Film Studies

You’re the Man Now, Dog!

From the Department of “No Frickin’ Way, How Could That Possibly Be?” comes the news that Wednesday was Sean Connery’s 80th birthday. Eighty. Eight-oh.

I’m having just a little bit of trouble wrapping my head around this concept. Granted, Sir Sean has never seemed exactly young to me — he’s always been either fully mature (James Bond) or on-the-far-side-of-middle-aged-but-still-vital (Ramirez; Henry Jones, Sr.; Captain Ramius) — but to think of him as downright old… well, that’s a tough nut to swallow. I’ve hero-worshipped this guy for a long time, you see, and a major part of his appeal for me personally has always been his physical presence, the intense aura of masculinity and confidence that he seems to radiate like body heat. He still has plenty of presence in that photo up there at the top of this entry, which is the most verifiably recent one I could find. It’s a Louis Vuitton ad photographed by the legendary Annie Leibovitz; as usual, click on it to see it larger. But that photo is also two years old, and a lot can change in only two years when people advance into this age range. I’ve read in a couple places that Sean experienced some unspecified health problems this summer, and that he now believes his acting days are finally, completely behind him. (He recently lent his distinctive voice to a Scottish-made animated feature called Sir Billi, so at least his filmography won’t end with that miserable turd The League of Extraordinary Gentleman. I had been hoping, however, that he would eventually step in front of the cameras again and turn in one final home-run performance that would be a fitting end to such a long, storied career. Ah, well…)

I guess none of us like to see our heroes diminishing, as old age inevitably causes them to do. Maybe seeing them fade reminds us that we, too, aren’t all we used to be. So while I honestly wish Sir Sean a happy birthday with many more to come, I do so with something of a heavy heart.

 

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Call It What You Want, It’s Still a Damned Remake

News today that a “contemporized adaptation” of the Arnold Schwarzenegger-on-Mars flick Total Recall is in the works. Never mind the question of whether the world is clamoring for yet another version of yet another story that’s already been told, or whether this particular story might benefit from being told again.* No, the thing that bugs me here is this obnoxious piece of jargon, “contemporized adaptation.” That, my friends, sounds to me like a marketing department trying to find some clever new way of saying “remake” without using the prefix “re-.” Because, I suppose, market research indicates that words beginning with “re-” too clearly state the obvious. “Reimagining,” “relaunch,” “reboot” — they all stink of a trip back to the same well, don’t they? So instead of using one of those words, dripping with all the negative connotations of creative bankruptcy, somebody sat around a conference table for hours to come up with this all-new term for the same old crap.

I can just imagine the pitch meeting for Total Recall, Take Two: A guy in a 5,000-dollar suit listens for a minute, then says with a slight, vaguely reptilian grin, “Wait a minute, this is just another bloody remake, right? We’ve done dozens of those in the last decade, why should I greenlight another one? Can’t you give me something original?” And he’s answered with, “No, no, it’s not a remake… it’s a contemporized adaptation.” And then, since Studio Suits are so easily dazzled by multisyllabic words, the first guy nods and says, “Oh, well, then, that sounds swell. Here’s a blank check.”

Guys, let me tell you something: it doesn’t matter how you say it. It doesn’t matter how you justify it. The fact is, you’re out of ideas. You’re lazy, you’re overly cautious, and you care more about extending brands than telling stories. And every one of these “contemporized adaptations” you keep cranking out just further proves my point. You know what? At this point, just remake it all, every movie from the last 50 years, and the sooner the better, because then maybe when it’s all been done over with sparkly CG effects and processed into murky 3D for maximum gimmick-appeal, we can get back to actually, you know, making movies, the kind you don’t have to make up words to describe.

Remakes. Grrr.

* For the record, I’m not really that big a fan of Total Recall. In fact, I outright loathed it when it was first released back in my old working-at-the-multiplex days. I don’t much enjoy “mind-f**k” movies anyhow, the ones that want to leave you guessing about what’s really happening to the characters and what’s only in their heads, and Recall was a pretty clumsy example of that genre. It was also ridiculously, cartoonishly violent (or so it seemed to me at the time; I’ve since seen worse), and it was just plain stupid in a lot of places. I could buy the alien instant-atmosphere-making machine, but Arnold and Rachel Ticotin looking completely unscathed in the final scene after having their eyes bugged four inches out of their skulls and then getting explosively recompressed? Uh, no. And don’t tell me this is proof that the whole movie was Arnold’s dream/memory implant. I already told you, I don’t like that mind-f**k crap. (I also dislike novels with unreliable narrators; I don’t like the feeling of some writer somewhere having a laugh at my expense.)

The biggest problem with Recall, though, is that it has no third act. Following a reasonably good set-up and middle portion, the writers obviously couldn’t figure out how to end it, so they just have Arnold shoot a bunch of people. Even though I hate remakes on general terms, you can actually make a pretty good argument in favor of remaking this one, assuming someone has come up with a solution to the problem of the third act. But of course, I don’t believe anyone has. Because most screenplays these days aren’t even as good as the dumb popcorn movies of the late ’80s and early ’90s.

And you know, now that I think about it, my attitude toward Total Recall has softened a lot in the last 20 years. Memories of it are bound up with memories of a good time in my life. And, as stupid as it was, it was still more entertaining than something like The Dark Knight. I’m really tired of all the Darkness with a capital D being sold as artistic significance in movies these days…

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For No Particular Reason…

…here’s a nice photo I recently ran across of the delectable Jane Seymour, circa 1978:

Jane Seymour as Princess Farah in Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger

I believe this was taken on the set of Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger, which starred John Wayne’s son Patrick as the swashbuckling hero of the Arabian Nights. I don’t think I’ve seen that movie since middle school, probably, but I found Jane’s appearance in that one, ahem, memorable. I’ve always liked her.

Anyhow, I finally got myself a day off — I think perhaps the Work Apocalypse is easing up at last — so I’m puttering around the house today, catching up on various chores I haven’t managed to take care of for the last several weeks. I’ll be back later with an entry or maybe even two. In the meantime, Jane will keep you company… be a gentleman (or a girlfriend) and buy her a drink or something, won’t you?

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Simply Because It’s So Awesome…

Here’s a pic of Kurt Russell and John Carpenter taken while they were filming Big Trouble in Little China:
Kurt and John on the set of Big Trouble

I must confess that I didn’t get Big Trouble when it first came out back in 1986. I’m not sure anyone at the time really did. I remember thinking it was weird and stupid and I couldn’t decide what the hell kind of movie it was supposed to be. I don’t think I understood the plot, as hard as that is to admit.

But then about ten years later, I was introduced to the work of Jackie Chan and suddenly I figured it out. Big Trouble wasn’t stupid at all, at least not in the way I’d believed it was. It was merely ahead of its time. Carpenter had made a Hong Kong martial-arts action-comedy before we folks in flyover country had ever seen one. No, that’s not entirely correct… what he’d done was melded the sensibilities of those HK flicks with his own, specifically by dropping an American action hero and tropes of the American Western, along with a tongue-in-cheek irreverence toward both, into a martial-arts action-comedy to create something wholly unique, a synthesis of two very different — and yet both supremely entertaining — filmmaking cultures. In short, I re-evaluated the movie and realized it was pretty damn cool.

Russell and Carpenter… two of my favorites Hollywood artists. Sadly, both have been in decline for years. But during the ’80s, man, what a combination they made… no less than a latter-day John Ford and John Wayne, in my humble opinion. It’d be awesome if they managed to make one final good movie together; hey, I can dream, can’t I?

The picture came from here, incidentally, a really awesome photoblog that manages to dig up lots of stuff along these lines. Check it out!

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Adele Blanc-Sec: I Need to See This Movie!

I already posted this trailer on Facebook, so I apologize to anyone who may be following me over there who’s already seen it, but I’m very enthused about this movie and want to spread the word as far as I can. Hopefully, a groundswell of attention will inspire someone to actually distribute it here in the U.S.

Les Aventures extraordinaires d’Adèle Blanc-Sec (i.e., The Extraordinary Adventures of Adele Dry-White) is apparently based on a French comic book. I first heard about the film a few months ago over on Michael May’s Adventureblog, and I thought it looked kind of cool, but I don’t speak French so it didn’t really grab my attention until I found a trailer with English subtitles. Once I could tell what was going on… wow. I wanted to see the movie right away. Like now. Have a look and see if it doesn’t have the same effect on you…

(Be warned that there is a brief glimpse of bare boobies at about the 2:00 mark, if that sort of thing bothers you; for what it’s worth, they’re seen in a bathtub setting as opposed to a sexual context, if that makes any difference. Hey, what do you expect, this is a French movie, after all!)

Victorian-era Paris, a pretty heroine, a pterodactyl, and a reanimated mummy who politely asks for tea, plus 1980s-style gratuitous nudity, and all of it directed by Luc Besson, the man behind one of my all-time favorites, The Fifth Element. How can this be anything less than a perfect afternoon at the movies?

From what I’ve been able to learn, it opened in France over a month ago and there are international release dates in various countries through October, but no word whatsoever of a release in this country. My friend Dave suspects there won’t be, because of the well-known American aversion to reading subtitles. I must grudgingly admit that he may be right; foreign films simply don’t do well in the U.S. But surely something dripping with this much pure awesome would transcend that silly bit of provincialism? At least enough to allow for a straight-to-video release? I’m keeping my fingers crossed…

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Really? Twenty Years? Naaah…

jim-henson_frank-oz_sesame-street-behind-the-scenes.jpg

SamuraiFrog reminds us that yesterday, May 16, was the 20th anniversary of Muppet-master Jim Henson’s sad and far-too-early death. Twenty years since that spooky day when my entire university campus seemed to fall into a deep depression. Few individuals have that kind of effect on an entire generation. And the thing I admire so much about Jim is that he did it with nothing more than whimsy and sly humor, and the imagination to turn feathers and foam and random bits of stuff into characters that still seem to live and breathe in our collective consciousness.

Still… twenty years? I’m really having a hard time wrapping my mind around that one!

Incidentally, the photo above is one I ran across quite a while ago; I’ve been waiting for a good reason to post it, and this seems as good a time as any. I’m sorry to say I don’t know who the man on Jim’s left is; the gentleman to his right is, of course, Frank Oz, Jim’s friend and co-conspirator during what I would call the “golden age” of The Muppets: the pre-Elmo Sesame Street, The Muppet Show, and The Muppet Movie. It seems to me that Frank, like Dan Ackroyd after Belushi, lost some minuscule but crucial animating spark after Jim’s death. Perhaps that’s presumptuous of me, considering I don’t know the man, but that is nevertheless the sense I get when he talks about the old days.

I think a lot of us feel that way, actually…

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The Only Movie Trailer You Need to See for Summer 2010

Ever feel like the summer blockbusters are all basically the same? Like maybe there’s a single mystical ur-movie and everything else is merely an imperfect iteration of it?

Yeah, me, too…

Yawn. I can’t recall ever feeling so completely apathetic about the approach of the summer movie season. Oh wait… last summer was pretty lame, too, the first time in decades that I consciously chose not to bother with most of the new releases. Looks like that’s probably going to be the pattern this year as well.

I still want to see Iron Man 2, though.

(For anyone who cares, this mash-up trailer features clips from 24 upcoming features. I’m placing a list of them below the fold. If you care…)

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Rebel with a Chimp? Bedtime for Giant?

I’ve just run across something very strange: a highlight reel from a 1954 episode of an anthology series called General Electric Theater starring — are you ready for this? — Ronald Reagan and James Dean.

That rending sound you just heard may indeed have been the fabric of space and time giving way like cheap nylons that’ve been left in the sun for a year. It’s mind-boggling to think two men who would become such polar-opposite symbols in our popular culture — one, a rock-jawed, law-and-order establishment man, the other the embodiment of youthful restlessness and psychological frailty — could have ever crossed paths either socially or professionally. You just don’t think of them existing in the same world, really. But here they are, in glorious black and white, both playing essentially to type.

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A Little Spring Cleaning

I was just looking through my clippings file — yes, I’m a big enough nerd that I keep a file of stuff I’d like to blog about! — and I see quite a few items I’ve been meaning to comment on for a while, but haven’t yet gotten around to. Here’s a selection of them, briefly noted:

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Twilight in the Jurassic

Here’s another example of what seems to be a developing Internet meme, photographs of the stars of Twilight oblivious to a lurking menace from another movie:

Raptors are drawn to sparkly things...

I don’t know why these things amuse me so…

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