Following up on clearing out the backlog of movies I wrote about a couple of weeks ago.
The Constant Gardener (2005)
I forget why this was on the Netflix queue but I’m glad it was. Ralph Fiennes
was outstanding (as always) in this adaptation of a John leCarré novel on the
effects of Big Pharma in the developing world. A seamless blending of love
story and political statement, director Fernando Meirelles weaves the
flashbacks in Jeffrey Caine’s script in such a manner that interest is
heightened with no added confusion. Fiennes and Rachel Weisz have an odd
chemistry that suits the two main characters perfectly. A film that deserves
more attention than it receives.
Seven Days in May (1964)
A good old-fashioned John Frankenheimer political thriller based on the blockbuster
novel by Charles W. Bailey and Fletcher Knebel III as adapted by Rod Serling.
An A-List cast including Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas, Frederic March, Edmund
O’Brien, Ava Gardner, and Martin Balsam give this oldie but goodie impact 54
years after its premier and is still a timely reminder of how fragile democracy
can be.
Silent Movie
(1976) Mel Brooks is a national treasure. Here he revisits every sight gag from
the golden age of silent comedies and invents a few of his own. Brooks plays
director Mel Funn, who drank his way out of the movie business. With his two
goofy “associates” (Dom DeLuise and Marty Feldman), Funn proposes an idea to
save the studio to magnate Sid Caesar: a silent movie with the world’s biggest
stars. In 1976 there were no bigger gets than Burt Reynolds, James Caan, Liza
Minelli, Anne Bancroft, or Paul Newman, and that’s who Brooks got. (Bancroft
was easy. She and Brooks were married.) Famed mime Marcel Marceau makes a cameo
and has a nifty surprise. If you haven’t seen this one you should, even if
you’re too young to remember what a big deal all these actors were.
The Nice Guys
(2016) I don’t care if it died at the box office; I like this movie. A lot.
Russell Crowe and Ryan Gosling have a chemistry that’s right for their roles
even if most critics didn’t think so. They’re supposed to have rough edges that
bump up against each other. A Shane Black film worthy of the name, and keep an
eye open for young Australian actor Angourie Rice.
Ocean’s 8 (2017)
So long as one doesn’t try to make too much of them, the Ocean movies are fun
and this is no exception. The all-woman crew led by Sandra Bullock and Cate
Blanchette has a ball and the gags all work, so long as one isn’t dissecting
them. (Which one can never do in any
caper movie.) And it’s only fair after women got to see George and Brad that we
men get to spend some quality time with Sandra and Cate.
The Hunt for Red
October (1990) There’s something about submarine movies and this is a good
one. Alec Baldwin plays Jack Ryan the way Tom Clancy wrote him, as a young man
in over his head making do with smarts and balls. Sean Connery conveys all the gravitas the Russian commander needs,
and the supporting cast of Scott Glenn, James Earl Jones, Stellan Skaarsgard,
Jeffrey Jones, Fred Dalton Thompson, and others plays off each other with
aplomb. It’s a shame John McTiernan is such a shitgibbon because no one made
better action movies (Die Hard and Predator come to mind right away).
Becket (1964) Edward
Anhalt’s adaptation of Jean Anouilh and Lucienne Hill’s play of the political
and personal drama between English King Henry II (Peter O’Toole) and his best
friend turned antagonist Thomas Becket (Richard Burton.) Two magnificent actors
given a worthy script that resulted in Oscar nominations for both actors (plus
a supporting nod for John Gielgud as the king of France) and an Oscar win for
screenwriter Anhalt. Factually flawed, the film still captures the gist of the
history and well within the confines of having only 2:28 in which to tell the
story. Two hours 28 minutes may seem like a long movie when all that happens is
talking, but Becket shows how
propulsive “just talking” can be when done at this level. Highest marks.
3 comments:
I, too, really, really loved THE NICE GUYS. I think the moment when Gosling punches through the window and then is sickened by his own blood was the moment I knew I'd love this film. The rest of the movie just reinforced it. Their chemistry is dripping from the screen. Would love a sequel, but also adore this one-and-done movie. Wife and her sister wasn't sure what I had taken them to when we first saw it...but loved it by the movie's end. We own the DVD and have seen it...2-4 times.
Hunt For Red October is my go-to "comfort" movie. Silent Movie is Mel's most underrated picture. And Becket...Peter O'Toole AND Richard Burton? Yes, please.
SEVEN DAYS IN MAY is a great film. I’ve seen it several times and it always holds up, always grabs me. I have an old paperback of it, but never read it because the movie is so overpowering. BTW, I always liked Edmond O’Brien’s performance as the boozy senator. You know what – I need to see this one again. Hope TCM shows it soon.
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