Calvary
The new Irish film Calvary turns on the premise that one of a priest's parishioners is threatening to kill him in a week's time in retribution for abuse at the hands of a now deceased priest. Good versus evil, belief versus doubt, retribution versus forgiveness. So far, so good. The clock is ticking.
The Ireland in Calvary exists trapped in limbo between modernity and the medieval. The Catholic Church remains powerful, despite the horrendous crimes committed by its Irish representatives, but there are also numerous atheists only too glad to spell out the Church's shortcomings. Brendan Gleeson, the stalwart irish actor, plays a world weary, but caring priest tending to a severely dysfunctional village. What's odd from an American perspective is the lack of mental health awareness. It's as if Ireland has missed Freud and antidepressants completely. There is one passing reference to finding 'closure', but a character dismissively states "that's something the Yanks do."
The sticking point here is that the film does a wonderful job of bringing the villagers and their familiar issues to the fore, but does a lousy one of fleshing out the priest's quandary. He can run and hide or stay and face the music. Brendan Gleeson is a great actor, with a tendency to appear languid on the surface all the while roiling beneath. He's fun to watch here, but his predicament never ignites. He seems almost content doling out doubtful wisdom, ambling to and fro among his flock. A neglected daughter is meant to give him motivation, but feels more like emotional window dressing.
Atheists and non-believers are almost psychotically cynical and despite the accuracy of their anti-Vatican barbs, the film is rooting for the priest. If pressed, I would venture that writer-director John McDonagh has a soft spot for Catholicism regardless of the pointed references to Vatican evil. The film drifts in and out of various characters' predicaments, but the point of it all is both hazy and leaden. The soundtrack reminds you that this is a portentous drama about morality, and the acting is uniformly good, but there's little narrative tension.
Brendan Gleeson is great, the film disappointed me.
Get On Up * 1/2
It couldn't have been easy trying to squeeze James Brown's life into a feature film. Born into poverty, domestic violence and abandonment in backwoods Georgia, Brown used his emotional pain to leverage his way to stardom and a prominent spot in the pantheon of American music. Watching Brown go through that experience is both exciting and sorrowful because one is continually reminded of the endless, degrading journey blacks have had to make from Jim Crow to the present. In the back of my mind were images of Ali, Nina Simone, Michael Jackson and a whole list of idols who struggled with 20th century racism.
Get On Up unfolds in contemporary, non-linear style, jumping to and fro in time and delivering a relatively nuanced vision of James Brown's already dramatic story. Mercifully, it's taken until now to get this project done; Hollywood would certainly have bollixed it up a decade ago. Some of the flashbacks are cliched and Brown's Jewish promoter doesn't evoke much interest as played by Dan Akroyd.
For the most part, the film deals glancingly with race, choosing to focus more intently on Soul Brother #1's rise on the charts and his personal demons. But reading between the lines of Get On Up with a knowledge of say, Ali's refusal to be drafted for Vietnam or Michael Jackson's pursuit of 'whiteness', you can't help but feel the weight of race on James Brown. Carrying that weight and the film, is Chadwick Boseman, who could easily get a nomination for not only mastering Brown's speaking voice and finesse on stage, but for always making The Godfather of Soul a vulnerable man. It's one of the best performances of the year.
From a musical perspective, the film fails to underline the importance of Brown's contributions to music. Not a living musician who plays hip-hop, rap, disco, r&b, soul, funk, jazz rock or all the myriad electronic offshoots stands clear of Brown's shadow. Brown's famous shout "On the one.." refers to emphasizing the first and third beats of a measure instead of the traditional second and fourth. Whereas many popular recordings from the sixties forward showcased wall to wall sound, lush strings filling any spaces, Brown's spare arrangements derive power from the silences. In one of the few musically relevant scenes, Brown lectures his sidemen, alerting them to the fact that whatever they play, they're playing drums. [For those interested in the development of Brown's musical genius and more about his idiosyncratic personality (he had his hair done three times a day) see "The One", by RJ Smith.]
Get On Up keeps Brown's electrifying showmanship front and center, where any James Brown bio should be. He's ordering purple suits for the band, checking his hair, rehearsing tirelessly and always watching the bottom line. Ultimately, the film is imperfect, trying to be all things to all people. It's part Hollywood bio, part realistic drama, part historical drama, part rip snorting entertainment.
More than usual Voyage Into Subjective feels especially subjective. James Brown is a musical idol of mine and his story, in some ways, parallels that of black America struggling to 'make' it against great, continuing odds. I was moved and saddened at the cost.
Venus in Fur ** 1/2
I'm pro sexuality in art, especially where it undermines perceived identity, so what the H, I had a good shot at enjoying Polanski's romp through domination and submission. And Venus in Fur was a jolly good time for me. Polanski's wife, Emanuelle Seigner, plays sharply off Polanski's brooding alter ego, Matheiu Almaric, who Americans will remember as Bond's Eurotrash nemesis in Quantum of Solace. Since this is a filmed play with one primary location, a theater stage, the acting has to click. So does the writing, which is playful, full of amusing double entendre, but backed by enough power shifts in the relationship to give the piece traction. Venus in Fur whirs along, questioning the balance of power between man and woman, actor and director, lover and object, writer and critic. Lighting, a few props and costumes, direction and judicious camera placement make Venus feel like a spacious film.
Quibble number one, a fairly minor one, is with the plot. Without spoiling the ending, I had a fairly clear idea of what was coming. The other quibble is more subjective and I'm not sure it's even fair. More entertainment than involving drama, Venus in Fur could have possibly been a bit deeper, had more at stake for its characters. It could even have been a bit more erotically charged - this is fairly tame stuff - although Polanski was directing his wife. Then again, that might have made it more Taming of the Shrew and less All's Well That Ends Well. I've ragged on Polanski over the last few decades for his mediocre output (Frantic, The Ghost, Death and the Maiden, The Ninth Gate), but I suspected the maker of Rosemary's Baby, Repulsion and Chinatown had better work in mind.
Ida *, Dance of Reality, The Rover
Shot in crisp black and white, Ida has the feel of a good short story lovingly transferred to the screen. The film deals with the aftershocks of the Holocaust in 1950's Poland when a novice to a convent learns about her heritage. I heard a fellow filmgoer complaining that it wasn't uplifting, but I found the spare, nuanced style and the shabbiness of communist Poland uplifting because there's little of the audience prompting we have in homegrown movies. It's a small film, well acted and beautifully shot.
Alejandro Jodorowsky is famous for a few over-the-top semi-surreal films made since the late 60's. If you've seen the films, you know why there are few of them and how hard it must have been to find the production cash. His latest film, Dance of Reality, is semi-autobiographical in the style of Fellini's Amarcord and there are moments when it achieves that dizzying balance between the mundane and the sublime. "I don't want to live in a world of dressed up dogs," says a dying anti-fascist with his last breath in the midst of the dictator's doggie costume contest. While this film apes Fellini's freak show tendencies, it feels dated and objectionable this late in history. Dance of Reality is chockfull of whores, drag queens and earth mother types that might have had (shock) value back in the day, but now feel as condescending as any other stereotype. I appreciate his attempts at subverting narrative expectations, but I wish he was better at realizing that goal. The documentary about Jodorowsky's attempt to make Dune, Jodorowsky's Dune, is far more entertaining.
Ever since his performances in Memento and LA Confidential, I've been waiting for another great Guy Pearce film. He can act and he's got those razor sharp cheekbones. The Rover is hyped as a dystopian revenge flick that takes place in the bleak outback of Oz. The film costars Robert Pattison of Twilight fame as a slow witted hick bank robber. Unfortunately, the whole exercise feels like a reboot of The Road Warrior sucked dry of fun. It's not a dystopia of excitement, but a dystopia of meaningless angst and violence. Nicely shot, well acted, humorless and empty.
As I watched The Double, stylistic and visual tidbits from other dystopian films hopscotched somewhere between synapses: the famous sign outside a suburban house in A Clockwork Orange that reads 'Home', the ominous televisions in Farenheit 451 and David Lynch's artfully creepy use of closeups. There's also a screaming crib from Rear Window. The references pile up and very soon you realize you're cataloguing and not watching.
That's unfortunate because the film delivers two very good performances by Jesse Eisenberg in the title role and some beautifully realized, steampunk-like interiors. The Double is visually rich and full of nightmarish DOS-style computers with blank keyboards, clanging elevators, dingy apartments and gloomy lighting. The stumbling block is the script, based on a novella by Dostoevsky about doppelgangers, that marches blithely off into Kafka land. Woody Allen, Steven Soderbergh and Orson Welles have trod here before with only Welles turning in a film that might be labelled successful. Richard Ayoade adds zip in the way of fresh insight or any particular suspense to the material, The Double clumps along, an earnest, albeit professionally produced, amateur screenplay.
Jodorowsky's Dune ** subjective stars
If you've seen a Jodorowsky film, there's a strong likelihood, for better or worse, that one of the visuals is tattooed onto your visual cortex. In my case it was dwarf sex in the Spaniard's psilocybin spaghetti western, El Topo, from 1971. Jodorowsky movies are provocative visual spectacles and grotesques from which realism has fled. I'm not a huge fan of his films, but I am an admirer of his chutzpah, his ability stick maniacally to his vision.
In 1975, Jodorowsky obtained the rights to film Dune, Frank Herbert's sci-fi epic. He attacked this project in typical style, hiring some of the best artistic talent to design the film's look and attempting to bring on a bizarre cast of stars including Orson Welles, Dali and Gloria Swanson. He hired Pink Floyd for the soundtrack.
In this documentary, Jodorowsky and a few of his compatriots recount the process of designing a phantasmagorical 14 hour version of Dune. One of the films co-creators claims that Jodorowsky mesmerized him onto the production, a claim easily reconciled with the inspired raconteur we meet in this film. He's a bit like 'the most interesting man in the world' from Dos Equis beer commercials. The crew eventually compiled a massive tome of intricate storyboards and shopped it around the major studios trying to scrape up some sorely needed cash. They'd already spent two million without shooting a frame. Hollywood wasn't buying, but the grandeur of Jodorowsky's failure make a beautiful testament to the creative power of passion. If you're into art making, film or otherwise, it's an engrossing ninety minutes.
Le Weekend ** subjective stars
"WILL MAKE YOU FALL IN LOVE ALL OVER AGAIN" raves something called Virgin Media.
I didn't fall in love again, sadly, but my fear that Le Weekend might be chillingly sentimental also didn't pan out. I was warmed, and cooled evenly, by a deftly written piece on a 60's-ish couple reassessing their marriage over a weekend in Paris. The script is by Hanif Kureishi, who also authored My Beautiful Laundrette.
Even if Jim Broadbent's name doesn't register, his hang dog look will be familiar from blockbusters - Harry Potter and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe - and smaller indies like Topsy Turvy (he plays Gilbert of Gilbert and Sullivan) and The Crying Game. An amazing film actor, Broadbent seems to act almost solely with his eyes and he's a joy to watch. His costar, Lindsay Duncan, is less well known in the US (HBO's Rome), but has also been working steadily for decades and is equal to Broadbent's game. Together they evoke that crazed mix of love and loathing that defines many long lived relationships. Add to that Jeff Goldblum's amusing rendition of a smarmy, successful American. It's not heaviosity, not Bergman's Scenes From A Marriage, but it is well written, funny and superbly acted.