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Showing posts with label Cinema. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cinema. Show all posts
Monday, 11 November 2019
Tuesday, 22 October 2019
PYGMALION and MY FAIR LADY? Two gifts from George Bernard Shaw
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Tuesday, 15 October 2019
Still Alice: a real diary, which affects us all, about the disease
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Sunday, 6 October 2019
El secreto de sus ojos: an intense novel and a film that can speak to the heart
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Labels:
Argentina,
Cinema,
Eduardo Sacheri,
El secreto de sus ojos,
film,
Juan Josè Campanella,
La pregunta de sus ojos,
Letteratura,
Oscar,
Ricardo Darin,
Romanzo,
Soledad,
Villamil
Wednesday, 2 October 2019
THE INVISIBLE MAN, BY HERBERT GEORGE WELLS: THE SYMBOL OF CREATIVITY, WHICH COLLIDES WITH PREJUDICE
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Saturday, 28 September 2019
Predestination: an interesting interpretation of our existence
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Aftermath: first, real drama’s trial of acting for Arnold Schwarzenegger
I had decided to
watch Aftermath, a film of 2017, as
if it were a challenge: I wanted to see if, even this time, Arnold
Schwarzenegger would have tried his hand at the usual revenge movie: a story based on the protagonist who loses one or
more of his loved ones and then goes back on criminals, making a slaughter (just
like Collateral Damage).
In fact everything
was announced as the usual soup; yet, the humble and modest aspect of Arnold in
the film should have made me understand, from the beginning, that it was much
more.
The architect Roman
Melnyk (Schwarzenegger) awaits with trepidation the arrival of his wife and his
daughter: the daughter is pregnant, and this makes the expectation more
meaningful, as he prepares the house with festoons and welcome gifts.
The man goes to
the airport to hug the two women again, but the atmosphere is not what he was
expecting to be: he is summoned to a secluded room and, once the doors are
closed, he is told that the plane on which the two women were traveling had a
terrible accident that caused the destruction of the aircraft and the
inevitable death of all passengers.
The film unfolds
on two parallel levels: the story of Roman, who, all at once, lost his wife, his
daughter and his grandchild, and the story of Jacob Bonanos, the flight
controller of the airport, who was responsible for managing all the routes on
the evening of the accident.
Here we
immediately highlight the two narrative sides: Roman's endless pain, mixed with
anger and helplessness, and the guilt-ridden pain of Jacob's remorse, as he
certainly wouldn't have wanted that tragedy to happen. And to tell the truth
the film shows us how Jacob is, as a matter of fact, a scrupulous, attentive
and professional operator: the accident really happens due to fatality,
certainly as a result of a distraction by Jacob, but all because of an inescapable
series of circumstances .
Roman decides to
go to the place of the disaster, mingling with the volunteer staff in charge of
collecting the remains and the wreckage of the plane: it is he who finds a
necklace belonging to his daughter and the body of the girl and his wife.
From that moment on he spends most of his time in the cemetery, next to the
graves of the women he loved and that he lost forever.
Jacob, on the
other hand, falls into a depression with no way out: he is now dependent on
psychiatric drugs and the anguish is devouring him from within. Moreover, as
all people accuse him of that unacceptable crime, he has received many death
threats. For this reason the company decides to give him a new identity and a
new job, in another location.
This does not
prevent Roman, after a few years, from succeeding, thanks to a detective, in
tracing the new identity and the new place where Jacob lives.
One evening Jacob
receives a visit from his wife and his son, from whom he lives separately.
Just that evening
Roman knocks on Jacob's door: Roman wants to show the photo of his wife and his
daughter to Jacob, only to have his apology for their death. Nothing else.
At that moment two
errors occur: Jacob reacts, at Roman's request, in an overwrought manner,
telling the man to leave, instead of trying to understand his reasons; for his
part Roman lets himself and be overwhelmed by the pain he feels inside and by the
anger that blinds him: while he is crying he stabs the ex flight controller,
killing him, under the eyes of Jacob's wife and son.
The ending,
however, is not really this: there will be some long-term consequences for such
a gesture; however, I will let you find them out by watching the film, although
it should not be difficult to guess.
If Jacob had
responded by revealing his inner torture, the torture to which he subjected
himself, to punish himself for what had happened, everything would have changed:
if he had only taken that picture in his hand, if he had only looked at it,
everything would have been different. If Roman would have let himself be guided
by his heart, and not by his instinct, he would have given Jacob a chance and would
not have killed him: our choices, dictated by the emotions of the moment, affect
our lives, for better or for worse.
The film is based
on a true story, that of Vitaly Konstantinovich Kaloyev, a Russian architect
whose relatives perished in the flight of Bashkirian Airlines number 2937. The
plane collided with flight DHL 611, on 1 July 2002. Two years later, the
architect killed the Danish flight controller Peter Nielsen, whom everyone
considered guilty for what had happened.
The screenplay by
Javier Gullòn (Enemy, Out of the Dark,
Hierro) is remarkable and humanly deep, while Elliot Lester’s film
direction is absolutely wise.
This film was able
to touch my soul strings and it was a surprise, given the premises: I finally
saw Arnold Schwarzenegger play a truly dramatic role; I saw the Terminator become a man, with all his
weaknesses, while the actor turned into an interpreter.
I believe I prefer
him this way: with a body that is no longer so striking, though still noteworthy,
with a long beard, with his wrinkles, even with his own particular tenderness.
And I hope to see more trials of actor like this in his future film career.
AFTERMATH Official Trailer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZN8toxhSn9Y
(The copyright of the drawings is owned by the author of the post)
Labels:
Aftermath,
Arnold Schwarzenegger,
Cinema,
Elliot Lester,
Javier Gullòn
Location:
Mar Tirreno
Sunday, 22 September 2019
Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot: the Dark Charm of British Crime
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Thursday, 12 September 2019
Stan & Ollie: a piece of life of two sweetest actors, so dear to the public
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Saturday, 31 August 2019
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion: a film that knows how to enchant you with diabolical tricks
I liked it
immediately. I believe it was because of the music that introduced it, which is
the main soundtrack of the film (the unforgettable Sophisticated Lady, performed by the orchestra of Duke Ellington),
but also for the place and the era in which the story is set: the evocative New
York of the 40s. It cannot be hidden, moreover (how could it be?), my deep
passion for almost all the works of the director and interpreter of this film:
Woody Allen. I said almost all of
Woody Allen's films, because some of them, although celebrated by critics, have
never convinced me.
Nevertheless, back
to what we are dealing with: The Curse of
the Jade Scorpion, to tell the truth, has many, too many reasons to
fascinate the viewer. Atmosphere, plot, dialogues: in the end, one may even get
the impression that everything was built - damn good - with a maliciously
seductive formula, by using peculiar archetypes of a certain cinema of the past
(The Maltese Falcon, The Big Sleep)
that has remained, somehow, at the back of our minds.
The life of C. W.
Briggs has always been nothing more than a routine, without any excessive
imbalance: he is a skilled and able investigator in a renowned Insurance Agency, who has always completed successfully every investigation. Everything
changes when the company hires a new accountant: Betty Ann Fitzgerald. Miss
Fitzgerald is good and efficient, but really fussy and with a remarkable tendency
to renew things: this is why she considers Briggs a residual of the past, a useless
and annoying man; the clashes between the two reach maddening levels, because
Betty Ann really wants to force C.W. retirement, supported, in this choice, by
the boss, Mr. Magruder, with whom she has a relationship. During a party for one of the employees, Fitzgerald and Briggs are subjected to a
bizarre hypnosis experiment by an illusionist named Voltan; Voltan induces them
in a trance state and, for the first time, he creates, artificially, a love story between the two adversaries
who, once awakened, remember nothing about that event. An inexplicable theft, which occurs in
the wealthy Kensington mansion, begins to question C.W.'s investigative
abilities, thus giving Betty Ann the opportunity to request her dismissal.
However Briggs, convinced that the theft was planned by someone who has access
to the agency's data, focuses his suspicions right on Fitzgerald. This way he
hides himself in Betty’s house and discovers the difficult relationship she has
with her boss, saving her from an attempted suicide because of love troubles.
Now one suspects the other but, as a matter of fact, neither of them is really
convinced of that. Betty Ann returns the favour to CW, secretly penetrating his
house and finding, to her great surprise, the swag that everyone is looking
for; consequently she decides to report him to the police; at the same time she
witnesses a strange phone call that seems to make Briggs fall in a state of
trance, just like the one he had during the illusionist's show.
During the night a
second theft is committed and C. W, accused by Fizgerald, is arrested for both
crimes; he manages to escape, thanks to the help of Laura Kensington, the naughty
daughter of the tycoon who suffered the jewelery theft and who really likes the
unlucky detective. Briggs, looking for the most unsuspected place to hide,
decides that this shelter must be the home of Betty Ann. Betty agrees to
host him, but she is, also, still doubtful. That very night also Fitzgerald receives a
phone call that turns her into a human robot: the woman, still in a catatonic
state, confirms to Briggs her love for him, but then disappears. The same
evening a third theft occurs and Betty Ann, once again, blames Briggs for that.
C. W. is really in
trouble and he would not be able to find a clue if one of his usual informants
did not give him a name that all criminals in New York whisper, talking about the
recent thefts: Polgar. Sharing his information with his office colleagues Briggs
discovers that Polgar is none other than the name of Voltan, the Wizard, the
one who had hypnotized Fitzgerald and Briggs on the night of the party.
Everything becomes, finally, clear: Voltan Polgar, the hypnotist, made sure
that C.W. and Betty Ann carried out the thefts for him, phoning first to one
and then the other and repeating the words that placed them under his mind
control. C. W., with the help of another hypnosis expert who deletes the power
of the key word in Briggs' mind, rushes on the trail of his colleague,
Fitzgerald; once he finds Betty Ann he saves her, with an act of courage, from
the threat of the illusionist and evildoer, Polgar.
Everything ends,
it seems, in the best way: C.W. is totally innocent, just like Betty Ann, but
the old detective does not feel like staying any more in the agency where he
has worked for years. Meanwhile Fitzgerald plans the marriage with her boss,
Magruder; this marriage, however, is not considered with enthusiasm by C.W. who
tries to convince the woman not to leave, confessing his love to her. Every
attempt appears useless and Betty Ann proves to be unshakable, thus forcing
Briggs to pronounce the word that Polgar used to trigger the hypnotic state in
her. Thus the woman abandons herself to his call and follows him without further
delay. The final surprise is that it was not only C.W. to be
"defused" by the hypnosis expert, but also Fizgerald who, evidently,
was just waiting for a sign from Briggs to leave with him.
The "jade
scorpion" that is named in the title is the principle of mental command
that Voltan Polgar, the Magician, uses to reduce his victims under his mind
control.
I said, at the
beginning, how this film manages to win me over: it looks like a film from
another time, and to tell the truth it is, to all intents and purposes: Allen
was too good at reconstructing the heartbreaking background of that magical era
for the cinema in USA: he did it by means of the clothes, the lights, the photography and with the
particular treatment of the script made with a style that would have been
really liked by John Huston, Howard Hawks or Norman Z. McLeod. Above all, he
did it with the soundtrack, which is made up by unmistakably true jazz
musicians: in addition to the aforementioned Sophisticated Lady in fact, you can listen to some real
cornerstones of jazz, such as Two Sleepy
People, Tuxedo Junction, How High The Moon , In a Persian Market, Flatbush
Flanagan and Sunrise Serenade.
I did not mention
only by chance Norman Z. McLeod, as he was the one who directed the film Road to Rio, played by Bob Hope and Bing
Crosby, and in which the story was about hypnotized people forced to do things
against their will. The name of Bob Hope, however, also pops up in another case:
the film My Favorite Blonde contains,
in its plot, a specific reference to the title of Allen's film. In other words The Curse of the Jade Scorpion seems to
be a real, perfectly successful tribute to Bob Hope, Humphrey Bogart and to all
the cinema of the thirties and forties.
What do you want
me to tell you: at a certain age one begins to look back with nostalgia. All
those stories that filled our childhood and our youth remain stuck to us, inexplicably, just like a hypnotic induction: it takes little to make us
remind things; a face, a word, a particular music are enough to recreate a
certain charm. And Woody Allen was truly diabolical in recreating those
alchemies. Pretty clever indeed.
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion - Official Trailer
https://youtu.be/yHjG3QjhWf0
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion - Official Trailer
https://youtu.be/yHjG3QjhWf0
Friday, 16 August 2019
Peter Fonda: a cowboy riding on his horse towards the far horizon
As I am writing this post, all the news agencies and all the newscasts of the world, even on the internet, are giving the same information: Peter Fonda, one of the last icons of the counterculture of the sixties, has disappeared. Certainly, he was an important figure, if we also consider his genealogy in addition to his character, meant as a watershed between a certain type of cinema, which characterized an era, and the modern cinema, more essential and direct.
Peter Fonda was
born on February 23, 1939 in New York City. He came from a family of actors:
his father was Henry Fonda, while his mother was Frances Ford Seymour; he was
the brother of Jane Fonda, and the father of Bridget and Justin Fonda. He had a
half-sister, Frances de Villers Brokaw, born from his mother's first marriage,
and who died in 2008.
Peter's mother
committed suicide in a mental hospital when Peter was only ten, by cutting her
throat with a razor blade.
While attending
the University of Nebraska, Omaha,
Peter Fonda joined the Omaha Community
Playhouse, where many actors (including his father and Marlon Brando) had
started their careers.
He trained as a
theatrical actor and later passed to the big screen, where he would give voice
and face to the youngsters of the sixties: the "on the road"
generation that was celebrated by the writer Jack Kerouac, halfway between
political revolt and hippy movement.
Easy Rider, a film he wrote and produced along with Dennis Hopper
in 1969, outside the limited world of the film studios of that time,
consecrated Fonda as the ideal personification of a conflicted age: with this
film he achieved a great success, both with public and critics, and had the Oscar
nomination for the best screenplay. Thanks to Easy Rider Fonda became one of the emblems of pop culture, along
with Hopper and Jack Nicholson, who acted with him.
Later he played in
other films, which had less resonance, western in particular: The Hired Hand of 1971,which he also
directed; Idaho Transfer, 1975; Wanda Nevada, 1979.
In 1988 he was,
for a short time, in Italy, to shoot a mini-television series based on the
novel Gli Indifferenti, by Alberto
Moravia.
In 1997, Fonda
took part in the film Ulee's Gold, in
the role of a widowed grandfather, a beekeeper, who must take care of his two
nieces, played by Jessica Biel and Vanessa Zima: it is an intense drama on
generational conflicts that earned him an important award: the Golden Globe as best dramatic actor. He
also received two other awards, from the New
York Film Critics Circle Award and the Southeastern
Film Critics Association Award, as best leading actor.
In 2007 he
returned to the big screen, playing the bounty hunter Byron McElroy in the new
version of 3: 10 to Yuma, where he
worked alongside Christian Bale and Russell Crowe. The film received two Oscar
nominations. He also played a cameo role in the final scenes of the comedy Wild Hogs and as a disturbing
Mephistopheles in the movie Ghost Rider.
In 2009, he
appeared in the role of The Roman, in
The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day,
and also in the Californication TV series.
So he appeared in American Bandits: Frank and Jesse James
(2010); The Trouble with Bliss (2011);
Smitty (2012); Harodim (2012); As Cool as I
Am (2013); Copperhead (2013); The Ultimate Life (2013); The harvest (2013); HR (2014); House of Bodies
(2014); Jesse James: Lawman (2015); The Runner (2015); The Ballad of Lefty Brown (2017); The Most Hated Woman in America (2017); Borderland (2017) and Boundaries
(2018).
He was executive
producer for the documentary The Big Fix
(2012).
Today, August 16,
2019, the news of his death in Los Angeles came, unexpectedly.
It is right to
remember Peter Fonda, in the field of Cinema, as a spokesman and standard
bearer of a certain youthful malaise: a malaise that resulted, often, in the
rebellion against some schemes and conventions, leading young people to leave
their homes and travel on the road, as it is shown in the movie Easy Rider.
Peter Fonda,
Dennis Hopper and Jack Nicholson will forever bind their names to Easy Rider, because it was not just a
movie, but a declaration, as much as it had been, years before, for Rebel Without a Cause, with James Dean.
As to me, however,
there is a film by Peter Fonda that I am very fond of: this film is The Hired Hand.
In those years,
the 70s, I was immersed in a specific kind of culture from USA: that of country
music and a peculiar way of seeing things, typical of a society that wanted to
rediscover individual values, in contrast to the collective approach which was held until
then. It was a need for introspection, even for solitude, to a certain extent,
which I found completely in the film directed and interpreted by Fonda.
I will always recall
Peter Fonda just like in The Hired Hand:
his black silhouette on a horse, standing out on the hill, while a red, hot sun
sets on the horizon.
(Copyright of Drawings are owned by author)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCsCRNByc3g
Saturday, 8 June 2019
American Pastoral, first great directorial performance for Ewan McGregor
Sunday, 19 May 2019
"Forbidden Planet", a cult sci-fi film with some a bit unknown implications
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Saturday, 18 May 2019
"The Imitation Game": the painful life of a genius
Tuesday, 14 May 2019
Doris Day, a former dancer who became a singer and an actress
I heard about her death by chance, watching the
television that was broadcasting two of her films, simultaneously. Doris Day is
gone, and another important icon from the glorious Hollywood of the past
disappeared with her.
Doris Day was born in Cincinnati, United States, April
3, 1922: her real name was Doris Mary Ann Kappelhoff. She was the daughter of
the famous German pianist and organist William Joseph Kappelhoff and of Alma
Sophie Kappelhoff.
As a child Doris showed a great artistic talent, even
if, in the beginning, it looked like her career should have been focused only
on dance. At only 12 years old Doris signed her first contract as a dancer.
Unfortunately, in 1937, a car accident put an end to a profession she had just
begun in the dance world.
After the bad accident Doris went back to Cincinnati
where, with the help of her father, she began, this time, to take care of her
singing gift. Doris started her career as a singer at a local radio station
and later she joined the Barney Rapp’s Dixieland Orchestra, where she revealed
all her skills. It was in this period that she took on the artistic name of Doris Day, inspired by a song she always
loved to sing, Day by Day.
In the late 1940s, while performing in a small New
York club, film director Michael Curtiz, who was in the audience, noticed young
Doris and, finding her voice very beautiful, offered her a role in his film
"Romance on the High Seas" (1947).
After that film, which was very successful, her
production company, the Warner, offered Doris Day a 5-year contract; the
contract, however, was interrupted in 1955, when she gave up her commitment
with Warner to switch to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
In the meantime, however, she had already made popular
films such as "My Dream Is Yours" (1949), "It's a Great
Feeling", directed by David Butler, and "Young Man with a Horn",
also with Michael Curtiz.
Once again with film director David Butler she played
in other films: "Tea for two" and "West Point Story". In
1951 she acted in a third film entitled "Storm Warning", but this time
under the direction of Stuart Heisler.
Her other important films were "Pillow
Talk", "Calamity Jane", "Love Me or Leave Me",
"The Man Who Knew Too Much", "Teacher's Pet", "The
Tunnel of Love", "Please Don't Eat the Daisies "," Midnight
Lace "," Move Over, Darling ".
After having made so many films, television series
with great public’s response, a couple of albums and having been the typical
American "girl next door", Doris Day gave the final farewell to the
scenes: she did it in 1986, after having shot the last episode of the TV series
"Doris Day's Best Friends".
Years after her retirement from artistic activity,
Doris Day continued to receive numerous awards and recognitions for her long
career.
In 2011 she returned, for the last time, to release an
album, "My Heart".
Doris Day has died today, May 13, 2019, at her home in
California.
Doris Day worked with famous actors such as Clark
Gable, James Stewart, David Niven, Cary Grant, James Cagney; she had also
important directors like Michael Curtiz and Alfred Hitchcock. Some of her films
like "The Man Who Knew Too Much" became icons in the history of
Cinema: "The Man Who Knew Too Much", a film where she sang, in a
dramatic scene, the famous song "Que
Sera Sera".
She had been defined "The girl next door", and they had proposed her like this: a symbol of the simple woman, the
good girl, the good daughter, wife and American mother, all stars and stripes.
And, of course, she never did anything to deny this
"dress" they had sewn on her. However, she had a deep, sincere
friendship, to which she was faithful, against all prejudices, for her
colleague Rock Hudson, who later died because of the AIDS he had contracted
because of his homosexuality.
Doris Day’s son should have been at the party in the villa
of Roman Polanski and Sharon Tate, on the day Charles Manson carried out the
bloody massacre of Bel Air: it seems that the main objective of Manson should
have been him, the son of the "girl next door". But Doris Day
convinced her child not to join that damn party; and I wonder if it wasn't
really a hint suggested to Doris Day by some inner omen.
(All image
rights are property of the author)
Doris Day sings “Que sera sera”, in the film “The Man
Who Knew Too Much”
Saturday, 11 May 2019
"Married Life": apparently it's just a thriller
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Thursday, 9 May 2019
"Sleepless in Seattle", a sentimental film that manages not to be sappy
Tuesday, 7 May 2019
Sergio Leone: a memory of our life in each of his films
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Saturday, 27 April 2019
"In war for love", a tender and gentle, but also melancholic and profound, story.
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Friday, 26 April 2019
Perfume, the story of a murderer: a good example of German Gothic
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