I may have to move in with Jay. KAMAD back on the Lambcast.
Thursday, December 14, 2017
Lambcast Rian Johnson Epidode
I may have to move in with Jay. KAMAD back on the Lambcast.
Labels:
#brick,
#Lambcast,
#looper,
#thebrothersbloom,
Rian Johnson
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
Lady Bird
The characters portrayed in this film go to Catholic Schools and wear uniforms reflecting that status. Inspired by that vision and setting, I am prepared to make a confession. "Bless me internet for I have sinned. I am not a Catholic so it has been my whole life since my last confession,...I did not love this film." Unlike Marion McPherson, I like Lady Bird rather than love her. After hearing so many podcast raves and seeing the 100% Fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes (which finally dropped today to 99%), maybe I was expecting too much. Don't get me wrong, this is a perfectly fine movie and it has some excellent qualities to share with us, but it is not a "perfect" film, although I can say it is an accurate and honest one.
One of the guys on the "In Session Film" podcast, said his only complaint was that "hella tight" sounded too early for 2003. He apparently is unaware that the term "hella" has been around the NorCal area since the early seventies and there was a No Doubt song that featured the phrase the year before. To me it sounded completely authentic to time and place. The one thing only that felt inauthentic was a sex scene where the girl keeps her bra on. I understand and respect the right of the film makers to present their story in a manner that is non-lascivious. This is not an 80s teen comedy after all, but Saoirse Ronan is not Janet Leigh in the opening scene of "Psycho" released in 1960. The idea that a teen Lothario would be passive enough to ignore this undergarment is just ludicrous. Find a more modest angle, or use a bedsheet, which is a lot more probable, and that scene would still work without a topless shot.
I'm really not trying to pick at the film, that was just one minor example of the slight imperfections that people might overlook because they love so much of the rest of the film. Who can blame them? There is a lot to love about this movie. The actors are all pitch perfect. Saoirse Ronan is deadpan funny in so many scenes that we ought to be laughing a lot. I did, but not as much or as deeply as I expected. Humor is subjective at times, and the contentious nature of her relationship with her mother Marion, while amusing, was also painfully expressed, which did not always deepen the laugh but soured it. The timing of the two actresses, Ronan and Laurie Metcalf, cannot be faulted. They are fine, it is the occasional bitter dialogue that sounds honest but hit my ear just a little too often as trying too hard. The same was true in a scene where "Lady Bird" confronts her best friend when being given the silent treatment. They both throw verbal jabs that are funny, but just a bit too perfectly set up.
Maybe the reason I am not quite as responsive to this is that I have lived this story to a large degree. Maybe I was off a year, but I have a daughter who longed to be going to school in NYC. She had a boyfriend who turned out to be something different than she had hoped. She worked as a barista to make cash so she could pay her own way. She was definitely smart but had work habits that held her back and she found friends late in her high school career in theater. The love/hate relationship was maybe more with her father than her mother, so the crisp dialogue in this film might just be too on the nose.
My favorite scene in the film involves Lady Bird's sudden realization that she doesn't want to fit in with her new friends. She wants to go to the prom. That was certainly the opposite of my child, who would never have bent her behavior to curry favor with a group of people she wanted to be "in" with, with only two exceptions, picking up cigarettes and automatically taking a position designed to irritate one or the other of her parents. Lady Bird has to come to realize that abandoning her friend Julie, played with a heart breaking degree of honesty by Beanie Feldstein, was a big mistake, and it is one of several transformative moments in the movie. Lucas Hedges gets a second opportunity within just a couple of weeks to make a mark on the film business. His part here is deeper and more significant than his role as the neglected surviving sibling in "Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri", and the tenderness between Ronan and he is wonderful despite the bitterness that accompanies it.
Writer/Director Greta Gerwig has fashioned a very effective coming of age story. There are plot elements that you can see coming, and the lines are sometimes to dead on, but it is a great script and film. It is however, just another coming of age story. The performances, elevate the movie quite a bit but the heaping of praise on everything about the movie burdens the experience rather than sharpening it. There is nothing to not like about the film but that doesn't make me love it. To take advantage of one of the most derided quotes in movie history, "Love means never having to say you"re sorry". My guess is that it is apparent how I feel. Sorry.
Labels:
#ladybird,
Greta Gerwig,
Laurie Metcalf,
Lucas Hedges,
Saoirse Ronan
Monday, December 11, 2017
Shane Black and Kiss Kiss Bang Bang/The Long Kiss Goodnight
This is designed to make all the bloggers out there jealous. An evening with two Shane Black films and Shane Black himself. Since it is the Christmas Season, it only seems appropriate that Kiss Kiss Bang Bang is the main feature here. If you haven't had enough of the question whether Die Hard is a Christmas movie, get ready for the encore with this sour seasoned greeting. It is a delicious mixture of violence, comedy and tragedy, all told around the Christmas Holiday. It will certainly not be everyone's favorite pudding, but it will make a lot of people laugh at the holiday season and remember why they hate the holidays.
I love seeing films at the Egyptian and the American Cinematique has created some great programming for the month of December, including a new 70mm print of Lawrence of Arabia which a certain youngest child and I will most certainly be taking in during the upcoming break. Tonight however is all about the marvelous Robert Downey Jr./Val Kilmer action comedy. Written and directed by Shane Black.
From the beginning, I was reminded that I love this movie for it's idiosyncrasies. The titles are animated with shadow graphics and in a flash back sequence we see young Harry (The RDJ character) in his magician mode. The second character in this sequence who plays a major role later in the film is a little girl who grows up to be Harmony (the Michelle Monaghan character). That we pass the next twenty years in a few brief seconds is one of the marvels of how movies can be told.
The accidental nature of Harry's arrival in Hollywood and the guilt that trials him sets up the rest of the plot. This is a plot that is pretty complicated and may at times leave some gaps that are never completely filled. The Choice by Black to keep moving forward without lingering too much over the dangling threads is one of the things that keeps the film from getting bogged down in logical consistency at the expense of narrative drive. When "Gay Perry" is introduced and becomes a foil for Harry for the rest of the film, we get a buddy comedy layered on top of a modern noir. Val Kilmer may not have had as good a role as this in the last fifteen years, and he was great.
The big question that film fans have concerns what is Black's thing about Christmas. Most of his films are set around the holiday and make explicit references to it. As he explained, "''it's like falling asleep in the back seat of the car with your father driving and singing a tune as the lights flash past your window. It is a feeling of childhood security knowing your Dad is taking care of you. When you get to L/A. The Christmas references are different, a broken figure of a saint or lighting that looks slightly out of place, but it's still Christmas. It's a culturally shared experience." He credits "Three Days of the Condor" with inspiring the Christmas motif in his films.
Black was modest and honest in describing his freshman directorial effort. He was happy to give credit to improvements in the dialogue to actors who improvised during rehearsal. He also noted that some of the photographic effects were a result of accident rather than planning. He uses the term "running and gunning" as the description of their filming schedule. One person asked if he had plans to film any other movies with different holidays and he joked about his time bomb race against the clock set during Breast Cancer Awareness week. There was also a question about the design of the story being a reverse "Chinatown" where the incest angle is different and not what you think it is going to be. "Every assumption you make is wrong and at the end you are faced with an old man bedridden that you beat on."
He strongly advised us to stick around for the second feature, which only about a third of the audience did, but we were rewarded with a great over the top serving of 90s action film that featured Geena Davis and Samuel L. Jackson. He debunked the notion that the plot has any 9/11 foreshadowing, as he put it, "it's just a movie."
Both films were on 35mm but Black's parting comment was that 35mm bows in the middle and is fuzzy, so he is happy with digital projection.
Thursday, December 7, 2017
Christmas Movie of the Month Lambcast: Die Hard
KAMAD gets in the Holiday spirit with several other Lambs to discuss the greatest of Christmas Films.
Wednesday, December 6, 2017
Movies I Want Everyone to See: Get Shorty
Review by Richard Kirkham Originally Published in the Fall of 2014
This
summer has been a cruel one for fans of "Get Shorty". In June, James
Gandolfini who played Bear the enforcer for Bo the Drug Dealer/wanna be
movie producer, passed away at a relatively young 51. Last month, Dennis
Farina who played Ray "Bones" Barboni left us at 69. This last week,
Elmore Leonard the novelist and screenwriter responsible for the story
and characters in the first place, left us at age 87. I'm not suggesting
there is a curse or anything, but if this film does not get included
before anyone else from the cast dies, I will feel terrible. "Get
Shorty" is a star vehicle, and it featured John Travolta in a great part
immediately after his comeback role in "Pulp Fiction". In spite of the
obvious star driven nature of the film, there is a great ensemble cast
that adds to the quality of the movie and makes it something I think
everyone will be glad to have seen.For movie fans, this is a film that should give them a warm feeling in their dreams. This is a gangster movie about gangsters who want to make a gangster movie. There are dozens of colorful characters both in the crime world and in Hollywood as the story gets told. The crime stuff may be accurate, someone with a better sense of that can judge for us, but the movie end of the story cuts incredibly close to the bone that is the film making process. Last year in the movie "Argo", John Goodman's character summed it up this way:
John Chambers: [after hearing of the plan to get the hostages out] So you want to come to Hollywood, act like a big shot...
Tony Mendez: Yeah.
John Chambers: ...without actually doing anything?
Tony Mendez: Yeah.
John Chambers: [smiles] You'll fit right in!
That is the plot of this movie. Everyone thinks they can be in the movie business and they are right. Yet being in the movie business does not always mean making a movie, sometimes it is about talking about making a movie. Our lead character Chili Palmer, played by John Travolta is good at talking.
Chili
is a loan shark from Miami, who ends up in Hollywood while running down
a customer who has tried to outsmart the mob. He is not a thug but he
is not a pushover by any stretch of the imagination. Chili is the kind
of guy who is usually too smart for everyone else in the room. He is
also a movie fan and like many other fans of film, he thinks he can do
better than the people who are currently making it in "Tinseltown". The
plot involves him trying to find financing and a star for the movie he
has in his head. That's right, the movie in his head. There is a
screenplay for another movie that is pivotal to the plot, but most of
what we see on the screen is the movie that Chili sees turning into his
own film. It's a movie about a loan shark who comes to Hollywood in
pursuit of a bad debt. He is making up the movie out of his life story
as he is living it. That is a pretty awesome way of creating a screen
story, if only all of us could lead an interesting enough life to do
that, we would be able to get rid of all the remakes and sequels that
come out of the film world today.
Travolta
is a walking advertisement of "cool" in this film. He dresses in a
sharp manner that doesn't seem ostentatious, he looks great in
sunglasses and finally, he may be able to set the anti-smoking cause
back by ten years. When he lights up and stares down an adversary, it is
a moment everyone in the business will want to emulate. Travolta was at
the top of his game in the moment this film was made. He was natural,
charismatic and he had an everyman touch despite the fact that it was
clear he was not everyone. Warren Beatty was apparently offered the
role, and from the looks department and the cool factor you can
understand why he seemed a good fit, but Travolta has a sense of humor
in his eye that makes the part work, and when he drops the veneer of
friendliness he feels dangerous in a way that I think Beatty would not
have been able to match.
In
addition to Chili Palmer, there are a dozen other characters that
flicker around the flame of Hollywood success. Delroy Lindo, a
charismatic presence himself, plays Bo the drug dealer. Bo wants into
the business of movies and sees an opportunity to leverage himself in
because a director owes him a large sum of cash. Another
debt that Chili is trying to recover is owed by that director and Chili
manages to insert himself into the process of making movies ( or more
accurately movie deals) by trying to extricate the director from his
entanglement with the drug dealer. Bo has a partner and an enforcer. The
enforcer is a giant of a man who was once a stunt guy in the movie
business. "Bear" is played by the late James Gandolfini as a menacing
but ultimately ineffective threat. Muscle alone will not be sufficient
to put Chili Palmer out of the deal. This is the first time I remember
Gandolfini from a movie role. He had a sweet disposition for a thug and
his wardrobe was California casual to the max. The big beard and long
pony tail he came equipped with was authentic for the times, I know because I saw it in the mirror every day in the 1990s.
Every
comedy has to have a fool somewhere, otherwise everyone would just act
in their best interests and reason would dominate rather than laughter.
"Get Shorty" has the biggest self deluded fool in Hollywood; low budget
exploitation director/producer Harry Zimm. Harry wants to play with the
big boys but we know he doesn't have what it takes from the beginning.
Harry owes a Vegas casino, he owes a drug dealer, he has a script he
can't quite get control over and a girlfriend who is way too smart for
him. Casting gives this movie another secret weapon, Gene Hackman.
Pound for pound, movie for movie, I would put Hackman up against any
other actor of any time, but he was not always thought of as a comedian.
That makes no sense in light of the Superman movies where he was the
antagonist and the comic relief at the same time. His three minutes in
"Young Frankenstein" may be the highlight of one of the greatest
comedies ever made. He turned down the part originally because he did
not usually do comedies. Zimm is a funny character not because he makes
jokes but because he is a parody of the movie business itself. Hackman
just had to play a character who was so clueless and yet so certain that
he could really be a Hollywood figure. He nailed it.
One of his funniest lines comes when he can't even speak because of a beating that he took. Crawling out of the hospital to make it to a lunch with the potential star of his breakthrough quality picture, Chili and Karen, Harry's girlfriend, wonder what the hell he is doing at the lunch meeting at "The Ivy" in his condition. Harry can only croak out the phrase "My project" through his jaws that have been wired shut. That is a true sense of commitment from a producer protecting his interests.
One of his funniest lines comes when he can't even speak because of a beating that he took. Crawling out of the hospital to make it to a lunch with the potential star of his breakthrough quality picture, Chili and Karen, Harry's girlfriend, wonder what the hell he is doing at the lunch meeting at "The Ivy" in his condition. Harry can only croak out the phrase "My project" through his jaws that have been wired shut. That is a true sense of commitment from a producer protecting his interests.
So
far our focus has been on the Hollywood element, let's not neglect the
gangster part of the story. Bo and his partners have problems of their
own, a South American drug lord has come in search of money and a lost
nephew. The FBI is watching money that has been stored in an airport
locker, and Bo tries to trick Chili into exposing himself to get at the
cash. Harry's big mistake in addition to not listening to Chili earlier
and getting more deeply involved with Bo, is that he thinks he can big
shot his way around the mob.
Harry makes the mistake of trying to go it alone and contacts Chili's
gangland connection in Miami, hoping to shake loose some cash for his
film. Enter Ray "Bones", played with the usual gusto by Dennis Farina.
Farina played gangsters in dozens of projects (he also played cops
pretty well being a former Chicago cop himself). Farina had a poetic way
of delivering a line with complete disdain and superiority. His
conversations with just about everyone in this film suggest a barely
contained rage at how idiotic he thought everyone else was. From the
start of the film, he was the east Coast version of Harry Zimm, too big
for his britches and not able to really stand toe to toe with Chili
despite his elevated position of power. The scene where he and Harry
meet is a high point of comedy in the movie. It is violent and abusive
in the way that modern gangster films are wont to be. It is also
hysterical.
Rene
Russo is Karen, a b-movie scream queen, and Harry's girlfriend. It
doesn't take long for Chili and Karen to connect because they are the
two most intelligent characters in the movie. Whenever Chili is
confounded by some stupidity in Hollywood, Karen is right there to to
interpret for him. Russo is completely believable as a working actress
who should know better and has greater ambition than originally seems.
As the ex-wife of movie star Martin Weir, she connects Chili and Harry
to some real power in Hollywood, a major star. Danny Devito seems like
an odd candidate for the role but he channels his friend Jack Nicholson
and creates an actor who is serious about his work but indifferent to
how it effects others. In the film "The Player" Tim Robbins' character
orders a different kind of fashionable water at every meeting, and then
he never drinks. Martin Weir special orders food and then never takes a
bite. It is one of the irritating ways that the pecking order in
Hollywood might be measured.
In
the background of the story are several other perfectly cast
characters. David Paymer does nervous and combative at the same time.
Bette Midler, who was unbilled in the film, does sexy and smart ass.
Miguel Sandoval has made a living playing drug lords and government
officials. Here he is menacing as he discusses taking in the Universal
Tour and then maybe murdering some of the other characters in the movie.
There is a long line of character actors who all bring this movie some
realism and personality.
The
director Barry Sonnenfield should get a lot of credit for making the
movie play so well. There are great tracking shots that don't call
attention to themselves but make the movie feel even more movie like.
The look of all the locations is also important. Martin Weir's arrival
for lunch at "The Ivy" is staged like a red carpet moment for an every
day Hollywood activity. Harry's office looks rundown, over stuffed and
heavenly to a movie fan who would love to have those kinds of film
mementos on the walls and bookshelves. Bo's house in the Hollywood Hills
is both pretentious and strangely attractive.
The real hero of the movie though is the creator of all of these characters, the late Elmore Leonard.
His book is really the script for the movie. Scott Frank is credited
with the screenplay and he and Leonard shared the same relationship on
another project "Out of Sight" a couple of years later. Leonard's
plotting and dialogue keep us involved. The actors bring the characters
to life and it all comes off as a good natured poke in the eye to the
movie business that is responsible for putting this out in the first
place. In light of all the recent passings, it is a good time to embrace
the quality of this film and remember how much a talented cast of
professionals can do to entertain us. "Get Shorty" may have been a star
vehicle for John Travolta, but it was a project that showed us that real
stars are found in every well cast part.
Richard
Kirkham is a lifelong movie enthusiast from Southern California. While
embracing all genres of film making, he is especially moved to write
about and share his memories of movies from his formative years, the
glorious 1970s. His personal blog, featuring current film reviews as
well as his Summers of the 1970s movie project, can be found at Kirkham A Movie A Day.
Sunday, November 26, 2017
West Side Story:L.A.Philharmonic
I'd not intended to write a post on this event, because I did not realize until we got to the venue that they were going to play the entire film. I was under the impression we would be getting a medley type concert, but it turns out this was one of those performances where the music in the film is entirely replaced with the live music in the concert hall. Since it is my policy to post on any film I see in a theater, this roughly qualifies.
"West Side Story" is one of the few movies I remember going to with just my Mother and older brother. It must have been 1968 when I first saw it and it was on a double bill with "In the Heat of the Night" of all films. I don't know if it was a nationwide match but I do know that the Mirish Company produced both films so a double feature was a probability. So I saw two Best Picture winners on the same night and I was probably just ten years old. I did write about "In the Heat of the Night" earlier this year when it was the opening film at the Turner Classic Movie Film Festival, but as far as I can see, there is not a previous post on "West Side Story".
I know that the Lambcast this week was going to be a movie musical draft, and I hope this is one of the films that got picked. It has always been a film that moves me. My daughter laughs at me because I tear up at the finale of the film. That's right, I'm a big wuss. The modern day re-telling of Romeo and Juliet is deeply moving just concerning the story, but when you pile on the fantastic dancing, the dynamic performances and the Leonard Bernstein music, it just knocks me over.
The overture today got my heart racing. As each melody is introduced, I could pick out the instruments in the orchestra that were playing and listen for the personality of each performer. When the lush violins come in for "Tonight" I began to feel the emotion build. The Jet Song gets the plot started and sets up the premise of the rivalry, and then Tony sings "Maria" and I frankly well up with admiration for the delicate poetry of Stephen Sondheim's lyrics. The whole orchestra bangs into the Dance at the Gym numbers and it was loud and powerful and gets the blood stirring. When people say they don't like musicals, to me it is almost like saying you don't like music. How could you not want to follow our lovers, fear for our friends and families and marvel at the dances in this movie?
So much of the credit goes to the original Broadway director/choreographer Jerome Robbins. He managed to make gangs doing ballet moves look like something that would express their feelings and still leave them as dangerous youth. Robert Wise brought cinematic magic to the movie as well. The opening helicopter shots and the quick edits to the locations match up with the Bernstien music and drag us into the context of the film quickly. There are a half dozen transitions that are clearly created by Wise and the color design of the film with the terrific cinematography is definitely more Hollywood than Broadway. Twenty years ago, one of the English Teachers who taught a cinema based class was out for a few weeks. The Dean asked me if I could take over the class and show a film one day and talk about it enough the next class day to help the students with their paper. I was happy to do so and the film that they were showing was "West Side Story". The Dean knew that I was a film buff and could probably carry it off. Fortunately, I did not have to read the thirty or so papers that were written, but I did get to talk about the film making techniques, and director's choices made here. It might have been my first attempt at a movie blog, even if it was not published on line.
The emotional peak of the music occurs during the "Tonight" Quintet, as several different voices trade off their stanzas, each one using the same notes but lyrics that are sadly at odds. The heart breaking innocence of Tony and Maria is contrasted with the bitter sniping from Riff and Bernardo and underscored with Anita's lustful planning. It builds to a crescendo and then it is immediately followed by the haunting silence which is broken by familiar whistles as the two gangs converge for the rumble. The L.A/ Philharmonic stays right in place with the screen and the music works marvelously. Today they were led by David Newman, an Oscar nominated composer and a regular conductor of classical music and film performances. I have seen and heard his conducting work at the Hollywood Bowl on numerous occasions and this day he dis another smashing job bringing the music of the movies to life for an audience.
The experience today was an invigorating end to a long holiday weekend. It was a great surprise and offered me an additional opportunity to write something for you "Tonight".
"West Side Story" is one of the few movies I remember going to with just my Mother and older brother. It must have been 1968 when I first saw it and it was on a double bill with "In the Heat of the Night" of all films. I don't know if it was a nationwide match but I do know that the Mirish Company produced both films so a double feature was a probability. So I saw two Best Picture winners on the same night and I was probably just ten years old. I did write about "In the Heat of the Night" earlier this year when it was the opening film at the Turner Classic Movie Film Festival, but as far as I can see, there is not a previous post on "West Side Story".
I know that the Lambcast this week was going to be a movie musical draft, and I hope this is one of the films that got picked. It has always been a film that moves me. My daughter laughs at me because I tear up at the finale of the film. That's right, I'm a big wuss. The modern day re-telling of Romeo and Juliet is deeply moving just concerning the story, but when you pile on the fantastic dancing, the dynamic performances and the Leonard Bernstein music, it just knocks me over.
The overture today got my heart racing. As each melody is introduced, I could pick out the instruments in the orchestra that were playing and listen for the personality of each performer. When the lush violins come in for "Tonight" I began to feel the emotion build. The Jet Song gets the plot started and sets up the premise of the rivalry, and then Tony sings "Maria" and I frankly well up with admiration for the delicate poetry of Stephen Sondheim's lyrics. The whole orchestra bangs into the Dance at the Gym numbers and it was loud and powerful and gets the blood stirring. When people say they don't like musicals, to me it is almost like saying you don't like music. How could you not want to follow our lovers, fear for our friends and families and marvel at the dances in this movie?
So much of the credit goes to the original Broadway director/choreographer Jerome Robbins. He managed to make gangs doing ballet moves look like something that would express their feelings and still leave them as dangerous youth. Robert Wise brought cinematic magic to the movie as well. The opening helicopter shots and the quick edits to the locations match up with the Bernstien music and drag us into the context of the film quickly. There are a half dozen transitions that are clearly created by Wise and the color design of the film with the terrific cinematography is definitely more Hollywood than Broadway. Twenty years ago, one of the English Teachers who taught a cinema based class was out for a few weeks. The Dean asked me if I could take over the class and show a film one day and talk about it enough the next class day to help the students with their paper. I was happy to do so and the film that they were showing was "West Side Story". The Dean knew that I was a film buff and could probably carry it off. Fortunately, I did not have to read the thirty or so papers that were written, but I did get to talk about the film making techniques, and director's choices made here. It might have been my first attempt at a movie blog, even if it was not published on line.
The emotional peak of the music occurs during the "Tonight" Quintet, as several different voices trade off their stanzas, each one using the same notes but lyrics that are sadly at odds. The heart breaking innocence of Tony and Maria is contrasted with the bitter sniping from Riff and Bernardo and underscored with Anita's lustful planning. It builds to a crescendo and then it is immediately followed by the haunting silence which is broken by familiar whistles as the two gangs converge for the rumble. The L.A/ Philharmonic stays right in place with the screen and the music works marvelously. Today they were led by David Newman, an Oscar nominated composer and a regular conductor of classical music and film performances. I have seen and heard his conducting work at the Hollywood Bowl on numerous occasions and this day he dis another smashing job bringing the music of the movies to life for an audience.
The experience today was an invigorating end to a long holiday weekend. It was a great surprise and offered me an additional opportunity to write something for you "Tonight".
Saturday, November 25, 2017
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
It might look like a comedy from the trailer, but "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri has a subject as unfunny as anything you can probably think of. The fact that Writer/Director Martin McDonagh manages to get us to smile so often is a testament to his writing skills. The death of a child through a brutal crime generally does not set off the chuckle meter for most of us. However, if you have seen his previous films, "In Bruges" or "Seven Psychopaths", you might not be too surprised. Each of them deals with dark themes with comic overtones and while not always successful in the case of "Seven Psychopaths", it all clicked in the feature debut "In Bruges".
Crime leaves a scar on everyone it touches. The feelings may not be the same from one victim to another, and they certainly do not get expressed the same way, but everyone has a piece of themselves changed by these kinds of events. Mildred Hayes is the mother of a dead teenage daughter. Her anger seethes for months and when she reaches a boiling point she is ready to let it out on anyone in the vicinity. Frances McDormand will probably win her second Oscar as the brutally self centered, guilt ridden and thoughtless Mildred. She is pushing for answers but there are none coming her way. Mildred is a character that you can at first feel for, but as we see what her mania is doing to others in the community that would otherwise sympathize with her, we can also hate her a little. She still has one child and he is battered by her pitbull like approach to the problem she sees. The Sheriff in the town is not guilty of negligence, just a lack of evidence to pursue. A man who shows a romantic interest in her and tries to be a friend, is belittled by her blindness to the feelings of others.
This movie never goes where you think it is going to. It feels like a vengeance film and a procedural, wrapped up in small town melodrama, but it never takes a conventional course. There are a number of moments that come out of left field, although they really are significant and related to the characters. The Sheriff's story turns out to be as sympathetic as Mildred's. Just when you think the deputy is getting his just desserts, there is a string of information and behavior that changes our attitude towards the character. People in this movie say and do hurtful things to each other, but rarely with the intention of having the kind of effect that occurs. It's as if each is throwing a temper tantrum and the whole town feels like the bewildered Mother in the grocery store with a ego-centric toddler to deal with.
Woody Harrelson can play both psycho and family man. Here, you will find his performance ultimately heartbreaking. At the same time, he manages, even when off screen to delight us with a sense of humor or a moment of empathy that everyone should appreciate. John Hawkes plays Mildred's ex-husband, the abusive Charlie. He too can be sympathetic one moment and loathsome the next. Lucas Hedges, who was so effective in "Manchester by the Sea" last year, again plays a teen, trapped by a family drama that he has difficulty coping with. There are a dozen performances by secondary characters that are just spot on: Zeljko Ivanek, Samara Weaving, Abbie Cornish, Caleb Landry Jones and others make this feel like a real place with real people who have real faults and qualities.
Special attention however must go to a second likely Academy nominee for this film. Sam Rockwell has been a favorite of mine since I first saw "Galaxy Quest". He was neglected for Awards attention a few years ago for one of my favorite films from 2013, "The Way, Way Back". That injustice is unlikely to be repeated. Rockwell is simultaneously repellent and sympathetic in the part of a Dim Deputy who has anger issues but also a strong need for justice. The less you know about the film and it's plot twists, the more compelling the performances turn out to be, Dixon is a character in search of a redemptive storyline, and it doesn't matter that he is sometimes an awful person, he is also a human being. Mildred's quest for justice for her daughter changes lives in many ways, none of them are predictable, and Rockwell's Dixon is the least predictable of all.
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