Tuesday, June 24, 2014

2001 vs. Blade Runner

Note: The following is a quick essay I wrote for a sci-fi literature class in the fall of 2011, which should explain its kinda weird opposing structure and goofy sign-off at the end.  Just thought I'd toss it on here, since everybody likes these movies and all.

Blade Runner  and 2001: A Space Odyssey both imagine times roughly 35 years into the future (give or take a few years), but their views of these futures are remarkably different, even opposed.  While 2001 sees human future as one of continual progress and eventual elevation to something beyond humanity, Blade Runner sees humanity improving in technology only, while declining steeply in order, civilization, and morality.
2001, directed by Stanley Kubrick, is primarily a film of formal brilliance.  It’s techniques, camera movements, and special effects are its primary draw, its appeal almost entirely intellectual rather than dramatic or emotional.  This technique draws from and reflects the film’s vision of the future, a future of cold and efficient order.  Future man is contrasted to prehistoric man through technology: prehistoric man uses bones as clubs, future man has spaceships.  The progress is clear---from primitive murder weapon to interplanetary transportation--but it is complicated by subsequent events.  The question is implicitly asked if human nature is any different, if missiles and space guns are really any different from clubs.  However, we are never shown any space guns or human warfare in this future, and it may even be an open question whether war has been averted or not.  Certainly America and Russia seem to be at peace, collaborating on space exploration and space travel.  Nor is there any evidence of a civilization-ending thermonuclear war, something that Kubrick’s previous film, Dr. Strangelove: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, viewed as inevitable.  Future man, then, has successfully navigated the challenge of the Cold War and learned to collaborate on space exploration, solving the problem of interplanetary travel.

At what cost, though?  The future men of 2001 are undeniably cold and unemotional.  This can partly be attributed to Kubrick’s style with actors. Few of his characters ever act in an entirely natural way; from Alex DeLarge in A Clockwork Orange to Jack Torrence in The Shining, Kubrick’s films are populated by inhumans and psychos, whose every move feels calculated, false, unnatural.  The men of 2001--and there are only men, no women characters allowed--seem similarly false and unnatural.  They have two subjects of conversation: bland, fake small talk, and serious, world-changing business.  There is no suggestion of genuine friendship, emotional passion, love, or sex.  This is emphasized by Kubrick’s supremely deliberate camera movement.  The spaceships and space stations are bare, narrow, uncomfortable, furnished with nothing that is not absolutely necessary.  Kubrick’s camera moves slowly, following characters from a distance, observing closely but not participating.  It is not until Dave Bowman’s battle with HAL 9000 that the camera is allowed to truly identify with a character and offer POV shots to the audience.  Before then, there is never a clear point of identification for the audience, no main character to latch onto.  Even the score is distancing--there is more beautifying music when observing the rotation of satellites than when observing humans in any capacity.  There is music when the astronauts are exploring the crater and discovering the monolith, but this seems to serve more to glorify the monolith than to express emotions in the characters, who seem rather less moved than we might expect.  All of this serves to build an image of the future as a time/place of scientific calculation, not emotions or relationships.
Blade Runner, in contrast, is a mood piece, where emotion is the central conveyor of theme.  Ridley Scott is a visual stylist but not a formalist of the Kubrick school; he creates images and environments, but not obsessively structured sequences of deliberate cuts and camera movements.  This gives the film a highly detailed, specific, and believable sense of place.  Instead of observing vast swaths of time and place like 2001, the camera plunges into a chaotic milieu of city life.  Set in Los Angeles in 2019, the world is in a postmodern tumult, filled with people attempting to lives their lives amidst a general moral vacuum, where rules, rights, and certainties are things of the past.  The city is a hybrid of then-contemporary L.A. with Hong Kong and Tokyo, and just a sprinkling of ancient Babylon in the massive ziggurat office-buildings.  This is a city of life--teeming multitudes populate shopping districts, shop-owners eagerly hock noodles on the streets--but also a city of death--homeless people lie in back alleys, tragedy and emptiness haunt the faces.  In this future, man has succeeded in traveling to new planets (an advertisement invites citizens to emigrate to the off-world colonies) as well as developing new technologies like hover-cars and videophones, but civilization as a whole seems to be breaking down.  The increasing diversity of the city leaves no one feeling at home, and the common sense of nationality, community, and purpose seems nonexistent.  There is a massive divide between the haves and the have nots, with the wealthy literally living on high in massive palatial buildings while the poor scrabble in the streets.  There is no evidence of government except the police force, which appears corrupt and ineffective.  This is a world where meanings are questioned and danger may lurk down any alley.

Scott crafts this world with an appreciation for minute detail and a focus on dazzling production design.  Every scene is teeming with background detail, with streets visible that stretch into the distance and pedestrians hurrying by on unknown business.  Aerial shots of the city show it extending beyond the edges of the screen, filled with bright lights glowing in the darkness but illuminating nothing.  The style is a fusion of 1940s film noir and 1970s speculative  fiction and art, including European comics by Moebius.  The city is filled with shadows, unsavory dives, the proverbial mean streets.  It always seems to be raining, something definitely not normal to Southern California but highly evocative of noirs like The Third Man.  Scott’s cinematography is far from Kubrick’s hyperrealistic focus.  Instead, when not evoking the angles and silhouettes of Carol Reed and Jules Dassin, the style is dreamy and atmospheric, gradual camera movements that suggest existential drift.  This is helped immeasurably by Vangelis’ otherworldly synth score--which incidentally contrasts sharply with Kubrick’s constant use of classical music, structured as it is with such precision.  Mood is the most important quality of the movie--more important than the plot.  All contributes to the depiction of the future as a place of existential stasis, a crumbling civilization with a crisis of self, solitude in the midst of crowds.
2001: A Space Odyssey and Blade Runner are both science fiction masterpieces whose visions of the future have influenced all those which have come after them.  Their styles are each  integral to their themes and visions of the future, form and effect inseparable.  (Interestingly, both look to what will come after humanity, and while their ultimate views may differ, both depict artificial intelligences as more sympathetic than average humans.)  2001 sees humanity as advancing inexorably toward a higher plane of existence, while Blade Runner sees the world in decline, full of lost people looking for purpose.  Which will prove right?  Only time can decide.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

The First Time (2012)



A movie about puppy-dog high school love starring ex-Nickelodeon/Disney Channel stars playing wealthy white L.A.-dwellers?  No thanks.  And yet--I had heard a couple recommendations and my curiosity got the better of me.  And it turns out I actually liked it.  Far from being the dumb rom-com of high school clichés I was expecting, the model to think of here is Richard Linklater’s Before Sunset.  Of course, it’s not nearly as good as that seminal film, but the mechanics are similar:  A boy and a girl meet each other unexpectedly and begin talking, and their conversation continues through arguments, interests, statements of purpose, and philosophies of life as they gradually fall in love.  The film starts on a Friday night and ends on Monday morning, so the action never has a chance to get wild or drawn-out.  Instead the focus is entirely on the two leads (Dylan O’Brien and Britt Robertson), on their little ticks and quirks, the way they stumble over words and struggle with embarrassment while opening themselves to genuine romantic intimacy for the first time. Of course, it’s still shot with flat lighting, bright colors, and smooth-faced well-dressed characters that remind strongly of tween-aimed television.  But somehow the fact that it pushes past that, that we come to know these characters and recognize their emotions, makes the final result sweeter and more impressive than it would have seemed otherwise.  Among recent teen romances, it isn’t quite up there with The Spectacular Now, but it’s far, far ahead of something like Easy A.

Rating: 7/10 stars.


(actually posted Jan 2015)

Sunday, March 2, 2014

If I Gave the Oscars: 2013 Edition


The premise is simple: these are how I would give out awards to the movies of 2013, if that was a power that I had.  I'm not going to go through all the exact same categories as the Academy Awards, because some of them are just tiresome and others require inside knowledge that I do not possess.  This post is obviously meant to be complementary to my Best of 2013 post, where I listed all my favorites, so I have left out Best Picture nominees here; they would be the same as the top 10 from that post, so no need to list them twice.  

Each category is listed in order of preference, with the first director/actor/etc. being my choice for the winner.  Things should be fairly self-explanatory from there.


Best Director
1. Hayao Miyazaki (The Wind Rises)
2. Martin Scorsese (The Wolf of Wall Street)
3. Abbas Kiarostami (Like Someone in Love)
4. Terrence Malick (To the Wonder)
5. Joel Coen, Ethan Coen (Inside Llewyn Davis)
HM: Richard Linklater (Before Midnight), Shane Carruth (Upstream Color)


Best Screenplay (Adapted or Original, doesn't matter)
1. Joel Coen, Ethan Coen (Inside Llewyn Davis)
2. Terence Winter (The Wolf of Wall Street)
3. Richard Linklater, Ethan Hawke, Julie Delpy (Before Midnight)
4. Shane Carruth (Upstream Color)
5. Spike Jonze (Her)


Best Actor
1. Leonardo DiCarprio (The Wolf of Wall Street)
2. Oscar Isaac (Inside Llewyn Davis)
3. Simon Pegg (The World's End)
4. Chiwetel Ejiofer (12 Years a Slave)
5. Joaquin Phoenix (Her)


Best Actress
1. Olga Kurylenko (To the Wonder)
2. Greta Gerwig (Frances Ha)
3. Julie Delpy (Before Midnight)
4. Brie Larsen (Short Term 12)
5. Amy Seimetz (Upstream Color)


Best Supporting Actor
1. Matthew McConaughey (The Wolf of Wall Street)
2. Michael Fassbender (12 Years a Slave)
3. Jiang Wu (A Touch of Sin)
4. Tadashi Okuno (Like Someone in Love)
5. Nick Frost (The World's End)
HM: Barkhad Abdi (Captain Phillips)



Best Supporting Actress
1. Zhang Ziyi (The Grandmaster)
2. Margot Robbie (The Wolf of Wall Street)
3. Lupita Nyong'o (12 Years a Slave)
4. Zhao Tao (A Touch of Sin)
5. Shailene Woodley (The Spectacular Now)


Best Cinematography
1. Emmanuel Lubezki (To the Wonder)
2. Philippe Le Sourd (The Grandmaster)
3. Hoyte van Hoytema (Her)
4. Nelson Yu Lik Wai (A Touch of Sin)
5. Emmanuel Lubezki (Gravity)
HM: Sean Bobbitt (12 Years a Slave)


Best Editing
1. Keith Fraase (To the Wonder)
2. Shane Carruth, David Lowery (Upstream Color)
3. Bahman Kiarostami (Like Someone in Love)
4. Eric Zumbrunnen, Jeff Buchanan (Her)
5. Shigeru Nishiyama (Wolf Children)
HM: Takeshi Seyama (The Wind Rises), Paul Machliss (The World's End), Ethan Coen, Joel Coen (Inside Llewyn Davis)


Best Musical Score
1.  Joe Hisaishi (The Wind Rises)
2.  Arcade Fire (Her)
3.  Steven Price (Gravity)
4. Hanan Townshend (To the Wonder)
5.  Shane Carruth (Upstream Color)
HM: T. Bone Burnett (Inside Llewyn Davis) for an expert collection of beautiful folk songs


Best Scene
1. The Opening Dream (The Wind Rises)
2. Quaaludes (The Wolf of Wall Street
3. From 1st Grade to 4th Grade (Wolf Children)
4. "My head is made of the same substance as the sun" (Upstream Color)
5. Final Homily (To the Wonder)
6. Earthquake (The Wind Rises)
7. Please Mr. Kennedy (Inside Llewyn Davis)
8. Sky-Diving Rescue (Iron Man 3)
9. First Impact (Gravity)
10. Roll Jordan Roll (12 Years a Slave)


(actually published Feb 28, 2016)

Best of 2013


1. The Wind Rises (Hayao Miyazaki)

1. The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese)

2. Inside Llewyn Davis (Coen Bros.)

3. Before Midnight (Richard Linklater)

4. Like Someone in Love (Abbas Kiarostami)

5. To the Wonder (Terrence Malick)

6. A Touch of Sin (Jia Zhangke)

7. Gravity (Alfonso Cuaron)

8. Upstream Color (Shane Carruth)

9. The Grandmaster (Chinese Cut) (Wong Kar-Wai)

10. Wolf Children: Ame and Yuki (Mamoru Hosoda)

11. 12 Years a Slave (Steve McQueen)

12. Short Term 12 (Destin Daniel Cretton)

Honorable Mentions:  The World's End (Edgar Wright), Mud (Jeff Nichols), Ernest & Celestine (Stephane Aubier, Vincent Patar, Benjamin Renner), Iron Man 3 (Shane Black), Pacific Rim (Guillermo Del Toro), Monsters University (Dan Scanlon)


Most Overrated:  American Hustle (David O. Russell)

Most Underrated/Underseen:  The Lone Ranger (Gore Verbinski)

Favorite Guilty Pleasure:  The Wolverine (James Mangold), I guess?

Worst Movie I Saw This Year:  Spring Breakers (Harmony Korine)


(actually posted Feb 2015)

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Best of 2012


1. Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson)

2. Lincoln (Steven Spielberg)

3. Holy Motors (Leo Carax)

4. The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson)

5. The Deep Blue Sea (Terence Davies)

6. Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)

7. Skyfall (Sam Mendes)

8. Looper (Rian Johnson)

9. Bernie (Richard Linklater)

10. Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow)

11. The Dark Knight Rises (Christopher Nolan)

12. The Grey (Joe Carnahan)

Honorable Mentions: Damsels in Distress (Whit Stillman), Cabin in the Woods (Drew Goddard), The Avengers (Joss Whedon), The Raid (Gareth Edwards), Blue Like Jazz (Steve Taylor), Life of Pi (Ang Lee), Les Miserables (Tom Hooper)


Big Imposing Art Movies Which I'm Too Chicken to Try Ranking Against These Others, But They're Certainly Something Else, Lemme Tell You:  The Turin Horse (Bela Tarr), Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (Nuri Bilge Ceylan)

Most Underrated/Underseen:  Arbitrage (Nicholas Jarecki)

Most Overrated:  Argo (Ben Affleck)

Favorite Guilty Pleasure:  Lockout (James Mather, Stephen Saint Leger)

Worst Movie I Saw This Year:  On the Road (Walter Salles)


(actually posted Feb 2015)

Monday, November 12, 2012

Recent Movies: Argo and Seeking a Friend for the End of the World



Seeking a Friend for the End of the World

A daring idea for a comedy produces a rather quiet film, and one not nearly as funny as you might expect.  Indeed, it’s one of the saddest American comedies to be seen in years.  The jokes are mostly knowing, wistful ones about human behavior in the face of coming doom--some people go crazy, some throw out all boundaries, some commit suicide, and some go looking for love.  It’s all a but mopey and mushy, and lacking in memorable scenes, but Steve Carell and Keira Knightley anchor the film with heartfelt roles and surprisingly believable chemistry.  Somehow the thing does end up developing momentum and building emotion.  And in the end, it seems to me, this little movie reveals a far more compelling, truthful, and finally, beautiful, view of the human response to The End than Von Trier’s Melancholia and all it’s half-baked philosophizing.

Rating: 7/10 stars.


Argo

When a film presents itself as a docudrama about events of international importance occurring within living memory, it helps if the film is accurate in what it portrays.  Argo is not the worst offender in this regard, but when one reads afterward about the various fudged details and learns most of the tension-building elements of the second half of the film were added or falsified, it can leave a viewer dissatisfied.  When the film offers little in terms of depth or theme otherwise (none of the characters are more than two-dimensional, and while there’s a mishmash of comments about Iranian history and the American response that one suspects are just there so the filmmakers can defend themselves from charges of jingoism, there are no larger comments on America and/or the Middle East), the viewer might come to feel the whole thing was a bit empty and forgettable, at worst misleading and reprehensible.  

I won’t go quite that far, because the truth is Argo is pretty gripping stuff, and it effectively dramatizes the mood of the nation and the administration during one of the major crises of recent decades.  It is always a fascinating thing, for this viewer anyway, to see the inner workings of important institutions and the machinations behind major events, and I found the little details to be the most interesting (everything from the mechanical devices used by air traffic controllers before computers to the fact that the revolutionaries employed women and children to piece shredded diplomatic documents back together for propaganda purposes).  There’s also some good stuff in here about Hollywood, both its hypocrisies and its perennial appeal, and plenty of snappy dialogue to give the illusion of more depth.  The clever skewering of the movie business early on, though, just makes it more disappointing that Affleck had to “Hollywood-up” the climax with fictional ticking-clock delays.  In the end, we’re left with a pretty good movie that probably makes most viewers want to read the book or watch a documentary on the subject to learn more about the real story.

[As a P.S., I found Jimmy Carter’s voiceover at the end terribly self-serving with its boast of getting all the hostages back “peacefully”--despite the fact his violent option crashed in the desert and cost 8 American servicemen their lives, not to mention the fact the Iranians released the hostages on the day he left office as a final humiliation, not a victory.]

Rating: 6/10 stars.

(actually posted Jan 2015)