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Sunday, April 30, 2023
Review: Mesmerizing "BABYLON" Sings and F**ks in the Rain
Sunday, March 19, 2023
Review: What's Love Got to Do With It" - The First Time the Oscars Screwed Angela Bassett
Saturday, March 11, 2023
Review: Disney's "ENCANTO" Spins Its Own Special Magic
Saturday, February 25, 2023
Review: "CREED" Fights Furiously in the Shadow of "Rocky"
Saturday, December 10, 2022
Review: Netflix's "THE POWER OF THE DOG" is Certainly a Movie
Saturday, July 2, 2022
Review: "LA LA LAND" Shoulda, Woulda, Coulda Been Great
La La Land (2016)
Running time: 128 minutes (2 hours, 8 minutes)
MPAA – PG-13 for some language
WRITER/DIRECTOR: Damien Chazelle
PRODUCERS: Fred Berger, Gary Gilbert, Jordan Horowitz, and Marc Platt
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Linus Sandgren (D.o.P.)
EDITOR: Tom Cross
COMPOSER: Justin Hurwitz
SONGS: Justin Hurwitz and Pasek & Paul; Justin Hurwitz, John Legend, Marius de Vries and Angelique Cinelu
Academy Award winner
MUSICAL/DRAMA
Starring: Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, Rosemarie DeWitt, J.K. Simmons, and John Legend
La La Land is a 2016 romantic film and musical drama written and directed by Damien Chazelle. The film focuses on a struggling jazz pianist and an aspiring actress who fall in love while navigating their career paths in Los Angeles.
La La Land opens in Los Angeles, California. While stuck in a typical L.A. traffic, aspiring actress, Mia Dolan (Emma Stone), has a moment of road rage directed at Sebastian “Seb” Wilder (Ryan Gosling), a struggling jazz pianist. Mia has a hard day of work at her coffee shop job, and her subsequent audition goes awry. Sebastian is fired from a gig at a restaurant after he slips in some jazz improvisation despite the owner's (J.K. Simmons) warning to only play traditional Christmas music. Attracted to the Seb's music, Mia walks into the restaurant and witnesses the firing. She tries to compliment his music, but Seb rudely walks past her.
Eventually, Fate brings them together at a party. Soon, they are sharing their dreams and start becoming a couple. Both have to reconcile their aspirations for the future, however, and as their career paths veer, can they stay a couple?
La La Land almost won the Academy Award for “Best Picture,” but didn't. La La Land could have been a great film, but it really isn't. The film's leads, Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone, are fine actors, and they are true movie stars. [I don't see anything in Stone's performance here that is worthy of the “Best Actress” Oscar she won.] The camera seems to love them, and they look great on the big screen – as the sayings go – but as hard as they try, their characters are limp. Stone's Mia has potential, but remains surprisingly vapid, except for a few moments. Sebastian is pretentious and insufferable, although he is intriguing.
The material that makes up this film's screenplay, written by Damien Chazelle, is a shallow interpretation of the musicals of “old Hollywood” (also known as the “Golden Age of Hollywood”). Chazelle may be a fan of such old musicals, but his love cannot recreate the genuine spirit and aesthetic of them. If you, dear readers, are familiar with classic Hollywood musicals, you will recognize that this film ties to be old-fashioned, but comes across as a pretender.
The film's score is quite good, and it has one great song “City of Stars” (which keeps playing in my head). Most of the rest of the songs are technically proficient, but are exceedingly dull. There is one more decent song (can't remember which one) and a catchy tune, “Catch a Fire,” co-written and performed by John Legend.
Still, La La Land has moments of brilliance. Mia and Sebastian's meeting on a bench at Griffith Park is filled with movie magic, and the film's final moment recalls the semi-tragic mood of Casablanca. The production values are terrific, including the Oscar-winning art direction and set decoration, and the Oscar-winning cinematography is some of the prettiest I have seen in the last decade. Even the Oscar-nominated costume design is worthy of a win.
I can see why Barry Jenkins' Moonlight wowed enough voters to win the Oscar for “Best Picture” of 2016 over La La Land. Moonlight is a fascinating character study, while La La Land is flashy cinematic bauble with caricatures. It is technically proficient, but every good moment is met by a flat and dull moment. La La Land is the film that could have been great, and should have been great, but ended up being just very good.
7 of 10
B+
★★★½ out of 4 stars
NOTES:
2017 Academy Awards, USA: 6 wins: “Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role” (Emma Stone), “Best Achievement in Directing” (Damien Chazelle), “Best Achievement in Cinematography” (Linus Sandgren), “Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures-Original Score” (Justin Hurwitz), “Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures-Original Song” (Justin Hurwitz-music and Benj Pasek-lyrics and Justin Paul-lyrics for the song, “City of Stars”), and “Best Achievement in Production Design” (David Wasco for production design and Sandy Reynolds-Wasco for set decoration); 8 nominations: “Best Motion Picture of the Year” (Fred Berger, Jordan Horowitz, and Marc Platt), “Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role” (Ryan Gosling), “Best Original Screenplay” (Damien Chazelle), “Best Achievement in Film Editing” (Tom Cross), “Best Achievement in Costume Design” (Mary Zophres), “Best Achievement in Sound Mixing” (Andy Nelson, Ai-Ling Lee, and Steven Morrow), “Best Achievement in Sound Editing” (Ai-Ling Lee and Mildred Iatrou), and “Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures-Original Song” (Justin Hurwitz-music and Benj Pasek-lyrics and Justin Paul-lyrics for the song, “Audition (The Fools Who Dream)”)
2017 BAFTA Awards: 5 wins: “Best Film” (Fred Berger, Jordan Horowitz, and Marc Platt), “Best Leading Actress” (Emma Stone), “Best Cinematography” (Linus Sandgren), “Original Music” (Justin Hurwitz), and “David Lean Award for Direction” (Damien Chazelle); 6 nominations: “Best Leading Actor” (Ryan Gosling), “Best Screenplay-Original” (Damien Chazelle), “Best Editing” (Tom Cross), “Best Production Design” (Sandy Reynolds-Wasco and David Wasco), “Best Costume Design” (Mary Zophres), and “Best Sound” (Mildred Iatrou, Ai-Ling Lee, Steven Morrow, and Andy Nelson)
2017 Golden Globes, USA: 7 wins: “Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy,” “Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy” (Ryan Gosling), “Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy” (Emma Stone), “Best Director - Motion Picture” (Damien Chazelle), “Best Screenplay - Motion Picture” (Damien Chazelle), “Best Original Song-Motion Picture” (Justin Hurwitz, Benj Pasek, and Justin Paul for the song: “City of Stars”), and “Best Original Score - Motion Picture” (Justin Hurwitz)
Saturday, July 2, 2022
The text is copyright © 2022 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
Thursday, May 26, 2022
Review: Original "TOP GUN" is Still a Bad Movie
TRASH IN MY EYE No. 33 of 2022 (No. 1845) by Leroy Douresseaux
Top Gun (1986)
Running time: 110 minutes (1 hour, 50 minutes)
MPAA – PG
DIRECTOR: Tony Scott
WRITERS: Jim Cash & Jack Epps Jr. (based on the magazine article, “Top Guns,” by Ehud Yonay)
PRODUCERS: Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Jeffrey Kimball (D.o.P.)
EDITORS: Chris Lebenzon and Billy Weber
COMPOSER: Harold Faltermeyer
Academy Award winner
DRAMA/ACTION
Starring: Tom Cruise, Kelly McGillis, Val Kilmer, Anthony Edwards, Tom Skerritt, Michael Ironside, Tim Robbins, John Stockwell, Barry Tubb, Rick Rossovich, Whip Hubley, James Tolkan, Adrian Pasdar, Meg Ryan, and Clarence Gilyard, Jr.
Top Gun is a 1986 action and drama film directed by Tony Scott and starring Tom Cruise. The film was inspired by an article entitled, “Top Guns,” which was written by Ehud Yonay and published in the May 1983 issue of California Magazine. Top Gun the film focuses on a daring young U.S. Navy pilot who is a student at an elite fighter weapons school where he competes with other students and learns a few things from a female instructor.
Top Gun opens on the Indian Ocean aboard the vessel, the “USS Enterprise.” The story introduces United States Naval Aviator, Lieutenant Pete “Maverick” Mitchell (Tom Cruise), and his RIO (Radar Intercept Officer), Lieutenant Junior Grade Nick “Goose” Bradshaw (Anthony Edwards). While on a mission flying their fighter aircraft, Maverick and Goose have an encounter with a hostile aircraft. As a result of the incident, Maverick and Goose are invited to the U.S. Navy “Fighter Weapons School” in Miramar, California (also known as “Fightertown U.S.A.”). The top one percent of naval aviators (pilots) get to attend Fighter Weapons School, also known as “Top Gun” (or “TOPGUN”).
Naval aviators have to complete a five-week course of classroom studies and flight training (called a “hop”). The top graduating aviator receives the “Top Gun” plaque. Maverick's rival for Top Gun is top student, Lieutenant Tom “Iceman” Kazansky (Val Kilmer), who considers Maverick's attitude foolish and his flying dangerous. Maverick also becomes romantically involved with Charlotte “Charlie” Blackwood (Kelly McGillis), an astrophysicist and civilian instructor, an unwise move for both.
Will Maverick earn the Top Gun trophy? Or will his reckless ways and tendency to disobey orders endanger those around him and cost him his future.
Until recently, I had never watched Top Gun, not even a minute of it. From the first time I saw a trailer for it, I thought Top Gun looked stupid, although I was a Tom Cruise fan at the time of its release (as I still am). I only recently watched it in preparation for seeing the long-awaited sequel, Top Gun: Maverick, which has a good looking trailer and has received glowing early reviews.
But I was right. Top Gun is stupid. It is poorly written, especially on the character drama end. Writers Jim Cash & Jack Epps Jr. are credited as the film's screenwriters. The film's credited “Associate Producer,” the late Warren Skarren (1946-90), was a screenwriter known for rewriting the screenplays of big Hollywood projects (such as Beetlejuice and the 1989 Batman film). Skarren apparently did some heavy rewriting for Top Gun's shooting script. However, the film seems to be made from the parts of several screenplays that were combined to form a new script. That especially shows during the character drama scenes, which are sometimes awkward, sometimes nonsensical, sometimes inauthentic, and sometimes all three at the same time.
To me, the film looks poorly edited (which was Oscar-nominated), once again, mainly on the drama scenes. The film's musical score, composed by Harold Faltermeyer, is mostly atrocious.
However, the flight action sequences and the aerial stunts are quite good. When the film is in the air with those fighter jets or when Maverick is riding his motorcycle, Top Gun can be entertaining and invigorating. The drama is just so bad that it makes me forget the film's good stuff.
In 2015, Top Gun was added to the “National Film Registry” because it was considered “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” For me, the only reason that would be true is because of its lead actor, Tom Cruise. I think Top Gun is the film that made Cruise a celluloid god. He became his generation's biggest movie star and remains so. Top Gun began a decade (1986-96) that gave us “peak” Tom Cruise. Yes, he is still in his prime, but that was the decade that saw him give his most acclaimed and memorable performances, and in 1996, he began his most successful film franchise with the first Mission: Impossible. Yes, Cruise has given other memorable and acclaimed performances, but never so many as in that time period of 1986 to 1996.
So Top Gun is significant because of Tom Cruise. He is so handsome and fresh-faced here, and his youth, dynamism, and screen presence save this thoroughly mediocre film. Even with the great action sequences, this film would have been at best a cult film had any actor or movie star other than Tom Cruise been the lead.
Yeah, I could talk about the other actors who were in Top Gun, but what they did could not rise above the mediocrity of this film's drama – both in screenwriting and in directing. Tom Cruise – in a fighter or on a motorcycle – is Top Gun. As much as I am a fan of his, however, I wouldn't watch this shit again. But yes, I will see Top Gun: Maverick.
4 of 10
C
★★ out of 4 stars
Wednesday, May 25, 2022
1987 Academy Awards, USA: 1 win: “Best Music, Original Song” (Giorgio Moroder-music and Tom Whitlock-lyrics for the song “Take My Breath Away”); 3 nominations: “Best Sound” (Donald O. Mitchell, Kevin O'Connell, Rick Kline, and William B. Kaplan), “Best Film Editing” (Billy Weber and Chris Lebenzon), and “Best Effects, Sound Effects Editing” (Cecelia Hall and George Watters II)
1987 Golden Globes, USA: 1 win: “Best Original Song - Motion Picture” (Giorgio Moroder-music and Tom Whitlock-lyrics for the song “Take My Breath Away”); 1 nomination: “Best Original Score - Motion Picture” (Harold Faltermeyer)
2015 National Film Preservation Board, USA: National Film Registry
The text is copyright © 2022 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
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Wednesday, December 29, 2021
Review: Walt Disney's "TARZAN" is Something Old, Something New, and Sometimes Amazing
Wednesday, November 3, 2021
Review: "Nomadland" is Frances McDormand's Land
TRASH IN MY EYE No. 64 of 2021 (No. 1802) by Leroy Douresseaux
Nomadland (2020)
Running time: 104 minutes (1 hour, 44 minutes)
MPAA – R for some full nudity.
DIRECTOR: Chloé Zhao
WRITER: Chloé Zhao (based on the non-fiction book by Jessica Bruder)
PRODUCERS: Mollye Asher, Dan Janvey, Frances McDormand, Peter Spears, and Chloé Zhao
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Joshua James Richards (D.o.P.)
EDITOR: Chloé Zhao
COMPOSER: Ludovico Einaudi
Academy Award winner including “Best Picture”
DRAMA
Starring: Frances McDormand, David Strathairn, Linda May, Charlene Swankie, and Bob Wells
Nomadland is a 2020 drama film directed by Chloé Zhao. The film is an adaptation of the 2017 nonfiction book, Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century, by author Jessica Bruder. Nomadland the film depicts the real-world phenom of “nomads” people who live as transients, traveling around the United States and living in motor vehicles (“vandwelling”). The film portrays this through the eyes of a woman who leaves her hometown to live as a vandwelling working nomad.
Nomadland opens sometime in 2011. Sixty-something Fern (Frances McDormand) recently lost her job after the “US Gypsum Corporation” plant in Empire, Nevada shut down. Fern had worked there for years along with her husband, who recently died. Empire, a company town of US Gypsum, basically becomes a ghost town as almost everyone leaves after the jobs disappear.
Fern decides to sell most of her belongings and purchases a van, which she names “Vanguard.” It becomes her new home. Fran travel the country searching for work, sometimes working at an Amazon fulfillment center. When she isn't at Amazon, Fern embarks on a journey through the American West, a modern-day nomad, living in her van. Is this her new life or is it just a temporary state?
It has been noted that a number of real-life nomads and vandwellers appear as themselves in Nomadland, especially of note, Bob Wells, one of the best known proponents of vandwelling. However, Nomadland, despite its title, is not so much about nomads and vandwelling as it is about Fern's journey. The film's writer-director Chloe Zhao chronicles Fern's evolution from someone who becomes a vandweller out of necessity into someone who seems to fully embrace the life of a nomad.
In that, I can see why McDormand would go on to win the Academy Award for “Best Actress” for her performance as Fern. McDormand creates in Fern a character that seems so real that I found myself believing that Fern was a real person. This certainly helps to sell the docudrama mode Zhao sometimes adopts to tell particular chapters of this film. In a career filled with virtuoso performances, Nomadland presents one of McDormand's very best. Although the film does have another professional actor, David Strathairn, playing a character named “Dave,” a nomad who falls in love with Fern. However, Strathairn and his character seem like a sapling trying to stay rooted in the hurricane that is McDormand's performance.
Nomadland is poetic and poignant; sometimes, it is poignant to the point of being too sorrowful to watch. The film captures the restlessness in Fern, and its director captures the precariousness of Fern's new lifestyle. Nomadland is about Fern's journey and life in Nomadland. The “nomadland” and its nomads, are there to serve the purpose of her story. If the film's title were more honest, it would be entitled “Fern” or “Fern in Nomadland.” Nomadland is like a series of vignettes about Fern more than it is an actual story about something.
Still, Nomadland is a powerful character study that is successful because it is in the hands of both a powerful actress, Frances McDormand, and highly-skilled film director, Chloe Zhao, who can create multiple layers within the story of a character. Nomadland reminds me of director Martin Scorsese's Raging Bull (1980). People see it as a great film, while I see it as a good, but meandering film that has built a great reputation largely on a truly great, generational performance by by its leading man, Robert DeNiro (who also won the “Best Actor” Oscar for this role). Nomadland is a really good, but meandering film that has built a great reputation on...
As a character study, Nomadland is an exceptional film, but it has no larger meaning beyond being an exceptionally well-made film. Nomadland is one of those film's that will make some people ask, “What's the point of this?” Art for art's sake? Oscar bait? – I couldn't really answer that question. However, I will give Nomadland a higher grade than I gave Raging Bull.
8 of 10
A
Sunday, October 31, 2021
NOTES:
2021 Academy Awards, USA: 3 wins: “Best Motion Picture of the Year” (Frances McDormand, Peter Spears, Mollye Asher, Dan Janvey, and Chloé Zhao), “Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role” (Frances McDormand), and “Best Achievement in Directing” (Chloé Zhao); 3 nominations: “Best Adapted Screenplay” (Chloé Zhao), “Best Achievement in Film Editing” (Chloé Zhao), and “Best Achievement in Cinematography” (Joshua James Richards)
2021 BAFTA Awards: 4 wins: “Best Film” (Mollye Asher, Dan Janvey, Frances McDormand, Peter Spears, and Chloé Zhao), “Best Leading Actress” (Frances McDormand), “Best Director” (Chloé Zhao), and “Best Cinematography” (Joshua James Richards); 3 nominations: “Best Screenplay-Adapted” (Chloé Zhao), “Best Sound” (Sergio Diaz, Zach Seivers, and Mike Wolf Snyder), and “Best Editing” Chloé Zhao)
2021 Golden Globes, USA: 2 wins: “Best Motion Picture – Drama” and “Best Director - Motion Picture” (Chloé Zhao); 2 nominations: “Best Screenplay - Motion Picture” (Chloé Zhao) and “Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama” (Frances McDormand)
The text is copyright © 2021 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
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Saturday, May 22, 2021
Review: "JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH" is Divine *
TRASH IN MY EYE No. 36 of 2021 (No. 1774) by Leroy Douresseaux
Judas and the Black Messiah (2021)
Running time: 125 minutes (2 hours, 5 minutes)
MPAA – R for violence and pervasive language
DIRECTOR: Shaka King
WRITERS: Will Berson and Shaka King; from a story by Will Berson & Shaka King and Kenny Lucas & Keith Lucas
PRODUCERS: Ryan Coogler, Charles D. King, Shaka King, and Mark Isham
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Sean Bobbitt (D.o.P.)
EDITOR: Kristan Sprague
COMPOSER: Craig Harris
Academy Award winner
DRAMA/HISTORICAL
Starring: Daniel Kaluuya, LaKeith Stanfield, Jesse Plemons, Dominique Fishback, Ashton Sanders, Algee Smith, Darrell Britt-Gibson, Lil Rel Howery, Dominique Thorne, Martin Sheen, Amari Cheatom, Ian Duff, Robert Longstreet, Nicholas Velez, and Terayle Hill
Judas and the Black Messiah is a 2021 drama, historical, and biopic from director Shaka King. The film is a dramatization of the betrayal of Chicago Black Panther Party leader, Fred Hampton, by FBI informant, William O'Neal. Judas and the Black Messiah was eligible for the 2020 / 93rd Academy Awards due to an eligibility window extension granted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Judas and the Black Messiah opens in 1968. Nineteen-year-old petty criminal William “Bill” O'Neal (LaKeith Stanfield) is arrested in Chicago after attempting to steal a car while posing as a federal officer. Bill is looking at hard time in prison, over six years, but he is approached by FBI Special Agent Roy Mitchell (Jesse Plemons) with a special offer. Agent Mitchell can have O'Neal's charges dropped if he works undercover for the bureau. Bill is assigned to infiltrate the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party (BPP) and to spy on its leader, Chairman Fred Hampton (Daniel Kaluuya).
Bill begins to grow close to Hampton, as the Chairman works to form alliances with rival street gangs, such as “The Crowns.” Hampton extends the BPP's community outreach through the Panthers' “Free Breakfast for Children Program.” By 1969, Hampton's persuasive oratory skills eventually help to form the multiracial “Rainbow Coalition,” which unites the Panthers with the “Young Lords,” a Puerto Rican militant group, and “The Young Patriots,” a militant group comprised of poor and displaced white people. Still, Hampton even finds time to fall in love with party member, Deborah Johnson (Dominique Fishback).
Hampton's rise and success makes the FBI determined to stop him before he becomes what J. Edgar Hoover (Martin Sheen), Director of the FBI, calls a “Black Messiah.” Meanwhile, a battle wages in Bill O'Neal's soul. Will he help the FBI destroy Fred Hampton?
Judas and the Black Messiah may have received all its awards for the year 2020, but this powerful dramatization of a pivotal moment in the history of the Civil Rights movement is already one of 2021's best films. What the writers of this film have created is a condemnation of racial injustice, mostly in the form of the local (Chicago Police Department), state, and federal law enforcement (FBI) and also in the form of the courts and prisons (especially Menard Correction Center, the prison where Hampton was incarcerated).
However, the writers also present, both in subtle ways and in obvious strokes, the racial injustice that comes from the economic deprivation and social inequality that ordinary black people suffer. Director Shaka King shows it in the two worlds in which the traitorous Bill O'Neal travels. The first is Agent Roy Mitchell's comfy home and the fancy restaurants where Mitchell meets Bill, and the second is the world of rundown buildings and impoverished neighborhoods where Bill is a thief, a Panther, and a two-faced, self-serving coon who has a prison sentence over his head, which leads him to be a traitor.
Bill O'Neal really isn't a “Judas” anymore than Fred Hampton is really a “messiah,” black or otherwise. Yes, Shaka King does play some of this film, especially its last act like a mystery play or Biblical allegory, retelling and reshaping the story of the betrayal of Jesus Christ at the hands of Judas Iscariot. O'Neal and Hampton seems like people swept up by the tide of events that was the postwar Civil Rights movement. Their story is tragic, but Judas and the Black Messiah seems to ask us two questions: What now? And where do we go from here? The questions are not related to the late 1960s so much as they are being asked of us at the dawn of the third decade of the twenty-first century.
As Bill O'Neal, LaKeith Stanfield gives a layered and multifaceted performance. Even when Stanfield plays Bill as angry or desperate, he creates multiple layers to that anger and desperation in each scene. Before the credits, Judas and the Black Messiah presents some archival footage of the real William O'Neal, and seeing that made me believe that Stanfield made a Meryl Streep-like transformation in creating a fictional O'Neal that was, in some ways, very much like the real person.
I can see why Daniel Kaluuya won the “Best Supporting Actor” Oscar for his performance as Fred Hampton. Kaluuya embodies the hope and the lost potential that people now look back and see in Fred Hampton. In the last act, Kaluuya truly makes Hampton seem messianic. And that is worth an entire shelf full of awards. I would be remiss if I did not mention how deliciously and wickedly great Martin Sheen is as J. Edgar Hoover, Director of the FBI, thirsting for Hampton's blood.
Judas and the Black Messiah continues the run of important African-American films confronting the legacy of racism in the United States, films like If Beale Street Could Talk and BlacKkKlansman, both from 2018. It goes without saying that this is an important film for those interested in the history of the Civil Rights Movement. Judas and the Black Messiah is for you, dear readers, if you want to see American films that electrify the important chapters in the American story.
9 of 10
A+
Saturday, May 22, 2021
NOTES:
2021 Academy Awards, USA: 2 wins: “Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role” (Daniel Kaluuya) and “Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures-Original Song” (H.E.R.-music and lyric, Dernst Emile II-music, and Tiara Thomas-lyric for the song “Fight for You”); 4 nominations: “Best Motion Picture of the Year” (Shaka King, Charles D. King, and Ryan Coogler); “Best Original Screenplay” (Will Berson-screenplay by/story by, Shaka King-screenplay by/story by, Kenny Lucas-story by, and Keith Lucas-story by), “Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role” (LaKeith Stanfield), and “Best Achievement in Cinematography” (Sean Bobbitt)
2021 Golden Globes, USA: 1 win: “Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture” (Daniel Kaluuya) and 1 nomination: “Best Original Song - Motion Picture” (Tiara Thomas-lyrics, H.E.R.-music/lyrics, and D'Mile-music for the song “Fight for You”)
2021 BAFTA Awards: 1 win: “Best Supporting Actor” (Daniel Kaluuya); 3 nominations: “Best Supporting Actress” (Dominique Fishback), “Best Cinematography” (Sean Bobbitt), and “Best Casting” (Alexa L. Fogel)
The text is copyright © 2021 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
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Wednesday, March 31, 2021
Review: "SON OF SAUL" is Powerful and Unforgettable
TRASH IN MY EYE No. 25 of 2021 (No. 1763) by Leroy Douresseaux
[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]
Son of Saul (2015)
Saul fia – original title
Country: Hungary
DRAMA
Starring: Geza Rohrig, Levente Molnar, Urs Rechn,Todd Charmont, Jerzy Walczak, Sandor Zsoter, Istvan Pion, Amitai Kedar, Juli Jakab, Gergo Farkas and Balazs Farkas
Son of Saul or Saul fia (original title) is a 2015 Hungarian historical drama from director Laszlo Nemes. The film is set in a concentration camp and focuses on a prisoner who tries to save his son's body from the crematorium. The film won the Oscar for “Best Foreign Language Film of 2015.”
Son of Saul opens in the Nazi extermination camp, Auschwitz, in October 1944. Jewish-Hungarian prisoner, Saul Ausländer (Geza Rorig), is a member of Sonderkommando. This unit is made of Jewish prisoners who herd other Jews into the showers where they will be gassed to death. Afterwards, Saul and the other Sonderkommando remove valuables from the clothes of the dead, drag the dead from the gas chambers to the crematoria so they can be burned, and finally clean the killing floors.
Saul carries out his dreadful task with a stoic and impassive expression upon his face. One day, however, Saul recognizes a boy removed from the gas chambers. He believes the boy is his son, so he begins a desperate, furtive campaign to save his son's body from the flames of the crematoria.
I have seen many films and television programs that are partially set in concentration camps and films that directly or indirectly concern the Holocaust. I think that Son of Saul is only one of a few films that I have seen that are set entirely or almost entirely in a Nazi extermination camps. The most obvious example is the Oscar-winning Schindler's List, which was directed by Steven Spielberg. In some ways, Spielberg presented Schindler's List as if it were something out of time, a film from the Golden Age of Hollywood, in terms of acting and staging.
With Son of Saul, director Laszlo Nemes makes no attempt at the artifice of prestige Hollywood cinema. Stylistic and stylish choices are used to make clear to the audience that the situation in which Saul Auslander lives is entirely bleak and without hope. This Nazi machine to kill Jews that we call the Holocaust is an industry, and its factory workers are dead men and women walking. You do whatever you need to get the job done, even if you have to shoot prisoners one by one and dump their bodies in pits because the machinery is temporarily clogged or the backlog of those to be processed is too long.
Saul's desperate plot to save the boy-who-could-be-his-son's body is only that – an act of desperation. It is something a dead man does so that at least one of his last gasps will taste sweet. Saul and practically all the other Jewish prisoners are already dead.
Son of Saul is a damning work of art. This is high art as a cave painting on the consciousness of lovers of cinema and movie buffs. Son of Saul is a recreation... or is it a reminder of a time so terrible that it haunts the past, present, and future of our species.
Saturday, October 29, 2016
NOTES:
2016 Academy Awards, USA: 1 win: “Best Foreign Language Film of the Year” (Hungary)
2016 Golden Globes, USA: 1 win: “Best Foreign Language Film” (Hungary)
2015 Cannes Film Festival: 4 wins: “FIPRESCI Prize-Competition” (László Nemes), “François Chalais Award” (László Nemes), “Grand Prize of the Jury” (László Nemes), and “Vulcain Prize for the Technical Artist” (Tamás Zányi-sound designer for the outstanding contribution of sound to the narration.); 2 nominations: “Golden Camera” (László Nemes) and “Palme d'Or” (László Nemes)
The text is copyright © 2016 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
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Tuesday, February 23, 2021
#28DaysofBlack Review: "LILIES OF THE FIELD" Feels Timeless and Spiritual
TRASH IN MY EYE No. 19 of 2021 (No. 1757) by Leroy Douresseaux
Lilies of the Field (1963)
Running time: 95 minutes (1 hour, 35 minutes)
PRODUCER-DIRECTOR: Ralph Nelson
WRITER: James Poe (based on the novel, The Lilies of the Field by William E. Barrett)
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Ernest Haller (D.o.P.)
EDITOR: John W. McCafferty
COMPOSER: Jerry Goldsmith
Academy Award winner
DRAMA
Starring: Sidney Poitier, Lilia Skala, Lisa Mann, Isa Crino, Francesca Jarvis, Pamela Branch, Stanley Adams, and Dan Frazer
Lilies of the Field is a 1963 drama film from producer-director, Ralph Nelson. The film is based on the 1962 novel, The Lilies of the Field, written by William Edward Barrett. Lilies of the Field the film focuses on a traveling handyman and the nuns who believe that he is the answer to their prayers.
Lilies of the Field opens somewhere in the Arizona desert. Homer Smith (Sidney Poitier), an itinerant jack-of-all-trades, stops at what he assumes is an ordinary farm to obtain some water for his car, a station wagon. There, he sees a group of women working around the farm. These women turn out to be five nuns: Mother Maria (Lilia Skala), Sister Gertrude (Lisa Mann), Sister Agnes (Iro Crino), Sister Albertine (Francesca Jarvis), and Sister Elizabeth (Pamela Branch). The nuns, who speak very little English, introduce themselves as German, Austrian and Hungarian nuns.
Maria, the “Mother Superior” (the leader of the nuns), persuades Homer, whom she calls “Homer Schmidt,” to do a small job of roofing repair on the main building. He stays overnight, assuming that he will be paid in the morning. The next day, Smith tries to persuade Mother Maria to pay him by quoting from the Holy Bible, but she responds by asking him to read a Bible verse from the “Sermon on the Mount” (“Consider the lilies of the field...). This won't be the last time that Mother Maria stonewalls Homer on the payment she owes him, but his strengths and skills are apparent to her and her nuns. Mother Maria believes that Homer has been sent by God to fulfill their dream of building a chapel (which they call a “shapel”) on their land.
If people remember Lilies of the Field, it would be for Sidney Poitier's performance, which earned him the “Best Actor” Oscar, and for the film's historical relevance. Poitier's win for portraying Homer Smith was the first time a black man had won the “Best Actor” Oscar, and it was also the first time a black actor had won an Academy Award in a lead acting category. To date, Homer Smith is my favorite performance of Poitier's. Poitier presents Homer as a man full of skill, grit, and determination, with plenty of sly wit and humor. Most of all, through Homer, Poitier makes the audience believe in man's capacity for kindness and in a man having a sense of duty and honor that he does not use to place himself above other men.
The film is blessed with several good performances. Lilia Skala, who earned a “Best Supporting Actress” Oscar nomination for her performance, can convince the audience that Mother Maria is a real person and not just a character in a movie. Skala makes Maria's faith seem genuine, and it is Maria's faith in God that in turn makes this film feel like a religious movie, or even a Christian movie, for that matter, without Lilies of the Field specifically being either religious or Christian.
Faith in God and faith in the goodness of man are at the heart of this film. James Poe's screenplay and the way that director Ralph Nelson presents this story combine to send a simple message of faith in God over worrying about the things one wants to happen. Lilies of the Field is not a Christmas movie, but I think it could be a wonderful entry in people's “Happy Holidays” playlist.
I found myself often very emotional while watching this film. At a little more than a hour and a half of run time, Lilies of the Field seems like a fairy tale, a folk tale, or even a Biblical story. It is magical. It is wonderful. And it makes faith seem like a very good thing, indeed. When people speak of the magic of Hollywood films, I think that there is plenty of that magic in Lilies of the Field.
10 of 10
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
NOTES:
1964 Academy Awards, USA: 1 win: “Best Actor in a Leading Role” (Sidney Poitier); 4 nominations: “Best Picture” (Ralph Nelson), “Best Actress in a Supporting Role” (Lilia Skala), “Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium” (James Poe), and “Best Cinematography, Black-and-White” (Ernest Haller)
1964 Golden Globes, USA: 2 wins: “Best Actor – Drama” (Sidney Poitier) and “Best Film Promoting International Understanding” and 2 nominations: “Best Motion Picture – Drama” and “Best Supporting Actress” (Lilia Skala)
1965 BAFTA Awards: 2 nominations: “Best Foreign Actor” (Sidney Poitier) and “UN Award” (USA)
2020 National Film Preservation Board, USA: 1 win: “National Film Registry”
The text is copyright © 2021 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
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