THE REVENANT: authentic and awesome

Leonardo DiCpario in THE REVENANT
Leonardo DiCaprio in THE REVENANT

Not just a compelling movie, The Revenant is an experience for the audience and a marvel of filmmaking.  Oscar-winner Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu (21 Grams, Babel, Biutiful, Birdman) may be the director doing the most groundbreaking work in today’s cinema, and The Revenant, with its long shoot in hostile conditions, is his triumph over the seemingly impossible.

The Revenant is based on the historical episode of mountain man Hugh Glass, who was fur trapping in the Missouri River watershed of the Dakotas in 1823, when the area was completely unspoiled and inhabited only by nomadic bands of Native Americans.  Glass was severely injured in a bear attack, left for dead by his companions and crawled 200 miles to safety.   A “revenant” is a re-animated corpse, and Glass essentially returned from the dead.

Leonardo DiCaprio plays Glass, and his performance is extraordinary.   For one thing – the most obvious – DiCaprio is a human piñata who actually must stand and then submerge in a freezing river, get bounced around by a CGI bear, chew on raw bison liver, crawl across uneven ground, and on and on; he takes a licking and keeps on ticking.  And, in at least two-thirds of the movie, Glass either isn’t able to speak or has no one to talk to.  So DiCaprio must convey his terror, grief, determination to survive and seek revenge with his physicality.

There are also solid performances by Tom Hardy (being villainous) Will Poulter and Domhnall Gleeson (a good year for him – also Ex Machina, Brooklyn and Star Wars).

There probably isn’t a more overused word in the current culture than “awesome”.   But it’s precisely the right word to describe the depiction of Glass’ ordeal.  The dazzling scenery as photographed Iñárritu‘s equally brilliant cinematographer  Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki is awesome, as is the overall filmmaking challenge.  In particular, the bear attack and an extended one-shot of a Native American attack with the camera moving by and forth among the combatants are brilliant and unforgettable. Showing off, Iñárritu even throws in an actual avalanche as a background shot.

The result is an utterly authentic film.  Now I think I know what it looks like when a bear attacks and when an Indian band raids. DiCaprio shows us convincingly how it looks when a man grieves.

The Revenant is also exhausting – in a good way.  As the film opens, we see men creeping through a primordial forest that has been flooded by a river.  They are tense and so are we.  We can’t tell whether they are hunting or hunted or both.  We soon come to understand that their heightened alertness and intense concentration is required to survive a dangerous environment.  That level of intensity remains throughout the film, and it wears down the characters and the audience.

History buffs will appreciate that Glass was part of Ashley’s Hundred, an enterprise that included many mountain men (Jim Bridger, Jedediah Smith, Kit Carson) who would later become guides and explorers with central roses in the history of the American West.

I also recommend Sheila O’Malley’s insightful comments on survival movies, in particular the very compelling Touching the Void.

This is one of the very best survival movies.  See The Revenant, and make sure that you see on the Big Screen.

 

DVDs of the Week: celebrating a master of cinematography

THE HIRED HAND
THE HIRED HAND

The great cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond died last week at 85.  He was known as a champion of natural light in filmmaking, a major contribution that he and fellow Hungarian László Kovács brought to Hollywood in the late 1960s.  Zsigmond shot The Deer Hunter, Deliverance and Close Encounters of the Third Kind.  He was nominated for four Oscars, and won for Close Encounters.

Zsigmond shot The Sugarland Express, Steven Spielberg’s first theatrical feature (Duel was a TV movie) and worked with directors Robert Altman, Woody Allen, Brian De Palma and even Jack Nicholson (The Two Jakes).  Yet he may best known among cinephiles for his groundbreaking and artistically risky work in McCabe & Mrs. Miller and Heaven’s Gate (two movies that I otherwise don’t care for).   He was even on the all-star camera crew for the prototype concert movie The Last Waltz.

To celebrate Zsigmond, this week I am recommending two DVDs – one of his overlooked masterpieces and a film ABOUT his art.  First, there’s the 1971 Western directed by Peter Fonda, The Hired Hand. This is a moody, captivating and underrated film – and it looks great, thanks to Zsigmond.  The Hired Hand is available on DVD from Netflix.

Second, Zsgimond is one of the artists discussing the art of cinematography in the excellent 1992 documentary Visions of Light; it’s a Must Watch for movie fans. Visions of Light is also available on Netflix DVD. Zsigmond also appears in the fine documentary on 1970s auteur-driven cinema Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex, Drugs and Rock ‘N’ Roll Generation Saved Hollywood.

I recommend this fine piece from Sheila O’Malley on Zsigmond, along with the excellent links contained therein.

Scroll down this page for some samples of Vilmos Zsigmond’s imagery.

THE HIRED HAND
THE HIRED HAND
HEAVEN'S GATE
HEAVEN’S GATE
CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND
CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND
THE DEER HUNTER
THE DEER HUNTER
THE DEER HUNTER
THE DEER HUNTER
DELIVERANCE
DELIVERANCE

Movies to See Right Now

Michael Caine in YOUTH
Michael Caine in YOUTH

This week I’ve got sixteen movie recommendations, beginning with six on my list of Best Movies of 2015.

  • Mustang, about exuberant Turkish teenage girls challenging traditional repression.
  • Creed, the newest and entirely fresh chapter in the Rocky franchise; it’s about the internal struggle of three people, not just The Big Fight.
  • The Irish romantic drama Brooklyn is an audience-pleaser with a superb performance by Saoirse Ronan.
  • Youth, a glorious cinematic meditation on life with Michael Caine.
  • Spotlight – a riveting, edge-of-your-seat drama with some especially compelling performances.
  • The Big Short – a supremely entertaining thriller – both funny and anger-provoking.

Here are ten more choices. There’s something for everyone.

    • Legend – a true-life story and the best crime drama of 2015. Tom Hardy plays both gangster twin brothers.
    • Carol – a vividly told tale of forbidden love.
    • Very Semi-Serious – a Must See documentary if you love the cartoons in The New Yorker. It’s showing on HBO.
    • Macbeth – an excellent new version of Shakespeare’s exploration of ambition. Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard star.
    • Hitchcock/Truffaut – a Must See for serious movie fans, this insightful documentary probes documentary Alfred Hitchcock’s body of work.
    • Chi-Raq: Spike Lee’s plea for inner city peace with justice, AND it’s a sex comedy.
    • Bridge of Spies – Steven Spielberg’s Cold War espionage thriller with Tom Hanks, featuring a fantastic performance by Mark Rylance.
    • Trumbo – the historical drama that reflects on the personal cost of principles.
    • Don Verdean – a dark satire on the faux scientists embraced by the Christian Right.
    • Spectre – action and vengeance from a determined James Bond.

I’m not a fan of Joy or The Danish Girl.

MUSTANG
MUSTANG

This week, you can set your DVR for two classic film noir classics on January 9. The 1962 Cape Fear features Robert Mitchum at his most menacing. Kiss of Death includes Richard Widmark’s breakthrough performance as psychopath Tommy Udo.

On January 11, Turner Classic Movies will present Sullivan’s Travels (1941). The great Preston Sturges created this fast-paced and cynical comedy about a pretentious movie director who goes out to be inspired by The Average Man – and gets more of an adventure than he expects. There has never been a better movie about Hollywood. It’s on my A Classic American Movie Primer – 5 to Start With.

Veronica Lake and Joel McCrea in SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS
Veronica Lake and Joel McCrea in SULLIVAN’S TRAVELS

JOY: disappointingly empty

Jenifer Lawrence in JOY
Jenifer Lawrence in JOY

The disappointingly empty dramedy Joy traces the story of housewife Joy Mangano (Jennifer Lawrence), who invented the Miracle Mop sold on QVC and became a business success despite the gravity pull of her dysfunctional family.

Why doesn’t this movie work?  One pivotal scene illustrates the problem. At this point, her business has imploded, she’s entangled in a hopeless legal morass, and everyone is urging her to file for bankruptcy.  She’s facing family disgrace, and she tells her daughter that she’s giving up.  But WE KNOW there’s no chance that Joy is really going to give up.  We know that Jennifer Lawrence is going to kick ass to a triumphant conclusion.  So there’s no tension, and therefore no drama.

Lawrence is very good, and I can generally watch her read a telephone book.  The rest of the cast, which includes Bradley Cooper in a brief role, is just fine.  But Joy’s slalom course through all her emotionally unhealthy relatives just isn’t very compelling.

Director David O. Russell has previously made two brilliantly entertaining movies with Jennifer Lawrence, Bradley Cooper and Robert DeNiro – Silver Linings Playbook and American Hustle. This ain’t them.

KEITH RICHARDS: UNDER THE INFLUENCE: jolly stories from a great raconteur

KEITH RICHARDS: UNDER THE INFLUENCE
KEITH RICHARDS: UNDER THE INFLUENCE

Keith Richards: Under the Influence is a good enough excuse to spend time with the ever genial Keith Richards.  Keith is not just a rock icon and a medical marvel, he’s a great raconteur – ever genial, with an omnipresent cigarette-hacking chuckle.

Keith drops many a nugget while relating his own musical journey and much about American music of which he is a devotee:

  • About meeting Muddy Waters at Chess Records.
  • That he considers himself a better bass player than a guitar player.
  • How the intro licks to Street Fighting Man were recorded when only he and Charlie Watts came early to a recording session to mess around.
  • How his bass line with Charlie’s drumming sped up the pace to Sympathy with the Devil from a lament to really rockin’.
  • “I’m no longer a pop star and I don’t want to be one”.
  • A sharp observation that White “rock” can seem like a march, and “I prefer the ‘roll'”.
  • His period of not working with Mick Jagger in 1985-89 was “World War III”.
  • And there’s a VERY funny Johnny Cash-in-a-hotel-room story.

Here’s challenge – try to spell out Keith’s raspy chuckle. It’s something like “Huh-whey-whey-heh-heh”.

Keith Richards: Under the Influence has the feel of an infomercial for Richards’ book and newest solo album.  But, no matter, it’s time well spent.  Keith Richards: Under the Influence is available to stream from Netflix Instant.

A POEM IS A NAKED PERSON: Leon Russell in his prime

Leon Russell in A POEM IS A NAKED PERSON
Leon Russell in A POEM IS A NAKED PERSON

During the years 1972-4, documentarian Les Blank hung out and filmed around Leon Russell’s Oklahoma recording studio, and A Poem Is a Naked Person is the result.

This was the period when Russell produced two of my very favorite albums, Leon Live and Hank Wilson’s Back, so I especially enjoyed the music.  There’s also a nice snippet of Willie Nelson (pre-beard and pigtails) singing Good Hearted Woman.

In fact, all of the Leon Russell parts (both talking and performing) are great. The problem is that Blank filmed everybody and everything in the neighborhood, including a tractor pull, the demolition of a building and a seemingly deranged and snake-obsessed artist.  There’s also a lot of conversation between people who are very stoned.  Getting stoned is a lot more fun than listening to stoned people talk.

The documentary’s puzzling title originates from liner notes on a Bob Dylan album.

A Poem Is a Naked Person has been a bit of a Lost Film, until recently only shown at screening where Blank was present.  Now you can stream it on Amazon Instant, Vudu, YouTube and Google Play.

How I devise my annual top ten list

Michael Caine and Harvey Keitel in YOUTH
Michael Caine and Harvey Keitel in YOUTH

How does a film get listed on my Best Movies of 2015?  Essentially, I look for two very personal reactions: 1) I am thrilled by the experience of watching the film (or feel another strong visceral reaction) and 2) I am still thinking about the movie for days afterward.

A few days ago I saw both Carol and Youth.  I found each of them to be exceptional films, and I enjoyed and admired them both.  But I was thrilled by Youth and am still thinking about it.  Youth made my top ten list.  Not so with Carol.

It hurts if I think of something else during the movie.  It helps to be original (Ex Machina, Wild Tales, Youth, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl). It helps to be authentic (Brooklyn, I’ll See You in My Dreams).   It really helps if I think that the movie is timeless and will stand up over time.

It helps if I would watch the movie again, but that’s not necessary.  One viewing of a challenging and uncomfortable film like The Look of Silence may be all that I can stomach.  On the other hand, I have a bunch of Guilty Pleasures that I can watch repeatedly without rating them as great films.

There’s no shame in missing my top ten list. I really enjoyed, and heartily recommend Carol, along with Legend, Meet the Patels, The Gift, Amy, Mr. Holmes, Sicario, Black Mass, Gemma Bovery, Spy and Seymour: An Introduction.  They’re just not on my list of the year’s best.

THE LOOK OF SILENCE
THE LOOK OF SILENCE

2015 at the Movies: Farewells

Director Bruce Sinofsky
Director Bruce Sinofsky

Bruce Sinofsky was a filmmaker who actually saved lives. His Paradise Lost trilogy resulted in innocent men being released from death row.

Lizabeth Scott‘s career was launched by her striking looks.  Often described as a “smoky blonde”, she proved herself a brilliant actresses playing smoky and smoking blondes in film noir, notably Dead Reckoning, Too Late for Tears and I Walk Alone. My favorite Lizabeth Scott role is in Pitfall. The married protagonist (Dick Powell) falls for her but she’s not the usual femme fatale. She’s not a Bad Girl, just an unlucky one. She has horrible taste in a boyfriend and the bad luck to attract a menacing stalker (Burr), but she’s fundamentally decent. Will her sexual promiscuity be punished at the end of this 1948 movie – and will his?

meara
Comedy pioneer Anne Meara

Anne Meara‘s death was noted in our celebrity-obsessed culture as the loss of Ben Stiller’s mom.  But she was – in her own right – a comedy pioneer.  In groundbreaking performances with her husband and comedy partner Jerry Stiller in the early 1960s, Meara influenced a whole new comic sensibility.  Her peers included Nichols and May, Mort Sahl, Woody Allen and Bob Newhart.  She was in the forerunner of Second City, and her sketches evolved into the SNL form of comedy that has dominated since the 70s.  She worked mostly in television, and one of her best recent roles was as Miranda’s demented mother-in-law in Sex and the City.

Fred Thompson is best known for his role as an investigative attorney during the Watergate Hearings and for his decade in the US Senate. But he was a pretty fair country actor, too, and my favorite Fred Thompson performance was in the very smart and funny corporate mockudrama Barbarians at the Gate.

Vincent Bugliosi, the Los Angeles prosecutor, secured convictions of the Manson Family for the sensational Tate-LaBianca murders. His memoir of the investigation and trials, Helter Skelter, was adapted into the riveting 1976 miniseries of the same title starring Steve Railsback as Charlie.

Christopher Lee, with his 278 screen credits, is fondly remembered for entertaining roles at the beginning of his career as a horror heavy and at the end of his career as an imposing presence in the Star Wars and Lord of the Rings franchises. My favorite Christopher Lee role is as the bad guy Rochefort (Charlton Heston’s henchman) in Richard Lester’s The Three Musketeers (1973) and The Four Musketeers (1974).

Leonard Nimoy, with Donald Sutherland and Jeff Goldblum in INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS
Leonard Nimoy, with Donald Sutherland and Jeff Goldblum in INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS

Leonard Nimoy was much more than Spock, with a career highlighted (in my mind) by the chillingly confident and authoritative Dr. David Kibner in the 1978 Philip Kaufman remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Not everybody can be menacing in a turtleneck.

Maureen O’Hara was the durable star chiefly remembered as the Queen of Technicolor and for being forceful enough to match up to John Wayne.  I remember her most fondly in one of her first American films, playing against John Garfield in the noirish WW II spy thriller The Fallen Sparrow.   She doesn’t look 22 – does she?

How can Maureen O'Hara be only 23 years old?
How can Maureen O’Hara be only 22 years old?

Movies to See Right Now

Steve Carell (right) in THE BIG SHORT
Steve Carell (right) in THE BIG SHORT

Here are my extensive recommendations, beginning with six on my list of Best Movies of 2015. This is the very best time to go to the movies.  Scroll all the way down for six bonus picks on video.

  • Mustang, about exuberant Turkish teenage girls challenging traditional repression.
  • Creed, the newest and entirely fresh chapter in the Rocky franchise; it’s about the internal struggle of three people, not just The Big Fight.
  • The Irish romantic drama Brooklyn is an audience-pleaser with a superb performance by Saoirse Ronan.
  • Youth, a glorious cinematic meditation on life with Michael Caine.
  • Spotlight – a riveting, edge-of-your-seat drama with some especially compelling performances.
  • The Big Short – a supremely entertaining thriller – both funny and anger-provoking.

Here are ten more choices. There’s something for everyone.

  • Legend – a true-life story and the best crime drama of 2015. Tom Hardy plays both gangster twin brothers.
  • Carol – a vividly told tale of forbidden love.
  • Very Semi-Serious – a Must See documentary if you love the cartoons in The New Yorker. It’s showing on HBO.
  • Macbeth – an excellent new version of Shakespeare’s exploration of ambition. Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard star.
  • Hitchcock/Truffaut – a Must See for serious movie fans, this insightful documentary probes documentary Alfred Hitchcock’s body of work.
  • Chi-Raq: Spike Lee’s plea for inner city peace with justice, AND it’s a sex comedy.
  • Bridge of Spies – Steven Spielberg’s Cold War espionage thriller with Tom Hanks, featuring a fantastic performance by Mark Rylance.
  • Trumbo – the historical drama that reflects on the personal cost of principles.
  • Don Verdean – a dark satire on the faux scientists embraced by the Christian Right.
  • Spectre – action and vengeance from a determined James Bond.

Today Turner Classic Movies is presenting an entire day of the irresistible William Powell and Myrna Loy as Nick and Nora in The Thin Man, After the Thin Man, Another Thin Man, Shadow of the Thin Man, The Thin Man Goes Home and Song of the Thin Man.  And on New Year’s Day, TCM is showing the superb proto-noir M (1931) – if you’re going to see one pre-war European film – see this one.

And to binge watch on this Holiday weekend, here are six more movies from my Best Movies of 2015 – So Far that are available to stream or to rent on DVD:

      • The smartest road trip movie ever, The End of the Tour. It’s available streaming from Amazon Instant, Vudu, YouTube and Google Play.
      • The unforgettable coming of age dramedy Me and Earl and the Dying Girl. It’s available streaming from Amazon, iTunes, Vudu, YouTube and Google Play and now available to rent on DVD from Netflix and Redbox.
      • The extraordinary Russian drama Leviathan, a searing indictment of society in post-Soviet Russia. Leviathan is available streaming on Amazon Instant Video, iTunes, Vudu, YouTube, Google Play and Flixster.
      • The hilariously dark Argentine comedy Wild Tales. It’s available on DVD from Netflix and streaming from Amazon Instant Video, iTunes, Vudu and Xbox Video.
      • The Brian Wilson biopic Love & Mercy, the story of an extraordinarily gifted person’s escape from torment. Love & Mercy is available on DVD from Netflix and Redbox and streaming from Amazon Instant Video, iTunes and Vudu.
      • The gentle, thoughtful and altogether fresh dramedy I’ll See You In My Dreams with Blythe Danner, available to stream from Amazon Instant Video, iTunes, Vudu, YouTube and Google Play.
MUSTANG
MUSTANG

Best Movies of 2015

Domhnall Gleeson in EX MACHINA
Domhnall Gleeson in EX MACHINA

Visit my Best Movies of 2015 for my list of the year’s best films, complete with images, trailers and my comments on each movie – as well as their availability to rent on DVD and to stream. My top ten movies for 2015 are:

  1. Ex Machina
  2. Wild Tales 
  3. Leviathan
  4. Brooklyn
  5. Youth
  6. Me and Earl and the Dying Girl 
  7. Creed
  8. Spotlight
  9. Phoenix
  10. The Martian

The other best films of the year are: The End of the Tour, Love & Mercy,  The Big Short, Corn Island, Mustang, I’ll See You in My Dreams,  ’71, The Look of Silence and  The Grief of Others.

I’m saving space for these promising 2015 films that I haven’t seen yet: The Revenant, Joy, The Hateful Eight and 45 Years.