Saturday, 31 December 2011
WHAT'S UP TIGER LILY?
BANANAS
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX (BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK)
Friday, 30 December 2011
SLEEPER
LOVE AND DEATH
ANNIE HALL
INTERIORS
SMALL TIME CROOKS
MANHATTAN
STARDUST MEMORIES
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S SEX COMEDY
Sunday, 18 December 2011
ZELIG
BROADWAY DANNY ROSE
THE PURPLE ROSE OF CAIRO
HANNAH AND HER SISTERS
RADIO DAYS
SEPTEMBER
Monday, 12 December 2011
ANOTHER WOMAN
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Gena Rowlands
Y
A gentle amble through one woman’s mind, it’s quiet, reflective and possibly the beigest film ever made. Not the highest quality piece of work, but notable for the strength of its central role, Gena Rowlands playing a complicated, outwardly cold woman past the best opportunities of her life with both a dignity and desperation that are endearing to see. There aren’t a lot of movies doing the rounds like this; even the current small crop of indie films that dare to try something other than crashing cars or cracking wise tend to focus on the youth of the western world, so seeing an intelligent rumination on an aging woman’s feelings seem more alien than Avatar could ever hope to be. Yes, it’s another example of Allen’s favourite genre of upper-middle-class New Yorkers smiling but eventually telling each other how rubbish they are, but it’s always absorbing, well-pitched and interesting, making the run-time fly by and putting coins in the respect jar. His attention to
CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Martin Landau and Woody Allen
Y
Why does it keep going back to Melinda and Melinda? That film was a pit full of spikes tipped with liquid rubbish, daring you to find anything decent within its bags of crap acting and desperate attempts at any kind of insight whatsoever. But there’s DNA there, a template buried under the crud that many of Allen’s other films reference or return to; strong women, detailed relationships, the fleeting farce of fate. Alliteration. Melinda and Melinda’s main shtick was the idea of a life divided into comedy and tragedy, but it dressed it like a child in a bin bag and left it to rot and fester under a script marched on by a moron carnival. Crimes and Misdmeanours, filmed over ten years earlier, is better. It’s the McFly to Melinda’s Busted, the Ali G to the later work’s Lee Nelson. The captain man from Space 1999 plays a complete bastard murder-orderer, but he does it with a conflicted brow and series of monologues and facial twitches that make you actually THINK ABOUT THINGS, about consequences, and passion and avoiding the distractions of 1980s fashion. Meanwhile, in a parallel storyline handled with 86% more subtletly than Melinda Woody himself grapples with his own shortcomings, questioning whether the end can ever justify the means and if he can get his little intellectual stick into Mia Farrow again. An attempt to drag the big questions of his beloved Russian novels into his own circle-jerk of navel-gazing, it generally works, if falling into preposterouness from frame to frame. For once Allen’s crutch of humour doesn’t detract from the serious central point, instead providing freedom from the claustrophobic nature of Landau’s storyline, whilst the conclusions it reaches reveal the sadness that clog the decisions that everyone makes. When he’s attempted to make grand statements before he’s tripped into aloofness, but here Allen keeps a steady keel and a compelling examination down to the final beats of another excellent soundtrack. When he’s on, he’s on.
ALICE
Starring Mia Farrow
M
Vaguely interesting magical-realism thing with a bit of flying and invisible cab-riding. If you’re watching it at three o’clock on a Thursday afternoon after a month of watching nothing but Woody Allen movies then try not to fall asleep and miss the last twenty minutes of the film. That said, it’s easy to get distracted.
SHADOWS AND FOG
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Woody Allen
Y
A strange deviation and all the better for it, best watched drunk or half asleep. Seeing too many of Allen’s films together can start to feel like you’re trapped in a charity shop that only sells boxes of lame comedy and middle class nitpicking, so it’s a pleasure to see that he can succeed when trying something completely different. Drawing on classic horror, Kafka, expressionism and John Malkovich’s malleable face, Shadows and Fog creates a genuinely heavy atmosphere of dread and fear. It wraps a simple story of two people walking through an unnamed town at night avoiding a man who enjoys putting pressure on necks in a dreamlike quality that’s hard to dig out of your head. Donald Pleasence shows up to give the whole thing a campy Hammer feeling, whilst the amazing thing is how it manages to include many of Allen’s usual themes in a completely different setting: there’s debates on money and art and women, but they’re dressed up in the form of a parable, with rambling diatribes mouthed by John Cusack or Madonna accompanied by some of the finest cinematography of his career so far. It’s conclusions of illusion and fabrication tally with his usual themes of fakery and artifice in the lives of intellectuals and artists, but again, everything is simplified, less reliant on dialogue and the confines of his own surroundings than other similar pieces. It may not be a comprehensive stroll through the director’s own head, but it serves as a dutiful homage to his pet favourites and an interesting deviation in a career that frequently plays it repetitive. At this point it seems like Allen is one of the most consistent of the post-everything filmmakers; he takes and takes, his personality formed by the films of his childhood and the shots of his heroes. It’s also full of shadows and fog, so no one’s going to feel short-changed.
HUSBANDS AND WIVES
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Woody Allen and Mia Farrow
Y
An honest and frequently devastating account of two marriages falling down, held up high by four great performances and a sparse, controlled script; he’s back to the funny stuff. Watching only Allen movies makes you forget how empty the rest of the film world can seem in terms of real emotion, leaving you only to compare one of his pieces with another in an endless cycle of harsh realism and wacky death-chat interludes. Stepping out of Allen’s private multiplex for just a little while reminds you how few people actually make decent films like this, films where the action comes from drunken late night visits, awkward phone calls and well-rounded characters. Allen finally accepts his strengths at realism here by framing the whole thing as a documentary, and it’s all the more traumatic for the use of straight-to-camera confessions and emotional outpourings, drawing on a life spent confessing secrets to strangers in exchange for money. All four of the main actors slap it out of the park, whilst Liam Neeson and Juliette Lewis provide a welcome breath of air away from the constant revolving misery of marriage make-ups and break downs. When he tries real emotion he can do it, he can push past the stereotypes and pretentiousness that ties a lot of his work into balls of knitted urine and create something that’s affecting and thought-provoking and relatable. And he does it here.
MANHATTAN MURDER MYSTERY
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Diane Keaton
d
Watching these things backwards is the right way to go, witnessing a steady climb from ass to class. However, that’s not to say there aren’t any road blocks, in this case a kooky bullet sent from the past to create an unfavourable-comparisons crisis in the early nineties. Ask anyone walking out of a Seth Rogen film what they know about Woody Allen and they’ll mention Diane Keaton and Annie Hall. Ask anyone coming out of Transformers: Dark of the Moon and they’ll claw at your hands, begging you to rip out their eyes and bury them as quickly as you can to make the pain go away. Annie’s the one, apparently. It’s the film that made the world grasp this struggling, sweating man to its collective bosom and love him, and tell him everything was all right and that he was a genius all along. Diane Keaton played a huge part in that, riffing off him and pushing him further, generally being an oddball muse with talent to burn and a face hewn out of beauty rock. She’s his walking Golden Age, his happy memories, his artistic conscience wrapped into some odd clothing choices, all of which makes Manhattan Murder Mystery a lot shit. It’s entirely Allen’s fault again; after he fucked up his relationship with Mia Farrow Keaton stepped into the role of Grandma Nancy Drew, instantly becoming the best thing in a film loaded with crap. She jumps headfirst into the babbling script and ridiculous scenarios, giving it her all and making Woody look like a nonsensical, valiumed-up moron for the duration of the run time.
Keaton’s appearance drags the film down into something more horrible than a bad movie, something that this blog can’t really comment on having not seen the partnership in its glory years yet. But even with a vague awareness of his seventies greatness you can see why Allen’s old school fans resent his recent output; because of this film, because of its dickbag characters, it’s endless ditzy bickering, it’s daring to use ‘Manhattan’ in the title. Keaton brings with her a direct reference to Allen’s glory years as a director, and having her show up in one of his lesser pieces demeans their relationship and their work together. You can never go back.
Christ, it’s meant to be a light-hearted mystery romp. Alright, the Lady From Shanghai homage drags up a smirk. But that’s it. Go home, show’s over, come back in ’77.
Wednesday, 7 December 2011
BULLETS OVER BROADWAY
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring John Cusack
M
Wow, this one’s fun and pattern forming. A lot of Allen’s best stuff so far has come from a desire to engage with the cogs of his profession; from Vicky Christina Barcelona’s musings on the nature of art to Sweet and Lowdown’s questioning of a life spent focused on talent. Debates of art vs life tap into the very heart of Allen’s shtick, providing a truth and depth that his pork-fisted attempts at basically anything else can’t touch. Bullets Over Broadway addresses this central conceit head-on, with a neurotic playwright going toe to toe with a gifted gangster and resulting in all sorts of artistic fumbling, arguments over talent and beauty and the point of all things, as well as yet another soundtrack that overshadows the film. It also continues the latter day tradition of stuffing young actors into Allen’s own persona, with John Cusack doing a fine job as the best one yet. He’s helped by a quick pace, interesting supporting characters (Jim Broadbent as a compulsive fat-fuck, Rob Reiner as a real-life fat-fuck Marxist blowhard) and the shrill, unintelligible bird-garble of Jennifer Tilly, who makes everyone else around her look like a comedy genius. The brief scraps of the play-within-a-film are funnier than everything in Don’t Drink the Water, whilst Dianne Wiest makes a fine flight for the Allen exit playing a demented Gloria Swanson wax-work with a penchant for long walks in New York Parks. She’s a great actress, even with her odd puckered up face, and the fact that she hasn’t worked with Allen again since is another black mark in his career book. Maybe all his best films have to shove in someone called Diane…
DON'T DRINK THE WATER
Starring Woody Allen
d
An incredible bucket of crap. Let’s look at how many Sopranos actors have appeared in Allen films:Edie Falco (Carmela)
– Bullets Over Broadway
The boss’ put upon wife gets an even shorter stick by being deprived of any lines. Shut up, possible greatest actress of her generation!
Tony Sirico (Paulie)
– Celebrity, Deconstructing Harry, Everyone Says I LoveYou, Mighty Aphrodite, Bullets Over Broadway
Psycho for hire plays a load of hoods, world keeps turning.
Aida Turturo (Janice)
– Celebrity,
In Celebrity she’s a fortune teller!
John Ventimiglia (Artie Bucco)
Seeing the mild-mannered chef play a mobster is liable to make your head pop open and spurt your brains all over the screen. It’s not supposed to be this way!
Arthur J. Nascarella (Some Guy)
– The Curse of the Jade Scorpion
Who?
Matt Servitto (Agent Harris)
– Melinda and Melinda
Perhaps he should launch an investigation into how the movie ended up so bad. Because he played an FBI agent.
Jerry Adler (Hesh)
–
Murderer! You got away with murder you murdering murderer!
Tony Darrow (Larry Boy Barese)
– Small Time Crooks, Sweet and Lowdown, Celebrity, Deconstructing Harry, Mighty Aphrodite, Bullets Over Broadway,
Nope.
Paul Herman (Beansie)
– Mighty Aphrodite, Bullets Over Broadway, Radio Days, The Purple Rose of
David Margulies (Tony’s Attorney)
– Celebrity
Innocent bystander to the greatest putdown of the 1980s:
Yes, it’s true. This man has no dick.
There's probably more. But Whaddya Gonna Do?
MIGHTY APHRODITE
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Mira Sorvino
M
So it’s all Melinda and Melinda again, where a talented actress acts her career off in order to make something beautiful from a boring script. Miro Sorvino punches out of a convoluted plot and distracting Greek-chorus distractions to produce an effective portrayal of a likeable character who rips the film from Allen’s clutches; until her arrival the piece meanders along as another unbelievable list of whinging, dug-up quips and improbable marriages to beautiful women, Allen himself showcasing a slightly creepier variation of his usual amiably confused character. He shuts up when Sorvino arrives. At many points in their exchanges you can actually see him tighten, stopping and listening to what the woman’s making out of his lame lines and looking on in wonder as she claims an Oscar using one of his poorer stories. The plot’s a mess that doesn’t know what it’s trying to say, Helena Bonham Carter’s out of time and space as yet another of Allen’s creepily misogynistic women who don’t know what’s good for them, and it’s got Peter Weller in it. Peter Weller was Robocop, and has an evil face. He looks like he’s about to bury everyone involved in a landfill, then poke the dirt slowly with his evil penis. It’s distracting, but probably for the best. Edit out everything but Sorvino’s scenes and you’ll have a great performance that makes no sense, but then neither does most of Allen’s other output from the decade of Bill and Ted.
Wednesday, 30 November 2011
EVERYONE SAYS I LOVE YOU
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring A Load of People Who Can’t Really Sing
Y
Ever wanted to hear Jack’s Raging Bileduct burst into song over how much he loves his fiancée? Longed to watch Drew Barrymore’s lips fail to sync up with the soundtrack but look pouty anyway? Thought it should be whimsical lyrics falling out of Mr Orange’s throat instead of cascades of intestinal blood? THAT’S A BINGO! One of the few joys of watching latter day Allen is that when he’s not bludgeoning careers he’s flipping them about, making straight-laced do-gooders lurch to his frequently rubbish tune. Everyone wants to work with him, so everyone does, and normally before they’re uber-famous or pissing on red carpets. This leads to wonderful situations like those mentioned above, as well as seeing a pre-swan-breakdown Natalie Portman playing a ditzy, boy obsessed schoolgirl with a load of no-marks who never made it. It’s light, it’s stupid, it’s happy, and the fact that it drags in actors known for more serious work is a delight to behold. There is a sense that Allen’s run out of ways to address middle-class non-problems by this point, resorting to a knockabout sing-along as a desperate way of repackaging old observations, but the whole thing is performed with such a sense of gaiety that you somehow forget it’s faults, culminating in a simple dance by the side of a river that’ll make you a believer in Goldie Hawn. And that’s a hell of an overachievement.
DECONSTRUCTING HARRY
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Woody Allen
M
A clip-show of stylistic tics, Billy Crystal and overbearing star-fucking that somehow manages to hold it all together with a splatter of old-fashioned wit and good-humour. It has to be said at this point, in the dawn of his artistic drudgery, how reassuring a presence Allen still is in his own films. His acting is perfectly in tune with his writing, his delivery lifting even his most tired observations into a smirk or a smile and his floundering elevating the performances of the professionals around him. Deconstructing Harry suffers in the same way that Celebrity does; the star turns, the Robin Williamsssss and Demi Moores only drag the film down with stunt casting and a lack of attachment to Allen and the story itself, making the narrative as blurry and indistinct as Williams’ predicament in his segment. (He plays an actor who starts to blur around the edges, like on film, but in real life. It’s diverting for a bit, and sort of clever. LIKE THE FILM.) Allen works better with character actors; people who ‘get’ his style and approach. You can basically divide everyone he’s worked with into those that understand his films and those that don’t, and the changes in tone are incredible to witness. Generally the more understated you are the better, which gives power to his character studies and psychological evaluations but slurps the fun out of his broader comedy. Deconstructing Harry ultimately fucks up by being too many things, and even a cursory glance at the DVD blurbs to come suggests he used to be much better at writing about himself. We’ve got to go back, Marty. BACK TO THE PAST. Where we’re going we’ll need some sort of mass transit system.
Wait, isn't that the music from The Mask in the trailer? The Mask is great! Go watch The Mask instead. It's The Mask!
CELEBRITY
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Kenneth Brannagh
French Trailer Which Somehow Makes The Film Seem Better Than It Is By Being In French
M
Just… odd. Stuffed full of quality actors (Pre-Jowly Dicaprio, Judy Davis, Hank Azaria) but disjointed as a chainsaw accident victim with a mouth full of tacks. Kenneth Brannagh is a nightmare, copying Allen’s shtick action for action and word for word; even Scarlett Johannson did a better job of being Alleny in Scoop, though Brannagh’s never been trumpeted for his subtlety. His performance sucks the film out of the vague reality that Allen usually skirts around, making the film a celebrity stuffed sketch show without the jokes, the one saving grace being the extended segment with Charlize Theron as a no-name nymphomaniac model which is every bit as good as it sounds. Everyone else is underused or ignored or given shoddy material that seems to be left out of his other films, whilst the only entertainment comes from spotting gestating actors in a pre-fame indie test-tube (Sam Rockwell, that odd-looking man from Entourage, J. Jonah Jameson). And that’s not a film. That’s a catalogue for casting directors, and too superficial for words, so these ones had better stop now. These words, here. They’re done.
Sunday, 6 November 2011
SWEET AND LOWDOWN
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Sean Penn
M
Right, love then. It’s all you need. The secret to Allen’s best work seems to be focus and love for the subject matter, and since he seems to hate the world with 95% of his molecules it’s difficult to find something to invest in. Luckily the other 5% is an adoration for women and jazz guitar, and that’s what makes Sweet and Lowdown function as a compelling film, that and the sterling work of Sean Penn and Samantha Morton. She’s amazing. She’s the heart and soul of the film. And she’s completely silent. Penn plays jazz guitarist Emmett Ray as a man in thrall to his own skill and talent, drawing on his real-life ego to incredible effect; it’s amazing to think Allen nearly played the role himself, choosing instead to bolster his credibility with an actor who knows what he’s doing. Luckily Woody confines his own appearances to talking heads, a group of jazz aficionados waxing lyrical on the merits of Ray’s temper and technique, whilst the rest of the film plays out as a more tightly focused essay on talent and artistry akin to his later work with Vicky Christina Barcelona. In fact, it’s all so convincing and well put together that it’s almost… oh. Oh wait, this is clever. Search Wikipedia for Emmett Ray. Whoops. Nice job, great film, but very specialist. So… MAYBE.
CURSE OF THE JADE SCORPION
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Woody Allen
d
Oh Good God, this is even worse. It’s a period screwball-comedy-thing set in the 1940s and everything’s terrible. He’s dragged in Dan Ackroyd and his face is melting into his chest, and he just looks upset. Ackroyd, not Woody. This is one of the only films where Allen admits that he fucked up, suggesting that it might have been better to cast another actor in the lead role instead of resuming his own bumbling anal-retentive shtick in a film noir setting. He’s damn right. It’s another one of his comedies where everyone involved looks slightly uncomfortable with the material because it’s ropey and unfit for purpose, built on the flimsiest hypnotism plot and threaded through with inanities and out-of-date observations. There’s a lot to be said for Allen’s individualism: in an era of factory-deficient sperm joke Apatow rip-offs it’s heartening to find a jazz-scored spoof of movies that most of today’s generation have never even heard of. But that doesn’t make it good. It doesn’t make it funny, and it doesn’t make it worth sitting through. It’s like a puffin – you’re glad it’s in the world, but when was the last time a puffin gave you a hernia through laughing too hard? When was the last time a puffin picked your kids up from school? They only do anything for David Attenborough anyway, and unless he’s a big fan of Allen’s post millennial output, then this analogy is going nowhere. Like the film! LIKE THE FILM!
HOLLYWOOD ENDING
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Woody Allen
M
Woody Allen’s great at playing Woody Allen. This isn’t a joke, he’s brilliant, and his neurotic persona is funny, endearing and perfectly-pitched even as the rest of the films he produces crumble around him. It should be – he’s been honing it for forty years. But what if this isn’t Woody’s real act? What if the stuttering, ad-libbing apologetic nonsense was just for the cheap seats, something for the cartoonists to sketch and the idiots to guffaw at? What if his real act was an elaborate, decades long role as a shit film-director making shit-films? And what if he told us as much in a movie?
Well, it wouldn’t be very good. It’d still be lazy, inept, overlong and condescending. But there’d be… Actually let’s stop this, it’s a real movie and it’s called
Allen’s real-life films are still screened at
So Hollywood Ending is basically one of two things. Either Woody’s laughing with us; he knows he’s a great director, we know he’s a great director, and we’re chuckling at a comedy version of him that doesn’t know what he’s doing. But there’s a problem: this isn’t a good film, because it’s not funny.
Or… Allen knows he’s a hack. He knows he’s terrible now, he knows he can’t direct for love nor money, and he’s made a film laughing at that fact. But again, this still isn’t a good film, because it’s not funny.
Hahahahah.
Sunday, 15 May 2011
ANYTHING ELSE
LOOK, I’M WOODY. HOWDY, HOWDY, HOWDY.
Starring Jason Biggs
M
You’re better off watching Anything Else than the rest of his output this century, in both senses of the sentence. There are jokes here, funny jokes, which is a marked improvement already. But there’s still that nagging pinch of hell; one of the running gags concerns writers sticking to comedy because it’s where the money is, yet another example of a sad-eyed Allen apologizing for his recent output through other actor’s mouths, the movie as an apology for itself. It’s not all dreck for once: casting naïve youngsters Jason Biggs and Christina Ricci has a positive effect on his mangled language and bizarre characters, the actors trying their darndest to make sense of the thing and imbibe their roles with a likeable quality, and it almost works. Once again it falls to Allen’s role as neurotic clown to provide the film’s highlights rather than his ‘skills’ at writing and directing. Wouldn’t it be great if he made a film that was all funny, all the time, that revolved around the brilliant comic creation of himself, that made insightful insights, carried a gaggle of gags, a simple thing that’s genuinely chucklesome and well-observed and didn’t jump for artistic merit like a leprechaun basket-ball player? Good job the Tardis is set to reverse; history says he gets better as time constricts. But Anything Else? Depending on how you’re watching Allen’s oeuvre it’s either a nugget of possibility or yet another deranged example of a man who’s almost forgotten how to make movies. Please let the 2000s end…
CHUNGKING EXPRESS
dMYD DVD
Starring Faye Wong
Y
What’s ‘Pure Cinema’? Mainlining Frank Capra? Vast sacks of dirty money? Chun-King Express? Let’s settle on that one; the film’s two stories and there’s a scene in the second one, the softly lit daytime tale that counters the jagged light-trails of the preceding section, it’s set in love-lorn Officer 633’s empty flat. But it’s not empty. There’s a girl there who works at a food stall and she’s whirling around the room, depositing goldfish, putting up stickers, flying toy planes. She’s bringing little lumps of joy to the Officer’s life without him knowing, by breaking into his house and doing good things. Seven years before Amelie. That scene’s Pure Cinema, forsaking definition, running laps around criticism and jumping around in your stomach like a sherbet creature on a trampoline. It’s beautiful.
Two stories of light and dark, fractured narratives leaping about with a hand-held camera and scrappy scraps of dialogue; it’s not the easiest film to follow. The stories don’t intermingle like the similarly style-affected Tarantino of the time but serve as differing views of love, wondering and escaping, separate and separately shot, alien and disjointed. The visuals are so striking that they’ll drag your eyes away from the subtitles, the soundtrack at times overbearing and repetitive. But you’ll leave with a strange appreciation of The Mamas and The Papas and a wonderful craving for Pineapple. And that’s Pure Cinema.
THOR
dMYD
Starring Chris Hemsworth
Y
Thank Gods for that. Anyone giving even a wandering fuck about the state of the Marvel Movie Universe was left bleeding after last year’s Iron Man 2, a frat boy nightmare detailing one man’s valiant battle against a script scribbled on the back of a napkin. Thor redresses those wrongs by actually caring about itself and its audience. The cast’s great (except for Anthony Hopkins), the script’s half-decent (unlike Anthony Hopkins), the sets are ropey (like… that guy.). But whocaresbecause it’s all so likeable, an almost unheard-of quality in the jizz-lobbing money fight that is blockbuster