Saturday, December 31, 2022

I Wanna Dance With Somebody (2022)

 This is of course a bio pic of the singer Whitney Houston, formulaic in the way these films tend to be. Some version of wide eyed innoccenc, tremendous success, romantic and substance abuse issue, some level of redemption, but we know how this one ends. I however wasn't particularly well versed on Houston's life so I did learn some stuff, particularly in regards to her long standing and sometimes romantic relationship with her friend and personal assistant Robyn Crawford (Nafessa Williams). Also in regards to her career spanning business relationship with producer Clive Davis, played by Stanley Tucci he seemed to be a positive and stabilizing influence in her life. Of course nonaganarian Davis is a producer on the film so of course he's gonna come off well.

The movie works because of the music, which is not given short shift and really allowed to breath. I mean the whole point of the movie is the music, no one in the audiance I saw this with left until after the credits and the music was over, though there were only five of us. Lead Naomi Ackie does a great job as Houston, of course her singing is all dubbed from recordings of the real Whitney, you couldn't make this film any other way. As Whitney sang the National Anthem at an early 90's Super Bowl, and to a lesser extent a few other times in the movie, a tiny techican in my head flipped a switch and out came the water works. For me this was a simple and satisfying, if rather undemanding, film going experince. ***

The Bodyguard (1992)

 I'd never seen 'The Bodyguard'. On finally viewing it I didn't think it was very good. Structured as a thriller, I mean it is a thriller, at least technically. At heart however it is a melodrama. Very corny, often ridiculous, and really all over the place. Kevin Costner's stoicism, well we've come to expect that from him, it's fine, it works well enough. Whitney Houston's character, very hot and cold, trying at times. I thought the twists were whacked, not sure they'd hold up under close scrutiny. Saved, to the extent it can be said to be saved, by the music and good chemistry between the leads. **

Friday, December 30, 2022

Babylon (2022)

 It would be hard to talk about director Damien Chazelle's new film about Hollywood 'Babylon' (2022) without comparing it to his other film about Hollywood 'La La Land' (2016), so I'm going to save myself the trouble and compare them. 'La La Land' is an Oscar winning musical/drama about achieving one's Hollywood dreams through a mixture of persistence and luck, it is a love letter to the movies and the film industry. 'Babylon' is a epic (some would say bloated) spectical of debauchery and striving in old Hollywood. It is a gaudy indictment, it is both critique and celebration, it is Oscar bait Hollywood self love merged with a seedy explotation film. It is, in its way, rather great. Perhaps greater  then it's better recived predescor 'La La Land'.

The two movies are yin and yang, the other side of their respective coins, 'Babylon' is 'La La Lands' evil twin. That two such different takes on roughly the same subject matter could come from the mind of the same writer/director, and in such a short space of time, is indeed impressive. It is an understandably polarizing film. It is full of cliches and types. We have been here before. It is a condensation of 'A Star is Born', 'Singing in the Rain', 'Sunset Boulevard' and 'Boogie Nights'. It is excess, it is a disaster, it is a triumph. It is a journey through Hell. It is decadence, tragedy, and a little hope.

The viewing experience reminded me of the first time I saw Sam Peckinpah's notoriously violent 1969 western 'The Wild Bunch', I hated, loathed the first half hour, it was just too much, but by the end I was loving the flick. The wild Hollywood party which makes up this movies extended prolog, the films title dosen't appear on screen until after its over around 35 minutes in, I found to be uncomfortable, as is a good deal of what comes later.

The film covers a collection of characters, their ups and downs through the years that transitioned Hollywood from all silent to all talkie films (Chaplin excepted). There are well established types, the ageing leading man (Brad Pitt), the ambitious young ingenue (Margot Robbie), and less established ones, the Asian 'Jill of all trades' constantly reinventing herself (Li June Li), the black jazz musician in an awkward relationship with the industry (Jovan Adepo) , the film splits the difference on its earnest young go getter (Diago Calva) by making him Latino.

Robbie and Calva's characters meet at the party which opens the film, her crashing it and he working it. Their Hollywood dreams bond them, they promise to keep in touch. She is discovered at the party and is off to the fictional Kinoscope Studios, he endears himself to Pitt's character whose patronage lands him at the very real MGM.

As a movie nerd with a good knowldge of the era depicted I enjoyed the "inside baseball" aspects of the picture, like knowing who Irving Thalberg was, recognizing a depection of the inciting incident of the Fatty Arbuckle scandle, and a costuming choice for Ms. Robbie that is reminiscent of a fairly famous photograph of the actress Bessie Love. But there is much to the film that is more accessible for general audiences. 

The movie covers themes of love and loss, dreams turning into nightmares, and how after grasping the big brass ring it can be hard to hold onto. There are stories within it that ask the question of how much someone would and should be willing to change or deny about themselves, and is that worth it to achieve the goal. There is sex, there is violence and there is substance abuse.

Pitt and Robbie give solid performances, but both very much within their established ranges. Calva does a good job as a sympathetic audiance surragate, with little in the way of movie experince he holds his own with the established players. Li June Li has a strong film presence and may be a genuine find. The supporting cast ranges from a now middle aged Lucas Haas to Flea of The Red Hot Chille Peppers. In keeping with the precident of 'The Fabelmans' we have another cameo part where an eccentric director plays an eccentric director, with Spike Jonez as a von Stroheim type.

The movie alternates between its various story line quite adeptly, everyone seems to be given their due and despite a more then three hour running time I was never bored. The film functions in many ways like a series of losley connected short films or vignettes. Stands out include a long day on various silent film sets, the difficulty of getting the sound right on a single scene in an early talkie, Margo Robbie's snake fight, and a sort of Dante's Inferno segment where Calva and a character known as 'The Count' take a tense journey with a disturbed Toby McGuire. There is also a monologue delivered by Jean Smart as a Hollywood gossip columnist that is both very good and manages to sum up the overriding message of the film, to the extent that it has one.

The film also includes a coda or epilogue set some years after the main events. Even the movies fans seem to be split on this, I was fine with most of this sequence, but there is a sort of tone shift at the very end which is kind of jarring and wants to have it both ways, I would have appricated something more understated.

'Babylon' is a flawed film, but an ambitious one. In less capable hands I could have hated this movie, but it really worked for me, Chazzell expertly played a tune I was receptive to, at times it seemed almost built for me. I get why those who didn't like it didn't like it, there are plenty of legitimate reasons, but for me this was **** a highlight of the film year.

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Marathon Man (1976)

 Dustin Hoffman is a grad student and running enthusiast (hence "Marathon Man"), the younger son of a blacklisted historian who suicided 20 years previous. He is close to his brother Roy Scheider, but thought him to be in the oil buisness until a fateful visit to New York.

 Roy was on the trail of escaped Nazi war criminal Laurence Olivier (who himself would play a Nazi hunter only 2 years later in 'The Boys from Brazil'). Now Roy's partner William Devane proposes to use Dustin as bate to flush the old Nazi out. Swiss actress Marthe Keller is Dustin's love interest, and she's hidding something.

An at times rather good and at times rather slow thriller. Directed by Joseph Schlesinger ('Midnight Cowboy', 'The Falcon and the Snowman') and based on a novel by 'The Princess Bride' author William Goldman; in fact it's the book he wrote immediately after 'The Princess Bride', and perhaps the book fills in this films plot holes. ***

Tuesday, December 27, 2022

New Years Evil (1980)

 From Cannon films it's 'New Years Evil'. Our killer commits murder as each time zone hits midnight and calls in to a New Wave New Years broadcast to gloat. Filming began in Los Angeles on October 15th 1980 and the movie hit theaters on December 19th, so this was a real quicky. That they managed to make the killer, played by the late Kip Niven, genuinely charasmatic is a real accomplishment. Also each murder becomes harder to commit then the last, metaphor for how it can be hard to keep one's New Years resolutions? All the non killer stuff pretty much sucks, but on balance film is a little better than its reputation. **

The King of Marvin Gardens (1972)

 Jack Nicholson is a Jean Shepard type radio story teller out of Philadelphia, he is contacted by his semi-estranged brother Bruce Dern to come to Atlantic City and help him with what turns out to be a long shot real estate scheme. The brothers attempt to evaid black gangsters and sell Japanese investors on a Hawiian resort, amidst the playground of 50 years previous, decaying in the salt water air (pre urban renewal Atlantic City sure is fun to look at). They do so in the company of a step mother (Ellen Burstyn) step daughter (Julie Ann Robinson, Twin Falls, Idaho born actress who would die in a Eugene, Oregon hotel fire in 1975) pair.

Written by Jacob Brackman, who wrote songs with Carley Simon, and directed by co-creator of 'The Monkees' Bob Rafelson. This is in the tradition of Rafelson's previous Nicholson collaboration 'Five Easy Pieces', a rambeling character piece, quriky, dry and poignant. That ending is something, a marvel of subtle set up. ***

Sunday, December 25, 2022

Hellzapoppin' (1941)

 Losley adapted from the hit Broadway review of the same name, 'Hellzapoppin'' is essentially a meta comedy about the process of adaptation, similar in a way to the Charlie Kaufman movie 'Adaptation' only a hell of a lot more surreal. This is the closet thing I've seen to a live action Tex Avery cartoon, and I include 'The Mask' in that assessment. A showcase of visual gags, absurdist humor, camera tricks and 4th wall breaking. The Marx Brothers on crack, how is this movie so obscure? With Chick Johnson, Ole Olsen, Martha Ray, Jane Frazee, Hugh Herbert, Shemp Howard and Elisha Cook Jr. ***1/2 

Dames (1934)

I don't recall even hearing about 'Dames' until I learned that director Edger Wright ('Shaun of the Dead', 'Baby Driver') had included it on a list of his favorite films, #22 sandwiched between 'Fury Road' and 'Halloween'. If he had just wanted to include  a Busby Birkley musical in his list there are more famous examples so why this one? I had to investigate.

Eccentric Bufflo millionaire Hugh Herbert must determine if his cousin Guy Kibbee's family is morally worthy to inherent $10 million. Herbert comes to visit, Kibbee and kin want to put on their best face, but Guy ends up being blackmailed by Joan Blondel, while his daughter Ruby Keeler ends up in a racey Broadway show being put on by  distant cousin Dick Powell with whom she is in love.

Birkley's quarkiest musical its a solid three stars for the first two acts, but the last act is four stars, boasting the strangest, trippyist musical numbers to come out of the pre code era, which is really saying something. I get why this is on Wright's list. I give it ***1/2

Saturday, December 24, 2022

Happy Christmas (2014)

 Having recently broken up with her boyfriend Anna Kendrick travels to Chicago to spend Christmas with her brother (Mark Webber) his wife (Melanie Lynsky) and their two year old son. While there she is a low level mess. Directed by Joe Swanberg, who Kendrick would work with again the following year in 'Digging for Fire', 'Happy Christmas' is an example of "mumbelcore" (which spell check wants to change to Dumbeldore) a lose genra defined by low budget, improvisational structure and a focus on relationships.

 Mark & Melanie have a strong and functional marriage, Anna's presence adds some stress to it but they adapt. At first Melanie is a little leary of Anna, especially after Mark has to pick her up drunk at a party her first night in town, but the two form a bond while outlining a romance novel together. Anna and Mark have a scene where they get stoned together, and Marks friend played by director Swanberg tries to form a relationship with Anna, but finds it difficult to do anything quite right. Leah Dunham is also in this as Anna's friend. Like Anna's visit the movie starts a little rocky but really grew on me. ***

Bill & Ted Face the Music (2020)

 Belted conclusion to the Bush I era franchise about two stupid California rockers destined to unite the world through song. Pretty consistent with the other two films in terms of themes and humor, and while it has  moments, a pleasant cast and a chill vive, the whole 'Bill & Ted are morons' shtick is tired and a little sad coming out of leads in their fifties. **

The Whale (2022)

 After neglecting him for more then a decade, sometime in the last couple of years the collective zietgiest rememberd that it loves Brendan Fraser and has promoted him to a sort of secular sainthood ala Keanu Reeves. Interestingly this collective love hasn't really corolated with much new work for the actor. He played the villain in the 'Batgirl' movie, but new management at Warner's has decided to chuck that film, now slated to be released never. 

The awards buzz, and I'll say now it's deserved, has been centered around 'The Whale', a new film that combines Fraser's public likability with director Darren Aronofsky's tendency to polarize. But Aronofsky's always at least interesting, even when his films don't really work, which is about half the time. I am pleased to report that I really thought 'The Whale' worked, and might even be the directors best film.

'The Whale' is based on a play of the same name by Samuel D. Hunter, the film takes place over the course of about a week in March of 2016, and like much of Hunter's work it is set in Idaho, seemingly around the Moscow area. I did not know going in that this was based on a play, but with the small cast and being set entirely in a single apartment, as well as the quality and heft of the writting, this quickly became apperent.

Lite spoilers 

Fraser plays Charlie, a 600 lb, reclusive English professor, who teaches courses online from his apartment with the web camera off. In the first scene of the film Charlie suffers what may be a heart attack while pleasuring himself watching gay porn on his computer. His life is saved by the well timed knock of an evangelical missionary (Ty Simpkins), who contacts Charlie's only friend Liz (Hong Chau) a registered nurse. Liz emplors Charlie to go to the hospital, he refuses even after being warned that he may only have days to live. This news however does prompt Charlie to try and reconnect with his estranged daughter Ellie (Sadie Sink of 'Stranger Things' fame). Now a high school senior Charlie has not seen Ellie since she was eight, when he left her and her mother to peruse a homosexual relationship with a former student who subsequently died. 

Starting from an intentionally off putting low point the film slowly unravels the history and interrelationships between its five characters, six if you count the pizza delivery guy. Glancing at summaries of some of Hunter's other plays his main themes seem to be interpersonal alienation and the short comings of religious faith, themes very much on display here. There are also thematic similarities to Aronofsky's 2008 film 'The Wrestler', so much so that the movies are really companion pieces. What sets Fraser's Charlie apart from Micky Rourke's Randy "The Ram" Robinson is the formers capacity for hope.

This is a powerful film, an empathetic and even charitable one. It's about the struggle to find grace amidst our worst failures. It is both atheistic and Christian. Strong performancs all around. While I have some mixed feelings about Fraser's fat suite the characters obscene weight is actually central to the story, not just a gimmick. Fraser really does some career best work here and is the obvious favorite for a best actor Oscar next year.

Clearly this is a movie that lacks a big tent appeal, but if your open to it there is a lot here, many layers to be appricated, much to be unpacked and interpreted. An exceedingly different kind of movie that is a window onto people, places and themes that aren't explored much on screen. One of this year's greatest cinematic achivments. ****


The Pale Blue Eye (2022)

 Adapted from the 2003 Louise Bayard novel of the same name, 'The Pale Blue Eye' is a mystery/thriller set in 1830 and built around the investigation into the death of a West Point cadet, a death that may have occult connections. Handsomely mounted and featuring a largish and Brit heavy cast, there is simply not enough heft to the thing. Surpringly little happens, I never felt invested, never felt any meaningful stakes, my mind wanderd. There are a few good character moments and Harry Melling (Dudley Dursley in the 'Harry Potter' films) is something of a revelation in a scene chewy performance as young Edger Allen Poe. I hated the final act. **

Monday, December 19, 2022

Avatar: The Way of Water (2022)

 James Cameron's career as a filmmaker is defined largely by exceeding expectations. 'The Terminator" could have been just another throw away b movie, instead it was a huge hit and started a franchise. "Titanic" was noted for cost overruns, became the most money making movie of all time. The original "Avatar" stretched visual effects in a way many expected to fail, but it wowed audiences visually and also became the most money making movie of all time.

 "Avatar: The Way of Water" was thought to have waited too long for release and be an unintersting retread people wouldn't want to see. Well it's already paid for for its self a week out, and for me at least it really worked. It is better then the first movie, I loved it. 

I thought the movie worked for two principle reasons:

1) World building spectical. The visual umph is still there. I saw it 3D on IMAX, I highly recommend paying the extra money. The movie like it's predecessor is in no hurry, it takes its time, it shows you vistias, it shows you creatures, alien cultures, it's truly immersive and captivating.

2) It became something different. The plot of the original "Avatar" was borrowed from other movies and the characters not very memorable. "The Way of Water" moves into the realm of the multi generational family saga. The kids make the movie, relationships make the movie. I grew to love this family, I cared about what happened to them, one of the reasons this film had to be so long is to cement that connection, to earn it's ending.

I wasn't expecting much from this beyound the visuals, I was very much surprised how involved I got. I want to see it again, and I hope that Cameron gets his two additional sequels, I want to see this saga through. ****

Sunday, December 18, 2022

Sorority Girl (1957)

 Roger Corman quicky is basically Susan Cabot being a bitch to her sorority sisters for an hour. Cheaply made, poorly acted, devoid of substance and point, as well as pretty darn boring this movie is bad. Corman and Cabot got along famously however and would make several more pictures together, including the far superior 'The Wasp Woman' (1959). *

Friday, December 16, 2022

I Heard the Bells (2022)

 'I Heard the Bells' tells the story of how a series of personal tragedies prompted the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow to pen the Christmas carol whose full title ends with "on Christmas Day". The first film from  Sight and Sound, a company which specializes in overtly Christian stage productions, this movie does feels more like theater then film. The production design and costuming is decent enough, the cinematography unexecetional and the no name cast gives earnest but largely pedestrian performances.

The film's biggest problems are in the writting and directing, which lays practically everything on too thick. From the highest of highs to the lowest of lows the movie decrees to us that we are to be swept up in, nay overwhelmed by, Henry Longfellow's every emotion. The heavy hand took me aback, pushed me away rather then pulled me in. Though this is not everyone's experince, the only other person in the theater with me was audibly sniffling through the last 30 minutes, which is admittedly the best part of the film. So if you think Frank Capra's not corny enough and like a movie to tell you exactly what to feel and when, 'I Heard the Bells' may ring true. Otherwise it's a kind of cinematic tinnitus. *1/2

Sunday, December 11, 2022

White Noise (2022)

 Don DeLillo's 1985 novel 'White Noise' is one of those books that was said to be unfilmable. Multiple previous attempts, including one that was to be helmed by Barry Sonnenfield, all fell through. Finally Noah Baumbach was able to rangel the thing into some coherence, adapting and directing the movie version. The film shows evidence of some adaptive difficulty, with a busy first half and a more reflective second. 

While the central narrative is not particularly complicated, the film touches on so many different themes that it can seem kind of crowded. Academic pretension, consumerism, fear of death, environmental disaster, changing family dynamics, depression, prescription drug abuse, existential dread, and plain old denial. It's a stew of American psychosis in the 1980's.

It's the start of the academic year in 1984 and Jack Gladney (the always great Adam Driver) is a celebrated professor of "Hitler Studies" at the College-on-the-Hill in suburban Ohio. He is on his fourth marriage, this one to Babbette (Greta Gerwig) a homemaker and part time aerobics instructer also on her forth marriage. Their blended family includes a boy and a girl from two of Jack's marriages, a girl from one of Babbette's, and a boy they had together. Their lives seem mostly good until the "Airborn Toxic Event".

"Airborn Toxic Event" is the name given to the result of a collision between a tanker truck carrying toxic chemicals and a train doing the same. The Gladney's do their best to ignore the ominous black cloud until an evacuation is finally ordered. What follows plays kind of like an unusually dark 'National Lampoons Vaction' movie. After 9 days things are said to be under control and residents allowed to return to their homes, but something has changed for the Gladney's, their sense of security and control over their lives has been shattered, strains in the marraige manifest. Thus begins the films more contemplative second half.

Driver anchors the film with a typically solid performance, Grewig comes off a little over strong at first but settles into the part. The kids are all good, though one never speaks, and for me the standouts among the supporting players are Don Cheadle and Jodie Turner-Smith as two of Driver's work colleagues. The aesthetics of the film are a few shades down from Wes Anderson.

A writerly film it loves its words. Generally stylized, there are some standout dialouge scenes and a sequence that can best be described as "dueling monologues". While watching the film it registered as a mixture of good and bad, though always interesting. On reflection how can a film so much about the idea of pretension not ocassionly wander into pretension its self? On further reflection this film is still at times genuinely pretensious. But the ending worked for me, things came together and I was generally satisfied. I also rather enjoyed the a-typical end credits.

'White Noise' takes risks and is the better for it. Not for all tastes, it's a film of some literary heft and a walleyed perspective on foibeles, from the personal to the societial. ***1/2

Friday, December 9, 2022

Black Christmas (2019)

 The second remake of 1974's 'Black Christmas' isn't a classic like the original, but it's a hell of a lot better then the 2006 version. Remake number one was unimaginative garbage, while remake number two actually has some ideas. While the sexual politics of the 1974 and 2006 films are almost shockingly similar, the 2019 version is decidedly post MeToo. While versions 1 & 2 are extremely white, one non caucassion speaking part among them, version 3 is brown. This movie is woke, and the better for it.

While the 2006 remake was interested in the sorority house and it's history, the 2019 version is interested in the college and it's legacy. Hawthorne College has been around for 200 years, it's founder Calvin Hawthorne apparently among the last slave holders in the North. Changing times bread diverse reactions, while women characters challange the old order, the "Founders Frat"  (target of sexual assult allegations in the recent past) is feeling rather disrespected. This movie goes overtly supernatural, something neither of its predecessors did. 

It reminded me a bit of 'Don't Worry Darling', both films have something of a Jordan Peterson figure as a bad guy. I was expecting some kind of a trick ending in that movie, not so much here so it could surprise me more with less effort. Good central performance by lead Imogene Potts, likable enough supporting characters, one of whom is named Nate and he dies (most characters in this die) at least trying to be heroic. The film could get rather heavy handed in its messaging and I prefered its more ambiguous first half. I was impressed with the improvement between the sequels, this adaption is not a lazy rehash, it's loser, using the basic premise as a vehical for exploring some contemporary social controversies, and of course serving up some kill sequences. **1/2


Thursday, December 8, 2022

The Fall of '55 (2006)

 Low budget documentary on a "gay panic" that hit Boise, Idaho in the fall of 1955. Police investigations, newspaper editorals, and public outrage at allegations of a vast network of homosexuals praying on children and young adults in the area. Not baseless, but at times exaggerated, perhaps even used as a means of settling scores. People were scared so things happened. 16 were arrested, 15 convicted or pleaded guilty. A cross section, many prominent, a lawyer, bank vice president, teacher, theater director, restaurateur, janitor, salesman ect. National news story, later the subject of a prominate 1965 book 'The Boys of Boise'. 

I grew up in Boise, people don't like to talk about this there. I don't think I was even aware of it until I was in my 20's. Documentary contains interviews, a scholar, a couple mental health professionals, children of people involved, various locals who lived in the area at the time. Lots of footage and pictures of 1950's Boise, I enjoyed seeing that, and the story is pretty interesting, lives were destroyed. The idea is seemingly implied that the erection of a metal cross (still there) on Table Rock in the spring of 56 may have been in part a reaction to the sense of scandal and disgrace in the community. The film is narrated by former local newscaster Claudia Weatherman. **1/2

Wednesday, December 7, 2022

Violent Night (2022)

'Violent Night' is (as seemingly every review will tell you) composed of used parts from other Christmas movies, principly 'Bad Santa' (1 & 2), 'Die Hard' (1 & 2) and 'Home Alone' (1 & 2). It is the story of a disillusioned real life Santa Claus (David Harbour) reluctantly come to the rescue of a dysfunctional wealthy family, when they are held hostage by John Leguizamo and his band of crooks on Christmas Eve. So the question is can this Frankenstein monster of a Christmas movie come to life, can it walk on its own? Would you settle for drunkenly stumble?

Less then the total of its parts 'Violent Night' is successfully there. It is a real, mostly coherent movie. It's uneven and as you might expect it's tone is all over the place. The movie contains a few interesting ideas (principly Santa's backstory), and is anchored by a sweet relationship between Santa and a little girl (Leah Brady) who still believes in him even when he doubts himself. This movie really delivers on the violence however so be aware of that going in. You will see characters killed in ways you've never seen characters killed before.

This cliched assembliage, boasts a couple pretty good action sequences, and one or two clever or somewhat heartwarming moments, but everything in it has been done better before, multiple times. It was nice to see Beverly D'Angelo again though. **

Monday, December 5, 2022

Black Christmas (2006)

 I am a fan of the original 1974 'Black Christmas', an early slasher film from future 'A Christmas Story' director Bob Clark. That movie stared Olivia Hussey and John Saxon, was filmed in Canada, and introduced "the killer is calling from within the house" trope. 2006's 'Black Christmas' is a lose remake, keeping the basic premise of murders in a sorority house, apropreating some of the moetephes (sp), and dropping in some Easter eggs from the original (such as the crystal unicorn used to kill Margot Kidder).

What we get here is a more gorey, less interesting film. A bad film, a cliche film, one with paper thin characters and nothing to say. We get backstories for Billy and the previously unseen Agness, they used to live a tourted existence in the home that became the sorority house. This is from that school of remake or sequel that wants to explain everything not made explicate in the first film, and in so doing misses the point. The scariest thing about the original Billy was not knowing why he was doing what he was doing, Bob Clark understood this, which is why he deliberately never explained Billy. John Carpenter got this right in the first 'Halloween' as well, he even used Bob Clark as a sounding board early in the creative process.

The Bush era remake is chiefly notable for period cell phones, and murdering a string of beautiful young actresses of the time, including Lacey Chabert, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, and Michelle Trachtenberg. Also one decent Dick Cheney joke. *

Sunday, December 4, 2022

While You Were Sleeping (1995)

 Yep I'd never seen 'While You Were Sleeping'. Sandra Bullock saves Peter Gallagher from being hit by a train, while he's in a coma she is mistaken for his fiance and falls in love with his brother Bill Pullman. Ms. Bullock is at peak adorable and has an easy chemistry with the whole cast, which includes Jack Warden and Glynis Johns. A likable 90's rom com. ***

Passport to Shame (1958)

 The plot of 'Passport to Shame' could accurately be described as taxi drivers vs human traffickers, though that also makes it sound cooler then it is. English cabbie Eddie Constantine marries French waitress Odile Versois so she can get a work permite, neither realizes at the time it is part of Herbert Lom's overly complicated plan to turn the woman into a high class prostitute. Things are further complicated by this discovery and the two actually falling for each other. Lom then has Versois kidnapped and Constantine must enlist the help of his fellow cabbies, as well as that of a lady of the night played by the U.K's answer to Marylin Monroe, Diana Doors. An odd film, but kind of endearing for being so odd. **

Saturday, December 3, 2022

The Northman (2022)

 Prior to 'The Northman' director Robert Eggers feature film career had consisted of two black and white, indie, existential horror movies, 'The Witch' which I really liked, and 'The Lighthouse' which I didn't care for.  The Northman' is a much bigger film, with a budget over 70 million, filmed on location with an international cast, it's a large scale Viking action drama, different then anything he's done before but still very Eggers.

The colors are largely muted though there are some vibrant greens. Anya Taylor-Joy, who Eggers more or less discovered in 'The Witch' is back, as is Willim Defoe from 'The Lighthouse'. Like the previous movies this is a period piece with a heavy sense of versimilitude, while still incorporating fantastic or supernatural elements.

Spoilers

The plot is a variation on Hamlet with Alexander Skarsgard as prince thought dead, who tracks down his family and the uncle who killed his father. The clan has relocated to Iceland after their small kingdom was conquered by a larger one. Skarsgard infiltrates as a slave, has a romance with Taylor-Joy, then proceeds to sow chaos and create the impression of devine retribution before a final battle with uncle, which is like a medevil version of the ending to 'Revenge of the Sith'.

It's as close to a Viking story as a 10th century Viking might tell it, as we are likley to ever see in a major motion picture. Took me a bit to get into it, though I have Scandanivain roots I profoundly dislike the society in which this is set, and not just because the slavery, but the mysoginy, the violence, the rigid class structures. Skatsgards character is little better then those he fights, their concepts of glory strike  as profanity. Again though that's kind of the point, it's a Viking story from a Viking point of view, make of it what you will. Impressive and unique, though not really my thing. ***

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

God's Gun (1976)

 'God's Gun' is an Israeli produced spaghetti western credited to director Frank Kramer (real name Gianfranco Parolini). Lee Van Cleef is a priest who founded a prosperious little Catholic community near the Mexican boarder in the latter half of the 1800's. He has the courage to stand up to Jack Palance and the Clayton Gang but is ultimelty gunned down for his trouble. Alter boy Leif Garrett manages to track down the padra's identical twin gunslinger brother. As the Batman says "criminals are a superstitious sort", so you know where this is going, though I do wish they had played it up more.

Still it's perfectly serviceable and short. Richard Boone plays one of those sheriff's who won't really do his job until the tide has turned on the bad guys. Sybil Danning plays Garrett's mother. **

Monday, November 28, 2022

Bladerunner 2049 (2017)

 I'm not a huge fan of the original 'Bladerunner' from 1982, you could say that I "appricate it" more then I "like it". But when I first saw the previews for the much belated 2017 sequal, the visuals were so impressive that I wanted to see it. However the length of the movie, 2 hours and 43 minutes, was a turn off. I'll gladly sit through some very long movies, but something about this one made me not want to put down money for a theater ticket. I wanted to soak in all the visuals and not having to miss some to pee. I figured I'd probably only ever see this thing once, so why risk missing some of it. I think I made the right call. 

'Bladerunner 2049' looks great, wonderful visual sense to the thing. Set design, special effects, shot composition, all first rate. There are some really interesting ideas here to. Most people of means have left the Earth for colony worlds, Terre Firma is all but dead, most plants and animals gone. Major cities like Las Vegas abandoned, most of Los Angeles is empty buildings, with small populated corridors along what had been major roads. A new generation of replicants live longer and are more docile, but still long to be human. While new intellegent holograms long for the physicality even a replicant enjoys. There is a lot of neat stuff to 'Bladrunner 2049', so it's a real shame that it is such a slog to sit through. 

It's just way too long, and its slow. Harrison Ford's character from the first film dosen't even show up until about 2/3rds in. I was annoyed when he finally came because it meant there was still a bunch of movie left.

The films director Denis Villeneuve is a very talented guy, particularly in the realms of visuals and ideas. As far as creating engaging characters go I find him far less interesting. He is capable of eleciting passionate performances, his film 'Prisoners' is great in that regard. Characters in his sci-fi work tend to be far more muted. Now this can be approprate for the story, I thought it really added something to 'Dune', many of those aristocratic characters would seem detached. The same could logically hold for a replicant, but it also keeps you at a distance which is not engaging. Of course Ryan Gosling is that kind of actor anyway, but every character here seems emotionally wanting. Ana de Armas's sexy holographic girlfriend has more soul and substance then any of the physical characters bothered manifesting.

So '2049' is a mixed bag, but none of its good points could for me outweigh the weaknesses which made the viewing experince such a plodding one. I don't think I'll ever see this again. If your interested in the visuals and ideas it may be worth seeing, if you want story and character don't bother. **1/2

Glass Onion (2022)

 'Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery' is a sequel to the surpise box office success of 2019 'Knives Out' ($313 million world wide off a budget of $40 million.). Netflix gobbled up the sequel rights for more mystery adventures by the southern fried detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig). The film is being given a short theatrical run, before becoming exclusive of its streaming service.

In this outing Blanc finds himself invited to the private Greek island of a Musk-ish billionaire (Ed Norton), to solve a 'who a done it' among a group of guests who all have reasons to wish their host ill. This Christie worthy assortment includes Norton's former buisness partner (Janelle Moane), the governor of Connecticut (Kathryn Hahn), a scientist (Leslie Odom Jr.), a fadding supermodel (Kate Hudson) and a "men's rights" social media star (Dave Bautista).

'Glass Onion' is not as good as 'Knives Out', but not by that much. I probably enjoyed my first watch of this more then the original, because I had a better sense of what it was going to be going in. This movie is more cock sure of its self then the first one was, there's some overselling to the piece, but it's still enjoyable. It's 'Death on the Nile' with a sense of humor. I enjoyed Blanc's online gaming buddies and Norton's Kato Kaelin like house guest (Noah Segan), "That's Derol, he's just staying here while he figures some stuff out." ***1/2

Sunday, November 27, 2022

The Fabelmans (2022)

 Steven Spielberg has always been a fairly personal filmmaker, espically as regards his Jewish heritage (Schindlers List, Munich). In terms of his own life he's touched on being a child of divorce (E.T.) and even a Boy Scout in the desert (Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade). With 'The Fabelmans' Spielberg goes all out autobiographical, adapting his own childhood with the help of Tony Award winning playwright and past collaborator Tony Kushner (Lincoln), who helps keep the basic structure but fictionalize the details, putting the "fabel" in Fabelmans.

There are two principle throughlines to the piece (and a couple additional minor ones). His love of movies and moviemaking of course, but also his relationship with his parents, the mildly indulgent but fair Burt (Paul Dano) whose a skilled enginer, and the freespirted Mitzi (Michelle Williams) who had wanted to be and almost was a professional pianist. 

Those familiar with Spielberg's life story, espically if you have seen the excellent documentary "Spielberg" of a few years back, will recognize many of the events here depicted. The very first sequence of the film shows the then 5 year old taken to see his first movie, the Cecil B. DeMille circus epic "The Greatest Show on Earth". I had seen that movie before but seeing clips from it on a big screen, which look excellent, really drive home how impactful that experince must have been for a young boy who had never seen a movie before. 

This experience stays with our Steven surrogate Sam, changes his life, becomes an obession, he must recapture the magic of that experience. At first dismissed by his father as an expensive hobby, Sam starts by filming his toy train as a young child, to becoming the family chronicler of vactions, to making increasingly elaborate films in the desert with friends after the family moves to Arizona for dad's work. Family drama and a late in high school move to California prompt Sammy to try and leave filmmaking behind him, become serious. However an opportunity to film the senior class beach trip presents its self, and Sam's back behind the camera and deterimended that filmmaking must be his life.

In counterpoint to this passion is the slow breakdown in his parents marriage, his fathers work obsession feeding into emotional, if not (at least at first) physical infidelity by his mother. Sam loves and respects his father, but the emotional kinship and sense of connection was with the mother. As he pieces together Mitzi's feelings for a close family friend (Seth Rogan), copping proves very difficult.

There is a lot going on in 'The Fabelmans", I haven't even touched on Sam's three sisters and extended family, his friends and enamies at school, the girls he likes, one in particular (Chloe East). There is the stress of the moves, the efforts to find purpose and direction in life, as well as encounters with suburban anti semitism. 

Gabriel LaBelle is an excellent and sympathetic surragate for Speilberg, he captures the earnest sincierity, the excitement and awkwardness that is easy to imagine in Steven as a young man. The large cast is solid, in addition to those already mentioned Julia Butters as sister Reggie is a standout. Though I want to take a moment and circle back to Michelle Williams, she really is one of the greatest actresses of her generation, you forget just how good she is and then you see her in someting, an Oscar finally for her please.

A very personal and in some ways small scale story, "The Fabelmans" is still worth seeing on the big screen. It's what his parents would want you to do, to best experince the magic of it. This is a film that Steven Speilberg had to make, and it's probably the best movie of the year.****

Saturday, November 26, 2022

The Swinging Cheerleaders (1974)

 Director Jack Hill, who is still with us at 89, is principally rememberd for three things, making some women in prision pictures, launching the career of Pam Geir, and this movie. With a title like 'The Swinging Cheerleaders" you instantly know why this picture got a green light and basically what its going to be about. Hill delivers the requist T & A but decided that while has was at it, he might as well try to make it a good movie in the bargain.

Svelte burnett Jo Johnston plays Katie, a student at the fictional Mesa State, who goes undercover on the cheersquade to write an expose on those "swinging cheerleaders" for a small underground newspaper, because 1970's. While on the squade she earns the ire of the head cheerleader played by the buxom Colleen Camp, and befriends others, principly Rosanne Kayton (token black beauty) and the illfated genra regular Rainbaux Smith. Katie also discovers that the football coach, and some in the faculty and alumni assocaition, are fixing games to win at gambling. Katie slowly convinces the team's star player Buck (Ron Hijak) that the coach's recent odd calls are part of this scheme. She also has sex with Buck who is dating Colleen's character so catieness. 

The acting is decent. The story well constructed and smarter then it needs to be. There is even some pathos to Rainbaux Smith's character and her reluctance to go all the way with nice guy boyfriend Ross (Ric Carrott). Of course Rainbaux over compensates in trying to overcome her fear of sex and ends up in an orgy courtesy of the smarmy Ron (Ian Sander).

While the movie gets slightly heavy at times it's surprising engaging throughout, even when everybody is cloathed and just talking. The ending, when Buck has been kidnapped to prevent him from playing in and winning the big game, and our lead cheerleaders and a small group of allies must rescue him before Mesa State loses, well that's right out of a period Disney film, only its not Kathleen Cody trying to rescue Kurt Russell.

"The Swinging Cheerleaders" is trying to be a bunch of different types of movies at once, and does a remarkably good job of balancing it all. It is exploitive yes, silly definitely, but it managed to avoid feeling dumb or needlessly gross, which is quite the accomplishment. ***

Morals for Women (1931)

 'Morals for Women' is a kinda lose sequel to the 1925 silent film 'Morals for Men' (which I have not seen). The carry through between the two seems to be confined to similar titles, presumably similar themes, the presence of actor Conway Tearel (though he plays a different character in each), and that both movies were produced by the same low budget studio. Tiffany Films was a "poverty row" studio which operated from 1921 to 1932, upon  bankruptcy its film stock was sold to MGM and it's lot to Columbia.

The film stars Bessie Love on loan out from MGM, she had stared in 1929's Oscar best picture winner 'The Broadway Melody", which was a huge hit making Love a big get for Tiffany. At the time this movie came out however musicals were in decline, so Metro seemed to be losing interest in Love, or maybe they were just trying to punish her producer husband William Hawks for something.

'Morals for Women' isn't a musical, comedy or adventure film, the genras Love was best known for at the time, rather it's a drama. Love plays Helen Houston, a pretty young woman who leaves Albany for New York City to work and help support her financially strained family (papa tends to drink and lose jobs), after her intended (John Holland) heads out to seek his fourtune. The young man finds his fourtine then tracks Helen to the big city with the intent to marry her.

When Holland finds Love she acts a little awkward, non commital, keeps saying they have to discuss something, then Holland has to go away on a short buisness trip before things are resolved. Though this is a pre code film, it seems awfully reluctant to say perscially what it is Love has done to be ashamed of. As beast I can figure Love's boss, the afore mentioned Conway Tearel, was paying her a vastly inflated office salery to be sexually avilable for himself and his buisness associates. That's some solid set up for conflict, could have been intersting, but nothing much happens in this film, and Love apparently tells and is forgiven by Holland off screen, in the final scene the two are in a loving embrace.

The film isn't horrible, but it's not exactly good, besides Love the best thing it has going for it is only being around an hour in length, so you don't have much time to get bored. It also sent me on a modesty interesting dive through Wikipedia looking for something to talk about. *1/2


Friday, November 25, 2022

Loving You (1957)

 Lizabeth Scott had retired from film acting just the previous year, but came out of her early retirement as a favor to Hal Wallis, the producer most responsable for her career and a sometimes lover. 'Loving You' was only the second film to star Elvis Presley and is sandwiched between the better remembered 'Love Me Tender' and 'Jailhouse Rock'. 'Loving You' is a sort of surragate Elvis origin story, Mr. Presley playing Deke Rivers, an orphaned Texas roustabout with a beautiful voice and sex appeal, and Ms. Scott as a statuesque, blond, female version of Tom Parker, only with superior ethics.

Featuring a very loose plot, even by the standards of Elvis flicks, it is a bland mediocrity of a movie. Lizabeth was 14 years older then Elvis so she is given a love interest in the form of Wendell Corey, who plays a cowboy singer who Ms. Scott manages, and also happens to be her ex husband (they never got over each other). Elvis's love interest is a cowgirl singer played by the more age appropriate Dolores Hart in her film debut. Ms. Hart, a real girl next store type, would have a modest film career of about 5 years, including a second apperance with Elvis in 'King Creole' the following year, before famously giving up acting to become a Benedictain Nun. She is still with us at 84.

Other then some associated trivium 'Loving  You' is a very forgettable movie. Unless your a commited Elvis complitest it's probably not worth seeing. Even my Elvis fanatic sister is luke warm on this one. *1/2

She Said (2022)

 One of my favorite films of 2019 was 'Bombshell', which told the story of the Roger Ailes sexual harassment scandal at Fox News. Conservative media is an easy target for Hollywood, and in my review at the time I mentioned how the far closer to home story of Harvey Weinstein's crimes, needed to be told in a major motion picture as well. Now they have been.

'She Said' chronicles the 2017 investigation by New York Times reporters Megan Twohey (Carey Mulligan) and Jodi Kantor (Zoe Kazan) into the sex crimes of the A-List producer, which finally ended Weinstein's career in the movies, lead to his prosecution and conviction (with still more cases pending) and helped inaugurate the MeToo Movement. It is an investigative journalism picture in the tradition of 'All the President's Men' and 'The Post', and easily the best such film in the genra since 'Spotlight'.

Weinstein's assults and harasments against famous Hollywood actresses most captured the public imagination in the aftermath of the New York Times story. This of course is a major part of the movie, with actress and Weinstein victim Ashley Judd appearing as herself in the film, another Rose McGowan is played by a voice actress in telephone conversations. But it is the stories of Weinstein's lesser known victims that are here more resonate. The production assistants, and various office personal who were victimized and often forced into restrictive NDA's, essentially blacklisted in the industry, careers destroyed.

Samantha Morton plays Zelda Perkins, a young employee at Miramax Studios London office in the 90's, her career was ended for standing up for one of Weinstein's victims. She has only one long scene in the movie, and it is Oscar worthy. Jennifer Ehle and another apparently uncredited actress play Laura Madden in the 2010's and 1990's respectively. Her story opens the film, the young woman coming across a movie shoot in her native Ireland, getting a small job behind the sceens, then shown running in tears through the streets after Harvey attacked her.

The film chronicles our two reporters as they spend often fustrating months investigating the story, looking for ways to get and confirm sensitive information, trying to persuade victims to come forward, and even current Weinstein employes to take personal and professional risks to get the truth out. It's all well done and very effective in the genra tradition. What 'She Said' adds is an unusual emphasis on the personal lives of the reporters themselves, both working mothers of daughters, this is personal to them, but they are also consummate profressionals with an excellent sense of ethics. Our leads performances as with most everyone in the film, including Patricia Clarkson and Andra Brougher as their NYT bosses, are excellent.

'She Said' is a deservedly strong contender for multiple Oscars, which puts the film in a weird place. Will Academy voters chose to honor a film depicting evils many of them turned a blind eye to, when it was one of Hollywood's most open secrets, what the seemingly beloved Harvey did to women. It's a damned if you do, damned if you don't scenario for many in the industry, and for many a deserved damning. But as a film 'She Said' is a first rate drama, and as an expose of what is still a systemic problem in Hollywood and beyound, its an important one. ****


Thursday, November 24, 2022

Bad Times at the El Royal (2018)

 'Bad Times at the El Royal' is one of the better Quntion Tarantino imitators. It's got a solid cast full of recognizable names, plays with structure, has long dialogue sequences, stylized violence, some cool sets, great music and period flair. There's 'Reservoir Dogs' and 'Pulp Fiction' here, but the Tarantino film it felt most reminiscent of did not come out until the following year, 'Once Upon A Time in Hollywood'. 

Both films are set (in El Royals case after a brief teaser segment in the late 50's) in 1969, and both films feature a charismatic but violent cult leader with devoted, mostly female followers. In this case the cult leader is played by Chris Hemsworth, but he dosen't show up until late in the film. 

The bulk of our main cast show up in the first 10 minutes and include an aspiring singer (Cynthia Erivo), an elderly priest (Jeff Bridges), a vacuum cleaner salesman (Jon Hamm) and a rather terse young woman (Dakota Johnson). They all arive for various reasons to stay at the El Royal, a once thriving now largely empty hotel, just outside Lake Tahoe and sitting literally on the California/Nevada state line. None of them are exactly what they seem, even the tired young man who runs the place (Lewis Pullam) has secrets.

There are overlapping plots and unethical behaviors amongst our core group, and philosophical rumintations to be had on matters of faith, conscience, and loyalty, among other things. The movie proves a rather stealth character piece, and the violence was less then I expected, though this is still one of those films where you may be surprised by who lives and who dies. Wrtten and directed by Drew Goddard, who is best known for his writting on movies like 'World War Z' and 'The Martian' and TV series like 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer' and 'Lost'. ***

Sunday, November 20, 2022

Spirited (2022)

 'Spirited' is one of those movies that seemingly came out of nowhere, I knew nothing about it until it was in theaters. This is probably because it was produced by Apple for their Apple+ streaming service. It has been given a fairly wide theatrical release, which is good and probably because of its big stars and how much money they spent on it ($75 million). I worry that after its theatrical run the movie will mostly disaper, exiled to a it's lesser watched streaming service, this would be a shame because 'Spirited' is actually quite good.

Unlike so many recentish Christmas movie theatrical relasses, which have a brief run and then are forgotten, like 'Four Christmases'  and 'Fred Claus', 'Spirited' could have some real staying power, provided people have options to see it in the coming years.

'Spirited' is deconstructed 'A Christmas Carol' by way of buddy comedy. Jacob Marley (Patrick Page) and his team of ghosts have been putting Scrooge types through the paces since the mid 19th century, each year selecting a different grouch for potential salvation, and amassing a very solid success record. But it's all become kind of pat for Ghost of Christmas Present Will Ferrell, who craves a challange and something on a bigger scale then a neighborhood Karen or jerk boss. While scouting out the next year's potential candidate, an a-hole Canadian hotel manager, Present stumbles upon Clint Briggs (Ryan Reynolds). 

Briggs is a media consultant who specializes in fomenting manufactured outrage, he's done a lot of karmaic damage to the world and has been labeled "unredemable" by whoever in the celestial bureaucracy makes those calls. But Present is sure that he can save him, redeem his soul, have a big positive impact on the world, and releave the self doubt he's been hidding. However things go off script early in the hunting and Present and Briggs end up on a wild, comic adventure of mutual self discovery.

It works. I hadn't thought of Reynolds playing "Scrooge" before but the moment you hear the concept it makes perfect sense. Ferrell makes Present a mildly depressive counterpart to his Buddy the Elf,  committed, deeply sincere, and wanting to see the best in everyone. The two leads have a good chemistry, and the supporting cast which includes Octavia Spencer, Sunita Mani, and the voice of Tracy Morgan as The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come, are solid. This is also a musical, catchy songs that I've been listing to in the days since seeing the movie. 'Spirited' is spirited, an enjoyable watch I hope to see again, provided I can find access to it. ***


Saturday, November 19, 2022

Mama Mia! Here We Go Again (2018)

'Mama Mia! Here We Go Again' is the sequel to the massive hit (and a massive hit in its own right) 2008 film adaptation of the 1999 jukebox musical featuring the songs of ABBA. I'm going to get this out of the way and say yes this is the better movie. It benefits from established characters and not being composed for the stage, so this is a much loser and I thought funner movie.

It has more of a story as well, even if we have heard much of it before. The framing story is set 5 years after the events of the first movie. Meryl Steeps's Donna has passed away from unspecified cause the year before, and Amanda Seyfried's Sophie has had the hotel remodeled in her honor and is prepering for a grand re-opening, which will reunite the characters from the first film.

The second story is a flashback to 1979/1980 and concerns a young Donna's first coming to the island and her relationships with Sophie's three possible father's. This part of the film is made by the luminous presence of Lily James as the young Donna, I found her much more believable as this free spirited character then I ever did Streep. I also thought that the musical numbers in both the flash back and present day sequnces were better stagged then in the first film. 

Featuring a large and likable cast and finally working in my favorite ABBA song 'Fernando', I had a much better time with this movie then then the first, even though at heart they're not all that different. I watched this yesterday evening and perhaps there was something in the air that night.**1/2

Wednesday, November 16, 2022

The Boss and the Worker (1975)

 Watching a genuine Italian sex farce one realizes that half of Billy Wilder's filmography was just toned down English language versions of these. The Boss is tightly wound, suffering from impotence, he becomes obssessed with a laid back, liberten Worker. At times The Boss tries to punish The Worker, make him miserable out of jealousy. At times The Boss thinks The Worker can help him with his problems, but it always backfires. They pick up a couple of Swedish hitchhickers, but The Worker ends up with both. The Worker sets The Boss up with a communist, but class distinctions get in the way of romance. The Boss tries to get even with The Worker, thinking the he will similarly have no luck on a cruise full of the stuffy rich, he ends up sleeping with The Boss's sex starved wife. I've never watched one of these before, the novelty of the unrepentant 70's Euro sexiness, tounge in cheek and more playful then dirty, it worked for me. I don't know if I'll feel the need to see another, but I'm glad I saw one. ***

Monday, November 14, 2022

Father of the Bride Part II (1995)

 I recently revisited 1991's 'Father of the Bride' for the first time in roughly 30 years, I thought it held up. Now for me the question was how is the sequel which I had never seen.

 The original 50's 'Father of the Bride' staring Spencer Tracey as Father and Elizabeth Taylor as Bride had a sequel, it was called 'Father's Little Divedend' and was about Taylor's character having a baby. 'Father of the Bride Part II' tries to top this in a gimmicky way with both Steve Martin's daughter Kimberly Williams and wife Diane Keaton pregnant at the same time. I worried this might result in a case of sequel over reach like in 'City Slickers II', but I thought this worked.

In fact in some ways it worked better for me the any of the other 'Father of the Bride' movies, both 50's and 90's. The film is of course a comedy, and a decent though unexectional one, but what it really has going for it is that family. The Banks's, McKenzie's and even Frank. I love them, I'm up for whatever they want to do. Since here I've known them longer as we've already been through the first one together, I love them more. This even followed through to the also gimmicky Covid era short film 'Father of the Bride Part 3ish' which you can find on YouTube. I would be totally up for a theatrical length continuation of this clans story. ***

Sunday, November 13, 2022

Trader Horn (1931)

'Trader Horn' is one of those movies where the things that happened off camera are arguably more interesting then what happened on screen. Based on the memoir of ivory hunter/adventurer Alfred Aloysius "Trader" Horn (born Alfred Aloysius Smith; 1861–1931), the film was surprisingly innovative in its development and execution. It is largely a travel log and nature film in which Horn (played by famed westerns actor Harry Carey) leads the son of an old friend (Duncan Renaldo) on safari. This gives a narritive excuse for a guide to be explaining things about African wild life and culture to the audiance throughout the film.

Eventually a fictional narrative takes center stage as the expedition procedes to "rescue" the daughter of white missionaries (Edwina Booth) from the natives. Actually it is her who rescues them, she had been largely raised in and as result successfully integrated to native society, she gives her old life up for the pretty face of Duncan Ranaldo.

The film was shot largely in then colonial Africa. The cast and crew traveled by boat to the dark continent along with film and sound equipement, which was carted around on a long an exhausting shot. Though production began in 1929 the film took a long time to put together and would not hit movie screens until 1931.

Though tremendously expensive to produce  it was also tremendously successful. Costing $1.3 million to make 'Trader Horn' brought in $4.2 million world wide. Though stilted by modern standards it was a massive novelty at the time, people had never seen anything like it on film before. The movie is more then a little bit sexist and racist, but Horn's genuine love for Africa and it's people comes through. The film was even nominated for a  best picture Oscar.

The production difficulties behind the scenes are legendary, but the stand out in this regard is the story of the films female star Edwina Booth, which is the main reason I decided to finally see the film. Edwina was born Jospehine Constance Woodruff to a a prominent Mormon family in Provo, Utah in 1904. The family moved to California for her fathers health in the early 20's and Edwina (who adapted her stage name from those of a favorite uncle and grandfather) was  discovered on a beach by director E.J. Babille and eventually signed with MGM. She worked small supporting roles for a couple of years and 'Trader Horn' was to have been her big break, it proved to be a nightmare.

The long, grueling shot overseas and away from her family saw Edwina fall from a tree, get cut by elephant grass, suffer sun stoke, insect bites, and contract malaria which may have rendered her sterile. In addition she was sexually harassed, and reported being forced to sunbath nude, at least in part to have a consistent skin tone for her skimpy and itchy costume made of monkey fur and lions teeth.

It took years for Edwina to recover her health, which combied with her suing the studio effectively ended her career just as it was taking off. She would appear on screen a few more times, mostly in adventure serials capitizling off of the success of 'Trader Horn'. She would make her last screen apperance in 1932 and marry three times, with the first annulled and her outliving her second two husbands. She was a commited member of the LDS Church and would serve as an ordinance worker in the Los Angeles Temple before dying in 1991 at the age of 86.

Though she kept a low profile after the end of her film career she would donate her personal papers to BYU. It was from these that we learn that she settled her lawsuit with MGM for $35,000, or approximately $600,000 in 2013 dollars. Booth will always be best remeberd for 'Trader Horn' and shows a real star quality in it. One wonders where her career could have gone had she not gotten sick or sued her studio.

The completed film was very much a product of its time, but also unlike other films of its time in the risks taken in front and behind the camera. There is a massive scope to the look of the film, and while generally played broad there are subtleties. Carey effectively conveys a listless jealousy of Ranaldo over Booth, he knows he is too old to have the spirited and beautiful young woman, he regrets this, but comes to reluctantly accept it. 'Trader Horn' managed to make something unique and memorable come from much pain and effort. ***


Thursday, November 10, 2022

Blue (1993)

 Spoilers

'Blue' is the first film in director Krzysztof KieÅ›lowski's "Three Colors Trilogy", with each film taking its title from one of the colors of the French flag, and each film it's theme from one of the words in the French moto, "Liberty, Egality, Fraternity".  'Blue' is the "Liberty film", though not in the words political sense.

Juliette Binoche plays Julie, the wife of a famed composer who is killed in a car crash along with their five year old daughter. Julie is so severely injured that she is stuck in the hospital and unable to go to their funneral, which is almost a state affair. Once finally able to walk she creates a distraction at night so that she can break into the pharmacy with the intent to steal pills and kill herself. With pills in her mouth she finds she is unable to swallow and aborts the attempt. 


Upon her relase she puts her husband's family estate on the market, sells the fancy city apartment, prepars a trust fund for her alzhimers stricken mother, and moves into a small apartment with the intent to spend the rest of her life cut off as much as possible from human contact. But again she finds despite her sincer efforts she can't quite do this.



Her husband's friend and assistant who has long nursed a crush on her insists on tracking her down to make sure she is okay, she is drawn to the plight of a neighborhood street musican, and finds that she can't keep from visiting the mother who no longer recognizes her. Her attempt to avoid involvement by refusing to sign a petition to kick a prostitute out of her building, causes the troubled young woman to adopt her as a champion.

She see's a TV news piece on her husband containing pictures of him with a woman she doesn't recognize, she is able to learn that he was having an affair and proceds to track the woman down. When she goes to confront her she finds the woman late in pregnancy with her husband's child, and something again breaks inside her. 

However her response now is not to try and break further away, but to engage again with the world. It is beautiful, I cried. Despite the worst that life could throw at her Julie works through her grief and again finds her "liberty". 


The Polish born KieÅ›lowski first made a name for himself in late communist televison. 'Dekalog' is what we would now call a limited series and takes a similar approach to 'Three Colors'; set in a sprawling state housing project each episode is a story inspired by one of the ten commandments. One episode was expanded into a movie titled 'A Short Film about Killing' and it is devastating, though not in the way you might expect. 


That film was all I had seen of the writer/directors work before 'Blue' and I simply need to see more. KieÅ›lowski, who died in his mid 50's,

 had a sense of and empathy for the human condtion that is simple extraordinary. 'Blue' is a truly beautiful film. ****



Wednesday, November 9, 2022

Machete Kills (2013)

 'Michete Kills' is the sequel to the 2010 film 'Machete', and middle chapter of a likely never to be completed 'Michete' trilogy. Danny Trejo is again Michete, a Mexican avenger whose girlfriend from the first movie Jessica Alba is killed in the film's opening minutes. He is there after recruted by a U.S. President played by Charlie Sheen to take down a crazed Mexican revolutionary played by Damian Bichir, his point of contact is played by Amber Heard.

The film contains much over the top violence and much beautiful women. Michelle Rodriquez and Tom Savinei return from the first movie, Sofia Vargas and Alexa PenaVega join the large cast; which contains many recognizable names often in small cameo style roles, such as Lady Gaga, Antonio Banderis, Cuba Gooding Jr., Walter Goggins, Vanesa Hudgens, and even Elon Musk appearing as himself.

Mel Gibson plays what is essentially a Bond villian, with plans to flee to space and start a nuclear war. In fact there is something very Bond like about this entire enterprise, from babes to baddies and even Q branch style weapons, like a lazer that turns people inside out. It's all overplayed of course and put through a grindhouse style filter. I found it all a little blah, though this may have been a slight improvement on the original film. **

Tuesday, November 8, 2022

You're Not You (2014)

 Based on the 2006 novel of the same name by Michelle Wildsen, 'You're Not You' stars Hilary Swank as a wealthy Houstonite stricken by ALS, and Emmy Rossum as the wreck of a college student who becomes her caretaker. I wasn't expecting too much from this, another inspiring in the face of illness/ changed my life through helping others movie. But this platonic version of 'Me Before You' worked. I was surprised and had to watch it again to make sure.

Hilary Swank gives a very commited performance, you watch her slowly degrade from the degenrative illness. it gets to where you can hardly understand her words, her face must do most of the communicating. Emmy Rossum does a fine a job. Good supporting cast includes Josh Duhmal, Stephanie Beatriz, Jason Ritter, Marcia Gay Harden, Lorreita Devine, Ernie Hudson, and Ed Beagly Jr. Francis Fisher plays Swank's mom, which means that along with 'Million Dollar Baby' both movies to feature a paralyzed Swank contain one of Francesca Eastwood's parents. ***

Sunday, November 6, 2022

Starcrash (1978)

 Made cheaply in Italy to cash in on the success of 'Star Wars', 'Starcrash' is pretty awful. It's hard to overstate how cheap it looks, comparing it to the 'New Hope' of the previous year it looks about a decade older. A silly, non sensical, derivative story, poorly conceived and executed. Yet somehow they got John Barry to do the score and Christopher Plummer to appear, playing the Emporer of the Galaxy, who in this case is one of the good guys. Predictably the movie was distributed within the United States by Roger Cormen's New World Pictures.

Caroline Munro, a Hammer Horror regular who the previous year had been a Bond girl in 'The Spy Who Loved Me', is a space pilot and adventurer. Her navigator is played by Marjoe Gortner, a former Pentecostal preacher and subject of the Oscar winning 1972 documentary 'Marjoe'. The two are caught and  briefly imprisoned for various crimes, allowing Munro to be minimally cloathed in bikini style prison attire (which she retains through much of the film), before being freed by the Emporer to hunt for his son and heir, whose ship crashed "starcrashed" while on a reconicense mission against an evil duke. The galaxy is in civil war you see.

There is a robot who talks with a Texas accent, and a green skined Telly Savalias type, and Amazon women, and Marjoe develops force powers and even fights some stop motion robots with a light sword. Also David Hasselhoff is in this. It's all pretty rediculus, yet because and not in spite, of its many faults remains watchable. Yet I can't bring myslef to call this anything other than what it is, which is a bad movie. *

Saturday, November 5, 2022

Intruder in the Dust (1949)

That this movie exists at all is remarkable, that it was produced by MGM, the poshist of all studios is even harder to believe, that it lost money, now that part makes sense. Based on the 1948 novel of the same name by William Faulkner, 'Intruder in the Dust' is the story of a black man accused of a murder he didn't commit, and the efforts of a group of liberal whites to make sure he's not killed for it.

The film hasn't dated entirely well, its the story of a black man told from the point of view of a group of whites, who are actual savior figures for him. But for the time and place of its creation the film is exceptionally progressive, and the performance by Juano Hernandez as the wrongfully accused man, proud, head unbowed, I can't think of anything like it from the Hollywood of the time.

There is something a little 'Hardy Boys' about the actual mystery. Claude Jarman Jr, who had won a special "Juvinale Oscar" three years earler for 'The Yearling', and is still with us at nearly 90, is the chief audiance surrogate figure. David Bain is noble but bland as his uncle the lawyer. While Elizabeth Patterson is endering as a stubern old white woman willing to sacrifice her life to prevent injustice. All three characters seems rather wish fulfilment, out of place in their convictions for the world in which they were born. Not impossible people, but unlikely ones.

The film is a relatively strong condemnation of racial bigotry, and has a few standout scenes with good tension, though these are mostly in the first half of the movie, before it becomes largely concerned with conventional sleuthing. But the film remains most notable for the no nonsense nobility of its lead black character, that he had to be presented within the context of a mostly middling southern fried 'who done it', is an understandable concession for the time. ***


Source Code (2011)

 A top secret government project can send Jake Gyllnenhaal's consciousness back in time, but only for 8 minute at a streach. He's sent back into the mind of a teacher on a commuter train that's about to blow up. They don't want him to stop the bombing, they don't think that he can, rather they want him to figure out who did it and report back. The plan is for him to live, die, repeat until the mission is accomplished.

Surprisingly effective premise, makes for good tension. Michelle Monaghan is the love interest, even though they just meet she repeatedly throws him for a (time) loop. Jeffrey Wright is the head of the project, Vera Farmiga is Gyllengaal's contact and chief allie. A satisfying thriller that becomes a feel good, sentimental romance. ***

Thursday, November 3, 2022

Mama Mia! (2008)

 Rob surprised me with this one for the podcast, it's possible I never would have seen it otherwise. 'Mama Mia!' the film is based on the 1999 ABBA jukebox musical of the same name, both were big hits with the "Wine Moms", that's a real thing you can look it up. 

Amanda Seyfried tricks her three possible father's into attending her Greek island wedding, hoping to determine which of them is her real daddy. Her mom Meryl Streep is not pleased to see them, high jinks and musical numbers ensue. 

This movie is perhaps most famous for Pierce Brosnan doing a really bad but earnest job singing, that didn't disappoint. However the movie its self is very much not for me. I like ABBA as much as the next guy but found the proceedings silly and somewhat grating. Though I thought it improved some as it went along, and I liked Seyfried and her three dads, this just wasn't my cup of Aphrodite's spring water. **

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

Miss Meadows (2014)

 What is this? Who is it for?

In 'Miss Meadows' Katie Holmes is the titular Miss Meadows, an elementary school substitute teacher of Disney Princess level positivity, who is also a muderious vigilante. She brings her own kind of justice to her decaying suburban Ohio neighborhood; she has a romance with a good hearted sheriff (James Badge Dale), who knows somethings off with her, but she's still Katie Holmes so he does his best to ignore his growing suspensions.

Miss Holmes just dominates this strange little film, giving what after 'Pieces of April' is probably my favorite Katie Holmes performance, it's just so odd. This low budget film has a deliberately artificial air, feels insubstantial and not fully develped, and needless to say there are tonal issues, but Holmes makes it watchable and weirdly charming. I don't know quite what to make of it, but I liked it. **1/2

Monday, October 31, 2022

Friday the 13th Part III (1982)

 The 3rd such film in as many years, both for the franchise and for me. Jason continues his killing spree and gains his signature hockey mask. The final girl from the last movie Amy Steel declined to return, so the script had to be rewritten to give new lead Dana Kimmell a separate traumatic back story. The films a little bit goofy, which I liked. In fact to my surprise I didn't hate this. Maybe it was a quirk of mood but it's badness struck me as enjoyable. Movie was  originally released in 3D so there are gimmicky shots very much composed with that in mind. *1/2

Saturday, October 29, 2022

Inferno (1980)

 'Inferno' is the closet to 'Susperia' (in aesthetics and themes) of the five Dario Argento films I've seen since. Despite a lack of cary over characters 'Inferno' is in fact a lose sequel, part of a trilogy not concluded until 'The Mother of Tears' in 2007 (which I have added to my list).

The story centers on Leigh McCloskey as an American music student in Rome, who returns to New York after receiving cryptic messages from his sister. (This films "American" scenes are pretty obviously shot in Europe which adds to the surrealism.)

Instead of a ballet school the string of deaths here are connected to an old apartment building. This structure is the seat of one of the "three mothers", ultra powerful witches who are said to "control the world" from their respective homes in Frieberg, Germany, New York City and Rome. (We saw the German one in Susperia and see the American and Italian ones here.)

'Infernio' follows a pretty similar story arc to its predecessor, with even the ending being basically the same. More muted then 'Susperia' there are still memorable scenes and elements including the extended opening sequence, principly it's under water segment, and the unwitting architect of all three witches residences being torturously kept alive as a slave long after the world believes him dead.

Though the intent was to expand upon the first films mythos it arguably makes it less interesting. I had more difficulty getting into this one then the other Argento films I've watched, I may have reached a point of saturation with Dario for a bit. I will probably need to revisit this but for now I give it **1/2

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

The Neon Demon (2016)

 Not a Dario Argento film this time but certainly taking some visual inspiration from 'Susperia' is 'The Neon Demon'. From the Danish director Nicolas Winding Refn, best known for the Ryan Gosling/Carey Mulligan film 'Drive'. Elle Fanning is a recent orphan who lying about her age moves to L.A. to become a model. It's a vicious scene, I think we all know that, but this film dials it up to 11.

Both aggressively unpleasant and slow, everyone is mean and/or exploitive to Elle, save one struggling young photographer whose legitimately sweet on her. Manipulative agent, shallow piers, MeToo creepy photographer, passive agressive gay fashion designer, sexually predatory lesbian make up artist. Even the motel manager where Elle stays is despicable, and he's played by the famiously well liked Keanu Reeves.

The film does take an unexpected turn at roughly the three quarters mark, which adds something but not a lot. This film about vile people lacking substance is vile and lacks substance. *

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Dario Argento's Trauma (1993)

 With 'Dario Argento's Trauma' Dario Arengto breaks his own formula a bit, as here the principle mystery solver is actually from the country he is solving a mystery in. Set and filmed around Minneapolis, Minnesota, Christopher Rydell (son of director Mark Rydell) is a news copy writer for a local TV station (and currently sleeping with its top anchorwoman). A former drug addict who has gotten himself sobar, one day he stops on a bridge when he sees a young woman in distress. He succedes is preventing her suicide, takes her to get something to eat and learns that she is a drug addict, anorexic and run away.

The girl is played by Asia Argento, daughter of the director, she's not quite Sophia Coppala in 'The Godfather III' bad. She gets away from Mark pretty quick and is apprehended by child protective services (Asia is 18 playing 16) and returned to her parents, Romanian immegrants. Her mother (Piper Laurie) works as a medium and after a reading gone bad her and her husband are killed. Beheaded by a serial killer who has been in the news lately (the films opening sequence depicts one of the killers murders).

Asia flees to Mark's, having apparently memorized his address after seeing his ID once. The two proceed to investigate the killings while avoiding the efforts of Asia's old psychraist (she had spent some time in rehab) to apprehend her. They discover that the killer will only behead when it's raining, and is killing not at random, but working through a list of doctors, nurses and patients who were at a specific area hospital on a specific rainy night. Also Mark and Asia are falling for each other, which is creepy because she's 16 and he's like 30.

Argento is deep into well worn thematic terroitory by this point, but I found his idiosyncrasies as a story teller still held my interest. He's told this basic story before, but there's still some real creativity here, and despite some stumbles the film certainly isn't bland. There is even what apperes to be a very functional, non exploitive lesbian relationship going on between two side characters. **1/2

Monday, October 24, 2022

Deep Red (1975)

 A Lithuanian psychic at an Italian parapsychology convention, proclaims in an open session that someone in the audiance is a murderer, shortly after she threatens to expose exactly whom and is murdered herself. An English pianist, plucky reporter, and parapsychologist team up to solve the case.

This is now the 4th Dario Argento movie I've watched and you can't help but pick up on recuring motifs and themes. Occurring in at least two of the 4 films I've watched we have psychic powers, head smashed through window, Goblin soundtracks, transvestites, multiple killers or a principle killer and someone who tries to cleanup their messes, and in each of the 4 the principle investigator is not a professionl detective and is from a country other then the one the murders take place in. I find this all kind of neat.

Executed with some real visual flair, though still nothing on the level of 'Susperia', 'Deep Red' is an effective Hitchcockian, psychological mystery with extra gore, in short a 'Giallo film'. The movie contains one near iconic horror image which I had seen before without context, and rather memorable opening and closing scenes. The exaggerated way many of the characters express themselves is reminiscent of anime and at least partly due to the dubbing. This one really worked for me. ***1/2

Sunday, October 23, 2022

Hannibal (2001)

Sequel to the Oscar winning 1991 film Silence of the Lambs', 'Hannibal' picks up 10 years after the events of the first film. Julianne Moore very ably takes over the role of Clarice Starling from Jodi Foster, this is one of the best examples of a recast I can think of. Clarice is older and wiser now, more jaded, run down by the bureaucracy of the FBI. At the start of the film she is involved in a bust gone wrong, its not her fault but she takes heat for it. Then the spector of Hannibal Lecter returns, first in the form of his lone surviving victim promising new leads, and later the man himself.

One of the things I most appreciated about this film is how different it is from the original. Both movies are based on books by Thomas Harring so there is still a strong sense of continuity, these stories come from the same mind. 

Much of the film concerns Lecter, again played beguilingly by Anthony Hopkins, having assumed a new identity and living in Florence. A local police detective played by Giancrlo Gianni is inveating a disapernce, a scholar whose old position Lecter's alter ego is now on the verge of filling. The detective gradually pieces together who Lecter is, but instead of proceeding through channels, he opts to persue a reward from Lecter's vengeful surviving victim. Things don't work out well for anyone involved.

For roughly its first half this movie really worked for me, then the whole Italian sequence started running long, and the film got increasingly over the top and trashy. 'Silence' felt more grounded and focused then 'Hannibal', and it felt like it had more of a story to tell. The story here exists because the first was so successful, and the desire to top what came before becomes far too dominate. While the central performances are strong and the film well made, it still feels exploitive in a way it's predecessor, despite much gore and sleeze of its own, managed to avoid. **1/2

Saturday, October 22, 2022

Phenomina (1985)

'Phenomina' is a Dario Argento horror/mystery/thriller set in Switzerland. A serial killer is abducting and killing teenage girls. Donald Plesance is a wheelchair bound, Scottish born entomologist who has  helped the police date a murder based on insect damage to the recovered head. A 14 year old Jennifer Connelly is the daughter of an American movie star and new student at a prestigious boarding school, she has a tendency to sleep walk and a strange psychic connection with insects.

Here Argento is able to delve into the whole girls school thing with age approprate actresses, something originally intended for 'Susperia'. It gets a little awkward. The dubbing and dialouge are worse then in either 'Susperia' or 'The Bird with the Crystal Plumage'. The movie also keeps wanting to be a music video and some of the acoustic selections really seem out of touch for the scenes they underscore. Reminiscent of 'Firestarter' this movie is alternately silly and batshit crazy. At least the ending is memorable. **

Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992)

 Francis Ford Coppola's 'Bram Stoker's Dracula' was a project born more of economic need then creative desire. While the 1970's had been a great decade both creatively and financially for Francis, the 1980's were considerably less so. With his production company American Zoetrope in dire straights, the early 1990's would see the autor concentrating on projects with built in commercial appeal, 'The Godfather Part III' in 1990 and 'Bram Stoker's Dracula' in 1992.

Wanting popular young stars as an audiance hook, Coppala brought in Winona Ryder and Keanu Reeves as the juvenile leads Mina and Jonathan. While Ryder is okay, Reeves performance is famiously bad, he underplays everything and both actor and director came to acknowledge this casting as a mistake. The youngsters look even weaker when forced to act against Gary Oldman's Dracula and Anthony Hopkins as Van Helsing, with Hopkins giving what is now my favorite portrail of the character.

Early in the movie there is a scene where a 15th century Dracula curses God and hits a stone crucifix causing it to bleed. Similarly Coppala manages to get blood from a stone, offering a fresh take on over done material. Ironically much of what feels new in this adaption comes from going back to what's old, story elements from the original novel usually left out of other adaptions. Examples of this range from big, Lucy's three suiters (usually condensed to one), when paired with Van Helsing are among my favorite parts of the film; to small, such as a brief apperence by the blue fire, which isn't gotten into in detail but by its very unexplained presence ads an extra element of enjoyable weirdness.

The romance angle between Darcula and Mina is considerably played up to good effect, the whole film is rather overtly sexual. Visually they pull out all the stops, using a variety of styles and employing some brilliant practical effects. Uneven but ambitious this Dracula mostly works, is a real creative accomplishment on most fronts, and worth seeing if your not put off by the eroticism. *** 

Friday, October 21, 2022

The Bird With the Crystal Plumage (1970)

 Written and directed by Dario Argento 'The Bird with the Crystal Plumage' is a Hitchcockian thriller about an American writer living in Italy (Tony Mustane) who becomes involved in efforts to stop a serial killer. Our protagonist happens to be in the right place at the right time to stop a woman's murder, though the assailant gets away. Briefly considered a suspect, the police inspector realizes his value as a witness and takes away Mustane' s passport to keep him in country. Mustane decides to try and solve the case himself, so he and his Italian girlfriend can move to America as planed.

Mustane gets too close to the truth putting himself and his girlfriend in danger. The Inspector gives him back his passport and encourages the couple to leave the country, but by thus point Mustane has become obsessed and must see things through to the end.

Nicely shot and well paced, the film looks good but is not the visual frenzy that was the directors later film 'Susperia' (his only other work I have yet seen). A solid mystery/thriller enhanced by some eccentric side characters, including a gay merchant and a reclusive artist. Argento dosen't overplay his hand with these flourishes and the film remains very accessible, even mainstream feeling more then 50 years out. The ultimate identity of the killer was a bit of a risk but I found it worked. ***

Thursday, October 20, 2022

See How They Run (2022)

'See How They Run' is an extremely metatextual movie. The story, a period piece detective tale, concerns a murder behind the scenes at the West End production of the Agatha Christie play 'The Mousetrap' in 1953. 'The Moustrap' play is an adaptation of a Christie short story, which was adapted from a Christie radio play, which in turn was inspired by an actual murder case from 1945.

With rare exceptions such as the Covid lockdown, that play has been showing continuously in its original West End run since 1952. At more then 27,500 performances that is the longest continuous run of any play in recorded history. Ironically 'The Mousetrap' also has a reputation as being mediocre.

'The Mousetrap' has also never recived an English language film adaption, though there are Russian and Bangalories productions. According to this film there is a clause in the contract for the play that no film adaption can start production until six months after the close of the plays initial run. Thus more irony as the murder victim was involved in pre production for a film adaption.

The story concerns the efforts of a alcoholic police inspector (Sam Rockwell) and a talkie constable (Saorise Ronan) to solve the crime. The interplay of those two is the best thing about this movie. The rest of the solid cast play a mixture of historical chatacters, such as actor Richard Attenborough and producer John Wolfe, and fictional characters like Wolfe's secretary and the man hired to adapt the play for the screen. These fictional characters are often cast post racially, which is a bit of a distraction when the film has a subplot about mid century sexism but completely ignores contemporary racism.

It's a fun enough film, has some decent twists and turns, and certainly has a sense of humor about its self, being a comedy and all; though it plays the mystery elements fairly straight. Again metatextually there are wheels within wheels here, and you might miss that the movie tells you precisely how it is going to end early on. **1/2