Thursday, July 29, 2010

Undertow (2004)

Undertow is a mediocre thriller with a few good moments to speak for it. At its best, it features quiet moments where Philip Glass' music is allowed to shine and the film is thriving on its 70's roots and atmospheres that resemble George Washington. At its worst, Undertow trades in thriller crumbles we've seen a thousand times (or more). I guess this is supposed to settle into the mind of teens as an evil fairytail about lost childhood and a grim world in which everyone is forced to take care of herself. Does it work? ... Not really.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The Children's hour (1961)

Being one of those films that I've read about in feminist texts (and The Celluloid closet), I finally got to see The Children's hour. The film is a second adaptation of Lillian Hellman's play. Karen (Audrey Hepburn) & Martha (Shirley MacLaine) are schoolteachers, having set up their own girls' school. In the first section of the film, we see Karen's & Martha's daily life. Karen is about to get married to Joe, who is a doctor. Martha is obviously unhappy with that prospect. One of the girls, perhaps the most annoying kid in film history, is punished for making trouble. She wants to have her revange, so she spreads a rumour about the teachers - that they are engaged in an "unnatural" relationship. The rumour is transformed into a scandal, involving a juridical process. In the last section of the film, post-trial, we see the two teachers, shattered by being scandalized. Another round of interrogation takes place. Does Joe believe in Karen? And what about Martha? Martha finally confesses her love for Karen. The film ends on a very traditional note; "the lesbian" has to die - this time, by her own hands.

Admittedly, the weaving of the plot contains some embarrassing half-measures. But that does not spoil this movie, which I, at least initially, found to be less crude than what I expected it to be. Interestingly, the contemporary New York Times reviewer, who regarded the story as unbelievable (that such a rumor would wreak such havoc), did not find it very daring. After that, I was less prone to think about radical politics, and started to think about my own conception of 60's prudes instead.

Critics have complained that this adaptation of The Children's hour makes a cliché out of the lesbian theme. And of course the repressed lesbian who commits suicide is exactly that. But that is not to say that the film has no merits; the ending scene is actually quite beautiful - no happy, heterosexual ending.The errand of the film seems ultimately to be about showing how rumors can destroy people's lives, rather than to portray a slice of heteronormativity drama. It is easy to make too much of the lesbian subplot, but that would be unfair to the film.

Wild at heart (1990)

Wild at heart is based on a pulp novel and also the film adaptation is through-and-through pulp material. If you leave it at that, this is a quite good movie, with some elegant editing work; the way in which scenes are linked and contrasted make the film what it is. Lynch succeeds in startling his audience with the seemingly random jumps from scene to scene. There's also a bunch of gritty/eerie scenes. Lynch concocts a love story clad with 50's nostalgia, raunchy bad guys, a bustling soundtrack and gruesome plot twists. True; Lynch gets away with a lot; corny Elvis imitations / cheap symbolism (ecstacy/FIRE!) / "shock-value"-scenes. At his best, Lynch conjures those moments where reality slips away, lacunae, moments of overwhelming fear in which nothing makes sense. There are a few scenes where Lynch appeals to those emotions - for example, there is a scene in which one of the bad guys of the movie, Bobby Peru, steps into the dirty, puke-smeared motel room in which our heroine is resting. But none of the images in Wild at heart manages to grab a hold of me in the same way as some of Lynch's other material.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Stromboli (1950)

This spring, I've watched quite a few Italian movies - let's continue on that track. Stromboli may not be Roberto Rossellini's most famous movie, but it is, for all its moments of terrible acting, a quite interesting one. Ingrid Bergman plays the leading role; a girl, Karen, with a complicated past, who, to escape a internment camp, marries an Italian man. The man lives on a small island, on the top of which broods an ever-active volcano. The differences between the spouses are apparent. The girl can't endure the simple life on the island. She feels trapped and lonely. One night, she goes to a woman's house, where she can get her dress fixed. The other woman, we learn, "is bad". And we soon see a gang of men serenading under her window. Among these men are Karen's husband. He drags her away and attacks her physically. This is not really a film dependent on plot. What Rossellini is trying to do is, I guess, to depict some clashes in terms of gender and class. It's a film about the significance of "a better life", and what it means to pursue it. The film is, in content and style, very subdued. With one, very unsurprising exception - the music. --- But there are several things about the film that made me uncomfortable. The image of the woman, too frail & self-occupied for the hard life, is a rotten one, but Rossellini seems to go along with it, developing it to tell a story about egoism, redemption and faith. The reason why Karen is so miserable is never really clarified. We are just to assume that she is too fond of fancy dresses and a comfortable life. The other important role in the film, that of her husband, is hardly more intelligible. He is bluntly naive, boyish - only to become brutal and violent. A cliché. A redeeming fact about the film is that the end has an openness to it, so that it can be interpreted in several ways. Stromboli is beautifully shot. The location, the desolate island, almost suffices for a reason for why this is still a good movie. In one early scene, we see Karin explore the village. She hears a distant cry of an instant. Karin's hestitant movements are central to understanding what kind of situation she has found herself in. That particular scene shimmers with life.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

The coast guard (2002)

The coast guard is not Kim Ki-Duk's strongest movie. It puts forward a harrowing critique of the South Korean army - against the backdrop of a general atmosphere (augmented by music) of sadness & remorse. In fear of northern spies, troops patrol the border. One night, a zealous young soldier shoots a young boy, a civilian, who has sneaked off to the beach with his lover. Tragedy, madness and violence ensue. The film depicts bully and fear. A very bleak picture is painted of the army's activities, arbitrary excercise of power, hierarchy, moral weakness. If there were less big gestures, less action-style violence & a more focused and subtle/evocative characterization of the characters had been provided, this would have been a much better film.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Romance (1999)

Catherine Breillat is certainly not a tepid director. Fat girl made some very good points on body image & sexuality - in a very blunt, in-your-face way. Watching the film was hard, but it was not in the least exploitative. Although stamped with a bad rumour, I sat down to watch Romance. Yes, it is very explicit, but it wasn't pornography. Sure, this movie could only be made in France: explicit sexual images - plus a monologue about the metaphysical relation between the male and the female. The style of the film is immersed in self-conscious gestures: almost every image seems to be aimed at challenging traditional images of sexuality and aspects of embodiment. What is it about? Masochism and self-annihilation? Well - sure. Take a long, hard look: "The woman is dead." Impossible female desire? Sex & birth? Well, it is certainly not about romance. Is it yet another film the purpose of which is to provoke and to shock? Partly it is, but there's more to it also. There's an undercurrent of extremely dark humor here. Early feminist writers held the medium of film to be an extension of the male gaze, for which women were made objects of desire. This kind of theorizing has partly been rejected as too simple, and there has been much discussion about how to understand practices of watching in a less one-dimensional way (Teresa de Lauretis is one example). Breillat's film joins in with this tradition in that she, too, poses questions about fantasy & gendered gazes. Romance is a complex film. The arrangement of scenes is very strict. But for all its self-consciousness, did I find clarity in those images? This is a difficult question. To be honest, the more I think about it, those ending scenes, depicting the birth of a child and the death of a man, exhibit a brilliant dose of sour irony.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Quando sei nato non puoi più nasconderti (2005)

An Italian film with material about prison-like camps for asylum-seekers and gangsters shipping illegal immigrants to Italy? That sounds political. But even though Quando sei nato... raised interesting & important questions, it didn't dig deep enough. Instead, it focused on its core story about a boy falls into the water on a boat trip with his father & is fished out by a boat of illegal immigrants. The main problem with this film is that the focus is wrong. I would have craved for more sociology or at least a more interesting cinematic experience. This is not to say that the film lacks qualities. The depiction of a very middle-class relation to money is very alarming: guilt has a price, guilt is something you can pay off with a suitable amount of money.

The Terminal (2004)

I watched The Terminal (almost all of it) to see whether it would depict USA as a fascist state with absurd policies about visitors, asylum-seekers and immigrants. It didn't. It was a film about Tom Hanks doing Forrest Gump with a quasi-Russian accent and an "Indian" cleaner who enjoys watching people slip on a wet floor.