Category: 2016 Movie Challenge Page 20 of 21

Challenge Week 4: Marty

I’m not sure I’ve ever seen as pure a cinematic expression of joy as the look on Marty’s face after he drops Clara off at her apartment and realizes he’s just had the best time of his life talking with this girl. Maybe Gene Kelly in Singin’ in the Rain after he drops Debbie Reynolds off at her apartment…you get the idea. But let’s back up.

Marty is a 35-year-old bachelor whose friends and family are after him to get married, but he’s got Ernest Borgnine’s face, so he can’t seem to drum up much interest no matter how nice he is (and he is genuinely nice, not the “nice guy” type who isn’t really nice at all)…until he meets Clara, who’s also rather homely. It would be easy to write this off as “two ugly people finally find other ugly people and settle,” but it’s so much more than that. Granted, it is a bit on the simplistic side in terms of message, but it’s so charming and Borgnine and Betsy Blair are so charismatic that I didn’t care about that.

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Challenge Week 4: The Visitor

I firmly believe that every year is a good year for movies, but let’s be real – 2007 is a little more good than most, with an embarrassment of riches when it comes to great cinema. That judgement holds even more water now that I’ve added The Visitor to my list of favorite films from 2007, because yeah, it’s pretty great.

It’s a small film, just like the other Tom McCarthy film I’ve seen (and love) The Station Agent, but with some very big ideas and emotions. Main character Walter (Richard Jenkins) is an economics professor who’s basically checked out of everything – he’s been teaching the same class for twenty years and it doesn’t matter to him, the book he’s supposed to be writing doesn’t matter to him, nothing matters to him. He’s trying to take piano lessons when we first meet him, and he gives up on that almost immediately, too, unable to carry through his attempt to hold onto something of his late wife, who had been a pianist.

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Challenge Week 3: Grumpy Old Men

I’ve never been too motivated to see out the later Jack Lemmon-Walter Matthau vehicles, despite being a fan of both of them in their earlier years – unconscious ageism? Probably. Anyway, I should’ve expected these two to play well off each other, given their respective talent and proven chemistry back in the ’60s, and they do. In a way, watching this felt comfortable, because even as John (Lemmon) and Max (Matthau) feud and play tricks on each other, it’s clear the two actors are having a bunch of fun just hanging out together on screen again.

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It’s winter in Minnesota and they’re having a heat wave, or so the oft-repeated song keeps telling us, but John and Max spend their days bundled up ice fishing and chatting with bait store owner Chuck (an always-wonderful Ossie Davis) and their nights ogling new next-door neighbor Ariel (Ann-Margret). And if you thought these two grumpy old men were old and grumpy, wait until you meet John’s dad (Burgess Meredith), a 94-year-old firecracker whose frankness embarrasses John as if he were still a teenager.

Challenge Week 3: Heat

It’s been a running joke for several years between me and my Flickcharter friend Nigel that I’ve never seen Heat, which is one of his favorite movies. I knew he’d assign it to me for this challenge, and sure enough, he did. To be honest, I probably would’ve watched it sooner otherwise, but I was happy to save it for his challenge week.

I won’t lie, I did a bit of a double-take when I saw this crime flick was almost 3 hours long – I even posted on Twitter asking if that was really necessary. The consensus: Yes, it is. Well, I’m not WHOLLY convinced, but my opinion is partially colored by the tendency of slow burn films to edge me into drowsy territory these days (my fault, not the film’s, but it still isn’t what I’d consider fun). And yes, this is a slow burn. It’s a crime film, but it’s very character driven, and contains a lot of scenes that aren’t strictly necessary from a plot point of view, but since the plot isn’t necessarily the main point, it’s hard to argue against them.

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The overall plot is fairly simple – career criminal Neil McCauley (Robert De Niro) and his crew get on the radar of hard-nosed homicide detective Vincent Hanna (Al Pacino), and they play cat and mouse through the rest of the film. It’s complicated, though, by the sheer number of other characters (many of them with pretty well-developed arcs of their own) and subplots – crew member Chris (Val Kilmer) and his wife’s troubles, Neil’s new relationship, Vincent’s failing marriage and troubled stepdaughter, conniving former crew member Waingro, victim/antagonist Van Zant, etc. All of this is understandably a bit hard to keep track of when you’re fighting sleep, so I wisely took a sabbatical and the second half of the film benefited from that greatly.

Challenge Week 2: The Last Five Years

I’ve been meaning to see this since I first heard it existed (in movie form; I don’t follow musical theatre enough to know the play), so I’m really glad to have the push to get to it. I’m a big fan of movie musicals, especially ones confident enough to maintain wall-to-wall singing and a small scale, both of which The Last Five Years does.

The last five years cover the relationship of Jamie and Cathy, respectively an aspiring writer and an aspiring actress who meet in New York, fall in love and then gradually grow further apart. It’s no spoiler to say how it ends up, since the opening line of the film is “Jamie is gone.” The structure tells the stories both directions – Cathy’s point of view going backwards, from breakup to courtship, and Jamie’s going forwards. If this structure sounds somewhat familiar, you may have seen Blue Valentine, with Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams’ characters undergoing a similar relationship trajectory with a similar dual structure. But this time, there’s music!

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I’ll confess, Blue Valentine hit me pretty hard, and The Last Five Years didn’t hit me as hard – probably in part because I saw Blue Valentine first, but also because The Last Five Years honestly isn’t quite as devastating. Oh, it’s devastating, Jamie and Cathy aren’t really AS mean to each other as the characters in Blue Valentine, plus there’s no kid involved, plus the wall-to-wall singing, as poignant and visceral as the songs often are (both musically and lyrically), kind of softens it a bit.

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