It’s been a while since I recapped the movies seen here at
Castle Schadenfreude, long enough that I’m going to break this up into two
bite-sized chunks. (Editor’s Note: It is not incidental that this also means
two separate blog post slots filled.) (Author’s Note: Sue me, you persnickety
prick.)
Black Mass (2015)
I read the book so I knew the Whitey Bulger story and it’s a good thing, as
this would have been hard to follow otherwise. Johnny Depp does his usual
submersion into a character, this time as cold a gangster as has ever drawn
breath, a man whose soul has no bottom. Part of the problem is that Joel
Edgerton, tasked with playing corrupt FBI agent John Connolly, doesn’t measure
up against Depp and Benedict Cumberbatch as Whitey’s brother Billy, president
of the Massachusetts State Senate and later president of the University of
Massachusetts. It’s not all Edgerton’s fault. The writing is clunky in parts
and the dialog doesn’t exactly sing. Even Kevin Bacon looks uncomfortable. Black Mass is a reasonably accurate
depiction of Whitey Bulger’s story, but it’s not a particularly good movie.
Tombstone (1993) I
need to watch this every couple of years or so. Not a great movie, and my
Western research shows the depiction of Wyatt Earp and Josie Marcus isn’t quite
kosher, but the portrayal of the relationships between the Earp brothers and
Doc Holliday is spot on, as are all the performances by Kurt Russell, Val
Kilmer, Sam Elliott, and Bill Paxton. Val Kilmer has had a fine career, if a
little slow lately, but he’ll always be known as Doc Holliday, and he should be
proud of that. It’s a career-making performance.
All the President’s
Men (1976) Still compelling, even though we all know how it comes out.
There are always little things I notice in this film that I missed before,
often because of the different historical context. Among the things that struck
me this time is how Bob Woodward is able to get people to talk to him the way
they do, holding Mark Felt’s name private for over thirty years. His word is
golden, as is this movie.
Legend (2015) We
were going to watch Trumbo but saw
this on the previews and shifted gears mid-stream. (Tonight’s entrée: Metaphor
Gumbo.) Tom Hardy plays both of London’s infamous Kray brothers, 60s gangsters
so nasty I’d even heard of them. A good rise and fall movie, with Hardy’s
outstanding performances carrying the day.
Spotlight (2015) A
film everyone should have to watch every few years, lest we forget, especially
in light of recent news that the Catholic Church hasn’t cleaned up its act as
much as they would have you believe. First rate cast led by Michael Keaton, Mark
Ruffalo, Rachel MacAdams, Liev Schreiber, and Stanley Tucci, and nary a frame
wasted. If you’re not mesmerized while watching and freshly outraged for
several days afterward, there’s something wrong with you.
Monty Python and the
Holy Grail (1975) I hope I never get too old to want to watch this, and to
laugh at it. If I do, may I encounter the most foul-tempered rodent you ever
laid eyes on, with big pointy teeth.
L.A. Confidential
(1997) Yes, again. And immediately after Monty
Python. This is the kind of thing that happens when you live in an anarcho-syndicalist
commune where we take it in turns to be a sort of executive officer for the
week but all the decisions of that officer have to be ratified at a special
bi-weekly meeting by a simple majority in the case of purely internal affairs
(Editor’s Note: Get on with it!)
Right, then.
Absence of Malice
(1981) A different perspective on investigative journalism, especially when
it’s not done well, as reporter Megan Carter (Sally Field) is duped into
reporting a bogus federal investigation that ruins the life of Michael
Gallagher (Paul Newman) and leads to the suicide of Teresa Perrone (Melinda
Dillon). The newspaper is careful to stay on the safe side of libel—hence the
title—and Newman takes matters into his own hands. A fine film top to bottom,
capped off by Wilford Brimley’s Hall of Fame-caliber scene
as the Deputy Attorney General sent down to find out “what in the good Christ…is
goin' on around here.”
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