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

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Monday, May 12, 2025

When the Tenth Month Comes (Dang Nhat Minh, 1984)

Le Van in When the Tenth Month Comes

 Cast: Le Van, Nguyen Huu Muoi, Nguyen Minh Vuong, Lai Phu Cuong, Trinh Le Phong. Screenplay: Dang Nhat Minh. Cinematography: Nguyen Manh Lan, Pham Phuc Dat. Film editing: Hien Luong. Music: Phu Quang. 

Dang Nhat Minh's When the Tenth Month Comes is a lovely, poignant film about village life in Vietnam after the end of the war with the Americans, but while war was still being waged along the border with Laos. A young woman, Duyen (Le Van), learns that her husband has been killed in conflict with the Khmer Rouge, but decides to keep it a secret from her aging father-in-law and her young son. When she finds it difficult to maintain the illusion that her husband is still alive, she persuades the village schoolteacher, Khang (Nguyen Huu Muoi), to forge a letter from him to her father-in-law. Khang's attraction to the beautiful Duyen causes village gossip. When Duyen, who has been an actress, is persuaded to perform in a scene from an opera about a woman whose husband is leaving to go to war, the similarity to her own life overcomes her and she flees the stage, causing more talk. Dang effectively blends elements of the fantastic into Duyen's story, connecting its contemporary reality to the mythic traditions of rural Vietnam. 

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Vicky Cristina Barcelona (Woody Allen, 2008)

Penélope Cruz and Javier Bardem in Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Cast: Rebecca Hall, Scarlett Johansson, Javier Bardem, Penélope Cruz, Chris Messina, Patricia Clarkson, Kevin Dunn, Christopher Evan Welch (voice). Screenplay: Woody Allen. Cinematography: Javier Aguiressarobe. Production design: Alain Bainée. Film editing: Alisa Lepselter. 

There are no surprises in Woody Allen's Vicky Cristina Barcelona. It's the oft-told tale of Americans abroad, experiencing culture shock when their preconceptions about life don't mesh with those in other parts of the world. In this case, it's two young women, Rebecca Hall's somewhat uptight Vicky and Scarlett Johansson's more free-spirited Cristina, who get caught up in the relationship between a sexy Spanish painter, Juan Antonio (Javier Bardem), and his volatile ex-wife, Maria Elena (Penélope Cruz). Triangles and even quadrangles form among them. Allen supplies a narrator (Christopher Evan Welch) who sounds very much like Woody Allen, but he's not really necessary unless you've never seen one of his movies before. It's late-career Allen, and one of the few to be both critically and commercially successful, winning an Oscar for Cruz's vivid performance. 

Eye of God (Tim Blake Nelson, 1997)

Nick Stahl in Eye of God

Cast: Martha Plimpton, Kevin Anderson, Nick Stahl, Richard Jenkins, Margo Martindale, Mary Kay Place, Hal Holbrook. Screenplay: Tim Blake Nelson. Cinematography: Russell Lee Fine. Production design: Patrick Geary. Film editing: Kate Sanford. Music: David Van Tieghem. 

A solid drama about a crime in a small Oklahoma town, Tim Blake Nelson's debut as a feature film director, Eye of God, is among other things a piercing look into Bible Belt religiosity. Martha Plimpton plays Ainsley, a waitress in the barely there town of Kingfisher, who has struck up a correspondence with a man in the state prison, Jack Stillings (Kevin Anderson). When he's released he heads for Kingfisher, where he's soon married to Ainsley. While in prison, he got religion, and is bent on making her go to church with him. She doesn't care for it, and before long his insistence on having his way drives them apart: When she gets pregnant he insists that she not leave the house. Then she befriends 14-year-old Tom Spencer (Nick Stahl), a shy loner, and their lives intersect in calamitous fashion. But in the film this narrative line is fragmented into flashbacks from the moment police find Tom, covered in blood, wandering alone on a road at night. The nature of the crime and the identity of the victim are cleverly withheld until all the pieces of the story are assembled. But the real strength of the film lies in the performances, not only of Plimpton, Anderson, and Stahl, but of such estimable character actors as Richard Jenkins, Margo Martindale, and Hal Holbrook, playing people who have their own problems that color their responses to the crime. 

Friday, May 9, 2025

Leila and the Wolves (Heiny Srour, 1984)


Cast: Nabila Zeitouni, Rafik Ali Ahmad, Raja Nehme, Sabah Obeid, Samar Samy. Emilia Fowad, Ferial Abillamah. Screenplay: Heiny Srour. Cinematography: Curtis Clark, Charlet Recors. Film editing: Eva Houdova. Music: Bachir Mounir, Laki Nassif. 

Lebanese filmmaker Heiny Srour's Leila and the Wolves is a fascinating journey into the 20th century history of the conflict in Lebanon and Palestine. Nabila Zeitouni plays Leila, who is mounting an exhibition in London on the role of women in the heavily male-dominated struggle. She imagines herself, wearing the same white dress she wears to the opening of the exhibition, wandering through time and space as events in the conflict unfold through the eyes of women contributing however they can to the liberation of the Palestinians. In one scene, the women throw flowerpots and pour boiling water onto the enemy troops as their run beneath their balconies. In another, they take an active role by staging a mock wedding that allows them to smuggle weapons and ammunition to the men doing the fighting. Finally, young women emerge as actual combatants. Srour's film is a collage of newsreel footage and reenacted scenes, with symbolic touches such as a crowd of women shrouded and veiled and seated on a beach as a kind of silent chorus on the action.  

Thursday, May 8, 2025

24 City (Jia Zhang-ke, 2008)

Joan Chen in 24 City

Cast: Jianbin Chen, Joan Chen, Liping Lü, Tao Zhao. Screenplay: Yongming Zhai, Jia Zhang-ke. Cinematography: Yu Wang, Nelson Lik-wai Yu. Production design: Qiang Liu. Film editing: Kong Jinglei, Xudong Lin. Music: Yoshihiro Hanno, Giong Lim. 

Jia Zhang-ke's 24 City takes a docufictional approach to the history of modern China, telling the story of the conversion of a former aircraft parts factory into a planned community, and by extension commenting on the past, present, and implied future of the country and its people. Jia mixes scenes in which actors impersonate factory workers and members of their families with scenes in which the actual workers appear before the camera. The stories are sometimes painful, as in the one in which a woman tells how she was separated from her little boy during the war and never saw him again, and sometimes poignant, such as the narrative of a smartly dressed, contemporary young woman who was shocked to witness the unpleasant conditions in which her mother worked. Their narratives are interspersed with musical sequences and snippets of poetry, including some lines by W.B. Yeats that prove oddly resonant. The result is an absorbing journey into a world unfamiliar to most of us. 

    Wednesday, May 7, 2025

    Chain (Jem Cohen, 2004)


     Cast: Miho Nikaido, Mira Billotte. Screenplay: Jem Cohen. Cinematography: Jem Cohen. Film editing: Jem Cohen, Davey Frankel. 

    Look at something familiar -- a word, a face, a tree, a building -- long enough and it becomes something alien, an arrangement of shapes and lines. Look at it for a while longer, and it can begin to take on a significance you've never found in the object before. That's what Jem Cohen's Chain does to one of the most familiar and banal of American institutions: the shopping mall. For some it's a place of comfort and convenience, while for others it's an emblem of consumer capitalism. For the two very different women who are the focus (not the protagonists, certainly not the heroines) of the film, it's a bit of both. Tamiko (Miho Nikaido) is a Japanese businesswoman who sees the shopping mall as a place to be exploited for the profits of the company she works for. Amanda (Mira Billotte) is a homeless runaway who sees the mall as a place to be exploited for mere survival. Adroitly manipulating images filmed at malls all over the country, Cohen first deconstructs the shopping mall and its welter of familiar corporate logos, and then, through juxtaposing what happens during the days Tamiko and Amanda (who never meet) spend in this ambiance, allows viewers to bring their own significance to an unlikely place. The result is eerie and revelatory.

    Tuesday, May 6, 2025

    Saving Face (Alice Wu, 2004)

    Joan Chen and Michelle Krusiec in Saving Face

    Cast: Michelle Krusiec, Joan Chen, Lynn Chen, Jin Wang, Guang Lan Koh, Jessica Hecht, Ato Essandoh, David Shih, Brian Yang, Nathanel Geng, Mao Zhao, Louyong Wong, Clare Sum. Screenplay: Alice Wu. Cinematography: Harlan Bosmajian. Production design: Daniel Ouellette. Film editing: Susan Graef, Sabine Hoffman. Music: Anton Sanko. 

    Alice Wu's Saving Face is a pleasant mixture of family drama and romantic comedy that never quite gets the two genres to work together and doesn't break any new ground for either of them. It plays on the usual themes of stories about immigrant families adjusting to American life, particularly clashes between tradition and change, old and young, queer and heteronormative. Only the fine performances of its cast really hold the movie together. 

    Monday, May 5, 2025

    End of the Road (Aram Avakian, 1970)

    James Earl Jones and Stacey Keach in End of the Road

    Cast: Stacey Keach, Harris Yulin, Dorothy Tristan, James Earl Jones, Grayson Hall, Ray Brock, John Pleshette, Gail Gilmore. Screenplay: Dennis McGuire, Terry Southern, Aram Avakian, based on a novel by John Barth. Cinematography: Gordon Willis. Production design: Jack Wright III. Film editing: Robert Q. Lovett. Music: Teo Macero. 

    Tonally and narratively chaotic from the outset, Aram Avakian's End of the Road finally settles into a straightforward plot line before its nihilistic ending. It earned an X rating for a truly harrowing abortion scene (and perhaps also for a scene in which a naked man tries to copulate with a chicken), but it's no skin flick. Instead it's a fable about ... oh, maybe about the malaise of life in the middle of the twentieth century, to judge from the montage of scenes from the era spanning Adolf Hitler to Richard Nixon. If it needs to be seen for anything it's for the astonishing and out-of-character performance by James Earl Jones as a psychiatrist who runs a very unconventional mental institution. Otherwise, it's a movie to be endured more than to be savored. 

    Sunday, May 4, 2025

    The Deep (Peter Yates, 1977)

    Nick Nolte, Robert Shaw, and Jacqueline Bisset in The Deep

    Cast: Nick Nolte, Jacqueline Bisset, Robert Shaw, Louis Gossett Jr., Eli Wallach, Robert Tessler, Dick Anthony Williams, Earl Maynard, Bob Minor, Teddy Tucker, Lee McClain. Screenplay: Peter Benchley, Tracy Keenan Wynn, based on a novel by Benchley. Cinematography: Christopher Challis. Production design: Anthony Masters. Film editing: David Berlatsky. Music: John Barry. 

    The Deep is a slackly put-together thriller about a search for sunken treasure. It was a big box office hit despite tepid reviews, partly because it was based on a best-seller by Peter Benchley, whose novel Jaws was turned into the paradigmatic summer blockbuster movie by Steven Spielberg in 1975. and partly because of shrewd marketing that featured Jacqueline Bisset in a wet T-shirt. But Bisset and Nick Nolte, the romantic leads, have little chemistry with each other, and although the underwater photography is sometimes spectacular it's also sometimes undecipherable during key action sequences. It's hard to find anyone today who remembers it with much enthusiasm. 


    Saturday, May 3, 2025

    Strange Days (Kathryn Bigelow, 1995)

    Angela Bassett and Ralph Fiennes in Strange Days

    Cast: Ralph Fiennes, Angela Bassett, Juliette Lewis, Tom Sizemore, Michael Wincott, Vincent D'Onofrio, Glenn Plummer, Brigitte Bako, Richard Edson, William Fichtner, Josef Sommer. Screenplay: James Cameron, Jay Cocks. Cinematography: Matthew F. Leonetti. Production design: Lilly Kilvert. Film editing: Howard E. Smith, James Cameron. Music: Graeme Revell. 

    Kathryn Bigelow's Strange Days contains one of the most painful and disturbing scenes I've ever witnessed. In it a woman, through a perversion of technology, is forced to experience her rape through the eyes and sensations of her rapist. The film was a box office failure, usually ascribed to poor marketing, but I suspect that word-of-mouth about that scene has a lot to do with keeping audiences away. It makes the protagonist, played well by Ralph Fiennes, vomit when he experiences it through a virtual reality recording device that plays back not only the visual but also the physical sensations that the recorder experienced while wearing it. Bigelow was the right director for the film, conceived by her then-partner James Cameron. Making such a scene virtually demands that a woman be responsible for it, but Bigelow is also a master of the hyperactive thriller, which Strange Days wants to be when it's not being so outrageously transgressive. It's well-acted, particularly by Fiennes and Angela Bassett, and it builds to a smashing, noisy climax on New Year's Eve at the dawn of the millennium, but it's overlong, and to my mind its over-the-top violence dissipates the points it wants to make about police brutality, racial injustice, and the dangers of invasive technology.