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Showing newest 9 of 74 posts from September 2007. Show older posts
Showing newest 9 of 74 posts from September 2007. Show older posts

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.

Read more!

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.

* * *

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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