Sunday, September 1, 2013

At the Cinema - August 2013

2 Guns – 7
You’ll like this movie if you like
a.  Mark Wahlberg
b.  Denzel Washington
c.  Gunfire
Mark and Denzel are undercover for different agencies trying to bring down a Mexican drug load or two.  They don’t know they’re each good guys.  It’s an interesting way to start a cop buddy movie, but it’s all really incidental to the charisma of the two stars.  They slog their way thru the plot twists, turns and contrivances, and generally put together a reasonable diversion of an action movie.  It’s fun and forgotten quickly.  There are worse ways to spend 2 hours.  Cleaning the oven would be one.



Blue Jasmine – 6
You’ll like this movie if you like
a.  Cate Blanchett
b.  Woody doing drama
c.  Occasional levity

When Woody Allen does “Midnight in Paris” he paints a fantasy weaving his fictional characters among famous literary titans to great humorous effect. Unfortunately here Woody does a stilted and contrived drama of fictional characters with no comic relief, and little in the way of travelogue footage to rival Paris.

Cate plays Jasmine, an exiled New York socialite who comes to live with her sister Ginger (Sally Hawkins) in San Francisco.  Both Cate and Sally are terrific in their roles, and expect Cate to get Oscar consideration.  That doesn’t mean there is much realism here.  This is almost a documentary, told in the mandatory back and forth flashback style that is in vogue.  (Did Woody start that with Annie Hall?)  Jasmine’s husband, played perfectly by Alec Baldwin was involved in financial and sexual hijinks.  His Bernie Madoff type scheming lands him in jail and Jasmine’s shame chases her into the real world, which she is ill suited for. 

Ginger’s first marriage, to Andrew Dice Clay’s character, ended when their nest egg fell victim to Jasmine’s husband.  Her second relationship, to Bobby Canalve is every bit as promising.  Ginger and Jasmine, adopted by the same parents as youngsters, really have nothing in common except being unlucky in love.  Jasmine finds it briefly, but she’s keeping her past a secret, so we know where that’s going.  She’s lost everything but her mind, and that seems inevitable.

Didn’t find this particularly interesting or believable, and the Woody Allen fan in me keeps hoping that his yearly churn will produce another classic or two before he’s done.  One more “Manhattan.”  One more “Annie” or “Hannah.”  Please. 

Scanning the Satellite

Searching for Sugar Man – 10
If you like music even just a little, you’ve got to see this fascinating story of an unknown and presumably dead singer-songwriter of the 70’s named Rodriguez.  He was an unknown in his native America, but through the oddest of circumstances he became a musical icon in South Africa and a voice of the rebellion against apartheid.  This is the story of the quest to find out what happened to him 30 years after he became a legend in one country.  To say there is a surprising eventual conclusion is to sell the movie short.  This is a great story punctuated by great music that sent me right to Amazon.com to buy the music.  Do yourself a favor.  Don’t google.  Don’t wiki.  Don’t even watch the trailer on youtube.  Find the movie and just let the story unfold.  You’ll see why it won the Academy Award last year for best feature-length documentary.  You’ll also be very happy.


The World According to Dick Cheney -8
Through interviews with Dick Cheney and many of his contemporaries, this film details the rise of Cheney and his influence through several presidential administrations, obviously culminating in his 8 years as George Bush’s Vice President.  Documentary film maker R J Culter paints a fairly balanced portrait.  Dick Cheney never wavered in his self-assurance or his commitment to his principles or his friends, most notably Donald Rumsfeld.  Cheney’s resolve and ability to get his way is legendary and more than a little scary.  Let’s just say when a politician wants what he wants, there is no reason to let the facts get in the way.
Chasing Mavericks – 8
I admit it.  I’m a sucker for surfing movies.  Maybe it’s because I surfed, very modestly, a few times and I totally get how someone could be so passionate about it.  It’s amazing.  What’s equally amazing is what I always want to scream at the screen:  “How do you make a living?”   How do they get to spend so much time on a hobby that doesn’t produce any income?  In this movie, at least some jobs are in evidence. 

This is the allegedly true story of surfing legend Jay Moriarity, played by Jonny Weston, and how he grew up fascinated with this mythic area off the west coast called “mavericks” where the waves are so high no sane man would go surfing anywhere near there.  Which of course doesn’t stop Jay from spending the whole movie training and preparing to surf it.  Among the skills he is pressed to learn by his mentor Frosty Henson, played convincingly by Gerard Butler, is how to hold his breath for 4 minutes.  Go ahead, try it.

The movie is co-directed by Michael Apted and Curtis Hanson and like every other surfing movie is marked by unbelievable photography edited together unconvincingly.  For example in the final scenes a boat goes in and out of the frame.  Nevertheless, it was fascinating to me and will be interesting to you in direct proportion to your interest in other surfing movies.

If you like this movie check out one of my all-time favorites “Big Wednesday,” or the first surfing movie that caught my attention, “The Endless Summer.” 

Casting By – 9
Here is another fascinating HBO documentary.  This one by Director Tom Donahue is about some “unsung heroes” of cinema, the casting directors.  Much of this focuses on the legacy of Marion Dougherty, who plucked many unknowns and cast them in hit movies and TV series.  The amount of gratitude that actors have for her and her contemporaries is evident here as an extraordinary number of them consented to be interviewed for this movie and pay tribute to the casting director who discovered them.  The credits alone are a who’s who of Hollywood, but it’s the insight into the inner workings of filming that will fascinate those of us sitting on the couch who love classic movies.

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