I was a last minute substitute on this podcast and lucked into the first pick.
I wonder what I should choose.
Take some time and go vote for my slate of Harrison Ford Films HERE.
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| Mosaic electronic poster at Hollywood Achlight |
Mostly, I'm just filling space here. There are some moral qualms you can have about using genocide as a plot point in a comedy, and the use of vehicles as terror weapons may be offensive as well. This movie is too silly to take seriously. Go get a refill on your Dr. Pepper or other beverage of choice. Don't worry about missing anything while you are gone, they will still be cracking wise and shooting crap up when you get back. As a matter of fact, you might want to go to the bathroom as well. 
What
is new is the perspective of the band members and the music they want to
make. Jimmy dreams of a soul band, modeled after the likes of Wilson
Pickett or James Brown. It is the rejection of most of the contemporary
music of it's time that provides several bits of humor. Girls who
audition for the band in their Madonna styles get hustled off as soon as
Jimmy gets a good laugh. Heavy Metal musicians are considered but
rejected because their style is
so at odds with the image Jimmy has. Punks and Boy George wanna be's
get the door slammed in their faces. This is a musical film, set in the
period of U2, Sinead O'Conner, Guns and Roses that rejects all of those
musical styles. This band is going to ape the soul classics of the early
sixties, not the punk aesthetic of it's time. An early sequence in the
film has all kinds of musicians showing up at the Rabbitte house, and
Jimmy's Dad is mostly bewildered by what he sees. Jimmy's Dad is an
Elvis man, and he finds much of what passes for music blasphemous, just
as Jimmy does but for different reasons.
The
band members begin to steep themselves in the soulful music of their
inspirations while Jimmy scrounges up gear and rehearsal space. When
rehearsals start the kids are not quite in sync but they are willing to
keep working. The oldest member of the band Joey "The Lips" Fagan , a
supposedly professional side man who played on records that everyone
would know, begins to mentor some of the band. He provides some
inspiration but also is the catalyst of some of the personal problems
the band faces. All of the characters get a moment or two to connect
with the audience.
Most of the young folks in the band were actually musical performers
before they got involved in acting. Glen Hansard who plays guitarist
Outspan Foster goes on to star in the movie "Once" for which he wrote
the Academy Award winning song "Falling Slowly". You can see when the
musical sequences are playing that they feel involved and Committed. The
story has bits of humor and character development but it really isn't
about the plot.
Daniel Craig steals most of the scenes he appears in. His bleached hair and motley collection of tattoos place him in a stereotype of hillbilly criminals, but it turns out he understands chemistry pretty well. One of the big laughs in the film comes when he basically conducts a lecture on explosives in the middle of the heist. If you like prison break films, this movie has a plot line that includes some clever misdirection and it gives Dwight Yoakam a chance to shine as an officious Prison warden. There are a half dozen other characters that probably deserve to be mentioned, including the cute as a button Farrah MacKenzie who plays Jimmy's daughter Sadie. Riley Keogh is the bother's little sister and she plays a pretty big role in the heist as well.
Hollywood
in the Golden Age, Nazi Commandos, Gangsters, Young Love, Air Speed
Races, Howard Hughes, is there anything that is not found in this Walt
Disney Picture from more than twenty years ago? I can't think of
anything they could have added to make this movie better. The story is a
clever adventure which mixes real world events with science fiction
elements and puts it in the backdrop of one of the most romantic times
and places in film history. "The Rocketeer" was a modest success and not
a break out hit that would justify a sequel. The movie harkens back to
the serial adventures of the 1940s but is based on a racy 1982 graphic
novel/comic, which has enjoyed greater literary success than it's
cinematic cousin. There are some obvious changes made in adapting this
to the big screen. The biggest change was altering the character of
Jenny Blake. Instead of the somewhat seedy "party girl/stripper" she is
in the comic, she becomes a more wholesome ingenue. She is an innocent
young actress, trying to break into the movies by playing in the crowd
scenes in the movies being manufactured at the Hollywood Dream Factories
of the Golden Age.
Jenny's
boyfriend is Cliff Secord, a barnstorming pilot trying to get his new
plane ready for the national air races. Southern California was in a
growth spurt when it comes to aviation. By 1939 more than half the
planes in the country were made in the state. Aviation was a glamorous
venture, which made heroes of Charles Lindbergh, Amelia Earhart and
Howard Hughes. The Smithsonian Air and Space Museum has an extensive
collection of the "buzz bomb" type planes used by the racers of the
time.
This was the golden age of aviation and it crosses paths in our story
with the golden age of Hollywood. Cliff and his mechanic mentor Peevy
discover a rocket pack, hidden in their old bi-plane by gangsters trying
to escape from the FBI. The crooks substitute an old vacuum cleaner for
the rocket and when their car explodes, destroying Cliff's racing
plane, the feds believe the rocket was destroyed as well. So Cliff and
Peevy look to the Rocket as a way of making back some money to restore
their dreams of racing in the Nationals.
It turns out that the gangsters are seeking the rocket pack for a
Hollywood star. In 1980, celebrity biographer Charles Higham published a
book that claimed that Errol Flynn, the swashbuckling star of "the
Adventures of Robin Hood" was a Nazi spy. The book was widely criticized
by scholars and reviewers for the slipshod reasoning that Higham used
to reach his conclusions. In fact, Flynn's family sued, but since Flynn
had died in 1959, the courts tossed the case on the legal premise that
the dead can't be libeled. Flash forward ten years and the slander is
now being used in a slightly disguised manner. The film Jenny is working
on stars Neville Sinclair, a character clearly based on Errol Flynn.
The confluence of events and setting creates a truly entertaining story,
that anyone who loves movies should appreciate.
The look of the
film is outstanding. The airfield out in the valley is stocked with old
bi-wings and hopped up racing planes. The wooden bleachers used at the
airshow and the hanger where many early events take place give a genuine
feel for the aviation industry of the period. Not too far from the
airfield is a diner that caters to the pilots and mechanics. It is
modeled after a real food joint here in Los Angeles at the time.
The interior is a lot more spacious than the exterior would allow, so a
little movie magic has to be forgiven. One of the nice touches in the
set is the wall near the telephone where at one point the bad guys
discover the phone number for Jenny, the girl they are at that point
trying to track down. 
There are dozens of little touches like this that make the film feel
incredibly authentic. In the Hollywood sequences, there is a large set
for "The South Seas Club", an upscale nightclub and restaurant, run by
Eddie Valentine, the mobster being employed by Sinclair to obtain the
rocket. The Front of the club is clearly on a backlot street but the
interior looks luxurious and ethereal. The big band singer makes her
appearance rising out of a giant clam shell. The tables, booths and
dance floors remind us of a hundred art deco sets from 1930s era films.
Only here the lighting is colored in dramatic flourishes of green and
blue.
When Neville leaves Jenny at their table to go and speak to Eddie in
his office, you can see a mermaid swimming in a large fish tank behind
him. As Cliff sneaks into the club, he hides in the laundry room,
labeled with a nice deco font on the sign. Everywhere, there is
attention to the kinds of details that might be ignored in a lesser
production.
The three
leads of the picture are cast perfectly. The luminous Jennifer Connelly
is Jenny Blake, and she sparkles as the damsel in distress. She is a
love interest that would clearly make both men stop and take notice. Her
character is also a lot more engaged in the plot than simply being the
object of rescue. She links the characters together and her soft line
delivery keeps the character from becoming shrill like others in similar
roles have become. The scenes where she engages in a uncertain
seduction sequence with Neville Sinclar after being drugged by him are
incredibly sexy without being vulgar.
The switch in character might be off putting to fans of the comics, but
it made the love angle much more effective in the movie. While we might
have enjoyed seeing her as a Bettie Page stand in, her character is
more interesting with the change and it helps broaden the appeal of the
movie. Billy Campbell was a stalwart hero type, with an eager manner and
a handsome face. He brought a certain naivete to the part of Cliff
Secord. The pilot is so caught up in the aviation issues that he doesn't
always see how important his girl is to him. When he sees the
propaganda film, it is like he awakens from a being a frivolous
adventurer to becoming a hero. He had of course done heroic things
earlier in the movie, but usually without much thought. His decision to
escape the FBI and go after the Nazi spy ring himself is based in part
on Jenny but also on the seriousness of the threat. When he evaded the
gangsters at the South Seas Club, it is almost comic..
When he escapes the clutches of the Nazi's, he grabs a gun, something
he had not done before. The shot of him on top of the Griffith
Observatory, with the flag waving behind him as he launched toward the
airship, is the moment he is branded "HEROIC".

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| Mosaic Electronic Poster at the Hollywood Arclight |
The other star of the film is the great outdoors. The spectacular vistas are wonderful to see but we also know how deadly the places can be. There is loneliness everywhere and the ennui that surrounds the inhabitants of the sparsely populated areas here can be overwhelming. Town is one thing, but most of these people are not in a town, they are trapped in spaces that are too small for the vastness of the wilderness around them. Whether this conditions drive you to violence, drug addiction or hopelessness, there is a very clear double edged sword that the environment presents. This film is getting a fairly small release, but if word of mouth is good, it is likely to be expanded and maybe the film will get an opportunity to grow. I hope you make an effort to see this picture and that you encourage others to do so as well. This is the sort of film making which needs a little TLC.