Happy Anniversary to The Wife

Donna Reed in IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE - the second best wife ever

Happy Anniversary to The Wife, also known as Lisa The Love of My Life!

We howled in surprise together at the hilarious Norwegian curling comedy King Curling.   And, in gown and tux, we sneaked out of a  gala to catch a late night screening of The Ghastly Loves of Johnny X at Cinequest.

I cherished her company at Bernie, Moonrise Kingdom, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Ruby Sparks, Brave, Searching for Sugar Man, Argo, Lincoln and Silver Linings Playbook.  And, at home, I especially enjoyed sharing the 1979 BBC miniseries version of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.

Although she’s always skeptical about French movie fare – especially on a Friday night – she was a good sport for some French films this year – and Israeli, Iranian and two Norwegian ones, too!

She’s the biggest fan and supporter of this blog, and I appreciate her and love her.  Happy Anniversary, Honey!

2012 at the Movies: biggest disappointments

DAMSELS IN DISTRESS

1. I haven’t seen Undefeated, the Oscar winning documentary about an underdog high school football team, or the French political thriller The Minister (L’exercice de l’État )   because – as far as I know – they haven’t yet been released in the US.  How can an Oscar winner not get a release?  You can read descriptions and watch trailers of these films as Movies I’m Looking Forward To.

2.  There was also no US release for the hilarious Norwegian curling comedy King Curling or the creepy Slovak voyeur thriller Visible World.  I think that, given a chance, American audiences would have responded to both of them.

3.  Sometimes my favorite filmmakers let me down.  There wasn’t much to Martin McDonagh’s Seven Psychopaths, which I had been eagerly awaiting for months.

Whit Stillman (Metropolitan, Barcelona) hadn’t made a film for thirteen years and then came up with Damsels in Distress. With the tedious Greta Gerwig.  Really, Whit?

And I thought that Aardman Studios’ Pirates! Band of Misfits was a bore.

Note: I don’t have a Worst Ten Movie list because, unlike professional critics, I don’t have to see every movie.  I do see over 100 new movies each year, but I try REALLY, REALLY HARD to avoid the bad movies.  So my worst movie going experience is always either 1)  on an airline flight when I see a movie that I normally wouldn’t; 2) a hyped art film that disastrously falls on its face and/or really pisses me off (The White Ribbon); or 3) something I find on cable TV while channel surfing (Paul Blart: Mall Cop).  But usually, the culprit finds its way aboard a long airline flight.  Not this year.

4.  That being said,  the worst film that I saw was probably Dorfman, which would have derailed if it had started out on the rails.

 

2012 at the Movies: year of the child actor

Quvenzhane Wallis in BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD

Beasts of the Southern Wild is a special film, and its star Quvenzhane Wallis carries the movie. Although this is her first film and she was only six years old during the filming, I would not be surprised if she is nominated for the Best Actress Oscar. That’s how stirring her performance is.

As I wrote in my comments on Beasts, writer-director Benh Zeitlin was specially audacious to bet his movie on the performance of a six year old. But we’ve seen some remarkable performance by child actors this year – and in many of my Best Movies of 2012 – So Far.

In my current pick for the top film of the year, the Dardennes brothers’ The Kid with the Bike , the story revolves around the 12-year old first time actor Thomas Doret. Doret pulls it off, delivering a performance of gripping intensity.

Although Mohammed Fellag is the lead in Monsieur Lazhar, there wouldn’t be a film without the performances by the kids, Sophie Nelisse and Emilien Neron.

Similarly, Wes Anderson’s delightful Moonrise Kingdom is carried by newcomers Jared Gilman and Kara Hayman. Moonrise Kingdom is their movie; even Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Frances McDormand and Bill Murray are just along for the ride.

And in Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation, the key point of view is that of the ever watchful teenage daughter. She desperately wants her parents back together, views everything through this prism and is powerless to make it happen. She is played by Farhadi’s real life daughter Sarina.

Pierce Gagnon plays one compellingly terrifying four-year-old in Looper.

Overall, it’s an uncommonly impressive year for child actors.

2012 in the Movies: thoughtful geezer movies

THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL

2012 featured a crop of thoughtful films about the aged.  Of course, one of the year’s most popular indies was The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, the surprisingly deep story about Brits seeking a low-budget retirement in India.

All Together works much the same territory with a French sensibility and Francophone actresses Jane Fonda and Geraldine Chaplin.

In Robot & Frank, Frank Langella’s performance elevated a curmudgeon comedy to a revealing study of getting older.

Of course, this year’s biggest geezer film will be Amour (which most of us will be able to see on January 18, 2013);  this Austrian film plumbs the ultimate issues of aging –  frailty and death – and is a lead pipe cinch to win the Foreign Language Oscar.

Now before we get all misty-eyed, let’s remember that these four movies are all foreign and indies – the Hollywood studios still run screaming from scripts about people over 40.   Still, this is a welcome trend, and, as Baby Boomers continue to age, I think we’ll see more and more good movies about older people.

2012 in the Movies: the year of the alcoholic

Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Octavia Spencer in SMASHED

An extraordinary group of 2012 movies featured searingly realistic depictions of alcoholism.  The indie drama Smashed portrayed the drinking life and the challenges of recovery and relapse, informed by the personal experience of co-writer Susan Burke.  In a potentially star-making performance, Mary Elizabeth Winstead played half of a couple navigating life while drunk.  Can they stay together and flourish when she sobers up?  Winstead realistically took her character through the carelessness, denial, humiliation and self-degradation of drinking and the fears and determination that co-exist in her recovery.

A much bigger movie, the Hollywood hit Flight, takes on deceit’s centrality to alcoholism, and Denzel Washington brilliantly evokes the protagonist’s achingly vulnerable loneliness and self-loathing.

The excellent documentary Bill W. tells the story of Bill Wilson, the founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, and it’s quite a story.  Wilson was a reluctant movement leader. His primary passion was for business, in which his drinking killed his potential success. Instead, he achieved fame and historical importance in a field not of his choosing. As the founder, he could have easily formed AA into a hierarchy with himself at the top – and AA as his personal power base. But, once AA could stand on its own, he chose to walk away from its leadership.

The appealing documentary Paul Williams Still Alive, tells the story of the songwriter, omnipresent in the 70s, but not now.  Paul Williams is now twenty years sober and very content in his skin; he doesn’t dwell on the time when he was rich, famous and unhappy.

And in the overlooked Take This Waltz, Sarah Silverman co-stars the protagonist’s sister-in-law, a recovering alcoholic whose relapse sparks a fierce moment of truth telling.

2012 at the Movies: a resurgence of smart romantic comedies

A dream girl comes to life in RUBY SPARKS

Just when I had branded the entire genre brain dead, several smart and engaging romantic comedies popped up in 2012.   The most inventive was Ruby Sparks,in which a shy writer writes about his imagined perfect love object until…she becomes real.  Yes, suddenly he has a real life girlfriend of his own design. Ruby Sparks takes this fantasy of a perfect partner and explores the limits of a partner that you have designed yourself.  The biggest star in Ruby Sparks is its leading lady Zoe Kazan’s ingenious screenplay – funny without being silly, profound without being pretentious, bright without being precious.

Also co-written by its female star, in this case Rashida Jones, Celeste and Jesse Forever is about a couple that is now working on an amiable divorce and are still best friends.  Once you accept the comic premise that this couple is made for each other but not as a married couple, everyone’s behavior is authentic.  Sure, he wants to get back with her when she isn’t in a place to do that – and, then, vice versa – but the characters resolve the conflict as they would in real life.  Here’s a mini-spoiler – this movie is just too smart to end in rushing to the airport or disrupting the wedding or any of the other typical rom com contrivances.

Similarly, the best thing about The Five-Year Engagement is the authenticity of the situation.  There are no wacky plot devices; this story could all really happen – and is the narrative for some couples today.

Coming up on TV: Sergio Leone and the man with no name

FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE

On the single blissful evening of November 9, Turner Classic Movies will be broadcasting the three great Sergio Leone spaghetti Westerns A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. All star Clint Eastwood and feature wonderfully idiosyncratic scores by Ennio Morricone.

Eastwood’s character in the trilogy is referred to in film literature as “the man with no name”. But actually, the character is named Joe, Monco and Blondie in the three movies, respectively.

Here’s Morricone’s theme for A Fistful of Dollars.

Pre-autumn look at the year’s best movies so far

My top movie pick so far in 2012 - THE KID WITH THE BIKE

Here’s a pre-autumn check in with my running list of the year’s best films – Best Movies of 2012 – So Far.  I’ve included six foreign language films, from Belgium, France, Quebec, Iran, Russia and Turkey, and five American and Canadian independent films.  That’s par for the course, because I usually call out 23-28 movies on my end of the year list.

The Kid on the Bike and A Separation had very limited US theatrical runs at the end of 2011 to qualify for the 2012 Oscars.  But they weren’t available to most Americans until this year, so they’re on my 2012 list.

And guess what – there are zero Hollywood movies on the list.  That’s not a huge surprise because Hollywood generally releases its Oscar bait in the fall.  The hyped Hollywood fare coming up in 2012 includes Argo, Cloud Atlas, The Sessions and Hyde Park on Hudson (being released by the prestige arms of major studios).  The other promising prestige movies (Killing Them Softly, Silver Linings Playbook, Lincoln, etc.) are being released by mini-majors such as The Weinstein Company and Touchstone (the prestige arm of Dreamworks) and by the smaller indie distributors.

Here’s another surprise –  there no documentaries on my list so far.  Last year at this time, Project Nim, Buck and Tabloid were all on the list.  There are several promising documentaries yet to be released (Paul Williams Is Still Alive, Undefeated, The Gatekeepers, Stories We Tell, Mea Maxima Culpa, ), but, as of now,  it’s a down year.

Incidentally, you can still find Beasts of the Southern Wild in theaters.   Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, Rampart, A Separation and Monsieur Lazhar are already available on DVD.   Detachment, Moonrise Kingdom, Elena and Take This Waltz will become available on DVD in  October.

Google calculates Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon

Kevin Bacon's best performance in THE WOODSMAN

Now Google helps you play Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon.  Type into the Google search box “Bacon number” and the name of someone from the movies and you get that person’s Bacon number.  I typed in “Bacon number Humphrey Bogart”, and this is what I got:

Humphrey Bogart’s Bacon number is 3

Humphrey Bogart and Peter Lorre appeared in Casablanca.

Peter Lorre and Jack Nicholson appeared in The Raven.

Jack Nicholson and Kevin Bacon appeared in A Few Good Men.

 

Just about everyone who is working in films today has a Bacon number of 1 or 2, so I tried to confound the system with Fatty Arbuckle, whose movie career was killed by a scandal in 1921, and I got:

Roscoe Arbuckle’s Bacon number is 3

Roscoe Arbuckle and Buster Keaton appeared in Coney Island.

Buster Keaton and Patty McCormack appeared in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

Patty McCormack and Kevin Bacon appeared in Frost/Nixon.

 

Next, I tried Warrren William, the King of Pre-Code from the early 1930s.

Warren William’s Bacon number is 3

Warren William and Henry Wilcoxon appeared in Cleopatra.

Henry Wilcoxon and Bill Murray appeared in Caddyshack.

Bill Murray and Kevin Bacon appeared in Wild Things.

 

Amazingly, these people each have a Bacon number of only 2:  Klaus Kinski, Margaret Hamilton (The Wicked Witch in The Wizard of Oz), John Wayne, Marcello Mastroianni, Mary Badham (Scout Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird), Melina Mercouri, Francois Cluzet, Gloria Grahame, Raymond Burr, Woody Strode, Vivien Leigh and Bob Dylan.  The highest known Bacon number is 7, held by William Rufus Shafter.  This is an AWESOME time-waster!  Love it! Thanks, Google!

 

The Norwegians Got Funny This Year

KING CURLING

This week’s DVD pick, the dark Norwegian comedy thriller Headhunters, has some big laughs. But it’s just one of some very funny Norwegian comedies this year.  I also liked the teen sex comedy Turn Me On, Dammit!.  Who knew that the Norwegians could be so damn funny?

My favorite comedy this year is King Curling, set in a sport that even the Norwegians find to be odd and boring, is HILARIOUS.  The star of a curling team suffers a psychotic breakdown and, after years of treatment, is released from an asylum heavily medicated.  To win money for a friend’s lifesaving operation, the curling team must win a tournament and the star needs to go off his meds to regain his game skills.

It’s a broad comedy, but the key is that the actors aren’t trying to be funny, a la Will Ferrell.  Instead, they play it absolutely straight, relying on the characters, situations and dialogue to generate the laughs.  And laughs, they are aplenty.

The curling star tries to maintain composure despite his recurring hallucinations of floating pink lint.  One of the Norwegian curlers, a womanizer with unusually low standards,  keeps lapsing into American gangsta street talk.  Another has a long-lost father who turns up as, of course, a Rod Stewart impersonator who doesn’t sound remotely like Rod Stewart.  And then there’s the kissing dog.  It’s a top drawer broad comedy.  Here’s the trailer for King Curling.