30 December 2023

And, Oh, the View!

 Schmoozing with the beautiful people ...

ANYONE BUT YOU (C) - Our Annual Christmas Day Mainstream Movie tradition put the emphasis on "mainstream" this year, with this trashy goof featuring handsome people in a gorgeous setting in a sort-of anti-rom-com romp. It's one of those movie when two hot actors pretend to hate each other -- but they probably really like each other! Let's just say that "Sydney Sweeney in a bikini" or "Glen Powell in a towel" does more than just rhyme.

That doesn't mean there's much reason to this painfully reductive genre exercise. Sweeney's Bea has a meet-cute in a coffeeshop with Powell's Ben, and they make a connection before she sneaks off from his apartment the next morning, but then has second thoughts, only to go back and overhear Ben, his male pride wounded, trash her to his roommate. Fast forward to them discovering months later that they are both on their way to the destination wedding of Bea's sister and Ben's friend. When their animosity threatens to overshadow the big event, the two concoct a scheme to pretend they are now a couple -- this will appease the brides and the families while also getting Bea's ex off her back (her meddling parents invited him as a surprise) while having the side effect of making Ben's ex jealous (she lives in Australia). What could go wrong?

 

There are enough laughs in this, and Sweeney and Powell are nearly naked enough, to make it a tolerable diversion. (One character refers to Bea as "the plump girl with the sad eyes.") What's most annoying is the film's pretensions to Shakespearean high jinks. The story is a high school sophomore's interpretation of "Much Ado About Nothing." Director Will Gluck ("Easy A," co-writing here with newcomer Ilana Wolpert) use the Bard's quotes as chapter headings and also go full-on silly by convening obviously transparent Greek choruses who engage in conversations meant to be overheard by Bea and Ben in order to psyche them into falling for each other, as if they were Samantha and Darren Stevens on an episode of "Bewitched." Gluck exaggerates these moments so that they are obviously unbelievable, which only serves to remind us that we're watching a contrived, light-hearted movie amid the smell of popcorn and the wails of a toddler dragged to R-rated fare on a holy holiday. 

I'm not demanding that we get drawn to the cineplex and then subjected to an overly faithful remake of a 17th century farce. Sure, Joss Whedon managed to do that successfully in 2013 with "Much Ado," but that was an artsy indie take, and no one would suggest that "Anyone But You" has such pretensions. Gluck and Wolpert pepper the script with some solid one-liners, even if it's not the most original banter. And they nod to rom-com conventions even while they blink out their desire to subvert them (though they fail to do that, big time, in the end). 

Sweeney and Powell are serviceable, but they don't have a ton of chemistry despite the ease with which their physical parts would likely fit together. The supporting cast is certainly C-List. Dermot Mulroney, as Bea's dad, is the biggest fish. Model Charlee Fraser stands out as the Aussie seductress, and Joe Davidson has a blast as her lunkheaded boy toy (but with a perfect comedic fake-out at the end). The soundtrack is packed with bangers -- "Unwritten" by Natasha Bedingfield makes for a cute punch line at the climax (and for end-credits outtakes). All of this is about as close as you can get to a classic definition of dumb fun.

CREATIVE CONTROL (2016) (B) - I'm torn about this shallow but oddly compelling futuristic tale of a man getting cracked-out on AI (and drugs), shunning his lovely yogi lover in favor of a virtually enhanced version of his best friend's more conventional girlfriend. Benjamin Dickinson is disturbingly manic as his character David has a meltdown while working on an ad campaign for a drug that eases anxiety. The irony!

Dickinson directed this stylish black-and-white bid for auteur status, and he co-wrote it with Micah Bloomberg (a similarly provocative "Sanctuary"). This one has a cocky attitude throughout, and many viewers will find that a turn-off, but there are enough good ideas and crackling lines of dialogue that it overcomes its shortcomings. There is a temptation to dismiss this as shallow -- at times it absolutely is -- but then comes more clever, biting dialogue, and you set down the remote. A critical scene in the middle of the film -- where David responds to his passive-aggressive girlfriend Juliette (Nora Zehetner) with a shout-storm -- injects a burst of reality that is exhilarating.

Otherwise, David is self-medicating (with pills shaped like '70s cereals) while working up a strategy to sell Augmenta (a version of Google Glass) and obsessing over Sophie (Alexis Rasmussen), who is both a model at the advertising firm and the partner of Wim (Dan Gill), the firm's photographer, who himself is banging another model on the side. David is deft with virtual reality (this takes place in a future of translucent, mouseless computer devices) and manages to magically create a virtual fantasy character that embodies Sophie's face and voice. For all the good it does him; he seems to spend much more time moping than masturbating. David's slow-building train-wreck of a career and relationship grows compelling by the final reel (if you make it that far), as his obsession with Sophie goes off the rails. 

Dickinson shoots in a creamy monochrome, except for splashes of color whenever computer screens and avatars come to life. He leans heavily on modern takes on classical music (Vivaldi, Schubert), with lots of haunting strings that introduce chapters. Cinematography credit goes to Adam Newport-Berra ("Last Black Man in San Francisco"), as director of photography.

And props to whoever crafted the many yoga-class scenes, because they got the parlance, teaching styles and temperaments of Juliette and her rival, Govindas (Paul Manza), down perfectly. (Juliette's single-leg down-dog, elegantly framed, is an example of how breathtaking the visuals can get here.) Throw in Reggie Watts (as himself), for no compelling reason, and you have a sadly sexy and sometimes suspenseful character study from the mid-teens.

BONUS TRACK

As noted, "Anyone But You" was our annual Christmas Day outing that returned after a one-year absence due to 2022's pathetic offerings.  For the record, here is our full list from previous years, in order of preference, updated:

  1. Up in the Air (2009)

  2. Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou (2004)

  3. Dreamgirls (2006)

  4. Charlie Wilson's War (2007)

  5. Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (2020)

  6. Little Women (2019)

  7. The Fighter (2010)

  8. Licorice Pizza (2021)

  9. American Hustle (2013)

10. The Shape of Water (2017)

11. La La Land (2016)

12. The Wrestler (2008)

13. Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015)

14. Young Adult (2011)

15. This Is 40 (2012)

16. Anyone But You (2023)

17. Holmes & Watson (2018)

18. Into the Woods (2014)

29 December 2023

The Digest of 2022

 

As you know, it takes us flyover folks longer to track down all the key releases in a given year, so our highly anticipated Best of 2023 list won't be out for a month or so. To keep you on the edge of your seats, below is a list, in random order, of 2023 releases that (so far) have scored a B+ or better and thus will compete for the annual honors. (Spoiler Alert: One of these is head-and-shoulders above the rest and is a lock to be No. 1.)

27 December 2023

Life Is Short: Get On With It

 If you can't grab us by the one-third mark, you take your chances of getting the plug pulled on you. Here are two streamers that just went nowhere slowly.

Title: MAY DECEMBER
Running Time: 117 MIN
Elapsed Time at Plug Pull:  48 MIN
Portion Watched: 41%
My Age at Time of Viewing: 61 YRS, 0 MOS.
Average Male American Lifespan: 77.3 YRS.
Watched/Did Instead: Wrote this review.
Odds of Re-viewing This Title: 22-1

Comment: I gave this until past the one-third mark to allow Todd Haynes ("Carol") to introduce some sort of hook to keep me watching the fictionalized account of the Mary Kay LeTourneau story -- framed as a pompous actress, Elizabeth (Natalie Portman), visiting the disgraced former teacher, here called Gracie (Haynes regular Julianne Moore), in order to study for a movie about the woman's life. Very little happens as Portman's character methodically interviews the people in Gracie's life and observes the passive-aggressive family dynamics Gracie created with the person she seduced when he was 13 but is now 36, Joe (a dull Charles Melton).  This all plays out like the made-for-TV film that seems to be in the works in the movie. And the score is glaringly out of place. It kept reminding me of a cheesy '70s TV show or film -- and what do you know, it is a reworking of the score from the 1971 British film "The Go-Between." So I'm not crazy; Haynes is. Portman is all breathy affect, and there's just not enough attention paid to Gracie or Joe. I finally bailed when the middle third started with a visit to Gracie's lawyer and Gracie's son from her first marriage (a former classmate of Joe's), who is a complete asshole and whose band plays songs that 62-year-old Haynes thinks a Millennial would think are cool to cover: Peter Frampton's "Baby I Love Your Way" and Leon Russell's "Tight Rope." It wasn't worth going on and waiting for the inevitable sex scene between Elizabeth and Joe and whatever fallout, if any, results from it. That's not a spoiler, just an assumption.

 

 

Title: INVISIBLE LIFE (2019)
Running Time: 139 MIN
Elapsed Time at Plug Pull:  35 MIN
Portion Watched: 25%
My Age at Time of Viewing: 61 YRS, 0 MOS.
Average Male American Lifespan: 77.3 YRS.
Watched/Did Instead: Moved on to another title on Amazon Prime before the free month expired.
Odds of Re-viewing This Title: 14-1

Comment: Speaking of made-for-TV movies, this Amazon original is a melodramatic period piece about two sisters in Rio de Janeiro whose lives take different paths when they are teenagers back in the repressed 1950s and who apparently spend the rest of the movie headed toward some sort of reunion. I did not make it that far. This is about as melodramatic as a modern movie gets. The two girls (Julia Stockler and Carol Duarte) fall under the thumb of their macho working-class father. One of them runs off to Greece with a sailor but eventually returns home pregnant. But meantime, the other has gone off to pursue a music career (but not before getting date-raped on her wedding night). There is nothing compelling about their personalities. The storytelling is strictly by-the-numbers. It is not only initially set in the '50s but it has an old-fashioned sensibility about it that is downright corny. No offense to Karim Ainouz, but lush melodramas just don't fly these days.


BONUS TRACK

I've always loved "Tight Rope." But then, I'm 61 now and remember when it came out. My affinity for this and Cat Stevens' "Morning Is Broken" got me mocked a lot as a sensitive tween.

23 December 2023

Immigration Tribulations

One of the best of the year, plus cleaning two out of the queue during a free month of Amazon Prime.

FREMONT (A) - Sometimes a movie is so pleasantly perfect that words fail a critic. Just go see it; trust me.

With a heavy debt to the deadpan storytelling and grainy visual style of Jim Jarmusch, writer-director Babak Jalali deftly unravels the story of Donya (Anaita Wali Zada), a refugee from Afghanistan, where she collaborated with the Americans as a translator. She is now in the bland Bay Area town of Fremont, dying slowly of boredom and desperate to make a human connection. She does have interactions -- with co-workers, neighbors, a therapist -- but she yearns for something deeper. 


Donya works at a small local fortune-cookie factory, where she graduates from making the treats to writing the fortunes, which gives her not only a creative outlet to process her emotional issues but also a way to slip in her phone number to whatever lucky soul might find it and contact her. That faux pas will backfire on her. But it will lead to an eventual trip to Bakersfield that offers the hope of a happier future.

Among Donya's acquaintances are co-worker Joanna (Hilda Schmelling), who at one point sings her an old folk tune ("Just Another Diamond Day," below); a cranky Afghan neighbor and his bullied wife; the factory owner (Eddie Tang) who is full of uplifting aphorisms and pithy life lessons; and the proprietor of the restaurant where Donya joylessly eats her dinner every night, joining him in watching a foreign soap opera. Best of all is Gregg Turkington as Dr. Anthony, the therapist, whose alternative methods appear to be self taught (and which revolve around teachings from the novel White Fang). Turkington ("Entertainment") gives this production comedic credibility, serving as the perfect foil for the exasperated Donya. Throughout, Wali Zada, a newcomer, is placid and monosyllabic but barely concealing the roiling emotions within, all suggesting hours of backstory conveyed in a single glance.

Jalali is partial to static shots framing a single character, another Jarmusch touch. The story is paced perfectly over an hour and a half. "Fremont" is co-written by Carolina Cavalli (whose "Amanda" also was released this year), and the script is spare but profound. When Donya has a serendipitous meeting with a brooding auto mechanic (the ubiquitous Jeremy Allen White), the slow grind of life's incivilities suddenly gives way to a glimmer of sunshine out there in California, a land of hope and dreams.

NOBODY'S WATCHING (2017) (B-minus) - Lightweight and uneventful, this earnest film depicts the challenges faced by  an immigrant from Argentina hustling to find work and a sponsor to stay in the United States.  Unfortunately, the main character is a pretty-boy actor who had made a name for himself in Argentina, and it's tough to empathize with his non-grueling existence as a nanny for a friend, among other odd jobs that are not back-breaking.

Nico (Guillermo Pfening) is mostly in denial after, early on, it is clear that the main reason for his move to New York -- a starring role in a Mexican director's independent film -- is falling through and he will be stranded without decent acting work. (It doesn't help that he's blond and blue-eyed and doesn't "look Latino," so he gets rejected at auditions.) Nico jeopardizes his job as a nanny with questionable behavior and soon descends into a decadent lifestyle of drugs and random sexual encounters.

It doesn't help that doors are closing back in Venezuela, too. The show-runner for the popular soap opera that Nico co-starred on had put Nico's character in a coma, though that's not the only reason Nico fled -- there is also a romantic history between him and the show-runner (Pascal Yen-Pfister), who is a closeted husband and father. Much of this movie actually plays out like a soap opera, and not a particularly compelling one at that. The director Julia Solomonoff (writing the script with Christina Lazaridi) is an Argentine who studied film at Columbia, so she surely has crafted a personal tale of an immigrant's life in dog-eat-dog New York. It would help if she gave us more solid reason to care about whether Nico will ever collect a TV show check again.

GOLDEN VOICES (2019) (B-minus) - This comic drama, set back in 1990, never finds an appealing tone as it follows an aging couple whose move from Russia to Israel lays bare the weaknesses of their relationship. It's simply not funny enough to be a comedy or compelling enough to be a drama.

Maria Belkin can be quite captivating at times as Raya, who dodges the mood swings of her surly husband, Victor (Vladimir Friedman), whose disposition is clouded by the fact that he can't get work like they had in Russia -- as renowned voice-over actors who dubbed some of the all-time great films. Raya, instead, gets a job at a call center, and she hides the fact that the work involves phone sex under a pseudonym. Victor eventually falls in with a shady operation that bootlegs theatrical screenings on videotape. If that plot sounds familiar, it's because it strongly echoes a "Seinfeld" episode about Russian pirates. 

Belkin is an aging beauty with an expressive face, in the mold of Katherine Helmond ("Brazil" and TV's "Soap"), and she does her best to wring pathos from her role. But Victor is just a gruff old brute, and when the inevitable climactic reveal comes, it's hard to feel invested in the marriage or to care about how this turns out. Toss in a deus ex machina involving Saddam Hussein's threat of a gas attack on Israel, and things just fall apart at the end.

BONUS TRACKS

This one from "Fremont" plays on a disc while Donya is driving in her car to Bakersfield. It is "Ulu Palakua" by Iwalani Kahalewei:


 

And here is "Just Another Diamond Day" by Vashti Bunyan, from 1970: 

21 December 2023

Slumming in the Sticks

 

TO LESLIE (B) - Your patience will be tested as to whether you can endure this poverty porn and anxiety exercise about an alcoholic woman reaching another rock bottom six years after having won the lottery. Andrea Riseborough's haunting performance as Leslie is so authentic you might not have the guts to last the two hours of wallowing and desperation.

It doesn't help that she's surrounded by a supporting cast leaning heavily into the corn-pone. It is difficult to stay in the story when you have Hollywood types, raised in the northeast, slathering on the southern drawl. Allison Janney has her moments as Leslie's nemesis; her character Nancy is seethingly resentful that she had to raise Leslie's son, James (a typically mopey Owen Teague). And then there is Marc Maron, turning in another shaky performance, as Sweeney, a kindhearted motel owner who hires the destitute Leslie to clean rooms. Maron was an odd man out in Lynn Shelton's "Sword of Trust," and he shows no more range here as the one-note good guy. (Apparently Maron's role was originally slated for John Hawkes; that's quite a step-down.)  Andre Royo and Stephen Root are wasted in fringe roles.

But this is Riseborough's show, from beginning to end. But she is essentially too good, highlighting several weaknesses -- the so-so cast, the labored script, and the plodding pace of the production. Her take on the character is so raw and searing -- which is not to say that it's overdone in any way -- that it overwhelms everything around it. It is probably one of the all-time great depictions of addiction, and you ache for her at all times, even during the bittersweet ending, which offers the hope of redemption. But too often the plot is weak, the pace slow, the surrounding characters dull -- and you wonder if this is anything more than a master class in acting by Riseborough.

This is only the second film written by Ryan Binaco ("3022") and it is directed by TV journeyman Michael Morris ("Better Call Saul"), making his big-screen debut. They wallow in Leslie's condition. They smother the soundtrack with classic country songs that often are too precisely on point for Leslie's latest predicament. Their default is not so much to brutalize Leslie's addiction but to belabor it. Riseborough might leave you in awe, but she's also likely to leave you feeling, as one character notes, "rode hard and hung up wet."

SHELTER IN SOLITUDE (C+) - I just can't recommend a movie that -- no matter how entertaining at times -- is structured around a preposterous idiot plot.  This one is ridiculous, even if it has the low hum of amusing rural characters.

Siobhan Fallon Hogan (Kramer's girlfriend on "Seinfeld" way back in the day) is a talented comic actor, and puts her heart into the screenplay, about a washed up country singer who improbably befriends a death-row inmate. Viv (Hogan) is a hot mess; her juke joint has been closed by COVID (and has been robbed during the shutdown), and she likes to drink and sleep a lot in her sloppy home. Her brother Dwayne (a solid Robert Patrick) runs the prison, and Viv somehow manages to get a job overnight guarding a prisoner facing the electric chair, noble Jackson (Peter Macon). 

If you can make it over that logical leap, pace yourself -- there are plenty more hurdles to come. Would you believe that Jackson is an innocent man who was just trying to protect his daughter from a rapist? Viv tracks down the daughter, revealing more and more illogical plot contrivances in order to build up a mountain of sympathy for poor Jackson. By the end of the film, the story has gone beyond being cartoonish. 

But things pass along in a folksy manner for an hour and a half, and Hogan and Patrick do make for a delightful bickering brother-sister duo. Quirky characters, sporting southern accents, come and go. Viv abides. And it's all rather inoffensive, even if it's far-fetched.

BONUS TRACK

"To Leslie" begs for old-school country cred via its soundtrack full of ringers from the classic era. The best is an all-time favorite from Waylon Jennings, "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way":


Leslie sits in a bar at a crucial point in the movie, and the song is just a little too spot-on -- Willie Nelson shortening Waylon's title to three words, "Are You Sure":

18 December 2023

Doc Watch: Damn Right I Got the Blues

 We're doing a free month of Amazon Prime, so let's catch up on our queue ...

BORN IN CHICAGO (B-minus) - This slim (77-minute) paean to white-boy blues pays its respect to Chicago's 1960s music scene, but it rarely rises above a paint-by-numbers history familiar to Boomers.  It also suffers from a sappy script full of saccharine sentimentality, robotically narrated by Elwood Blues himself, Dan Ayckroyd.

The first 20 minutes troops through the dawn of Chicago blues on Chicago's South Side around the end of World War II, and it feels like a rushed, forced march, barely hitting highlights. While it's a kick to revisit clips of Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter and the rest, this is a perfunctory gloss that merely serves as a bridge to the white kids who crashed the scene by the '60s. 

The focus is mostly on Paul Butterfield and Mike Bloomfield, who befriended Howlin' Wolf and cut their teeth in front of black audiences, which paved the way for the British R&B invasion (Rolling Stones, Clapton, Yardbirds, etal.) to not only swamp the genre but also help revive the careers of the original artists by the 1970s. Some of the original band members remain, including Nick Gravenites, who penned the song "Born in Chicago," and nice guys like Corky Siegel. Selective archival interviews bring in heavy hitters like B.B. King and Bob Dylan, along with money men like Bill Graham and Marshall Chess.

It's tough to get over the hump early on -- the simplistic scan of the pioneers and the cheesy transition to the young boomers, wherein everyone is depicted as wonderful, talented and racially harmonious in every way. But the music is good, and the filmmakers' hearts are in the right place.

JOY RIDE (B+) - Let's follow two emotionally damaged middle-age men as they drive themselves to their comedy gigs and perform in hipster clubs. Onetime wild man Bobcat Goldthwait and the former wunderkind Dana Gould have been pals for decades, and Goldthwait, now known as a skilled indie director, filmed them on the road and during their two-man shows.

Gould, known for his work on "The Simpsons," is awfully intense compared to Goldthwait's zen demeanor these days, and it is heartening to see them open up about their unpalatable upbringings and ways of coping with their respective mental challenges. This, of course, is yet another insider standup buddy wank (in which they gaze lovingly at the other's inspired genius on stage every night, a less vaudevillian Gen X version of the duo of Martin Short and Steve Martin), and it's ironic that they have the chutzpah to dis Jerry Seinfeld's "Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee," as if they are not essentially doing the same thing. But there's also something charming about the men's relationship -- and they are really funny. Stick around (or skip ahead) to the 55-minute mark and Goldthwait's flawless rendition of a shaggy-dog tale about an airplane flight that had engine trouble and made an emergency landing. (He, too, sticks the landing.)

The clips are well curated -- the highlights include Goldthwait trashing Arsenio Hall's set, torching Jay Leno's guest chair, terrorizing Regis and Kathie Lee with a fire extinguisher, and performing in a leisure suit and heavy makeup. (And the clip of Gould cutting a promo with Bob Hope is worth the price of admission.) There certainly could be fewer "I was pals with Robin Williams" stories, although it's eerily fascinating to hear about Williams playing Call of Duty for hours at a stretch while Goldthwait just sat at his side. And the attempt to perpetuate the feud with Seinfeld mostly flops, which Seinfeld would just love. But these two guys are old pros, and at 78 minutes they don't wear out their welcome.

BONUS TRACKS

One cool nugget from "Born in Chicago" is the story of how the Rolling Stones insisted on having Howling Wolf join them on the bill for their 1965 appearance on ABC's hip show "Shindig":


Buddy Guy (reported to be updating his name, in order to appeal to younger listeners, to Dude Bro) shredding through our title track:


 

The Pixies with their out-of-control-locomotive performance of "Born in Chicago":

14 December 2023

What If ...

 ... two dudes tried to survive the apocalypse in a biodome and Nicolas Cage started showing up in everybody's dreams ...

BIOSPHERE (B+) - This whole experiment relies critically on your ability to suspend disbelief. And I won't even come close to ruining the plot twist that requires the viewer to toss most rationality out the window. 

The important thing here is that Mark Duplass and Sterling K. Brown ("Waves") are wonderful companions -- to each other and in relation to us -- and Duplass and director Mel Eslyn have written a fascinating, if weird, post-dystopian tale of survival. Duplass' Billy and Brown's Ray share a biodome designed by Ray, an oasis in a dark world. Billy, an aging hipster gamer, used to be president of the United States, and Ray's wiles somehow rescued them. Their survival, though, is threatened when the fish they rely on for essential protein start dying off. Will our heroes and the fish find a way to survive?

Since that's all I can say about the plot, let me wax on a bit about Duplass. First, Brown is really good here, but there is no filmmaker/writer/actor like Mark Duplass. He has a unique ability to create relatable characters and then imbue them with so much humanity and nuance that his performances can seem otherworldly yet impeccably grounded. Here he inhabits a complex man-child who is unafraid to explore the emotional depths of his lifelong friendship. He can be effortlessly funny -- in particularly subtle ways -- and deeply moving. Just a glance or a perfunctory line delivery can speak volumes

Maybe great actors really do need to suffer for their art. As I write this I noticed that the New Yorker just published a lengthy interview with Duplass, in which he discusses a lifetime battle with depression. I don't know what his secret is. But no one has created more quality films, TV shows and performances than he has, whether as a producer with his brother Jay or in projects such as this, where he collaborates on a script and then co-stars. Imagine putting yourself out there so often and in so many ways -- and succeeding in almost every project you take on. "Biosphere" is proof that he has not run out of intriguing ideas or creative ways to put a neat spin on a genre that has been beaten into the ground. 

From his film origins in the Mumblecore movement ("The Puffy Chair") through mainstream success while maintaining indie cred, Duplass is easily, by far, the best multi-hyphenate storyteller of our generation. And whether or not you buy the crazy gimmick in "Biosphere" you'd be hard-pressed to walk out on his and Brown's compelling two-man show.

DREAM SCENARIO (B) - I laughed a lot during this meandering thought experiment, mostly at Nicolas Cage's shlubby, passive-agressive college professor who, for some bizarre reason, begins to pop up in humanity's nightly dreams. Whereas "Biosphere" is meticulously thought-out and logically airtight (if farfetched), here writer-director Kristoffer Borgli was struck with a really good idea but didn't really map everything out well and loses the thread in the second half.

Kudos to the makeup department for the convincing bald pate on Cage's Paul Matthews, a nerd who lets others take advantage of him. His first appearances in dreams are innocuous, and he starts to get recognized wherever he goes, but then his actions in the dreams turn violent, and he in shunned, even ousted from polite society. It's kind of a groaning take on cancel culture, but it does finally draw Paul out of his doldrums as he tries to fight for his right to exist. 

All the while, Cage wrings melancholy humor out of the material. But the second half of the film is a mess. One bright spot is Michael Cera as head of a PR team trying to sell Paul on the idea of adding product placements to his appearances in people's subconsciouses. Cera is great, but the idea goes nowhere, gets dropped for a while, then gets wildly overplayed as Borgli rushes to wrap everything up. Another fun scene involves a gathering of Paul's fragile students, guided by another teacher who tries to gently reintroduce them to this Walter Mitty version of Freddy Krueger, only to frighten them all off.

There are some interesting ideas here, but they never gel. It's never boring, though, just clunky. Cage gets an assist from Julianne Nicholson as Paul's long-suffering wife and Dylan Gelula as a PR assistant who wants to re-create the sex dreams she has about Paul, to disastrous results. Even if it falls short of its potential, there's enough here to appreciate everyone's effort.

BONUS TRACK

At one point in "Biosphere," the friends dance around to obscure '70s-'80s pop songs by a band called Zeus. Here is "I Love the Night," which sounds like Rick Springfield fronting the Cars: 


I've never heard of this band, and I can't find out much about them on the internet. I mean, who are these masked rockers?

11 December 2023

New to the Queue

 It all comes to a head ...

Todd Haynes might be going to the well once too often, but we'll look in on his twist on the Mary Kay Letourneau story, "May December."

Ava Duvernay takes Isabel Wilkerson's nonfiction book Caste and dramatizes it as "Origin."

A documentary chronicles the challenges of local news operations, "Bad Press."

Any description that starts out "The smoke sauna practices of southern Estonia ..." has me hooked, so we'll check out the documentary "Smoke Sauna Sisterhood."

A polemic about the idea of Black Americans moving to the South to wield political influence, "South to Black Power."

04 December 2023

Doc Watch: Rock Docs

 

THE STONES AND BRIAN JONES (B) - This documentary from Nick Broomfield about the doomed co-founder of the Rolling Stones is incredibly intricate but not very intimate. Broomfield is very respectful of Brian Jones, and he draws out a lot of people who knew him back in the '60s, but the director never really gets under Jones' skin or inside his mind.

Jones was the pioneer of dying of rock-star indulgences at age 27. He succumbed to drugs and alcohol in the summer of 1969, just weeks after getting kicked out of the band by Mick Jagger and Keith Richard. And this biography can get quite granular at times -- not unlike the documentary from earlier this year about another troubled soul, Syd Barrett of Pink Floyd -- tracking down a lot of the beautiful women who defined Jones' existence. There was at least one gasp in the audience when it was revealed that Jones had a pattern of finding a teenage girlfriend, moving in with her family, making a baby, and then moving on to the next one, doing that five times by age 23.

But why did Jones act the way he did, engaging in aggressive serial monogamy and drowning himself in pills and booze? Maybe something-something about his childhood, we're told, coming from a square household led by strict parents. There's not much to glean from Jones himself, seen in archival interviews. He was quite deferential to the songwriters Jagger and Richard, and Jagger quickly surpassed Jones as the face and appeal of the band. While he didn't mind standing off to the side, he did rue the evolution from blues to rock 'n' roll. What also seemed to bother Jones was the mate-swapping that the Stones principals engaged in, passing women around like baseball cards. A story is told that willowy model Anita Pallenberg arrived at the Cannes film festival with Jones and left it days later with Richard. Marianne Faithfull seemed to make the rounds with the trio, too.

Broomfield can't resist the urge to insert himself in the story. As a teen he met Jones on a train and was forever transfixed by the mop-haired rocker. Broomfield's narration at times is sluggish. Mick and Keith don't sit for an interview, of course. Bill Wyman, though, is a wonderful host, and this is worth it simply for his flair for spinning war stories, always with a twinkle in his eye. But in the end, it's difficult to conjure strong feelings either way for Jones. This might have been a touching tragedy, if the demons in Jones' head hadn't gone to the grave with him 54 years ago.

SQUARING THE CIRCLE: THE STORY OF HIPGNOSIS (C) - The stories of Baby Boomers sure are getting tiresome. Especially when many of the stories seem apocryphal. Here we delve into the British art studio Hipgnosis, which made its name during the classic-rock era designing a bunch of iconic album covers, such as the prism on Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon."

And, yes, we again come full circle with Syd Barrett (profiled in this doc), with now-familiar stories told, as we get to know Aubrey "Po" Powell, the co-founder of Hipgnosis with Storm Thorgerson, Barrett's old pal, a decade gone and seen here only in archival footage. Anton Corbijn ("Control," "The American") chugs chronologically through the cover designers' oeuvre, and the origin stories are pretty interesting at first. But he starts to pinball from David Gilmour and Roger Waters' Pink Floyd album covers to Paul McCartney's "Band on the Run" and "Venus and Mars" (a couple of billiard balls, cool) to 10cc to Led Zeppelin's "Presence." There's a twinge of curiosity piqued by references to the Sex Pistols and Peter Gabriel. Grumpy Noel Gallagher of Oasis brings a Gen X factor to play fanboy to his elders, his observations a clunky note in the proceedings. Everyone (shot in arty black-and-white) looks really old, even McCartney.

Maybe if this were less than an hour it would have made a snappier PBS special. In the second half, Powell, who seems like a genuinely talented and friendly person, just kind of drones on with more hoary stories (we yet again revisit the infamous inflatable pig from Floyd's "Animals"). By the time we get to McCartney insisting on posing a statue on Mount Everest, the documentary crosses over into the indulgences of rich rock stars from a million years ago. (Powell literally reminds us that "money was no object" back then.) OK, old dudes. Cool stories. Glad you all had fun.

BONUS TRACK

The "Jones" trailer: