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JimBell Blog

  • Croupier

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    Croupier  (1998)

    Croupier (1998) is a good tale of an impoverished young writer whose father helps him get a job as a dealer in an English casino. Initially the suspense is novel: Will he slip into his old ways? Although his old ways are only hinted at, he may have been a compulsive gambler. Of course we don’t want the lad to go downhill, partly because he has a promising relationship with an attractive store detective. As he slowly gathers material for his book, he becomes involved, peripherally, in a casino heist, and his relationship with his girlfriend deteriorates.

     

    Although the film is refreshingly intelligent, the ending is a bit rough, as if the story had too many strands to pull together. Immediately after the heist, it is not clear whether it was successful. In one way this is clever because it sets us up for the surprise ending about how his father was conning him the entire time. But the vaguery is also detrimental because we don’t know how to take the shocking death of his girlfriend. The policeman says it may have been just a hit and run, or it may have been a revenge killing related to the casino heist. Either way, the croupier seems little moved by her death. In retrospect we can assume she was probably the victim of a chance hit and run. Deus ex machina?

     

     


  • Bad Movie Night

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    The New World  (2006)

    You know about a bad hair day; well, this was a bad movie night—three promising rentals, three disappointments.

     

    Although the period detail is excellent in The Man Who Wasn’t There (2001), the main character, played by Billy Bob Thornton, is too unrealistic in contrast to the other characters, who may be a bit off kilter but seem plausible. For example, early on, the protagonist and his wife entertain her boss and his wife for a painful dinner, the social interaction saying all that needs to be said. In contrast to this fine presentation of self in everyday life, our protagonist is so clinically depressed that the interaction involving him seems fakey because ordinarily people would not put up with his taciturn rudeness. Although I liked this film when I saw it several years ago, I’m no longer enamoured with it simply because it is film noirish.

     

    Flight of the Red Balloon (2007) begins with a worrisome scene: A boy is talking up into the air to a balloon which we cannot see, asking it to come home with him. This does not bode well for an interesting movie. Unfortunately, the cinematography makes things worse. As with the opening shot, the camera often focuses on only half the action. For example, if the young boy is playing the piano, the camera focuses on the new babysitter watching him. But the shot does not show enough facial expression to tell us anything. So we’re left staring at an impassive profile while the sound track plays piano scales badly.

     

    Maybe I should have watched Terrence Malick’s The New World (2005) all the way through, but during the first part I felt so preached at that I thought it would only get worse. The natives are fakey—fakey choreographed movements, fakey face paint, fakey handling of a prisoner, and on and on—totally unconvincing. The main white man, Captain John Smith is dull and, apparently, stupid. What’s he doing leaving his men and wandering off through the swamps in a suit of armour? It is symbolic, of course, and just more preaching.

     


  • Before the Devil Knows You're Dead

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    It is difficult to get involved in Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead (2007) because all the characters are repulsive. The older brother is a sleazy executive with a serious drug addiction and a failing marriage. The younger brother is a gutless wimp trying to pay alimony. They decide to rob their parents’ jewellery store, and the older brother weasels out, and the younger one hires a petty criminal to do the job. No one is supposed to get hurt, but two people die and the family self-destructs.

     

    The structure of the film makes it even more difficult to identify with the characters because, after the robbery, we get a series of flashbacks. We’ve already seen the tragedy; the flashbacks explain the why but do not generate empathy for the characters.

     

    Then people start picking up some of the loose ends of the failed robbery, but should we feel anxious that the guys might get caught or should we hope they are tracked down, drawn, and quartered? If you’re not confused about which way to feel, you probably hope they will get caught, and the sings quickly multiply that they will get found out somehow. I’m not sure where the suspense comes in.

     

    A minor character (a jeweller and a fence) states the movie’s salient theme: “The world is an evil place, Charlie. Some of us make money off of it; others get destroyed.” Yes, the movie says, life can be this bad. The stellar cast is constantly emoting, always distressed, nearly over-the-top. The sets are hard, harsh, and often in a cold light. The music is usually mechanical and constricted. The title gives fair warning: “Devil” and “Dead” are the two key words. This is a movie of relentless and ubiquitous evil.


  • The Bank Job

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    The Bank Job  (2008)

    The Bank Job(2007) may be just another heist movie, but it distinguishes itself by creating, with a few deft strokes, approachable and human characters. Unfortunately, because it IS just another heist movie, it is also easy to forget, even though you enjoyed watching it.


  • In Bruges

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    In Bruges  (2008)

    In the language of this movie, "In Bruges is fuckin' useless." In the language of a sympathetic critic, it is difficult to make a movie about stupid and corrupt people without the film being dumb and amoral. In Bruges has tried to address both of these problems. Because the two hired killers and their boss are not the sharpest tools in the shed, the movie tries to create comedy to hold our interest. A tiny minority of viewers will like the black humour, but I did not. Part of the problem is that dumb dialogue is often not witty. For example, we have dialogue somewhat like this: "Guy 1: Bruges is a shithole! Guy 2: It's beautiful. Maybe you should wait til you see it. Guy 1: It's still a shit hole." Sometimes the humour attempts come from the sound track. As the hitman with some redeeming value pulls his bleeding body across an old stone floor to try to save someone, we hear tinkley, cheesy music to belittle his effort. Funny?

    While the humour attempt fails, the other attempt works. The older of the two killers has a crisis of conscience and refuses to kill. Unfortunately, this does not happen until the first half of the movie has dragged on with no moral compass, no interesting characters, and no discernable plot. But when the older hitman refuses to kill, the movie becomes a drama of substance. Will he have the resove to hold fast to his decision? How will he deal with his raging boss?

    But just when the drama starts to work, the attempts at black comedy again undermine everything. So when the crime boss and the younger hitman are set for a gun fight in a small Bruges hotel, their concern about harming a pregnant woman leads them to this deal: Count to 3, then the young guy will leap out of a second-storey window into the canal, and the boss will run out the front door and try to shoot him. Juvenile. Not funny. Insipid.


  • The Savages

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    The Savages  (2007)

    JJ79, I enjoyed you detailed and thoughtful review of The Savages (2007). Few people ever comment on others’ reviews on Spout, so I’d like to comment on yours, for a change. Your main point is that neither Wendy (Laura Linney) nor Jon (Phillip Seymour Hoffman) “give us enough to latch onto,” that the movie “never gives us a reason to care about either one of them.”  Although I agree the characters can be annoying, the movie does try to make them somewhat sympathetic. We learn in bits and pieces how dysfunctional their family was—mother essentially not there, father physically abusive to the son as the father’s father was to him. Although the movie does not connect all the dots, we see the sorry outcome of this sad upbringing: Wendy, who is smart, talented, and good-looking, has no self-confidence; Jon, who is smart, talented, and emotional, tries to restrict himself to the intellectual in both his academic career interests and in his personal life. One reaction to these characters is, as you say, to want to give them a good slap. I could see this reaction if the characters felt sorry for themselves. But far from whining, they soldier on, trying to overcome the worst of their upbringing and character traits.

     

    I know you object that “the children learn nothing,” but I think for all their trying, they do improve. As the movie draws to a close, Jon is, tentatively of course, headed for Poland to possibly reunite with a woman who loves or loved him. His mumble about meeting her family suggests that he is open to the permanent commitment that he previously refused. In addition, Jon and Wendy develop a better relationship. They have moved from distant (early in the film) to confrontational (yelling at each other about research grants) to where Jon gives Wendy substantial praise for her play—that’s probably the most important thing he could do for her at that moment. The movie ends by focussing on Wendy’s growth. When she gave up her pathetic affair with a married man, she asked for and got his old Golden Retriever that he was going have put down because of its hip dysphasia. The last shot in the film is of her jogging with the dog who has obviously had the expensive surgery and is rehabilitating with training wheels. Wendy has become less self-absorbed and able to do something for another living being. She has broken out of her passivity and taken action. This change occurred gradually—first being forced into taking care of her father in Arizona, to decorating his room in the Buffalo old-folks’ home, to looking for alternative accommodation for him, to somehow getting her play produced. Significantly, her proactive commitment is not an easy one (say, to a cute little puppy) but to an old dog with health problems. In contrast to her ex-lover who was going to take the easy way out and simply have the dog put down, she invests the money (she has little money and the vet bills are high) and the effort with no guarantee that the rehabilitation will work or the old dog will live much longer. Although Wendy has not learned how to bring peace to the planet, she has made a realistic and salient change for her.

     

    On another note, I agree that the look of the movie is superb. W. Mott Hupfel III makes statements with his camera which, juxtaposed with what is supposed to be going on, generate an on-going critique. This visual commentary is set up in the opening scene: The elderly ladies doing 1930s choreographed dance routines on a lawn in front of a verdant hedge look idyllic; then the camera pans to show the desert and ticky-tacky houses of an Arizona retirement community.

     

    Interestingly, the music supplies another layer of commentary. The tinkley but not annoying original music often plays over a serious scene suggesting, accurately when you think of it, that the people in the serious situation are not being straight-forward and honest with each other or, sometimes, with themselves.

     

    The movie is brilliant. But simultaneous, multiple layers of critique also keep the movie from generating much warmth, a feeling you clearly experienced. I admired the maturity of the writing, the wit of the critique, and the importance of the topic enough to really like the movie at somewhat of a distance.


 


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