Hmmm, and it’s been a while since I listed the movies I
watched. Let’s get right to it because several of these are really good. True,
one blew, but what are you gonna do?
Life of Crime (2014).
Based on Elmore Leonard’s The Switch,
this is one of the more successful
Leonard adaptations. Not as good as the Big
Three (Jackie Brown, Get Shorty, Out of
Sight), but well done and true to the tone of Leonard’s book. The cast of
Jenifer Aniston, Yasmin Bey (a/k/a Mos Def), John Hawkes, and Tim Robbins (all
well supported by Isla Fisher, Will Forte, and Sons of Anarchy’s Mark Boone, Junior) play just the right mixtures
of avarice and dim-wittedness. Screenwriter/director Daniel Schecter knew
enough to leave Leonard’s dialog as intact as possible, doesn’t try to make too
much of anything, and pulls it off well. Not a classic, but 98 minutes well
spent.
Escape From New York
(1981). I had my way with this one here.
The Magnificent Seven (1960).
It’s a classic, and it still holds up. As I’m sure most of you know, this is a
remake of The Seven Samurai, and a
product of the bridge era between horse operas
and the more realistic Westerns
that started to pick up speed in the 60s. (Not that there were none before
that, but realism was not the primary quality associated with Westerns until
the revisionist filmmakers—notably San Peckinpaugh and Sergio Leone, followed
by others including Clint Eastwood, picked up the ball.) For years known as
much for Elmer Bernstein’s soundtrack and remarkably prescient casting (Yul
Brynner, Eli Wallach, and a young Steve McQueen supported by then relatively
unknowns such as James Coburn, Charles Bronson, and Robert Vaughn), the story
holds up as an exploration of differing concepts of honor. Loaded with
archetypes that (almost) always manage to stay away from cliché, one doesn’t
have to be a fan of Westerns to appreciate The
Magnificent Seven. (Stay away from the sequels, though. They suck.)
L.A. Confidential
(1997). Among the small handful of best crime fiction films. Not a missed beat:
direction, screenplay (Brian Helgeland’s finest moment, and he did Mystic River), casting, acting. Damn
near a perfect movie.
Romancing the Stone
(1984). Not as good as I remembered it from its original release, but not a
waste of time, either. Fluff, a semi-parody of romance novels that could have
been held together better, but the audience it was intended for wasn’t about to
notice too much of that.
The Big Lebowski (1998).
First half of the New Year’s Eve double feature with The Beloved Spouse. One of
my comfort movies. We watch it at least once a year and laugh just as hard
every time.
Monty Python and the
Holy Grail (1975). The second half of the New Year’s Eve twin bill. It’s
been a while since last time, but it won’t be again. It is a silly film, but
our anarcho-syndicalist commune need not waste time at its semi-weekly meetings
to ratify another watching of this one.
Spy Game (2001).
Robert Redford is the retiring spymaster and Brad Pitt is his protégé who may
have gone rogue. There’s internal CIA intrigue and plenty of twists but, by the
end, the whole is less than the sum of its parts. Enjoyable throughout, it ends
and one is left with a “So what?” feeling.
Lock, Stock, and Two
Smoking Barrels (1998). A plot Donald Westlake would have been proud
of as
four over-their-heads buddies try to raise half a million pounds they were
cheated out of at cards. You can see most of what's going to shake out
fifteen minutes before the end and have no idea how it’s going to happen. Writer/director
Guy Ritchie does a masterful job of keeping things moving through dry wit and
intersecting plot lines. Great fun.
1 comment:
I've seen all of these but Life of Crime. I remember liking most of them too, though I've never been a fan of Monty Python and it took two Lebowski watchings to decide I like it. Your review of Escape From New York borders on blasphemy, though. I'll need to re-watch to confirm, which I've been meaning to after seeing Russell lately in both The Hateful Eight and Bone Tomahawk.
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