What I’ve Caught Up With, September 2024 Part 2:
Film: The Border (1982)
Immigration agent Charlie (Jack Nicholson) and his wife Marcy (Valerie Perrine) move from their trailer in California to the greener pastures of El Paso and into a duplex attached to Marcy’s friend Savannah (Shannon Wilcox) and her border agent husband Cat (Harvey Keitel). Charlie tries to run on the straight and narrow, but desperate for the good life, Marcy can’t stop herself from burning through all of their money, and soon enough Charlie is forced to work alongside Cat running undocumented workers into the country. Meanwhile, Maria (Elpidia Carrillo) has her baby stolen by one of Cat’s human traffickers. The Border feels like the other side of El Norte, and it’s about as depressing, but the performances are damn good. Director Tony Richardson makes the landscape and the border its own character, which only makes all of this bleaker.
Film: Jeremiah Johnson (1972)
Much more a character study, Jeremiah Johnson is most famously the source of the “mountain man nods approvingly” gif. The eponymous Johnson (Robert Redford) goes to live a hermit’s life in the mountains but finds that he cannot. He takes a native wife (Delle Bolton) and adopts a son (Josh Albee) from a woman who has gone crazy after being attacked by an indigenous tribe. All goes well until Johnson is forced through a sacred Crow burial site, which causes a decades-long feud. This is a cool idea for a movie, but the revenge/feud plot doesn’t happen until the film is almost three-fourths of the way over. It’s a lot of build-up to get us to the stuff that we’ve signed up for.
Film: The Grey Fox (1982)
Stagecoach bandit William Miner (Richard Farnsworth) is caught in 1868 and released from prison into a completely different world in 1901. Not seeing himself suited for work and with stagecoaches no longer running, Bill Miner sees The Great Train Robbery and decides that waylaying trains is the next logical step. He robs a train or two and lays low in Canada where he encounters Kate (Jackie Burroughs), a photographer and early feminist who he is immediately taken with. The Grey Fox is a slow film, but a fine one, and Farnsworth is a charmer throughout. This is simply a pleasant story despite the criminal element, and Bill Miner is an easy guy to root for.
Film: Circle of Friends (1995)
Remember when Chris O’Donnell was the flavor of the month and you couldn’t swing a dead cat without hitting a film he was in? Circle of Friends certainly remembers, because this film is from right in the heart of that period. Three Irish girls, Bennie (Minnie Driver), Eve (Geraldine O’Rawe), and Nan (Saffron Burrows) grow up together in the post-War years, go to university in Dublin together, and fight over boys. Alan Cumming is sleezy and Chris O’Donnell, who is the human equivalent of plain yogurt, is somehow the sexiest man on campus. I’ve clearly never liked O’Donnell that much, and I’ve also never really cared that much for Minnie Driver, so there’s not a great deal for me here.
Film: Blithe Spirit (1945)
Novelist Charles Condomine (Rex Harrison) hires a medium to do research for a new murder mystery he is writing. The medium, Madame Arcati (Margaret Rutherford), manages to summon Elvira (Kay Hammond), his late first wife, but he’s the only one who can see or hear her. This causes a great deal of stress with his second wife, Ruth (Constance Cummings). Eventually, Ruth figures out that Charles isn’t faking and Elvira is really there. This is perfectly pitched, funny, but just dark enough to have an edge to it, especially when Elvira decides she doesn’t like being alone in the afterlife. All of the main performances are good ones, and I’m not at all sure how Margaret Rutherford missed being nominated for Best Supporting Actress.
Film: Lured (1947)
People tend to remember Lucille Ball as the wacky comedienne, so it’s easy to forget that she was quite the dish in her film career. In Lured, she is a taxi dancer whose friend gets targeted by a murderer preying on beautiful young women. She’s enlisted by the police to help track down the killer. It’s a dandy story, and a solid romance between her and George Sanders. There are a lot of odd red herrings here, though, including a subplot where she is attacked by Boris Karloff and another that involves her almost being sold into prostitution in South America. Charles Coburn plays a rare serious role as a Scotland Yard detective. It’s good, but very unfocused.
Film: Noises Off… (1992)
Farce is hard to do well, as evidenced by just how many farces are actually pretty terrible. Noises Off… is precisely how a farce should be done, and it does it both as a play being performed, and as the scenes behind the play being performed. A stage director (Michael Caine) attempts to bring a farce to the stage with a cast filled with idiots who have a series of problems and relationship issues. The play itself that they are performing is actually very funny—a bunch of timing gags and sexual inappropriateness. Mixed with a disastrous dress rehearsal and a pair of riotously terrible performances, our director dreads the show opening on Broadway. This is a packed cast—all of the main players—Carol Burnett, Christopher Reeve, Nicollette Sheridan, Marilu Henner, Denholm Elliott, John Ritter, Julie Hagerty, and Mark Linn-Baker—are in perfect form. This should have been a massive hit, and it’s evidence that both Linn-Baker and Hagerty should have had much bigger careers.
Film: Language Lessons (2021)
Mark Duplass does interesting work. Most of his films are small, low-budget, and don’t get a huge audience, but they are almost always worth seeing. In Language Lessons, Adam (Duplass) is given a series of 100 Spanish immersion lessons as a gift. Over the course of a few lessons, his relationship with his teacher CariƱo (Natalie Morales) blossoms as both of them individually go through terrible personal tragedy happening in their lives around the lessons. The film is told essentially over Zoom, sometimes from her perspective and sometimes from his. It’s open, honest, and poignant, and the sort of film that can be made brilliantly for almost no budget. It’s not an easy watch, but both performances are impressive.
Blithe Spirit is an awesome film as I only have one more feature film and a short by David Lean that I have to watch for my upcoming Auteurs essay on him. Circle of Friends was a good film but I didn't like Noises Off.... It just didn't work for me at all. The Border is a film I've only seen bits of but not enough to form an opinion. The rest I do want to see soon.
ReplyDeleteHonestly, The Border is fine, but I don't know that it's necessary. We'll disagree on both Noises Off... and Circle of Friends. I'll watch the first again, and likely won't watch the second again any time soon.
DeleteIt’s not Sirk’s best but I love Lured for its all the strange elements it contains. I mean you have Lucy all dolled up in what seems an atypical role (though at the time I don’t think it was that far out of her established persona, which I’m guessing was much closer to who she really was then the daffy redhead), George Sanders as the romantic lead (again not uncommon then but his main fame now is the snarky character man), the delightful team of Charles Coburn and George Zucco as the cops that recruit Lucy and that truly bizarre and unsettling standoff between Lucy and Karloff plus a good story.
ReplyDeleteI saw the play version of Noises Off before the film, but still laughed my head off at the crazy shenanigans that amazing cast got up to. It helped that they were all so game.
Blithe Spirit is so veddy British but a great deal of fun even with their innate reserve. I’m likewise amazed Margaret Rutherford didn’t snag a nomination but I think her finally winning years later for The V.I.P.S was the Academy’s way of making up for all the missed opportunities they had botched through time, though she is a delight in that film as well.
I was not sure what to expect from The Grey Fox, but I always liked Richard Farnsworth so the chance to see him in the star spot was irresistible. It was quite measured and rather forlorn in its approach but kept me engaged throughout and he was wonderful.
Jeremiah Johnson is a hard film in so many ways. The landscape, situations, peripherical characters and Redford himself are all made of flint rock. I found it intriguing and value in its story, but I have never felt compelled to watch it again. Interesting though that it was standard fare back in the 70’s…if a star of Redford’s magnitude was attached but the thought of something like it being out in general release is unimaginable.
I felt very much the same way about The Border. Great cast, always happy to see Valerie Perrine, and a decent story but that once was enough.
I do remember Chris O’Donnell’s strange moment as the IT boy, I didn’t understand it either. I’m sure he’s a nice enough guy but he evaporates on screen. However, Circle of Friends is much more Minnie’s picture than his and she does well in it, it seemed a launching pad for her but again it didn’t happen. She’s a far more talented performer though, just missing that star element that someone like Reese Witherspoon possesses and has had a decent career. As for the film itself, it was a nice, mostly forgettable enterprise.
I’m unfamiliar with Language Lessons.
I found Lured fun, but unfocused, and that's always going to be an issue for me. I don't mind a red herring or two, but this film was filled with them.
ReplyDeleteI liked the sardonic nature of Blithe Spirit. I don't know that I'll watch it again, but it was fun while it was playing.
I agree completely on both The Border and Jeremiah Johnson. Both have compelling moments, but I can't really think I need to see either one again for any pressing reason. The same is probably true of The Grey Fox as well. Farnsworth is genial and easy to like, but there's not really enough of a picture here to get me to come back.
I have a feeling you like Minnie Driver more than I do. I find her generally forgettable.
Language Lessons and Noises Off... were two very big highpoints and for different reasons. I can't recommend Language Lessons enough. It's very small and measured, and very tender, and both performances are wonderful.