Showing posts with label Frank Capra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Capra. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2013

Week 52 in film

Christmas + lousy weather = cinema overdrive!

It's A Wonderful Life (Frank Capra, 1946)
Another classic I still had to watch. Christmas felt like a good time to do it. James Stewart is endearing as ever and the fantasy angle in a very sweet and sappy Christmas tale is original and more compelling than I expected. The moral is impossible to miss, but more relevant than ever. 8/10



Star Trek Into Darkness (J.J. Abrams, 2013)
Amongst all the action-scifi crap made these days Abrams proves to be a good action-director. I liked the third Mission Impossible, Super 8 and this one, which surprised me, to be honest. The balance between action and plot is a bit off at the end, but thanks to a great start very sufficient overall.  7/10

The Quick and the Dead (Sam Raimi, 1995)
Raimi honours all these Western classics with some 'comic-book-like' action and directing. The plot development is not surprising or original but I couldn't help enjoying it for its full length. 7.5/10

Tabu (Miguel Gomes, 2012)
One of the most original films of the year comes from Portugal. The history of an old Portugese lady is told by her ex-lover whom she met when living in Africa. Beautiful black and white photography, poetic undertones and a relaxing pace. 8/10

Juliet and the Spirits (Federico Fellini, 1965)
Giulietta Masina seems to be playing herself in this visual treat from Fellini. Keep in mind: Fellini loved women. He was dreaming the biggest boobs and asses you can imagine, as visible in last years Eye-exhibition. He also loved Masina, who was always by his side. Knowing this makes this film very interesting. Giuletta her husband is cheating on her and she struggles with the thought of sexual freedom haunted by memories and (beautiful) visions. A very personal film by the Italian master. Did he 'borrow' the shot shown below from that other Italian master? 8/10



Lawrence of Arabia (David Lean, 1962)
A hiatus in my film knowledge (there are a number of them...): the sword-and-sandal-genre. I decided to dedicate 4 hours to what is supposedly the best film in this category. Reminded me why I am not a fan. After two hours of sand and camels I felt bored. Of course the cinematography is stellar, and the ending makes up for a lot, but still, not a masterpiece if you ask me. 7.5/10

Paradies: Hoffnung (Ulrich Seidl, 2013)
Third and last film in the Paradies-trilogy. The worst. A group of teenage girls at fat camp are more boring than Seidl may have considered. Stays on the surface pretty much the whole film, there are a lot of possible angles here, the doctor-girl relationship is not the best one. 4.5/10

Stagecoach (John Ford, 1939)
A very young John Wayne in a film that is more classic than good. The chase with the Indians is great, some of the characters are funny but the whole love-interest-angle didn't work for me at all. 6.5/10

Miracle on 34th Street (George Seaton, 1947)
Week of the (Christmas) classics. This one is just as endearing as It's A Wonderful Life. Due to a simpler plot and mediocre acting not in the same league, though. 6.5/10

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Week 20 in film

Norwegian Wood (Anh Hung Tran, 2010)
What I remember best is the music by Jonny Greenwood and the Beatles. The rest of the film is, although on occassions beautifully shot, forgettable. The second hour is too dull in its narrative, where the first managed too grab me at times. Too bad.   6.5/10



All God's Children Can Dance (Robert Logevall, 2007)
Boy is told to be the son of God. When he is an adult he sees a guy with a weird ear, who he believes could be his father. Feels a bit like a Wim Wenders film, it certainly isn't. Ends up being an empty shell.   3/10

The Bitter Tea of General Yen (Frank Capra, 1933)
Un-Capra like story of a woman (the great Barbara Stanwyck) who is kidnapped by a Chinese dictator. Pretty racist to have a Chinaman played by an American actor.    7.5/10

Headhunters (Morten Tyldum, 2011)
This film about an art-thief is about a lot except the theft of art. Lots of improbabilities. Not everything from Scandinavia can be a success   5.5/10

The Tree of Life (Terrence Malick, 2011)
With a new film from Malick upcoming I had to re-watch his masterpiece again. It overwhelmed me even more than before this time. Goosebumps on multiple occassions, especially during the first hour. The editing is superb, pure poetry. Very hard, almost impossible for To The Wonder to live up to my expectations.   10/10



True Grit (Coen Brothers, 2010)
Good old 'the dude' Jeff Bridges delivers a good performance again. Entertaining, witty and probably better than the original, which I haven't seen. Not the best and not the worst Coen-film.   7.5/10

Izgnanie [The Banishment] (Andrei Zvyagintsev, 2007)
Russian cinema almost never disappoints me. This dense picture has a slow pace, as we know from this director and it is beautifully crafted. Clearly quotes Tarkovsky, almost even literally. Is this a bad thing? Not at all.   8.5/10

The Lost Weekend (Billy Wilder, 1945)
Disappointing 'classic' from one of my favorite directors. The acting is great, but somehow the plot isn't moving forward and keeps repeating itself. Perhaps this is the point, but how to explain the un-Wilder-like ending? No, I expected better.   6.5/10



The Killer (John Woo, 1989)
Great action from Hong Kong. Woo would never deliver this kind of quality in Hollywood. Not even with Face/Off. Chow Yun Fat is supersolid. A film with 'the usual' friendship, snipers and one-bullet-left situations.  7.5/10

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Week 19 in film

Sisters (Brian De Palma, 1973)
One of the early chapters out of De Palma's "How to imitate my favorite director". Derivative of epic is still good enough.   7/10

Soldaat van Oranje (Paul Verhoeven, 1977)
This two and a half hour Dutch classic somehow failed to amaze me. Based on a true story but never as compelling or intense as many other WWII pics. Nevertheless a well acted and interesting enough film. Not Verhoeven's best, not his worst.   7/10


Criss Cross (Robert Siodmak, 1949)
An unreliable romance, suspense, bars filled with witty men and cigarette smoke. This film has all the elements that make me a noir-lover.   8/10

Another Earth (Mike Cahill, 2011)
This science fiction film feels realistic not because of the concept but because the concept is just on the side. Well acted and intimate drama where the 2nd earth should be seen mostly as a metaphor before people start complaining about scientific inconsistencies.  The last shot is simply awesome.   7.5/10

Werckmeister Harmoniak (Bela Tarr and Agnes Hranitzky, 2000)
My second encounter with the Hungarian master and this film proves why he is considered a master. It has a very slow pace but where other films might put you asleep, his extremely long takes start to fascinate me more and more. The black and white cinematography is extraordinary, same holds for the musical score by Mihali Vig. The plot is secondary, but a clear metaphor for the repression in Eastern Europe. Regardless, Bela Tarr is a unique filmmaker and I love his style.   9/10



Lockout (Stephen St. Leger & James Mather, 2012)
It's like Die Hard in space with a hint of The Rock. Not very original...    5/10

Jurassic Park (Steven Spielberg, 1993)
Supposedly the version Spielberg always had in mind now it's in 3D, yeah right....3D, as usual, doesn't add a thing accept to the price of your ticket. On the other hand, pretty cool to watch this classic on the big screen.  7.5/10

Platinum Blonde (Frank Capra, 1931)
Typical Capra. Rich girl falls in love with 'normal' guy who has a hard time adjusting to his new-found class. "Like a bird in a golden cage". Not bad, but I was hoping for some more pre-code, which I couldn't spot to be honest, despite Jean Harlow's presence.   7/10