The holidays are my busy season for movies. Not that I
actually leave the house. That’s crazy talk. There are plenty of other options
these days. I’m not hopelessly old-school about everything.
The Hunger Games
(2012). Young adults deserve better than two-dimensional characters
designed
for the sole purpose of manipulating the audience’s emotions, plot devices that
basically allowed the creators to do whatever they want, and technologically
created firestorms and hellhounds. All that was missing were the Fire Swamp and
Rodents of Unusual Size. Adding insult to injury, at the end you realize it’s
not a movie, it’s an episode. (Yes, I know about the sequels. Usually the first
one is supposed to at least pretend to be a standalone. Think Star Wars.) Jennifer Lawrence, an
actress who deserves all her accolades, plays essentially the same character
she played in Winter’s Bone, except
that movie actually made sense. I realize I’m not the target audience for this
franchise, and I’m delighted.
The Gambler (2014)
Good, but after sleeping on it not as good as the sum of its parts. The
acting
is uniformly excellent, notably John Goodman. (When are people going to
recognize he’s one of the great actors of his generation?) Mark Wahlberg is as
believable as possible in a tough role, as a man so self-destructive he only
bets ever everything at a time. The college scenes are well done, the film is
stylish, but one gets to the end and wonders what we were supposed to take away
here.
A Christmas Story
(1983) The annual viewing with The Beloved Spouse. It’s a sweet movie,
with
Jean Shepherd’s subversive commentary keeping it from becoming saccharine. Some
timeless set pieces. (Anyone who’s ever seen it will never forget the lamp
scene.) Perfectly cast, with Darren McGavin owning The Old Man the way few
others have ever matched up to a role. These kinds of movies aren’t usually my
cup of tea—my idea of Christmas fare runs more toward Bad Santa and The Ice Harvest—but
this one is well worth its annual viewing.
The Santa Clause 2
(2002) Christmas is when you watch Christmas movies, right? The Beloved Spouse
likes the occasional kids movie and not only doesn’t mind me picking at the
plot holes, but will do so herself. Tip to Santa: don’t let Chet be one of the
lead reindeer until he’s ready.
Bad Santa (2003)
The second half of our Christmas Eve doubleheader. No one—no one—
plays these
kinds of roles better than Billy Bob Thornton. As laugh out loud as any
Christmas movie ever made, so long as you leave large chunks of your conscience
in another room. As I always say sometimes, a better person wouldn’t have
laughed at a lot of this, but no better person was available.
Holiday Inn (1942)
This is one of those movies some will point to and nostalgically say, “They
don’t make them like this anymore.” Good. One-
dimensional characters who are,
frankly, kind of amoral, and will do or say anything to advance the story,
which is kind of disreputable and definitely unbelievable itself. (The only line
of defense for such a plot is, “You’re not supposed to take the plot seriously.
It’s a comedy.” Then it should have been funnier. See Bad Santa, above.) Oh, and a blackface routine. For those who might
want to defend the blackface bit with “Things were different in 1942,” I say,
“and good riddance.”
Confidence (2003)
An underrated gem. Edward Burns plays Jake Vig, leader of a confidence crew who
accidentally take off a vicious LA criminal known
as The King (Dustin Hoffman).
Vig and his crew sell The King on the idea of ripping off someone even bigger
that The King has personal issues with. After that you’re never really sure
who’s working with who or how things are going to shake out. Burns is perfect
as Vig, and Hoffman gives one of my favorite of his performances. An excellent
supporting cast is led by Rachel Weisz and Paul Giamatti. If you’re into caper
films with an edge and sharp dialog, you really ought to see this one.
The French Connection
(1971) Damn, this is a great movie. Watch it too often and too close together
and some plot holes appear, but the story
holds up, as does everything else.
Contemporary when filmed, it now views like
a period piece. The famous chase scene serves two roles: great excitement (duh),
especially for the time; and it condenses Popeye’s obsession into seven
minutes, so everything those else he does makes sense. There are a dozen or so
crime films I look forward to watching repeatedly. This is one.
Bram Stoker’s Dracula
(1992) No one makes more visually beautiful films than Francis Ford
Coppola,
and this is no exception. Gary Oldman and Anthony Hopkins steal the show as
Dracula and van Helsing, respectively, though the competition was less than
fierce. Winona Ryder is all right, but there must have been fifty English
actresses who could have done at least as well. As for Keanu Reeves? Really? Had
to be at least a thousand British actors who could have handled this better.
Overall, the film holds up. Close to Stoker’s novel, it plays as a love story
and works well. Seeing this one again only makes me wonder even more why people
feel they need to break the vampire rules to make the stories more appealing.
They’ve been popular for a long time for a reason.
Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid (1969) First movie of the birthday double feature and one of a
handful of my guaranteed to succeed comfort movies. Just a wonderful film on so
many different levels that I’m not going to go into them all. If you haven’t
seen it recently, do so. Going on 50 years old and still solid in every regard.
L.A. Confidential
(1997) The nightcap of the birthday double
feature. To me, one of the top five
crime films ever made, along with The
Maltese Falcon, Chinatown, The Friends of Eddie Coyle, and The French Connection. Curtis Hanson and
Brian Helgeland make a masterpiece of James Ellroy’s glorious mess of a book,
hitting all the right notes in the doing.
3 comments:
That would be exactly my list of the top five crime movies. Have we forgotten how to make great ones?
I thought about that list more than I usually do. In fairness, we have to remember it spans aver 50 years. (And I left out the first two GODFATHER films but a list of five is a list of five.) On the other hand, good stories with believable characters do seem to have taken a back seat to explosions and superheroes.
I would agree with your crime movies, Dana, with the possible exception of THE FRENCH CONNECTION. I would probably substitute THE ASPHALT JUNGLE. In any case, a great post.
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