Month: August 2022

Gang Related (1997)

Tupac Shakur and Jim Belushi are pair of corrupt detectives who are left scrambling when a person they murdered turns out to be an undercover DEA agent. The film has a lot of good ideas going for it, but the result is terribly uneven. Released a year after Tupac’s own murder, I was unsure of him playing the more level-headed character to Belushi’s unhinged mastermind, but it speaks to the talent that was lost that he pulled it off quite well. Belushi on the other hand does not know how to bring the steely, ruthlessness necessary for his character whose arc goes on for too long and wraps up in a terribly convenient way.  Crime

She (1935)

Randolph Scott is summoned to his dying uncle’s home where he learns that his look-alike ancestor supposedly discovered an immortal flame 500 years ago with only his wife returning from the expedition. Scott and companion Nigel Bruce attempt to re-find the discovery, meeting Helen Mack and her father along the way, before the group is eventually brought to the lair of the titular character, portrayed by a fantastically regal Helen Gahagan. A very weird story that I wouldn’t have guessed is based on a popular novel from 1887, the film is limited by the often simplistic story telling of the 1930s. I don’t generally prefer colorized versions of films, but it does allow the grand Art Deco-influenced sets and overall quality production design stand out.   Fantasy  Adventure

Oscar Nomination: Best Dance Direction

Batgirl (1967)/Red Nightmare (1962)

It was just recently that I learned a Yvonne Craig Batgirl short was produced to introduce the character to the Adam West Batman television series. At only 8 minutes, it doesn’t offer a whole lot, but what it does give a small view into Batgirl’s personal life. It’s entirely filmed inside the Gotham City Library and shows Craig transforming into her Batgirl persona, primly hanging up her librarian clothes after discreetly changing in a closet. Fantastically, her hat flips to her mask and her reversible skirt becomes her cape.  Action

Awhile ago I had gotten into watching old PSAs on YouTube. Red Nightmare was one I discovered at the end of that binge but I kept it aside as one I’d like to watch. A truly ridiculous piece of Cold War propaganda produced in part by the Department of Defense, everyday joe Jack Kelly, after spending a day avoiding the commitments placed on him by his idyllic capitalistic society, dreams that his town has become overrun by communism. It’s weirdly not the nightmare the title leads one to expect. His teenaged daughter decides to join a work collective instead of marrying a drip. His son gets to visit a museum celebrating Soviet inventions instead of being forced to attend Sunday school indoctrination. Jack is punished at work for not meeting his quotas. So yeah, it looks different, but plays out pretty much just like capitalism.

Thunderball (1965)

Sean Connery returns as James Bond, travelling to the Bahamas to recover two atomic bombs stolen by SPECTRE agent Emilio Largo (portrayed by Adolfo Celi). Stealing all the best notes from Goldfinger (entertaining title sequences, fantastic theme songs, female characters bent on revenge), it doesn’t do much new with them. There’s a fantastic early scene in the SPECTRE headquarters that again have obvious comparisons to Dr. Evil’s lair in the Austin Powers series. The Bahamas provides an obviously gorgeous setting and its underwater scenes are creative especially an epic battle between the forces of good and evil, but they impart a couple of problems. First is an inability to tell characters apart under all their gear and second, it slows down the action in an action film to a crawl making for an unnecessarily bloated runtime.   Action

Oscar Win: Best Effects, Special Visual Effects

We Are Marshall (2006)

In 1970 a plane carrying almost the entire Marshall University football team and staff crashed on its way back to Huntington, killing everyone on board. While some felt it was disrespectful to continue on the next season, a team led by new coach Matthew McConaughey managed to rebuild itself after the disaster. I do enjoy a good sports film, though I don’t relate to ones that rely on an entire community supposedly being transformed by a single team. Not that I doubt such towns exist, I’ve just never experienced one. Along with an impressive cast that includes Ian McShane, David Strathairn, and Anthony Mackie, what sets this one apart is its reflection on loss and shared grief. The actual sport takes a way back seat to this theme.  Sports

That Cold Day in the Park (1969)

Unmarried and lonely Sandy Dennis spies teenager Michael Burns stranded in the park across from her home during a rainstorm and invites him to stay with her. Regrettably for both of them, they do not know enough about each other for this arrangement to work. There’s a sense of impending dread that resonates throughout the film and I was fully expecting it to play out similarly to the end of The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone. There is absolutely no one else I can think of who could play the necessary aspects of the complex main character as Dennis and she carries this unusual film from its first moments.

Crooked House (2017)

Stefanie Martini invites former flame, private investigator Max Irons to her family’s estate to investigate the circumstances surrounding her beloved grandfather’s death. Not surprisingly based on an Agatha Christie novel, the central mystery isn’t all that surprising and the little supposed romance between Irons and Martini fizzles especially since Martini comes across as a poor choice in her role. Luckily the rest of the female cast is incredibly strong with the always marvelous Glenn Close, Christina Hendricks, and Gillian Anderson, who for some reason are all hairstyled in uniquely garish colors. The film is an entertaining diversion, but it plays out as a poor man’s Knives Out.  Mystery  Crime

Desert Fury (1947)

Having dropped out of yet another finishing school, Lizabeth Scott runs into gangster John Hodiak on her way back home. Despite her casino owning mother Mary Astor’s misgivings, she falls for the gangster despite various rumors swirling around him. The romance here, which is about the only plot available, is poorly sold with little reason given for its development or even for the disapproval from Scott’s family and friends other than Hodiak being a ‘bad’ guy. What really doesn’t help that relationship is the surprisingly, almost blatant same sex relationship between Hodiak and his partner-in-crime Wendell Corey. The two intimately share their work and home with Corey becoming possessively jealous as Lizabeth weasels her way in.  Noir  Crime

Wonderful World (2009)

Former children’s musician Matthew Broderick finds himself more and more isolated other than attempts at bonding with his young daughter chess matches with his sickly, philosophical roommate Michael Kenneth Williams. When Williams falls into a diabetic coma, his sister Sanaa Lathan arrives from Senegal and Matthew finally finds a new connection to life. A slight cliché of a movie which probably doesn’t do enough for its Black characters, its strengths lie directly in the hands of its central cast. Perhaps it’s just the nostalgic Ferris Bueller connection, but I find Broderick generally likable even in his most unlikable characters.

Wild River (1960)

TVA administrator Montgomery Clift arrives in rural Tennessee to oversee the building of a dam on the Tennessee River, facing much opposition from the locals especially Jo Van Fleet whose family lives on one of the river’s islands. Clift is perfectly cast in this role. He’s equally determined to complete his task with a firm […]

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