Showing posts with label 1971. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1971. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

1990: Back to the Well

We live in the age of the legacy sequel. Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, The First Omen, Alien: Romulus, Twisters, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, Apartment 7A: these are all from this year alone, all dependent on the audience's memory of specific plots, imagery, and often even characters of films released before the turn of this century. Nostalgia is in! Some say it's because audiences miss the films of old, we're chasing the high of our youth - certainly making a semi-sequel/remake to 1996's Twister suggests this.



Now, obviously, when I looked at the Oscar nominees of 1990, I knew I would get to revisit the legacy of The Godfather thanks to The Godfather: Part III, which revisits characters introduced to audiences in 1972's The Godfather and last seen in 1974's The Godfather Part II. What I did not expect was to run into three more films following up with icons of early-70s cinema.


It began in August with The Two Jakes, a follow-up to 1974's Chinatown. The original's Oscar-nominated star Jack Nicholson, Oscar-nominated producer Robert Evans, and Oscar-winning screenwriter Robert Towne all reunited for the sequel, with Nicholson pulling double duty as director. Joe Mantell, Perry Lopez, James Hong, and Faye Dunaway (via voiceover) all reprise their roles from the original; joining the ensemble are Harvey Keitel, Meg Tilly, Madeleine Stowe, and Eli Wallach, who also has a significant role in The Godfather Part III. It's an interesting movie, especially if one is familiar with Chinatown's production, particularly how director Roman Polanski helped shape it into the coherent, suspenseful narrative we all know and love. The Two Jakes is awfully vague by comparison. To many, that's a sign of weakness: the plot's confusing, the threads go nowhere, the pace is ponderous, there's lousy voiceover, my God, how could this be Chinatown! Well, it's not Chinatown, it's The Two Jakes, and it's about an older, wearier Gittes seeing echoes of the past even as its signposts are developed into oblivion. Its constant callbacks to Chinatown can be frustrating...or they can, like Agatha Christie's final Poirot novel Curtain, serve as a reminder that we are doomed (fated?) to return to the places and people most significant to us, that, as Paul Thomas Anderson would say in 1999's Magnolia, "We may be through with the past but, the past ain't through with us." It's an untidy film, but, it's haunting enough to justify any supposed cash grab.


One week after The Two Jakes debuted, The Exorcist III hit theaters. The second sequel to 1973's The Exorcist also saw a change of directors: instead of William Friedkin, William Peter Blatty helmed, his first time since 1980's The Ninth Configuration. Blatty, author of the original 1971 novel, producer/writer of the original film, and winner of the 1973 Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, adapted his own sequel novel, Legion. This one has Lt. Kinderman, a cop who played a supporting role in the original's events, taking center stage as he investigates a series of murders that don't just mimic the M.O. of an executed serial killer - they may be the work of his demonic spirit possessing another. George C. Scott takes over for Lee J. Cobb in the Kinderman role. As the number indicates, there was already a sequel to The Exorcist - 1977's The Heretic - but Blatty makes sure that we forget that film ever existed, never references it, pretends it didn't even happen. Hell, even the III and the climactic exorcism were both forced on him by an insistent studio: he wanted to maintain the Legion title, more fitting for the nature of the forces of evil Kinderman is up against (indeed, that's the title of the Director's Cut released by Scream Factory in 2016), while the exorcism feels as tacked-on as it is. When it's about a policeman trying to reconcile faith with his job - not just the existence of demons in a grounded world, but even the possibility of a caring God in a world so full of suffering - it's downright moving and scary.

(Where was Friedkin in all this? Making The Guardian, about a nanny who is actually a kind of part-tree Druid nymph who sacrifices her charges to an ancient arboreal deity. It sounds mad but, sadly, is actually quite dull. Just as an exorcism was shore-horned into Legion, supernatural forces were shoe-horned by the studio into Friedkin's film. It's not great. It's not even good.)


Jake Gittes without Roman Polanski, Kinderman without Friedkin: at least Peter Bogdanovich got to return to the director's chair for Texasville, his followup to 1971's The Last Picture Show, both based on books by Larry McMurtry. While the first film is an ensemble piece (albeit with Timothy Bottoms and Ben Johnson at the center), the second is very much through the eyes of Jeff Bridges' Duane. All of these legacy sequels deal, in some way, with weariness, regret, and generally looking around at the world twenty years later and going, "Is this all there is?", with each one giving a different answer - or taking a different tack in how they answer. Texasville, because it is focused on a small town full of the same people who'll never leave, is more poignant, more effective in this regard than the others because...well, because the stakes are so small. No demons, no criminal conspiracies, just people living, getting older, reevaluating their choices. Like the movies above, this was a box office failure, a fact that, according to IMDb, sabotaged early Oscar buzz for Annie Pott's performance as Bridges' wife who, somewhat too understandingly, befriends his old flame Jacy Farrow (yes, Cybill Shepherd, absolutely glorious). Its reception is so unfair, but so is Bogdanovich's reaction: he believed his vision was compromised, and there are cuts that run thirty minutes longer, with Criterion's recent release including a black-and-white version (The Last Picture Show was black-and-white as well, but Texasville was released in color); I haven't seen these versions, but the latter feels like even Bogdanovich may have missed how The Last Picture Show works as bilious nostalgia while Texasville is reality hitting you in full color, finding beauty without silver and shadows to lean on. I love this movie, I love it more than I do The Last Picture Show, and I think that flick's a bloody masterpiece.

Texasville and The Exorcist III began as novels, their original creators driven not by the easy buck but by the need to express their own conflicts within their lives. The Two Jakes, as documented in The Big Goodbye, The Kid Stays in the Picture, and Easy Riders and Raging Bulls, was a reunion among friends (Towne, Nicholson, Evans), seeking to recapture that moment when they were all on top of the world, together. All three flopped, and The Two Jakes has not benefited from any critical reappraisal. So, it's funny that the one legacy sequel to make money, get nominated for everythingand even get a re-release just last year, is the one whose entire creative team (to go by reports) was either cornered into it or just did it for the check. 


That would be The Godfather: Part III, in which Al Pacino returns as Michael Corleone, trying to go legit but unable to escape the consequences of his actions or the ghosts of his past. Writer-producer-director Francis Ford Coppola refused to do it until the studio told him it was happening whether he participated or not, so he might as well preserve his legacy...albeit at a discount price. Robert Duvall, nominated for his performance as consigliere Tom Hagen in the original The Godfather, did not return for Part III because the studio also tried to shortchange him. Pacino did the movie but thought it betrayed the character of Michael Corleone by making him too sympathetic. We'll discuss it much more when we get into the year's Oscar nominees. 

It's funny that legacy sequels then were not the guaranteed moneymaker they are now. Maybe it was because this was an era where they didn't have to bank on nostalgia to market films to adults. After all, this was the year with a particularly infamous innovation for cinema: the NC-17 rating. But we'll get into that tomorrow. 

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Wednesday, April 1, 2015

This Is It: The 1971 Retro Hollmann Awards, Part Three

It all ends today. This is the last of the Retro Hollmann Award of 1971.

Within, you will find: my favorite costumes; my full Top Ten; my lineup of Original Song, the final winner of which was not decided until three minutes before I hit PUBLISH...

And, to start us off, the prize for Best Ensemble, which has no equivalent at the Oscars, but hey -- these are the Hollmann Awards.



BEST ENSEMBLE
1. The Boy Friend
Always give props to a troupe of dancing, singing thesps, all bringing their A-Game, all on-tone, none ever better. Maybe you wouldn't think to combine the talents of Glenda Jackson, Twiggy, Tommy Tune, and Vladek Sheybal (not to mention Max Adrian, Georgina Hale, and Antonia Ellis) -- but thank goodness someone did.

4. Carnal Knowledge

Unexpected performances from Ann-Margret, Candice Bergen and Art Garfunkel; effective cameos by Carol Kane and Rita Moreno; an almost movie-stealing turn from Cynthia O'Neal; and a phenomenal Jack Nicholson at the center of it all.

5. Cold Turkey

Dick Van Dyke and Bob Newhart against type, yes -- but let's also give props to Barnard Hughes' desperate, chain-smoking doctor, Barbara Cason's snooty cigarette fiend, Simon Scott's surly tobacco exec, and Bob & Ray.

3. Dodes'ka-den

Kurosawa's cast has to run the gamut from comedy to drama, varying degrees of each, without being in different films. Nailed it. Little Hiroyuki Kawase is a real find as the beggar's son, Tomoko Yamazaki wrings your heart as the paper flower girl, and at the heart of it all -- Yoshitaka Zushi as the boy conducting a train.

2. The Last Picture Show

Ross Brown, casting director
Anarene feels like the real deal, not just because of the soon-to-be legends like Jeff Bridges, Ellen Burstyn, and Cybill Shepherd; not just due to the reliable character work of Eileen Brennan, Clu Gulager, and Ben Johnson; but also because of the work from Sharon Taggart, Joe Heathcock, Sam Bottoms, and Gary Brockette. It takes a village to make a masterpiece.

What more can I possibly give to the films of Ken Russell? Find out after the jump...

Monday, March 30, 2015

A Bit of Magic: The 1971 Retro Hollmann Awards, Part Two

The honors for the films of 1971 continue! Yesterday, the big winners were Fiddler on the Roof, The Devils, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, and Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion. All but one of those titles return today...but not necessarily as winners!


BEST SOUND

5. The Anderson Tapes
Dennis Maitland, production sound
Al Gramaglia, sound mixer
Jack Fitzstephens, sound editor
Why do footsteps always seem different in Sidney Lumet's films? They scuff and shuffle, clip and clop. And of course, we mustn't forget the conversations we hear, whether in person, over headphones, or through the hiss of secret recordings played back for our benefit.

2. The Boy Friend
Maurice Askew, sound recordist
Brian Simmons, sound mixer
At times blending a scratchy vinyl recording with the voices of the on-screen ensemble, changing it up from polished and perfect to the sometimes-lost acoustics of the rundown theatre, and never missing a step -- quite literally, especially during the tap numbers.

1. Fiddler on the Roof
David Hildyard, sound mixer
Gordon K. McCallum, sound re-recording mixer
Les Wiggins, sound editor
Perfect. From the butcher chopping in time to "Tradition" to all atmosphere dropping out during the "Chava Ballet Sequence", from the subtle scrapings of the bottle dancers' feet to the soundtrack being overwhelmed by fire and pounding music. Grounds the musical in reality.

3. The French Connection
Chris Newman/Theodore Soderberg, sound
It's all about that chase sequence between a car and a city train, with the right amount of squeals, shrieks, screams, moans (from heart attacks), and so on. I'm also a big fan of the sequence where the cops are taking a suspicious car apart -- rejoice in the RIP RIP RIP!

4. El Topo
Gonzalo Gavira, sound effects
Lilia Lupercio, sound editor
Every little noise is exact, from the bullets to the crunching of the sand beneath a boot. The cacophony of the village at the end, the echoes of the cave of the misfits, the gutting final slaughter.

Visual Effects, Director, Supporting Actress and more, after the jump...

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Mayhem, Music, Murder: The 1971 Retro Hollmann Awards, Part One

After so much waiting, here it finally is -- the Retro Hollmann Awards of 1971! Seventy (70) films were screened for 1971, and as always, some desirables were missed, some surprises were discovered, and some duds, unfortunately, slipped through the cracks. But here's the full list:

 The Abominable Dr. Phibes
The Anderson Tapes

The Andromeda Strain

Bananas

Bedknobs and Broomsticks
Billy Jack
Black Jesus

Bless the Beasts & Children

Blood Mania

The Boy Friend
Brewster McCloud
Carnal Knowledge
Cat O’Nine Tails
A Clockwork Orange
Cold Turkey
The Conformist
Death in Venice
The Devils
Diamonds Are Forever
Dirty Harry
Dodes’Ka-Den
$
Drive, He Said
Escape from the Planet of the Apes
Fiddler on the Roof
The French Connection
The Garden of the Finzi Continis
Get Carter
The Go-Between
Harold and Maude
Honky
The Hospital
The House That Dripped Blood
Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion
Jennifer on My Mind
Johnny Got His Gun
Klute
Kotch
The Last Picture Show

The Lickerish Quartet
The Love Machine

Making It

Le Mans
Mary, Queen of Scots
McCabe & Mrs. Miller

The Music Lovers

Nicholas and Alexandra

Play Misty for Me
Pretty Maids All in a Row
Shaft
Simon, King of the Witches
Sometimes a Great Notion
Straw Dogs
Summer of ’42
Sunday Bloody Sunday
Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song
Taking Off
Tchaikovsky
They Might Be Giants

El Topo
The Trojan Women
Two-Lane Blacktop

Wake in Fright

Werewolves on Wheels

What’s the Matter with Helen?
When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth
Who Is Harry Kellerman, and Why Is He Saying Those Terrible Things About Me?
Willard
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
Zachariah

For the next three days, I will be naming my perceived best in all 18 categories, two of which (Makeup, Ensemble) did not have an Oscar equivalent that year. Some nominees match the Academy's, while some categories have been completely overhauled. They are all, however, unmistakably Me.

And we start with the Editors!  

BEST EDITING
2. The Anderson Tapes
Joanne Burke
Standout scene: the entire heist that takes up the final third of the film, cutting back and forth between the tenants of each floor as they are rounded up by Anderson's crew; the crew itself gathering the objects of desire; the several areas of surveillance; and the slowly mobilized law enforcement.

5. The Devils
Michael Bradsell
Standout scene: If this was purely the director's cut, I'd say the sequence where the nuns rape a towering, crucified Jesus statue, intercut with Frather Grandier holding a quiet, personal Mass in nature, is legendary for a reason. But let us not forget the final sequence, as the village of Loudon watches an execution with varying degreess of satisfaction and horror.

1. Fiddler on the Roof
Antony Gibbs/Robert Lawrence
No standout scene -- for it is all so perfectly edited, from "Tradition" through to the finale -- the Bottle Dance, the pogrom, the Chava ballet, "Anatevka", the dream sequence....perfection.

4. Get Carter
John Trumper
Standout scene: Carter beats the shit out of some thugs, using their car. It's great.

3. Klute
Carl Lerner
Standout scene: Any of the therapy sessions, cut back and forth between Bree and the doctor at the perfect moments. Bree's final encounter with a deranged murderer, including listening to a recording of her deceased friend, is a gutting, terrifying scene as well.

Makeup, Cinematography, Score, and more -- below the jump.

Monday, March 2, 2015

Casting Coup: A Clockwork Orange

I am not one of those people that immediately objects to a remake. I always want to see where it's gonna go, what it's going to do with the material, if it's going to have a neat new spin or follow things beat for beat. But I grew up in the theatre, where everyone got to play the Scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz at least once, each serving a different director's vision, each following their own instincts.

And so it is that I have Casting Coup Tuesdays (now basically Casting Coup Weeks), where I reimagine the cinema as Broadway, and cast a Revival -- easier to do with something like Fiddler on the Roof, which started as a stage play. But this week I'm tackling all five of the Best Picture nominees from 1971, which means taking on the task of re-casting classics like The French Connection, The Last Picture Show, and today's gem...

NOMINATIONS
Best Picture
Best Director - Stanley Kubrick
Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium - Stanley Kubrick
Best Film Editing - Bill Butler

The story of an impossibly violent teenage hoodlum in the near future whose crimes eventually catch up to him, landing him in jail; he attempts to get out early by undergoing an experimental behavior modification treatment called Ludovico's Technique. The film, and the novel before it, wants to talk about free will, governmental control, fascism -- all that good stuff. Kubrick's film ends on a distasteful note of Alex embracing his true, horrible nature, but at least he's exercising his free will. This excises the final chapter of Anthony Burgess's original novel, which has a little more hope for innate goodness, but which Kubrick felt wasn't true to the tone of the rest of the novel. I can see that.

A note before we begin -- when I originally planned this Casting Coup Week, it was to go along with my 2014/1971 connections. Thusly, each cast features one or more Academy Award-nominated actors from this year.

Let's get to it, shall we? After the jump, mind.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Eight Against Five: Best Picture, 1971

Was 1971 the greatest Best Picture lineup ever? The American Film Institute certainly must think so -- in its original presentation of the 100 Greatest Films of All Time, two of these films made it in: A Clockwork Orange and The French Connection; in the 10th Anniversary reassessment, The Last Picture Show joined them. At least one of these choices is wrong, in my opinion -- and you won't wait long to hear which of them it is!

And what of today's crop of Best Picture nominees? Will they one day be added to the list of Greatest Films of All Time? Certainly there are early arguments to be made in favor of Birdman and Boyhood, both uniquely consructed and executed. And I'm sure history will correct the perceived snub against Selma -- though, hey, being one of the eight movies named Best Picture of the Year is no slight, you know what I mean? 

Oh, Lord, eight pictures. How ever will I compare each of them to 1971's crop of five?

The American Tale 
I suppose Iraq could make a tale of a sniper, and I know there's that Seven Up series of films from Britain that document a group of people from childhood through...well, ongoing. And Lord knows every country has its take on small town living. But the slacker musing/iMac using/Obama loving of Boyhood; the blind patriotism unsettlingly ignoring the moments of doubt, along with the overseas vengeance, of American Sniper; and the village existence that is physically easy to leave but mentally and emotionally always there, trapping you, keeping you in a place where the cinema is the symbol of a dying town, as in The Last Picture Show. These concerns, and the execution thereof, are, I think, uniquely American.

The Jerk-As-Genius Appeal 
"He's unlikable but maybe he's right!" the film screams. And maybe it's true! Maybe the biggest assholes in the room...are the brightest assholes in the room! The guy who hates sandwiches and doesn't like jokes might be the one who brings down the Nazis (The Imitation Game). The teacher who physically and verbally abuses his students is the only one able to bring out the untapped potential in the truly talented (Whiplash). The cop shouting racist epithets, bedding barely legals, and randomly shaking down people he just doesn't like, is more dedicated to seeing justice done than anyone else working in the system (The French Connection). They're uncompromising, but dammit, they get results.

The Historical Romance  
Admittedly, The Theory of Everything is much more of a biopic, more micro, than Nicholas and Alexandra, which not only explores the devoted marriage of Russia's last royal family, but how that effected the rest of their Empire, until it finally crumbled. Theory of Everything is not about crumbling empires, but strengthened wills that fight back against the undefeatable...and defeat it. In one film, an entire world that has been granted to the central couple is taken away; in the other, the couple itself builds its own world. Really, what a fascinating double feature it would make -- even if it got a bit long.

The Auteurist Work 
The director's thumbprint is on every single aspect, and not just because they also contributed to the screenplay. For some, this gets in the way of the film, as the director's confident choices appear to mesh uncomfortably with their intent; for others, it all goes together beautifully, the Auteur Theory made perfect, and all the more beautiful because the director refused to compromise. For Birdman, it resulted in an Oscar; for A Clockwork Orange, it resulted in infamy and immortality; what, then, will it yield for Selma? Time will tell, but there is no doubt that each film is unflinching in its vision. Iñárritu, du Vernay, Kubrick -- no need to specify with first names, we know immediately who you're talking about.

The Non-Drama with Technical Prowess  
Not to say that it's all fun and games, necessarily, but it's certainly a respite from the often more dour work in the category -- and the craft elements are so specific, so impressive, that they alone make the case for its being here. This year, we were blessed with The Grand Budapest Hotel, which I consider the best of Oscar's nominees -- movingly-written, superbly-designed, and with a soundtrack that is delectable to the ears. In 1971, audiences were blessed with Fiddler on the Roof, another movingly-written, superbly-designed, musically-orgasmic motion picture which I consider...ah! But you'll just have to wait and see, won't you? After the jump, please....

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

It's the Singer and the Song: Best Original Song, 1971

Time to make another mixtape, this time of Original Song nominees!

I have to confess, Glen Campbell...I'll Be Me sits with The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies as the only non-specialty nominees I have not seen. But I've listened to it! And I liked it!

Now: the music. After the jump.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Things Are Different: Best Supporting Actor, 1971

It's not easy to compare this year's slate of Supporting Actor nominees to that of 1971. Ben Johnson is somewhere between J.K. Simmons (the steamroller) and Robert Duvall (the veteran honored) -- except Duvall already has an Oscar and several nods, and Simmons' character is incomparable to Johnson's. Jeff Bridges certainly has the same cocky attitude as Edward Norton, but it's definitely more naive, boyish, open, and borne of insecurity. Mark Ruffalo is just as charming and good-natured and dependable as Richard Jaeckel ... actually, that's a perfect comparison. If this was Ethan Hawk'e first nomination, I could more easily make the Character Actor Made Good argument with Roy Scheider. But who the hell gets saddled with Leonard Frey? 

The Oscars are different, there's no doubt about it. We joke a lot about how Supporting Actor has become the go-to category for honoring veterans, or how they're for leads who aren't as famous/young/handsome as the other lead. And in comparing these two years ... that may be quite true. Simmons is the only 2014 member nominated for the first time, in a role that would be campaigned for lead if, say, Daniel Day-Lewis or Denzel Washington played the part. But when you look at 1971's lineup, everyone is here for the first time, all of them are legitimate supporting turns, and the ages range from 22 to 53 -- quite young!

That's what I learned. Now what I did I love? That's after the jump.

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

A Fine Vintage: Best Actress, 1971

One of my favorite categories -- after Supporting Actress, of course, and right ahead of Adapted Screenplay. And I have to commend both 2014 and 1971 for the strength of their lineup. Even if not everybody made it to my personal ballot, I still find the overall list to be well above-average. Both years.

Here's to the ladies who...

...go back and forth between determination and humiliation. They're capable, haunted, and don't want to have to beg and plead to maintain their existence. 
(Marion Cotillard in Two Days, One Night / Glenda Jackson in Sunday Bloody Sunday)

...doggedly pursue a fresh start, as they sometimes face, sometimes escape their past. Too many strangers have seen them naked; they're getting their self-control, self-worth, and confidence back!
(Reese Witherspoon in Wild / Jane Fonda in Klute)

...live every moment with the threat of disease destroying their family, their household, and their legacy -- and refuse to let it defeat them.
(Julianne Moore in Still Alice / Janet Suzman in Nicholas and Alexandra)

...stick to their guns, even as the world around them gives them every reason and opportunity to abandon their cause. It's not about stubbornness; it's about love.
(Felicity Jones in The Theory of Everything / Vanessa Redgrave in Mary, Queen of Scots)

...are in control of every situation, even if the man in their life thinks otherwise.
(Rosamund Pike in Gone Girl / Julie Christie in McCabe & Mrs. Miller)

More thoughts on the 70s gals, after the jump....

Monday, February 16, 2015

Crafty Bugger: Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, 1971


In looking at this year's nominees for Best Production Design, one cannot help but be reminded of the nominees for its then-equivalent Best Art Direction-Set Decoration in 1971. Especially if, like me, you're devoting an entire month to forcing those kind of parallels. Hopefully, however, you'll see a pattern emerge...one that makes the word "forcing" seem like a disservice.

Take Interstellar, which showcases the same grounded sci-fi steeliness as The Andromeda Strain.

Or  The Imitation Game, whose attention to period authenticity does for World War II Britain was Mary, Queen of Scots' similar approach does for Elizabethan England.

Take Into the Woods, with its rather ugly, straight-faced take on fantasy, much as Bedknobs and Broomsticks grounds itself in a reality unprepared for the witchcraft on display.

Or Mr. Turner, with lived-in locations that echo the same intimate veracity as Fiddler on the Roof.

And then, of course, there's The Grand Budapest Hotel, grand and big and bold and colorful, as befits a fantastical Wes Anderson flick -- it's amusing, then, that its closest counterpart is the historically-based Nicholas and Alexandra, a film that went to great lengths/expense to capture the ostentatiousness of the Romanovs.

And we'll see just what I mean, after the jump....

Book Club Time: Best Adapted Screenplay, 1971

Finding the common thread between the nominees of 2014 and those of 1971 will be a challenge indeed. The landscape of cinema and Oscar has changed so completely in those 40-plus years. Back then, all five nominees were based on novels, and two of them were foreign. This year, one nominee is based on a novel, three on bios, and one on a short film -- the latter especially stands out, since in 1971, such things just did not happen. 

Still, there are some similarities, if you choose to look for them. So allow me to suggest, a la Amazon, some companion watches/reads ... after the jump

Saturday, February 14, 2015

My Valentines: Best Supporting Actress, 1971


This is ladies night, and the feeling's right ... to look at the handful of performances that made the Academy's cut for Best Supporting Actress! Both 2014 and 1971 boast a strong lineup overall. Can you imagine if these gals paired up, commiserated, found common ground? Just imagine...

Joan Clarke (The Imitation Game) & Lois Farrow (The Last Picture Show)
For a moment, it looked like she would have to settle, something she wasn't too happy about. After all, she was as intelligent as she was beautiful, more aware of her surroundings than many of the men around her. A shrewd observer, she had to make some compromises -- that was just the reality of her situation -- but she was more in control than anyone knew. Well, almost anyone -- there was that one guy who appreciated her for who she was...

Olivia (Boyhood) & Alison Densmore (Who is Harry Kellerman...?)
Life hasn't dealt her an easy hand. She's struggling. But the fact that she is struggling means she's working, she hasn't given up. There's a goal in mind, though as time passes, she's starting to think that maybe it's unattainable -- maybe no one really reaches it at all. Through it all, she's more self-assured and in control than she thinks she is. She's a survivor, but she's not just surviving. And she's going to be just fine.

The Witch (Into the Woods) & Mrs. Maudsley (The Go-Between) 
Momma has plans for her daughter -- those plans do not involve the earthy mess outside the walls of the place they call home. She will do whatever it takes to make sure her plans come to fruition, even down to manipulating innocents. The main thorn in her side: That Man her daughter is completely besotted with, but who is clearly No Good For Her. But you know, no matter what you say, children won't listen. 

Bobbi (Wild) & Ruth Popper (The Last Picture Show)
A sweet woman, naturally open-hearted and warm, but one who's been ill-used by the men in her life. Continually sacrificing, trying to satisfy everyone but herself -- until, late in life, she finally gets the chance to pursue something that's challenging and freeing and personal. Though tears are shed in the kitchen, in the end, she rolls her shoulders back, reaching out to comfort those around her.

Sam (Birdman) & Bobbie (Carnal Knowledge) 
Girl is in a bad place, but she's looking to get out of it. A good start would be to stop pursuing the egomaniac.

The ladies of 1971, plus mine and Oscar's winner, after the jump.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Tuning In: Best Original Dramatic Score, 1971

I can't help but think of Best Original Score as a category full of types -- indeed, most Oscar categories are full of types (doubters should look to StinkyLulu for clarity). Of course, what those categories are differ from person to person, but let's see how wildly I can draw parallels between the films of today and those of 1971!

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

The Helmsmen: Director, 1971


We've landed on Best Director! Gave a lot of thought to this one in my 1971-2014 linking. I mean, who do I compare to whom? Of the five men nominated in 1971, two already had Oscars, one was on his third nomination, one was a first-time filmmaker, and one had finally found a film that suited both himself and audiences. Of the five men (always men!) nominated in 2014, two are previous nominees, two are beloved auteurs finally embraced by the Academy, and one is Morten Tyldum.

But dammit, I found a way! I found the common threads!

THE RIFFER
He's not just honing his voice via literary adaptation; he's also riffing off the tone and style of a respected director whose voice and interests neatly align with his own. This could be Wes Anderson adapting Stefan Zweig via Ernst Lubitsch for the invented Europe of The Grand Budapest Hotel, or Peter Bogdanovich adapting Larry McMurtry via John Ford to capture a Western community for The Last Picture Show.

THE PERCEIVED HIRED GUN
Working in a genre that's catnip to Oscar voters and audiences only mission was not to fuck it up. Probably anybody could have done this. Yet he still manages to bring a personal touch, not getting in the way of the story, yet offering a strong piece of cinema with superb performances. Morten Tyldum offers us another World War II tale (with a gay twist!) in The Imitation Game; Norman Jewison offers us a musical epic in Fiddler on the Roof.

THE MEMOIRIST
He's got a personal stake in the material, having shaped aspects of it from his own life, but he doesn't let that cloud his judgment. The performances he coaxes from his actors delve deep -- you know them all too well. Richard Linklater reportedly riffed off aspects of his childhood for Boyhood; John Schlesinger was more than willing to own up to the autobiographical elements of Sunday Bloody Sunday


THE LANE CHANGER
Raised eyebrows when he took on the project, as it's not exactly his "box", so to speak; not so much his "thang". Yet this is the one that makes people look up, and even his former critics find themselves applauding. Alejandro G. Inarritu traded in his mopey human dramas for showbiz comedy in Birdman. William Friedkin, known for niche stage adaptations and zany comedies (weirdly), became a power player with his cop thriller The French Connection


THE BULLSHIT ARTIST
Carefully-composed shots and a very deliberate tone, with observations and revelations tailor-made to make people think a little more deeply about things, man. Problem is: this emperor has no clothes. An empty, dull, unfocused horror. Yet it's fooled everyone. Bennett Miller's Foxcatcher is a worse offender than Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange, though. Even more agonizing: these guys are usually great!

A further look at the filmmakers of 1971, after the jump.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Looks Like a Winner: Best Cinematography, 1971


I probably shouldn't point out that this is almost a full week late, but hey -- it's here, right?

Now we come to a difficult point of assessment: Cinematography. Many times, we grade it in terms of what looks prettiest, but this is not necessarily the best choice -- not all movies are made to be pretty. We also sometimes judge on technical wizardry or degree of difficulty -- better, perhaps, but I don't care how much of Gravity was a single take, it was a 3D film that looked flat. In the end, one must always consider what it does for the film.

And sometimes, I just go for the prettiest.

As with any category, there are certain looks, and certain genres, that tend to crop up come nomination time. If I may...

THE EARTHY ART PIECE
The film that people would describe as "painterly", yet not necessarily bold in color. It was meant quite literally for biopic Mr. Turner this year, a reflection of the titular painter's own very mustardy canvases, but also serves well for 1971's Fiddler on the Roof, which, despite its musical genre, has a quite natural, clay-like look to it. Both have phenomenal sunsets, too.

THE MONOCHROME MASTERPIECE
In the age of color film, going black-and-white seems to almost guarantee a nod (Nebraska, for God's sake). Artfully applied this year for Poland's Ida, a tale of identity, memory, morality, and the grey areas in all; also beautiful in 1971's The Last Picture Show.

THE SINGLE-TAKE WONDER
Nothing impresses like a beautifully-lit film with at least one single-take scene, one that makes our jaws drop and exclaim, "HOW?!?" This year, Birdman is getting the praise, as the entire film is comprised of several long-take scenes; in 1971, Summer of '42 the climax is filmed uninterrupted within a single room.

THE HISTORICAL EPIC FROM OL' RELIABLE
There are masters of the craft who are respected and beloved by their peers. Today, we have Roger Deakins, once again nominated (and, once again, probably unsuccessfully) for his reliably great work on the war film Unbroken. In 1971, there was Freddie Young, celebrating the last of his five nominations (three of which he won) for the Romanov bio Nicholas and Alexandra.

THE WINTRY WONDER
There is, I think, a special talent to making a frosty frame, to capturing the genuine chill of a setting. Certainly The Grand Budapest Hotel feels like winter, even indoors; so, too, does The French Connection. Neither really looks similar, and they certainly cover action differently, but at least I'm not alone in admiring icy cinematography.

Less muddle after the jump

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Odd Pairings: Best Original Screenplay, 1971

Double feature time again -- only this time, instead of just throwing on a DVD or Blu-Ray or whatever the kids use (holograms? what were those little discs in Minority Report?), why not pick up a manuscript? Specifically, any published copies of the nominees for Best Original Screenplay, be they from 2014 or 1971. And allow me to suggest some travel companions to suit the mood...

You down for broad dramedy zeroing in on a male protagonist undergoing a personal crisis while performing his duties within a particular industry? Double the pleasure with 1971's medical satire The Hospital and 2014's showbiz satire Birdman! (Yes, I know I already made that comparison yesterday, but if the shoe fits...)

In the mood for a bizarre crime flick with a sick sense of humor and an unstoppable protagonist that you kind of wish would, just once, get punched in the face? Double-tap that sucker with 1971's cop-focused Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion and 2014's late-night news-focused Nightcrawler.

Perhaps you like crime just fine, but would rather trade in the humor for something that takes a closer look at gender and America. Learn about the ladies from 1971's Klute, and learn about the lads from 2014's Foxcatcher.

Or maybe you're highly specific and could really go for a coming-of-age story focusing on the influence certain adults have over children's lives, and the melancholic nostalgia that comes from looking back? Get out the tissues, because I'm talking about 1971 drama Summer of '42 and 2014 comedy The Grand Budapest Hotel.

Nah, you're the type of person that wants to see the reverse -- the effect a younger person has on the older people in his life -- and you want it spiced up with realizations of how everyone always hopes that they're almost on the brink of Getting It Right, but rarely do. They just thought there'd be more! Yes, yes -- double the fun with 1971's bisexual menage a trois at the center of Sunday Bloody Sunday and 2014's saga of parents and children Boyhood.

For a further look at the films of 1971, please do jump after the jump...

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

The More Things Change...: Best Actor, 1971

It is interesting, I think, when one looks at this year's crop of Best Actor compared to 1971's, to notice the surprising similarities among the nominees. After more than 40 years, there will always be a certain type of role, or performance, or actor, that attracts Oscar's attention.

Birdman and The Hospital
Michael Keaton (also a Hollmann Award Nominee) brings terrific subtlety to the role of Riggan Thomson, a washed-up actor literally staging his comeback, constantly questioning and doubting himself, surrounded by an ensemble of crazies with their own insecurities and hang-ups, in a beautifully-realized dark comedy about the theatre. George C. Scott is more bellowy and blowsy as Dr. Herbert Bock, a doctor at the end of his rope, constantly questioning and doubting himself, surrounded by an ensemble of crazies with their own insecurities and incompetencies, in a so-so dark comedy about the medical establishment. Oscar, it seems, loves sweaty, drunken monologuing.

The Imitation Game and The French Connection 
Benedict Cumberbatch is superb as the real-life mathematician Alan Turing, portrayed in this film as a super genius who must prove to an increasingly hostile Establishment that his ideas and instincts are not only correct, but the only thing standing in the way of a great evil -- Herr Hitler. Gene Hackman is superb as Popeye Doyle, based on real-life cop Eddie Egan, portrayed in this film as a cocky-but-honest cop who must prove to an increasingly hostile Establishment that his instincts are not only correct, but the only thing standing in the way of a great evil -- heroin trafficked in from France. Oscar, it seems, loves the smartest guy in the room, especially when he has to defy his superiors, man!

American Sniper and Fiddler on the Roof
Bradley Cooper bulked up to play Navy SEAL Chris Kyle, unwavering in his conviction that the Iraq War, and his part in it, are necessary to preserve the United States -- at times, he's absolutely frightening in his black-and-white certainty. Topol greyed up to play middle-aged milkman Tevye, but while Chris Kyle holds firm to what he believes to be true, Tevye is starting to look with curiosity, and maybe a little excitement, at the changing world around him -- he holds on to his traditions, yes, but he's beginning to adapt. Oscar, it seems, loves a man with strong beliefs.

The Theory of Everything and Sunday Bloody Sunday 
Eddie Redmayne is the great quantum physicist Stephen Hawking, conveying warmth, strained patience, uncertainty, and eventual acceptance in an unconventional love story -- forget the ALS, it's the odd triangle between Stephen, wife Jane, and friend/church choir leader Jonathan Hellyer Jones, that's the real draw. Peter Finch is Dr. Daniel Hirsh, conveying warmth, strained patience, insecurity, and willful self-delusion in an unconventional love story -- Daniel, his young lover Bob, and Bob's female lover Alex. Oscar, it seems, loves to check "It's Complicated."

Foxcatcher and Kotch 
What on earth could Steve Carell's performance as John du Pont possibly have in common with Walter Matthau's performance as Kotch? Honey, I don't even know why these people got nominated. Oscar, it seems, loves grey toupees.

For a further look at the performances of 1971, please continue after the jump.

Monday, February 2, 2015

Here We Go: Best Original Song Score and Adaptation, 1971

Over the next three weeks, we'll be taking a look at the films of 1971 -- as usual, seen through the prism of the Academy Award Nominees from that year. Not as usual, we will also take a look at the corresponding nominees of this year's Oscars. How does J.K. Simmons stack up alongside Ben Johnson? What is the parallel between Alexandre Desplat and Jerry Fielding? Can we trace an evolution, or possible plateau, in the 43 years that have passed between The French Connection and Selma? These are the types of questions we will try to ponder.

Later, though. For now, let us concentrate on one of my favorite categories to have gone the way of the dodo -- the Adapted Song Score (aka...well, see post title).

I'm still not entirely sure why they discontinued the category (is it because no one could top Prince?), especially since the minimum required was only three. Easy enough, I should think. This year alone could have seen nominations for Annie, Begin Again and Into the Woods, all of which use both songs and music derived from those songs to create a complete score. Previous years would have been able to honor FrozenTrue Grit, Black Swan, Ray, Walk the Line -- plenty of options!

In 1971, there were a full five to choose from: