Sunday, September 30, 2007

Outsourced: Life Lessons in a Global Marketplace

By Matt Zoller Seitz

Outsourced, in which a Seattle call center manager named Todd (Josh Hamilton) is fired and then dispatched to India as a consultant to train his own replacement, is a wonderful surprise. At first it threatens to be just another fish-out-of-water story. The film’s director, John Jeffcoat, and his co-writer, George Wing, hit expected marks, from the moment when a street urchin swipes the hero’s cellphone to the bit where Todd learns why Indians don’t eat with their left hand to the scene where Todd realizes that his sharpest employee, an outspoken young woman named Asha (Ayesha Dharker), is gorgeous and has a crush on him. Gratifyingly, though, the filmmakers treat Todd’s story as a springboard for a smart look at the effect of cultural difference on work, friendship and love, and the global economy’s impact on national and personal identity.

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To read the review, click here.

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Links for the Day (September 30th, 2007)

1. "Bruce Springsteen's Magic." The Sunday Times' Dan Cairns takes a peek - with some preview clips of selected tracks.

["For Springsteen, and for his fans, that chain has gone through periods of both strength and weakness. It was years into his recording career before the singer began to be perceived as a political songwriter. When that shift occurred, with the global success of 1984’s Born in the USA album, and Ronald Reagan’s opportunistic kidnapping of the title track, the experience so shook Springsteen that he has shied away from explicit statements ever since. (A rare exception was his endorsement of John Kerry in the 2004 presidential election.) For the most part, he has let his songs do the talking. Even now, with his most political album in years about to hit the racks, Springsteen avoids full-on explication of Magic’s songs, and edges warily towards the subject."]

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2. "Turner classics." The National Gallery of Arts is offering the most comprehensive American exhibition yet on J.M.W. Turner.

["Virtuoso and visionary painter Joseph Mallord William Turner has long been presented as a prophet of the modern age. His swirling, atmospheric late landscapes have tempted many to categorize him as the first father of impressionism. The last major show of Turner's work in this country, held in 1966 at New York's Museum of Modern Art, cast him as an advance man for abstraction, more interested in loose brushwork than grand narratives."]

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3. "Jessica Biel turns down Wonder Woman role."

["Biel was earlier reported to be in talks to star in the film, but according to Entertainment Weekly, the deal has broken down, reports Moviehole.
Movie bosses at Warner Bros. are still looking to fill
[roles for] ... that of Superman, Batman, the Flash and Aquaman. George Miller is already on board as director, with the script being penned by Kieran and Michele Mulroney."]

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4. "NYFF. Blade Runner @ 25." Greencine has a nice round up of posts.

["Let's face it: The re-release of the film in this new form has been occasioned by a desire for closure - Scott finally completes his masterpiece - but also money," writes Michael Joshua Rowin in Stop Smiling...]

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5." Short film specialist, Aditya Assarat, turns his lens on the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami for his first feature length effort."

["Aditya Assarat made short films that took your breath away. There was a classical beauty to his composition, and a poetic melancholy in a character's longing gaze that one more readily associates with tragic novels. His genteel taste and talent have aroused much expectation for his first feature-length movie and, after a few years of fund-hunting, Aditya is finally putting the finishing touches to it prior to the film's premiere at the Pusan International Film Festival on October 8."]

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Quote of the Day:

"Love—is anterior to Life—
Posterior—to Death—
Initial of Creation, and
The Exponent of Earth—" Emily Dickinson


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): Joseph Mallord William Turner's Disaster at Sea (1833-5)
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Clip of the Day:


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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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Torchwood, Season One, Ep 4: "Cyberwoman"

By Joan O’Connell Hedman

Torchwood dips into its Doctor Who back story ("Army of Ghosts", "Doomsday") in this sorry mess involving Cybermen, bathetic love, a pterodactyl, and a hapless pizza delivery girl. Redeeming qualities are few, but we can always hold out hope that the pterodactyl was mortally wounded and won't return.

As "Ghost Machine" showcased Owen (Burn Gorman), "Cyberwoman" belongs to Ianto (Gareth David-Lloyd), which proves to be the episode's undoing. Gorman's visible terror and barely contained rage stand in stark contrast to David-Lloyd's adolescent bleating and blubbering. Ianto is written here as a resentful and rather stupid adolescent, and David-Lloyd's over-the-top performance does nothing to convince us he's not.

Particularly annoying was a scene in which Ianto snarls at Jack (John Barrowman) for not caring about him, never asking him about his life. The rest of the team looks guilty. "Aw, poor Ianto," you can see they are thinking – but Jack is pissed, and rightly so. Ianto's love life is none of Jack's business, and working at Torchwood is deadly serious. The issue of whether or not Jack has ever loved anyone the way Ianto loved Lisa would be worth exploring, if Ianto loved Lisa in a realistic way, as opposed to the way toddlers love their teddy bears and refuse to give them up when they get too ratty. (For the record, I'm in favor of toddlers, and older children, keeping their much loved, and much abused, stuffed animals. They don't have the potential to enslave all humanity.)

The wall-to-wall Ianto would be enough to bury this episode, but Chris Chibnall, the series' lead writer, keeps piling on. It's bad enough that we're presented with Ianto's love, Lisa (Caroline Chikezie), dressed in a cross between a Roman soldier's kit (crested helmet, arm and leg sheathes) and a metal bikini. How, exactly, are we supposed to believe that any one at Torchwood thinks that the pterodactyl could actually defeat Lisa? The Lisa-v-flying reptile cuts feature the lamest fight choreography and worst use of blue screen I've seen in a long time. This chick electrocuted Jack to (temporary) death twice in the space of a minute and threw Ianto into a wall so hard he died, too. (Jack later revives him, more's the pity.) There was no way Lisa was going to lose that battle.

Other problems include the squickiness of Dr. Tanizaki (Togo Igawa) the cyberneticist, feeling up the unconscious Lisa; the repeated too-gory shots of the failed upgrade of the doctor; the inconsistent, maddening use of Jack's techno-wristband: enough power to get Gwen out of the upgrade chamber, and enough to open the door of the pterodactyl's hideaway, but not enough to do anything else useful. Last but not least, the callback to the pilot episode, with the pizza delivery girl being buzzed through the front office to Torchwood proper.

Let's ignore for the moment the idea that she would just walk down that dungeon-like corridor without so much as a friendly "Come on in." It's impossible to explain how Lisa performed a brain transplant on herself -- and that she was up and about, fully functional, within minutes of the operation. I can accept that the Cybermen solved the tissue-rejection problem, but that's stretching the idea past the breaking point. Ianto's failure to kill the newly-transplanted Lisa was also beyond belief; how many murders and attempted murders – including his own -- does it take to convince this guy that Lisa has become a monster?

There were a few bright spots amid all this idiocy. Burn Gorman's performance was fantastic again, particularly the scene in which the conversion unit is discovered and he explains it all to Gwen (Eve Myles). Gwen and Owen have nearly as much chemistry as Gwen and Jack, and the scene in the autopsy room put that to good use, also. Rhys (Kai Owen), who has a knack for calling just as Gwen is mid-snog, had the briefest of scenes, hilariously asking Gwen to video Wife Swap. Tosh (Naoko Mori) was a non-entity, again.

As for Jack, he seemed to be channeling Jack Bauer, but given the situation, it wasn't out of character. In the aftermath, will anyone remember that Jack survived Lisa's electrocution, twice? You'd think they would already have noticed his inability to stay dead. Ianto's ranting that Jack was the worst monster of them all illuminated the extent of Ianto's delusions. If Ianto were a teenager, I'd understand all this excess, but since Ianto is both a grown man and gorgeous, it makes no sense whatsoever. Jack's single-minded focus on destroying the threat of another Cyberman takeover was the only appropriate response.

As usual, the show looks fantastic, cheesy inter-species fight scenes aside, and ignoring any lingering X-Files flashbacks that the use of flashlights by male-female teams may provoke. And again, the score heightened both tension and humor, particularly in the Iron Man-like riffs we heard during Lisa's introduction. Clearly, the production values are there, as are the good intentions – but the writers have to step up and make their characters more consistent and their plotlines at least vaguely believable if they want to make a go of this.

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Joan O'Connell Hedman's first sci-fi series obsession was Farscape. In addition to writing a semi-regular food column, Joan blogs at Oasis of Sanity. This article's screencaps are from The Institute, a Torchwood fan site.

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Saturday, September 29, 2007

Links for the Day (September 29th, 2007)


1. Scorsese film to focus on George Harrison

["The two surviving Beatles, Sir Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, are expected to participate, and Harrison's widow, Olivia, will co-produce, according to movie trade magazine Variety."]

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2. Vancouver Film Festival to feature 24 Chinese films among others. The festival runs from September 27th to October 12th.

["Highlighted international titles include the German-Turkish film The Edge of Heaven; Romanian film 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days; and Iranian Persepolis, all of which have won major awards at the Venice Film Festival and the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year."]

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3. The Kingdom - as reviewed by Rob Humanick at The Projection Booth.

["A single image from The Kingdom’s opening credits effectively summarizes the entire film to follow. An animated timeline serves to enlighten the audience as regards the history of Saudi Arabia, from its formation as a country to the discovery of oil to the involvement of fifteen of its citizens as hijackers in the 9/11 terrorist attacks. This final point is illustrated – in cheap thriller effect with pulse-pounding musical accompaniment to boot – with the all-black image of a jet en route to its soon-to-be-collapsed targets, the screen cutting to black just before the moment of truth, because, well, that would be going too far. There isn’t intended malice in this image, just insensitivity. In other words, The Kingdom isn’t evil – it’s just fucking stupid."]

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4. Why the hell not? Peter Berg brings America to The Kingdom. Get ready for the onslaught. And check out Ryland's full treatment. My kingdom for a positive review!

["Despite its questionable politics, Peter Berg’s busiest film yet, The Kingdom, blows up a lot of stuff, and kills a lot of people, really well. Which is to say it never bores however bull-headed it may bluster. The flip side, of course, is that the film assaults its audience as much as its villains (and its heroes)."]

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5. The Spy Who Shagged Yee. Ang Lee's NC-7 effort isn't sexy, The Village Voice's Wilonsky.

["Based on a 54-page short story that Eileen Chang started writing in the 1950s and finished in the '70s, Ang Lee's latest foray into forbidden love is as monotonous and disaffecting as Brokeback Mountain was gripping and immediate."]

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Quote of the Day:

"Foreign powers do not seem to appreciate the true character of our government." - President James Polk


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): "Manifest Destiny" by John Gast (1872)
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Clip of the Day: Thank You Masked Man


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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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Friday, September 28, 2007

Doctor Who, Season Three, Ep. 12: "The Sound of Drums"

By Ross Ruediger
It’s difficult to discuss Doctor Who's penultimate Season Three installment, “The Sound of Drums”, without also talking about the events of the episode that follow it. It (ideally) leaves the viewer slack-jawed and mumbling stuff like, “Well, I’m gonna have to see what happens next week.” Regardless, I’ll attempt to do my best to pretend I’ve never seen the season finale and discuss these events in a broader picture.

The episode picks up where “Utopia” left off…sort of. The Doctor (David Tennant), Martha (Freema Agyeman) and Jack (John Barrowman) escaped their predicament with the Futurekind thanks to Jack’s Vortex Manipulator and the Doctor’s ability to get it working again. They’ve arrived in present day London. The Doctor knows the Master is somewhere, and despite the trio’s conclusion that he’s regenerated, the Doctor is certain he will recognize him. Whaddaya know? Harold Saxon has been elected Prime Minister, and the posters plastered everywhere announce as much. A giant monitor in the middle of the street shows Saxon doing PM-like things.

The Doctor: “That’s him. He’s Prime Minister. The Master is Prime Minister of Great Britain.”
(The monitor shows Saxon kissing a blonde woman.)
The Doctor: “The Master and his wife?!”
(Saxon/The Master speaks to Great Britain.)
The Master: “This country has been sick. This country needs healing. This country needs medicine. In fact I’d go so far as to say that what this country really needs, right now, is a doctor.”

Time for a little Past Master. Over the years the Master has villainously rocked and other times he’s been less effective than Snidely Whiplash. The first Master was played by Roger Delgado and he was a cool and collected sort of dude -- the evil antithesis of Jon Pertwee’s cool and collected Third Doctor. He was also a master hypnotist and cunning strategist. Since the Doctor at that time was exiled to Earth, most of the Delgado Master’s stories saw him insinuating himself into Earth society with some devious plan that usually involved alien invasion. When Delgado was tragically killed in a car accident in 1973, the production team didn’t even regenerate the character and ceased writing him altogether. The Master was briefly resurrected, albeit in a decaying form nearing the end of his Time Lord life cycle, in 1976’s “The Deadly Assassin”, after which he was not seen again until 1981’s “The Keeper of Traken”. In that story he stole the body of a man in an effort to stay alive and was then played by Anthony Ainley until the end of the classic series, typically popping up once every couple years with increasingly outlandish plans. This incarnation of the Master was more of the twirling moustache-type villain, and Ainley was only ever as good as the script he was working with (unlike Delgado, who had a knack for turning bullshit into gold). The last time the Master was seen was in the Paul McGann TV movie where he stole yet another body to continue his existence; the character had become so desperate at this point that he chose the body of Eric Roberts.

I said “Drums” picks up where “Utopia” left off “sort of.” I use that qualifier because for the Master, 18 months have passed since he left the Doctor on Malcassairo. That explains how he, as Harold Saxon, was able to worm his way into a position of such power -- a position, by the way, that was seemingly left open due the Doctor’s actions against Harriet Jones, which is another example of the Doctor’s oblivious do-gooding resulting in catastrophe.

This new Master (John Simm) owes a lot to the original Delgado Master from a plotting standpoint, but as far as characterization goes there’s a fair amount of the hammy Ainley Master on display. And yet such comparisons do not do Simm’s performance or Russell T Davies’ script justice: This Master is a bold reinvention of the character. As great as Derek Jacobi was in his brief stint, it was a wise move to regenerate the character into someone more youthful. The Master needs the yin/yang dynamic with the Doctor to work most effectively (similar to the Pertwee/Delgado pairing). Simm and Tennant achieve it in a way that Jacobi could not have, regardless of his formidable skills. What is truly disturbing about this Master is his utter disregard and contempt for humans. He sees them as his playthings and is constantly aware of his superior intellect. He’s like a kid with a magnifying glass and an anthill.

The Master’s set up the Archangel network through the world’s cell phones and has in effect hypnotized the population in believing in him without question via the same four haunting drumbeats that have apparently plagued him his entire life. He’s also done his homework where as Martha Jones is concerned, and soon it becomes clear that Professor Lazarus’ work for Saxon wasn’t just a fluke, nor was Tish Jones’ hiring -- she now works directly for Saxon. The continued hounding of Francine by Saxon’s cronies is also brought into focus. And the Master’s big finish is his public declaration that he will initiate first contact between humanity and a race known as the Toclafane – creepy, orblike creatures who seem anything but benevolent. The TARDIS trio is now on the run as the Prime Minister of Great Britain has declared them public enemies. The first conversation the Doctor and the Master have had in several lifetimes (aptly via a cell phone) is definitive, but also shows the lack of knowledge the Master has about his own existence.

The Master: “Do you remember all those fairy tales about the Toclafane when we were kids -- back home? Where is it, Doctor?”
The Doctor: “Gone.”
The Master: “How can Gallifrey be gone!?”
The Doctor: “It burned.”
The Master: “And the Time Lords?”
The Doctor: “Dead. And the Daleks – more or less. What happened to you?”
The Master: “The Time Lords only resurrected me because they knew I’d be the perfect warrior for a Time War. I was there when the Dalek Emperor took control of the Cruciform. I saw it. I ran. I ran so far. Made myself human so they would never find me. Because…I was so scared.”


It’s an interesting scene, because what seems to be the connection of the two of a kind quickly sours. The Master hates the idea that he and the Doctor are so connected. He resents the Doctor for his need to do good and for his ability to survive and make sense of the chaos that is time and space. This reading seems to be confirmed later on when the Doctor tells Jack and Martha the story of the Master, which is set against the most glorious Gallifreyan imagery any Doctor Who fan could wish for:

The Doctor: “They used to call it the Shining World of the Seven Systems. And on the continent of Wild Endeavour, in the mountains of Solace and Solitude, there stood the Citadel of the Time Lords, the oldest and most mighty race in the universe. Looking down on the galaxies below, sworn never to interfere, only to watch. Children of Gallifrey were taken from their families at the age of eight to enter the Academy. Some say that's where it all began, when he was a child. That's when the Master saw eternity. As a novice, he was taken for initiation. He stood in front of the Untempered Schism. It's a gap in the fabric of reality through which could be seen the whole of the vortex. We stand there, eight years old, staring at the raw power of time and space, just a child. Some would be inspired, some would run away…and some would go mad.”

I wonder if someone who’s only familiar with the new series will bask in the majesty of that sequence the way I did? From that point onwards, the “The Sound of Drums” shifts into Third Act gear with the Doctor devising a plan involving perception filters and a lot of sneaking around. The Doctor, Jack and Martha eventually make their way onto the massive aircraft carrier, the Valiant, which is the Master’s base of operations and the location for the televised Toclafane meeting. Events deteriorate from bad to abysmal with the discovery that Master has turned the TARDIS into a “paradox machine”. And after that, the President of the United States is vaporized; the Master -- thanks to a combination of the genetic codes contained in the Doctor's severed hand and the Lazarus technology -- ages the Doctor into a frail old man, and finally he opens a rift in time and space through which six billion Toclafane enter, descend upon the Earth and proceed to “decimate” a tenth of the population. In the final seconds, Martha materializes off the Valiant only to witness the Earth's destruction firsthand and proclaim, “I’m coming back.”

The Master: (viewing the mayhem from above, with a decrepit, broken Doctor at his side) “And so it came to pass that the human race fell, and the Earth was no more. And I looked down upon my new dominion as Master of all; and I thought it good.”

“The Sound of Drums” is a fantastic buildup to the season finale, mostly because it’s so character-driven. The four leads all have total faith in the script, as do the numerous secondary actors. The vibe of the last few minutes is epic in a way that the series hasn’t really reached before – not even in either of the previous season finales. Everything looks set to deliver the greatest season finale yet. But will it? “The Parting of the Ways” had the benefit of the Doctor’s regeneration. “Doomsday” saw the Doctor saying goodbye to Rose Tyler. What might “Last of the Time Lords” offer up that’s of equal substance?

By the way, is it not just rockin’ to have Jack back in the TARDIS (not to mention the classy inclusion of Barrowman’s name in the opening credits)? If I didn’t have such an immense affection for Torchwood, I’d consider it a huge shame that he isn’t a Who regular -- although in all fairness, he probably works so well here because he isn’t part of the series every week.

Lastly, I leave you with this bawdy, foul-mouthed bit of internet madness.

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Ross Ruediger is a San Antonio-based critic and columnist, a contributor to The House Next Door, and publisher of The Rued Morgue.

NEXT WEEK: “Last of the Time Lords”. ‘Nuff said.

Classic Who DVD Recommendation of the Week: How about getting away from the Master altogether? Check out Tom Baker’s first story, “Robot”, which featured this priceless exchange:

The Brigadier: “Naturally enough, the only country that could be trusted with such a role was Great Britain.”

The Doctor: “Naturally. I mean the rest were all foreigners.”

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Mad Men Fridays: Season One, Episode Ten, "Long Weekend"

By Andrew Johnston
Mad Men salutes a man who I consider one of the three biggest influences on the series, the great Billy Wilder (the troika is rounded out by Cheever and Updike), with what could be the series’ bleakest and most depressing episode. At the very least, it’s the episode most heavily saturated by the casual misogyny that makes The Apartment, Wilder’s magnum opus, as chilling as it is ultimately uplifting. But even Wilder couldn’t avoid occasionally succumbing to the temptation to overclose (though not necessarily in The Apartment), as TWoP’s ever-astute Sars and our equally illustrious host put it, and “The Long Weekend”, while largely excellent, unfortunately crosses that line a little more than usual.

We begin with the introduction of Betty’s father, who’s been mentioned previously in ways that suggest Don isn’t a big fan of the guy. Don quickly switches sides, however, when Betty voices her belief that it’s a little too soon after her mother’s death for her father to have embarked on a new relationship. Don’s logic is sound--after 40 years of marriage, his father-in-law lacks the skills to go it alone as a widower--while Betty counters that all he needs is a housekeeper. While it’s hard to disagree with Don, his argument helps establish the theme of female subservience (“I live to serve,” his father-in-law’s girlfriend said a little earlier) that is largely responsible for the episode’s intense creepiness.

At Sterling Cooper, we’re treated to another screening of ads from the 1960 Presidential campaign. The dismissive response to Kennedy’s ad seems like another example of SC being an agency that “just doesn’t get it”, though at least Don & Co. are smart enough to think that Nixon’s ad sucks pretty hard too. Pete’s admiration of the Kennedy strategy--“the President as product”--again shows him to be one of the most forward-thinking guys there, but Don’s brainstorm--casting the election as a narrative--proves he’s even more forward-thinking by anticipating Presidential campaign strategies of the 1980s and beyond. Don’s insight is driven by his personal identification with Nixon as a self-made man--for reasons the audience knows about but which no one at Sterling-Cooper does--and while it’s intriguing to see the biographical facts about Nixon cast in such a light, it’s also the first time the episode veers into “overclose” territory (perhaps more for Don’s “he’s the Abe Lincoln of California” line than for the parallels to Don’s life).

While Don is rightly proud of having bootstrapped himself into his job as Sterling Cooper’s creative director, he seems to believe that luck or fate also played a large role--otherwise, he’d probably boast of his roots when Rachel Menken reminds the assembled executives that her father actually started with nothing and says she doubts anyone else in the room can say the same thing (while Don has been cagey about his background to everybody, a humble beginning is nonetheless a component of his adopted identity, per his discussion with Roger and Mona Sterling at the beginning of Ladies Room). Instead, he adopts a position of respect toward Abe Menken, though he also doesn’t shy away from delivering one of the forceful pitches that have become his signature (which leads to Mr. Menken’s line comparing the agency to a Tsarist ministry, another of the terrific political-historical metaphors that the series does so well. Rachel, having no idea what he’s talking about, briefly becomes a surrogate for audience members on whom such references are lost). During his spiel, Rachel displays an impressive poker face as far as her feelings toward Don are concerned, but her father’s comment about Don being “too dashing for my taste” implies that he may well have picked up on his daughter’s sentiments anyway.

It’s with the story concerning Joan’s roommate Carol that the episode starts to enter a whole new dimension of creepiness. In their first scene together, when Carol arrives at the agency, Joan is as bitchy to her roomie as she typically is to Peggy and the rest of the steno pool. Her cattiness doesn’t seem unjustified: Carol is a veritable catalog of upper-middle-class clichés--before getting fired, she had a stereotypical entry-level publishing gig, and she’s living in Manhattan on her parents’ dime (hateful as Joan may be, her manipulation of men such as Roger arguably constitutes evidence of greater industriousness). While Carol seems pathetic at first, she proves to be a more complex figure--and a legitimately tragic one--when her exasperation over being fired leads her to admit the extent of her feelings for Joan. Joan shuts her right down with an icy unflappability so complete as to be practically Victorian. Though the particulars are different--the unrequited passion is one-sided--Carol strangely reminded me of Anthony Hopkins in The Remains of the Day in this scene, which left me absolutely devastated (of course, it goes without saying that Joan is infinitely bitchier than Emma Thompson’s character).

I’m of two minds about the follow-up scene, in which Joan and Carol return to their apartment with the guys they met at the bar. On the one hand, Carol resigning herself to having sex with this creepy, pathetic fat guy pushes the scene further into the realm of tragedy. On the other, as a longtime Manhattan resident, I simply can’t believe that they couldn’t find better looking guys, or that someone like Joan would in a million years fall for that guy’s line. Sure, ubiquitous cellphones are 30-some-odd years off, so Joan can’t just call up Ken Cosgrove or Paul Kinsey to see what bar they’re at, but it would have been a lot more believable to have Carol experience her humiliation at the hands of a Sterling Cooper junior exec in full on drunken letch mode. The ugliness and stupidity of the men Joan and Carol hooked up with pushed the scene deep into the realm of the “overclose”, even if what the scene conveyed about how men treat women as objects--and how women agree to be treated as objects--fed right into the central theme.

This theme is most vividly conveyed, of course, by Don and Roger’s plot. I love how Roger is instantly able to tell which set of twins among the four is likely to be the sluttiest (I choose to read it as a coincidence that they’re also the least conventionally attractive pair of sisters). The bit where one of the twins observes that “people” (presumably men and only men) always ask them to kiss each other makes it seem as if the girls are on the naïve side, but it soon becomes clear that their cynicism about sex exceeds even Joan’s. Then again, it’s no wonder they’re so jaded given how Roger behaves--it’s clear he’s far from the first guy they’ve met who acts this way. Roger’s sleaziness gives the lie to his earlier claim that Sterling Cooper is nothing like the insurance firm in The Apartment, but his “Dracula” line (and the way he rides Mirabelle like a pony) again constitutes overclose.


I was as surprised as Roger that it was a heart attack which provided his wake-up call--I’d expected cirrhosis or a DUI accident to make him reconsider his lifestyle rather than the ulcer he was banking on. His crisis may strike some viewers as a moralistic example of chickens coming home to roost, but the extent to which Bert Cooper sees Roger’s coronary as a threat to the agency’s very existence suggests it will have greater meaning where the larger plot is concerned. Roger’s crisis unsurprisingly gives John Slattery an opportunity to shine--he’s just amazing in the hospital bed scene--but the whole situation nonetheless feels a little forced, and his line about how “I’ve done everything they told me--drank the cream, ate the butter”--may very well be the series’ single most egregious example of heavy-handed irony.

Don’s response to Roger’s heart attack yields a much more interesting and subtle bit of irony--instead of driving Don to change his own ways, Roger’s heart attack leads him to engage in a self-destructive brand of carpe diem. At least that’s how Rachel sees it, even though an affair with Don is something she very much wants. At the time, of course, she has no idea that Don is being driven by a strong craving for a kind of intimacy he feels he can’t achieve with Betty, but which he seems to feel that she, as a kindred spirit, can provide. Don’s final speech, which connects a lot of dots and allows a lot of free-floating facts to coalesce, may also be overclosing at some level, but Jon Hamm makes Don’s long-awaited opening-up so convincing and poignant that I’ll let Matthew Weiner & Co. off the hook.

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A few miscellaneous observations:

This week’s episode was particularly notable where geeky continuity-oriented details are concerned. In addition to a callback to the sketchy OB-GYN from the pilot (who apparently offers illicit abortions in addition to prescribing birth control on the sly), Roger’s heart attack--and Joan’s reaction to it--ties in nicely with Joan’s evocative line from “Babylon” about how food near a bed reminds her a little too much of hospitals. Bert Cooper’s oblique revelation that he knows of her affair with Roger helps make the point nicely, and suggests that Weiner has found an ingenious way to keep Joan around in future seasons despite her transparent desire to find a rich husband to live off of: Her professional skills are too useful to Cooper for him to let them get squandered. It’ll be very interesting to see if Cooper’s “don’t waste your youth on age” admonition is a warning that stays with her in the long run.

Finally, it wouldn’t be an episode of Mad Men without at least one easily-avoidable chronological cock-up. Certainly, there are a lot of little details the episode gets right--in 1960, Labor Day indeed fell on September 5, per the memo we get a glimpse of about the office closure. And, according to the IMDB, The Apartment had its New York City premiere on June 15, 1960, followed by an L.A. premiere a week later on June 21. It presumably went into general release immediately thereafter, and given how much longer films stayed in theaters 47 years ago, it’s by no means out of the question that Roger and his family might just be getting around to seeing the film at the end of August. The IMDB also says that Psycho, mentioned by Roger in the same scene, opened on June 16, 1960 (a Thursday, oddly). However, Joan’s remark that she looks “somewhere between Doris Day in Pillow Talk and Doris Day in Midnight Lace” is where the wheels come off the wagon. Pillow Talk was a 1959 release, but the now-forgotten Lace didn’t open until October 13.
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Andrew Johnston is the television critic for Time Out New York.

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They do it with love: The Kingdom

By Steven BooneThe Kingdom is a two-faced liar. It promotes the idea of bloody American exceptionalism in the same breath that it sings We Are the World. Just like those CNN reports that show U.S. soldiers high-fiving Iraqi kids while giving out candy, it uses sentimental music and editorial sleight of hand to insist that whatever our servicepeople and intelligence agents do Over There, they do it with love.

Peter Berg's procedural about FBI agents investigating a terrorist bombing at a US compound in Saudi Arabia generates most of its suspense from the effort to discern "good" Saudis from "bad" ones; and from the question of whether the Americans will come out of this adventure in one piece -- all others be damned. This is that same old song of empire and paternalistic love-at-gunpoint that made John Wayne tip his green beret. But Wayne didn't live to see the kind of filmmaking that Berg practices. In the style of Traffic, Black Hawk Down, United 93 and Saving Private Ryan, The Kingdom uses chaotic visuals to enforce a sense of absolute realism that is more insidious here than any state-commissioned propaganda.

FBI Special Agent Ronald Fleury (Jamie Foxx) arranges a top secret five-day trip to Saudi Arabia to find the perpetrators. His team: The old pro, Grant Sykes (Chris Cooper), the smart-ass, Adam Leavitt (Jason Bateman), and The Girl, Janet Mayes (Jennifer Garner). Once on the ground in the authoritarian state, Fleury and company don't get much cooperation from Saudi officials who disdain Americans elbowing in on their jurisdiction. Saudi protocol ties Fleury's hands, as he must stick to his hosts' itinerary and await permission to probe crime scenes. Colonel Al-Ghazi (Ashraf Barhoum) is a distinct pain in the ass in this regard, until Fleury wins his trust over time.

The Kingdom celebrates American solipsism and arrogance, demonstrating that foreigners, particularly Ay-rabs, are due only a token respect. Their customs are to be tolerated, not understood, as time is of the essence when Americans have been killed. Completing the investigation trumps all other considerations. But Foxx and crew soon realize that they can't just bust in and take over, so they grit their teeth, speak a little more slowly, and cooperate with the Saudis' unreasonable demands. Meantime, Berg lets Foxx get his Miami Vice mirror-shades swagger on. His performance seems designed to illustrate what's special about Americans, our bluster and ignorance mitigated by a supercompetence you just can't get anyplace else: Fleury ultimately gets a Saudi crown Prince to grant his team more leeway by saying, "America is not perfect, but we are good at this."

Good at what, exactly? Keeping cool, for one thing. In the second worst scene of the movie, a joint Saudi-American raid on some suspected terrorists leaves the wrong suspects dead in heaps. Foxx and his crew survey the room of mostly teenage corpses with mild regret. When Jermey Piven shows up, for the second or third time, as their super-slick liason, he stops dead in the middle of his usual bullshit spiel to retch and hyperventilate at the sight of the bodies. At the screening I attended, audience members snickered, as if to say, "What a suit-and-tie pussy." The laughter was inappropriate, but the filmmakers' callous presentation told me that laughter is what they were going for.

There are a lot of cheap jokes, fish-out-water bits of business and solemn exchanges along the way. Jason Bateman plays an audience surrogate for civis who couldn't imagine firing an automatic weapon. He brings out Berg's gift for directing lighthearted comic ensemble scenes, constantly serving as the group's sarcastic, neurotic bullshit detector. Few actors can whine so charmingly. Colonel Al-Ghazi is the film's Gunga Din, a Saudi officer who bonds with Fleury not because they're at roughly the same place in their respective chains of command, but because, deep down, Al-Ghazi's an American-in-training. He hates terrorists and loves freedom. He grew up on American TV shows like The Green Beast, known in America as The Incredible Hulk. At first menacing and mysterious, he becomes a cuddly sidekick by the time he and Fleury chuckle over their love of Bruce Banner.

When the investigation's five days are up, the team must return home resigned that, because of the photo-op and spin Piven's character and other beauracrats have orchestrated around their failed raid, they will be greeted as heroes. But the terrorists finally come out of hiding and attack Fleury's caravan on the way to the airport. They kidnap Leavitt, precipitating the film's worst, most powerful sequence. The bad guys drag Leavitt to their hideaway and sit him down for a videotaped beheading. The movie crosscuts between Fleury's team shooting their way out of the ambush to go after the kidnappers and Leavitt's captors beating him, firing up the camcorder and waving the scimitar menacingly. Berg draws out the suspense agonizingly, as the evildoers have battery trouble (or something) with the camcorder while Fleury plows through traffic. Cinematographer Mauro Fiore (Training Day, Smoking Aces), the Vittorio Storaro of action flicks, throws the Private Ryan epileptic camerawork into overdrive. When Fleury and crew finally get to the hideout, they have to shoot up a city block full of bad guys. As the smoke clears, a soldier says, "This very bad neighborhood." Sykes responds, "No shee-it." So now we're watching Die Hard in the sand.

I haven't had such a queasy sensation of excitement and sorrow since the Klan's race-to-the-rescue in Birth of a Nation. What makes this whole shoot-em-up truly monstrous isn't the body count (standard for a Ho'wood action flick) but its monumental concern for the fate of one American FBI agent, mingled with its complete disregard for the nondescript Arabs milling through this firefight, multiplied by the impression of sobriety and humanism the film has spent 90 minutes struggling to convey. Nasty. As an acton stylist, Berg has been compared to Michael Mann, but the legendary shoot-out in Mann's Heat never lets you forget that innocent civilians (not just the favored protagonists) are in peril on a real city street, nor the terrible obscenity of it all.

Once inside the terrorist hideout, Mayes frees Leavitt and they both engage the enemy in a gory hand-to-hand struggle that had the audience I was in whooping and clapping. Catharsis never felt so ghoulish and cheap. But it gets worse. Spattered with blood, Mayes wanders into another room, where a little girl, a woman and an old man are cowering on sofas. They've heard the whole thing. When Mayes extends her hand to comfort the little girl, the child reaches out and inadvertently presents a piece of evidence that tells her the bomb mastermind is in this room. When Mayes sees that the old man is missing some fingers, she knows she's found her man. Another firefight, close quarters, brutal. The honorary American, Al-Ghazi, catches a fatal bullet but doesn't die until he's had his Gunga Din moment with Foxx, who let's him know he's dying with honor and whatnot. The film wraps up with the last of two solemnly scored montages that cut between the battered FBI agents returning home and the survivors of the raid reflecting upon the futility of vengeance.

It's not that The Kingdom doesn't know what it really wants (blood); its just afraid to tell you straight-up. You might bail. So we get the unique spectacle of a film that comes on all brotherly like Grand Illusion while stoking blind rage fit for a Rwandan radio broadcast circa 1994.
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Steven Boone is a New York-based critic and filmmaker, a contributor to Vinyl is Heavy and the publisher of the pop culture blog Big Media Vandalism.

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Links for the Day (September 28th, 2007)

1. "Monsters, Madmen, and 50 Foot Women: The Last Gasp of the 1950s, as Experienced Through Creature Features." By Robert Cashill of Cineaste.

["There are at least three branches of the esteemed Criterion Collection. There is the one that puts out first-rate DVD editions of cinema classics like The Seven Samurai and The Third Man. There is its new Eclipse line, which has packaged early Bergman, late Ozu, and, coming soon, the mid-period of some other distinguished auteur. And then there is its unnamed subset, dedicated to movies that stretch its mission to present 'the greatest films from around the world.' Dedicated collectors of Criterion's canonical titles must surely feel their ascots tighten about their necks when the label forgoes Welles and Antonioni for a month to put out deluxe packages of cult chillers like The Blob or Equinox."]

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2. "Allies push Bush to pass children's health insurance." By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar of the Los Angeles Times.

["WASHINGTON -- The Senate, by a wide margin, approved a bill Thursday to expand health insurance for children of low-income working parents, sending it to President Bush as supporters mounted a last-ditch effort to persuade him not to cast a long-threatened veto...The American Medical Assn. and AARP, the seniors lobby -- key Bush allies in the creation of the Medicare prescription benefit -- wrote the president Thursday urging him to change his mind and sign what they called a "carefully crafted bipartisan compromise. On the Senate floor, some of the sharpest challenges to Bush's position came from Republicans. The bill's GOP supporters said the administration was misinformed -- and even misleading the public -- when it argued that the bill's provisions for extending aid upward to families far from the poverty line would put the nation on a slippery slope toward socialized medicine. 'The administration is threatening to veto this bill because of 'excessive spending' and their belief that this bill is a step toward federalization of healthcare,' said Sen.Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), a supporter of the plan. 'I am not for excessive spending and strongly oppose the federalization of healthcare. And if the administration's concerns with this bill were accurate, I would support a veto. But, bluntly put, they are not.'"]

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3. "Robert Benton's Portland Feast." By N.P. Thompson, for Willamette Week.

["On the nudity in Feast of Love, Benton states that he was 'very clear about what the boundaries were. In the case of Radha [Mitchell], I told her, ‘If I were your father, I wouldn’t let you do this.’' I asked him if Mitchell, an adventurous performer from the get-go, needed any coaxing for the full frontal fight sequence where she and her married lover (Billy Burke) have at it. Not at all. 'Radha wanted to do a second take, and I thought, ‘Are you insane?’']

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4. "Halo 3 Mimics Halo 2, With Some Improved Graphics." Charles Herold's latest "Game Theory" column in The New York Times.

["The story of Halo 3 is the same as that of Halo 2 and the original Halo: a lot of things get in your way and you kill them."]

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5. "The Darjeeling Limited: Anderson chucks the suffocating quirks from the train for his most emotionally complex film yet." By Vadim Rizov of The Reeler. See also: A.O. Scott in The New York Times ("an overstuffed suitcase") and Armond White in NYPress ("It could be re-titled Three Stooges and a Prayer").

["Not coincidentally, Anderson’s first and second films were also the most emotionally volatile of his career, their adolescent protagonists swinging between unconvincing internalization (externally manifested in the bizarre) and open despair in a heartbeat. But something calcified in The Royal Tenenbaums; characters squared off in a closet, and all eyes were on the panoply of game boards on either side. In Tenenbaums and The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, the protagonists' emotional constriction had become the films' own -- any real feeling was buried deep beneath the elaborate shots and miniature sets. Anderson's latest, The Darjeeling Limited, is a landmark eruption: No more stifled adolescents. The Whitman clan -- brothers Francis (Owen Wilson), Peter (Adrien Brody) and Jack (Jason Schwartzman) -- process trauma and confront grief, no clever soundtrack required. "]

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Quote of the Day: "I always thought the real violence in Hollywood isn't what's on the screen. It's what you have to do to raise the money." -- David Mamet

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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): From This Island Earth (1955).



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Clip of the Day:"I pity the poor son of a bitch that got mixed up in this shit!"

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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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The Criterion Collection #399: House of Games

By Matt Zoller Seitz

It surely isn't lost on David Mamet that the title of his 1987 debut feature, House of Games, doubles as a three-word summation of his career. From stage to screen, the playwright and filmmaker's tales are rife with hustlers, tricksters and sleight-of-hand artists. Mamet's characters tend to fall into one of two camps: the taken and the takers. Some of the latter are fairly marginal in the greater scheme of things: in House of Games, Joe Mantegna's mind-twister Mike and his partners in deception aren't really a threat to anyone but their marks. Other Mamet takers are more menacing because they represent larger institutions: the mob in Things Change, the blandly ruthless executive branch of the U.S. government in Spartan.

But Mamet is rarely content to depict simple morality plays or contests of will. He self-consciously and deliberately italicizes the characters as characters -- mouthpieces for Mamet's world view and motors driving the plot. The story, meanwhile, is often more of a "story," an interlocking series of situations designed to illustrate Mamet's philosophy of life; he's like Stanley Kubrick in this respect, only leaner, and with less interest in (or capacity for) lyrically cinematic moments. The subtext of many Mamet films is, "You're watching a story because you crave a story; the characters' goals, indeed the characters themselves, are pretexts to satisfy that need." Many of Mamet's projects as playwright, director and hired-gun screenwriter follow hard men in pursuit of what Hitchcock called a "MacGuffin"; Glengarry Glen Ross, The Spanish Prisoner, Ronin (which Mamet rewrote without screen credit), Homicide and Oleanna revolve, respectively, around the leads; the process; the briefcase; the definition of the word "grofaz"; and a report by a "group" investigating sexual harassment charges against a professor. The films sometimes add one more layer of self-awareness by peaking with a twist that surprises, disappoints or otherwise pulls the rug out from under the viewer -- a tactic perfected in 1973's The Sting, in which a couple of con men hoodwinked both their mark and the audience.

Mamet forged his template with 1987's House of Games, newly reissued in a terrific 20th anniversary DVD from the Criterion Collection. Mamet's debut stars his then-wife, Lindsay Crouse, as Dr. Margaret Ford, a psychologist and bestselling author who gets tangled up with a con man named Mike (Joe Mantegna) whose signature line should be every Mamet fan's mantra: "Don't trust nobody." When one of Margaret's patients confesses that he owes Mike a gambling debt that he can't afford to pay, and she visits Mike's smoky headquarters, the House of Games, hoping to solve the problem, Mamet sets off a chain of misdirection that continues through the film's hysterically overwrought climax ("Please, sir -- may I have another?").

In House of Games, the gambit that con men call the "hook" is the scene where Mike tells Margaret that he'll erase the patient's debt if she'll pose as his girlfriend, join him in a high-stakes back room poker game, and then, when Mike briefly leaves the room, spy on an opponent known as the Man from Vegas (Ricky Jay), then inform Mike if the man flashes his "tell" (a bit of body language revealing intent to bluff). The scene is fake-out within a fake-out: the Man from Vegas appears to outsmart both Margaret and Mike and then, when Mike calls him out as a liar, pulls a "gun" that's actually a water pistol and demands a payout that the rattled Mike claims he doesn't have; Margaret, an outwardly tough woman with a major Florence Nightingale complex, instantly offers to write a check covering Mike's debt. The scene is cut to suggest that Margaret, the lone civilian in a room full of hardcore gamblers, is the first character to spot the water dribbling from the water pistol's barrel. In fact, the supposed "screw-up" was part of the con men's script, as was the subsequent, "spontaneous" confrontation between Mike and the Man from Vegas (who's actually George, an associate of Mike's).

This entire sequence is the opening salvo in a long con that illustrates the poker player's maxim, "If you look around the table, and you can't tell who the sucker is, it's you." Margaret's "discovery" of the water pistol con makes her feel smart. But a smart woman wouldn't whip out a checkbook in the presence of a self-confessed "bad man" like Mike, much less willingly return to Mike's orbit ("...like a dog to its own vomit," in Mike's words) and ask if she can follow him around and write about book about his world. She should know better, but she can't help herself. Or perhaps, deep down, she wants to get taken.

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What a piece of work is Mamet. He's kin to Sam Peckinpah, Martin Scorsese and Norman Mailer, prone to romanticize the same brutes he dissects; half sociologist, half hype artist, utterly valuable. His books on the craft of creativity (including Writing in Restaurants, On Directing Film, and the acting manifesto True and False) are must-reads. His singsong rants influenced everyone from Spike Lee and Kevin Smith to Quentin Tarantino and David Milch. And his meticulous, largely self-taught directing style -- dazzlingly showcased in House of Games, a master class in dramatically functional compositions and camera moves -- should be mandatory viewing for any would-be filmmaker.

Games also marked the appearance of a lot of Mamet's baggage, much of it cumbersome, some downright ugly. Mamet has little use for women, who exist only to support or undermine men. He has less use for intellectuals (a class that Mamet, with his chin-stroking author photos, unquestionably belongs to; interesting bit of self-hatred, that). And he despises psychiatry, therapy and anything that smacks of "sensitivity." This pose is reinforced in Mamet's books about writing, which dismiss organized study of the arts (particularly workshops, college courses and graduate studies) as cons designed to make people who aren't serious feel as though they are. "I don't have any experience with film schools. I suspect that they're useless, because I've had experience with drama schools, and have found them to be useless," Mamet writes in On Directing Film. "Most drama schools teach things that will be learned by anyone in the normal course of events, and refrain from insulting the gentleman or gentlewoman student of liberal arts by offering instructions in demonstrable skill."

Mamet disdains psychiatry and worships "natural" men who aren't remotely curious about why they are who they are; yet his dramas, while hard-edged and profane, are also archly self-aware, and they often build their narratives around reductive, Psych 101 explanations of compulsion, sublimation, repression, projection and the like. The most annoyingly trite scene in House of Games is when Margaret makes a Freudian slip in the presence of her German-accented mentor and Mamet plays the moment straight. The moment is trite because only in bad movies do Freudian slips disclose one's true self; it's annoying because Mamet includes it in a film that otherwise slags psychiatry as a sucker's game. Mamet's third film, Homicide, starring Mantegna as a cop and self-loathing Jew who gets sucked into an investigation that might involve a sect of violent Jewish radicals, had an even more unsubtle Freudian gimmick: it illustrated the idea that the hero had culturally emasculated himself and wanted to be punished by having him repeatedly drop his gun when he most needed it. Mamet plunders pop-Freud thinking while sneering at the culture that birthed it and denying its influence on his work -- a neat trick. He's like a politician who's built a 40-year public service career on running against government.

Mamet's big three animosities intertwine in House of Games' systematic debasement of Margaret, one of only two major female characters in an otherwise testosterone-heavy film, and the repository of Mamet's bemusement at the vanity and impotence of intellectuals and his much proclaimed contempt for psychiatry. The latter is showcased again on the Criterion disc, in a commentary track by Mamet and Jay, an actor, gambler, card trickster and walking encyclopedia of deception. Mamet never misses an opportunity to slag shrinks ("all their kids are insane," he says at one point). Jay's more nuanced analysis of the Margaret-Mike relationship states that Mamet is "conflating, if you will, psychology and the con."

Mamet's Scientology-level loathing of psychiatry pales beside the more nuanced mockery of The Sopranos. That series' creator, David Chase, kids Dr. Melfi's tough-love deadpan, pregnant pauses and smugly certain diagnoses even as he acknowledges that she's right more often than not. Chase's point could be boiled down to, "Psychiatrists are as self-important and deluded as anyone; psychiatry is good at identifying the roots of people's behavioral problems, but almost useless at fixing them, because people are so contradictory that they resist deconstruction, and they often can't or won't change." Mamet's take: "Psychiatrists are con artists with diplomas."

By making both of the film's representatives of psychiatry female (Margaret and her mentor, Dr. Littauer, played by Lilia Scala), Mamet lumps psychiatry in with cultural forces that he believes are trying to psychologically castrate men. The notion of therapeutic culture as a distinctly feminine con game is built into the film's narrative. Mamet's script defines empathy as weakness and reveals Margaret -- the film's most conspicuous purveyor of empathy -- as a parasite who feeds on pain, helps others in order to distract from her own sense of worthlessness, and poses as strong while secretly craving submission and humiliation.

That Mamet's stand-in, Mike, is a better psychologist than Margaret is an easy gag, but incredibly satisfying to moviegoers -- a cliche that flatters every audience member's fantasy of being the coolest person in the room. The character is a dazzling conceit: an abstraction that embodies the seductive adage that instinct trumps book learnin'. The Mike-Margaret relationship inadvertently anticipates the byplay in Woody Allen's Bullets Over Broadway between John Cusack's wimpy, pointed-headed college boy playwright, David Shayne, and Chazz Palminteri's Mafia assassin, Cheech, a scowling thug who turns out to be a natural born writer who knows things you can't learn in college.

The difference is, Mike is content to be a bad man, and digs the awed fascination he provokes in "respectable" people. He's uniquely qualified to hoist the doc on her own petard. He deduces that the transgressive impulses and need for dependence that characterize Margaret's patients are present in Margaret as well, then draws them out and exploits them. Added to which: Mike man, Margaret woman. He's a suave bulldozer; she's a prim fembot who could use a good plowing. When Mike seduces Margaret -- emotionally, by inviting her into his forbidden (male) world; then physically, in a purloined hotel room -- the acts are pregnant with wider insinuations. We're not just seeing a con man dupe and nail a shrink. We're seeing an exemplar of natural manhood ravaging a symbol of feminized, therapy-addicted, "sensitive" culture.

Mamet has a mission -- The Re-Ballification of Man -- and he's been on it for most of his career. In Oleanna, the film and the play, a pompous but essentially honorable professor is goaded into violence by a grade-grubbing fembot student who hits him with specious sexual harassment charges that she knows he can't disprove. In The Untouchables, Sean Connery's gnomic old Irish beat cop, Malone, shows the WASP-y college boy Elliott Ness how to fight dirty, and gallantly endures one of film history's most gloriously spectacular death scenes; Ness honors Malone's example by engineering a nonsensical and probably illegal jury switcheroo during Al Capone's trial and chucking Malone's assassin, Frank Nitti, off a courthouse roof after Nitti has already surrendered. "I have become what I beheld," Ness declares in the end, "and I am content that I have done right." Tellingly, Ness' wife -- the most significant onscreen emblem of the civilized, domestic society that Malone and Ness went medieval to protect -- is identified in the end credits simply as "Ness' wife." In the Mamet-scripted The Edge, Anthony Hopkins' hero character, a soft-spoken, well-read, self-made billionaire, survives a plane crash in the Alaskan wilderness, outwits and outlasts a much younger fashion photographer (Alec Baldwin) who wants to steal his trophy wife (Elle MacPherson), and slays a grizzly the size of a Winnebago. In Heist, Gene Hackman's thief is an old man who forgets to wear a mask during a robbery, but he still kicks ass and bunks with a saucy dame half his age (played by Pidgeon). Mamet's affinity for manly men is so pure that it's almost childlike. He hypes them even when it's not necessary. "My motherfucker's so cool," Jay's sidekick character says of Hackman in Heist, "when he goes to sleep, sheep count him."

* * *

In an interview commissioned for the House of Games disc, Crouse defends every aspect of the film. When she insists that Margaret truly is the hero of the tale, the character who engages the viewer's rooting interest, she's not too persuasive. She sounds like an actor who's still justifying having accepted a role that no actor with half a brain would have refused. Far more compelling is Crouse's analysis of Games as a dream film -- a non-representational narrative built from bits of Margaret's personality. Crouse repeats the adage that "every person in your dream is you," or otherwise indicative of the dreamer's fears and desires. This interpretation jibes with the movie's hardboiled, not-quite-real aesthetic -- the deliberately stiff, signifier-loaded dialogue; the cartoonishly Freudian character motivations (Margaret's bestseller is titled Driven); and most of all, the cruel magnetism of Mike, a devil summoned by a dirty secret prayer.

"You want someone to possess you," Mike intones, stroking Margaret's hand as she gazes at him in wonder. His musk fogs Margaret's bullshit detector and sets her heart racing. He's Stanley Kowalski rewritten by Ayn Rand. The delight he takes in conquering Margaret recalls Rand's defense of the notorious scene in The Fountainhead where the ostracized genius architect Howard Roark stopped jackhammering a quarry long enough to hate-fuck the book's snooty heroine, Dominique Francon. "If it was a rape," Rand said, "it was a rape by engraved invitation." "You raped me," Margaret tells Mike in the climax of House of Games. "You took me under false pretenses." She's not speaking literally -- their sex was consensual -- but figuratively, and accurately; what Mike did to her was a violation. "Well, golly, Margaret," Mike sneers, "Well, that's what happened, didn't it?" In other words, don't act offended, lady; we both know you wanted it.

Crouse's defense is intriguing, but it only holds up if House of Games can be said to stand apart from Mamet's other movies -- if, in other words, the anxieties and fantasies on screen are credibly Margaret's, and if the situations and imagery are demonstrably different from what we see in Mamet's other films. They aren't. But Mamet's preoccupations and hangups are so engrossing that House of Games is fun regardless. Its style is simple, but its situations are primordially deep, and their provocative, politically incorrect and often silly nature makes them all the more fascinating, because the narrative isn't just about Margaret and Mike.

Given its subject matter, we should know from Games' opening moments that we're being set up along with the doctor -- that things aren't what they seem, that there's no way Margaret can outsmart Mike and his crew because Margaret has ideals and delusions and shame and the con men don't. If we're fooled, it's because the director flatters us as Mike flatters Margaret -- with intent to deceive. The water pistol scene is Mamet the trickster's version of the subsequent scene where one of Mike's compatriots (Mike Nussbaum) walks Margaret through a short con involving paper money and an envelope. Like a con man with a movie camera, the filmmaker positions viewers for a big con by revealing smaller ones. "It's called a confidence game," Mike explains. "Why? Because you give me your confidence? No. Because I give you mine."

In his books about creativity, Mamet says that fiction's core appeal resides in the sub-rational desire to know what happens next -- either because you don't know what's coming or because you're curious to see how the inevitable plays out. Congruent with that is the desire to vicariously experience predicaments we'd avoid in life, and identify with iconic character types comprised of ten percent credible psychology and ninety percent wishful thinking. House of Games boldfaces the implied pact between storytellers and audiences.

On the Criterion commentary track, Mamet says that acting and lying engage the same submerged animal trait: the instinct to survive a deadly threat by any means necessary. Acting and lying, Mamet says, plug into "the essence of the cerebral cortex: How do I get away from the wolf that's trying to kill me?" Storytelling feeds the same need. Audiences crave controlled encounters with primal desires and fears; therefore, the storyteller's first obligation is to satisfy that need. To Mamet, drama is a service industry.

That's a cynical attitude, but it's not incorrect, and Mamet proves it on the page. Acts and beats are the DNA of Mamet's drama, archetypal (or cliched) characters his marrow. He gives us "stories" instead of stories -- living, breathing, messy or (God forbid) ambiguous fiction -- because he finds the latter dull, and as phony as Margaret's empathy. (In On Directing Film, he tells would-be moviemakers to study Dumbo, and says that young artists who claim they just want to "express themselves" should compare how people describe a work by a performance artist with how they talk about Cary Grant.) He creates characters like Mike because he knows that viewers crave characters like Mike -- men who, like certain storytellers, can mesmerize and overwhelm us, even when we know they're absurd and believe that we're strong enough to resist their charisma. The big bad wolf wears Armani.

Mike doesn't just suss out Margaret/the viewer as a tight-ass who's nursing a bad-girl fantasy. By italicizing his self-created trickster image, Mike sparks Margaret's healer's impulse (as both woman and doctor) and stokes her need to live for someone else and through someone else. Mike is a professional storyteller; he knows what the audience wants, even if the audience would never admit it. When Margaret excoriates Mike for setting her up, he rebukes her for having the temerity to act surprised. "You say I acted atrociously," Mike says. "Yes. I did. I do it for a living."

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Thursday, September 27, 2007

Links for the Day (September 27th, 2007)


1. "Welcome to the Luis Buñuel Blogathon." A celebration of the surreal Spanish satirist (say that three times fast) unreels through Sept. 30 all over the film blogosphere. The event's host, Flickhead, has the links.

["Few filmmakers have held my attention, respect and admiration for as long or as deeply as Luis Buñuel. For years I’ve thought of him as my ‘favorite’ director, mostly due to a personal connection I feel with his attitudes, humor and outlook. A surrealist, a wandering spirit, a cynic, a recovering Catholic...Buñuel used the cinema to explore these areas and took special delight in society’s inexorable draw to the seven deadly sins—especially pride, lust and greed. Among the very few masters capable of channeling elevated social and cultural criticisms into popular cinema, he took aim at the whole of humanity, recognizing the folly of our desires."]

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2. "Iraq, Afghanistan wars to cost US $190 billion in 2008." By Susan Cornwell of Reuters. Related: "Another Iraq Spending Showdown Looms" and "Iran's Nuclear Defiance."

["The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will cost at least $190 billion in 2008, the Pentagon said on Wednesday, making it the most expensive year in the conflicts since they were launched by President George W. Bush. Defense Secretary Robert Gates asked Congress to approve the funding after Bush this month beat back demands from Democrats for a quick end to the Iraq war and said the U.S. presence there would go on after he leaves office in 2009. Gates said he hoped longer-term for a much smaller U.S. force than the 165,000 troops currently in Iraq. He added that 'I don't see' any of the requested money being used for preparing a military attack on Iran, which Pentagon officials say is supplying weapons used against U.S. soldiers in Iraq."]

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3. "Love is one rancid Feast." A review of director Robert Benton's latest feature, by House contributor Alonso Duralde, now the film critic for MSNBC.com. Congratulations, Alonso! Related: AD reviews The Kingdom, Lust, Caution, Eastern Promises and Into the Wild. See also: Alonso's book.

["This is the sort of movie that’s set in an idyllic college town — Portland, Ore., in this case — where everyone seems to have a job and a home but no one spends all that much time working. How else would they be able to spend their days going for long walks, seeking advice from saintly professor Morgan Freeman (who has, of course, a dark secret), playing softball, or having athletic afternoon trysts? A friend of mine would sing the Melrose Place theme song and insert the phrase 'pretty white people with problems,' which pretty much describes Feast of Love. Morgan Freeman is the one person of color present, but in Hollywood movies there always has to be one to give wise advice to the white hero — it’s the same thankless role Alicia Keys recently filled for protagonist Scarlett Johansson in The Nanny Diaries."]

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4. "Which Came First, the Chicken or the Egg? (Part One)." By Errol Morris of TimesSelect. In which the author investigates two notable photos of cannonballs on a road during the Crimean War, circa 1855. Morris was spurred to write this piece after fixating on a portion of Susan Sontag's essay "Regarding the Pain of Others," which suggests that the photographer Roger Fenton manipulated reality to make the second picture more striking. The comments thread is a thing of beauty.

["I spent a considerable amount of time looking at the two photographs and thinking about the two sentences. Sontag, of course, does not claim that Fenton altered either photograph after taking them – only that he altered or 'staged' the second photograph by altering the landscape that was photographed. This much seems clear. But how did Sontag know that Fenton altered the landscape or, for that matter, 'oversaw the scattering of the cannonballs on the road itself?' Surely, any evidence of this would be independent of the photographs. We don’t see Fenton (or anyone else for that matter) in either of the photographs bending down as if to pick up or put down a cannonball. How does Sontag know what Fenton was doing or why he was doing it?"]

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5. "Fox Host O'Reilly says restaurant comments not racist." From CNN.com. To hear the broadcast in question, click here.

["On his September 19 radio show, O'Reilly said he took civil rights leader Al Sharpton to the Lenox Avenue fixture and 'couldn't get over the fact that there was no difference between Sylvia's Restaurant and any other restaurant in New York City...I mean, it was exactly the same, even though it's run by blacks, primarily black patronship,' he told listeners. 'It was the same, and that's really what this society's all about now here in the U.S.A. There's no difference.' And later, speaking with National Public Radio correspondent and Fox analyst Juan Williams, O'Reilly said there 'wasn't any kind of craziness at all' during his dinner with Sharpton: 'There wasn't one person in Sylvia's who was screaming, 'M.F.-er, I want more iced tea...It was like going into an Italian restaurant in an all-white suburb in the sense that people were sitting there and they were ordering and just having fun,' he continued."]

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Quote of the Day:

"Character is like a tree and reputation like a shadow. The shadow is what we think of it; the tree is the real thing."--Abraham Lincoln



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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): All you ever need to know about artists and their public, courtesy of Charles Schulz. For more Peanuts strips, click here.


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Clip of the Day: "Don't you dare bring one more thing into this house!"
_____________________________________________________
"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

"On the Circuit": Redacted

By Keith Uhlich

Screened at the 45th New York Film Festival.

[Editor's Note: "On The Circuit" is a joint production of The House Next Door and Zoom In Online. For news, events, training, and other points of interest to the creative community, please visit Zoom In Online by clicking here.]

From its opening image (wherein a tried-and-true “Based on actual events” crawl is slowly blacked out to reveal the film’s title), Redacted revels in a mixed, often muddled sense of humor and horror. Those who sense a touch of the late-night sketch comic in Brian De Palma’s latest are not far off from the point -- Redacted is as much about media infiltration of the senses as it is about documenting (by fictionalizing) the 2006 rape of a teenage Iraqi girl (Zahara Al Zubaidi), and the subsequent murder of herself and her family by several members of the US military. For a Western populace reported to receive the majority of its information via a steady diet of televisual punditry-cum-burlesque, it is somehow perversely appropriate that Redacted represents the basest elements of our nature via a coarse Chris Farley clone (Kel O'Neill). But the joke is not just on us; nor, risking reductive semantics, is it just on them.

Whatever De Palma’s personal politics (and Redacted represents these in quite plain, left-slanted sight), he’s also a believer in the camera as intermediary, as an interpretive instrument with a life all its own. On one level, Redacted seems a rough, present-tense assemblage of various aural/visual media sources (security cameras, personal video diaries, Internet postings, and faux-documentaries), but the homogenized Hi-Def sheen under which all these elements unfold emphasizes the inherently fictive nature of the piece as a whole. The pretense-laden French-doc-within, Barrage, further gives the game away, what with its hilarious cribs from The Wild Bunch and Barry Lyndon, and subtitles that seem tailored to audiences both within and without Redacted’s demi-imaginary universe. The formal play is almost always apparent in De Palma’s work (and he finally gets to explicitly reference an oft-cited influence, Appointment in Samarra, John O'Hara's novel-via-Maugham), but it’s particularly unsettling here in ways that inspire simultaneous cries, at least from this long-time member of the De Palma-phile peanut gallery, of both “Bravo!” and “Bullshit!”

Two highly varied viewings of Redacted suggest it is a work to be grappled with, but more for what it has to say about the invasive and mutative effects of media than for the soul-crushing horrors of the War in Iraq. Taken as a statement, definitive or otherwise, on the current imbroglio, Redacted is a failure, its performers too stiff and stagebound (or cartoonishly overemphatic), its horrors aesthetically distanced as opposed to transgressive. Naming the film's most morally conflicted character Lawyer (Rob Devaney) and one of its primary bad apples Flake (Patrick Carroll) shows that De Palma isn't out for subtlety, but his cast of unknowns are unable to give these archetypal constructs the necessary inflections that would raise their onscreen dialogues/actions to the resonant level of myth.

No one sequence in Redacted approaches Eriksson's (Michael J. Fox) canted point-of-view shot in Casualties of War as he observes his squadron raping the young Vietnamese girl Oahn (Thuy Thu Le), a multilayered assault on both the body and the body politic, profoundly illuminated by the spiritual gaze of cinema. Redacted, in contrast, stays continuously down and dirty, earthbound. De Palma's aesthetic choices tend towards the obvious: the rape here is shot through a nightvision filter, giving the participants' eyes, whatever the position of their respective moral compasses, a demonic glint, and reinforcing the film's decided lack of an omniscient presence. The Aesop dictum is all-too-apparent: War is hell.

De Palma's bluntness typically masks a cuttingly direct subtext, but here he more often trades illumination for crude, confrontational effects. I am willing to concede that this is to some degree the goal, and certainly the rawness of Redacted contributes as much to its successful shadings as to its failed ones. When De Palma turns his gaze to the Internet, the film's satire becomes trenchant. Ideologies of all stripes are skewered with gleeful abandon, an angry teen's rant against the United States government coming off with about the same (nonexistent) amount of discernment as the clandestine comings-and-goings captured by Islamofascist webcams. These sections also house the film's best performance, by Bridget Barkan as a tearful soldier's wife who blogs about her most intimate fears and trepidations.

De Palma understands both the connective and divisive possibilities of technology, but Redacted ultimately errs more on the side of doomsday than redemption. As in The Black Dahlia, De Palma casts himself in a crucial offscreen role in Redacted's penultimate scene, prodding one of his characters to "tell us a war story," then insisting (after said character's none-too-convincing moment of onscreen moral crisis) that "I need to get my picture." What follows this meta confessional is a series of purportedly real snapshots of wartime atrocities (most of them redacted against the writer/director's will) that effectively sum up the numerous frustrations of De Palma's cri de coeur. Indeed, the swell of a Puccini aria over the final (staged) image is as charged and troubling an ending as this great director has given us -- the movie-long meld of the fictional with the factual comes full circle, and this strange, off-putting Hi-Def experiment more or less implodes in an implicit admission of its own ineffectiveness. Maybe that is De Palma's final insult/insight: So much blood spilled over so little.
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Keith Uhlich is co-editor of The House Next Door and a contributor to various print and online publications.

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"On the Circuit": Interview with Carlos Saura

By Keith Uhlich

The House Next Door is proud to present the inaugural podcast of "On the Circuit", a joint production with Zoom In Online. "On the Circuit" features conversations with leading directors, cinematographers, editors and actors at film festivals worldwide. In this segment (accessible after the break), correspondent Keith Uhlich speaks with renowned Spanish director Carlos Saura, whose latest film, Fados, had its world premiere at the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival.___________________________________________
Keith Uhlich is co-editor of The House Next Door and a contributor to various print and online publications.

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Heroes Tuesday: Season Two, Episode 24, “Four Months Later”

By David Sims
The first season of NBC’s zeitgeist-seizing sci-fi hit Heroes made its name by ending with a bang. Virtually every episode concluded with a mind-bending cliffhanger or twist, redeeming the dullest hour and leaving even casual fans eagerly anticipating the next one. This tactic built the series' reputation as the "anti-Lost." Where the latter seemed to look further and further inwards, adding layers to its mystery without actually solving anything, Heroes satisfied its viewers week-to-week with answers, consistent excitement and twists that paid off. NBC's series confounded its champions, however, by ending on a cataclysmically bum note. Last May’s first season finale was the whimper to end all whimpers, and left many critics disgruntled. It’s unfortunate, then, that Season Two began just as ponderously, doing little to allay fears that Heroes might have contracted “second season syndrome” earlier than expected.

The blame for this substandard though hardly awful premiere falls at the feet of Heroes creator and showrunner Tim Kring, who wrote this episode (Greg Beeman directed), helpfully titled “Four Months Later”. Unusually for a showrunner, Kring, the writer responsible for both the lackluster Season One finale and Season Two opener, seems to be one of the Heroes writing staff’s weak links. He's too interested in Heroes’ most ponderous, unappealing aspects -- chiefly the vague, cumbersome narration by Mohinder Suresh, a character who opened “Four Months Later” addressing an appropriately disinterested Cairo audience about the many superheroes springing up across the world and the virus that afflicts them (this pandemic, an obvious lift of the X-Men’s “Legacy Virus”, is just the latest of many comic-book devices Heroes has lovingly borrowed).

Mohinder (Sendhil Ramamurthy, who invests even the most ridiculous dialogue with unerringly dull sincerity) has, since the pilot episode, epitomized Heroes’ major flaws. Between the vague grandiosity of his speeches, his constant stoic humorlessness and his seeming disinterest in romantic possibility, Mohinder takes himself far too seriously. Here he was paired with veteran character actor Steven Tobolowsky, who played, with his usual schlubby uneasiness, a mysterious agent of the hero-hunting ‘Company’ that dominates much of the series' unseen backstory. This unnamed agent revealed an exceedingly useful special ability, instant alchemy (Heroes has not nearly exhausted the reservoir of cool powers) and offered Mohinder a job within the Company. The episode mercifully spared us an excess of Mohinder, but from a brief telephone call we gleaned that he, Matt Parkman (Greg Grunberg) and Noah Bennett (the estimable Jack Coleman) are working to infiltrate the Company and bring it down from the inside.

The rest of "Four Months Later" shows what happened to the heroes after saving the world. So far the series has followed a rigid narrative formula, with episodes tending to focus two major characters from the show’s voluminous ensemble. There is sporadic intersection along with alliances and friendships; but for the most part, Heroes functions as a collection of mini-shows. The format is both help and hindrance: it tends to keep the better characters out of the lamer stories, but it gives lesser characters weaker material and forces them to struggle to grow.

Grunberg, who plays telepathic cop Parkman, was the biggest victim of this syndrome last season, trapped week-to-week in a cycle of unendingly dull domestic scenes with his cheatin’ wife. It took him forever to link up with the rest of the cast, but link up he did; he seems to have a slightly more exciting setup this year, guarding precocious hero-locator Molly Walker (Adair Tishler) and working to bring down the supposedly evil Company. Parkman is now a member of the NYPD, overseen by Barry Shabaka Henley (Miami Vice, Collateral). So far, he’s still more teddy bear than action man, swapping cute dialogue with Molly and trying to help her track down an evil ‘bogeyman’ that appears in her nightmares. Hopefully Parkman’s new new setup will turn his character around and give the talented Grunberg more action.

The final member of this Company-skewering team is the recently-christened Noah Bennet (Coleman), known only as “Horn-Rimmed Glasses” (or “HRG”) among fans for his retro choice of eyewear (and lack of a proper name, in a Simpsons-esque recurring joke). In contrast to Matt Parkman, a credited cast member who failed to excite last year, Noah was a recurring role that became an out-of-nowhere fan favorite, at first intriguing audiences with his mysterious behavior as a member of the Company, then beguiling them as he renounced his ambiguously bad ways and strove to save his adopted daughter Claire (Hayden Panettiere, with whom Coleman has a convincing father-daughter rapport). After the excitement of last year, the Bennets have relocated from Texas to California, where Noah sternly instructs his daughter (who regenerates and heals wounds) to lay low on her first day of school.

One might think such is impossible on Heroes, but Claire managed to pull it off, hiding both her academic and supernatural talents, even from the bizarrely-monikered West (Nicholas D’Agosto), a somewhat smarmy new love interest who we spotted secretly floating by Claire’s window at the end of the episode. Whether this was because West is a super-powered Peeping Tom or a more sinister character remains unclear. Noah, meanwhile, has a similarly dull new life working at a copy shop governed by a tyrannical manager. The powerless Noah violated his own credo by breaking his boss’ fingers for breathing down his neck too hard. This slow start to the Bennet story essentially lifts Claire’s situation last year (misunderstood, lonely superhero at a catty high-school), the only difference being that her family is now aware of her abilities. When Claire called her real father, Nathan Petrelli (a former politician who can fly, and was presumed dead at the end of last season), to mope about her isolation, it drove home how little things have changed for Claire over the course of a year.

Nathan (Adrian Pasdar), who flew his literally unstable brother Peter (who can absorb and copy the abilities of others, and made the mistake of copying a radiation manipulator) into the stratosphere to let him detonate in the first season finale, is now bearded and drunk, having seemingly resigned his recently-achieved position as a congressman. Near the end of the episode, he has a bizarre vision of himself scarred by radiation poisoning, perhaps suggesting he brought something evil back with him after travelling to ‘the other side’ with his brother. That’s mere speculation, but Nathan has always trod a fine line between simple sliminess and actual villainy; the loss of his brother might be enough to push him over the edge. His mother Angela (Cristine Rose), who is connected to the Company and manipulates her son's political future a la Lady Macbeth, has more than a hint of malevolence.

The first season's finale dubbed this new season (or “volume”) “Generations,” promising a focus on the characters’ ancestry. While it’s clear that the Machiavellian Angela will figure in future events, "Four Months Later" spotlighted Kaito Nakamura (George Takei), father to missing time-traveler Hiro (Masi Oka). Kaito, a stereotypical but nonetheless intimidating Japanese patriarch played with the right sense of the theatrical by Star Trek legend Takei, is a samurai sword-wielding superhero/CEO who appropriately scares the shit out of his kids. He also seems to have ties to the Company and Angela, and dropped many a mysterious hint about the Company’s other founders and its ultimate goals. However, before we could learn much, Kaito was offed by a shadowy figure, perhaps setting in motion the first key mystery of this new season; Kaito's ever-cheerful son was stuck in 1671 Japan and unable to help his dad out. When this twist was unveiled in May, I groaned, but Oka is a fun actor, and his scenes with David Anders (playing a British rapscallion who poses as Kensei, the heroic Japanese warrior of Hiro’s childhood stories) were the episode's best. Stranding Hiro in the past is a recipe for tedium, but bringing Kensei along into the 21st century might not be a bad idea, given the spark of their repartee so far.

A lot happened in “Four Months Later,” but rather than zippy action, we were subjected to a lot of slow-moving exposition and fuzzy hints about overarching mysteries that won’t be resolved for months to come. Even the episode’s cliffhanger, featuring the return of the supposedly detonated Peter (Milo Ventimiglia) as an amnesiac in Ireland, was both predictable and questionable (watching Peter re-learn his powers all over again is not something I look forward to). One hopes this is merely a slow start, and that Heroes will gain momentum. At this pace, it’s not going anywhere fast.

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London-based writer David Sims is a contributor to South Dakota Dark. This is his first article for The House Next Door. For a recap of Ep. 25, "Lizards," click here.

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Links for the Day (September 26th, 2007)

1. Mean Girl: The Bionic Woman has the best villain on television? Troy Patterson at Slate thinks so.

["Her name is Sarah Corvus—who's actually the first bionic woman, an uncontrollable prototype returned to bedevil Jaime and her superior—and, as played by Battlestar Galactica's Katee Sackhoff, she's the most thrilling villain network TV has seen in some time."]

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2. Hollywood's new golden age. No thanks, Miss Blanchett, I had something to drink right before I came over.

[The other day, an admiring profile of Cate Blanchett revealed that, in order to give her new mansion as small an environmental footprint as possible, she requested that the plumbing be constructed to "allow them to drink their own waste water."]

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3. The Shamus thinks it is time to talk Oscars!

[I know, I can hear you already: "No, Shamus, no! Not the Oscars! Don’t talk about the Oscars yet: It’s only September!” But just in case the Academy’s board of governors is reading this blog (which is about as likely as me replacing Clive Owen as the new Philip Marlowe), The Shamus needs to offer some advice on one category I feel rather strongly about: the honorary Oscar for Lifetime Achievement In Film."]

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4. Clint Eastwood eyes director role in Mandela film. With Morgan Freeman as Mandela.

["Story [The Human Factor]is set right after the fall of apartheid, and after Mandela was released from a long imprisonment and became South African president. Mandela recognized the significance when South Africa was selected host of the 1995 Rugby World Cup after the team had been barred from even competing since the 1980s because of apartheid."]

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5. Two Eyes Twelve Hands 50 years later.

["In a cinema-crazy nation like India, how many films from India do people remember as truly greats? Or masterpieces that have stood the test of time? Globally? Few and far between really. But history has it that a few of the rare Indian films have been bestowed with rare honor too – that of international recognition and awards."]

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Quote of the Day:

"They gave me away as a prize once - a Win Tony Curtis For A Weekend competition. The woman who won was disappointed. She'd hoped for second prize - a new stove." - Tony Curtis


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh.
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Clip of the Day: The Shamus is right, Tony Curtis is one of the greats. In fact, Tony Curtis never misses.


_____________________________________________________
"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

Read more!

Looking up: In the Shadow of the Moon

By Todd VanDerWerff

In the Shadow of the Moon is a documentary on a topic that seems hard to screw up. The wealth of NASA imagery featured in the movie (some familiar, most rarely-seen) guarantees a fair share of mesmerizing shots. And the specific collection of talking heads (including surviving veterans of the moon missions, Neil Armstrong excluded) ensures that interesting stories will be spun. But these admissions aren't meant to diminish the movie's achievements. Director David Sington and editor David Fairhead have assembled a huge assortment of footage into one of the finer examples of documentary montage editing in recent years. Cutting from moment to moment with finesse, the filmmakers gracefully build the tale's first two-thirds from the fledgling days of the Apollo program to the first arrival of men on the moon. It's an inspiring spectacle. The mere sight of a rocket blasting off -- the letters "USA" sliding past the camera in slow motion -- taps great wells of emotion, because the image is at once familiar and alien. At the screening I attended, when one of the astronauts says, “America made bold choices then,” a little sigh rippled through the audience. Yes, we did -- and to its credit, the movie resists the urge to ask if we make similarly bold choices now.

In today's political climate, it initially seems odd to encounter a film that depicts America as positively as this one. But In the Shadow of the Moon is less pro-America than pro-the ideal of America that many of us carry in our hearts (as Bruce Springsteen might say). And it’s less beholden to the idea that only the United States could have accomplished this than many viewers might like it to be. The film's attitude is more like, "The moon has always been there; people would have gone there eventually, and those people just happened to be the men of the Apollo program."

There are missteps. Shadow glosses over the fact that all of the moon voyagers were white men, mostly disposing of the civil rights and feminist movements in an early montage (at least there’s no clumsy attempt to tie in the moon missions in with greater social freedoms). The film's early accounts of JFK's assassination and Vietnam feel obligatory, though the latter leads to the intriguing revelation that the astronauts felt some guilt over not serving as pilots in the war. The score grates and grows too majestic, and Sington is too enamored with close-ups of the elderly astronauts‘ eyes. And the movie's final leg is sadly perfunctory, trying to squeeze another five moon landings and the Apollo 13 mission into a half-hour or so. The Apollo 13 story is especially compressed; yes, we’ve all seen the Ron Howard movie, but it still would have been nice to hear more of what the survivors had to say. (The latter is the only section that suggests the project might have benefited from being a television miniseries.) But for the most part, the film manages to be inspirational but not cloying or corny.

Those seeking details of marriages crumbling beneath professional stain or firsthand accounts of the parties Tom Wolfe described in The Right Stuff will be disappointed. But the interviews offer a different sort of intimacy -- revealing, for example, just how much of a nerd Buzz Aldrin was, and how unimpressed the astronauts’ children were with their accomplishments. The interviews move easily from personal reminiscence to practical details about the process of getting to the moon to borderline profound thoughts on humanity’s place in the cosmos. The film even finds time to point out that Armstrong's status as the first man on the moon made him even more of a recluse than he was before.

The documentary begins with John F. Kennedy’s declaration that the U.S. would land a man on the moon by the end of the decade, then speeds through the research and development of the machines that would accomplish that goal. There are frightening glimpses of how badly things often went before Apollo -- especially a botched 1967 launch simulation that claimed the lives of astronauts Virgil "Gus" Grissom, Edward H. White II, and Roger B. Chafee. Then comes the film’s meatiest portion -- the story of how Armstrong, Aldrin and Michael Collins went from Earth to the moon, with recollections from the other astronauts mixed in. This section includes a lot of information that was new to me -- for instance, the fact that Apollos 11, 12 and 13 were scheduled so closely together so the U.S. would have three shots at landing on the moon in 1969.

The middle section encompasses the launch itself, the initial orbit of the Earth, the voyage to the moon and the landing on its surface. It's spellbinding. Much of the footage is familiar (Armstrong’s first moon walk, for example), but what makes this section work so well is how perfectly and majestically it builds, always darting right up to the point where it might overplay its hand, then resisting the temptation. Its most striking characteristic is its willingness to hold on seemingly mundane shots (a booster falling to Earth after decoupling from the main spacecraft) until they seem poetic. The entire movie benefits from the NASA's incidentally artistic footage. Shots of the first fires of liftoff licking the edge of the frame and then billowing across it, or of the Earth’s gentle curve sweeping around, are like abstract paintings in motion. Many of these images are deployed merely to illustrate the astronauts' comments (I especially loved Collins’ thoughts on what it was like to be alone in the spacecraft on the dark side of the moon while Armstrong and Aldrin were in sunlight). But they're so beautiful that they seem to stand for something beyond their content.

Making a film about a historical moment as recalled by the men who lived it is always a treacherous undertaking. (For an example of a documentary that overdoes it, check out Ken Burns’ The War, which is effective in small doses but inclined to overstate its case.) Shadow isn't flawless, but it’s a mostly clear-eyed look back at a time of bold choices. The best romantic fiction captures an ideal of the way we want the world to be; what's remarkable about Shadow is that, romantic as it is, it captures a moment in time when the world really was all that it hoped it could be -- when, for 15 minutes, things stopped, and everybody looked up.
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House Next Door contributor Todd VanDerWerff is the publisher of the pop culture blog South Dakota Dark.

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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Links for the Day (September 25th, 2007)

1. A guide to Philip Roth. In anticipation of Exit Ghost.

["Philip Roth is America’s greatest living novelist. His books are the most widely anticipated literary events on both sides of the Atlantic – no other writer working today mixes universal critical acclaim with such broad popularity. His latest book, Exit Ghost (his 28th), is due out next month, and is certain to be the most important of the season."]

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2. John McTiernan headed to prison.

["Director John McTiernan today was sentenced to four months in federal prison for lying to the FBI about hiring indicted private investigator Anthony Pellicano to wiretap a veteran film producer seven years ago."]

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3. GLAAD: Gay TV characters declining.

["Each year, the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) conducts a study that monitors the number of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) characters featured in scripted primetime television programs. Today, the group released the findings of its 12th annual "Where We Are on TV" study, and for the third year in a row, the number of LGBT characters is down."]

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4. Scarlett Johansson enjoys British pubs. So much so that it was causing continuity errors in The Other Boleyn Girl.

["There was some re-shooting. The problem was that Scarlett piled on weight during filming and there was concern that she looked thin in some scenes and heavier in other," the Daily Mail quoted sources as saying.]

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5. A budding film industry in Kenya?

["The dusty, lion-colored plains and snowy mountain peaks of East Africa have appeared in numerous Hollywood blockbusters. Now, Kenyans fed up with being the background for high-budget films about white people running around an African playground are telling their own stories."]

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Quote of the Day:

"Is an intelligent human being likely to be much more than a large-scale manufacturer of misunderstanding?" - Philip Roth


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): Women of All Nations.
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Clip of the Day: David Lynch on product placements.

_____________________________________________________
"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

Read more!

Monday, September 24, 2007

"On the Circuit": Go Go Tales

By Kevin B. Lee

Screened at the 45th New York Film Festival.

[Editor's Note: "On The Circuit" is a joint production of The House Next Door and Zoom In Online. For news, events, training, and other points of interest to the creative community, please visit Zoom In Online by clicking here.]

Go Go Tales opens with a stunning couplet of images that emblematize Abel Ferrara's latest foray into the sublimity of sleaze. An overhead close-up studies leisure-suited Ray Ruby (Willem Dafoe), his distant, lascivious gaze dissolving into a pan across the lap of a nubile ballerina. Only towards the end of the film do we discover that the girl is a dancer at Ray's strip joint, and that she's dressed in a tutu as part of an improbable cabaret act in which the employees showcase their true artistic talents. This fresh-faced girl, makeup smudged and pokies peeping from her leotard as she sits patiently waiting for her big break, is the image that sings out the dream of this movie: of sacred sex and profane beauty, of "having it all" in all its intangible glory.

This moment is one of only a handful between Ray and his many scantily-clad employees over the course of one long night at Ray Ruby's Paradise Lounge. For the most part he's running around avoiding having to pay them, while also trying to subdue both his landlady (a delectably bitchy Sylvia Miles) and his brother/biggest investor Johnie (a fey Matthew Modine, sporting a blonde dye job and a Pomeranian). Bereft of any funds (save for the funny money he passes around as the strip club version of arcade tokens), Ray and his trusty accountant (Roy Dotrice) have bid their redemption on thousands of dollars worth of lottery tickets, hoping to cash in on the $18 million jackpot announced that evening. And wouldn't you know, they've won -- except they've forgot where they stashed the ticket.

The impending shutdown of the club injects nominal suspense into the proceedings, but Ferrara's chief focus, parallel to Ray's, is to provide a haven, however transient, for his beloved performers to play fun and free. Clearly fashioned after John Cassavetes' The Killing of a Chinese Bookie and Woody Allen's Broadway Danny Rose, Ferrara's film (and the nightclub at its center) is a nocturnal Eden where camp expression runs wild, dialogue often melding into an Altmanesque cacophany. Everyone seems to be having fun with their characters, from rapper Pras Michel as a club chef presenting his "organic" pigs-in-a-blanket, to Bob Hoskins (as bulldogishly belligerent as ever) as the head bouncer vainly shepherding busloads of misguided Asian businessmen through the doors. Top prize is a toss-up between Miles' deranged incantation to potential new tenants Bed, Bath and Beyond (a monologue put to great use over the closing credits) and Asia Argento, whose apparently sole purpose in her limited screen time is to French kiss a rottweiler while wearing tit tassels and f-me pumps.

Expectedly, some of the improvised scenarios fall flat (a man recognizing one of the strippers as his wife feels like a worn-out premise), but this is definitely one of those films made of moments greater than the whole. I don't buy the grander claims made for Go Go Tales as an incisive view into the struggle of art versus capitalism, commerce and addiction (there just aren't enough ruminative moments for those themes to come through), but as an object lesson in cinema at play, it's got as much life as the constantly roving and redefining frames of Fabio Cianchetti's camerawork, or the dense, multifaceted nightclub soundtrack. This is a film that's about being alive and cavorting like crazy through both good times and bad. As erotically as they are shot, the many bare bottoms and breasts that flash across the screen are less titillating than reassuring, offering the fleeting promise of a space where light and flesh can dance in endless abandon.
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Kevin B. Lee is a filmmaker based in New York City. He has written for Cinema-Scope, The Chicago Reader, Senses of Cinema and Slant. His website is www.alsolikelife.com.

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Links for the Day (September 24th, 2007)


1. So, is there really Life on Mars? Film critic and long time television refusenik Mark Kermode confronts his prejudice against the telly, and finds it has been kicking the big screen's arse for some time.

[The challenge: "A few 'rules of engagement' were established, most importantly that I was not going to watch any reality TV, which I consider to be the new pornography; nor any game shows, 'talent' contests or programmes in which celebrity chefs swear at each other while people redesign their houses. News and documentaries were out, too, because I never had any problem with them in the first place. This left mainly comedy and drama, the two areas in which sensible comparisons with movies were possible."]

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2. The Outsiders: 40 Years Later. Dale Peck revisits S.E. Hinton's classic of young adult literature.

["Long credited with changing the way Y.A. fiction is written, Hinton’s novel changed the way teenagers read as well, empowering a generation to demand stories that reflected their realities."]

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3. Yad Vashem blasts Columbia over Ahmadinejad invite.

["It is unfortunate that Columbia University, an institution ostensibly dedicated to the pursuit of truth and knowledge, should choose to provide a man so divorced from reality and historical truths with a platform to spout his venomous ideology," a Yad Vashem spokesperson said.]

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4. A moment of silence, please: Marcel Marceau (1923-2007). And here's a 1974 interview he did for the Christian Science Monitor.

["You don't miss the words. It is a confrontation between life and death. Very exciting. The great problem of humanity is life and death. Every person dreams of becoming invisible one day. The want to be immortal, to survive the struggle is in the film."]

***
5. The countdown has ended for Flickhead's Buñuel-a-Thon (Sept 24th thru Sept 30th).

["All's well that Buñuels: God. No God. Sex. No sex. Food. No food. Life's about compromise, no? Yes? Or is it all a dream?"]

***
Quote of the Day:

"To make Michael Myers frightening, I had him walk like a man, not a monster." - John Carpenter


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): Christopher Lee enjoying some soup.
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Clip of the Day: 1982 discussion with John Landis, John Carpenter & David Cronenberg. The following is part one of three. Be sure to check out parts two and three as well.

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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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Sunday, September 23, 2007

"On the Circuit": Before the Devil Knows You're Dead

By Steven Boone

Screened at the 45th New York Film Festival.

[Editor's Note: "On The Circuit" is a joint production of The House Next Door and Zoom In Online. For news, events, training, and other points of interest to the creative community, please visit Zoom In Online by clicking here.]

They get mean when they get old, these great directors. Hitchcock made the merciless, despairing Frenzy at 73. Woody Allen wrote and directed the godless-universe tragedy Match Point at 70. And now 83-year-old Sidney Lumet damns us all with Before the Devil Knows You're Dead. But just like Frenzy and Match Point, Lumet's crime saga pulsates with a sense of its creator's pure joy of filmmaking. "Unimaginably pleasurable to make," Orson Welles once told Peter Bogdanovich of the former's ecstatically grim Touch of Evil. Well, even as the bodies slump over bleeding in Before the Devil Knows You're Dead, you can almost hear Lumet giggling.

Let's take a quixotic lunge at describing this flick without giving up crucial spoilers that the oncoming months of buzz, festival coverage, TV spots and trailers surely will: Hard up for cash, coke-sniffing executive Andy (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and his blue collar younger brother Hank (Ethan Hawke) plot a jewelry store heist that, yep, goes all wrong. The plan was to use no weapons, just a toy gun, but somehow a loved one, the last person in the world either of them would want to hurt, ends up critically wounded and brain dead. Still, they escape the law and suspicion -- until their father Charles (Albert Finney) starts investigating the crime on his own. It was his jewelry store, after all. Buckets of blood, sweat and tears ensue.

Before the Devil Knows You're Dead is New Jersey playwright Kelly Masterson's first original screenplay; he seems to have studied the mathematical construction and high melodrama of the great noirs before jotting down a word. Not bad. This film is satisfying in a thousand old-fashioned ways and ludicrous in others that matter more to plot/continuity accountants than to folks who like their crime stories operatic. If you're the type who couldn't get past a pivotal scene in De Palma's Scarface because, "come on, nobody can sniff that much cocaine and then shoot straight," then you'll probably have trouble with this flick. It all hinges on whether you believe these suburban Joes are desperate enough to pull even a small-time heist.

Lumet is more concerned with 1) orchestrating scenes with the Swiss timing and piercing compositions we remember from his best films (Serpico; The Verdict); 2) honoring and lavishing the dysfunctional family dramatic thread that gives the film both its momentum and its credibility problems; 3) giving some gifted actors a whole lot of red meat to chomp on. Sorry to drop yet another name, but Stephen Frears's Dirty Pretty Things was this kind of beast: Frears's love for his motley assortment of actors and of choice, flavorful moments powered through a kind of unbelievable story about immigrants selling their organs. (Look here, ain't no immigrant who looks like Audrey Tautou desperate enough to sell any organs that ain't on the outside.) Before the Devil Knows You're Dead runs with the notion that the brothers are so down and out and insecure because of their stone-hard father's emotional abuse. (Thank God Daddy-obsessed Spielberg didn't snatch up this script.) Even though the robbery is intended as a "victimless crime" in which Pop would be reimbursed by insurance, it's clear that their scheme is also a latent act of rebellion. This is the kind of subtext actors love to play with, and Lumet doesn't stand in their way.

Hoffman portrays the kind of corporate go-getter who frets over his net worth the way some men check penis length -- and for the same reasons: His luscious wife Gina (Marisa Tomei) has expensive tastes. Tomei plays a calculating wifey with a heart full of the same stuff she's digging. She really cares about Andy, despite carrying a secret that essentially makes a fool out of him and leads to a fatal confrontation. As the brothers' mom, Rosemary Harris is roughly the same bland old WASP lady she plays as Spiderman's Aunt May. Here she gets to show some physical skill in the first of the film's three crackling action-suspense scenes. Albert Finney initially plays Dad a bit frail and long past his days of being the family tyrant, until he gets consumed with solving the crime. Lumet gives him and Hoffman what could have been their "could have been a contender" moment of confession and tearful lament, but the scene is overwritten and dramatically unnecessary. A better "contender" duet happens between Hoffman and Hawke. Hanging their heads in shame at what they've done, they struggle to figure out their next move, only to dredge up more and more shameful family business. Though Hoffman's character is the cokehead, Hawke plays Hank like a hardcore dope fiend throughout. He'd be the film's standout performer if it weren't for Michael Shannon's brief scenes as a ball-busting extortionist. Shannon has a face and presence Lumet surely wishes he'd had had on tap for character roles in Dog Day Afternoon and Prince of the City.

There's not much new here, aside from Lumet's enthusiasm and simple craft. In the age of Transformers, that's enough for me.
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Steven Boone is a New York-based critic and filmmaker, a contributor to Vinyl is Heavy and the publisher of the pop culture blog Big Media Vandalism.

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Links for the Day (September 23rd, 2007)


1. "A War to Weary the Soul." House contributor Alan Sepinwall reviews Ken Burns' seven part, 16-hour documentary series The War, which premieres tonight at 8 p.m. eastern on PBS. See also: Beverly Gage in Slate.

["The problem, compared to previous Burns magnum opuses The Civil War and Baseball, is that so much of this ground is already well-traveled. For much of the audience, the Civil War existed as a few chapters in a high school textbook, and while most serious baseball fans knew of Jackie Robinson, Willie, Mickey and the Duke, they knew men like Rube Waddell and Walter Johnson as mere names on a page, if that. Meanwhile, pop culture has so thoroughly documented World War II in recent years - whether it's Tom Brokaw's Greatest Generation books and specials, the History Channel's glut of WWII docs, or the many fact-based movie follow-ups to Saving Private Ryan - that so much of The War feels like an extended series of footnotes to a story we all know by heart. During episode four's section on the D-Day invasion of Normandy, all I could think while watching black and white footage from Omaha Beach was, 'Boy, Steven Spielberg really nailed it, didn't he?' That The War is as frequently watchable as it is should be a testament to the skills of Burns, Novick and their team of researchers and editors, and to the engaging, articulate subjects they found. But while individual moments shine, the project as a whole is a chore to get through, even by Burns' prolific standards. "]

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2. "As Bills to End War Stumble in Congress, Partisan Din Swells." By Carl Hulse of The New York Times. Related: "Democrats Fall Short on Another Anti-War Bill," "Iraq Expands Blackwater Investigation," "Blackwater Denies Iraq Smuggling," and "Iraq: Blackwater Fired Unprovoked."

["In many respects, the Senate showdown was always more about political positioning than troop positioning, because virtually no one expected any of the central Democratic efforts to become law and force a change in war strategy. Even if a deployment plan or withdrawal timetable were to reach a 60-vote threshold to pass it, Mr. Bush would veto the bill and the search would be on for 67 votes to override — currently an unattainable number. But none of the proposals came close to passing. The latest Democratic effort to require a withdrawal within nine months died Friday by an anticlimactic 47 to 47, a slip in its support since it was last considered in July."]

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3. "TORONTO CRITICS' NOTEBOOK: Dylan, Who, Lou Reed Music Fims Rock; "Margot" Is Bittersweet; Lumet Thrills." By Stephen Garrett, for IndieWire.

["Todd Haynes' I'm Not There, easily one of the best and most ambitious films of the year, fragments the many chapters of the folk-rock troubadour's life and reshuffles the cards to form a fascinating meditation on identity and personal responsibility, transforming the pop prophet's intimidating, cryptic life into a deeply empathetic and surprisingly accessible journey. Amazing Journey: The Story of The Who features a wealth of archival footage and snappy interviews with the surviving bandmates and shows how a bunch of working-class lads can inspire each other to transcend enduring rock anthems and create the high pantheon category of rock opera. And Julian Schnabel's supple visual instincts perfectly preserve Lou Reed's own rock-opera concept album in Lou Reed's Berlin, a deeply satisfying record of his live performances at St. Ann's Warehouse in Brooklyn, New York, 33 years after the album's failed initial release."]

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4. "Plains Speaking." A review of Jonathan Demme's documentary about ex-president Jimmy Carter, by J.R. Jones of the Chicago Reader's film blog.

["Demme certainly chose an opportune time to follow Carter around: his Palestine book [Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid] was roundly attacked by pro-Israel partisans for daring to compare the treatment of the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip with South African apartheid, though it's evident from the movie that few of the journalists who interviewed him bothered to read much more than the title. In one sequence Carter appears on Wolf Blitzer's CNN program The Situation Room and, politely but firmly, corrects Blitzer's facts time and again."]

***


5. "Announcing Film + Faith Blog-a-thon, November 7-9, 2007." RC of Strange Culture gets religion.

["As film has carved out its own unique place in the arts, I'm asking people to delve into the religious and faith themes that have developed in the last 100 years of film."]

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Quote of the Day: "Donny was a good bowler, and a good man. He was one of us. He was a man who loved the outdoors... and bowling, and as a surfer he explored the beaches of Southern California, from La Jolla to Leo Carrillo and... up to... Pismo. He died, like so many young men of his generation, he died before his time. In your wisdom, Lord, you took him, as you took so many bright flowering young men at Khe Sanh, at Langdok, at Hill 364. These young men gave their lives. And so would Donny." -- Walter Sobchak (John Goodman) in The Big Lebowski.

***

Image of the Day (click to enlarge): "Bone Pile at Cassino," by Tom Craig.

For more art and drawings inspired by the experiences of soldiers in World War II, visit the web site for They Drew Fire, a documentary that aired on PBS in May, 2000. The painting at the top of this post is "Embarkation" (1942), by Thomas Hart Benton.

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Clip of the Day: A preview of Ken Burns' The War.

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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

Read more!

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Torchwood, Season One, Ep 3: "Ghost Machine"

By Joan O’Connell Hedman


So far, Torchwood has dished up the pilot episode (Everything Changes) and the fish-out-of-water episode (Day One). Now, with "Ghost Machine," the first "regular" episode, it gets down to the brass tacks of what happens when humans interact with alien technology. "Give me the aliens any day," doesn't just sum up this episode; it may be the theme of the entire season.

Let me get my nitpick out of the way: they're running around again. In fact, we open with a chase scene. Seconds in, I was already rolling my eyes, but I got past that initial reaction quickly. There are only two chase scenes, and the first is a nicely choreographed piece of action, particularly the bit with Gwen (Eve Myles) rolling under a descending gate, catching up with her prey only to lose him. The second chase, featuring Owen (Burn Gorman, giving an Emmy-reel performance here) and the same idiot boy, is helped considerably by the wryly self-aware score and an amusing shot of the running Owen, evocative of The Six Million Dollar Man. Gwen's frustration at having the boy get away is mitigated as Tosh (Naoko Mori), supervising via their own surveillance tech as well as CCTV, insists "You got it!" What she actually has is his jacket, and in the jacket, she finds the alien gadget that was transmitting the signal they were following. As Gwen turns the gadget around in her hand, it starts flashing lights. Seeing this, Gwen presses the button, and the present day fades away.

This episode's most significant weakness is its treatment of Gwen. From the beginning, she has been shown to be solidly sensible as well as smart and quick on her feet, but here, she does the absolutely unthinkable and presses that damned button. She could have been detonating a nuclear device for all she knew. Shouldn't the first rule of contact with alien technology be, "Don't mess with what you don't understand"? Even worse, later on the episode, she does it again, even though she had witnessed everyone else shouting at Jack not to press the button, along with his reply, "As if!" Jack knows better, but, like Kirstie Alley's Rebecca, Gwen Cooper may be too stupid to live.

Having pressed the button, she's all alone in the railway station, and a little boy carrying a suitcase and a teddy bear wanders out of a tunnel, clearly lost and alone. From his clothing we can see that he's from the past, and that's confirmed when we get a close-up of a tag that has been tied to his jacket, naming him and his destination. Gwen, stricken by the boy's situation, tries to talk to him, but it seems he can't hear her; the vision fades, and she's back to reality. That scene gave me chills, and I don’t think it's just because I'm the mother of an eight-year-old. It was too real, even while we knew it was something that had happened long ago. I imagine that scenes like these, calling to mind the thoroughness with which the Blitz tore at the fabric of British life, are even more powerful in the UK. The idea of having to send children away from home to protect them from bombing raids should evoke intense feelings in anyone.

As badly as Torchwood stumbled with Gwen in this episode, the ghost memory scenes are fantastically written and shot. Burn Gorman owns this episode, as Owen witnesses a scene leading up to a 1963 rape and murder. Descriptions can hardly do justice to the atmospheric dread and terror the scene evokes. Owen is paralyzed by the girl’s fear just as Gwen was overcome by the little boy’s loneliness. And just as Gwen seeks out the boy (handily located by Owen in the phone book), Owen is driven to find the rapist/murderer and see what has become of him. Of course, he’s in the phone book, too.

So many scenes are well-written that I don’t know what to make of the lapses they wrote into Gwen’s character. The follow-up interviews are barely less intense than the ghost memory scenes. Gwen finds the little boy, an old man now, who tells his story in just a few sentences – how he lost everything in the war when he came to Wales, and so he never left. There may be people who can hear such stories and be bored by them; such people are heartless. But Owen's interview of Ed Morgan (Gareth Thomas), the rapist/murderer, was so fraught with menace and the threat of violence – from both men – that I found I was holding my breath.

All that intensity is balanced by a hysterical montage of the field team’s interviews as they try to locate the young man who had the gadget, Bernie Harris (Ben McKay). Not one of Bernie's friends or neighbors has anything redeeming to say about him, including his Mum. (My favorite: "I wouldn't piss on him if he was on fire.") Another montage scene has Captain Jack (John Barrowman) training Gwen on weapons. Even though she was a police constable, she never had a gun because she was on the beat, as nonsensical as that may seem to Americans. The array of weapons laid out is intimidating, but Jack is encouraging, although his training technique has no respect for the concept of personal space. The montage starts out fairly realistic but ends with Gwen pumping away with a gun in each hand; we can only hope that those ridiculous John Woo moves will go out of style eventually.

The training scene had an intimacy that played well; Gwen and Jack have chemistry. But I still don't feel that Jack has earned that intimacy from Gwen; he just takes it for granted. And Gwen goes along with it up to a point, almost as if she's hypnotized by it, until she shakes herself awake and realizes what she's doing. Jack is lonely, and Gwen has affected him in an unusual way; why else would he share his secrets with her? It's almost as if Jack doesn't know what to do with his own feelings. He's not used to having feelings, and he doesn't have relationships as much as encounters; up till now, he has been OK with that. But I got the feeling that the late-night training session was scheduled partly out of Gwen's need to know how to shoot and partly out of Jack's loneliness and desire to spend more time alone with Gwen. I liked that we saw a more emotional Jack this time around, particularly when he let his annoyance show when the field team failed to find Bernie. His response underscored that this isn't Mystery, Inc; Torchwood is a professional organization with a job to do and no excuse for not getting it done.

Gwen has some great scenes with Rhys (Kai Owen), particularly one in which she snuck the ghost machine home and is using it to see all the happy memories inhabiting her apartment. She loves Rhys and wants to stay with him, but she is also drawn to Jack, and eventually she will have to choose between them. (Please, for those of you who've seen the rest of the season, no spoilers!) It's telling that Gwen turns to Jack for comfort in the final moments of the episode, but that scene somehow doesn't play as intimately as the training scene did. There, the sexual element was unmistakable; here, Gwen is looking to Jack as a friend and mentor, and he responds that way. She's overwhelmed by all these events, and for the first time, we glimpse that Jack does love humanity after all, in spite of the horrors we perpetrate.

"Ghost Machine" is a mature investigation of human emotions facilitated by a piece of alien technology. It was never about the machine, it was always about what the machine revealed about us. Where do we put our energy, what impressions do we leave on the world? Small-time sleazebags like Bernie and monsters like Ed Morgan are part of humanity, not the whole. Gwen has to learn to live with that; so do we all.

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Joan O'Connell Hedman's first sci-fi series obsession was Farscape. In addition to writing a semi-regular food column, Joan blogs at Oasis of Sanity. This article's screencaps are from The Institute, a Torchwood fan site.

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Doctor Who, Season Three, Ep. 11: "Utopia"

By Ross RuedigerIf “Blink” was the perfect standalone episode of Doctor Who, then “Utopia” is just the opposite. To get what’s going on here, one must be well versed in the lore of the new series, otherwise the entire affair will seem a jumbled mess. Familiarity with the old series is either a huge bonus or a detriment, depending on how willing you are to accept some bold Who revisionism. “Utopia” is also the unbilled Part One of Season Three’s three-part finale. Get onboard now or forego watching the rest of the season until DVD.

The Doctor: “You two! We’re at the end of universe, right? Right at the edge of knowledge itself and you’re busy…blogging!”

The pre-credits sequence is so ridiculously over the top, one wonders if the rest of the episode is going to be something to be taken even remotely seriously. The TARDIS returns to Cardiff to refuel at the Rift. A figure outside runs toward the time machine. Martha (Freema Agyemen) asks the Doctor (David Tennant) about the earthquake in Cardiff a few years ago and wonders if he had anything to do with it. He references Season One’s “Boom Town”:

The Doctor: “Bit of trouble with the Slitheen. A long time ago -- a lifetime. I was a different man back then.”

The running man is revealed to be none other than Captain Jack Harkness (John Barrowman). He screams at the TARDIS as well as to the operator inside. The Doctor looks at the TARDIS scanner and upon seeing Jack oddly decides it’s time to get outta Dodge. No time for reunions here! But Jack’s been waiting a looong time for this chance and rather than give up, he jumps directly onto the TARDIS exterior, clinging to it as if for dear life. Inside the controls explode and the machine kicks into overdrive, heading for the furthest point in time it can reach, the year 100 trillion -- a silly number that punctuates the improbability of the sequence, as does the Doctor’s assertion that they’re headed for “the end of the universe”. As if all that isn’t enough, Jack’s still hanging onto the TARDIS as it makes its speedy getaway through the time/space vortex.

On the planet Malcassairo some mutant rejects from The Road Warrior are continually at odds with the remnants of the human race. There is a third species present in the form of one individual, Chantho (Chipo Chung) – an insectlike alien female who is the sole survivor of Malcassairo’s indigenous population. Chantho is the assistant to Professor Yana (Derek Jacobi), an addled, grandfatherly scientist who suffers from a periodic pounding of the head. He works to aid the humans in reaching Utopia via a rocket -- although exactly where or what Utopia is, is about as nebulous as its name implies. Yana and Chantho don’t seem entirely certain this pipe dream is ever gonna happen, but in the interest of keeping morale high amongst a race that’s nearly extinct, they perpetuate the notion of ongoing success.

The TARDIS arrives on Malcassairo and upon the Doctor and Martha exiting the ship, they see Jack laying on the ground, seemingly next door to death. The Doctor is again curiously non-plussed and about all he can offer up to Jack’s inert form is a half-hearted utterance of his stock apology, “I’m sorry”. Jack springs back to life, healthy as a horse and immediately flirting with Martha. There’s a swinging of dicks between the two men.

Jack: (suspiciously) “Doctor?”
The Doctor: “Captain.”
Jack: “Good to see you.”
The Doctor: “And you. Same as ever – although…have you had work done?”
Jack: “You can talk!”

If you’ve been watching Torchwood, Jack’s inability to die will come as no surprise. If you’re strictly a Who viewer, writer Russell T Davies brings you up to speed in a matter of minutes as the trio carry on a lively conversation covering everything from Jack’s escape from the Game Station, his immortality, how he got to present-day Earth and gratuitous Rose Tyler chit-chat (much to the annoyance of Martha, who doesn’t care for the revelation that she was blond). After a run-in with the vicious mutants, the trio eventually ends up at the compound safeguarding the humans. Professor Yana is overjoyed to meet the Doctor, as perhaps this man of science can help him with the Utopia project. Martha finds a kindred spirit in Chantho (a very Rose Tyler thing to do) and Jack sticks his fingers in all the pies (ahem…).

Jack: “So what about those things outside – the Beastie Boys. What are they?”
Yana: “We call them the Futurekind, which is a myth in itself, but it’s feared they are what we will become…unless we reach Utopia.”
The Doctor: “And Utopia is?”
Yana: “Well every human knows of Utopia! Where have you been?”
The Doctor: “I'm a bit of a hermit.”
Yana: “A hermit? With friends?”
The Doctor: “Hermits United. We meet up every ten years and swap stories about caves. It's good fun -- for a hermit.”

There’s an amount of skillfully written and played technobabble that goes on for a good fifteen minutes or so as the ins and outs and complexities and snafus of Utopia are explained and explored. The scene between Jack and the Doctor discussing the significance of Jack’s immortality and how Rose was responsible for it is one of the great Doctor Who moments because it weaves together numerous dangling threads from both Who & Torchwood and says so much about the ideology of Davies’ Whoniverse. Their conversation could only exist and make sense within the confines of this show.

Throughout the escalating madness, Yana’s brain farts become increasingly intense…and upon first seeing the blue police box, his internalized reaction indicates that a certain bodily excrement is about to hit a certain spinning device designed to facilitate the movement of air. The tension builds as words like TARDIS and Dalek have debilitating effects on Yana. The Utopia project seems to be gaining a positive momentum when all of a sudden Davies plays a card I never saw coming, even though -- for an old school fan like me -- everything else was plainly written on the wall: Yana possesses a fob watch identical to the one used by the Doctor to rewrite his biology in “Human Nature” -- a watch Yana’s owned his entire life yet has never opened.

“Utopia” shifts into “Holy Shit!” mode and the entire affair is an adrenaline rush. Martha runs to tell the Doctor about the watch. He snaps and tears into her, basically saying, “Don’t fuck with me, lady!” The Doctor is sideswiped by the name “Yana” and recalls the final words of the Face of Boe from “Gridlock”: You Are Not Alone. (Back when that scene played it had a pedestrian vibe, but here it is redeemed.) As Yana opens the watch, the transformation begins and a Time Lord is reborn: The Master.

If new Who is all you know, then the Master as a character means nothing to you, although the fact that he’s a Time Lord should be a big payoff. He’s the Moriarty to the Doctor’s Sherlock Holmes and they’ve periodically locked horns over the years since the character was first introduced in 1971’s “Terror of the Autons”. Jacobi’s transformation into pure evil is chilling. He proceeds to shut down the compound’s defenses allowing the Futurekind to attack, sabotage the Utopia project, and electrocute a terrified Chantho when she pulls a gun on him.

The Master: “Now I can say I was provoked! Did you never think all those years standing beside me to ask about that watch? Never!? Did you never once think -- not ever -- that you could set me free?”
Chantho: (trembling) “Chan. I’m sorry. Tho. Chan. I’m so sorry--”
The Master: “And you, with your Chan and your Tho driving me insane!”


But Chantho summons up enough energy before dying to put an end to this horrible creature who looks exactly like the man she’d secretly loved for so many years. The Doctor, Jack and Martha enter as the dying Master jumps inside the TARDIS -- which he locks from the inside! (The simplicity of this never before seen mechanism is a fanboy’s wet dream.) The Doctor pleads from outside, begging his enemy for a meeting of minds. Inside, the Master regenerates -- like any sensible dying Time Lord would do -- and is reborn yet again into a much younger, far more energetic Time Lord played by John Simm (Life on Mars). He taunts the Doctor, steals the TARDIS and whisks himself away leaving the trio stranded to face the oncoming threat of the Futurekind.

For an episode that initially looked to be the filler before the season finale, “Utopia” delivers some stellar goods.

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Ross Ruediger is a San Antonio-based critic and columnist, a contributor to The House Next Door, and publisher of The Rued Morgue.

NEXT WEEK: The identity of the mysterious Harold Saxon is finally revealed (although it doesn’t take rocket science to figure it out at this point) in “The Sound of Drums”.

Classic Who DVD Recommendation of the Week: I’ve quietly recommended Master stories numerous times in this season’s recap series. Now check out “Survival”, which was actually the last story of the classic series. It featured the Master as well as evil cat people long before “New Earth” came along.

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"On the Circuit": Pitcher of Colored Light & At Sea

By Kevin B. Lee

Screened at the 45th New York Film Festival.

[Editor's Note: "On The Circuit" is a joint production of The House Next Door and Zoom In Online. For news, events, training, and other points of interest to the creative community, please visit Zoom In Online by clicking here.]

Of the many films worth anticipating in the New York Film Festival's eleventh annual Views from the Avant-Garde (including new works by Ernie Gehr, Ken Jacobs and Peggy Ahwesh), two that can already be considered highlights come from veteran artists Robert Beavers and Peter Hutton. Beavers' Pitcher of Colored Light is publicly programmed with a posthumous work by Beavers' longtime partner Gregory Markopoulos, but it made for a complementary pairing with Hutton's hour-long At Sea when the two played together at a festival press screening. While one film is shot within the safe confines of a single home and the other depicts a maritime odyssey with epic views of endless ocean, both employ vivid palettes of light and color to evoke feelings of adventurous movement through time and space, underscored by a creeping sense of mortality.

Beavers' 23-minute film, a steady but seemingly unstructured series of pans, close-ups, and panning close-ups across a variety of surfaces and objects in his aging mother's home, feels like Proust on celluloid. The loving close-ups suggest the perspective of a child when everything inside one's house seems big -- certainly bigger than one's gaze or attention span. The nearly incessant fade-outs and fade-ins to other objects speak to this viewpoint, but eventually some of these household images return, their presence as affirming as pillars or pillows. There are hints of themes and patterns -- the light of dawn breaking over a ceramic rooster; the purple of a shirt being ironed matching violets in the garden; but any overriding logic is supplanted by the persistence of the spaces and objects, first and foremost, as things in themselves.

Only gradually does one realize the passing of seasons, that a full year is being chronicled. Light itself is always shifting, teasing the camera to follow its diagonal paths through domestic interiors (this film deserves the title Secret Sunshine moreso than Lee Chang-dong's feature). Whether it was intended to be seen as such, I'm inclined to describe this film as an approximation of a pre-cognizant child's evolving experience of home; if so, the recurring close-ups that linger on the silver hair and deeply wrinkled countenance of Beaver's mother add a layer of foreboding to this nostalgic cavalcade.

Hutton's At Sea is itself a reflection on the artist's background as a merchant seaman, fixated as it is with the life cycle of a merchant ship. Hutton filmed a South Korean shipyard where a giant merchant vessel is assembled and launched, as well as a desolate beach in Bangladesh where another ship is disassembled for scrap metal. One might dub the results Au Hasard Boatazar, as Hutton shares some of Bresson's project of searching for the life and pathos found in the non-human. Not unlike Bresson's donkey, Hutton's ships remain objects perpetually being acted upon: whether by skillful Korean welders firing away at the creation that dwarfs them by stories; by the relentless beating of rain and waves against a freighter as it carries its cargo around the world; or by the crude hacking, against a rusted hull, of South Asians seeking scrap metal.

Like Beavers, Hutton's camera can never capture the full scale of his spaces; these mega-freighters stretch beyond the frame, inducing a frightening majesty reminiscent of Flaherty's oil rig in Louisiana Story. Their curved red hulls covered with scaffolding grids create complex patterns of geometry and color.
Remarkably, Hutton's camera never moves; and when it is planted aboard the ship, the world seems to move around it, inflicting torrents of punishment upon this sturdy but inevitably doomed vessel. By the end of the film, the ship is reduced to a faraway pile of steel on a beach that seems soaked in oil and rust, while Bangladeshi laborers joyfully sidle up to the camera and smile unabashedly, the first close-ups of any kind in the film. Self-reflexive nods to the camera in its act of filming may be played out as an aesthetic trope, but in this instance Hutton leaves us with a tense, unresolved relationship between mankind, its monstrously magnificent creations, and the ever-weary environment.

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Kevin B. Lee is a filmmaker based in New York City. He has written for Cinema-Scope, The Chicago Reader, Senses of Cinema and Slant. His website is www.alsolikelife.com.

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Links for the Day (September 22nd, 2007)


1. Wes Anderson AT&T Television Commercials. A series of commercials about all over the place. (hat tip Ryland Walker Knight)

["The Rushmore director is back making some tv spots for AT&T which are 'designed to highlight how AT&T helps connect people to their worlds wherever they live and work.'"]

***
2. Good viewing up north. North of Jerusalem, that is, at the 23rd Haifa Film Festival.

["Israelis have had so many arts festivals to choose among in recent months, but the Haifa International Film Festival remains one of the most artistically adventurous and interesting."]

***
3. Sex Pistol savages 'dead carcass' Sting. Johny Rotten casts disparaging comments on a fellow aging musician. Whatever happened to courtesy?

["Referring to Sting as 'Stink,' he said of the reformed Police: 'That really is a reformation isn't it? But honestly that's like soggy old dead carcasses.'"]

***
4. Eyeing up a piece of paradise. Mark Schilling reviews Naoko Ogigami's latest, Megane.

["Ogigami wisely resisted the temptation to make "Kamome Shokudo 2," but her followup, Megane (Glasses), has many of the elements that made Kamome a success, including Kobayashi and Motai. This same-but-different formula is not new — the "Road" films of Bob Hope and Bing Crosby used it as well — but it is unusual for the Japanese film industry, which prefers safe sequels over chancy creative tangents."]

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5. Good, Bad or Ugly: A Legend Shrouded in Gunsmoke Remains Hazy. By the suggestion of the The Shamus, here's Manohla Dargis' of the new Jesse James film.

["Bad man, poor man, bushwhacker, thief, James was as American as apple pie and the Confederate flag he wrapped himself in like an excuse. That bard of the great unwashed, Woody Guthrie, compared him to Robin Hood, and decades later Bruce Springsteen kept the fires burning, singing about a homespun legend as seductive as it is false."]

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Quote of the Day:

"I have been hunted for twenty-one years. I have literally lived in the saddle. I have never known a day of perfect peace." - Frank James


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): The real Jesse James.
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Clip of the Day: John Lee Hooker is bad like Jesse James

_____________________________________________________
"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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A Disney movie for beatific hippies: Sean Penn's Into the Wild

By N.P. Thompson

In the opening segments of Sean Penn’s version of Into the Wild, a mother’s nightmare of her missing son segues to a freight train curving through crisp Alaskan scenery, its long, metal body weaving around snow-capped mountainsides. It’s an impressive beginning. Neither in the dream nor in the boxcars do we get a full-on glimpse of the son, Christopher McCandless (played by Emile Hirsch). He may be there, in the margins or the shadows, or we may only imagine that we see him in our peripheral vision. Penn, however, stretches this distancing effect out of shape. The director chooses an aerial shot of a pick-up truck dropping McCandless at the edge of a field as the 24-year-old former college Republican (from Emory University) sets off on what, we all know, was a fatal excursion. We hear the voices of McCandless and the driver; the tires leave straight parallel snow tracks on the frame’s outermost left. Still, Penn keeps Hirsch’s face from us, filming him from the back, then alighting on a wide vista of the Denali range as the northern peaks might loom in an adventurer’s eye.

Finally, Penn shows us Hirsch. As Eddie Vedder’s gravelly baritone cascades over the soundtrack, we’re shown Hirsch/McCandless’s bearded visage in close-up. Penn lights the young actor in a snowy aureole that felt like mythologizing to me — the wrong kind of mythologizing. Hirsch looks the part of a determined dreamer, yet moments into McCandless’s discovery of the abandoned Fairbanks Transit bus that was to be his home base in the wilderness, as well as his eventual deathbed, Penn has the boy in the driver’s seat conducting imaginary conversations. And unfortunately, all two hours and twenty minutes of this Into the Wild is just as false. Penn keeps McCandless at a distance because the filmmaker has no idea how to approach his subject. The director, lacking empathy with McCandless’s motivations, shovels phoniness on top of phoniness in one poorly staged scene after another.

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To read the review, click here. House contributor N.P. Thompson writes about movies, books and art for a variety of print and online outlets, and is the publisher of Movies Into Film.

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Friday, September 21, 2007

Links for the Day (September 21st, 2007)


1. One from the Heart: Abel Ferrara’s Go Go Tales. Cinemascope's Dennis Lim interviews the filmaker.

["...No, no, no, we were going for the jokes. There’s a story about the Marx Brothers—how they’d go on tour, start in Providence or New Haven or New York, and go across the country with the writers in the theatre and see if they could get two laughs a minute, a guaranteed two, like, ha ha ha laughs a minute. And they kept writing and writing across the whole country, and when they got to L.A. they’d shoot it. And we could do that kind of thing with Go Go Tales because it’s real time. We could get those actors and perform it as a Wooster Group special."]

***
2. Sight & Sound's 75 Hidden Gems: Deep End - Filmbrain tracks down one of the almost lost, almost forgotten films on the Sight & Sound list.

["My familiarity with Skolimowski is limited to his work as a screenwriter (Knife in the Water), and one film -- the also-forgotten Moonlighting from 1982, though I've been trying to locate his adaptation of Nabokov's King, Queen, Knave for years.

"
Deep End, his second English language film, is a seedy psychosexual thriller set in London's East End."]

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3. Rod Stewart bans daughter from modeling undieworld. Modeling underwear is in the genes.

["Rod Stewart has had a lot in common with the underwear brand Ultimo recently.

A wife, an ex-wife and a daughter, to be precise.

But when the 62-year-old rock veteran discovered another Stewart has been signed up to model for the brand, he was far from pleased."
]

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4. Owen Wilson comedy role is recast. Fellow Texan, Matthew McConaughey, to assume Wilson's part in Tropic Thunder.

["Ben Stiller directs and stars in the film, about a group of actors making a big-budget war movie, who are forced to become the characters they play."]

***
5. Wherefore art thou, Satyajit Ray? Dennis Cozzalio notices an omission on the foreign film list. He also provides his twenty-five favorites.

["Many thanks to Mr. Copeland, and to everyone who participated, for words well written, films well evoked and a job well done.

For what it’s worth, here’s a list of my final 25 picks. I have left them in the order in which I ranked them, but I admit to a certain top loading of my favorites into the first 10 choices in a bald-faced attempt to bolster their standing on the final list."
]

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Quote of the Day:

"Too bad that all the people who really know how to run the country are busy driving taxi cabs and cutting hair." - George Burns on politics


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): The Politician by John Keyse Sherwin (1822)
***

Clip of the Day: A Monty Python apology


_____________________________________________________
"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

Read more!

Thursday, September 20, 2007

The Landlord: Whose dream is it, anyway?

By Steven Boone


How desperate was Hollywood in 1970? It let Hal Ashby make The Landlord, a crazed, profane racial satire written by negroes.

It was the dawn of the New Hollywood. Studios that had failed to pull Americans away from their televisions with colossal epics like Cleopatra targeted the youth market with relatively cheap flicks by new filmmakers. Ashby, the Oscar-nominated editor of In the Heat of the Night, must have seemed like a safe bet, even after he grew a long, shaggy beard and expressed hippie sympathies. The support of Ashby's commercially successful mentor, Night director Norman Jewison -- who signed on as the film's producer -- surely helped.

Little did United Artists know. Thirty-seven years on, The Landlord is still shocking, but not because it's salacious or cynical. The film is shocking because of how tenderly and patiently Ashby attends to certain transgressive moments while asserting that in a sane, just world, they wouldn't be taboo at all.

The film starts off in rapid-fire, farcical mode as 29-year old Elgar Enders (Beau Bridges) contemplates finally leaving his rich parents' home to purchase one of his own. Ashby cuts between Elgar's future residence, a rundown Park Slope brownstone inhabited by poor black folks, and Elgar's musings on this matter as he plays squash and relaxes in his parents' backyard. Elgar wants to renovate the building and evict the rent-delinquent tenants, but something else happens: He falls in love with them. Like Ashby's second film, Harold and Maude, The Landlord is about a spoiled white boy who breaks free of his stifling family by pursuing a forbidden love. In this case, his new love is The Black Community, in all its ragged beauty.

It definitely ain't love at first sight. Beyond clueless in his preppie gear and plush convertible full of floral arrangements, Elgar arrives at his new home to a welcoming committee of shit-talking Brothers who send him running down the street shrieking. A chain-smoking little kid, a black militant professor, a shotgun-toting mama, and a crazy activist Copey (Louis Gossett, Jr.) are among the tenants who give him near-constant grief. Back at the Enders' estate, Elgar's family resists the idea of his housing blacks in a Park Slope "slum." His casually racist mother (Lee Grant) and arch-conservative father (Walter Brooke) treat his real estate ambitions as just another childish diversion. Even his hippie sister (Susan Anspach), who cheers him on, says she couldn't "stomach" dealing with blacks herself. Elgar's brother (Will McKenzie) and future brother-in-law (Robert Klein) are just passive and aloof. In each case, the family member makes his or her feelings known in broad, theatrical, screwball dialog. Elgar gets so fed up with them during dinner one night that he announces to his sister's fiance that the Enders are octaroons. All hell breaks loose.

The first half of The Landlord cuts between these two surrealistic cartoon worlds--one black, one white-- before getting down to square business. Raucous ensemble scenes give way to some lovely duets: Elgar befriending and flirting with the activist's loopy, frustrated wife Francine (the amazing Diana Sands); a series of arguments with his mother that reveal more emotional complexity in their relationship; Elgar winning over a standoffish mulatto club dancer (Marki Bey) with his boyish sincerity; Mrs. Enders and the shotgun-carrying tenant, Marge (a sly, luminous Pearl Bailey) drinking and laughing together in Marge's cramped apartment. Hardcore realism comes crashing in when when Copey gets some bad news that sends him on a rampage-turned-nervous breakdown. Gossett takes the film to a haunted place in a confused, self-hating black man's heart that I haven't seen since the end of August Wilson's stage masterpiece Ma Rainey's Black Bottom. It tore me up.

Such scenes make one miss the unpredictable way people fought, bonded, grieved and made love in the great '70s films. Ashby allows the most important interactions to occur in gorgeous stretches of what feels like real time. When Elgar and Francine find themselves alone in her apartment, struggling with their attraction for each other, Ashby lets the moment draw long, sensuous breaths. Has any mainstream American film before or since let an honest moment like this pass between black and white characters of opposite genders? In Monster's Ball, Black Snake Moan and Jungle Fever, scenes of mixed-race intimacy are footnoted by history, politics, symbolism, paranoia and mutual resentment; you can sense the filmmakers crowding the room, not even as voyeurs (that could be hot), but as sober lecturers. Here, though, Ashby stops time, stops the world, to let Francine be a woman and Elgar be a man. His cinematographer, Gordon Willis, heightens the poetry with a wash of red lamp light that paints Elgar and Francine roughly the same color.

Oh, man, Gordon Willis. Even though The Godfather series, Alan J. Pakula thrillers and Woody Allen flicks were still in his future, The Landlord, with its use of naturalistic lighting and underexposure, might be his wildest adventure. Rooms and faces have an "unlit," documentary feel, but what modest light there is lends a warmth and ruminative feeling in perfect step with Ashby's stealth seriousness. Impenetrable shadows fall in precisely jagged sheets, swallowing up figures like tar pools. In the Enders estate scenes, Willis goes bright and flat, but the brownstone interiors are visual Soul.

What saves all of this fine craftsmanship from becoming Dances with Negroes (a white man's extended vacation in an exotic, therapeutic culture) is the rich, searching material it serves. Kristin Davis, a black woman, created the Elgar Enders character in her novel The Landlord. The visionary black filmmaker Bill Gunn (Ganja and Hess) wrote the screenplay adaptation. So we get a sheltered white male character's impressions of black folk as imagined by a black female novelist and mixed-race filmmaking team. What an exquisite filter system.

With so many brilliant collaborators and points of view, whose movie--whose dream--is it anyway? Ashby seems to say it's all of ours. At the film's heart is baby-faced Bridges, playing Elgar as a sensitive boy through-and-through. He's foolish, impulsive and painfully ignorant, but that doesn't stop him from diving into the eye of the storm to see what it's all about. He might get laughed at, beat up, ostracized, but his emotional generosity and curiosity about other human beings is unstoppable; it makes him fearless. For this and a thousand other reasons, The Landlord now looks like a more ambitious and audacious debut film than Citizen Kane. You heard me right.
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The Landlord runs through Tuesday, September 25 at Film Forum in New York City. Steven Boone is a New York-based critic and filmmaker, a contributor to Vinyl is Heavy and the publisher of the pop culture blog Big Media Vandalism.

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Links for the Day (September 20th, 2007)


1. "Quentin Tarantino's Death Proof: The Full Cut." House contributor Rob Humanick brings the new DVD into The Projection Booth.

["A word of warning: do not attempt to drive after watching this film. Especially if you're like me, in that you can't miss the transition of a street light from yellow to red by half a second without getting nabbed by the boys in blue. The vehicular thrumming of Death Proof is far too seductive a call to refuse once you're out in the parking lot, and if you're not careful, the pedal's to the metal before you've even realized it. I've done it twice so far, trust me."]

***
2. "Videocam of the Dead." More on Romero's back-to-basics dead film, from Nathan Lee at The Village Voice.

[Diary was inspired, Romero explains, by a desire to address not the terrors of modern life, but the relentless impulse to record them. "Everything's so fucked," runs the key line of dialogue, "there's nothing left to do but record it."]

***
3. "Ken Burns' The War as seen by teenagers." A panel of teens reacts to the WWII documentary. The War premieres Sunday, September 23rd on PBS.

["When the various veterans describe rushing to enlist, even lying about their age to make the cut, these teens can't relate to it, nor the draft. Alex and his family have discussed what would happen if a draft were implemented today. 'My mother wouldn't let it happen,' he says. 'We would move to Canada first.' The group also speculates what would happen if women were drafted in today's society. Women keep society together during wartime, says Soraya. 'The family and therefore the whole society would fall apart.'"]

***
4. "Critics Everywhere Agree: These Were the Stinkers of Summer." The Washington Post's Williams Booth recounts the summer duds.

["'Twas the most lucrative season ever for Hollywood, with more than $4 billion in gross domestic ticket sales. Yet it was also a summer for some serious slop. So let's honor the low, the rank and the really not good. Ladies and gentlemen, we bring you the Ten Worst Summer Movies of 2007, as scientifically tabulated by the review-aggregating Web site Rotten Tomatoes."]

***
5. "Air America talk show host claims Stephen Colbert stole his joke." Unfortunately, there were no witnesses.

["In both jokes, Uygur and Colbert suggest that the Republican presidential candidates sounded like Klingons from Star Trek while speaking about the value of honor."]

Upon reviewing the evidence, it looks like Colbert may have taken Uygur's comparison and added some "funny" to it.

***

Quote of the Day:
"As all foreign authors know, Hollywood likes to have first bite at anyone who is 'new' and even moderately successful, and at twelve-thirty I was having lunch in the Brown Derby with a producer who wanted to make a fortune out of me in exchange for a glass of water and a crust of bread. I was treated to the whole smart rag-bag of show-biz pressure talk in between Eggs Benedict and those eighty proof dry martinis that anaesthetize the uvula." - Ian Fleming from his travelogue Thrilling Cities, Los Angeles & Las Vegas.


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): Feline infinity.
***

Clip of the Day: The Ritz Brothers doing their thing.

_____________________________________________________
"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

Read more!

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

"On the Circuit": The Darjeeling Limited

By Keith Uhlich

Screened at the 45th New York Film Festival.

[Editor's Note: "On The Circuit" is a joint production of The House Next Door and Zoom In Online. For news, events, training, and other points of interest to the creative community, please visit Zoom In Online by clicking here.]

The whispering winds suggest that Wes Anderson's new feature, The Darjeeling Limited, will screen commercially without its accompanying prologue short, Hotel Chevalier. If true, an unfortunate turn of events, and not just because it would deny prospective audiences the sight of a lithe and lustrous Natalie Portman reclining nude on a dresser while Peter Sarstedt croons, from the BOSE™-accentuated depths of an iPod, "Where Do You Go To (My Lovely)". Moreso, the Paris-set Hotel Chevalier is a crucial piece of Anderson's latest puzzle, adding a few telling shades to the character of Jack Whitman (Jason Schwartzman) -- one of a trio of estranged brothers who undertake a "spiritually healing" train journey across India -- while also underscoring Anderson's cinephilic statement of intent. Expanding on the journeys undertaken by Jonathan Demme and Brian De Palma to the City of Lights (via their nouvelle vague-inspired efforts The Truth About Charlie and Femme Fatale), Anderson travels to Paris for both artistic inspiration and historical engagement: a multipurpose stopover on the road to Rajasthan.

India has drawn many a Gallic cineaste, from Jean Renoir (The River) to Louis Malle (Phantom India and Calcutta), and Anderson pays implicit tribute to his precursors and their probing, sometimes problematic curiosity (a main feature cameo by New Wave benefactor Barbet Schroeder brings the underlying theme -- at what point does the filmmaker's inquisitive presence become an intrusive one? -- to the fore). Indeed, The Darjeeling Limited is a highly flawed personal vision, containing what the Screenwriter 101's among us would deem various and sundry "third act problems." For a film obsessed (rightly so) with trinities and with the collective expression of a higher, holy purpose, The Darjeeling Limited often plays like a stubbornly earthbound contraption, a sputtering locomotive carrying half-formed ideas to a final destination bereft of necessary transcendence. That the film nonetheless contains some of Anderson's best work is hardly surprising -- he's nothing if not engaged with each and every frame of his symmetry-besotted world of widescreen.

The Bill-Murray-misses-the-train opener, scored to The Kinks' "This Time Tomorrow" (the first of three brothers Davies cues), is one for the ages, a hilarious mount of slo-mo frustration that sees object-obsessed middle brother Peter Whitman (Adrien Brody) emerging from the literal shadow of Murray's pressed-suit surrogate father. The trio's mid-film visit to an Indian village begets a morbid tonal shift that Anderson handles with a master's deftness -- tempting to call this section (encompassing both a funeral and a flashback) the best thing he's ever done. Similar kudos to the sequence where eldest brother Francis Whitman (Owen Wilson) removes the bloodied set of bandages he brandishes throughout as a passive-aggressive badge of honor -- external wounds and internal ones were seldom so profoundly intertwined.

And yet The Darjeeling Limited never coheres in the ways these individual moments suggest it will. The brothers' ultimate goal -- to seek out their runaway mother (Anjelica Huston, making like Sister Clodagh in Black Narcissus) -- feels like a perfunctory, tacked-on afterthought, especially in light of the film's intensely affecting middle section. This time out, Anderson's desire for structural equipoise ill-serves his themes of reconciliation and redemption; thus do The Darjeeling Limited's closing images play as little more than the self-conscious metaphors of a heavy-handed literalist. Losing one's emotional/actual baggage never came off with such resounding indifference.
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Keith Uhlich is co-editor of The House Next Door and a contributor to various print and online publications.

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Links for the Day (September 19th, 2007)


1. The Ray Memorial 100. Ed Copeland has released the list of top 100 foreign films, with 22 that did not make it.

["174 ballots were submitted to determine this list. I tried to use as many different people who sent quotes as possible. For most of the balloting, the top two films seemed to trade the lead with each new ballot, but in the final weekend, the one that finished No. 1 took off. (I swear it's not a fix.)"]

***
2. G. I wonder why the revamp, Joe. Mark Steyn on the upcoming G.I. Joe film and the depiction of the U.S. military in Hollywood.

["So much for my two childhood memories: 1) he's [G.I. Joe] no longer anything to do with the U.S. military; and 2) the guys with no private parts are the execs at Paramount and Hasbro who concluded that an American serviceman would be too tough a sell in the global marketplace."]

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3. Red Carpet Meets Harsh War.

["Are audiences ready for the steady stream of movies and documentaries that bring a faraway war very close?"]

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4. Sitcom savior?Alan Sepinwall on Back To You.

["Creators Christopher Lloyd and Steven Levitan and director James Burrows all worked with Grammer on Frasier, a series that at its best found its laughs in behavior first, clever wordplay second, insult humor third. Back To You has gotten that order backwards..."]

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5. Joining the Enterprise crew: Zoe Saldana to play Uhura. From Variety (hat tip FilmChat).

["Saldana, whose credits include Guess Who, recently wrapped the Sony thriller Vantage Point. She is filming James Cameron's sci-fi tentpole Avatar."]

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Quote of the Day:

"The Discreet Lack of Charm of the Bourgeoisie." - Odienator on Rules of the Game


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge):Jean Renoir at work.
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Clip of the Day: The trailer for the re-release of Rules of the Game.

_____________________________________________________
"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

Read more!

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Links for the Day (September 18th, 2007)


1. Cineaste at 40. The film magazine celebrates its anniversary with a number of articles that look back on its long run; selections include an introduction by editor Gary Crowdus; a piece on Cineaste's formative, often tumultuous early years, by contributing editor Robert Sklar, and the editors' lists of the 10 Best Political films made during the past four decades. For a table of contents, click here.

["The inaugural issue of Summer 1967 announced that Cineaste was 'written for, and by, film students,' which referred, in that day and age before the proliferation of academic film studies, to those who were learning how to make films. 'The editorial policy of Cineaste is not based on the auteur theory or any one cinematic viewpoint in particular,' read the editors' statement of purpose. 'By not advocating any one theory, we hope to avoid the petty politics that is so much a part of current film criticism as well as enable ourselves to cover a much wider spectrum of films and filmmaking."]

***




2. "Wary of Past, Clinton Unveils a Health Plan." By Patrick Healy and Robin Toner of The New York Times.

["Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton unveiled a plan on Monday to guarantee health insurance to all Americans, but in a way carefully designed to avoid the political flaws in her failed proposal of 1993-94. Mrs. Clinton promised to cover everyone without big new bureaucracies, without a complicated reorganization of one-seventh of the American economy and without affecting people who are insured and happy with their coverage — all features that helped doom the Clinton administration’s plan 14 years ago...“I learned that people who are satisfied with their current coverage want assurances that they can keep it,” she said. “Part of our health care system is the best in the world, and we should build on it; part of the system is broken, and we should fix it.”"]

***



3. "The magic number 30, give or take 4." By David Bordwell.

["In any field, most people would expect to have their careers moving along by the time they hit their early thirties. But aspiring filmmakers may think that there’s a long period of preparation–working in a mailroom, sweating over screenplays–before they finally get to direct. Directing films is a top-of-the-heap role. Who would trust a young first-timer with a multimillion-dollar investment and authority over far more experienced performers and technicians?...Nearly everybody, actually."]

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4. "Un-American Activities: The Films of Abraham Polonsky." By Fernando F. Croce of Slant.

["If the artist's worst fear is to be denied the right to create, then the McCarthy witch hunts of the 1950s lavished the ultimate punishment on Abraham Polonsky. At the height of his talents, after the acclaimed directorial debut of Force of Evil in 1948, the fiercely Marxist dramaturg was blacklisted by the HUAC and effectively shunned from Hollywood filmmaking for the next two decades. While fellow red-stamped pariahs Joseph Losey and Dalton Trumbo survived by working abroad or writing under pseudonyms, Polonsky was involved in virtually no projects until the late 1960s, when a prominent writing credit for Madigan and the belated sophomore effort of Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here promised a comeback that never took place."]

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5. "Defending Paul Mazursky's The Pickle." By the Shamus, at Bad for the Glass.

[The Pickle is part of Mazursky’s long-standing theme — the urban sophisticate male in mid-life crisis who doesn’t know how to tame his animal instincts. This theme shows up again and again in his male characters — Alex, Bob, Ted, Blume, Willie and Phil, Martin and Charlie in An Unmarried Woman, Philip in The Tempest, etc. In The Pickle, that male is Danny Aiello's Harry Stone, and possibly Mazursky’s stand-in. He’s a mass of insecurities, and passive/aggressive anger, as he goes on a bender of sex, drink and nostalgia in the days before [his film] The Pickle has a special sneak preview, a preview that Stone is sure will kill his movie career. (Yep, I guess there’s a little 8 1/2 here, too.)"]

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Quote of the Day:

"You have not yet learned that in this life you have to be like everyone else - the perfect mediocrity; no better, no worse. Individuality's a monster and it must be strangled in its cradle to make our friends feel confident. You know, I've often thought that the gangster and the artist are the same in the eyes of the masses. They are admired and hero-worshipped, but there is always present underlying wish to see them destroyed at the peak of their glory." -- Maurice (Kola Kwahriani), in Stanley Kubrick's The Killing (1956).

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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): From The Graduate (1967, Dr: Mike Nichols).


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Clip of the Day: "That was Terrence fuckin' Malick!"

_____________________________________________________
"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

Read more!

The Bad and the Ugly: Pretension Weighs Down The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford

By Ryland Walker Knight
Just under three hours long, Andrew Dominik’s The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford is an ostentatious exercise in gimmickry shooting for big and beautiful. Were it not so boring, it might best be labeled as obnoxious. It shouldn’t be this way, either, because it has a lot going for it on paper.

It’s a Brad Pitt vehicle, written and directed by an up-and-coming filmmaker (Dominik made the acclaimed Chopper in 2000), shot by the Coen brothers’ phenomenal cinematographer Roger Deakins and co-starring a who’s who of today’s almost-famous male actors (Casey Affleck, Sam Rockwell, Paul Schneider). Unfortunately, only the B-list actors come off well, particularly Rockwell and Schneider, because every single trope employed by the film fails itself.

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Read the rest of the review at The Daily Californian website by click here. For more about the film, visit Ryland Walker Knight's blog Vinyl Is Heavy.

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Monday, September 17, 2007

"On the Circuit": I Just Didn't Do It

By Keith Uhlich

Screened at the 45th New York Film Festival.

[Editor's Note: "On The Circuit" is a joint production of The House Next Door and Zoom In Online. For news, events, training, and other points of interest to the creative community, please visit Zoom In Online by clicking here.]

The Japanese legal system comes under intense scrutiny in I Just Didn't Do It, writer/director Masayuki Suo's follow-up to his popular 1996 film Shall We Dance?. This is not to say that Suo's is a withering gaze; if anything, his reliance on slow zooms and tracking shots, constantly moving along more or less parallel lines, is revelatory of a more probing and generous eye. The comparisons between I Just Didn't Do It and Kafka feel all wrong because Suo isn't out to lose his protagonist, Teppei Kaneko (Ryo Kase), among the surreal detritus of a corrupt bureaucracy. From the start, the film is more concerned with the shifting positions of power around Kaneko -- no matter his placement in a given scene, Kaneko's connection to (as opposed to his alienation from) other characters and narrative events is always strongly emphasized.

The brief vignette that opens I Just Didn't Do It is Kaneko's crisis in miniature: a Japanese businessman is arrested after feeling up a young schoolgirl on a crowded subway train. The businessman quickly admits to the crime and is let off with little more than a fine. Accused of similar misconduct, Kaneko protests his innocence, and so is incarcerated and interrogated for weeks on end. Suo follows the subsequent events -- from the search for representation to the reading of the trial verdict -- with a slow-build fidelity, introducing various peripheral characters such as Kaneko's mother Toyoko (Masako Motai) and his head lawyer Arakawa (Kôji Yakusho) to counterbalance the central predicament. (Kaneko differs from Kafka's Josef K. in the sense that he is but one part of this flawed mass organism, not mere slave to, nor victim of its whims and grotesqueries.)

The film's best scene occurs midway through when Kaneko's accuser has her day in court. Since she is young and reportedly traumatized by the experience, the girl is shielded from Kaneko by free-standing screens. At first she is only a soft-spoken voice, concealed from all but the judge and counselors' vantage points. Though the dialogue is familiar to anyone with a knowledge of courtroom melodramas, the tension increases because of Suo's masterful staging of the events (he cuts around the barriers rhythmically, and only reveals the girl to the camera when an attorney brings her a photo of Kaneko to identify). Such subtle visual aptitude, along with a wisely sparing use of incidental music, are what raises I Just Didn't Do It above the level of procedural. It's a tragic tale of a society at large, one so obsessed with the micromanagement and/or eradication of vague behaviors that it frequently loses its ability to mete out proper and considered justice. That the film's actions are couched in a familiar and fascinating vein of Japanese politeness only makes its defiant closing passages (as much an appeal to a higher power as to a mortal one) that much more powerful.
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Keith Uhlich is co-editor of The House Next Door and a contributor to various print and online publications.

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Torchwood, Season One, Ep 2: "Day One"

By Joan O’Connell Hedman
Finally, we have independent confirmation that human sexual relations are indeed the best thing in the universe -- at least, if we're to believe this episode of Torchwood.

Gwen Cooper(Eve Myles)begins her first "day" at Torchwood when a night out with Rhys (Kai Owen) is interrupted by the crash of a meteorite; apparently her training will be trial by fire. Gwen is barely composed after Jack (John Barrowman) has to vouch for her at the crash site, and her awkwardness manifests when she tosses an instrument to Owen (Burn Gorman), and misses. The tool strikes the rock, and mysteriously triggers a wayward smoke effect from a Pink Floyd laser show – that is to say, fluorescent purple smoke streams out and away. Oops.

Meanwhile, a heartbroken teenager in an alleyway outside a nightclub conducts a one-sided conversation with her ex-lover’s voicemail: "I wish you were dead. Call me back." Just as she hangs up, the purple smoke zooms in on her, backs her up against a wall, and dives down her throat. She heads back into the club as if there's nothing wrong, but when one of the bouncers hassles her, she grabs his lapels and plants an intense kiss on him. Either she's ticked at her ex, or there's something else going on. We're not left wondering for too long, because our alien-possessed girl picks up a cute but self-conscious boy and doesn't so much seduce him as consume him in a scene that was much more explicit on BBC. BBC America (BBCA) cuts it down to the high points, if bathroom sex could ever be described as having such a thing; as shown by BBCA, it's an unremarkable sex scene, having lost the immediacy and intensity of the original. The young man seems quite sincere in his efforts, but the girl is mostly interested in his reactions. At climax, we get the best special effect of the episode: the boy transforms/explodes into a cloud of golden sparkles, which the girl quickly inhales with a transcendent expression.

Back at Torchwood, the field team recaps. Gwen's having the worst first day ever, and Owen asserts that there's an alien on the loose and they have no idea where it is or what it wants. On cue, Ianto (Gareth David-Lloyd) wanders in with a report of an unusual nightclub death. Off they go to the club to see all that's left of the boy: a small pile of dirty gray sand. No one really wants to know the answer to the essential question, How did you know this used to be someone? It's not complicated; the same bouncer was jacking off to the security camera’s recording, only to be scared witless at the last moment. (The BBCA edit here spares the viewer a few seconds of "Ew!", much appreciated.) "We’ve got to see that tape!" Jack declares. Apparently the Welsh are mad for closed circuit television (CCT); they’ve got cameras everywhere Torchwood could want. While it's useful, say, for the team to watch the attack in which the alien possessed the girl, it's absurd to think any city, however small, has the kind of coverage the dialog implies. But having identified the girl out in the alley, it's just a romp through various impossible databases, some cross-referencing between two disparate sources, and the girl and her address are pinpointed. Gwen, at least, has the decency to be shocked at how little privacy citizens of the UK have.

It would be simple to boil this episode down to a police procedural, or to count the clichés that it serves up: impossibly tough first day on the job, gaseous alien using a human as host, aliens coming to Earth for sex and killing their partners in the process, not to mention the use and re-use of new alien tech we’ve never seen before and will probably never see again. If that were all there was, I would file this episode under “tedious” and leave it at that. Notwithstanding Torchwood’s sex-obsessed reputation, there is exactly one sex scene, one make-out session, and one extended kiss. Sex is not what’s driving this episode, although it is ostensibly what’s driving the alien, who declares male orgasmic energy "the best hit there is," and insists "I live off that energy." This particular alien sounds like a horny teenage junkie to me, and therefore not exactly trustworthy. Although no one stops to examine the alien's testimony, it doesn't sound like a viable existence, further evidence for why we should never trust anything any alien communicates without good reason.

The main plotlines here involve Gwen, trying to find her place in Torchwood and minimize the damage she believes she caused, and Carys (Sara Gregory), the alien-possessed girl, fighting for her life. It's understandable that Gwen would feel responsible for the release of the alien, but actually, it was a bit of good luck. If Gwen hadn't hit the rock and released the alien, presumably it would've come out in its own time and in secret. It came to earth to feed, on purpose: "You broke my ship," is the first thing it says to Gwen. If not for Gwen's bad toss and Carys' execrable boyfriend, Torchwood would've have had no clue what was happening. It could've been much worse, but no one thinks this through.

Captain Jack and the rest of the team don't bother to reassure Gwen much, but Gwen doesn't stew in her guilt; she mobilizes it, determined to save Carys and prevent the alien from killing again. The rest of the team can't understand why she cares so much; when she responds, "Because if we don’t help, who will?" Jack finally defines her position in the team: to remind them all of what it's like to be human, because they've all forgotten. It's pretty much a staple that when you play host to a gas-based life form, the alien screws up your physiology to such an extent that it will kill you if you don't get rid of it. What's new here is the psychological torment that Carys endures. Casual alien sex is usually portrayed as hot and consequence-free for the alien/host, but Carys is a wreck the next morning. She remembers everything, and she's horrified.

Why did the alien pick Carys? We learn that she worked in a fertility clinic, so perhaps she had an aura of sexual energy simply from being around so many sperm donors. But Carys had just lost her virginity, and she associated sex with love. Carys, failing, reaches out, desperate, “All this sex… all we see, all we feel, so much beauty…so much fear...” The alien just wants the energy, but to Carys it means so much more than that.

Sara Gregory's performance is outstanding, both as the fragile Carys and the sex-addicted alien; Eve Myles has no problem keeping with up her, eventually bringing out some of Gwen's maternal tendencies. No one else has too much to do, and although it's fun to see that Jack has "an excess of alive," I don’t think there's any justification for Carys glowing during that last kiss. Gwen's still the only member of the team that knows anything significant about Jack, and it was interesting that she didn't share it. She may be the only normal human at Torchwood, but at least by the end of "Day One," she has figured out some way to fit in.

This episode has some lighter moments, but it's far from the romp that Torchwood's flippant attitude may have promised. This is the last place I'd expect to find a morality tale about the consequences of teenage casual sex, but I can't get away from the idea that that's just what "Day One" is. There's a lot that's silly here, but there was heart where no one would look for it. Any series that can throw a curve that big is worth watching.

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Joan O'Connell Hedman's first sci-fi series obsession was Farscape. In addition to writing a semi-regular food column, Joan blogs at Oasis of Sanity. This article's screencaps are from The Institute, a Torchwood fan site.

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Ending on a high note

By Alan SepinwallDidn't I warn you not to watch the Emmys? James Spader? Really?

The Sopranos went into last night's show with 15 nominations, the most for any series, and pundits everywhere were predicting the show would sweep its way through the awards like Sherman through Atlanta.

But TV shows in their final seasons, even all-time classics, have a lousy Emmy track record, and when the night was over, Sopranos only had three trophies: for Outstanding Drama Series, directing (Alan Taylor, for the Christopher death episode) and writing (David Chase, for the finale). Until the last-minute best drama win -- only the second time the series ever won it -- it looked like the cast's curtain call after a "Jersey Boys" musical medley would be its only trip to the stage.

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House contributor Alan Sepinwall is the television critic of the Star-Ledger. To read the rest of the article, click here. To discuss the 2007 Emmys with Alan at his blog What's Alan Watching?, click here.

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Links for the Day (September 17th, 2007)

1. Winner.

["Gore won Outstanding Achievement in Interactive Television for his two-year-old cable network, Current TV. The channel relies heavily on viewer generated content, like Internet sites YouTube and MySpace. Current TV is available 24 hours a day in 41 million homes across the U.S."]

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2. Kathy Griffin's Jesus mocking cut from Fox Emmy broadcast

["A lot of people come up here and thank Jesus for this award. I want you to know that no one had less to do with this award than Jesus," an exultant Griffin said, holding up her statuette. "Suck it, Jesus. This award is my god now."]

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3. David Sims at South Dakota Dark live-blogged the Emmys.

["22.38: OK, this is going on too long."]

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4. Television Without Pity on the Emmys by Joe R.

["So the Emmy Awards are upon us again, and while every year we all say the Emmys have lost all credibility and are stupid, we still manage to be outraged when the same damn people win the same damn awards, because we somehow convinced ourselves that this year it would be different."]

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5. Robert Duvall ropes an Emmy for Walter Hill's AMC miniseries Broken Trail.

["Best actor Robert Duvall and supporting actor, Thomas Haden Church come out on top. The two play uncle and nephew, respectively in the miniseries."]

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Quote of the Day:

"I never knew an actor in my lifetime or anybody's lifetime who didn't want to do a Western. We all want to do Westerns and believe me it belongs to us in this country, uniquely to us. ... The Western is here to stay." -- Robert Duvall's acceptance speech


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge):
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Clip of the Day: Sally Field's %!@$#*% speech is cut off.

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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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Sunday, September 16, 2007

Links for the Day (September 16th, 2007)

1. The Jane Fonda Effect - Did she do for nuclear energy what Jaws did for the water?

["The China Syndrome opened on March 16, 1979. With the no-nukes protest movement in full swing, the movie was attacked by the nuclear industry as an irresponsible act of leftist fear-mongering. Twelve days later, an accident occurred at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in south-central Pennsylvania."]

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2. Darkness Invisible. Some observations on depression sparked by Owen Wilson's story.

["Depression — the real hard stuff — is not chic, and it doesn’t sell tickets. It is a clinical illness urgently requiring treatment, usually hit-or-miss medication that tinkers with serotonin or dopamine levels. I am referring to the sort of condition that subverts lives, making it difficult to talk to people and impossible to leave the house. At its worst, it can spiral into the sort of suicidal ideation that requires hospitalization, or into suicide."]

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3. Cat among the pigeons - Controversial Thai filmmaker Thunska Pansittivorakul, curiously named Silapathorn Artist by the Office of Contemporary Art and Culture, may be just the Bond director Daniel Craig wants.

[Thunska: "When I heard from the OCAC that I had been nominated for the award, I told them I probably wasn't a suitable candidate and declined to give them the information about myself they required. I also recommended two other filmmakers who I believe to be more eligible. I implied to them that I preferred to have as little to do with the Ministry of Culture as possible."]

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4. A new DVD collection of Gregory Peck. I'd see him in anything, so I'll stand in line.

["Highlights include the superb western The Gunfighter(1950), compelling Second World War drama Twelve O’Clock High (1949) and the pioneering anti-Semitism expose Gentleman’s Agreement (1947)."]

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5. Ed Gonzalez's Emmy Predictions

["Steve Carell is the man, but a win for Alec Baldwin seems necessary."]

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Quote of the Day:

"When you can't remember why you're hurt, that's when you're healed." - Jane Fonda


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge):

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Clip of the Day: Hard Gay saves a ramen shop.

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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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Saturday, September 15, 2007

Doctor Who, Season Three, Ep. 10: "Blink"

By Ross Ruediger

Is it possible that “Blink” is the greatest Doctor Who episode ever created? Maybe. But it’s even more probable that “Blink” is such a fine piece of sci-fi/horror that it deserves to stand on its own, outside the larger canon of the series.

If I were going to introduce someone to Doctor Who for the first time, it would be tempting to show them “Blink” -- and yet it would be unfair to do that because they might think the series is something other than what it is. If “Blink” is the greatest installment of Who, then what does that say about the show, given that the Doctor is in it for it all of six or seven minutes? Like the previous two-parter, much of “Blink’s” strength comes from its uniqueness (although that’s probably the only thing it has in common with “Human Nature”).

Steven Moffat’s scripts for Doctor Who have come to be the stories against which all others end up being measured (which is probably very unfair to the other writers). “The Empty Child” two-parter and “The Girl in the Fireplace” have been the high points of the first two seasons, so it’s no surprise that “Blink” is another masterpiece. What continues to stymie me about Moffat’s work is his ability to see Doctor Who in a way that is entirely his own. He doesn’t seem like a man who sits down to write a Doctor Who story as much as someone who sits down to write a story that would be good regardless of whether or not it’s Doctor Who. “Blink” is the clearest example of this yet. Remove the Doctor from the proceedings, insert a time traveler with any other name, and this could just as easily have been an installment of some other show. Maybe “Blink” is actually the greatest episode of an unknown sci-fi/horror anthology series and it just happens to be on loan to Doctor Who.

Jeez. If I engage in any more hyperbole I might as well get married to it. The episode begins with a young lady by the name of Sally Sparrow (Carey Mulligan). She’s got this Nancy Drew thing going on, but I suppose any young woman investigating a spooky old house would. She discovers a message hidden behind some crumbling wallpaper. It’s from someone called “The Doctor” and it insists that she duck. Luckily she does, as if she hadn’t she’d have been knocked out cold by a rock flung by seemingly nobody. The only other thing in the room is a creepy, angelic statue. Before long, Sally Sparrow finds herself embroiled in what must be the strangest series of events in her life, and all of them seem to lead back to an even stranger man who appears only as an easter egg on a series of otherwise unrelated DVDs.

The episode is as simple as it is complex. It’s, as the Doctor put it, “a big ball of wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey…stuff”. It also achieves the unthinkable in the form of the Weeping Angels – a race of alien beings who must surely rank amongst the scariest the show has ever presented, and yet we never once see them move. Oh how I hate to toss around words like “genius”, but how else do you describe what Moffat achieves here with inanimate objects? Even after the episode concludes, Moffat plays with the viewer by repeating the Doctor’s advice for dealing with the angels against a montage of other statues. He’s scarred children for life with this piece. Peet Gelderblom, who also worships at the altar of Moffat, wrote to me in an e-mail after seeing “Blink”: “He's taken the least convincing scare element of Stephen King's The Shining -- the hedge animals that move while you're not blinking -- and made it work, simply by supplying the right context and backstory. I looooved it.”

Aside from being great sci-fi and great horror, there’s also the tenderness of the story and the characters are quite intricate given how much is going on in these 45 minutes. Particularly moving is the story of Billy Shipton (Michael Obiora), a DI who’s instantly transported from the present to 1969. The only way he will return to 2007 is by living his life day to day until he gets there. Sally Sparrow meets him twice on the same day: Once when he’s a virile, flirtatious young hunk, and a little bit later as an aged, dying man in a hospital. When he sees her for the second time he reminisces, “It was raining when we met.” She replies, “It’s the same rain.”

Much like last year’s Doctor-lite episode “Love & Monsters”, the internet plays a big role in “Blink”. The Doctor’s easter egg appearances have led to an entire internet subculture of surfers trying to decipher the deeper meanings of his message. Sally’s sleuthing partner, Larry (Finlay Robertson), who is one of them, repeats a phrase of the Doctor’s from the DVD: “'The angels have the phonebox'. That's my favorite, I've got that on a T-shirt.”

I want one of those T-Shirts.
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Ross Ruediger is a San Antonio-based critic and columnist, a contributor to The House Next Door, and publisher of The Rued Morgue.

NEXT WEEK: Derek Jacobi guest stars and Captain Jack Harkness crosses back over from Torchwood to reunite with the Doctor in "Utopia".

Classic Who DVD Recommendation of the Week: Check out some vintage Who by seeing Jon Pertwee battle "The Claws of Axos".

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Links for the Day (September 15th, 2007)

1. Rare Hemingway proof of For Whom the Bell Tolls to be sold at auction.

["The proof, which contains Hemingway's handwritten corrections, will be offered at Swann Galleries' auction of 19th and 20th century literature on Nov. 29. The auctioneer says it is the first signed advance proof copy of the novel ever to surface"]

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2. THE MATTER OF COMEDY

["Good comedy confronts, it embarrasses, it hurts, bewilders, delights, teases and provokes… Comedy matters, even when we never take it seriously."]

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3. There's no place like ho-hum - Noel Vera on Disturbia

["D.J. Caruso's Disturbia may seem like a teenage remake of Hitchcock's Rear Window (1954) updated to allow for digital cameras and cellphones but other films figure as well: Tom Holland's Fright Night (1985), David Lynch's Blue Velvet released a year later, The Blair Witch Project (1999) among others. Nowadays you don't steal wholesale, you mix in borrowings from other pictures too..."]

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4. Ewan’s dream

["I would love to be in something like Indiana Jones, if not for me then for my kids,” says McGregor. “I have always loved that classic kind of adventure and I would love to be part of that, although it’s too late for the new one."]

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5. 48 Hours to Vote for the best foreign language films

["The deadline for ballots is midnight central time Sunday, a mere 48 hours away. We've received more than 130 ballots so far. I have received more comments, so the few titles below with asterisks are all that remain without any quotes from voters or that I could use quotes for."]

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Quote Poem of the Day:

"You who celebrate bygones,
Who have explored the outward, the surfaces of the races, the life that has exhibited itself,
Who have treated of man as the creature of politics, aggregates,
rulers and priests,
I, habitan of the Alleghanies, treating of him as he is in himself in his own rights,
Pressing the pulse of the life that has seldom exhibited itself,
(the great pride of man in himself,)
Chanter of Personality, outlining what is yet to be,
I project the history of the future." - Walt Whitman's "To a Historian"


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): A Gander Pull by Frederick Remington:
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Clip of the Day: Continuing with Americana - what's more American than baseball and Bill Murray?


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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

Read more!

Friday, September 14, 2007

Lady vengeance: The Brave One

By Matt Zoller Seitz
In a nearly quarter-century career spanning a dazzling array of genres, Neil Jordan has made several masterworks and a number of pictures that fascinate despite their flaws. The Brave One -- starring Jodie Foster as Erica Bain, a New York City radio host who turns vigilante to avenge a beating by three street thugs that put her in a coma and killed her fiance -- occupies a unique place in his career. It's his first really bad movie -- silly, confused, pandering, and in places, loathsome.

The Brave One's problems have nothing to do with the professionalism of its cast or crew. There are no performances I'd call inadequate, and at a craft level, the film boasts a number of striking touches -- notably its imaginative sound design, which makes the heroine's post-attack paranoia more specific by tying it to her talent, and Phillippe Rousselot's widescreen photography, which is distinguished by some of the best quasi-subjective Steadicam shots this side of a Brian de Palma movie. And the performances are mostly sharp and memorable, from Naveen Andrew's brief but touching turn as Erica's fiance to Terrence Howard and Nicky Katt as the bantering detectives investigating Erica's killing spree, down to Victor Collicchio and Zoe Kravitz, whose brief but vivid appearances as a pimp and his captive whore spark fond memories of Jordan's first classic, Mona Lisa. Yet the movie is dishonest in a way that only thumb-sucking liberal Hollywood prestige pictures can be. It pretends to "complicate" the issue of revenge by making its lead character female and spending a good part of the picture's running time dealing with the physical and emotional aftermath of her fiance's death (the best and truest part of the movie; as in The Accused, Foster displays acute sensitivity to a victim's psychic tremors). But at the same time, The Brave One indulges in many of the same dramatic and political short cuts as the supposedly more lowbrow revenge pictures to which it thinks itself superior.

Erica's nighttime wanderings -- which fuse the vigilante-as-social-id trope of the original Death Wish and the pathology of real-life Taxi Driver wannabe Bernhard Goetz -- invariably place her in tense situations (witnessing the shooting of a female liquor store clerk by a vengeful white man, a subway intimidation spree by a couple of loudmouthed black teens, and so forth). That Erica often seeks out potential trouble and wills it into bloody reality by hiding her fear and baiting her quarry is a great touch; it jibes with the psychology of volatile troublemakers, and depressed people whose suicidal tendencies translate into externalized fury (groups that often overlap). But at the risk of overgeneralizing, I don't think the random-shooter business tracks with Erica's gender. It seems more characteristic of a man who suffered violence at the hands of other men, felt emasculated as a result, and started prowling the streets hoping to get his balls back.

When Nicky Katt's character, Detective Vitale, quips that "Women kill their children, husbands, boyfriends...shit they love," we're supposed to smile ruefully at his reductive thinking, and at Detective Mercer's ultimate realization that the street avenger is a woman (a deduction that certifies Mercer as Erica's kindred spirit, and her equal in sensitivity). But Vitale's quote underlines the falseness of the whole movie, which wants to put a fresh, bankable twist an a familiar genre while being all things to all viewers. Jordan's movie aims to consider revenge in a rather lofty, rhetorical way, while at the same time presenting Erica with an army of deranged or degenerate shitheels that she can kill with a clear conscience. The movie is a weird amalgam of Hollywood liberal PC cliches and right-wing talk radio's greatest hits. Erica's fiance is an Englishman of Indian descent, and the gang that beats Erica's fiance to death appears to be racially mixed. But the biggest burst of applause at the Manhattan screening I attended came at the end of a scene where two black teens (whose menacing minstrelsy recalls the "I don't be got no weapon" scene from Hollywood Shuffle) harass a skinny white boy and a law-abiding black man and his daughter, then threaten our heroine with a knife and demand sexual service. (Note to punks everywhere: before you ask a strange woman for a blow-job, first make sure she's not armed.) The Brave One wishes to divorce its vigilante plot from anxieties about race and class, then exploits those same anxieties when it wants to get a rise out of the audience -- a have-it-both-ways approach that may be described as "complex" by critics who want to give a beloved star and director the benefit of the doubt.

As a whole, the movie is a mess, in that earnest, well-intentioned way that's the hallmark of "serious" Hollywood movies released between September and December. Erica's essays doubling as narration make The Brave One's debt to Foster's breakthrough movie, Taxi Driver, explicit while inviting unflattering comparisons. Foster reads Erica's Ivy-league-grad-pondering-the-mean-streets prose earnestly, and the movie sanctifies it with stylized slide-show imagery. This approach leaves the impression that Jordan and his screenwriters (Roderick Taylor, Bruce A. Taylor and Cynthia Mort) expect us to take Erica's observations at face value -- as straightforward indicators of the film's viewpoint on Erica, her hellish ordeal, and the city she inhabits. It's impossible to overstate what a huge mistake this is. Erica is a trite, cheesy writer, and her borderline-sotto radio voice comes off as an unintentional parody of the National Public Radio house style: "This American Death." (At some points, her "I'm gonna talk softly because I know you haven't had your coffee yet" delivery evokes the " Schwetty Balls" sketch from Saturday Night Live).

One of the many characteristics that makes Taxi Driver complex and durable is its unreliable narration. The combination of disturbed cabbie Travis Bickle's pulpy voice-over ("Someday a real rain will come and wash all the scum off the streets") and Martin Scorsese's sensuously noir-ish, highly selective illustrations of a purgatorial city of lost souls and devils tells us that we're seeing things mostly through Travis' eyes; Robert De Niro's deliberately stilted, unemotional reading clues us in on the sociopath's detachment from his own fathomless anger. Narration and picture/sound combine to create richer meanings than could be achieved individually. But in The Brave One, we're not just supposed to take Erica's Pete Hamill-goes-to-graduate school routine seriously and pretend that the movie isn't critiquing itself so we won't have to; we're supposed to be stunned by the raw honesty of her insights, most of which are as banal as Travis' diary entries yet inexplicably presented as proof of Erica's deep sensitivity. When she intones, "It is horrible to fear the place you once loved" and "Each death leaves a hole that needs to be filled" and "Anyone can be a killer," I can't deny the essential truth of her observations. But I also want to jump into the movie and advise her to save them for her shrink.

The movie threatens to become interesting when Erica claims her trauma by turning herself into a terrifying avenger figure even as she starts discussing her attack and recovery on the radio. But rather than investigate this narcissistic impulse, much less criticize it, The Brave One treats it as perfectly natural, even noble, and it makes sure to separate Erica from all the less thoughtful people out there who would misread or oversimplify the vigilante or project their own concerns onto her. After Erica's boss, Carol (Mary Steenburgen), sees how the ratings jumped when Erica started talking about her ordeal on the air, she orders Erica to start accepting call-in comments for the first time in the show's history. What follows is a scene that should either show Erica the folly of her actions or inspire her to crank up the gunplay and get more public feedback and push the movie into the realm of black comedy. Instead, the scene is mainly concerned with reassuring us that Erica is more thoughtful than the doofuses that listen to her program. (One caller links the vigilante's rampage to the Bush administration's urge to invade Iraq after 9/11, proving, if nothing else, that the screenwriters have been reading their Sunday arts section. Another caller covertly expresses a modern filmmaker's nostalgia for a hellish 1970s New York where a revenge killer would make a certain grim sense. "This city was turning into Disney World," she says. "At least we got our street cred back.") The juxtaposition of Erica working through her feelings on audiotape and her attackers videotaping their handiwork promises a movie that's interested in violence-as-performance, and attuned to the ways that media have infected our perception of life. But both elements are deployed in a mostly functional way -- respectively, to tell audiences what to feel about Erica's predicament, and to give Erica proof positive of the attackers' identity so she can hunt them down.

The Brave One is riddled with nonsensically motivated and poorly thought-out characters who bear little resemblance to real human beings. (Howard's divorced sad-sack Detective Mercer, who becomes fascinated by, and perhaps infatuated with Erica, is a particularly egregious example; he seems awfully slow-witted for a hotshot crime fighter, and his climactic decision, which turns him into a hardboiled urban version of a Magical Negro protecting the white star, is just dumb.) And while the film is effectively directed, it's not visually, rhythmically or structurally imaginative enough to defend itself against complaints of implausibility by claiming to be a non-realistic or "dream" film (as Mona Lisa and The Crying Game absolutely were). Jordan's movie is only dreamlike in the sense that it meanders and repeats itself. It's neither lurid enough to qualify as troublesome, you-know-you-want-it revenge pulp, nor smart enough to earn the "thought-provoking" label it seeks. When the film dispatches Mercer to grant Erica absolution and suggest that she was doing a job that Mercer could not do himself, the The Brave One's veneer of complexity melts away, and we're left with a movie that seems to believe that what's good for Erica is good for New York -- that society ultimately benefited from what an NPR show might call "Erica's journey." It's vigilantism as therapy.

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Mad Men Fridays: Season One, Episode Nine "Shoot"


Probably because of how high “The Hobo Code” set the bar (plus the extent to which I was jonesing for new episode of Mad Men after almost two weeks--I’d had the luxury of seeing “The Hobo Code” a few days in advance of its broadcast), but “Shoot” struck me as a relative disappointment, even if it still offers plenty to chew on. Despite significantly increasing our understanding of Betty Draper (in addition to further developing Pete, Peggy and Joan), the episode just came across as too much of a standalone thanks to the plot about Don being tempted by an offer to jump ship and join McCann-Ericson.

Maybe I’ve been spoiled by Friday Night Lights, where [spoiler alert for those who haven’t seen the whole season] Coach Taylor actually chose to leave the Dillon Panthers for TMU (though we all know that won't last), but it never seemed as if there was any possibility that Don would leave Sterling Cooper--nor was there really a compelling reason for him to. As a result, the only real tension came from his mixed feelings over Betty resuming her modeling career, and because we were denied the chance to hear what he thought abut more than one or two aspects of the complex situation, it turned out to be one of the rare times when Jon Hamm’s skill at making Don so magnificently inscrutable turned out to work against the material.

The big question, of course, is whether Betty was ever aware that she was only approached about the Coke modeling gig because the McCann posse wanted to snare Don. Certainly, she spent much of the episode in a dream world of sorts, oblivious to the presumed queerness of both Giovanni, the Italian designer who initiated her into modeling, and the McCann art director. Beyond being restless and flattered, though, it’s clear Betty took the job in large part to give her mom a Bronx cheer beyond the grave.


Betty’s uber-metabolism, which let her eat what she pleased while working as a model in the old days (okay, maybe she was bulimic, but there wasn’t any real evidence) is provided with an intriguing parallel by the way Peggy remains intensely sexually desirable to Pete despite her weight gain. A lot of fan speculation on TWoP and elsewhere centered around the possibility of her being pregnant (creating an opening for a back-alley-abortion story line), but much as I was deeply relieved that Matthew Weiner didn’t go with the obvious and have Pete take credit for Peggy’s copy, I was equally pleased a possible pregnancy was eschewed in favor of a plot thread about her putting on some pounds, which is all the more intriguing for how quotidian (for TV) it seems.

The Peggy-Joan scene was both hugely enjoyable and extremely edifying insofar as it proved just how completely oblivious she’s been rendered by her singleminded focus on getting ahead by sleeping around and playing office politics. The notion that Peggy was trying to get close to Paul Kinsey almost had me doing a spit take. As the show moves forward into the ‘60s, my money is definitely on Peggy, and not Betty, being the main avenue down which the show follows the evolution of feminism.

In Matthew Weiner’s Fresh Air interview (which I really need to get around to checking out one of these days), he apparently talks about about Sterling Cooper being an agency that “just doesn’t get it”, and Joan’s perplexed response to Peggy’s ambition reveals that the not getting it isn’t limited to the executives (Salvatore’s big line, by the way, was a brilliant simultaneous example of both the not getting it and the “loud but shy” brand of queer behavior that his would-be lover called him on last week).

I’d been inclined to write off the fan argument that Pete is the one guy at SC who does get it, reading his responses to pop culture (his approval of the VW commercial, etc) as him being contrary for the sake of being contrary, and thereby that he just didn’t have the brainpower to back up his big talk. I was proven wrong by his brilliant idea of having John F. Kennedy “watch Mamie’s funeral” after he recounted the Dartmouth prank to Harry. While I definitely gave Pete insufficient credit for brains, I didn’t overestimate his balls, which were proven deficient by the way he let Harry twist in the wind (or so he thought) by hesitating to cop to his idea, which Bert Cooper left the room believing to be mostly Harry’s brainstorm. Harry has been a pretty low-profile guy at SC in terms of major business activity, despite the huge size of the media department (displayed when Paul took Peggy on the nickel tour of SC back in “Ladies Room), so it’ll be very interesting to see what effect, if any, this has on his status at the office.

Don’s status at the office, of course, is sure to rise in tandem with his salary (that $45,000 a year, by the way, is apparently more than $300K in today’s dollars). After giving Adam Whitman $5000 and then signing his bonus over to Midge, Don could certainly use that $5K bump, but money clearly isn’t the reason he stayed at SC—he could surely have negotiated his way to $45K or more at McCann. The real issue is whether he stayed at SC because a smaller agency offers him inherent advantages (i.e., it’s easier to hide his past at SC), because he wanted to keep Betty from working or because he was pissed off about his wife being used in a ploy to get him to jump ship. A poster at TwoP offers the intriguing theory that Don might have been influenced by the Jackie Kennedy TV spot, if it left him offended by how she was being pimped to boost her husband’s prospects.

In any event, Don’s confession that he’d have done anything to have a mother like Betty is the episode’s most direct reference to Don’s past (unless he was being literal when he told Roger he’d once died in the middle of a pitch!), and given that we’ve seen her complainig about Don’s reticence to discuss his past, that confession may be the largest factor behind Betty’s decision to abandon modeling and throw herself into motherhood. And does she throw herself into motherhood! I thought the Drapers’ creepy neighbor was actually going to kill the dog, setting up a confrontation that would allow us to see Don at his scariest. Never did I expect to see Betty unloading a BB gun at the pigeons in what started out looking like it was going to be an oblique Sopranos-esque ending. It’s a scene which again proves that Mad Men has a much stronger comic element—and that the Drapers’ marriage is far stronger than any viewer could have guessed when the show premiered.

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Some miscellaneous points

Not long before Mad Men made its debut, there was a minor flap about a potential product placement deal between AMC and the Brown-Forman Corporation, the beverage company that distills Jack Daniel’s. The actual deal didn’t go through, but AMC apparently decided to include three subtle references to Jack Daniel’s over the course of the season as a gesture of thanks to Brown-Forman for all the advertising they buy on the network, rather than as product placement per se. Tonight was the second reference—Fred Rumsen sends a bottle of Jack to Harry and Pete to congratulate them on the Nixon maneuver. Reference No. 1 was back in “Babylon” when Roy and Don ordered Jack Daniel’s at the artsy Greenwich Village café. This time, the product wasn’t even mentioned by name, but the bottle is instantly recognizable. Surprisingly, the deal didn’t prevent a clearly identifiable bottle of Smirnoff, distributed by Brown-Forman’s rivals at Diageo, from turning up in “Red in the Face”. Chalk one up for historical accuracy: It’s been well established that Roger is a vodka man, and Brown-Forman’s marquee vodka, Finlandia, didn’t arrive in the United States until 1971. While liquor ads are banned on broadcast TV, the FCC seems to have no such policy against plugging liquor brands by name, as Stolichnaya gets a prominent shout-out in the forthcoming premiere of NBC’s Bionic Woman.

I’ve been quite outspoken in my championing of John Slattery, but Vincent Kartheiser is really starting to rival him and Jon Hamm as the series’ acting MVPs. Kartheiser’s demented glee when he explains his anti-JFK plot to Harry is enormously delectable, and while he leaves us with no doubt that Pete is simmering to a boil while Ken and Harry make fun of Peggy’s weight, Kartheiser totally doesn’t telegraph the attack on Ken, which wouldn’t have been a fraction as effective if anyone knew it was coming. More than one fan has commented on Kartheiser’s resemblance to Johnny Depp, in particular to Depp in Tim Burton’s Ed Wood, and it would be pretty great if Kartheiser was able to enjoy a Depp-like career after Mad Men has run its course.

Finally, I was pretty stunned when the episode ended with what I believe is the first time Mad Men has used a 21st century pop song, or any post-1960 pop song for that matter. The song in question is “The Infanta”, from the Decemberists’ 2005 album Picaresque. Per good ol’ Wikipedia, “In the Spanish and former Portuguese monarchies, Infante (masculine) or Infanta (feminine), also anglicized as infant, is the title given to a son or daughter of the reigning King who is not the heir-apparent to the throne.” The lyrics describe a ridiculously ornate procession thrown in honor of such a person, and while we know very little about Betty’s past at this point, it has been established that (like Grace Kelly, interestingly) she hails from the swanky Main Line suburbs of Philadelphia. Her family may not have the wealth or power for her to be an Infanta per se, but she’s certainly received a lot of princess-like treatment from others over the years, and the song’s bouncy energy makes it an inspired way to punctuate the scene, regardless of its year of origin.
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Andrew Johnston is the television critic for Time Out New York.

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"On the Circuit": Diary of the Dead

By Keith Uhlich

Screened at the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival.

[Editor's Note: "On The Circuit" is a joint production of The House Next Door and Zoom In Online. For news, events, training, and other points of interest to the creative community, please visit Zoom In Online by clicking here.]

Positing itself as a final assemblage from some unspecified point in the future (so that it plays as a strange, Nostradamus-like amalgam of retrospective and prophecy), George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead gleefully engages with themes of spectatorship and subjectivity. It's the most labyrinthine and multifaceted of the director's Dead films, possessing a master's grasp of visual/aural interplay, in addition to a wicked mix of humor and pathos -- in Romero's universe, a deaf, scythe-wielding Amish dynamiter is at once a ridiculous figure of fun and a tragic hero prone to a selfless (and gruesome) act of martyrdom. A prologue, ostensibly filmed by a news crew, reveals the zombies' kill point to be head center, corresponding to the position of the third eye. Whether or not Romero is up on his chakras, his primary metaphor is clear: Diary of the Dead documents the invasive assault of media (in all its guises) on the inner consciousness. Using a tried-and-true film school setup, Diary follows a ragtag bunch of student artists and their Universal Horror-accented professor (whose skill with an archer's bow is only superseded by his prowess with an alcohol flask), all of whom are given to baldfaced pronouncements (pro and con) about the nature and so-called truthfulness of moving pictures. Their initially disconcerting tendency to speak in capitalized supertext helps to elicit Diary of the Dead's resonant and counterbalancing subtext, the idea that the camera itself is an irremovable appendage, especially when contemplating a cataclysm unfolding.

Cataclysm takes many forms, from the personal to the global; for all the apocalyptic emptiness of Diary's first-person landscapes, perhaps its most disturbing sequence is a throwaway home video where a children's birthday party becomes a hysterically unwitting bloodbath at the hands of a ravenous clown. The setup is familiar, but the incorporation of the camera as both distancing effect and character (it seems irrevocably drawn to the action, mesmerized by it) only deepens the sense of horror. Romero himself is fascinated by the human race's strict adherence to instinct and ritual -- his zombies have always had an endearing quality because, in-between the bloody feasts, they play-act the various customs and habits recalled from their days among the living. An insert of a gaggle of zombies wading along the bottom of a full swimming pool, or the image of the film's heroine, Debra (Michelle Morgan), coming face-to-face with her walking-dead mother (a flash of recognition passing over the latter's eyes before she impulsively attacks) speaks volumes as to Romero's sociological humanism, as does a charged exchange between Debra and a group of Black Panther-like survivalists that ends in a quietly profound acknowledgment of kinship.

"Shoot me," says the young cameraman, and on-screen Diary auteur, Jason (Joshua Close) at the film's climax. The double meaning certainly isn't lost on viewers and characters alike, though a subsequent invocation of the archangel Michael (punctuated by a well-placed bullet to the brain) casts this seemingly obvious pronouncement in a revelatory light. By the end of Diary of the Dead, the camera has become a conduit to death and resurrection (cinema as simultaneous remembrance and perpetual life-force). And yet Romero puts a fascinating chink in the foundations of his argument via a coda that revisits and reworks the cruel-world fatalism of his original Night of the Living Dead, positing an explicit, confrontational query over a painterly and precise digital still-life. The only appropriate response to the Pittsburgh poet laureate is, perhaps, exactly that which we see onscreen: bloody tears.
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Keith Uhlich is co-editor of The House Next Door and a contributor to various print and online publications.

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Joy and pain: Charles Burnett's My Brother's Wedding

By Andrew Chan

Who would deny that the revival of Charles Burnett's career has been the major film event of the year? Though his 1977 debut feature, Killer of Sheep, had already managed to enter the canon without ever having enjoyed a theatrical release, Milestone Films’ pristine 35mm print still came as a revelation when it arrived this past spring. It wasn’t just that it proved to be every bit the equal of the Italian neorealist classics to which it has often been compared, but that it also served as a potential wake-up call to its audience, even the most conscientious of whom may have forgotten how scarce depictions of the urban black community still are in American film. As a film student at UCLA in the ’70s, Burnett began addressing the social need of his time by responding to blaxploitation’s fashionable views of criminality, seeking to provide a balance in American cinema’s images of the ghetto. That Killer of Sheep remains essential for the void it fills makes it no less of an artistic triumph. Foregoing the emotional extremes of most politically motivated cinema, Burnett built his first masterpiece out of slices of life in which joy and pain are indistinguishable. With its lyricism and tonal restraint, it remains one of the starkest visions of American society and its deferral of dreams. But what makes it indispensable is its avoidance of the shallow pity that so often sentimentalizes social realism.

The release of Burnett’s 1983 follow-up, My Brother’s Wedding, in a new director’s cut made possible by his increasingly public prestige, shows us how deep his humanist perspective goes, yielding more evidence of the subtlety and patience with which this filmmaker explores one of the great subjects of his career: the problem of dignity among a demoralized underclass. Set in South Central Los Angeles, the film chronicles the growing pains of Pierce (Everett Silas), a young man trying to reconcile his responsibility to his family with his sense of duty to a friend who has just been released from prison. Working in his family’s dry cleaning service, he feels trapped by his lack of direction and options, even as he resents his brother for being an upwardly mobile lawyer with an upper-middle-class fiancée. The film climaxes when Pierce is forced to make a choice that will test his loyalty to both parties. But while the plot ultimately comes to revolve around Pierce and his decision-making, this ambiguous protagonist spends much of his time in the movie floating around as more of a lost soul than a real man.

As in Killer of Sheep, the mess of life leaks in from the margins of the story, overwhelming individual characterizations. Burnett gives precedence to vignettes over the manipulations of plot, lingering on comic details such as a boy making fart noises out of boredom, or a girl who repeatedly asks Pierce to take her to the prom. My Brother’s Wedding serves as a powerful companion to its predecessor, as it evokes the comfortable familiarity its characters feel toward their milieu, as well as the sense of aimlessness that threatens to trap them there forever. Extending the effects of his use of nonprofessional actors and improvisation, Burnett adds a thick layer of artifice to the poetic naturalism found in Killer of Sheep by keeping the acting amateurish. Much less reliant on music as a counterpoint to action, this film sometimes has the eerie mood of a vacuum; whereas the characters in Killer of Sheep were accompanied in their desperation by the yearning voices of Paul Robeson and Dinah Washington, the world depicted in My Brother’s Wedding seems completely devoid of the urgency to strive. Unlike Sheep’s emotionally mysterious hero, Stan, Pierce lacks a strong charisma or the will to adopt a consistent set of principles. But in case audiences emerged from the earlier film convinced that the trials of ghetto life were what endowed Stan with his backbone, Burnett replies by identifying Pierce’s tragic flaw as a “romanticized view of the have-nots.” Poverty, the film explains, makes no one any wiser or nobler. Burnett gets tough on his hero toward the end of the film because he realizes, as many artists never do, that the sanctification of suffering is among the worst sins a social realist can commit.

For its critique of the notion that criminality equals cultural authenticity, and its engagement with the anxiety that upward mobility dilutes culture, My Brother’s Wedding is as relevant today as Killer of Sheep. Just as the youngest son in Burnett’s To Sleep with Anger is torn between a life of sin and a life of responsibility, and just as the slaves in Nightjohn are forced to decide between the chains of illiteracy and the freedom of knowledge, so Pierce is stalled from any growth or progress by his limited sense of what does and does not constitute blackness, and even his basic goodness won’t save him from being left as the one solitary figure at the end. As he stumbles through the film without an identity or ambition, the haunting opening lines of Killer of Sheep echo back to us: “You’re not a child anymore. You’ll soon be a goddamn man. Start learning what life is about now.”

* * *

The new wave of exposure Burnett is enjoying won’t make his oeuvre very much easier to package. The best of his wide-ranging résumé includes his daringly poetic first films; the novelistic To Sleep with Anger; "When it Rains," a jazz-themed short film made for French television, and Nightjohn, a juvenile-lit adaptation for the Disney Channel. Though his key works can be viewed as variations on a cluster of thematic concerns, the diversity of their sources and styles makes it less easy to identify the auteurist thread that ties them all together, especially since they do not flaunt the kind of definable persona or visual stamp that always threatens to turn major talents like Spike Lee into caricatures. Marketing Burnett as a darling of the art-film world, some have taken to calling him a black Jean Renoir or Satyajit Ray, but analogies to these humanist touchstones are helpful only up to a point, since they fail to account for Burnett’s disarming use of humor, his instinctive sense of music’s relationship to image, and the influences of black art and culture on his formal sensibilities. The films invite comparison to the most high-art of foreign auteurs partly because they do not fit comfortably in the domain of the American independent, certainly not when placed alongside the undisciplined aesthetics and self-satisfied quirkiness of the scene’s younger generation. Burnett’s movies are, however, reminiscent of a time that began at least a decade before Killer of Sheep was made, when the spirit of independent film found its embodiment in the wandering, improvisatory style of John Cassavetes. While Killer of Sheep and My Brother’s Wedding possess a temperament that suggests the exact opposite of the high-pitched hysteria in Faces and A Woman Under the Influence, Burnett’s films represent similar challenges for the audience in the amount and type of attention they require; the unpredictability of their jagged rhythms; and the complexity and amorphousness of their emotions.

In the attempt to sell Burnett as a figure of both aesthetic and cultural importance, the most interesting result might be the way much of the critical press has agreed upon a single convenient soundbyte, habitually referring to him as America’s “most gifted black director.” Such quotable acclaim suppresses the questions we must ask about why African-American voices continue to be so underrepresented and misrepresented in our movies. So far, partly due to a lack of access to his films (a problem that will soon be solved by Milestone’s upcoming DVD anthology), the most vocal part of Burnett’s fanbase consists of white cinephiles, which may be why a considerable amount of criticism has emphasized his affinities to European filmmaking instead of his debt to black culture. But the impulse to understand Burnett within the framework of African-American art is a necessary one, particularly as it shifts the focus away from his obvious but ultimately limited connection to the neorealists.

To appreciate Burnett from a racial and cultural angle is to at some point position him in dialectical opposition to the younger Spike Lee, who holds claim to the title of “most gifted black director” among the mainstream audience. Such a contrast can be both horribly reductive and surprisingly illuminating: when considered in dialogue with Lee’s films, Burnett’s work calls to mind the longstanding ideological debates that once placed the late-’30s duel between Zora Neale Hurston and Richard Wright at the center of black aesthetics, ethics, and politics. Both Burnett and Lee are committed to very personal ideas about what constitutes a realistic, authentic portrayal of black life. But, like Wright, Lee’s highly topical films take on the form of sharp social critique and protest that includes and implicates the white audience; his style takes the philosophy underlying Wright’s political novels and expands it to embrace the values of the Black Arts movement and the passion of socially conscious black pop. On the other hand, Burnett, like Hurston, often lays his ethnographic eye on the daily routines and relationships within insular black communities, leaving the sources of oppression unnamed and invisible. His visual palette is beautiful but subdued, evoking the rootsy sparseness of a blues record. But although Burnett and Lee can be interpreted as manifestations of two different ideas about what a black artist should be, one of the many dangers of this binary lies in the temptation to ignore Burnett’s political aims simply because he courts less controversy, and because his films are likely to invoke more of our sadness than our outrage.

None of Burnett’s greatest films consider very deeply the moral responsibilities or accountability of their white characters. There is a refreshing cultural privacy he establishes in films such as Nightjohn (with its scenes of a slave community after-hours) and When It Rains (in which jazz becomes a form of currency by which a black woman is saved from eviction) that allows him to pose the same questions again and again: What do dignity and morality mean for a black person in an unjust society? How much of the pain of oppression becomes the joy of overcoming? How much control does a black person have over his or her own life, his or her own moral choices? Burnett presents these questions in ways we have never heard them asked before—in the poet’s voice of sorrow and confusion rather than the preacher’s holler of righteous conviction. With the theatrical release of Killer of Sheep and My Brother’s Wedding this year, he has changed the face not just of cinema but of identity.
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Andrew Chan is a poet and film critic currently studying at UNC-Chapel Hill. He is the creator of the blog Movie Love.

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Mr. Woodcock: Laugh 'til it hurts

by Steven BooneMr. Woodcock is often as juvenile and predictable as its title suggests. Yet, this dark comedy about a self-help author plotting revenge on his sadistic former gym coach gets honest laughs because of performances that ring universally true.

We all have some bully in our past that chipped years off our youth just by sheer emotional cruelty. Each of us also knows at least one person we think is a jerk who nevertheless prospers and seems to have the world's blind adoration. Mr. Woodcock folds both types into one character and the inspired (if, after Bad Santa and Bad News Bears, all but mandatory) choice of actor to portray him, Billy Bob Thornton.

Thornton plays Jasper Woodcock, a dictatorial small-town gym coach whose unpunished crimes against children include forcing an asthmatic kid to run Olympic-sized laps. But his cruelest tortures are psychological: He terrorizes a fat, unathletic boy with relentless putdowns, including the prediction that he will grow up to be a worthless loser.

To read the rest of the article in the Star-Ledger, click here.

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Links for the Day (September 14th, 2007)

1. 50 Cent's retirement? Not so fast.

["Don't hold your breath waiting for 50 Cent[s - ed.] to retire."]

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2. Takashi Miike, Tarantino and a Macaroni Western - a look at Sukiyaki Western Django

["Both Miike and Tarantino, overpraised and overindulged for years, are now in the baroque phases of their careers, strenuously embellishing by-now familiar themes with ever more convoluted arabesques of cinematic referencing and auteurist posturing. I count myself as a fan of both — but I also think they have both reached an impasse, like aging rockers who jazz up their stage shows as vehicles for their decades-old riffs."]

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3. Steve Boone on 3:10 to Yuma at Vinyl Is Heavy

["He (James Mangold) clearly loves every last old-time Western trope and was determined to get them all into this one silly/serious, sprawling/unimaginative cowboy flick. Alongside this fanboy preoccupation, the film also squeezes in some post-Unforgiven revisionism. Strange brew."]

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4. London Film Festival line-up unveiled

["Taking to the stage to discuss their careers and work will be Wes Anderson, Laura Linney, Steve Buscemi, Robert Rodriguez and Paul Greengrass, while other expected guests include Tom Cruise, Robert Redford, Meryl Streep, David Cronenberg, David Lynch, Naomi Watts, Sienna Miller, Halle Berry, Ang Lee, Jason Schwartzman and Sean Penn."]

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5. Islamic militants try to blow up Buddha statue. Third time is not a charm for radical Islam's jihad against impressive rock scupltures. I say we pass the hat around and see if we can get BPS Security to send a car out there once or twice a night.

["A group of armed men arrived in the village late Monday saying they were mujahedeen, or Islamic fighters, and told residents they wanted to blow up the 7-meter (23-foot) statue, said villager Amir Khan.

I told them that there are houses near to the rock and any blast could put our lives in danger, but they pointed their weapons at us,’ said Khan. We heard the sound of drilling twice and then early Tuesday morning we heard two blasts.’

The statue was undamaged, but some of the rock surrounding it was blown away, officials said."
]

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Quote of the Day:

"The pleasantest of all diversions is to sit alone under the lamp, a book spread out before you, and to make friends with people of a distant past you have never known." - Kenko from Essays in Idleness


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): Outing In Mountains and Fields by Yosa Buson, 1716-1783

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Clip of the Day: Al Pacino in Glengarry Glenn Ross


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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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Thursday, September 13, 2007

"On the Circuit": Festivalitis

By Keith Uhlich

Portrait of a baggy-eyed writer blocked, reading Balzac's The Duchess of Langeais (PDF), listening to Monteverdi's Vespers of the Blessed Virgin (iTunes). Exhausted. Exhilarated. More to come.
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Keith Uhlich is co-editor of The House Next Door and a contributor to various print and online publications.

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Links for the Day (September 13th, 2007)


1. Heavy Metal in Iraq...and it's not being used for interrogation. A TIFF entry. (hat tip GreenCine)

["Heavy Metal in Baghdad presents a welcome and surprising glimpse into the youth culture of modern Iraq. Using an intimate, street-level style, the documentary takes us to an Iraq beyond the lens of network news, introducing young Iraqis steeped in American pop culture, while registering the omnipresent violence that threatens to overwhelm any situation."]

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2. Take the Cronenburg Tour. Jordan Hoffman at UnderGroundOnline will be your tour guide.

["Nowadays you can fill a Costco with cinema studies dissertations about the semiotics of kitchen appliances in mid-80s slasher flicks, but believe it or not there was a time when hardcore film snobs would turn their nose at the entire horror genre. Respect came slowly. One of the first genuine auteurs who resonated not just with horror fans but with critics was David Cronenberg."]

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3. Attend the tale of Sweeney Todd. Ed Copeland celebrates the 25th anniversary of his favorite musical from his favorite musical songwriter, before Tim Burton gets his version released.

["Maybe alcohol should be involved before I see Burton's film since, as Sweeney and Lovett advise in 'A Little Priest,' Everybody goes down well with beer. I'll reserve judgment, but I still recommend that everyone try to see the George Hearn-Angela Lansbury version, if for no other reason that if you are unfamiliar with the show, it will get you prepared for what's coming."]

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4. Craig wants naked scene in next Bond flick. This time without the rope and the seatless chair.

["I'm prepared to do a full-frontal scene. I'm not shy and Bond wouldn't be shy about it either," Daily Snack quoted the source as saying."]

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5. George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead - from Eddie Cockrell at Variety.

["Though set in the present day, Diary rewinds to the mysterious zombie outbreak that set the franchise in motion. Suspicious of lies being fed through the mainstream media as society disintegrates, a surviving member of a student film crew has assembled a docu, The Death of Death, from the crew's own footage and Internet grabs, as testament to what really went down."]

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Quote of the Day:

"I didn't like Scream too much. I thought Scream 2 was better." - George Romero


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Image of the Day (click to enlarge): Modern Japanese woman and angel Setsuko Hara from Early Summer
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Clip of the Day: Angela Lansbury and George Hearn performing "A Little Priest" from Sweeney Todd:


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"Links for the Day": Each morning, the House editors post a series of weblinks that we think will spark discussion. Comments encouraged.

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Wednesday, September 12, 2007

934. Unfaithfully Yours (1948, Preston Sturges)

By Kevin B. Lee

[Editor's Note: This is the 934th entry (published slightly out of order) in House contributor Kevin B. Lee's Shooting Down Pictures, a record of his ongoing quest to see every title on the list of the 1000 Greatest Films compiled by They Shoot Pictures, Don't They?]

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Opinions vary as to whether this late Preston Sturges work (the second of three box office flops that effectively ended his career) merits inclusion among his masterpieces from the early half of the 1940s. Those (like myself) who cherish what Manny Farber called “the high-muzzle velocity” of his films may be frustrated by the relatively staid pacing of the proceedings, characterized by set-bound, dialogue-heavy, almost television-like long takes. Instead of his famously free-wheeling exchanges among a democratic array of vivid characters, Sturges focuses squarely on an imperious orchestra conductor played by Rex Harrison (in a suitably high-toned performance that’s more admirable than likeable). As Harrison’s Sir Alfred de Carter ponders the rumored infidelity of his wife (Linda Darnell, whose characteristic vapidity is put to intriguing use), the proceedings are reflected through his increasingly paranoid mind; if Sturges was the Shakespeare of screwball comedy, this is undoubtedly his Othello.
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To read the rest of the article, click here. See after the break for Kevin's video essay on the film.

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Links for the Day (September 12, 2007)

1. The Man in the Light Gray Flannel Suit - an interview with Vincent Kartheiser.

[The Scanner: "The writers do a fantastic job depicting the gender politics of that era. Do the scripts ever spark any discussion on set?"

Kartheiser: "Yeah, there are a lot of women on set who look at their characters’ lives and say, “Why did we ever burn our bras? Things were kinda nice.” I think it’s easy to look back o