A blog by Tim George. Follow my other work at http://www.tewahanui.nz/by/tim.george, http://www.denofgeek.com/authors/tim-george, and theatrescenes.co.nz.
Friday, 29 September 2023
On Dangerous Ground (Nicholas Ray, 1951)
BITE-SIZED: Nightfall (Jacques Tourneur, 1956)
Wednesday, 27 September 2023
BITE-SIZED: The First Power (Robert Resnikoff, 1990)
Showdown in Little Tokyo (Mark L. Lester, 1992)
An American cop raised in Japan, Chris Kenner (Dolph Lundgren) is the head of the Asian Crime Taskforce in LA.
Though paired with a new partner, green officer Johnny Murata (Brandon Lee), Kenner is determined to play by his own rules.
However, when yakuza crime lord Yoshida (Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa) begins a violent takeover of the city’s underworld, the mismatched partners have to overcome their differences to take the bad guy down.
Here he is playing a character who is the best at everything - Lundgren is so flat he comes across as an asshole. With the right star, it might have worked - but I doubt it.
Brandon Lee seems to have a better idea of what this kind of dynamic needs. He is bringing the right energy for a buddy cop dynamic - he is all loose energy to contrast with Lundgren’s more zen veteran.
On the downside, he does not have the material. The script makes him ridiculously ignorant - almost all of his lines are asking questions that make him look silly (he does not even realise that Malibu Beach is a different police department that LA).
Trashy and over-the-top, the film often feels like a comic book, with flashy colours, graphic compositions, and characters styled in extreme versions of forties fashions. It sometimes feels like an R-rated cousin to Dick Tracy or The Rocketeer, only super-violent and packed with nudity.
While the leads are mismatched in ways the film did not intend, it does not miss with Yoshida (Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa). Hi gives Yoshida a near-diabolical relish for his various misdeeds.
Thursday, 21 September 2023
The Selling of Vince D'Angelo (Danny DeVito, 1982)
Bracketed by entertitles, the film plays like a fly-on-the-wall documentary, cutting between campaign adverts, press conferences, and behind-the-scenes footage from all of these moments, to show the candidate’s corruption and disregard for the norms and rules of campaigns, democracy and any other structure you can think of.
D’Angelo’s playbook could be seen as Trumpian - claiming to be taken out of context; claiming to be a victim of a smear campaign. While amusing, the montages showing D’Angelo talking out both sides of his mouth feel like they could be re-enactments of Trump’s news coverage. This is probably more a case of comic exaggeration being echoed by reality, rather than any unique insight.
A lot of D’Angelo’s tactics would only work in a pre-Internet era: He recasts his family for a campaign video and fakes an assassination attempt to put him ahead in the polls.
Sadly relevant in its portrayal of how populist strongmen can rise to power, the film ends a punchline which feels ripped from today’s headlines - and the role of media in focusing on coverage which will garner ratings.
While he is ultimately run out of town, despite/because of his escapades D’Angelo is revealed to be writing his memoirs, to be published by Simon & Schuster.
Despite running 20 mins, this short film exemplifies DeVito’s specific persona as a star:
Gleefully narcissistic, craven, greedy and selfish, DeVito remains likeable because of how little remorse he shows, and how much joy his characters take in getting one over.
DeVito’s persona is of a born carny, a conman forever looking for one more sap to bleed dry - and this mini-epic is a prime vehicle for his hyperbolic brand of pop misanthropy.
The pure cynicism of the final punchline - no matter how bad or awful, someone will pay for this story, and nothing matters if there is profit to be made - feels like a mission statement for the rest of DeVito’s career as a filmmaker.
Tuesday, 19 September 2023
The Dalton ellipses continues: a look at Bond 17 (Mark 2)
Saturday, 16 September 2023
Jewel Robbery (William Dieterle, 1932)
I first saw Kay Francis in Ernst Lubitsch’s Trouble in Paradise over a decade ago. I had not given her much thought until I heard the podcast You Must Remember This’s episode about her.
Intrigued, I decided to check out the films highlighted in the podcast.
Bored with her well-to-do but routine existence, the Baroness’s (Francis) one joy is gaining new baubles.
On her latest excursion to buy a piece of jewellery, the Baroness crosses paths with the Robber (William Powell), who is also interested in possessing the store’s merchandise.
While he is intent on stealing jewels, the Robber inadvertently steals something else - the Baroness’s heart…
“This is becoming delightful!”
A vehicle for Francis and William Powell, Jewel Robbery is a delightful European fantasy - a bored aristocrat finding love and purpose with a daring criminal mastermind.
This movie should serve as a template for streaming movies - 68 mins long and it focuses on a capsule drama between a few people in a few locations.
The film has the brevity of a good short story.
The first scene establishes a sense of luxury and pomposity - an expert demonstrates the new ‘invisible’ alarm system, only for staff to discover that the store has already been robbed.
This puncturing of the upper classes continues in the next scene: Kay Francis’s Baroness is introduced in a bubble bath - ionically, she expresses frustration at her life as her every need is literally attended to (she ends the scene being carried into her makeup chair).
After this introduction, the action shifts to the jewellery store and the titular set piece.
When the Baroness confesses her inner boredom to would-be suitor ___ ( ), he treats it merely as further evidence that she needs to marry him.
Francis brings a guile and zest to the Baroness, particularly in her interactions with Powell.
Francis even sells the character’s fair weather feelings - she is briefly enraged when it seems like she has been robbed; only to fall deeper in love when she discovers her new admirer has returned her favourite ring
Powell matches her with a polite sense of frivolity - a near godlike figure, he is able to infiltrate anywhere and slip out of any trap the authorities set for him.
Rejecting violence, he is closer to a stage magician, orchestrating every element of his heist - he even includes music to provide a calm atmosphere.
He compliments the Baroness, showing an attention and knowledge lacking from her supposed lovers.
The supporting cast are solid:
Henry Kolker and Hardie Albright bring the biggest laughs as the Baroness’s self-aware husband, and the Baroness’s hypothetical future husband, respectfully.
The film pokes fun at the pomp and snobbery of the aristocracy - stuck in time and completely out of touch. When the Baroness confesses her inner boredom to her sidepiece Paul (Albright), he treats it merely as further evidence that she needs to marry him.
While the Baroness and the Robber share a love of the finer things (her prized ring - a symbol of matrimony - bonds them together in criminality. She half-heartedly tries to give it back to him but he refuses), they also share something else:
Sex.
Their burgeoning romance is infused with eroticism, and the film leans into the couple’s lust for possessions and each other without innuendo. Coming a few years before the Hays Code gained teeth, Jewel Robbery lacks the ellipses and more coded innuendo that would entomb cinematic desire (and other aspects of life) from American films for the next 30 years.
That openness to desire adds to the film’s sense of joy, and pleasure in pleasure.
Released in the depths of the Great Depression, Jewel Robbery is pure escapism.
The film ends with our heroes unpunished and unconverted to the side of ‘virtue’ - the Baroness stares down the camera with a cheeky finger to her lips, as she leaves for a rendezvous with her new lover.
Their romance is based on freedom - from obligation, punishment and structures of the upper classes. They get the spoils of being rich with none of the self-importance.
In its focus on a couple falling in love over crime, it feels like a spiritual predecessor to Mario Bava’s Danger Diabolik.
Director William Dieterele was disparaged by Billy Wilder as a set dresser, constantly framing characters by props and set dressing.
His style works for Jewel Robbery - characters are surrounded by opulence - and visualises the Baroness’s sense of entrapment and suffocation.
This becomes a refuge when she is with Powell’s Robber in his hideaway.
The brevity of the movie adds to its levity and sense of escapism - there is no danger that can be averted, or barrier that can stand between our lovers.
A real gem, no pun intended.
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Wednesday, 13 September 2023
Tetsuo - The Metal Man (Shinya Tsukamoto, 1988)
After he is infected by a strange metallic disease, innocent salaryman (Tomorowo Taguchi) finds himself rapidly overwhelmed.
Running only 67 mins, the film’s plot is almost like Cronenbergian riff on a fairy tale:
An innocent salaryman is attacked by someone already afflicted with the metallic symbiote, and proceeds to undergo a transformation into the titular metal man. Most of the action is restricted to the claustrophobic confines of his apartment.
Powered by anxiety about the future, technology, the subordination of flesh to machine, and notions of masculinity, the film’s themes are matched by its aesthetics:
Shot in grainy black and white, the film’s distinctive handmade qualities - the lurching camera, jagged editing, stop-motion and a reprise of one of the earliest cinematic special effects, speeding up the film - give the film a pulsing sense of life, as the mechanised, rhythmic score builds a sense of inevitability.
The film’s style echoes the characters’ transformations - the Salaryman (Tomorowo Taguchi) and the Young Metal Fetishist (writer-director Tsukamoto) are covered in scraps of pipe and other used items and materials.
Even before he is affected, the grubby, cramped tunnels and apartments of the mise-en-scene, make the world feel like the metal has already taken over. The characters are already trapped. Giving over to the new flesh is ultimately a form of escape.
The Salaryman’s transformation is portrayed as a disease, transferred from a young woman who attacks him in public. This metallic affliction rapidly affects every aspect of his life, down to his fatal assault on his wife. It is violent and fatal, yet the film ends with the Salaryman’s transformation complete - what has been destroyed has given way to new life - a form of evolution.
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