A blog formerly known as Bookishness / By Charles Matthews

"Dazzled by so many and such marvelous inventions, the people of Macondo ... became indignant over the living images that the prosperous merchant Bruno Crespi projected in the theater with the lion-head ticket windows, for a character who had died and was buried in one film and for whose misfortune tears had been shed would reappear alive and transformed into an Arab in the next one. The audience, who had paid two cents apiece to share the difficulties of the actors, would not tolerate that outlandish fraud and they broke up the seats. The mayor, at the urging of Bruno Crespi, explained in a proclamation that the cinema was a machine of illusions that did not merit the emotional outbursts of the audience. With that discouraging explanation many ... decided not to return to the movies, considering that they already had too many troubles of their own to weep over the acted-out misfortunes of imaginary beings."
--Gabriel García Márquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

John Wick: Chapter 2 (Chad Stahelski, 2017)





Cast: Keanu Reeves, Riccardo Scamarcio, Ian McShane, Ruby Rose, Common, Claudia Gerini, Lance Reddick, Laurence Fishburne, Tobias Segal, John Leguizamo, Bridget Moynahan, Franco Nero, Peter Stormare. Screenplay: Derek Kolstad. Cinematography: Don Laustsen. Production design: Kevin Kavanaugh. Film editing: Evan Schiff. Music: Tyler Bates, Joel J. Richard. 

"You've got a beautiful house, John," the villain (Riccardo Scamarcio) says to the hero (Keanu Reeves), and we silently think the rest: "Too bad if something happened to it." It does, of course, and we are back in the world of John Wick. Grimly stoic as usual, the protagonist takes a licking and keeps on John Wicking.  Wickworld is a place with its own peculiar laws, one in which extremely violent things happen, from automobile demolition derbies to shootouts in the subway, and no authorities seem to intervene and passersby often don't even take notice. The choreographed violence becomes tolerable -- it's part ballet and part animated cartoon. In the extended fight between Wick and Cassian (Common), there's no sound but gunshots, blows landing, and combatants grunting, a kind of percussive duet that's as rhythmically compelling as Gene Krupa's drum solo on Benny Goodman's "Sing, Sing, Sing." 

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

The Sisters Brothers (Jacques Audiard, 2018)


Cast: John C. Reilly, Joaquin Phoenix, Jake Gyllenhaal, Riz Ahmed, Rebecca Root, Allison Tolman, Rutger Hauer, Carol Kane. Screenplay: Jacques Audiard, Thomas Bidegain, based on a novel by Patrick DeWitt. Cinematography: Benoît Debie. Production design: Michel Barthélémy. Film editing: Juliette Welfling. Music: Alexandre Desplat. 

An American Western filtered through Gallic sensibilities, The Sisters Brothers was a box-office flop, but it remains one of the more intriguing movies of recent years. To its credit, it gives John C. Reilly another chance to show what a remarkable actor he is when he's given more than just a backup role to play; he somehow sends even such charismatic performers as Joaquin Phoenix, Jake Gyllenhaal, and Riz Ahmed into the background when he's on screen. Full of quirky dialogue and unexpected situations, the movie's chief flaws are that it feels a little longer than necessary and the narrative is occasionally more elliptical than necessary.    

Monday, February 17, 2025

Petite Solange (Axelle Ropert, 2021)







Cast: Jade Springer, Léa Drucker, Philippe Katerine, Grégoire Montana, Chloé Astor. Screenplay: Axelle Ropert. Cinematography: Sébastien Buchmann. Production design: Valentine Gauthier. Film editing: Héloise Pelloquet. Music: Benjamin Esdraffo. 

Young Jade Springer gives a fine, sensitive performance in the title role, a 13-year-old girl torn apart by her parents' divorce, but the film gives us no fresh insight into a common family crisis. 

Sunday, February 16, 2025

Argylle (Matthew Vaughn, 2024)


Cast: Bryce Dallas Howard, Sam Rockwell, Bryan Cranston, Catherine O'Hara, Henry Cavill, John Cena, Dua Lipa, Samuel L. Jackson, Ariana DeBose, Sofia Boutella, Richard E. Grant. Screenplay: Jason Fuchs. Cinematography: George Richmond. Production design: Russell De Rozario, Daniel Taylor, Film editing: Col Goudie, Tom Harrison-Read, Lee Smith. Music: Lorne Balfe. 

A time- and talent-wasting spy spoof that was a perhaps well-deserved box office flop (which probably means it will emerge as a cult film someday), Argylle features Bryce Dallas Howard as Elly Conway, the author of a series of spy thrillers that have a way of predicting actual occurrences in the world of secret intelligence. She's tipped off to the peril this puts her in by Aidan Wilde (Sam Rockwell), a real-life espionage agent, and a manic series of revelations and counter-revelations ensues. Henry Cavill plays the title character, a James Bond clone with a flat-top haircut that would have offended Ian Fleming's Bond as much as a stirred martini. 

Saturday, February 15, 2025

One Way or Another (Sara Gómez, 1975)




Cast: Mario Balmaseda, Yolanda Cuéllar, Mario Limonta, Isaura Mendoza, Bobby Carcases, Sarita Reyes, Guillermo Díaz. Screenplay: Julio García Espinosa, Tomás González Péres, Tomás Guitérrez Alea, Sara Gómez. Cinematography: Luis García.  Art direction: Roberto Larrabure. Film editing: Iván Arocha. Music: Sergio Vitier. 

Sara Gómez's One Way or Another is a clear-sighted docudrama that personifies the attempts of postrevolutionary Cuba to establish a stable, egalitarian state by focusing on a young couple: Yolanda (Yolanda Cuéllar), a schoolteacher, and Mario (Mario Balmaseda), a laborer. Old ways and old attitudes die hard, and Gómez resorts to a wrecking ball smashing into slum buildings as a visual metaphor throughout the film. Though it ends with Yolanda and Mario walking away from the camera arguing, a measure of hope for the couple, and by implication for Cuba, remains. It's a propaganda film with a heart, though the chilly speech and manner of the authorities trying to engineer a new society contrasts sharply with the messy vitality of the daily lives of the Cuban people. 

 

Friday, February 14, 2025

The Help (Tate Taylor, 2011)

Viola Davis in The Help

Cast: Viola Davis, Emma Stone, Octavia Spencer, Bryce Dallas Howard, Jessica Chastain, Ahna O'Reilly, Alison Janney, Cicely Tyson, Sissy Spacek, Mary Steenburgen, David Oyelowo. Screenplay: Tate Taylor, based on a novel by Kathryn Stockett. Cinematography: Stephen Goldblatt. Production design: Mark Ricker. Film editing: Hughes Winborn. Music: Thomas Newman. 

The Help is Gone With the Wind for white liberals, as a line in the film suggests. Glossy and superficial, its treatment of race and class annoyed me, though not quite as much or as deservedly so as it annoyed its star, Viola Davis, who has expressed her regret that she appeared in the movie. I lived through the time and pretty much in the place it depicts, and while I can vouch for the accuracy of much of its portrayal of the racial and social attitudes in the movie, it's the point of view that brings the movie crashing down into mediocrity and irrelevance. Both the writer-director Tate Taylor and the novelist Kathryn Stockett, whose work he adapted, were born in Jackson, Miss., in 1969, too late and too white to give a more informed and nuanced look at the subject they treat. While their hearts and minds are in the right place, they rely on tired tropes like the Magical Negro and the White Savior to tell their story. The result is a soothing reassurance that all of this took place in the past and things are not as they were as far as racism in America is concerned, an attitude at odds with every day's headlines.  

Thursday, February 13, 2025

Once Upon a Time in China (Tsui Hark, 1991)










Cast: Jet Li, Biao Yuen, Rosamund Kwan, Jacky Cheung, Kent Cheng, Kam-Fai Yuen, Shi-Kwan Yen, Shun Lau, Wu Ma, Jianquo Qiu, Cheun-Yan Yuen, Chi-Yeung Wong, Shun-Yee Yuen, Xiong Xinxin, Jonathan Isgar, Mark King, Steve Tartalia, Colin George. Screenplay: Tsui Hark, Kai-Chi Yuen, Yiu-Ming Leung, Elsa Tang. Cinematography: Tung-Chuen Chan, Wilson Chan, David Chung, Ardy Lam, Arthur Wong, Bill Wong. Art direction: Chung-Man Lee. Film editing: Marco Mak. Music: Romeo Diaz, James Wong.  

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

John Wick (Chad Stahelski, 2014)









Cast: Keanu Reeves, Michael Nyqvist, Alfie Allen, Willem Dafoe, Dean Winters, Adrienne Palicki, Ian McShane, Lance Reddick, John Leguizamo. Screenplay: Derek Kolstad. Cinematography: Jonathan Sela. Production design: Dan Leigh. Film editing: Elisabet Ronaldsdóttir. Music: Tyler Bates, Joel J. Richard. 

Keanu Reeves reminds me of Gregory Peck, another handsome movie star of limited acting range who succeeded by being eminently likable. Just as Peck was miscast as the demonic Captain Ahab of John Huston's Moby Dick (1956), Reeves struggled to play the villainous Don John in Kenneth Branagh's Much Ado About Nothing (1993) -- something about both performers seems to draw a sympathetic response from the audience. That something is certainly needed in John Wick, with Reeves playing a remorseless hit man, though the actor is so innately likable that the filmmakers didn't really need to kill Wick's puppy to elicit audience sympathy. Shoot-'em-up thrillers are so common these days that adding another franchise to the action genre seems like overkill. But what makes John Wick work is screenwriter Derek Kolstad's ability to craft a believable alternate world in which the character can seem plausible. Director Chad Stahelski (and his co-director David Leitch, who was denied that credit by the Directors Guild) manage to create an ambience that evokes both French gangster movies and Hong Kong martial arts films -- Jean-Pierre Melville meets Tsui Hark -- while retaining a peculiarly American love of artillery and automobiles. 

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

Battling Butler (Buster Keaton, 1926)



Cast: Buster Keaton, Snitz Edwards, Sally O'Neil, Walter James, Budd Fine, Francis McDonald, Mary O'Brien, Tom Wilson, Eddie Borden. Screenplay: Paul Gerard Smith, Al Boasberg, Charles Henry Smith, Lex Neal, based on a play by Stanley Brightman and Austin Melford. Cinematography: Bert Haines, Devereaux Jennings. 

Rich man Alfred Butler (Buster Keaton) goes glamping with his valet (Snitz Edwards) and falls in love with a backwoods maiden (Sally O'Neil). When he's mistaken for the lightweight boxer Alfred "Battling" Butler (Francis McDonald), he has to prove his manly prowess to her burly father (Walter James) and brother (Budd Fine). Unfortunately, Keaton's comic routines in the boxing ring pale in comparison with Charles Chaplin's boxing scene in City  Lights (Chaplin, 1931). Keaton gets more laughs from entering the ring, getting tangled in the ropes, than he does while in it. Not one of Keaton's more inventive feature films, Battling Butler suffers a little from predictable plotting, derived from a Broadway musical that starred Charles Ruggles. Still, even a second-tier Keaton film is better than almost anyone else's standout movie.

Monday, February 10, 2025

Kingsman: The Secret Service (Matthew Vaughn, 2014)



Cast: Colin Firth, Taron Egerton, Mark Strong, Samuel L. Jackson, Sofia Boutella, Michael Caine, Fiona Hampton, Samantha Womack, Mark Hamill, Jack Davenport. Screenplay: Jane Goldman, Matthew Vaughn, based on a comic book by Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons. Cinematography: George Richmond. Production design: Paul Kirby. Film editing: Eddie Hamilton, John Harris. Music: Henry Jackman, Matthew Margeson.