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The Cave Wall-- A Film Blog

Archive for 200612     ( return to current blog )


 Flags of Our Fathers (Clint Eastwood, 2006)
 

There's something unconvincing about a movie bent on showing how a photograph doesn't capture the full truth. In any case, the best part of Flags of Our Fathers wasn't the overwrought and terribly muddled plot: a WWII veteran has a flashback about he and his fellow soldiers from the famous Iwo Jima image travelling around the country in the months thereafter to raise money for the war, in the midst of which his fellow soldiers themselves are having flashbacks about the long and bloody fight for the island. Nor was it the hyperrealistic reconstructions of the battle scenes--scenes, incidentally, which were shot somewhere in Iceland. In fact, it was the various photos of the original island and soldiers fighting for it that were shown with the credits.

5/10
Posted by Tim C. at 11:57 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 The Awful Truth (Leo McCarey, 1937)
 

Very enjoyable standard old-school Hollywood fare. Won an award for Best Use of Dog (or should have). The most hilarious scene had Joyce Compton performing a garish version of "My Dreams are Gone with the Wind," intercut with suitably horrified audience reactions.

7/10
Posted by Tim C. at 10:32 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
 Broken Flowers (Jim Jarmusch, 2005)
 

I enjoy the films of Jim Jarmusch despite his hipster credentials and his occasional beatnik-pandering misfires like "Coffee and Cigarettes." My fascination started with "Stranger than Paradise" (1984): a Hungarian girl goes to visit her cousin who lives in the ugliest apartment in the ugliest part of New York City; then the cousin and his best friend go to visit the Hungarian girl who now lives in the ugliest house in the ugliest part of Cleveland; then all three of them take a road trip and end up at the ugliest hotel in the ugliest part of Florida. In short, a very important and decade-defining film in which nothing at all happened.

Broken Flowers is in a similiar vein--all the locations, for instance, look like places you've been before. It may be even better because it has Bill Murray in it. At first it seems to actually have a plot, but much like Antonioni's "L'Avventura", the plot serves to get things going and then gradually recedes from view in favor of other themes. Which here seem to have to do largely with growing older and not wiser. Overall (except for one scene of inexplicable nudity) I'd very much recommend seeing this.

7/10
Posted by Tim C. at 10:14 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Bus 174 (Jose Padilha, 2002)
 

Bus 174 is the greatest documentary film I have seen. One day in June of 2000, a young Brazilian street kid named Sandro is interrupted by the police while trying to rob a downtown Rio de Janeiro bus. He takes hostages, and the standoff that ensues is transmitted live, and in shockingly close detail, to millions of television viewers all over the country.

What Padilha does, while letting the hostage standoff unfold in front of us via footage collated from the many TV crews present, is to simultaneously retrace the events in Sandro's life that led to the incident on the bus. If this sounds like a recipe for some sort of bleeding-heart exercise in emotional manipulation, don't worry: the reconstruction that takes place is in fact quite detached and analytical, and never lets Sandro off the hook for his actions. Its primary virtue, however, is that it doesn't let anyone else off the hook either.

Padilha has characterized Bus 174 as being about "urban violence in developing countries." But it turns out to be about so much more, including not only many of the major social concerns of our time-- particularly the growing gap between rich and poor--but also deeper metaphysical issues like personal identity, free will, and our ineradicable moral nature. All of these issues are compounded by the fact that the story told here is far beyond what any writer of fiction could possibly construct, with an ending so bizarre and so troubling that it will stick with you for a very long time.

10/10
Posted by Tim C. at 12:20 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Eyes Without a Face (Georges Franju, 1959)
 

What's creepier? A face without eyes--or eyes without a face? After long and intense deliberation, apparently, the makers of this film decided on the latter.

Kenneth Turan, one of the only two movie critics I trust (the other is Anthony Lane from the New Yorker), wrote the following: "Once seen, never forgotten, 'Eyes Without a Face' is a film to haunt your dreams. Disturbing, disorienting, quietly terrifying, it's one of the least known of the world's great horror movies and, in its own dark way, a startlingly beautiful and artful piece of cinema as well." So how could I resist?

After seeing it, however, I was a bit underwhelmed. For one thing, the main characters--the doctor, his assistant, and the daughter--are never fully developed in the way you'd want them to be. And why are the cops in the film so stupid? But on the other hand, if you think about the film solely as a sort of twisted fairy tale, a la E.T.A. Hoffman, it is a resounding success.

7/10
Posted by Tim C. at 11:32 PM - 1 Comment   Add a Comment  
 
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