he escapes from the cops and obtains medical attention with the balm of his gun-toting associates. While recuperating, Gibbs recruits his father “Papa” Gibbs (Julius W. Harris) to coerce District Attorney DiAngelo (Gerald Gordon) into clearing him of all pending charges. DiAngelo’s goon officers shot to rid Papa Gibbs from the roof of a tall building, but he fights traitorously and earns a respected position in the gang. Soon, Tommy’s one time-not inconsiderable Papa is a pimped-out crime lord, running the business with an iron fist while his son recovers. Framer-son friction results when Papa has Tommy’s love interest from the cardinal film (Gloria Hendry as Helen) murdered, after which Tommy heads to Los Angeles with his new energy squeeze Jennifer (Margaret Avery), leaving the Harlem task in Papa’s predisposed to hands. Meanwhile, trusted aide Zack (Tony King) schemes to betray the Gibbs family, leading to a climactic, bi-coastal bloodbath.

The rushed nature of this oeuvre shows itself at every opportunity. The machinate is contrived and convoluted, designed to exaggerate fistfights and gun battles at the expense of credible motivation and suitable progress. Gunfights are unconvincing, with cap-gun sound effects and awkward squib hiring, dialogue is often clumsy, and blood is of the extremely modify “red paint” disparity. New York filmmaker Larry Cohen (who would go on to make the classic moonless comedy/horror films Q and It’s Alive!) works effectively within his budget, evoking a mettlesome urban cityscape and using a handheld camera for many shots, and he directs action sequences fairly effectively. But Cohen’s trademark humor only surfaces to sum up, most curiously during an extended, upward of-the-top confute between rivals that starts aboard a TWA jet and ends up on a baggage carousel as tourists duck concerning cover. The performances aren’t melancholy, given the documents, and D’Urville Martin (a warhorse of the Rudy Shaft Moore Dolemite films) contributes an pleasant performance as Reverend Rufus, a street evangelist and con man whose fictitious profession becomes his accurate calling.

Affliction Up In Harlem is in many ways a typical 1970s’ funereal exploitation look-alike, from the days when a movie was sold by its flier, actual content being on the brink of beside the import. Fred Williamson’s Tommy Gibbs is stoic, determined and ruthless in his battles against “the man,” and his anti-soporific stance is meant to be heroic, his other illegal activities though. It’s certainly action-packed, but the whodunit meanders from one site to another with little of crux between the fit to be tied set pieces. It’s played straight adequate to preserve continue it from being a retro-laughfest, but it’s not credible enough to be charmed seriously. Likely to be of interest primarily to collectors and fans of the genre.

Feb
07

A CIVIL ACTION Synopsis: Jan S…

Posted by ordinarypeople

A WELL-MANNERED ACTION

Synopsis:

Jan Schlichtmann is a cynical, high priced personal injury attorney who only takes big-money cases he can safely settle out of court. Though his latest case at first appears straightforward, Schlicchtmann soon becomes entangled in an epic battle…one where he’s willing to put his career, reputation and all that he owns on the line for the rights of his clients.-Back of the box spin.
I have to admit, Travolta put out an incredible performance in this film. If I could describe the intensity that propels it, it’s akin to the same powerful imagery and dialogue found in Erin Brockovich and The Rainmaker. Powerful, hard-hitting, gut wrenching at times and redemptive. All these and more are levels of intensity that you’ll experience while watching A Civil Action. Some have identified this as the best legal thriller …ever. I can’t give the film that kind of a send off but it is both gripping and extremely entertaining.

Audio/Video:

The audio is presented in a rich DD5.1 that more than adequately presents the film’s aural elements. For the most part, this is a dialogue driven film that relies heavily on stingers and the occasional thunderclap. The score is brilliantly moving and quite beautiful and it is the predominant aural texture interwoven throughout the listening space. The dialogue is clear and easily understood and the surrounds and LFE add a further level of sweetness to an already first rate audio presentation.
The video is equally impressive in it’s scope. The widescreen transfer is very striking and perfect in its presentation. There were no imperfections or transfer errors noted. The colors were rich and well saturated. The fleshtones accurate and blacks extremely black and true. In all an excellent transfer.

Extras:

The only extras included are the film’s theatrical trailer and a very brief 8-10 minute featurette on the making of A Civil Action.

Overall:

John Travolta is (or was after Battlefield Earth) experiencing resurgence in his career. His portrayal of this attorney was absolutely beautiful. Playing off experts like Robert Duvall, John Lithgow, Kathy Bates and William H. Macy definitely made for an intense experience and IMHO, Travolta stood toe to toe with them and gave as good as he got. There’s something about the attitude his character had that seemed to fit him to a “T”. I am a fan of legal drama and can be scathing when they miss the mark or never even come close. A Civil Action not only hit the mark, it nailed incredible performances by a top-drawer cast coupled with an excellent story. For the level of intensity, drama and performances from some of the industry’s best, A Civil Action is definitely among the best of the genre.

Feb
05

Noriko’s Dinner Table review

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Strange but suggestive, “Noriko’s Dinner Table” reps less a sequel to helmer Sion Sono’s anterior animus parody “Suicide Club” than an existential to. “Table” follows two teenage sisters who stream their identities to join a quasi-misuse ring. Although told through a cascade of flashes forward and second, the puzzle doesn’t a certain extent be made up of a whole idea by the stop, which may leave genre fans frustrated but the arthouse bunch intrigued. Either way, pic — which won special jury write about at Karlovy Vary — is too big by half and liking serve meager B.O. portions, but heartier meals on ancillary.

Pic is divided into five chapters, four of them named after major characters. Although each of the characters contributes a lengthy, overextended voiceover spiel explaining his/her thoughts and feelings, storytelling is highly fractured. Shots and scenes from different points in the story are jumbled together throughout to create a kaleidoscopic overall narrative — and what was probably an editing room nightmare.

The story, in correct chronological order rather than how it is actually told, goes something like this: The Shimabara family — journalist father Tetsuzo (Ken Mitsuishi), wife Taeko and their two daughters, 17-year-old Noriko (Kazue Fukiishi) and her younger sister Yuka (Yuriko Yoshitaka) — live in Toyokawa. Shy and vaguely unhappy, Noriko becomes obsessed with a Web site called Haikyo.com (literally “a deserted or abandoned place”), where she makes online friends with other teenage girls.

Noriko decides to run away to Toyko to meet Haikyo’s queen bee, Ueno54, who turns out to be a young woman named Kumiko (Tsugumi), a member of a bizarre group called Family Circle, semi-amateur actors for hire by clients in complex games of pretend.

Adopting her online nickname “Mitsuko,” Noriko joins Family Circle and begins to forget her former identity, especially after Kumiko forces her to watch the mass suicide of 54 schoolgirls at Shinjuku station, the key event in Sono’s “Suicide Club.”

Final act, much too long in the waiting, turns into a Grand Guignol bloodbath, involving the dining table of the title along with other household objects, resulting in a bizarre open ending that hardly answers the most pressing questions but has a compelling mystery about it.

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Overlap between “Noriko’s Dinner Table” and the gorier “Suicide Club” extends not just to the Shinjuku suicide scene and preoccupation with shadowy cults, but also to thematic interest in alienation and the generation gap. New film, which is big on the nature of role-playing and memory, feels a bit more pretentious, although the occasional scene or image manages to deliver a hefty wallop.

Thesping is mostly OK, though a little hammy, suggesting the helmer is more interested in moving characters like chess pieces around his board.

Lensing by Souhei Tanigawa, on what looks like a mix of DV and 35mm, is strikingly composed, although transfer is only so-so. Rest of tech credits are just average.

Feb
03

: One of the lessons we learn …

Posted by ordinarypeople

: One of the lessons we learn in most Hollywood movies is that with scarcely any exceptions, everything works out in the end. I’m told the rationalization is that happy endings sell more popcorn. Record the existence of independent films such as those released by companies such as Mistiness Moving. In their Trek release, they come us the licentious set of Morocco (remember Casablanca?) where drive children marshal out a living while being victimized by adults, other children, and level the arrangement itself. If this sounds privy to, it’s presumably because other films, including the excellent Salaam Bombay, apportion with similar controlled by matter. Adolescent exploitation is very much on the take-off provoke around the humanity and perchance seeing real sentience victims (the stars of this movie were street children just as the in the past mentioned large screen were) cast in the roles they were born to play might oblige a difference.

In Ali Zaoua, the story gets rough really quick. The movie is titled after a young lad who dies early on in the movie. Determined to give him a decent burial, a few of his friends move Heaven and Earth to do right by him. Most of the adults, including Ali’s hooker mother, don’t care much about the glue-sniffing losers they see the children to be. Among the dreams of a better life, and tidbits of animation, we get to see how they all prevail, within limitations. Here’s what the box says: “Nabil Ayouch’s Ali Zaoua is not only an extraordinary film, it is an accomplishment. The young people in the film are not professional actors, but real street kids (”chemkaras”) recruited from the streets of modern-day Casablanca. Blending cinematic fiction and reality, Ayouch patiently evokes natural and beguiling performances from the first time actors, where just as in the film; the street has become their home and their family.”

Picture: The picture was presented in 2.35:1 ratio Anamorphic Widescreen and looked very detailed with a multitude of textures. There was obviously a lot of thought that went into the composition of the movie on a technical basis and I noticed very few problems that weren’t related to conscious decisions on the part of Director Ayouch.

Sound: The audio was in Arabic with English subtitles in a Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo. For the most part, this aspect of the movie was also very clear and crisp.

Extras: A short film, The Architecture of Reassurance by Mike Mills, which explored the life of children in a much different setting than the feature. It was a bit less accessible than the feature to me but the underlying themes were interesting. Trailers to the feature and Marion Bridge, biographies of some of the cast and the Director of Ali Zaoua, and a paper insert of the movie closed out the extras here.

Final Thoughts: For all the diminished hopes of the children involved with this movie and the stark contrast between the background they suffered through and what I’m used to, I thought the movie was immensely enjoyable. There was little or no attempt to portray the leads as completely sympathetic and that only added to the reality of the message. The larger message, for me at least, concerned the disposable nature of lives in society and even in a rich country like ours, it’s a problem. I highly recommend this one to fans of foreign cinema and I’ll be looking for future efforts by this director (and company).

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Agree? Disagree? You can post your thoughts about this review on the DVD Talk forums.

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Feb
02

The Sleepy Time Gal review

Posted by ordinarypeople

Live action/special effects comedy. Starring Freddie Prinze Jr., Sarah
Michelle Gellar, Matthew Lillard, Linda Cardellini and Rowan Atkinson.
Directed by Raja Gosnell. Written by James Gunn. (PG. 87 minutes. At Bay Area
theaters.)



Two schools of thought will undoubtedly emerge about the big-screen version
of “Scooby-Doo”: Those who say it’s a logical extension of the televised
cartoon show that has captivated kids since 1969 and those who say it’s the
latest sign of Hollywood’s desperation to mine popular cartoon characters for
cinematic profit.

The first camp will see “Scooby-Doo” as a fun, innocuous way to spend 87
minutes, while the other camp will say it’s a sappy, formulaic vehicle that
exists to spawn sequels and merchandise. In which camp is this reviewer? For
now, let’s just say this: If you focus solely on the film’s acting, you come
away somewhat satisfied that Matthew Lillard (who plays the Shaggy beatnik
character), Freddie Prinze Jr. (the vain, spoiled Fred), Sarah Michelle Gellar
(cast as the beautiful Daphne) and Linda Cardellini (the brainy Velma) did the
best they could with their parts.

The plot? That has the mystery-solving team of Shaggy, Fred, Daphne, Velma
and their large, talking, animated dog, Scooby-Doo, flying to Spooky Island,
where a mysterious man named Emile Mondavarious (Rowan Atkinson) runs an
amusement park for college-age students on spring break. Lately, the students
have been undergoing odd transformations at Spooky Island, arriving as typical
thrill-seekers but leaving as stiff, brain-locked automatons. Who’s sabotaging
the theme park? That’s the question for the private investigating quintet.

The premise behind “Scooby-Doo” lets an animated dog and his best friends
roam around a tropical hideaway, enter strange buildings and — if they can
avoid getting hurt — unveil the secret behind all the monstrous mayhem.

For families with children, “Scooby-Doo” might be a fine way to while away
some time. For adults still hooked on the “Scooby-Doo” series (I hope that’s
not a sizable group), this film will also be fun. Others contemplating “Scooby-
Doo” will have to ask themselves this: Do you really want to spend money
watching what is essentially marginality, or would those dollars be better
used to see a better film or even buy a good book?



Advisory: This film contains some violence.

– Jonathan Curiel



‘LATE MARRIAGE’

POLITE APPLAUSE

Drama. Directed and written by Dover Kosashvili. (Not rated. 100 minutes.
In Georgian and Hebrew with English subtitles. At the UA Galaxy, Rafael Film
Center in San Rafael and Towne 3 in San Jose.)



Don’t expect another “Monsoon Wedding” from this tough-minded film about
arranged marriages between Soviet Georgian immigrants in Israel. Writer-
director Dover Kosashvili is a shrewd observer of cultural collision, and his
film — a stunning directing debut — is anything but sentimental about old-
country customs.

Zaza, played by the charismatic, sleepy-eyed Lio Ashkenazi, is a 31-year-
old graduate student in philosophy who keeps dodging his parents’ matchmaking
efforts. By his estimation, they’ve made 100 attempts to find him a wife: “The
ones I liked didn’t like me,” he shrugs.

Zaza isn’t gay; he’s not even overly picky. The real source of resistance
is his secret relationship with Judith (Ronit Elkabetz), a beautiful Moroccan
divorcee with a 6-year-old daughter. When Zaza’s family discovers the romance,
they converge on Judith’s apartment, humiliate her and threaten her life in
front of her daughter.

The brutal frankness of that scene is matched by a long, earlier episode
when Zaza and Judith have sex. The actors are naked and nothing is held back,
but Kosashvili doesn’t sweeten the moment with dramatic lighting or cunning
camera moves. It feels real, unvarnished, but is no less sexy for those
qualities.

Kosashvili focuses on character dynamics, lets scenes run on for a long
time and rarely moves the camera. “Late Marriage” at first feels flat and
enervated; after a while the pacing, lack of artifice and compelling story
create a kind of hypnotizing pull.

Ashkenazi and Elkabetz are sensational in the lead roles, struggling to
protect their love against the combined force of Zaza’s family. Zaza’s mother,
cold and invincible, is played by Lili Kosashvili, the director’s mother.



Advisory: This film contains nudity, sexual situations and rough language.

– Edward Guthmann



‘THE SLEEPY TIME GAL’

POLITE APPLAUSE

Drama. Starring Jacqueline Bisset, Martha Plimpton and Nick Stahl. Directed
by Christopher Munch. (Not rated. 94 minutes. At the Roxie Cinema.)



“The Sleepy Time Gal” is a smooth, elegiac mood piece about a free-spirited
woman who is hit with a terminal illness while in her prime. As part of her
coming to terms with her stormy life, she searches for the daughter whom she
gave up for adoption years before — even as her biological daughter embarks
on a search for her.

Directed by Christopher Munch, the film is semiautobiographical, based on
the story of the director’s mother. It’s at times moving and at other times
slow, but what makes the film compelling is the mood it instills in the
audience, a mood very much like the melancholy and disorienting cloud that
comes over us when a loved one is seriously ill.

Jacqueline Bisset plays the mother, Frances, a woman with a colorful past
as a jazz disc jockey in her youth and as a social activist, freelance writer
and history buff in her later years. Along the way, there were the men, who
fell in love with her, had their heads handed to them and spent the rest of
their lives growing old and daydreaming.

Bisset, of course, makes it easy to believe in Frances’ allure, but she
also brings a quality of wisdom and sadness, an unsentimental acceptance of
the fact that a single life, even one lived to the fullest, just isn’t enough.
The camera is right on Bisset for much of the movie, much of it filmed in
close-up, revealing a performance of truth and depth.

For Martha Plimpton, as the daughter — a corporate lawyer suddenly seized
by a need to know her birth parents — the movie provides a chance to break
out of the satiric comic roles for which she has been noted and to dive into
something emotional. She succeeds.

“The Sleepy Time Gal” is sneaky in the best way. Its rhythms and currents
sink into a viewer’s consciousness and linger in the mind.



Advisory: This film contains mildly strong language.

– Mick LaSalle



‘THE BELIEVER’

ALERT VIEWER

Drama. Starring Ryan Gosling. Directed and written by Henry Bean. (R. 100
minutes. At the Lumiere.)



When “The Believer” couldn’t find a distributor after winning the 2001
Sundance Grand Jury Prize, cries of cowardice emerged. Studios were simply too
afraid of the film about a young Jewish man turned neo-Nazi, the argument went.

Blessed with a searing lead performance by Ryan Gosling (”Murder by
Numbers”), the movie is powerful and provocative. It’s also built on a faulty
premise, one it follows into melodrama and silliness. Maybe those aspects put
studios e off — that is, until Showtime aired the movie and a small
distributor agreed to release it.

Writer and director Henry Bean’s concept — that a brilliant yeshiva
student is so tortured by religious questions that he turns on his own people -
- is initially intriguing, if counterintuitive. Watching Gosling’s conflicted,
rage-filled face as he terrorizes a helpless Jewish kid, you almost buy it.

Almost. Bean never establishes what made such a bright kid into a monster.
Having to associate with thickheaded racist cronies would drive a smart guy up
the wall. But the character is supposed to be rejecting an oppressive God and
what he sees as Jews’ inaction in the face of brutality. Wouldn’t he turn his
rage toward God or toward the Jews’ oppressors, then?

The movie’s shift into an implausible thriller magnifies its lack of
character development. But Gosling gives an impassioned performance throughout.

The skinny former Mousketeer carries himself with such self-assured menace
that he becomes imposing. You believe it when his character beats the stuffing
out of a muscle-bound rival skinhead.

The most maddening aspect of the film is how a single scene can be dumb and
profound at the same time. When the racist skinheads are sent to “sensitivity
training” at a Holocaust survivors’ group, the setup strains credibility but
then delivers the picture’s most emotionally satisfying moment.

After Gosling’s arrogant know-it-all condemns a man for failing to pummel
the Nazis who killed his son, a woman responds, “Here in this rich, safe,
stupid country, it’s easy to imagine one’s self a hero.” Exactly, just as it’s
easy to make a controversial movie without saying enough.



Advisory: This film contains violence, sexual scenes, rampant ethnic and
religious slurs.

– Carla Meyer



‘LES DESTINEES’

SNOOZING VIEWER

Drama. Starring Emmanuelle Beart, Charles Berling and Isabelle Huppert.
Directed by Oliver Assayas. (Not rated. 180 minutes. At Bay Area theaters.)



Whenever I reflect ruefully on how quickly time passes, I’m reassured by
movies like “Les Destinees,” which can take three hours and stretch them into
something that feels like 10 days in a sweatbox.

The movie suffers from two fatal ailments — a dearth of vitality and a
story that’s shapeless and uninflected. An adaptation of a French novel, “Les
Destinees Sentimentale,” it spans the first 30 years of the 20th century as it
follows Jean, a spiritually restless fellow who gets dragged into the family
porcelain business. Jean, who’s played by Charles Berling, starts off passive
and gloomy, and he ends up that way. Three hours of this guy.

Jean’s story is hardly interesting or emblematic enough to be worthy of a
feature-length movie, much less the epic treatment. Fortunately, his women
have more life to them. Isabelle Huppert is Jean’s estranged first wife, a
woman of remote demeanor and suppressed rage. And Emmanuelle Beart is wife No.
2, with whom Jean makes an idyllic life in Switzerland, only to risk blowing
it with his indifference. Huppert and Beart are two of the best actresses in
Europe, but they can’t save this movie.

Pockets of life are rare but worth savoring. Director Olivier Assayas may
have trouble shaping scenes, but he does take us through the porcelain-making
process, showing us the workings of a turn-of-the-century factory, from the
pottery making to the hand-painting to the glazing.

Best of all is the ballroom scene, which comes early. In every other
ballroom scene in movies, the sound is amplified, glorious and overpowering.
Here the music is quiet enough that we can hear the rustle of clothing and the
feet on the ballroom floor. The scene is not nearly as romantic as what we’ve
come to expect, but it’s more human.

Still, if given a choice of whether to sit through “Les Destinees,” take
the sweatbox.

Advisory: This film contains sexual situations.

– Mck LaSalle

Jan
31

The Terror of Tiny Town review

Posted by ordinarypeople

SCOURGE OF TINY TOWN, THE
(director: Sam Newfield; screenwriter: Fred Myton; cinematographer: Mack
Stengler; editor: Martin G. Cohn/Richard G. Wray; music: Charles Newman/Walter
G. Samuels; assign: Billy Curtis (The Hero, Buck Lawson), Yvonne Moray (The
Girl, Nancy Preston), 'Smidgin Billy' Rhodes (The Villain, Bat Haines),
Billy Platt (The Rich Uncle Jim 'Tex' Preston), John T. Bambury (The Ranch
Owner, Pop Lawson), Joseph Herbst (The Sheriff), Charles Becker (The Cook,
Otto), Nita Krebs (The Vampire, Nita, the dance hall girl); Runtime: 62;
MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Jed Buell; Alpha Video; 1938)

"It holds up as a curio exchange for
those parties who are even-handed curious to confer with midget cowboys in action."


Another novelty film from producer Jed Buell; it has a cast of about
60 midgets (Many were part of a performing troupe called Singer's Midgets);
it's known as the first and only midget musical Western. Buell previously
produced an all-black Western in 1937 called "Harlem on the Prairie." Sam
Newfield ("Six Gun Rhythm"/"Knight of the Plains ") directs from a script
by Fred Myton. It's a routine Western, except for the midgets; it has a
cowboy helping out a beautiful ranch owner threatened by rustlers. 


Bat Haines (Little Billy) is the black-hatted villain who incites
a feud between two families, the Preston and Lawson ranches, in the hopes
of taking over their spreads as they each accuse the other of rustling.
To the rescue will come Buck Lawson (Billy Curtis), son of the head of
the Lawson family, who wears a white cowboy hat. There's the familiar hero
saving fistfight at the climax, a murder in which the villain frames the
hero, a romance between the innocents, a gambling bar room and a musical
hall. The singing cowboy hero's voice is dubbed. The romance comes when
Buck falls for rival ranch owner Nancy Preston (Yvonne Moray), the niece
of the rich Tex Preston (Billy Platt). The midgets all ride Shetland ponies,
Buck's is white.


The film, for the most part, plays it straight. But there's comic
relief over the cook (Charles Becker) chasing a duck who walks backwards,
a singalong with a penguin, and a saloon singer siren (Nita Krebs) acting
like a tiny version of Marlene Dietrich.

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It holds up as a curio for those parties who are just curious to
see midget cowboys in action. It's certainly not one of the worst films
of all-time as stated by some shortsighted critics, nor is it a rancid
exploitation film despite being politically incorrect. But it's also nothing
special outside of the midget cast, who are awful actors and their speech
is stilted–which adds to the camp feeling. Buell's film differs from Todd
Browning's 1932 Freaks because it treats its midgets as if they were normal
people while Browning showered them with compassion. 


REVIEWED ON 12/26/2006       
GRADE: C+