Wednesday, December 30, 2009
My Favorite Film of 2009: Inglourious Basterds
The first time I saw Quentin Tarantino’s “Inglourious Basterds” I came away with the feeling that I had just seen an important movie. It’s such a unique film that I couldn’t quite get a handle on it. I went back a second time with it fresh in my mind to see if I could distill my thoughts a bit but it only gave me more to think about. I was drafting a long-winded review in my head but I put off writing about it. Upon it’s DVD release I got an opportunity to examine it a little closer. And while I don’t think it’s a perfect film (I wince every time Eli Roth comes onscreen) I do think it’s the best of the year and one of the most important films of the decade.
Here are a few reasons why:
1). This is the film that finally taught morons to read subtitles.
Let’s face it, the advertisements for the film are nothing but a compilation of the most juvenile and violent scenes taken out of their original context. Those people who went into this thinking it was a splatterfest romp through WWII got something else entirely. It’s one of the largest bait-and-switch promo campaigns in film history, one in which the title characters become supporting players in their own film.
Let’s start with the opening scene, which is essentially a 20 minute conversation between two actors, one of which isn’t even a main character. And a great deal of that conversation is in French. One of my greatest cinematic pet peeves is when characters speak English instead of their native language for the benefit of American audiences. In this case the conversation begins in French but after a few moments Colonel Landa requests that they switch to English. At this point I’m thinking “Ok, Tarantino has acknowledged the fact that they should be speaking French but has carefully made a segue into English so this thing will play to the frat boy crowd.” But then I realize something brilliant is going on. There’s actually a reason for switching to English – Col. Landa doesn’t want to alarm the French-speaking Jews hiding underneath the floorboards. This sets the tone for the rest of the film, which to my surprise and delight, turns out to be a story about the complexity, subtlety and beauty of language. I’d say about 80% of this film is spoken in French, German or Italian.
What follows about an hour after this opening conversation is without a doubt the most entertaining thing I saw all year. We have three German-speaking members of The Basterds deep undercover as SS Officers meeting with German actress-turned-spy Bridget Von Hammersmark in a French bar filled with Nazis. They try to maintain their cool under the pressure of an increasingly suspicious Gestapo Officer while being forced into a party game in which they have to guess a person’s name written on a card on their forehead. There are so many layers of deception and identity going on in that scene that it’s astounding. And of course there is the language. While the Gestapo officer has no trouble discerning the Frankfurt and Munich accents of two of the undercover Basterds, he is puzzled by the seeming English accent of Lt. Archie Hickox. I will admit that during the first two viewings I couldn’t tell the difference between the German spoken by the guy from Munich and the German spoken by the Brit, but on the third viewing I knew to listen more closely, and by god I could hear it! The tension eventually builds until you can’t take it anymore, and even though it ends in an orgasm of shocking violence (as many Tarantino scenes do) you really have to appreciate how it gets there.
Once I realized what Tarantino was doing with the language in this film I fully expected large groups of people to start walking out. A packed Saturday night crowd on opening weekend most likely didn’t come to see a foreign film. But everyone was just as riveted to the screen as I was. And as we were exiting the theatre I was very surprised to hear no complaints at all. People were actually phoning their friends to tell them to see it immediately. My faith in humanity was briefly restored.
2). The Best Movie Villain in Recent Memory
When was the last time you have seen someone as well written and superbly acted as Colonel Hans Landa? Remember how Hannibal Lecter was so menacing because he was the most intelligent person in the film? But what happens when you put something like that in a position of power? When asked about his role as Colonel Landa, Christoph Waltz claimed that the whole character was all right there in Tarantino’s script. I’m sure Tarantino deserves much credit but Waltz is certainly being modest. His Landa never gives away his true intentions until it’s too late and you realize that he’s been one step ahead of our heroes at every turn. And if he wasn’t such a self-serving fascist you would almost have to admire him. He’s the most fleshed out character in the film and you could go so far as to say that even though he is the villain, he is the main character this story. They say that heroes are only as strong as their villains and what Tarantino and Waltz have created here is one of the best villains ever to grace a movie screen.
3). The End of Holocaustsploitation?
“Holocaustsploitation” is a term that hasn’t quite caught on in English vernacular and I kind of hope it doesn’t. I use it here to describe the glut of films in recent years that have mined the Holocaust for entertainment value. Regardless of whatever Spielberg’s intentions were with “Schindler’s List” (and I have no doubt that they were good) it has become clear that the shortest path to an Oscar nomination (outside of playing someone who is mentally ill) is to star in a holocaust film. It’s the ultimate “serious subject” genre. You could spend days debating the relative merits of films like Life is Beautiful, Jakob the Liar, The Pianist, Black Book, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, Definance, The Reader and many others. In most cases you would probably find good intentions but some larger questions remain. Is it ethical to fictionalize something so sensitive and traumatic? Is there an inherent guilt in watching these films for entertainment? What issues are we still dealing with 75 years later that cause filmmakers to continually return to this era? Go back and view Alain Resnais’ 1955 documentary “Night and Fog” about
the German death camps. It’s certainly not enjoyable but I think every human being should watch this at least once. And then ask yourself, “Is there anything more to be said about the Holocaust”?
I think there’s a fine line with these types of films and each one is potentially dangerous and irresponsible. And sometimes we don’t realize where that line is until we’ve crossed it.
So where does Inglourious Basterds fit in? On the surface it looks like it could be the type of irresponsible film I was just talking about. Yet it somehow maintains a precarious balance on that line and then in the last few minutes completely obliterates it. One thing it does is that other than the first scene in which Shoshanna’s family is murdered, there are no images of oppressed Jews. No concentration camps, no piles of bodies, no serial numbers. The Jews in this film are all empowered and angry. This alone sets the film apart. Inglourious Basterds is simply the revenge film to end all revenge films. The issues that continue to spur on the creation of new Holocaust films? Tarantino sets out to solve them. The issue for most of us, I think, is the pent-up anger and frustration that we will never be able to go back and put a bullet in Hitler’s head ourselves. And of course we never thought we’d see a closeup of Hitler’s face riddled with bullets and then subsequently blown up with dynamite. Tarantino has the balls to give us exactly what we’ve always wanted but never thought we’d see. If this was presented as revisionist history (like Forest Gump) we would be right to be offended. But this is really an alternate timeline in which one of our biggest wishes is fulfilled. But the real kicker is that for the most part the film is handled with such reverence and elegance, moreso than any other American war film I can recall. That’s the crux of this whole thing and what I had the hardest time wrapping my head around. You have such exquisite scenes like the two that I described earlier intercut with what can only be described as tasteless juvenile violence. It’s a film that contradicts itself as you are watching it.
My sincere hope is that after Adolph Hitler and most of the Nazi high command have been obliterated in one of the most satisfying film climaxes ever that we can put this behind us. This film offers catharsis unlike any other I have seen. I don't know what is left to be said about World War II that hasn't already been said.
I think this is a film that recognizes the characteristics of Holocaustsploitation and tiptoes carefully around it. I don’t know what Tarantino’s intentions were. Maybe it was just to create something entertaining out of the stale World War II genre, which would pretty much disprove the last few hundred words I wrote. I’m still not entirely sure what to make up of this film.
I guess I’ll just have to watch it again.
Monday, December 28, 2009
Best of 2009
The Brothers Bloom - Riann Johnson
Fantastic Mr. Fox - Wes Anderson
This was the only film of 2009 that I liked enough to see three times. Please see my in-depth write up coming soon.
The Road - John Hillcoat
If there was anything bleaker than The Coen Brothers' "A Serious Man" it would have to be "The Road" based on Cormac McCarthy's novel, who the Coen's mined for Oscar gold a couple years ago with No Country For Old Men. Any faults this film may have are also faults of the novel because this is probably the most faithful adaptation of I book I have ever seen. I have longer review of this film from earlier in the year. Suffice it to say, neither the novel nor the film pull any punches.
Honorable mention goes to: Star Trek, Up, District 9, Paranormal Activity, Where the Wild Things Are, Funny People, The Hurt Locker, Coraline, The Informant, An Education
Saturday, December 26, 2009
Nine
Monday, December 21, 2009
Avatar
If James Cameron were to take his new film Avatar back in time about 30 years and show it to a late 70s audience, it would probably be easier to convince them that in the future we had actually colonized alien planets and had sent a film crew there than it would be to explain how CGI works. When the height of computer graphics is an Atari 2600, Avatar must truly seem like it comes from another planet. I really can't say a thing to fault the technical aspects of Avatar. Every second that one of Cameron's Na'vi are on the screen you sit there mesmerized at a creature that really shouldn't exist in such rich detail and natural movement. I can't even begin to imagine how many man hours of motion capture, modeling, texturing, lighting and compositing went into this film.
Let's consider how far we've come in the last decade. 2001's "Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within" purported itself to be the pinnacle of CGI at the time. They even went so far as to create the first "virtual actress" in Dr. Aki Ross, a character model that they thought was so fully realized that they expected to re-use her in future films. As it turns out, she wasn't much of a commodity. Appearing in a bikini in Maxim was the height of her post-film career. It wasn't too long before high school kids with a souped up computer and a pirated copy of Poser were creating their own virtual women, once again proving that any new technology will be co-opted to satisfy our basest needs. As far as Final Fantasy revolutionizing filmmaking - well, the trend didn't really catch on with movie-goers but it did influence storytelling within the video game industry. Even today's mediocre games have fully rendered cut scenes that surpass what Final Fantasy delivered in 2001.
The Star Wars prequels attempted to carry the virtual torch into a new millennium, but despite the technical wizardry ILM had pioneered in the previous decades they weren't able to create believable virtual worlds. The effects in the Star Wars prequels often felt clunky and distracting and made me yearn for the days of puppets and matte paintings.
Robert Zemeckis' people have made some pretty significant advances in virtual characters but I still find the idea to be very unsettling. The fake children and psuedo Tom Hanks of The Polar Express really creep me out. Beowulf further upped the visual ante but I find that the women characters in that film, largely due to being idealized versions created by men, seem to have all the expressiveness of sex dolls.
James Cameron takes one big leap over the Uncanny Valley by simply choosing not to recreate human characters with CGI. If something feels a little alien to you, well, its because they are aliens. Overall, Avatar is technically flawless.
The art direction here is splendid. This film must be a creative person's dream to work on. The world of Pandora is incredibly beautiful and for a couple hours we don't mind taking a tour of it. It really does feel new and fresh and always a joy to look at.
So why am I spending so much time talking about the visuals? Because that's pretty much the only significant aspect of this movie. The plot is very simple. The film is about 2 hours and 40 minutes long but you could easily summarize the whole story in a few sentences. It doesn't challenge the way you think about anything and there is really no subtext to analyze. Spoiler alert! Pocahontas and Dances with Wolves lead the Ewoks to victory over the evil Empire, the Iraqis get to keep their oil and everyone lives happily ever after in Smurfland. Everything plays out exactly as you would expect it to and every plot point is telegraphed way in advance. There is really no tension or drama here and by the end of the film you'll start to get bored by the extended action scene that Cameron probably designed to top every other action sequence in any movie ever. And the action is pretty thrilling and refreshingly comprehensible (I'm looking at you Michael Bay) but ultimately never quite pulled me in to the point that I cared what happened next or gave me any sense that the unexpected could actually happen. It's all by the numbers and we've seen it all before.
There was a brief moment where our hero Jake, in an awkward voice-over, mentions life in his Avatar body seems to be reality while his real life has started to feel like a dream. When I initially heard about the concept of Avatar I was hoping the film would explore this theme more in depth. Given our society's penchant for disappearing into MMORPGs like World of Warcraft or Second Life, it would seem like a theme worth exploring and certainly more of an interesting focus than the hundredth anti-occupation film since the Iraq war started. Avatar really glosses over that MMO gamer aspect (although it is very glossy).
I seem to remember a time when action films were built around human beings and occasionally punctuated with special effects. These days the films are built on special effects and occasionally punctuated with people. As amazing as the CGI effects are there is still a need to connect with the characters and Avatar sometimes makes it hard to do that. There were times when I knew I was supposed to be feeling emotion but I just couldn't muster a tear because deep down I knew I was missing that human connection. So as far as we have come on a technical level, we're not quite there yet.
Avatar has been the source of a lot of talk and speculation in the months leading up to its release. People would ask me what I thought about it and I didn't have much to say. Given that James Cameron is responsible for one of my favorite films, Terminator 2, and one of the biggest cinematic turds in recent memory, Titanic, it was hard for me to form any kind of opinion. And now that I have seen the film I find that my view of it is pretty much as it was before. I'm still kind of indifferent.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
2009 in Review: Entertainment, Weakly
No, no...the inclusion of the above shot from "500 Days of Summer" doesn't mean I thought it was a bad film. But that scene is a nice metaphor for my film experience this year: Expectations not met.
It's almost pointless to make a "worst" list isn't it? I usually don't even bother because I try to avoid the bad ones. But my personal criteria for a bad film is simply wasted potential and disappointment and this year I found an unusual amount of those two things.
Most of the previous year’s best films were provided by giant Hollywood blockbusters. The Dark Knight, Iron Man, Wall-E, Tropic Thunder..... but look how far we have fallen in only a year. This summer’s blockbusters were excruciatingly bad. These films make me want to punch myself in the face. These films are Hollywood’s best case for illegal downloading. All I was looking for this summer was some escapism that didn’t make me feel like an idiot and it was nowhere to be found. Lets start with the worst of the worst:
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen may very well be the worst film in the history of cinema. Sure, there are no-budget amateur films that are worse, but we are talking about a multi-million dollar Hollywood production that was seen by almost everyone. I will admit that my inner eight-year-old was excited about this one and I happily paid $9 for the chance to see it. Unfortunately, this film’s intelligence level is below that of an eight-year-old. It should be entertaining to watch giant robots blow shit up, yet somehow Michael Bay makes it a chore. Bay is responsible for what I see to be the worst trend in modern action movies: quick cutting. No shot lasts more than a few seconds, rendering the action incomprehensible. Combine that with vapid, one-dimensional characters, talentless acting, a story that makes no sense and means nothing and you have a film that combines all of Hollywood’s worst aspects into an incredibly painful two hours.
I have a theory that in about 20 years The Criterion Collection will release a Michael Bay retrospective. His films will be significant in that they started the decline of cinema.
The best praise I can give to G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, or Terminator: Salvation is that none of them were as bad as Transformers. I really wish I had something nice to say about them because they are all based on franchises that I loved as a kid. Unlike The Dark Knight they have not grown up with us. I came out of all of these somewhat depressed about not being able to recapture the magic I felt as a child and fearing for the future of a human race that actually enjoys this crap.
I'll have another post soon about some of the trends I saw this year, as well as the annual "best of" list.
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Team Jacob
I found the Team Edward (James Olmos) graphic online earlier this week over at /Film. If I was the kind of person who wore funny t-shirts I would definitely buy that one.
So I couldn't resist the visual joke or the opportunity to co-opt the Twilight brand with my own Team Jacob image. Irene Jacob that is, star of two of my favorite films, Krzysztof Kieslowski's "The Double Life of Veronique" and "Three Colors: Red". She was my teenage heartthrob back in the day. And in 1994 probably the most beautiful woman on the planet. At that point she was on her way to becoming a great actress. Unfortunately, since those two Kieslowski films near the beginning of her career, she hasn't done anything worth mentioning. Trust me, I've sat through quite a few bad to mediocre Irene Jacob films in the hopes that one of them would return her to the prominence she deserves.
The Twilight branding actually works pretty well with her photo from "Red". While I can't stand the series itself I actually kind of like consistency of the design between the books and the novels. It's almost like they were developing a brand right from the beginning. That's the power of graphic design folks.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Wild Strawberries
I've somehow managed to live 31 years on this earth and have been an avid film buff for half of them, yet until a couple days ago I had somehow managed to have never seen a film by Ingmar Bergman. How someone can keep a film blog and never have seen "The Seventh Seal" I don't know. I suppose that would have been the place to start, being his most well known film. But that's not where I started. I organize a film discussion group that meets every month and this month we chose three films that are favorites of Woody Allen. "The Bicycle Thief", also one of Allen's favorites, was the subject of my first blog post. The second was Bergman's "Wild Strawberries."
I'm not that knowledgeable about Woody Allen so I'm not really qualified to discuss how it relates his work but these are my thoughts about "Wild Strawberries" in general. Knowing the context in which a film is released really heightens your appreciation of it. For instance, without context you might look at most of the French New Wave as incredibly dull. There's nothing shocking about "Breathless" if you've ever been exposed to "Pulp Fiction". Regarding Bergman's films, I'm pretty much without the context of his other films or Swedish films in general. Wikipedia tells me "the film is often considered to be one of Bergman's most emotional, one of his most optimistic, and one of his best." If this is one of his most emotional then I understand why "The Seventh Seal" is regarded as such a cold and distant film.
I will admit that I had trouble relating with the characters. The actors and characters are likable, yet Bergman remains at a cautious distance. Isak's flashbacks to his childhood don't really convey any kind of warmth yet I feel that's what the director intended with those scenes. Instead, an uncomfortable Luis Bunuel vibe creeps into the scenes that are supposed to be pleasant memories and the surrealism is really racheted up once Isak starts having nightmares.
The film is essentially a man reflecting back on his life as he is about to receive an honorary degree. The film takes place during the trip from his home to the university. He is accompanied by his daughter-in-law. Along the way they stop to pick up some hitchhikers and a couple of stranded motorists and even stop by Isak's childhood home which gives him an opportunity to reflect.
While I wasn't particularly moved by any of the flashback scenes, there was one scene that I thought was brilliant. In the back seat of the car we have the three youthful hitchhikers, so full of life and energy. In the middle seat (really, how big is this car?) sit a bickering middle-aged couple. And the front seat is occupied Isak and his daughter-in-law Marianne. It's three stages of life sharing the same car. Marianne eventually asks the argumentative couple to get out and we find out later that she has recently had an argument with her own husband and fears becoming like that couple. Isak, on the other hand, has already been through a rough marriage and is all the wiser for it. But even in old age his wisdom doesn't save him from regret and self-doubt as his dreams start to become more painful reminders of his failings.
It does end on what Bergman intends as an optimistic note, which is another childhood flashback. Like I said, I didn't feel that the flashback scenes were very successful and I think the success of the movie depends on how you perceive those scenes. There were enough interesting ideas in this film to make me curious about Bergman's other films. "The Seventh Seal" is already in my Netflix queue.
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
The Road
For me, watching John Hillcoat's "The Road" after having read Cormac McCarthy's novel was a unique experience. I've never seen a film that so perfectly captured what I had pictured in my mind as I read the book. Part of that might be chalked up to the fact that I had seen some production stills of the film before starting the book, so my imagination was already colored with a grey palette. But I don't think that accounts for all of it. There's something about the language McCarthy uses in the novel that removes any room for interpretation. The descriptions are incredibly vivid yet at the same time the economy and simplicity of the language is very poetic.
Aside from one small misstep at the end, I would say this has to be the most faithful adaptation of a novel I have ever seen. I don't know if I should give too much creative credit to Hillcoat. He doesn't really put his personal stamp on anything, but after watching his debut feature "The Proposition" it's as if he was born to direct this film. I do have to give him credit for not compromising the gruesome and bleak nature of the story. Try as they might, the trailers attempt to make it look like an action packed adventure with the beautiful Charlize Theron at the center of it, despite the fact that she's in the film for no more than ten minutes. I know they are having trouble selling this to American audiences and the studio probably won't make the budget back on this one unless it gets some Oscar buzz soon. It's a film that certainly deserves some recognition and will be near the top of my best of 2009 list. But it's so grim that it's not something I'd be willing to watch again very soon.
Fantastic Mr. Fox
I consider myself to be a big fan of Wes Anderson but with his previous film “The Darjeeling Limited” it’s clear that he’s been stuck in a creative rut. Two years ago, while my other favorite American auteur, Paul Thomas Anderson, was reaching well outside his comfort with “There Will Be Blood”, Wes Anderson turned in exactly what you would expect of him. You can almost diagram the formula: Bill Murray + The Kinks + strained relationships + a slow-motion final shot + his perennial font of choice: Futura Bold. Fantastic Mr. Fox includes nearly all of those things but it’s still a large creative leap forward for Anderson and I’m really happy to see the results.
While the bare bones plot of the films is based on Roald Dahl’s book of the same name, the film is %100 percent Wes Anderson. It’s charming as hell and probably the most I have laughed during a film this year. Mr. Fox’s meticulously crafted world is a creative extension of what Anderson has done is previous films with “The Royal Tenenbaums” and “The Life Aquatic” (think the cross section cutaway of the ship). It also gives him ample opportunity for visual jokes, many of which I’m sure I missed. I’m looking forward to this one on DVD so I can make use of the freeze frame feature to study the details. My favorite visual joke is the graffiti of the word “CUSS” (being the film’s all-purpose profanity) spray painted on a wall in the background. (I can’t wait to work “clustercuss” into a conversation). I also loved the way the action plays out in one scene on security camera monitors, from left to right, like comic book panels come to life.
Ultimately, I’m not sure what the subtext in this film is, if any. I picked up on themes of rebellion and being true to your nature but there’s no overt moral to this film. And that’s fine because it’s one of the most entertaining films of the year.
The Bicycle Thief
There were a few other things that I noticed on a second viewing. The posters Antonio is hired to paste up are of Rita Hayworth in “Gilda”, an ironic contrast between the decadence of Hollywood and the harsh reality of post-war Italy. And I also like the tension that director Vittorio de Sica builds the first time Antonio leaves his bicycle unattended. We know from the title of the film that his bike will be stolen. Antonio returns and the bicycle is still there and it’s very unexpected later in the film when his bicycle is stolen out from under his nose as he is working.
It’s a heart-wrenching film and bleak film. I wonder how it was perceived by American audiences in 1948, who were probably used to the glamorous Hollywood happy endings.
For some reason, the theme of bicycle theft has been a popular one in films all over the world.
“Beijing Bicycle” (China), “Cyclo” (Vietnam), and even Tim Burton’s “Pee Wee’s Big Adventure” are all somewhat inspired by The Bicycle Thief.
I’ve even seen it used a couple of times in comedy. A recent episode of ABC’s sitcom “Modern Family” was called “The Bicycle Thief” in which a father tries to teach his irresponsible son a lesson by stealing his new bike, only to find out that it wasn’t his son’s bike at all but that of another kid.
Mike Leigh’s 2008 “Happy Go Lucky” begins with a scene where the irrepressively cheery Poppy browses in a book store only to come out and find that her bicycle has been stolen. And instead of that incident driving the rest of the plot, her zen-like attitude calmly dismisses it as she remarks “I didn’t even get a chance to say goodbye” and then goes about the rest of her day as if it doesn’t matter. It’s a pretty good joke if you know the influence The Bicycle Thief has had on modern cinema.
I just wonder why the bicycle motif appears again and again. I guess its a very universal symbol. I suppose it might have different connotations in American culture. We typically see it as a luxury item used only for sports or recreation, while for the rest of the world it’s a primary means of transportation and therefore carries more significance. I suppose if someone made an American version of “The Bicycle Thief” it would be an SUV or minivan that was stolen. Or maybe an iPhone.