Thursday, June 27, 2019

#108 - The Rock


Yeah...I had a basic copy of this I got my hands on - the DVD supposedly has a shitton of extra features - but I didn't care - not sure why Michael Bay is in the collection again - sorry

I literally just had this on in the background while doing some tedious work - it's a decent action movie - that's it - don't really care otherwise - moving on

RB

#107 - Mona Lisa


Didn't mean to get this far behind - sorry - think it's been a few weeks

#107 was a bit of a concern to find on Netflix before we got the Criterion Channel up and running - a Neil Jordan film starring Bob Hoskins and in her debut role, Cathy Tyson. 

Bob is a small-time gangster out of prison who gets the job of driving around Cathy Tyson, a high class call girl.    I thought both actor and actress were perfect for the role -  It is a little interesting that she also reminds me of Dil, the transgender character from Neil's film a few years later, The Crying Game - (sorry if I spoiled that for you) -  The story goes on with conflicting feelings about who the characters are and how they feel about each other. 

The song, Mona Lisa, by Nat King Cole, is all over the soundtrack, and in a way, it's perfect for Cathy's character.   Like the Mona Lisa, she isn't an easy character to read - you don't know if she loves you, is using you, or wants to shoot you - like the famous painting to some degree, we don't know what she's smiling about or what the mystery is behind the character, but it doesn't take long for us to start rooting for Bob Hoskins - (as George, the center of the film as Neil puts it) - to hopefully get the girl and get out of the business.

The CC has the director's commentary which i'd like to come back to and in one of those funny twists, because the film takes place in the 80's, we get some Genesis soundtrack as well which I did NOT expect - :)

A nice film - and I guess Bob was up for an Oscar but lost to Paul Newman - not in print on Criterion anymore but maybe out on blu-ray or up for a re-release at some point

RB

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

#106 - Coup de Torchon



#106 is an adaption of a West Texas pulp novel adapted for 1930's West Africa - An interesting tale about a local policeman who is pushed over the edge and begins taking his revenge

The interesting part of this movie is it reminded me of another film about a lawman gone bad, "The Killer Inside Me"  - what's really interesting is both that book and this one are written by the same author - he seems to have a certain frame of mind with this sort of writing. 

Neither the lead actor nor the director have popped up on my radar before but they appear to have quite the body of work in France - perhaps we shall see more of Bertrand in the future - it is one of those movies that at first gets you to sympathize with the main character - (like the Micheal Douglas character in "Falling Down") - you're considering the possibility that the first people this guy kills probably had it coming - and maybe another one - and then it starts to spiral

Kind of a cool DVD - an alternate ending is described - but it's out of print - so do the Netflix or library route

Saturday, June 1, 2019

#105 - Spartacus


#105 has so much going on - a Hollywood epic, produced by a star who felt slighted over losing the role of Ben Hur, directed by an influential director who was unable to retain final control, and thus disavowed the film, and written by a man who essentially broke the Blacklist of Hollywood in 1960 with this film, and his name finally credited as the screenwriter for the first time in 10 years.

Unfortunately I didn't get the Criterion version of this one - there's actually some decent blu-rays out with some decent restored footage - I don't think I got the better of the two blu-ray's and none of the commentary that is on the Criterion disk.   A couple special features and deleted scenes are available, and some in fact was readded to the film, where Tony Curtis and Anthony Hopkins - (filling in for Lawrence Oliver who had passed) redubbed the audio.

Obviously this is typical of the big budget Hollywood pictures of the day, but the battle scenes are what stand out to me - especially the movement of formations -  To take 4 or 5 minutes to show the Roman formations marching into place - the giant blocks of men organizing and reorganizing on the field is something you just don't normally see.

Anyhoo I hadn't seen it - a little long at 3 hrs even with an intermission but a piece of cinema history.