Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Navalny (2022)


 ☆ ☆ ☆ ½

Navalny (2022) – D. Roher

Of course, it is a terrifying tale taken straight from today’s news, and all the more impactful for that reason. Alexei Navalny, Russia’s opposition leader, was poisoned in 2020 and this documentary shows the unfolding events and subsequent investigation (which point straight to the FSB and Putin) with involvement by Navalny himself and access to his family, colleagues, etc. Filmmaker Daniel Roher manages to create suspense, outrage, and sympathy through some well-chosen footage, solid editing, music, etc. -- it’s the complete package (and if it was supporting a different viewpoint, we might call it propaganda)  Only occasionally do the filmmakers question Navalny about his views (he once joined a rally with neo-Nazi leanings) and you do have to wonder (not if he’s better than Putin, just about what he stands for beyond being against this dictator). He suggests that Russian politics are at a primitive stage, still arguing about the need for human rights, fair elections, etc., and that sounds about right. He’s a young charismatic guy with a loving family and a good sense of humour. I don’t think it gives anything away to reveal the downbeat ending – Navalny was arrested and placed in jail after returning to Russia and he’s still there.  The fact that Putin is still in power after his brazen attempt to assassinate, censor, and unjustly imprison Navalny is the even bigger shock.  Obviously, the war in Ukraine has suggested even further that he feels above the law and is either evil or insane or both.

 

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)


 ☆ ☆ ☆ ½

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) – S. Spielberg

By request from Amon (nearly 10 years old). I feel as though I must have watched this once or twice since its release in 1989 but I didn’t really remember much at all.  For example, there is a prelude where River Phoenix stars as the young Indiana Jones with a few nods toward the origin of various trademarks (whip, hat, fear of snakes)! Then, when Harrison Ford shows up, we are quickly into the adventure story which involves rescuing his father (Sean Connery), a professor of medieval literature, and finding the holy grail (yes, the real one).  I never read/saw the Da Vinci Code but, in my imagination, that book probably reads like this movie: the heroes have to solve a bunch of mysteries related to old texts, hidden tombs, ancient curses and booby traps and the like.  The Nazis are once again (as in the first film) the main antagonists, threatening to get to the grail first.  Director Steven Spielberg is clearly having fun here (Indy comes face-to-face with Hitler in one scene, played for laughs) and the action-adventure scenes are enjoyable/thrilling/comic. Sure, there are a lot of echoes of the first film (we haven’t watched the second because it is supposed to be too gory for young kids) but this didn’t interfere with our viewing pleasure. Harrison Ford is still in peak form and Connery plays against type with good effect.  It can’t top the original (Amon says it is his fave of all-time) but #3 is better than what came later (I don’t have high hopes for Indy 5 but Amon can’t wait).

 

Curse of the Crimson Altar (1968)


 ☆ ☆ ½

Curse of the Crimson Altar (1968) – V. Sewell

The drawcard here is that this late 60s horror film features not only Christopher Lee (Hammer’s Horror of Dracula, 1958, and more) and Barbara Steele (Black Sunday, 1960, and more) but also Boris Karloff (no introduction needed) who was by this point confined to a wheelchair. Each of them is as charismatic as always but there isn’t really much happening in this film, except a bit of high weirdness. Robert Manning (Mark Eden) goes in search of his missing brother to an old village/estate where they celebrate the burning of a witch, Lavinia Morley (Steele), centuries earlier – except that through some magic Lavinia still haunts the place and seeks to destroy the descendants of her destroyers (the Mannings, of course).  There isn’t any gore here and only the mildest of grindhouse titillation and not even any scares, just a few scenes meant to be psychedelic, I think. Perhaps these scenes where Steele tries to force the Mannings to sign their souls away in the devil’s book make the film worth it. Or perhaps Karloff’s gleeful look when he says he collects “instruments of torture” is enough. But other than that, it is just a lot of waiting around while Eden talks to the others or searches the old house and grounds. Not terrible.

 

Sunday, June 19, 2022

Son of the South (2020)


 ☆ ☆ ☆

Son of the South (2020) – B. A. Brown

An important film, in that any film about the Civil Rights era and the courage of those who stood up for social justice is important, providing a valuable reminder and lesson for people today. However, I do wonder whether this message still needs to be carried via a white protagonist – shouldn’t a film about the black struggle for respect feature black actors in the central roles? That said, this is a story drawn from Bob Zellner’s autobiography and is specifically about his experience as a white southerner from Alabama who became an important ally for the cause, as a founding member of SNCC (the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee). And to the extent that white audiences still require a white identification figure, perhaps Bob (Lucas Till) can still help draw in some who wouldn’t otherwise watch a black film (I suspect though that those resistant to this message won’t be watching anyway). Brian Dennehy adds his star power (in one of his final roles) as Bob’s grandfather, a member of the KKK.  Potentially true to reality, Bob is portrayed as naïve but earnest, an observer of the bus boycott, freedom ride, and other key events that are really organised by Rosa Parks (Sharonne Lanier), John Lewis (Dexter Darden) and other black leaders played by Lex Scott Davis, Cedric the Entertainer, Chaka Forman, and Shamier Anderson. Much of the movie was filmed in Montgomery, Alabama, and notably my uncle Timothy Lennox has a small speaking part as a reporter interviewing freedom ride participants. The film is very watchable but I felt it had one false note near the end, when Bob wins another moral victory against a racist acquaintance from college (who I thought folded far too easily when challenged). Definitely worth seeing for its spotlight on this crucial period in American history (and lessons that sadly seem relevant even today).

 

Sunday, June 5, 2022

The Card Counter (2021)


 ☆ ☆ ☆ ½

The Card Counter (2021) – P. Schrader

I have to give credit to Paul Schrader for this screenplay – it has an elegance and simplicity that weaves “current events” and philosophical weight together in a way that honours his long-standing themes and still holds together as a commercial entertainment. However, I am not sure these were the right actors to pull it off. Oscar Isaac is fine, although subdued, as the casino-haunting lead with the need for redemption (due to tragic past actions) but Tye Sheridan seems less capable of embodying the naïve young man seeking revenge for transgressions against his family.  Tiffany Haddish is only along for the ride as the conduit to high stakes poker games (and eventual love interest) – we don’t see into her character. Willem Dafoe has only a glorified cameo, looking somewhat John Boltonesque.  What might this have been with other more astute players, one can only guess. Schrader is a matter-of-fact director (although First Reformed showed a tendency toward intense surrealism that I didn’t notice in the past) – would another director have turned the screws tighter on the emotional pain inherent here? Scorsese (who produced) might have made something more operatic but that might not have honoured the impulse toward Bresson that Schrader clearly followed. Although the locations are drab and the action largely muted as in Bresson (save for a few flashbacks)  – and the use of poker tournaments as a plot device brings with it an inherent tension (and win/lose emphasis) – the film doesn’t quite capitalise on its promise.