What I’ve Caught Up With, October Part 1
Film: Brainstorm (1983)
Natalie Wood’s brilliant career ended with Brainstorm, a film released a couple of years after her death. The cast is a good one—Wood, Christopher Walken, Cliff Robertson, and Louise Fletcher, and the story is the sort of near-future science fiction that was common in the 1980s. Scientists have developed a device that allows others to experience the sensory input from other people—a sort of VR that includes all five senses. All is fun until the military gets involved and someone records their own death as a sensory experience. This is very much the precursor to Strange Days from about a dozen years later. What an odd way for Wood’s career to end.
Film: Copshop (2021)
Joe Carnahan’s Copshop is a pretty solid actioner, if a film that is not shy about being as over-the-top as a classic Schwarzeneggar or Stallone film from the 1980s. Con artist Teddy (Frank Grillo) is on the run from an assassin named Bob Viddick (Gerard Butler), so he arranges to be arrested just outside of Las Vegas. Viddick is smart, though, and gets himself arrested as well. Everything goes to hell, especially with the arrival of a second assassin named Tony Lamb (Toby Huss). Standing in their way is rookie cop Valerie Young (Alexis Louder). It’s violent and ridiculous, but fun, even if it’s desperate to be seen as a Tarantino film. Louder is the best part of the film, but Toby Huss is having the most fun, and honestly, it’s probably the best thing Gerard Butler has ever done.
Film: The Power (1968)
Scientists exploring the limits of human endurance for the space program discover that someone in their midst has powerful psychic skills, something beyond human comprehension. With that revelation, people on the committee start dying off in strange ways. Professor Jim Tanner (George Hamilton) and his scientist girlfriend Margery Lansing (Suzanne Pleshette) try to figure out who is doing what to whom, and things get strange and dangerous quickly. A fun cast (Michael Rennie, Earl Holliman, Aldo Ray, and Yvonne De Carlo among others) helps with this. George Hamilton seems like a strange choice for scientist leading man, but he pulls it off well. There’s a good story here, although the film tends to ramble in places and get lost in its own attempt to be cool and hip. Worth a view, even if it isn’t perfect, if only because Scanners and Dreamscape ripped a couple of pages out of this to tell their stories.
Film: Antonia’s Line (1995)
There are times when I wonder if a film can be made that doesn’t include some amount of sexual assault. Antonia’s Line is the story of a Dutch woman named Antonia (Willeke van Ammelrooy), her daughter Danielle (Els Dottermans), Danielle’s daughter Thérèse (Veerle van Overloop), and her daughter Sarah (Thyrza Ravesteijn), who also serves as the film’s narrator. It’s a story of love and death and life, and one generation moving to the next. There are moments of real beauty here, but also tragedy, and for the love of everything, I would really like to have a movie about the lives of women that didn’t involve rape, which happens twice in the film, including once with a child victim. I realize it’s something that happens, but can we have a little bit of relief for people who have been traumatized and give them a safe movie to go to?
Film: Long Shot (2019)
I don’t really care for Seth Rogen in general, in part because it really seems like he just plays himself, and I find that guy annoying. Long Shot wasn’t really on my radar, mostly because of Rogen, but I gave it a shot, and surprise surprise, it’s pretty good. Secretary of State Charlotte Field (Charlize Theron) reunites with journalist from her past Fred Flarsky (Rogen), who becomes her speech writer for her presidential run, and eventually becomes her secret lover. The film goes too extreme with some of the plot points, and a bit gross at the end of the second act, but a lot of the humor lands surprisingly well. There are some genuine laugh-out-loud moments, and that surprised me more than anything.
Film: Equilibrium (2002)
Equilibrium is what you would get if you took Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 and crossed it with Orwell’s 1984, tossed it with a little bit of Vonnegut’s Welcome to the Monkey House, and set it in the universe of The Matrix as directed by John Woo. In the future, humanity is rendered emotionless by chemicals, but there is naturally a resistance that fights back but not taking the meds and by preserving works of art and culture. John Preston (Christian Bale) is a member of the thought police that round up criminals, who are summarily executed if they are found with contraband or expressing an emotion. And, of course, eventually he’s going to rebel. It’s a solid cast—William Fitchner, Emily Watson, Sean Bean, Sean Pertwee, Taye Diggs, and Angus Macfadyen all appear—but it feels very derivative. Much more style than substance, but the gun battles are cool.






Brainstorm isn’t a great film, but it has some interesting ideas and set pieces. I’ve read that Natalie signed on to the film specifically because it was somewhat different from her usual pictures. She’d been working sporadically and mostly in television to give more time to her children and thought that this with its more modern bent and contemporary cast would help freshen her image to a wider audience. It’s difficult to completely judge her performance since it had to be pieced together. Such a waste.
ReplyDeleteThe Power was a hoot! Steeped in sixties fashion and set design with some questionable science mixed in but still enjoyable. Nothing against him but I agree that the perpetually tan George Hamilton was an odd choice for the lead. Gregory Peck would make much more sense, but I guess MGM was trying to turn George into a big movie star. Oh well at least it has that great supporting cast and the always marvelous Suzanne Pleshette.
I’ve never been drawn to watch it again, but I really liked Antonia’s Line. Very fine filmmaking.
I haven’t seen the other three:
I have zero interest in Copshop, but Equilibrium sounds interesting. The one I’ll be tracking down first though is Long Shot. Somehow it blew right by me but I’m a big Charlize Theron fan and I like Seth Rogan well enough though he’s best in small doses.
There are moments in Long Shot where I felt like I laughed almost in spite of myself. Some of the premises are ridiculous, but it's genuinely entertaining. Equilibrium is seriously how I have described it--like John Woo made The Matrix and it had a baby with Fahrenheit 451. It has some interesting ideas, and the conclusion is pretty satisfying. Copshop, you can live without.
DeleteThe Power is loco-bananas, but it is fun. George Hamilton is such an odd choice to play a scientist.
It's sad when a legend like Natalie Wood goes out on such an oddball movie like Brainstorm.
Equilibrium is fucking underrated. It does a lot in showing that Christian Bale had what it takes to be Batman motherfucker!!!! I liked it a lot even though it is far from being original. I have seen Antonia's Line. I liked that film but I don't remember it. I have not seen Brainstorm as it is a damn shame about Natalie Wood as her cunt sister Lana has done nothing but dishonor Natalie's memory through a bunch of bullshit.
ReplyDeleteLong Shot is a film I like. Especially the scene where Charlize Theron is drunk-as-fuck as she is talking to a powerful figure from another country as she managed to cool things down while dissing her boss. Plus, Seth Rogen is awesome is this and I think he is a better actor than people give him credit for. Hell, his character gets to live the dream of all men. Become First Lady. Yeah. He will live up to the standards of such greats as Eleanor Roosevelt, Jackie O, Lady Bird, and Michelle Obama. He would live the life that all dudes would want. 😍😍😍😍 What? Like you haven't dreamt about it too? Jefferson d'Arcy realized that it is a dream that can become a reality with the right leader. https://youtu.be/89zRZCYGIcg?si=rV5iCZLlwunbFPSH