Monday, September 1st, 2008
I have already gone on at length about No Country For Old Men. Without a doubt in my mind, it was the best movie of last year. For the full review: http://blog.rogersradiointernet.com/cynicalcinema/2008/05/10/no-country-for-old-men-best-movie-of-the-millenium-1010/ Now, Alliance Films is releasing it again, along with The Man Who Wasn’t There in a two-disc set. A two-disc set everyone should buy. Not only is No Country For Old Men the best film of the past ten years, The Man Who Wasn’t There is a very underrated classic. Since I have already reviewed No Country, I’ll talk about that one here instead.
Billy Bob Thornton plays a barber who hates his life. He tries to do something, anything, to relieve his boredom, and that something is blackmail. He blackmails James Gandolfini, his wife’s boss, who is having an affair with his wife (Frances McDormand). A fairly innocent, one-time plan at first, the whole thing, as with all film noir, spirals out of control, and before long, Thornton is involved with murder. And then things get really weird. The film is shot in black and white, set in the forties, and feels just like 1940s film noir. It captures the tone, the feeling, and the pacing of great noir, and there are some great performances by Thornton, McDormand, Gandolfini, and Tony Shaloub as a high-priced lawyer. Also terrific is Scarlett Johannson, who appears as a young ingenue piano player, and looks even hotter in black and white with a 40s hairdo. And then there is the whole alien abduction thing. Insane, but this movie is terrific.
The Coen Brothers have done some of the best movies of the past twenty years. And two of them are packaged together today by Alliance Films. Well worth picking them both up.
Posted in Ethan Coen, Josh Brolin, Joel Coen, Tony Shaloub, James Gandolfini, Michael Badalucco, Kelly MacDonald, Black and White, Gangster, Film Noir, Cormac McCarthy, Billy Bob Thornton, Javier Bardem, Woody Harrelson, Crime, Western, Thriller, 2007, Tommy Lee Jones, Coen Brothers, 2001, Scarlett Johansson, Frances McDormand, Classic | No Comments »
Monday, August 25th, 2008
There is an absolutely phenomenal box set being released on August 26th. Woody Allen has been one of the greatest American directors for many years, and while he is mostly remembered for his all-time classics, Manhattan and Annie Hall, every one of his films is worth watching for one reason or another. With his latest, Vicky Cristina Barcelona in theatres, Alliance Films decided to release Woody Allen: The Collection today, August 26th. Every movie in this box is good, some are great. And while six of the discs have been readily available before this on DVD, the seventh is the bonus.
Wild Man Blues, a 1997 documentary film about Woody Allen, has been a hard-to-find item for some time. Not a film about Allen the film maker, but a film about Woody Allen the jazz musician. Allen, when not making films, plays jazz clarinet at a New York club. This film, directed by Barbara Kopple, follows Allen around as he takes the jazz ensemble on the road. The documentary was made right around the time when the public image of Allen was at it’s lowest. He had just left Mia Farrow for their stepdaughter Soon Yi Previn, and people were beginning to look on him as some kind of sexual predator. This film was accused of apple-polishing by some critics upon it’s release. As though it were some kind of brown-nosing attempt by Kopple to repair Allen’s tarnished image, and the movie was quickly forgotten. But in watching it now, it is merely a window into the man’s private life, his relationship with Soon-Yi, which really does appear to be pretty normal, and his relationship with his parents, which is eye-opening.
The other films in the set are all second-rate Woody Allen films, which would be first-rate films by almost anyone else. Mighty Aphrodite, the film for which Mira Sorvino won a Best Supporting Actress Oscar, is a pretty fluffy film that works best as a reminder that Mira Sorvino CAN actually act. Bullets Over Broadway is a brilliantly funny comedy about gangsterism and the roaring twenties, featuring terrific performances by Chazz Palminteri and Dianne Wiest. Everyone Says I Love You is a musical comedy that is absolutely jammed with star power, and as such is one of the only Julia Roberts movies, AND one of the only Drew Barrymore movies, that I actually enjoy. Deconstructing Harry is a very dark comedy that is equally star-studded, with Robin Williams, Demi Moore, Billy Crystal and dozens of others in perhaps Woody Allen’s most under-rated movie. Celebrity is also jammed with big names, but isn’t one of Allen’s best efforts. And Scoop is likely the low point of the box set, with Scarlett Johanssen turning in a surprisingly mediocre performance and Hugh Jackman being a little more irritating than necessary. Not a horrible movie, but weak by Woody Allen standards.
Woody Allen: The Collection is a must for fans of his work, with Wild Man Blues being the icing on the cake. Get this box set, then pick up Annie Hall, Manhattan and Crimes And Misdemeanors, and you have all the Woody Allen you’ll ever need.
Posted in Everyone Says I Love You, Jeffrey Wright, Joey Buttafuoco, Alan Alda, Edward Norton, Julia Roberts, Goldie Hawn, Drew Barrymore, Donald Trump, Alison Janney, Joe Mantegna, Hank Azaria, Melanie Griffith, Leonardo DiCaprio, Judy Davis, Winona Ryder, Bebe Neuwirth, Natalie Portman, Natasha Lyonne, Jennifer Tilly, Dianne Wiest, Joe Viterelli, Tracey Ullman, Alan Arkin, Box Set, Carl Reiner, Edie Falco, Jack Warden, Chazz Palminteri, Mighty Aphrodite, Gaby Hoffman, Lukas Haas, Helena Bonham Carter, Mira Sorvino, F. Murray Abraham, Michael Rapaport, Famke Janssen, Kemmeth Brannagh, 1997, 2006, Gretchen Mol, 1994, 1996, Woody Allen, 1995, 1998, Jennifer Garner, Paul Giamatti, Rob Reiner, Tim Roth, Mary-Louise Parker, Bob Balaban, John Cusack, Charlize Theron, 2008, Scoop, Scarlett Johansson, Stanley Tucci, Demi Moore, Tobey Maguire, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Bullets Over Broadway, Wild Man Blues, Celebrity, Mariel Hemingway, Richard Benjamin, Deconstructing Harry, Barbara Kopple, Hugh Jackman, Elizabeth Shue, Kirstie Alley, Billy Crystal, Robin Williams, Ian McShane | No Comments »