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Manhattan (1979)
2/10
Nope, not any more
25 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
For a long time Woody Allen was one of my favorite directors, and this was among my favorite of his films. When I saw it in the theater in 1979, many in the audience applauded when the credits started at the end. If you didn't know anything about Woody Allen and could just take the film, its plot and themes, and the characters at face value, it still would be great.

Unfortunately, you really can't.

Yeah, the film is a less-comic take on this perpetual relationship comic-drama, but this time his character is involved with a 17-year-old girl. Everyone in the film accepts their relationship; he's the only one who bellyaches about it. And, in the end, when she says that they'll get back together when she returns from her year overseas and says "Everybody gets corrupted," he is clearly ruefully sad. He wanted the innocent girl, not the woman she would become.

Again, this could work if Allen didn't depict his character as a victimizer rather than a victim. It could work if except for his "comic" take on his character's ex-wife, whose sexuality and functional relationship with another woman is defined only in terms of what it says about him (and what it might mean for their son's sexuality). It could work if Woody Allen wasn't Woody Allen, if he hadn't been so creditably accused, if he hadn't "tackled (Mariel Hemingway) like a linebacker" in their make-out scene in this movie and then tried to get her to come to Paris with him the moment she turned 18 according to her published memoir. (She turned him down, she says, and he left her parent's house where he was visiting the next day.)

But, he is Woody Allen. And, I don't own and haven't watched one of his movies since Match Point, and I won't watch any of them again. Not even Manhattan.
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2/10
It's not adaptation - it's bastardization
26 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I am bitterly disappointed by this film. It's noisy, jumbled, and chaotic, far too violent (it was a children's book, for heaven's sake!), and almost completely formless. The action sequences are just ridiculous, and what's worse is that they look fake - maybe an artifact of filming a 3D movie and then showing a 2D version, but something that you can't say of the LoTR movies. This was like a not very attractive cartoon.

Morevoer, even as stuffed to the gills as it is with material from Tolkien's appendices to LoTR and other things that should make the world come alive and draw you in to the back story, much of it doesn't makes sense. It's just a blitz of portentous talking between fights and chases. The acting may not be all bad, but nobody's even on screen long enough to actually act or is given anything to *do*. Ian McKellen's Gandalf has become a caricature and his performance no more than a collection of tics and mannerisms. Sylvester McCoy is embarrassing. At least half the dwarfs aren't' given enough actual acting time to create characters, which just makes the film even more cartoon-like.

Overall, watching The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey was about as much fun as watching someone play World of Warcraft. I hate to say it, but even as someone who has been a scholarly Tolkien geek for decades, I may not bother to see the moves that are to follow. I'm afraid that may be a rather common reaction, too. Oh, well - maybe it will turn people toward reading the book (and Tolkien's other work) to see what the fuss was really about.
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The Artist (I) (2011)
2/10
O.K. if you've never seen another movie before.
18 February 2012
Why are people gushing over this? It is nothing but a barely competent collection of the clichés that people think of when they think of a "silent movie" but really are ones that mark third-rate commercial entertainment, which this is. It's thin, it's badly acted, and it's *wrongly* shot. If you're going to ape your betters (which in this case would include Pabst, von Stroheim, Murnau, Lubitsch, and Chaplin), then you should have the decency to study what they do and try to imitate their style.

This is crap. I'd like to believe the acclaim for it is a joke, but I fear it's not. I guess people don't watch things like "City Lights" any more and don't recognize this for the pandering garbage it is. And it *is* pandering; never for one frame do you get the feeling that these people don't think they're archly "slumming" and being "edgy" by shooting without sound despite the fact that their vision is utterly pedestrian and probably wouldn't have made it off the second bill in 1928.

Oh, and they use "Pennies from Heaven" with no awareness whatsoever of its resonance. I hope Dennis Potter comes back from the great beyond and smacks them on the head.
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4/10
Incredible, but silly
1 August 2009
On the one hand, the skiing sequences are spectacularly performed and shot. It is easy to see the genesis of some of Riefenstahl's set-ups for "Olympia" in the slow-motion and low angle camera work ("Skicam!"). On the other hand, as a film this is just laughable, with Riefenstahl mugging her way through a plot that must have taken all of a minute to think up. It's hard to believe that this is anything other than Arnold Fanck collecting the producer Harry Sokal's money, yelling to his cast and crew, "Come on, we're going skiing!," and then tossing something together in the editing room once everyone had thawed out and sobered up. No wonder Riefenstahl (reportedly) insisted on G. W. Pabst being hired as the "co-director" of "The White Hell of Pitz Palu;" when given full control over the dramatics of the film as he is here, Fanck makes Mack Sennett look like Herik Ibsen.
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Watchmen (2009)
4/10
Mostly nice to look at
22 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I found the movie's attempt to match what I assume are the visuals of the source material to be attractive, and I really wanted to like the story's subtexts about such things as the nature of heroics and the shifting boundaries imperfectly separating courage from foolhardiness and cynicism from concern. In the end, though, it was hard to care too much about the film because so much of it was more or less tepidly silly. Even to the uninitiated (like me), the bad guy is clearly announced about halfway through, and his great master plan, once revealed, is one of those dumbfoundingly convoluted but stupid ideas that only works in bad fiction because a character has been given an absolutely impossible amount of resources and lucky breaks by authorial fiat in order to make it work.

The acting doesn't help matters. Jackie Earle Haley is an interesting actor and Rorschach an interesting character, but Malin Akerman is simply awful and Matthew Goode and Patrick Wilson not much better. Having seen Billy Crudup in _Almost Famous_, I know he's a good actor who will likely recover from being in this, if for no other reason in that he is normally filmed in flesh tones and with pants. At least he has the grace to sound bored with his character's ridiculous dialog.

Still, it looks nice, and Rorschach is entertaining (though why he would want to rely on the rest of these drips is lost on me).
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Firefly: Serenity (2002)
Season 1, Episode 11
8/10
Almost better than the feature film
18 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Just what the hell was wrong with Fox, anyway? There is nothing wrong with this double-length pilot that a re-shoot of the flat-out sloppy "invisible steering wheel" wouldn't fix. It establishes the characters very well, sets up a compelling story, and hits the various tones spot-on throughout. Bypassing this and ordering up "The Train Job," which does none of those things (and is one of the less good episodes to boot) was just foolish.

I'm guessing, from what I've picked up, that Fox didn't like Angry Mal. If that is the case, then the violence, the antagonism, and the honest unpleasantness of the setting and some of the characters must have played a part as well: Jayne is a lot less goofy here, and he is less controlled as well; Badger is more dangerous and less of a cartoon, and Patience, from her second line on is, one of the best villains I've ever seen (far better than the irritating ethnic joke that was the twice-appearing Nyska).

I'm sorry that we'll never know what direction this would have gone if Fox had had some stones.
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3/10
The most disappointing Coen Brothers film I've seen
21 December 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I honestly can't tell what they were thinking when they did this. The script is a mess, full of afterthoughts and misfires and very short on any sort of actual point or significance. It just sputters along with stabs of pointless violence and splashes of awkward humor that are mostly based on casting ugly people and then making them sound stupid. The bad guy is Freddy Kruger with a Prince Valiant haircut, Tommy Lee Jones is wasted, Woody Harrelson is (pardon) wasted, a lot of really nice scenery is wasted. It isn't even particularly well shot despite the fact that it is the often-brilliant Roger Deakins. Joel and Ethan Coen have made two of my favorite films and others I have enjoyed, but this is just sadly wrong.
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7/10
I wish it were better
4 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I'm honestly glad that some of what was in Crichton's book - like the Neanderthals - never made it to the screen. It's unfortunate that what did make it is pretty much nonsense. All of the Beowulf parallels are gone (they weren't very clear in the book, either), along with the personalities of most of the characters. The movie looks cheap and ugly, and things like the "stand in a circle while they conveniently come at us from all sides in the round building" bit are just laughable. The action is pure slop; it seriously looks like no one bothered to stage it.

The one bright spot is Dennis Storhøi, whose sharp intelligence and joking comradeship with Antonio Banderas' petulant Ahmed Ibn Fadlan actually breathes some life into this mess. It's too bad that the Norwegian Storhøi, who followed this up with a performance as George in _Who's Afraid of Virigina Woolf?_ that won the Norwegian Theatre Critics Award (Teaterkritikerprisen), will likely never get another chance at an English-language film. He's good (and Banderas is better when around him) - the film is not.

(After writing this review, I read complaints from several of the other Scandinavian actors that scenes explaining who their characters were and exploring their world and relationship with each other as a "band" were removed in favor of more "action" material from the Chichton-directed re-shoot after original director John McTiernan was fired. That just makes this even more of a failure.)

Update 7/16/2017: I've since watched this several times again, and each time I gain more respect for what the film could have been. I'd even say that the actors did such a good job of working together as a "band" that their scenes survive the worst additions, like the laughable gore effects and the already-noted chaotic battle sequences.
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Borat (2006)
1/10
I got my money back
24 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This has to be the shortest length of time I've ever spent in a movie before knowing I was going to hate it - just under five minutes. It wasn't just that it was racist and offensive, because that's not necessarily bad. But it was damned ugly. Incompetently ugly. Shot by people who have no idea what anything should look like ugly. And the only thing that came across in that five minutes was Cohen's ridiculous accent and the completely inability of anyone connected with the film to write or stage something funny.

I don't know who Cohen is, but based on this he is both supremely untalented and supremely clueless about... practically anything. I guess that's why so many people love this film - they're enjoying laughing at someone being such an unaware jerk. And it is making money, so I guess he'll get to do it again. Pity, that.
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Firefly: The Message (2003)
Season 1, Episode 14
6/10
Not a good episode
6 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
As much as I like Firefly, this episode is not good. It's full of embarrassing continuity errors (Jayne's cursed clean/dirty/clean and off/on/off hat, the upside-down cow that isn't), mischaracterizations (a panicking Wash), and sloppy, repetitive writing. Just how many times do we need to hear that lame "if you can't run..." fortune cookie? It feels fake, and everyone's acting (except for the old pro Adam Baldwin) feels forced. Beside, just how many old buddies do Mal and Zoë have? Doesn't look like too many made it if you watch the first scene of the pilot. No, no one had seen it at that point, but Minear and Whedon should have remembered.

The show was canceled during the filming of this and it looks, unfortunately, like they gave up. But if they had just stuck a little harder and turned out a good episode instead of something that really couldn't be aired, might things have gone better? This is the only one I haven't bothered to watch again, despite the few good Jayneisms.
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Serenity (2005)
7/10
Surprisingly Good
14 May 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I stopped watching television in 2000, so I never saw the series and didn't see this until it came out on DVD. I'm glad I finally did, though I now wish I had added to the box office of the film when it was in theaters. We need to encourage more science fiction like this - unslick (anti-slick, even), believably funny, and telling straight-forward stories. I can see that this would have been very engaging on the small screen, and it holds up pretty well on the big one.

The weaknesses are minor, though they add up. If I hadn't read about the film and show first, I wouldn't have understood that the Reavers were more than a one-time threat. The ground-based chase sequence looks physically wrong (as in the physics are wrong, and it is therefore unbelievable). I'm not sure if it was the DVD I saw, but Nathan Fillion's dialog is unintelligible at far too many points - there's a difference between acting and mumbling. Some of the other acting is weak and flat, though not that of Adam Baldwin, Gina Torres, Jewel Staite, or, especially, Chiwetel Ejiofor (though his role is both florid and underwritten and only works because of the craft he brings to it). There is almost no transition from exteriors to interiors, making the whole thing look set-bound.

The Serenity itself, though, is one of the best-imagined spaceships I've ever seen, and the opening introduction to the crew very neatly done. The story is nothing ground-breaking, but it's well visualized. I'm afraid that the inevitable serial novels will not capture the space/Western/screwball comedy tone that the film manages, but it's nice that they got to play it on the big screen.

Well worth the time for science fiction buffs, especially as we get far too much slick and horror and far too little grit, humor, and humanity in our movies.
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When Pigs Fly (1993)
5/10
Very odd
1 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This is a strange, flat, and subdued film that nevertheless has some incidental interest, mostly for Marianne Faithful's performance. She's not only still surprisingly lovely and a rather charismatic actor, but she also in one scene rips off a stream of invective that reminds you just who she is. And if that doesn't remind you, then her sitting at the piano and giving the single best performance of "Londonderry Air" I have ever heard will.

Otherwise, it's a very intelligent little movie that is unfortunately directed in an almost completely lifeless manner; it might have been a better script for someone else to film. Definitely check it out if you're a fan of Faithful's, but I can't really recommend it for anyone else.
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Clerks (1994)
4/10
So this is what the fuss was about
23 December 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Getting through the first few minutes was rough, and it only got a little better. The movie, face it, doesn't really make sense in a bad way - people's actions don't look real (people are so obviously playacting transactions at the store counter that it's not funny), things happen as obvious set-ups for jokes, and it's so haphazardly shot that you don't get any sense of the locations and where people are in them. Brian O'Halloran isn't bad at all, but the rest of the actors are terrible (no fault) and have obviously in many cases not learned their lines (no excuse). The writing is only fair at best - sometimes funny, often dull, frequently obviously "writing."

It's interesting to contrast this with another zero-budget personal film, Mark Borchardt's "Coven." Borchardt has a surprisingly good visual sense and is a much more imaginative writer, but he apparently doesn't have the personal organization or support to pull off directing a feature-length film. Smith seems to have those things, and so he has a career. That's good for him, but I can't imagine taking the time to see anything else he's done.
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Head-On (2004)
1/10
Dreck
17 May 2005
In Hollywood movies the troubled romantic couple is brightly and cheerily filmed in nice surroundings. In this German film the couple is ugly and the surroundings squalid. Does that mean it's art? No, it just means it thinks making one-dimensional characters ugly makes them real. They're still just clichés, only now they're pretentious clichés.

This is the kind of film that forgets what it had the characters do five minutes before. The drunken bum is a widower. He says his wife's name and looks at her pictures. And then all of the other characters forget about it, he forgets about it, and we forget about it. It didn't really matter - it was just a formula.

This is garbage unrelieved by any style (unless you think jump cuts are innovative), layered with loud but uninteresting music, and devoid of any point. The acting is impossible to judge, since the characters are so badly drawn, it's static in all the worst ways, and it's ugly to boot. Want to see a film about a strange romance of strangers in German society? See "Ali: Fear Eats the Soul" instead. It's got soul, and heart, and intelligence. This just has hype.
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1/10
Godawful
19 March 2005
We actually watched this twice in the theater because we could not believe how bad it was the first time. Maybe we'd missed something... nope, what's missing was missed from the beginning of preproduction. I actually went back to Robbin's novel to see if I could find the problem, and I discovered that what I thought was funny and exciting back in the day is now just so much disconnected and fuzzy-headed junk.

So, the initial problem with the film was deciding to do it at all, and the rest of the train wreck progressed from there. Absolutely nothing works - not a blessed thing. Some beautiful exterior photography gets steamrolled by random camera placement in interior shots. All of the actors look at least uncomfortable - Angie Dickenson looks positively mortified - except for Rain Phoenix, who gives the impression that she is too unaware to realize how awful her performance really is. The dialog is one, long, unwavering cringe. Scenes don't make sense from second to second, and the connections between them are nonexistent. And yet, the movie stumbles blindly on, convinced that it is saying something profound.

This is too bad to even be funny; it is simply excruciating. Gus Van Zant has done other good-to-great movies which I encourage you to see, and I'm happy he survived (and appears to have learned from) this mess.
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8/10
I also saw this as a child
9 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I must have been nine years old, given the date of the film, when I saw this. I remember it as gray, wet, and fascinating. There seemed to have been a run on children's films from the UK in the late sixties ("Run Silent, Run Free" comes to mind as well), and that may have helped make me the Anglophile I am today.

And the killing... yes, it was a huge emotional shock. But was it an inappropriate one? I don't think so. In fact, what I remember even more than the shock of the killing itself was watching the main character's grief and recovery from that. I don't think I'd seen anything like that before in a film, and it is something very worthwhile that stayed with me.

Certainly you should be prepared to talk to your children about this, but I don't know if sheltering them from it is a good response. That's like never getting them a pet because animals die.
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9/10
A few things overlooked
18 December 2004
Well, I think I said in my review of TTT that I was afraid that Jackson and company wouldn't be able to fit in all that was left. Now, though I have not seen the extended cut (longer than the cut of _Napoleon_, I believe!), it looks like they added much of it back there.

As a Tolkien geek of 30+ years I was greatly impressed by these films even though I miss much of the subtlety of the book itself. However, that subtlety is not entirely lost; instead, it is often taken up in the acting. Bernard Hill and Miranda Otto actually make *more* of their characters than the books do. All of the Hobbits are fine, Andy Serkis is better than fine, and Ian Holm, bless him, gives all the young ones lessons in sly scene stealing. Ian McKellen is a bit too subdued at times, but when he hits the mark he's very powerful. Elves are basically impossible to play, but all of the actors in those roles do well even if Orlando Bloom is a bit callow.

The revelation throughout all three films, though, is Viggo Mortensen. I hated him immediately upon his entrance in the first film, then quickly started to reassess as the film moved on. I quickly realized that he managed to hit every single one of even the deepest notes of the character, a man who is not only skilled beyond his first appearance but whose nature as a hero and a king is based in millennia of history and inheritance. It is an amazing performance, one of the best I have ever seen, and so strong that even though the end of the film was naturally without him I missed his character, just as I do every time I read the book.

So, enjoy the CGI. But watch the acting - that's where you'll get the depth of the tale.
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The Dame Edna Experience (1987–1989)
Brilliant, but in the end more scary than funny
10 December 2004
Warning: Spoilers
I first heard Barry Humphries as Dame Edna Everage on National Public Radio, where she had very professional interviewer Scot Simon laughing so hard he was actually pounding the table where he sat. I had several minutes like that myself during the first two of the six programs on this DVD, especially when Humphries as Dame Edna would go off on brilliantly timed comic asides that built up to explosive levels of outrageousness.

Then, I watched the live audience performance, the interview with Humphries, and then the "interview" between Dame Edna and Humphries where she took him to task for his horrible portrayal of his mother in his autobiography, broke down in tears, and then fired him as her manager. I started laughing less and less, and ended up squirming instead. By the end of it, I decided that while Humphries is a very individual talent with incredible timing and a real gift for physical and verbal comedy, there is some core of cruelty and loathing in his creation of Dame Edna that is hard to describe but very real.

After a while, "The Dame Edna Experience" is not like watching a performance, but more like watching a very lucid, audience-assisted psychosis. It's not funny; instead, it's deeply creepy. After two hours or so, I removed the DVD and decided that I never want to hear or see Dame Edna again.
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Viridiana (1961)
9/10
Just a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down...
26 November 2004
Just what did Franco (if he did invite Bunuel back to make a film in Spain as the legend goes) expect? Who knows, but we're the richer for it.

It's easy to read _Viridiana_ as an allegory for Spain, with Fernando Rey as the corrupt old regime, Francisco Rabal as the "progressive" but ineffectual and cowardly Franco, and Silvia Pinal as the aloof, kind-hearted but muddle-headed church who the others lust after. But even if you don't buy that, there's still some of the best cinematography of any of Bunuel's films, great acting, more phallic symbols than you can shake a stick at (hehehehe) and one of the most consciously blasphemous - and funniest - scenes in any film as one of the beggar women takes a picture "with the camera Daddy gave me." The Vatican condemned it, and Franco's government seized and burned every print they could find. I guess some people just don't have a sense of humor.

Don't let the comments scare you into thinking that this will be "art" and therefore some nasty tasting pill of high-minded pretension. It is art, but like all of Bunuel's films it's art that never fails to be wickedly, bitterly funny, with a clear eye, a fully human sense of outrage at cruelty and pomposity, and a healthy dose of smuttiness. And, unlike some of his movies, this one presents the story in a more-or-less straightforward manner, though that's mainly Bunuel's sly way of lulling you into thinking you know what's going to happen so that he can pull the rug out from under you.

If this sounds in the least interesting, then give _Viridiana_ a try.
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Naqoyqatsi (2002)
2/10
eMpTy V
22 January 2004
This is a failure so complete as to make me angry.

All of the subtlety and structure of Reggio's early films is gone, leaving nothing but a hash of digitally smeared images whose sole purpose seems to be Whining About Bad Things Humans Do. Just how do Star Trek-like wormhole graphics, slo-mo colorized seascapes, mutiplicities of obviously fake computer icons, and shots of athletic competition that, incidentally, show that no one has ever been able to top (or even match) Leni Riefenstahl for filming bodies in motion, edited together with an overlay of video colorization that a 1980s "Dr. Who" producer would have rejected as "too cheesy," add up to a polemic against "civilized violence"? There is no intellectual, emotional, or visceral connection between these images as assembled and mutated by Reggio and way too many digital effects artistes, and the cautionary tale I assume he wanted to produce. With all of the "dramaturgical consultants" involved, no one seems to have pulled his head out the his own feeling of Saying Something Important and considered that they might all be failing to say something new.

Only people who watch too much television could make such a film and believe that it's meaningful; this is kindergarten Stan Brakhage, and ultimately gutless in its relentless obviousness. The only irony and tension evident here (unlike in "Koyaanisqatsi" where the relentless beauty and strangeness of time-altered ordinary images forced you to consider their meaning) was when the DVD I was watching jammed and skipped. This is MTV for the Noam Chomsky crowd, based on reflex rather than reflection and signifying nothing. Two stars for the music, which is in Glass's best pomo-Cesar Franck style and features some passionate cello from Yo-Yo Ma. (I hope for his sake that he didn't have to record his parts to a playback of the film; there are some things you shouldn't have to do even for a paycheck.)
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Cabaret (1972)
10/10
Visible flaws, but hard to shake
16 January 2004
Maximillian (Helmut Grier) says at one point in the film that Sally Bowles (Liza Minelli) is like a charming child, but he "is always relieved when she is taking her nap." That nicely sums up my reaction on seeing _Cabaret_ again after 30 years. Minelli's performance is incredible but overpowering, and I'm relieved when she's off screen. The affair between Brian and Sally is a bit of a strain as well, but only because it is frustrating and slightly unbelievable. Minelli, to her credit, makes her character's ambivalence obvious, but York, though a good actor, plays it too straight, showing neither the reasonable doubt nor the required level of intentional denial (especially for a character who, for a bookish Cambridge student, is both remarkably perceptive of Sally's playacting and bold in his contempt of Nazism) necessary to make us believe that he's as caught up in this faux romance as the script requires him to be.

There are other flaws as well. The music strains believability, as it is obviously scored for and played by a much larger ensemble than the one shown on screen. Unlike most others, I found the "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" sequence to be beautifully shot and edited but embarrassingly obvious. It's as if someone thought that the film had better make it clear to the densest of viewers that Nazis Are A Bad Thing. Finally, the VHS I saw was cropped, worn, and badly transfered; DVD viewing seems mandatory.

Little of this matters in the end, though, as _Cabaret_ is so bold, well-structured, well-performed, and arresting that the flaws fade quickly from memory. Even on the awful print I saw the lighting is incredible and the editing exciting, and Minelli's over-the-top musical performance beats doubts into submission faster than a bunch of Brown Shirts after a night of elbow-bending. Fosse is equally overpowering: never a subtle director (which is usually to his credit), but always a subtle choreographer. The image of the blank faced "Cabaret Girls", swinging their out-thrust pelvises back and forth in doubletime while staring dead-eyed at the audience, sets the chill of the movie in the first five minutes, and that chill never leaves. Joel Grey, as the evil MC, threatens that the girls may take off their clothes; if they did, it would be like a striptease of corpses

See it on DVD, and don't turn off your brain. It's worth all of the criticism and the praise it has received.
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1/10
The "goofs" section doesn't tell the whole story...
2 January 2004
Never before have I seen a film with such grossly mismatched reverse angle shots - these clowns can't even handle a dialogue scene competently. Combine that with a level of implausibility that overwhelms within the first 20 minutes (gee, we not only don't evacuate the President with alien spaceships overhead and *leave his daughter to wander unsupervised around the White House*, but everyone and his dog can wander around Area 51 at will!), an oblivious disregard for it's own script (stealth bombers flying over an "evaucated" city that conveniently left all of its lights on), and what appears to be a total lack of geographic knowledge, and this is one huge, stinking, stupid mess. How anyone can like or recommend this is beyond me. Jeff Goldblum and Will Smith do get a few points for their improvisational throwaways, though those stand out as they are the only lines in the film that sound like they were spoken by human beings. (And I've since found out that at least one joke in their "spaceship sequence" was lifted from an old Warner Brothers Daffy Duck cartoon, which is probably why it stands out as good.)
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Belle de Jour (1967)
10/10
Different every time
28 December 2003
My other favorite Bunuel films, _The Exterminating Angel_ and _The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie_, are in some ways social satires surrealistically told. _Belle de Jour_, however, is much more of a purely surreal work, which is appropriate since it is about two of the most surreal of subjects: power, and sex. Don't watch it expecting psychedelic camera tricks and Freudian dream sequences - Bunuel is much too controlled for trickery, and much too tricky to allow you to calmly map out what is real and what is not. And don't expect to know exactly what has happened at the end or even to remember the film clearly later. Each time I see it again I discovered that that the film has somehow reassembled itself in my memory, so each viewing is fresh and surprising. Even if you don't give a tinker's melted watch about surrealism, and don't care to puzzle out reality from fantasy, there's still much to like here: frequent droll humor, a little bit of titillation, and a good performance from an incredibly beautiful young Catherine Deneuve. Watch it with someone you love.
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8/10
Definitely their harshest film...
9 October 2003
... and possibly my favorite for that. Given the greed of the 80's and 90's (which had only begun in 1983), even "Permanent Crimson Assurance" takes on a

disturbing air. It is certainly their most cinematic and elaborate film, though I agree with some who say that the humor suffers (or, more correctly, changes)

because of that. I regret that they did not do another just to see how far they could push. I recognize that much of it is deliberately offensive, but anyone who likes their comedy with a does of bitters should enjoy it.

Also, to correct an earlier reviewer - Graham Chapman died of cancer that had metastasized from his throat (he was a heavy pipe smoker much of his life) to his liver (he drank heavily as well, as the comments on "Holy Grail" note.) Gay men do die for reasons other than AIDS.
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9/10
Not Kubrick's best
24 July 2003
I'm afraid that "A Clockwork Orange" doesn't hold up as well for me now, nearly 10 years after I last saw it. It's very talky (not dialogue but narration, which rarely works), the compositions are overly formal and static, and Malcom McDowell's

performance is not nearly as impressive now that I've see "O Lucky Man!".

Worse, Burgess's language sounds much too stilted, and his story is simplistic. While the film still makes it as a black comedy, it's simply not as funny as "Dr. Strangelove"; I get the feeling that Kubrick had no sympathy for the material's moralistic tone.

Of course, that criticism is made in light of Kubrick's early masterpieces and his later, mature works. I am convinced that "Strangelove," "2001," and, yes (and especially), "Eyes Wide Shut" are masterpieces, and I think that Kubrick's

formalism and abstraction matured into a powerful narrative and intellectual

force after this film. "A Clockwork Orange," though, is neither as deep nor as evocative as I remembered; maybe it's just not as timeless as those others.
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