Saturday, April 30, 2011

El Mariachi (1992), Robert Rodriguez.

The mariachi's opponent: a sombrero wearing dork with a casio.

Released the same year as Reservoir Dogs and Man Bites Dog, El Mariachi was one of those super-popular, low-budget flicks drenched in violence that appeared to indicate there was a new generation of talented young filmmakers on the loose.  Remy Belvaux (Man Bites Dog) died by his own hand in a suicide in 2006, Quentin Tarantino is now an Oscar winner and Robert Rodriguez is currently working on Spy Kids 4.  Huh.

El Mariachi is not a bad shoestring effort: the location is well used, the unknown cast adds authenticity and local colour.  The story moves along and is punctuated with humour.  It's a generally neat and tidy (81 minute) little tale.  Rodriguez's more recent Machete with its absurd comic book braggadocio and corny action leaves you wishing he still had a hero like the humble El Mariachi up his sleeve.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Bowery to Broadway: the American Irish in Classic Hollywood Cinema (2010), Christopher Shannon.

Aaaand here comes Christopher Shannon to rehabilitate the Irish.  If this book were a boxty, it would arrive undercooked and leave you hungry.  Its goals as "a study of film narrative" attempt to throw light on the "least represented ethnic group in American film" (Catholic Irish).  Can this be true?  The world did not know the contributions of Jimmy Cagney, Spencer Tracey et al?  Or is this just blarney?  Shannon begins by bemoaning how the Jewish contribution to film has been well-studied but by contrast "appreciation for those [Irish] stories has suffered from a single-minded scholarly obsession with the Irish Catholic role in film censorship."  Gee, with heavy hitters like nasty old Father Coughlin and Joe Breen I wonder why!

Expostulating on film narrative without the nitty gritty of historical research serves a limited purpose:  it leaves the reader with little beyond the stereotypes described.  Shannon does not clearly identify what he means by the Irish (he casts a wide net and includes not only New York Irish Catholics, but people of Irish extraction born in Commonwealth countries like Canada and Australia, surely a different life experience).  As a non-Catholic, I would not know what the Catholic experience, habits or dogma entails and how the Catholic Irish experience would differ from say that of French or Filipino Catholics.  What we do get (as when Shannon explains "grace") is not bad, but certainly doesn't provide me with a good grasp of the major unifying force for this community.  And without details on demographics, or evidence from Irish American primary sources, I do not get a sense that somewhere out there in American theatres there was a living breathing, evolving Irish American community looking for themselves on screen.  Tantalizing tidbits are casually tossed (as in the throwaway line about how some films were marketed specifically to Irish Americans - wait, what?  More!) or are hidden in footnotes.  After reading Bowery to Broadway, I could facetiously summarize its thesis as "we were white, we assimilated pretty quickly, the end."  Brevity - and this includes the paltry number of photographs used - is this book's undoing.

Excluding B-movies from his scope was a mistake, as it is in B's not A's where you are allowed to call a Mick a Mick and laugh about it.  But Shannon is too busy trying to clean up the Irish.  Claims like "Edward G Robinson and Paul Muni, who played the gangster heroes in Little Caesar and Scarface, easily shed their gangster image for other roles...[compared with James Cagney in The Public Enemy]"  are purely laughable.  Paul Muni, yes - but c'mon, man, it's 80 years after Little Caesar and are you telling me Robinson is known for something else aside from a gangster?  Maybe as Dr Ehrlich, the physician searching for a cure for syphilis?  Shannon also misses an opportunity to directly face the issue of the curious relationship between the Jews and Irish in the film industry, and his book's opening words contrasting the two communities, as well as strange claims like the one made about Robinson and Muni only exacerbate the problem.  He cites numerous examples of instances where these former tenement neighbours found themselves together on film sets and scripts.  Cagney spoke a little Yiddish.  Bowery Cinderellas often found themselves with Jewish husbands - yet Shannon does not get too deep into why in Kitty Foyle the character of Mark is cleansed of his Jewish identity while Kitty's Irishness remains. 

Raging Bull (1980), Martin Scorsese.


Wow.  I have no explanation as to why I had never seen this until the other day.  Joe Pesci as the normal one?  Languorous shot lengths perfectly communicating lazy summer days?  Incredible!  I would argue that by making all the domestic scenes generally chaotic and abrasive (and depicting this as stereotypically Italian-American), De Niro's dangerousness was made less emphatic.  I am still dumbfounded by his performance.  It took me several minutes to be convinced it was actually Robert De Niro!   


Monday, April 4, 2011

Pushover (1954), Richard Quine.

Sure, she's foxy - but she completely drew that lipstick out of the lines.

Pushover is a low-rent, loser's version of Double Indemnity.  You heard me!  And darn you, Columbia Pictures or the Film Foundation or whoever put this box set together for not inviting Eddie Muller to speak to this on the commentary.  Here we have clean cut Fred MacMurray lusting after a no-good blonde just like last time but this time with an addled mind and no plan.  MacMurray's part of a stakeout on Kim Novak, whose boyfriend just stuck up a bank and killed a guy.  While waiting for him and the money to show, MacMurray develops a secret relationship with her.  Pushover is tightly filmed almost entirely within Novak's apartment building or in the street below.  MacMurray comes off as a ruinous cad making one dumb decision after another, running after a foolish dream while his sensible cop buddies furrow their brows in his direction.   

Start of a beautiful tracking shot of dueling baby grand pianos in a cocktail lounge.

Nollywood Babylon (2008), Ben Addelman, Samir Mallal.

DVD seller in Lagos, Nigeria

"My tape is blasting like a bullet."   The third-largest movie industry in the world has no theatre distribution, budgets averaging $15,000 a production and isn't even shot on film.  It was invented when a merchant of blank VHS tapes tried to offload his goods in the electronics stalls of the slum city of Lagos, Nigeria.  Perhaps with the assistance of the witchcraft that provides the underpinnings for so many Nollywood plots, something magical was created.  Nollywood Babylon is a fascinating look at the power of storytelling in Nigeria.  The documentary follows disciplinary director Lancelot Oduwa Imasuen as he completes Bent Arrows, his 157th film.  The anticipation of the hopeful novice actors in auditions is tempered by the apocalyptic backdrop.  All infrastructure in Lagos is chewed and decayed.  A street market tramples rail lines, which lay unused.  Half-fallen skyscrapers litter the landscape.  There are three theatres, which show only Bollywood movies and are so dangerous that no sane person would choose to travel to them to purchase a ticket.


Why would I leave my home and go outside to a theatre... 


Nollywood movies are watched in the streets, when people crowd around a small television set.  Nollywood Babylon also investigates the use of cinema by its mega churches, which haul plastic bags full of tithes away from emotional services from a devastated population.  That movies can flourish in this setting is astonishing.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Each Dawn I Die (1939), William Keighley.

I'm innocent, you lousy mug!

Each Dawn I Die has a similar plot to countless classic era B-movies:  an innocent man is wrongly jailed and must suffer the hardships of prison until he finds freedom.  Of course with the quivering intensity Cagney brings to the screen, you'd never mistake this for a B.  Visually, the film is pleasantly plain, effective for a prison setting, and uses uncomplicated compositions.  Raft's identification of Cagney as "a square guy" echoes this aesthetic.  I couldn't help but mentally contrast the subdued prison visit scene in this film with the one in Goodfellas, where Lorraine Bracco brings her bawling kids to a crowded visiting room and nags Ray Liotta for being unfaithful.   Ray wants the relief of his quiet cell; Cagney is aching to be set free.  The repeated use of the word "time," the mention of the length of prison sentences and shots of clocks and calendars emphasize the psychological toll the sentences take on the men.

"And you're the dirty screw that killed my pal!"