the better truth

the better truth

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Gravity (2013)

The Eagle Almost Landed

I want a world without gravity
It could be just what I need
I'd watch the stars move close
I'd watch the earth recede

- Jim Carroll, Wicked Gravity

The feature film “Gravity” has been called the juggernaut of the Fall season with a gross of over $300 million dollars and a three week hold as the number one box office draw. Not bad for a story set essentially in real time and fixed exclusively on one female character. In addition there is little dialogue. What hooks the audience is the terrifying portrait of the limitless expanse of space. More specifically the juxtaposition of the abyss against the fragile man-made outposts and even more delicate men and women who choose to be the inhabitants.  This film is a tour de force of cinematography, set-design and special effects.  This is a story made for the 3D format as objects literally leap from the screen. Unfortunately the first rate design is laid over a simulacrum of a script.

All those who grew up with Star Trek, which had its TV premiere during the Apollo era, have the opening words burned into their minds: “Space, (pause) the final frontier”.  Capt. Kirk chose the word ‘frontier’ with great purpose. This is an extremely DANGEROUS place. In fact it is the opposite of place; it is the embodiment of nothingness. A small malfunction or misstep and the pioneer drifts into the dark oblivion. Astronauts are brave; not cavalier. This is where the fine work of the filmmakers, Alfonso and Jonas Cuaron, encounters the first patch of turbulence. George Clooney, the only other major character in the film, outside of Sandra Bullock, is inappropriately glib from the opening moments. He seems to be channeling exuberance of Buzz Lightyear rather than taciturn cool of  John Glenn. Courage has been defined as grace under pressure. Clooney is impervious to pressure which results in a complete lack of grace. He is moronic, not heroic.  His demeanor is that of a super-hero crossed with a joke-telling uncle at a family wedding.  Perhaps the Cuaron brothers were trying for the astronaut paradigm which combines the best of science, soldier and pilot. Clooney failed to launch. Bullock is all nerves - which works... to a point. Her reactions to the unfolding series of catastrophes are richly human. Unfortunately being paired with a cartoon spaceman leaves her alone metaphorically as well as physically. The dazzling special affects can obscure her isolation for awhile. In the end, however, she is adrift in a tiring script... but one must not underestimate the power of spectacle. This film is worth the price of admission, despite the shortcomings in storytelling.

Perhaps the most compelling component of the work is the effortless expansive drift of universe pitted against the ant-like flicker of mankind’s great technological prowess.  The Cuarons are familiar with all the classic film depictions of outer space and they choose wisely in incorporating the best ideas from past masters. Their clever integration of the latest computer graphics wizardry gives new dimensions to classic interpretations of the place beyond the clouds. The rapid sound design explosions juxtaposed with daring silences add to the intense immersion into the terror of being on the cusp of a bottomless pit of darkness. This audible dissonance, as well as the horror/beauty of claustrophobic abandoned space stations,  is taken from Danny Boyle’s underrated “Sunshine”.  Bullock’s rejuvenating fetal recline after managing to seal the hatch in the temporary refuge is a homage to the closing of Kubrick’s “2001”.  There is even a reference to  Looney Tunes as a “Marvin the Martian” chachka floats out of a compartment filled with battered corpses of fellow crew members.  It all works to show a director in control of his medium and supporting the storyline. Unfortunately the dialogue and plot twists burn up in the atmosphere of unnecessary exposition and kitsch motivation.

 The writer/director team know what they are doing. The brilliant shifting POV during the initial debris storm cinematically captures the entire drama of being a spider dangling between the comfort of earth and the darkness beyond. The choreography of the crashing solar panels and awkward zero gravity dance all help build a struggle of survival against the universe (literally). It is difficult to jibe this technical perfection with the unfortunate Clooney performance and the insipid banter. There is a strange nervousness tick in mainstream American feature films where the characters vomit deep seated personal details at crucial moments. Script doctors and studio executives believe this gives the audience a firmer perspective on the motivation of the characters. Unfortunately it has the effect of sucking away all the mystery and romance. It is anti-dramatic in that it replaces onscreen chemistry and action with limp narration and hollow reasoning. Bullock’s character’s tragic loss of a child is incidental to the scene in which Clooney tugs her across the universe to safety.  In fact her revelation strangely places all the terror in a box of appropriately simulated grief.  The images and actions are enough and completely speak to the emotional trauma and desolation.  All that was needed was a vocal metaphor to compliment the visual feast - the sound of stressed breathing. It worked in “2001” and no doubt Cuaron knows it would have been a fit in this sequence. There is, however, the reality of the marketplace. Film is a collaborative work which relies on the input from those who are footing the bill; regardless of their ability to shape the work artistically.

Sandra Bullock is an interesting choice as the person to carry the film. No doubt the suits were referencing her role in the thriller franchise: “Speed” and “Speed 2: Cruise Control”. Bullock has maintained her sex appeal and has a seasoned resume demonstrating a range beyond reactive repertoire of traditional actions films. It was a good performance encased in a pedestrian dialogue.  Obviously the suits can point to box office and exclaim: Mission Accomplished. It begs the question, however, of how much Bullock would have soared had she been given the script that matched the Cuaron’s brilliant visual accomplishments.  What if her character had been granted enough strength to forgo the absurd ‘dream sequence’? How would the re-entry have played without the necessity to narrative her fears and feelings.  Bullocks physicality and visual expressions were undercut by needless prattle. Note: her character was the most memorable while she was actively battling the endless barrage of obstacles. This was not accompanied by detailed descriptive narrative but simple directions, commands, grunts and endless rushes of breath.  She might have repeated the same desperate distress call, “Houston in the blind”, for the last half of the film and it would have had more power than the gooey anecdotes and verbal reaffirmations of her state of mind.

There is a wonderful video of the international space station narrated by Commander Sunita Williams which gives a view of the mundane aspects of space life (e.g. brushing teeth, showering, room layout...). ( The video is at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RmV90BmMNMg) No doubt the cinematographer and set designers spent countless hours re-creating this strange zero gravity home base. The overall effect was completely convincing to this reviewer - a certified non-space expert. The real scientists were less impressed. Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson, a leading American astrophysicist, issued a number of twitter posts challenging the science, although he said he enjoyed the film. Mr. Cuaron responded in the Hollywood Reporter revealing he was aware of the real world shortcomings but felt he had artistic license.  (http://www.theguardian.com/film/2013/oct/21/gravity-alfonso-cuaron-knew-science-flaws) This is a small exchange but speaks volumes about American’s audiences quest for ‘authenticity’.   In order to ‘really’ validate a film’s worthiness the filmmakers must pay homage to the god of science. Forcing fiction to submit to factual reality obscures the real truth behind the story.  This is a tale about a frail human technician dangling over the vast unknown. Space journeys are terrifying because they challenge the modern American shibboleth: we live in a material world that can be controlled by our will .  A mainstream commercial feature must bring us to the edge and carefully snatch of away from the horror of nothingness. Ironically Dr. Tyson’s commentary, although negative, adds to the sense that this work is somehow rooted in science rather than science fiction. The director’s response speaks to the technical prowess balanced with ‘real’ science. Perhaps the lesson of this film might be that we need to untether from the notion that our comfortable factual hard-nosed ‘reality’ is rooted in explainable logic. Here is a fact that seems to be lost in all our technical prowess: our current scientists have absolutely no idea what makes up the composition 95% of the universe.  Metaphorically speaking we live in an extension of the ‘dark ages’. What does this have to do with ‘Gravity’? If we accept the idea that we ‘don’t know’ we will feel less inclined to hamstring our art with pat explanations.  We really are dangling over a dark unknown. This can be applied to our characters’ motivations and actions. In this respect truth can set us free... and produce better films.

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Carlito's Way (1993)

DePalma's Way

       
    Brian Depalma is the Ralph Lauren of film: prolific, successful and unoriginal. He shares the clothing magnet's knack for turning uninspired reproduction into an artform. Mr. Lauren evokes the past by replacing the context of history with his guess as to what the public will gobble-up that particular year. His annual pretentious appropriations are startling for their shear randomness (19th century England, Czarist Russia, the old West…). Mr. Depalma work shares this whimsical arrogant derivativeness. In fact he augments the crime. Instead of borrowing the general look of a particular era he usurps the specific recognized masterpieces of renowned directors: Eisenstien's Battleship Potemkin, Hitchcock's Vertigo and Psycho , Antoninio's Blow Up, Howard Hawks' Scarface. The results are limp counterfeits. It is hard to image anyone finding Dressed to Kill and Body Double more compelling than Hitchcock's originals. The same is true of Scarface; aside of a riveting opening sequence Depalma manages to double the length and produce less than half the thrill. The staircase shootout in The Untouchables is a classic Depalmaism. In the middle of a remake of a cult film noire serial the director decides to pay homage to a revolutionary (in both senses) Russian director. Einsenstien portrayed the birth of the Bolshevik uprising. The proletariat are brutally massacred on the staircase by the Czar's troops. It is impossible to fathom any correlation to Al Capone's Chicago. Mr. Depalma, to my knowledge, has remained silent and the film fails to offer a clue. Blow Out (the reworking of Blow Up) was an abomination. This is an exquisite example of a Ralph Lauren Channel suit.

    Mr. Depalma's newest work is Carlito's Way. It is less and more of the same; less blatant in its borrowings but uninspired and unoriginal nevertheless. There are touches of Serpico, Saturday Night Fever, The French Connection and once again Einsenstien's staircase scene from The Battleship Potemkin. This time its on an escalator and, sensing when to say when, Mr. Depalma omits the icon baby carriage tumbling, unattended, down the steps. To give Mr. Depalma some credit the script left little chance of producing a first rate drama. David Keopp's script is based on two novels by Edwin Torres, a former judge. It is terrifying to think that someone on the front lines of the criminal justice system could present such callow portraits of outlaws. The absurd plot twists can be laid to Judge Torres's having a full time career on the bench. The central characters, Al Pacino as a former drug king pin and Sean Penn as a corrupt lawyer, are more difficult to justify. Anyone with a cursory knowledge of the Mafia, drug dealers and the criminal justice system would have to conclude that these men are products of startling meager artistic imagination. The fact that Judge Torres had numerous encounters with the real Mcoy makes these creations all the more shocking.

    Mr. Depalma uses Serpico, the exposition of corruption in the NYPD, as a guide. In both films, which are set during the 1970s, Al Pacino plays an honest man struggling to escape a corrupt milieu. The structures are nearly identical: Pacino is ambushed during the opening sequence which is followed by a flashback which sets the stage for the shooting. Sean Penn follows Pacino's lead in dredging up past performances. Although the make-up gives him the air of Alan Dershowitz the character evokes his other portrayal of a cocaine addict. (i.e. the snowman in The Falcon and the Snowman). Penelope-Ann Miller delivers a strong rendering which nearly lifts her character out of the chauvinistic conception of women as pathetic victims. The choice of working at a sleazy topless bar to support her ballet career was contrived. There are people who are forced to make these choices but the contrast of the angelic ballerina with the crass showgirl called to mind the male obsession of portraying women as either saints, whores or both. Given Judge Torres' renditions of convicts it should come as no surprise he holds this view of the opposite sex. In a sense Ms. Miller's choosing to take the part is a more realistic illustration of the pitfalls women face when pursuing a career in the arts. In short, all the leading performers were diligent professionals going through the motions. No one broke new ground; but then again Mr. Depalma has never been know as an innovator.

    Carlito's Way glides from one obvious set-up to another. The emphasis is on action, not reflection. All the protagonists are troubled souls who have developed harsh survival strategies in an unforgiving world. Ms. Miller's character chooses to be part of a girlie-show, Pacino's decides to go straight and Penn's goes to the devil. This unfortunate trio falls into a series of set-pieces. They duck bullets, escape enemies, lie, fight, flee, scheme… The missing element is the most essential: motivation. What possessed these desperate people to make these choices? The film skirts the issue. Carlito decides, after spending his life in crime, that he wants to rent cars in the Bahamas. Penn's character is incredulous and reprimands Carlito with a laughing smirk. Despite Carlito's sincerity the film retained a residue of the corrupt lawyer's skepticism. The motivation for Pacino's fore-running character, Frank Serpico, is crystal clear. He became a policeman in order to serve the public. That film also revealed the young officer's torment in challenging accepted codes of behavior. Carlito is more perplexing. His epiphany on the values of civic virtue is never illustrated. This makes the believability of his former life in crime hard to accept. There are countless badguys who pay homage to Carlito by recounting stories of his evil deeds but without any reflection by the man himself the effect is lost. It is impossible to reconcile the incongruity between the old "gangster" Carlito and the new "citizen" Carlito. Pacino's heartfelt portrayal is doomed because the screenwriters never show the real turning point in the story: Carlito's change of heart. How did he develop his "Way"? Carlito himself muses about being tired of the street carnage and life in prison might but a few sentences between action sequences does little to resolve the mystery. It is difficult to know what precipitated this dramatic turnaround. Was it because he was freed from jail early on a technicality? Did it occur after his arrest on the charges which brought him the long sentence? Was it the brutal death of his cousin, whom he allows to participate in a drug deal? Did he engage in criminal acts behind bars? The film never answers these questions making it impossible to understand the man.

    The same criticisms hold true for the other central players. Ms. Miller's character's life with the "old" Carlito is hard to imagine. She does not appear to be the type of person who would date a heroin king pin. Did she also undergo an grand epiphany? The artistic team behind this film sees this as an irrelevant issue. The corrupt lawyer is the least perplexing but even his actions are bizarre. It is understandable that a young naive criminal lawyer could become seduced by the flashy lifestyle of his clients. Mr. Penn's character, however, shows a hostility towards Carlito and his other clients which is never fully explained. Surprises are an integral part of the action-crime genre. A problem arises when such bombshells reveal character traits which are heretofore invisible. The result is a loss of credibility. The player becomes merely a pawn in a drawn-out movie fantasy. Perhaps this is the key to coming to terms with Depalma. Focus less on the characters and more on the theatrics.

    There were many moments which were genuinely exciting. The shoot-out in which his cousin is murdered is especially engaging. The tension builds as Carlito realizes they are being set-up. The editing and choreography are first rate. There are other fun moments but without good writing and  believable characters the film lacks staying power.  The problem lies in his methods of placing the violence in the context of a story. When his characters are attempting meaningful interaction there behavior becomes artificial. The Penn-Pacino friendship is a case in point but nowhere is this more clearly illustrated than in the love story. Miller and Pacino are strong performers but their romantic interludes in this film are brazenly synthetic. The closer they became the more the sterility grew. The final scene evoked a sense of relief for not having to suffer through another moment of saccharine drivel. This relationship showed the degree of Mr. Depalma's inability. This director is at his best when his screen characters are at their worst. If hitting, stabbing and shooting could sustain a drama then Mr. Depalma would rank among the cinematic legends. Unfortunately spicing his own films with recreated snippets of their work fails to mask Depalma's dearth of creativity. His vision seems ideally suited for a medium in which surface-flash counts for everything. He might become one of the great directors of commercial television spots but as a feature filmmaker he has firmly established himself as a hack.                      

Fire in the Sky (1993)

Fire in the Snowflake
   
   
I saw the poster and I was intrigued: Alien Abduction, November 5, 1975, 5:49 PM, Fire in the Sky - based on a true story. I've been in the mood to escape. I thought this film might evoke a vicarious thrill. Humans can be so tiresome and earth can be so drab (especially in Long Island City Queens). Instead of leaving "the great globe" I became immersed in the more sordid aspects of life on the mother planet.

Fire in the Sky plays at being an alien suspense movie (e.g. Close Encounters of a Third Kind). In reality it bears little resemblance to that film genre with the exception of a five minute sequence near the close (the victim experiencing flashbacks of being inside the UFO). Fire in the Sky is closer in spirit to Bad Day at Black Rock or High Noon. An idealized Western town facing a crisis of morality which centers around the old Western institution of the "lynch mob". Unfortunately Fire lacks the artistry or the moral fortitude of the two earlier films. Whereas Spencer Tracy and Gary Cooper faces fictitious crisis in make believe towns their struggles have a larger resonance than the trials and tribulations of the "real" protagonists in that "real" Western Town: Snowflake Arizona (who could make that up).

The bulk of the movie focuses on the relationship amongst the collection of Snowflake citizens who are snared into a drama sparked by the disappearance of one of Snowflake's finest: a popular local logger. The idea has potential. A small town falling under the cloud of suspicion. Neighbor turning on neighbor.  Was his best friend, the head logger, implicated or was he murdered by a mean spirited, non-Snowflake logger? James Garner is sent to straighten-out the mess. He's non-Snowflake but he can be trusted. We learn from the painful expository dialogue "You're the sheriff who's solved every case. I'm so happy to meet you". Mr. Garner shrugs off the compliments. He wants to get right down to business in the tradition of Mcload. (I know he was Rockford but the Cowboy hat made me think of Mcload. His acting style made me think of the spots he used to do for the Beef industry: "Beef, Real food for real people" - well returning to the real drama). James Garner thinks all this UFO talk is fooey hogwash. He's on a mission to find the truth. Oh yes the truth. The truth is that the logger was abducted by aliens. Therein lies the problem. The mean-spirited actions of the citizens and the sheriff are justified. From an audience's point of view the bad guys fail to be malevolent. (Unless one thinks it unreasonable for a group of people in a small town to be skeptical when told that a space ship just sucked a close friend into outer-space). They're not really evil. They just were denied the opportunity of seeing the first twenty minutes of the movie or more precisely the flying saucer and the campy special effects. Furthermore the good guys fail to be compelling. Their actions are weird even in the bizarre context of the situation. Panic is understandable. Panicking then regrouping only to panic again is less so. Calling UFO watchers instead of the police upon rediscovering your friend is incompressible, not to mention inhuman. I don't think the aliens themselves would have been so cruel.

It is interesting to note the fates of the two central characters: the leader of the logging team and his best friend, Travis, the "victim" of the alien abduction. The leader begins the film as, just that, the leader. He is in charge of a group of loggers which is assigned to complete a government timber contract which he negotiated. He needs the money.  He is behind on his mortgage and is having difficulty  providing for his family (his younger sister as well as a wife and two children). His spousal relationship is strained but nothing outside of the normal toil of a married couple of limited means. Things are tough but it is a community where life is hard. He is facing his responsibilities and enduring with dignity, something Snowflake understands and admires. This is in sharp contrast to Travis; the abductee. Travis is a dreamer; the never ending adolescent with a beat-up motorcycle and pie in the sky ambitions. Travis is a the point where it isn't cute to be a flake. It he really intends to marry his best-friend's live-in sister he must "buckle-down". The epilogue to the film (the obligatory Hollywood happy ending) shows the two best friends making an attempt at reconciliation two years after that fateful night. (Travis originally blamed his friend for being abandoned in the woods). The former leader and bulwark of Snowflake has metamorphosed into a disheveled loner living in a cabin deep in the woods. He lost his job, house and family.(Even his sister, who married Travis, seems to have written him off as a hopeless coward.) Travis is now the well adjusted family man with a thriving business not to mention the proceeds from the best-selling first hand account his torment with the aliens. (A fact never overtly mentioned in the plotline but which can be gleaned from a cursory reading of the opening credits: "Adapted from the novel: Fire in the Sky by Travis). There is nothing wrong with Horatio Alger but what about Timon of Snowflake? The ramifications of the misdeeds of our neighbors in space seem beginning, if not downright helpful, when contrasted with the repercussions of the conduct of the dear family, neighbors and friends of Snowflake. But, once again, who can really blame them. In the realm of skepticism "Alien abductions" certainly rank with incidence of "spontaneous combustion" if not matching sightings of Elvis. In this context the strange, unsettling role reversal of the two lead characters is merely unfortunate not tragic. There is nothing in this tale to evoke more than a sympathetic groan. Peeling  away the extraordinary we are left with the sense of having born witness to one of life's horrible fender benders.

In order for this story to have resonance it must unfold as more than a slow-motion re-enactment of a series of inevitable misunderstandings. It never does. It is all very sad but it is also so inevitable. There is nothing at stake. The cars move slowly on a collision coarse and eventually make contact. This could have been avoided if the audience was placed in the same position as the denizens of Snowflake. It could have easily been achieved by leaving the existence of the aliens as an open question. The film should have begun after Travis had disappeared and focused exclusively on the plight of the friend and his battle with the righteous God fearing townsfolk. Let the audience participate and judge. Give us a stake in the action. Although this would have surely been a more captivating film it is doubtful that it would have been made. The "action space movie" advertising campaign would have been scraped (no beam of light from the heavens on the poster). More importantly the film fires a direct volley at Snowflake U.S.A.; the paradigm of middle American virtue. What kind of a producer would expect a blockbuster from a film devoid of special effects and action sequences which exhibits the darker side of "Mom, the flag and apple pie"? That would take someone of extraordinary vision. Perhaps such a person would believe in aliens. Don't worry there aren't too many of those. No one in Snowflake to be sure.

The Lover (1992)

The Lover is not Mon Amour

   
    Merchant-Ivory has been very successful in the last few years by taking recognized works of literature and translating them to the screen (i.e. Room with a View, Maurice, Howard's End…). This is thinking-man's fun; the film equivalent of Masterpiece Theater with enough English accents to play on the American sense of cultural insecurity. A new wave has arrived, or more precisely a nouvelle vague: Magritte Duras' The Lover is now a movie. Merchant-Ivory beware, the idea is catching on.

    The Lover is the story of a love affair between an impoverished adolescent French girl and wealthy Chinese man in his thirties. It is framed by having an older woman, a writer living in Paris, reminiscence about this experience which occurred in Indo-China where she spent her childhood. There is a hint that this is an autobiographical portrayal of Ms. Duras. Although this film can be erotic and enthralling, the role of the Duras figure undercuts its strength. The opening shows obscure erotic shapes (bodies perhaps) in close up. A distinctive voice of an older woman, speaking English with a French accent, begins the narrative. As she talks, the shapes evolve into a close-up of a hand writing out the story in French. This sequence ends and the beautiful young French teenager quickly encounters the dashing rich Chinese man. These two figures stand out in the harsh reality of pre-World War II Vietnam. The romance takes its course in the midst of a very impressive re-creation of the period. I felt as if I was there. If only that old lady had shut up. Instead the narrator talks and talks and talks. It is as if she was hired for the visually impaired. In the context of the abstractness of the opening sequence, the narration worked. Throughout the film it became antithetical to the passionate portrayal of the couple. Radio show hosts and sports broadcasters never do much to build a sense of romantic intimacy. Despite the refined timbre of her voice, she was an endless annoying intrusion.

    The most glaring verbal assaults were exhibited at the close of the action and during the epilogue. The climax of the film features the young woman leaving on a ship. She looks out to see if her lover has remembered her. The film is shot in a straightforward way which clearly shows the action. It is personal moment at the end of a very passionate story. My enjoyment of the outcome was clouded by that groggy old voice from the future carefully explaining exactly was occurring. This sequence jumps to a moment when the ship is out at sea. The girl wanders around then bursts into tears. It is not necessary to wonder what she is thinking. In fact there is no need to watch the scene. The fateful narrator tells all. It was truly a bizarre cinematic experience. It was the equivalent of watching a foreign film and having a stranger in a distant seat giving expository comments in-between reading the sub-titles aloud. This carried over into the epilogue. This sequence ties into the opening close-up of the hand and the pen. Unlike the beginning there is no montage of abstract close-ups. The director has  completely capitulated to the narrator. Visual blandness lives as the voice drones on. There is a wide shot of an older woman, with her back to the audience, writing at a desk. The narrator goes on to explain that many years later the lover contacted her. The voice spells out his feelings, her reaction, the outcome…  all the while her back faces us, an unintended metaphor for the visual surrender which has occurred. The voice has run out of things to explain. The film ends. Movies are primarily a visual medium. It seems such an obvious statement but The Lover's closing begs a reminder of this simple truth.

    The director, despite the ending, exhibits some control of the craft. The film is successful when the telling stops and the showing starts. There are two sequences which particularly stand out. The sexual interplay between the protagonists is truly erotic. They are usually making love but in one gruesome scene he "fucks" her. Throughout it all, however, there is not one moment of pornography. The director completely avoided being gratuitous or sensationalistic. In an age where Madonna's Sex is a bestseller, this is no small feat. The "meet the family" encounter was another moment when the director and the actors were in top form. This evening is perfectly drawn. Compassion, rudeness and ruthlessness gyrates back and forth between friends, enemies, family and lovers. Anyone who has ever encountered the rough waters of mixing relations and sweethearts will take solace; nothing could be as nightmarish as Ms. Duras' experience. Even the narrator's interruptions failed to dull this brilliant portrait. It is so vivid it calls into question the need for the earlier domestic scenes. The initial flashback of the horrors of the young girl's home becomes superfluous. Everyone comes to life clearly and succinctly when she clandestinely introduces her family to her lover. This is good filmmaking.

    Overall The Lover is an adequate rendition of a tragic love story with professional acting, magnificent design work and passable directing. Perhaps that would suffice if it were not for Ms. Duras' Hiroshima Mon Amour. This film, which was directed by Alain Renais in the early '60s, is built around a Frenchwoman's tryst with an Asian man. It might be easy to become absorbed in the fact that the protagonists in both films are almost racially identical. More importantly, however, both these couples face the same predicament: trying to establish true love in a horrific, unforgiving world. Hiroshima Mon Amour is a haunting film. Ms. Duras' bleak outlook on the prospects of finding a spiritual-emotional partner are fully realized. Despite having only viewed it once 11 years ago, I can vividly recall the strange interaction between that blessed but unfortunate couple. It might seem unfair to expect The Lover to live up to this recognized cinematic masterpiece. Unfortunately the thematic resemblance forces the issue. The director also opens The Lover with a subtle reference to the Renais film. The abstract montage of the hand writing on the page evokes Renais' abstract human forms in the midst of passion/torture. In both cases Duras' words provide the voice over. From this point on, however, the films go their separate ways. Mr. Renais creates a love fraught with passion and ambivalence. The Lover relates an engaging, erotic and unhappy reminiscence.

    Perhaps the ultimate irony is that The Lover was made three decades after Hiroshima Mon Amour's premiere. If this is truly an autobiographic episode from Ms. Duras' childhood, it gives an interesting perspective on the seed from which Renais' masterpiece evolved. Regrettably most audiences will not have the experience of seeing the earlier film in movie houses, if at all. Perhaps a future film professor might show the two works as a double bill: High Brow Entertainment and Great Cinema. No need to say which film will be shown first.    

JFK (1991)

SOS OS

   
    It isn't really necessary to pay that much attention to an Oliver Stone movie. You can make dinner, talk to a friend on the phone, work out, read the paper… just so you glance over every 5 or 10 minutes for a visual or a snippet of dialogue. That'll do it. No need to take the whole thing in. One sixtieth will suffice. OS has an interesting attitude about subtlety. His movie characters haven't yet resorted to wearing placards designating "good" and "evil". Then again there are so many fascinating hot buttons of current social history which OS has yet to apply his fresh, brilliant, cinematic vision. Maybe he can utilize the placard technique in MANSON?   

    JFK breaks new ground for America's premier storyteller. Even if an audience listens to every word and watches every frame; the film remains utterly incomprehensible. I will refrain from commenting on OS's understanding of recent history. It would bring back memories of 25 minutes I spent with an anti-Darwin creation-science teacher. I will, however, dare to go way out on a limb and say I don't believe our former President was soft on Communism and I do not consider the DA of New Orleans to be beyond reproach. (To quote a former Governor of that bastion of civic propriety: "The only way they gonna run me outta office is if they find me in a hotel room with a women dead or a boy alive".) But lets not get into all that. Let's look at JFK on its own merits.

    I enjoyed the first twenty minutes. Those montages of all the great old people in the great old days. Kinda makes you wonder about now. It's like seeing a clip of the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show then witnessing Guns'n'Roses on MTV. What the hell happened? We used to be so cool, interesting and more than anything, full of conviction. It's even worse when we try to relive the past (e.g. the remake of Breathless or Paul McCartney on MTV unplugged.) Yes, yes I know revisionist historians have gone and proved that Camelot was a forerunner of Reagan's P.R. blitz. And that no one was really as pretty, as smart, as cool or thin as we are all programmed to believe. Perhaps all those blurry black and white pictures make you suspend, for a few seconds, the inherent sense of cynicism which is a part of any rational person who grew up in the 70's and came of age in the 80's. Perhaps. Perhaps. There is, however, more to it than just romanticizing. Orson Welles, the cinematic  Last night Orson Welles The Third Man" was on T.V. He made this memorizing political thriller when he was in his early 30s. I couldn't help shuddering to myself when I thought of our current cinematic wunderkind's latest film, "Kafka". This is also a statement about government intrigue;  unfortunately it is opaque and private whereas Welles' work is crisp and universal. Maybe it's nostalgia but something seems lacking when contrasted with the past. 

    To quote Lou Reed from his ballad "Heroin", "I guess I just don't know. And I guess that I just don't know". This echoed through my head for the remaining 2 hours and 40 minutes of JFK. In a sense this is a battle cry for our time. Our master storyteller utilizing all the creative talent currently available - the finest actors, grips, cameramen, lighting designers, set designers, gaffers,  FX men… all to set the stage for the climax: A courtroom scene in which the main conspirator is on trial for no easily discernible reason and the protagonist is choreographing a ballistic ballet making and equally obscure point. This is capped off by a speech in which Kevin Costner looks into the camera and implores us all to do something. I can't remember what. Maybe it was to convict the "fag". Oh yes. On top being a dullard OS is a bigot. But male homosexuals should take solace in the fact that OS is what they are often falsely accused of being: a rapid misogynist. In OS's universe women are awful and irrelevant - lesbians do not exist. Back to that closing scene. Is Donald Trump writing screenplays? I ask because the closing argument bore a striking prosaic resemblance to Mr. Trump's full page N.Y. Times add "Why I bought the Plaza Hotel". Mr. Trumps musings about the Mona Lisa vs. Mr. Costner's quoting Coleridge or was it Browning? or was it Tennyson? Well I know it wasn't Ginsberg.

    I'm feeling very lonely these days. The world seems to be wondering "Who was on the grassy knoll?" Congress is opening files. Oprah, Phil, Sally and Heraldo are pointing at Cubans and the mob. N.P.R. has experts arguing with callers who are quoting the Warren Commission verbatim. Norman Mailer has weighed in with a piece for Vanity Fair. OS is addressing the National Press club then he is scheduled to be on a panel with Nora Ephron and others. OS is in New Hampshire denouncing everyone and everything and telling students at Dartmouth he'll let them see JFK for free if they vote. "I guess I just don't know. And I guess that I just don't know."

    I've strayed. Lets return to the latest creation and take it scene by scene. After the montages, Ed Asner argues with Jack Lemon about something. Ed dies? Is murdered? Joe Pesci gets hauled in by Kevin Costner. Something about goose hunting in Texas. There are many gay people having fun; something which seems to elude all the hets (maybe I was wrong about OS).  The fun male homosexuals are right wing crazies who run a military camp and want to invade Cuba - they hate JFK who they consider a wimp and a traitor. We shift to the future. Kevin Costner is on a plane with Walter Matthau. For me this was the most startling scenes in the film. I thought Matthau had died of a heart attack many years ago. I could have sworn I had read his obituary. Yet there he was sitting next to Costner on the plane playing Sen. Earl Long. My heart was pounding. I almost turned to the stranger next to me "Isn't Walter Matthau…" Luckily, the invigorating dialogue brought me back to my senses: Sen. Long expresses misgivings about the Kennedy assassination saying he thought something might have been going on. Oswald had some dealings in New Orleans. Costner decides to dedicate his life to finding the "real" assassin. Of course. Why not. He is only the DA for New Orleans. He has all the time in the world. I wonder if Sen. Long had decided to talk about the Bermuda Triangle what course the film would have taken. Back to the plot. There are meandering intrigues. His wife is a bitch. The guys in the office are nice but weird. More of the right wing homosexuals. It goes on. What did I forget to remember? Oh yes, Donald Sutherland appearing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Costner gets a phone call from a stranger who claims to be a ex-CIA man and tells him to fly to Washington D.C. and meet him by the Lincoln Memorial. Costner takes the next plane - of course. A thumbnail rule in "good" film or theater is "show don't tell". Well Donald tells and tells and tells and tells and tells… a verbal diarrhea burst of conspiratorial crap. Something about being sent to the South Pole and a newspaper in New Zealand. He wasn't very engaging and when Costner asks him to stop talking and start helping, he pats Costner on the back as if to say "What do you think I am, crazy?". Unfortunately for movie audiences nationwide OS never explores the answer to this question. Sutherland wishes Costner luck, walks away and disappears.

    I wonder if the Sutherland scene was based on actual encounters. I can imagine OS receiving clandestine calls in the middle of the night to arrange meeting with strangers in Grand Central station or the Golden Gate Bridge. This might account for his view of the King and RFK assassinations. (OS doesn't miss a cultural-historical beat.) OS ties these events into this plot as only someone of his abilities could. Sissy Spacek, Costner's wife, is burdened with their 7 children. Or was it 5 children. No, no I distinctly remember there was only one child in the closing shot. The family tableau of the wronged Kevin Cosner marching off in the distance with wife and child.(Do you think they killed their own children? No, no they just shrank the family to fit the shot) Back to OS's brilliant tie in: Sissy, overburdened with a large number of children, <7 but="">3, thinks hubby has lost a screw. What a crazy ungrateful bitch. Just when he was about to take a field trip to Dallas. (Remember he lives in WHO-DAT-VILLE.) Costner sees King and RFK blown away on the tube and he straightens Sissy out… "You're crazy if you don't think this is connected to what I'm doing". I dunno Kev. Maybe the little lady is on to something or maybe James Earl Ray and Siran Siran were on the payroll of Bell Helicopter. I can't go on.

    I just saw a poster for RUBY- "the man who killed the man who killed Kennedy". Ruby is dead. Oswald is dead. JFK is dead. Walter Matthau isn't dead. Jim Morrison is dead? Elvis is dead? Is Paul dead?  "I guess I just don't know. And I guess that I just don't know"    

   

The Age of Innocence (1993)

The Age of Slumber

   
   
     The paradigm Martin Scorsese fiction film is a beautifully stylized work which features violent, street-wise New York life. (e.g. Mean Streets, Raging Bull, Taxi Driver and Goodfellas). He has strayed from this motif with varied results. Certainly Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore was artistically successful. After Hours, The Color of Money and Cape Fear were plagued with problems. New York, New York, The King of Comedy and The Last Temptation of Christ were problems. Mr. Scorsese has, once again, trained his eye on New York. This time it is the genteel upper class world of the 19th century. Choosing to adapt Edith Wharton's The Age of Innocence is his most radical thematic departure since he told the story of Christ. One could argue this is even more bold because of the lack of violence.

    Edith Wharton writes about the duplicity of polite society. The central protagonist in her novel is a young lawyer who knows the rules. His professional insights are not as significant as his social prowess. He knows how to play the game outside of the office. He lives in a world of men to whom work is merely a sport. They are beyond caring about money. The huddled masses are light years away. In this framework his social skills are survival tools which he has mastered. No gesture goes unregistered. No slight unnoticed. This young man falls victim to the velvet glove brutality he is expert at overcoming. Mr. Scorsese movie is about props (i.e. white gloves, waistcoats, earrings, ball gowns, cigar cutters, oil paintings and food and food and food…) and customs (i.e.greetings, bows, table arrangements, dances, music, expressions…). Mr. Scorsese deserves credit for the research. The homework must have been exhausting. He realistically re-created the ethos of 19th century New York. The task at hand, however, was to translate Ms. Wharton's words to the screen. Mr. Scorsese forgot the assignment and he became a filmic Liberace: everything was showy but nothing was in context. The scenery cannibalized the scene. The performers and the thrust of Ms. Wharton's novel lingered in the background. Appearances are everything in fashion but fiction features require more than a facade.

    It is hard to imagine that the same director who devised the brilliant narration of Goodfellas could allow the intrusive voice over which permeates The Age of Innocence. Mr. Scorsese was meant to bring life to Ms. Wharton's words. Instead he chose to have them read by Joanne Woodward. Ms. Woodward can read. Ms. Wharton can write. Mr. Scorsese should have directed. The narration indicates countless emotions which needed to be enacted. A small example is a moment when the Countess crosses the room to talk to the protagonist. As she walks towards him the narration dutifully indicates she is committing a social faux-pas. This might seem trivial but it underscores the central flaw in the film. It would be difficult to discern that any grievance had occurred by simply watching the action. Mr. Scorsese seems to believe that since these people were discreet and subtle there is no way to convey the sense of the scene without Ms. Woodward's play-by-play. Since the crux of the novel hinges on the delicate balance between societal perceptions of events vs. the actual reality of what is occurring, this choice is fatal. It leads to Ms. Woodward's intrusive explanations of what all the protagonists are feeling in the course of the climatic final dinner party. It begs the question: if Ms. Woodward reading of the words is such an integral part of understanding the film why not simply read Ms. Wharton's book?

    Other movies have demonstrated that it is possible to portray the sub-text of a scene without resorting to the vulgar use of voice-over. John Huston's The Dead, based on the James Joyce's short story, is a case in point. This film also contains a dinner party in which people are interacting on a myriad of levels. The scene shows the party and yet it told many other stories. It lacked narration. Including it would have been a needless intrusion. The director worked with the performers and created an ensemble piece which clearly delineated the sub-text. This dinner party enacted the reality of Mr. Joyce's words. Mr. Scorsese chose to indicate what was occurring in Ms. Wharton's book. Adding insult to injury was the choice of Ms. Woodward as narrator. She is a talented reader but the story is told from a man's point of view. It is true that Ms. Wharton was a woman but the sex of the author is irrelevant when compared to the gender of the central protagonist. The all-knowing female voice was a peculiar distraction in interpreting the thoughts of the young man. It became yet another reason to disregard first hand perceptions of events presented and focus on what the omnipresent narrator was instructing the audience to feel.

    The central performers added to the need to seek outside opinions in determining the nature of the film. All three leading players were flawed. Michelle Pfeiffer is an American born European Countess who feels alienated upon returning home after many years. Unfortunately those many years in Europe failed to leave any residue. Ms. Pfeiffer seemed more American than Daniel Day Lewis, the supposedly All-American exemplar of old world New York. Mirages of modern day California appeared whenever she uttered a word. The combination of the two was awkward and unconvincing from the moment they met at the theater during opening sequence. She boldly holds out her hand for him to kiss and he merely shakes it. Is he trying to instruct her on American etiquette? Is he re-kindling a past romance?  Is he suddenly struck by cupid's arrow? It is difficult to know. This confusion only increased as the film progressed. Was he dutifully supporting his wife or was he willfully a part of the world which conspired against his true love? In the end is he a pathetic weakling who was duped into remaining married or a man upholding tradition as a religion? Mr. Lewis's sphinxlike performance leaves no clues. He and Ms. Pfeiffer are talented performers who exhibit many skillfully executed moments of passion/hate/warmth/love. Neither, however, could convince an audience that they were together in spirit. These were two mis-cast virtuosos not a desperate love-struck couple. The third part was the most challenging. It required a ingenious blending of callow innocence and ruthless cunning. Winona Ryder was not up to the task. She wallowed in the basics. She never reached beyond mastering the manner of the age. In a sense she embodied Scorsese whole approach to the novel. A true rendering of Ms. Wharton's complex antagonist required more than speaking without contractions and handling the props properly. An audience must know that this smiling waif has the will and cunning to massacre the innocents. Ms. Ryder only proved that she could recite her lines with a minimum degree of unpleasantness. 

    Mr. Scorsese had the same ill-luck with the implementation of special effects. Raging Bull and Goodfellas take full advantage of the film medium. The fades, freeze frames, tints, colors, shading, dissolves, textures, framing, sound… all worked beautifully in rendering the stories. The special effects in The Age of Innocence were self-conscious distractions. A notable example would be Daniel Day Lewis's entrance into the ballroom. The camera was placed on a steady-cam and swirled hysterically over all the lavishness as Mr. Lewis mingled with the guests and Mrs. Woodward's droned on explaining the action. It was as if Mr. Scorsese felt the endless photographic roamings over all the extravagance would shed light on Mr. Lewis's disposition. Compare this to Ray Liota's arrival at the Coppa Cabana in Goodfellas. Here is essentially the same scene, the initial moments of an important social function rendered with the use of a steady-cam.  Mr. Loita's entrance, however, told the audience his relationship to that world: the endless stream of people greeting him and clamoring to shake his hand while knowing his first name… The steady-cam gave the sense of excitement and power to his movement thus re-enforcing the underlying thrust of the scene. Mr. Lewis' arrival, on the other hand, only told the audience that the host for the evenings entertainment had expensive taste in art and a large exquisitely furnished house. Little of Lewis's standing or attitude could be gleaned from the entrance. The same lack of artistry was shown in the vignetting and highlighting of characters in the midst of important discussions. When Mr. Lewis seeks out Ms. Pfeiffer at the opera they are magically highlighted and all the other voices are silenced. By separating them from the rest of the crowd, i.e. the society, Scorsese fights the central focus of the novel which is how society digests their clandestine love. Their struggle would be better served if the couple was placed in the midst of the group where they would be forced to show the nature of the conflict. The ramifications of the consequences of their actions would be better understood. It is not their love which is intriguing but how the society reacts to it. Society must be given equal weight (e.g. Huston's The Dead). Separating and highlighting, by whatever means, should never have been employed in the telling of this story. The other two techniques which were used, fading to primary colors and presenting mini-montages (e.g. when people responded by letter declining the party), seemed contrived. There were a few moments when Mr. Scorsese showed that he possesses a master's control of the medium (e.g. the camera choreography and editing in the opening scene) but these were pearls in a very, very large desert.

    This is a long, long movie by someone who must know better. What is behind this behemoth? There are rumors that Mr. Scorsese has been incensed by his perennial snubbing by the geniuses at the Academy. The success of the Merchant Ivory formula must have hit home. Ironically the thinking is  sound. He might walk away with a best-director trophy for one of his worst films. Elite societies reward those who play by its rules. Certainly Edith Wharton knew that to be true. It would be curious to know if she would applaud or smile wryly if Mr. Scorsese secured the award. Judging by her writing one would have to say the latter.


The Remains of the Day (1993)

The Remains of the Book
   
   
James Ivory has made a career producing films with a well-made play sensibility (e.g. The Bostonians, Room with a View, Heat and Dust, Mr and Mrs. Bridge). The only thing missing is Allistair Cooke giving a re-assuring introduction while sitting by the fire in his den. Mr. Ivory does go out on a limb now and then (i.e. Slaves of New York, Maurice*) but he seems most at home with a mannered drama cast with wealthy people of other eras facing upper class problems. It is natural that Mr. Ivory would gravitate to Kazuo Ishiguro's magnificent novel The Remains of the Day. Although this a contemporary work written by a young writer the central character is an elderly English butler in the twilight of his career which spanned from pre World War I through the 1950s.

Mr.Ishiguro's background sheds light the spirit of the story. He is a native of Japan but moved to England at an early age. The central character embodies an English sense of propriety and etiquette with a Japanese ethos of duty and honor. Mr. Ishiguro's Mr.Stevens approaches his work with a zealot's fervor. His mission in life is to be a truly great butler. His days are spent honing his skills and meditating on what qualities define "greatness". This goes beyond any notions of popular recognition. Mr. Steven's standards are not of this world. The closest mortal analogy would be the military. Mr. Stevens' relationship to his Lord resembles that of a dedicated foot soldier to a respected General. The Lord's whims, guests and dinners become the battle itself. It is not surprising than that Mr. Stevens refers to taking a position at any level of his profession as "being in service". Mr. Ishiguro structures this seemingly esoteric story brilliantly. The reader is draw into Mr. Steven's mind and becomes enthralled by his Weltanschauung. The book is the story of a man confronting his god and becoming an atheist. Unfortunately Mr. Ivory's movie concerns a man pursuing an old romance out of a sense of missed opportunity.

On the surface Mr. Ivory has been faithful to Mr. Ishiguro's text. The essential plot elements remain intact. The adjustments are minor and in many cases work to give the story a more concise framework. The movie melds the diplomat who criticizes Lord Darlington's pro-German positions with the American who purchases the estate after his death. This works well save the regrettable choice of Christopher Reeves (A brilliant Superman but this role required someone with a larger emotional palette). Mr. Stevens father is employed in the house as a replacement for a wayward footman who is struck by cupid's arrow. Introducing the father in this way helps build the romantic tension between the young Mr. Stevens and Miss Kenton and it also reinforces the sense of isolation with those who remain "in service". The scene in which the young Mr. Stevens demotes his father is another improvement on Mr. Ishiguro's original story. This confrontation ironically paints Stevens the younger as a man of compassion despite his clipped words, stoic manner and harsh deeds.

There were two changes which were less successful. These alterations are seemingly minor but they speak to a significant difference in Mr. Ivory's approach to the character of Stevens. The country Doctor in Mr. Ishiguro's narrative is an idealist turned pragmatist. The socialist dreams which he nurtured in his privileged youth have long since faded into the mundane tasks involved in being a rural practitioner. Although there are tinges of regret about a life spent amongst the rustics he seems to have accepted his role in life. It is a interesting parallel to Mr. Stevens who is on the verge of assessing the fruits of being "in service". Mr. Ivory strips the character of the country doctor to the barest necessities: he is an upper class doctor who is held in high esteem by the locals. His youthful dreams and the attitude about his job are absent. The movie doctor is designed to play a different role. He aggressively questions Mr. Stevens about a career dedicated to the cares of another person. The doctor seems to be nibbling around the edges of: Haven't you wasted your life? This is a vulgar device which undercuts the spirit of Ishiguro's work. Even more disturbing is Mr. Stevens' answer. He replies that he is on a journey to rectify the situation.

The issue is one of awareness. In Mr. Ishiguro's novel Mr. Stevens' trip is undertaken in order to see if Miss Kenton is available "to return to service". It is clear that Mr. Stevens is unwilling to confront the fact that Miss Kenton is the unconsummated love of his life. The idea that Mr. Stevens would comment to a stranger that he is on a journey to turn his life around; (i.e. try to woo back his long lost love) is antithetical to Ishiguro's character. The Mr. Stevens of the novel would be unable to whisper this to himself alone in his own room. This is the beauty of the book. The reader sees what the protagonist cannot. The reader can shift through Mr. Stevens' reactions and grasp the overriding truth. His misconceptions are humorous and his unbending loyalty is admirable. In the end his fate is heartbreaking. After the encounter with Miss Kenton, Mr. Stevens is left a broken man. Although it is likely that Ishiguro's Stevens returns to Darlington Hall the author deliberately ends the book on the beach. His Mr. Stevens is alone on a bench as night falls. He has ceased sobbing and consoles himself by watching groups of people gather on an ocean pier. He muses on the ease with which they interact and attributes the general warmth exhibited to their ability to "banter". He follows this thought with the idea of practicing his bantering skills in order to please the new owner of Darlington Hall. It is a poignant moment of truth. Mr. Ivory ignores this scenario entirely and chooses to add a coda in which Mr. Stevens returns "to service" with the new American owner. There is a strange scene in which Mr. Stevens frees a pigeon which is trapped in one of the central rooms. The film ends with a literal "birds eye view" of the house and the surrounding countryside. This escapist imagery might be meant to highlight Mr. Stevens' predicament. Unfortunately seeing Mr. Stevens back "in service" plays against the thrust of the story. All of the heartfelt subtlety of Mr. Ishiguro's ingenious ending is lost.   

The closing scene illustrates the central challenge to a screen adaptation of this novel. How does a director tackle a story which is essentially inside the head of the protagonist? The beauty of the book lay in reacting to Mr. Stevens' ongoing monologue. Mr. Ivory's choice of highlighting the love interest in lieu of Stevens' ever-present self-scrutiny undermined the heart of the novel. Anthony Hopkins gave an admirable performance as did Emma Thompson. Unfortunately their efforts failed to convey the novel's unworldly sense of dignity. The blame can be laid to Mr. Ivory's misinterpretation of the text. The film is a professional rendering of the exterior of Ishiguro's work. The characters are there. The events are there. The setting is right. The soul is missing. This was a fatal mistake. The Remains of the Day is a story of religion; not love.


*-Maurice is a movie in which homosexuality takes center stage. This is in every sense a conventional James Ivory drama (i.e. a period piece set in the upper echelons of English society handled with bland professionalism). The reactionary social fervor which reigned during the Reagan-Thacter years made this lack-luster production a daring enterprise. Maurice's content should set it apart from the body of Mr. Ivory's work despite its form being identical.

Barcelona (1994)

BORECELONA

   
   
Barcelona is the second film of the American auteur, Whit Stillman. His debut, Metropolitan, showed rich white teenagers facing the travails of the New York debutante world. Although Mr. Stillman has shifted continents little else has changed. It is the same crowd with the same struggles in older buildings. Variations on a theme can be an interesting challenge provided the artist is up to the task. Unfortunately Mr. Stillman proves that film is still without its Edith Wharton.

The conflicts involved in Mr. Stillman's work might better be suited to an Everly Brothers' song rather than a full length feature film. Barcelona's two young American yuppie male protagonists fret over girls in between petty fights and sophomoric philosophizing. These two cousin fail despite Stillman's efforts. There are hints that he intended something grander. The tag-line in the poster reads "Americans and anti-Americans in love". The opening scene features a terrorist bombing of Barcelona's American library and other attacks on U.S. targets. There are endless references to the Cold War and the United States love/hate relationship with Europe. This is prompted by one of the cousins serving as an American Naval Officer. Unfortunately the superfluousness of the central characters undercuts any hint of larger themes. The sailor is a coxcomb and his cousin is a prig. In this context the weighty political debate melds into knit-picky roommate altercations and dull gossip. Comedy might have been the path to success; regrettably Whit doesn't prove very witty. In a basic structural terms he gives us two Felix Ungers; The Odd Couple becomes The Annoying Cousins.

The stiffness of the two cousins mirrored the director's mechanics. It is odd that Mr. Stillman chooses to work in film. One feels the proscenium arch in every one of the laborious vignettes. The voice over cues an establishing shot, the "action" begins till the fade out prompting another voice over… The visual monotony is coupled with dialogue that seems paced by a metronome. Not even the upper class WASP world is this rigid. Given Mr. Stillman's blue blooded aristocratic east side background one would have thought he would have been able to detect the patent falseness. Not surprisingly the natives are even more disappointing. There are a steady stream of second rate American actresses pretending to be Spanish. They are beautiful, bland and thoroughly unconvincing.

In his debut Whit Stillman exhibited an ability to carefully craft a story and fully utilize a setting. Metropolitan was shot on super 16 with a shoe-string budget using borrowed apartments and late night exteriors. It is a case study in how to produce a quality low budget fiction feature. It seems Mr. Stillman left all his Yankee frugality and know-how state-side while in Europe.  The production values in Barcelona matched the acting, directing and writing. Mr. Stillman managed to produce a work of uniform mediocrity. It is an astounding leap backward. There is no doubt that the next Stillman production will focus on young American aristocrats. Let us hope the director re-discovers some of the magic of his first effort. Those "Metropolitan" aristocrats were born in the frugality of Stillman being an unknown first-timer. The "Barcelona" group evolved in the luxurious decadence of Stillman's success. This second feature proves the old adage: money isn't everything. Maybe a few of Whit's characters will learn this lesson as well.      


The River Runs Through It (1992)

The Words Run Through It

   
The written word is king in our culture. Writers are the spokespeople for the intelligentsia. Movie makers are media stars. This may be a sweeping generalization but it will be many years before there is a Nobel Prize for Film. More importantly the assumption that movies are a second rate medium affects how they are made. The River Runs Through It is a paradigm of the stifling ramifications of being overpowered by the written word.  

Norman Maclean is an excellent writer. The River Runs Through It is a magnificent piece of literature. I didn't read the book, I saw it; or to put it more accurately I saw the movie. It was problematic. The acting was strong. The photography was breathtaking. The costumes and scenery were accurate and beautiful. All and all it was very professional. Everyone performed there job with consummate skill. Unfortunately the reason for the failure of the end result can be traced to the belief in books; and conversely the lack of confidence in film.

Voice-over narration is something that is used often but rarely effectively. A strong example of this technique (and ironically another transformation of a novel into a film) can be found in Goodfellas. Scorsese has the central character speak to the audience as a unobtrusive guide. The words convey the events and descriptions which, in turn, propels the images forward. It is a symbiotic relationship. Ray Liota's voice would drop in during transitions or other critical moments as if it were a friendly insider giving the  "inside dope". A "local" giving the tourist-audience the lay of the land. The narration could never stand on it's own. What good is the lay of the land, without the land. The images would suffer a loss also; the land without the lay. In short, Ray Liota's voice-over is an integral part of the telling of the story.

Robert Redford's voice-over in The River Runs Through It is the polar opposite. It is a distraction, despite Maclean's gift as a writer and Mr. Redford's strength as a reader. I might go so far as to say "because of" instead of "despite". Mr. Redford has a distinct voice which any American moviegoer over the age of 10 would recognize immediately. He is, however, visually absent from the screen. This has the effect of drawing the audience away from the images and towards the  that familiar, unmistakable, disembodied voice. The visuals undercut themselves by mimicking the still photo montages which are the hallmark of film-as-slideshow documentaries. (e.g. Ken Burn's The Civil War) This technique might befit an educational presentation whose main objective is to inform. It is ill-suited for dramatic filmmaking whose mission lies in the realm of emotion.  La Jette proved that a riveting story can be told through the use of a series of still pictures. It is therefore the choice of images themselves and not their lack of fluidity which presents the problem. The antique photographs and beautiful landscapes were, in themselves, pleasing and appropriate but they were not specific. Any antique family pictures or beautiful montainscapes would work in buttressing Mr. Redford's reading. This lack specificity carried over into the action.

It is interesting to note that the film's emotional apex, the murder of one of the protagonists, is covered in the narration but ignored visually. This is consistent with the overall short-shrift given to the actors. The central philosophical underpinnings of the film were spoken by Mr. Redford, not performed by the cast. The characters were representational arch-types instead of actual people. The brief moments of levity were provided by minor characters (the Methodist family, the Calamity Jane bar fly…). The main actors were too bound up in being icons to be able to live and breath. This creates the specificity problem. As with the photo-montages any appropriate icon would work equally well. Any "good brother" or "dutiful mother" or "minister-father" would be as compelling. The result becomes a strange disconnect with the action. The protagonist death is meaningless in itself. There is no need to show it. The family response is characteristically stoic and uninteresting. The film maker is forced to abandon the actors quickly and move to his main vehicle for evoking emotion: words. The closing narration evokes the response. Tears began to flow as Mr. Redford reads the beautiful words and the image of an old man fishing in the river appeared on the screen. Norman Maclean's passing ironically supports the generic nature of the visual image. The old man fishing would have been the author himself; unfortunately he died. They used a stand-in. A generic old man reflecting on life encircled by the breathtaking Montana scenery. Filmically the choice was irrelevant. He worked equally well.

It should be noted that tears did flow. Many audience members have been, and will be, very moved by this movie. Perhaps some might see this as confirming the success of the transformation of Maclean's words to the screen. The goal of making the jump should be in liberating the text from the book. Unfortunately Mr. Redford's adaptation relies solely on the power of the word itself. In a sense the film is closer in spirit to a reading of the story by Mr. Redford accompanied by well chosen slides and carefully choreographed pantomime. Although professionally executed, the lack of specificity of the characters, worked against the audience forming an emotional connection with any of the central protagonists. The words mask the lack of a bond by striking passionate chords. Yes there were tears, but they were for the characters in Mr. Mclean's novel and not the actors in Mr. Redford's film.

Words are powerful, but so are images. Books are important, but so are films. When transposing between the two never be lulled into believing the strengths of one will play equally well in the other. Failure to take into account the differences will lead to results which are passable, but not exceptional. In The River Runs Through It, the audience heard a passionate tale, and they reacted strongly. One can only imagine the results if they had seen the story as well.   
   

The Player (1992)

The Player's Player
   
    Robert Altman has been very busy since Nashville was finished in 1976. He has traveled all over the map turning plays into movies: from the army base (Streamers) to little towns in Texas and the South West (Five and Dime Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean & Fool for Love), the forgettable stay in the White House (Secret Honor) and the equally forgettable European jaunt (Vincent & Theo). Plays aren't movies. Whether this was an epiphany or a sabbatical designed to keep the engine running is hard to figure. No more playing around. Robert Altman has returned with The Player.

    Movies are the media du mode in self-reflective, entertainment-obsessed, American society. The Player has therefore become the film of choice for filmgoers "in the know". Word on the street has Altman, an American auteur operating outside the system, creating a scathing indictment of the industry via a brilliant parody in which "the players" play themselves. It is more than "great" it is "important"; too serious to be a financial blockbuster. As Jeffrey Lyons, a critic of "The Living Section" sensibility, states "this is a film for people overly concerned with how movies are made."  Well isn't a slap from Jeffrey really a compliment? Everyone who is anyone is overly concerned with how movies are made. If only there were more people of Altman's integrity who might "tell it like it is". Confessions from con men, however, should be regarded with the utmost skepticism. A Hollywood film which purports to expose the evil doings of an insider in the movie business, a player, must be greeted with kid gloves (or a falconer's mitt). Con men and socio paths are often charming and fun and at times even brilliant. (As John Guare and David Mamet have proved). The Player shares all these characteristics but one must never forget we are dealing with a player. The danger lies not in being killed or robbed but of being taken.

    Before canonizing Altman it is important to closely evaluate the miracles. He needs three and without doubt he should be given two: M*A*S*H and Nashville. These are his masterpieces. Here institutions (the army & the country music business) are brilliantly rendered through collections of individuals. This is his strength - institutional portraits via the group. A Fred Wiseman of dramatic filmmaking. The result is the same as Wiseman's - heartfelt social satire. Altman's genius lies in his weaving together disparate groups and different levels of reality. M*A*S*H and Nashville oscillate from the serious to the absurd; from harsh reality to complete fantasy. They are driven by juxtaposition of characters and settings which keep the audience guessing and happily wandering through his mad cap worlds. To experience a good Altman movie is not to have taken in a linear story but to have visited a strange land and met the natives. When Altman stumbles it is like being at a boring party in an awful place (Buffalo Bill,The Wedding). Even at his worst, not counting those endless play-movies, Altman had an eye and ear for what people were saying and what was going on. In capturing the specific absurd incident, whether a traffic jam in Nashville or a military R&R trip during the Korean war, he spoke universally. His work is usually entertaining, often disconcerting and most importantly, well done.

    It was an exciting prospect: Altman tackling Los Angeles. The master of contemporary American social satire captures the Movie establishment. What went wrong? In short Altman abandoned himself to formulaic Hollywood filmmaking and ironically hide behind the facade of parody. Interestingly the film chronologically self destructs. It is as if Altman slowly turned the directors chair over to the scores of agents, script doctors, studio executives and movie stars who appear in the film. In the opening sequence, the director is in top form. The camera effortlessly glides over a Hollywood lot as a collection of characters goes about the business of "making movies". This is definitive Altman: revealing the essence of the Movie business through a diverse collection of people while oscillating between the absurdly funny (Buck Henry pitching the Graduate II), to the seriously funny (The Japanese taking the studio tour), to the serious (the mail carrier collapsing). It is strange to think that the same person who created one of the best film openings of all time could end this same work with hollow melodrama. Altman's defense would be the formulaic, soap opera finale and the tedious linear plot were all part of the design of the grand parody. Never forget we are dealing with a player and a smart talented one at that.

    The degree to which The Player is a parody is at the heart of the matter. I remember having a discussion with a woman from Tennessee soon after the release of Nashville. Her reaction to the film was telling:"It (Nashville the movie) is just a slick Jewish New York look at my hometown." Racism aside, her remarks reveal a significant degree of anger and defensiveness. She was oversensitive. The target of the satire was neither people in the country music business or the citizens of Nashville but America circa 1976. Career army doctors might have had the same reaction to M*A*S*H. It was certainly not the Army of "be all you can be." The point is: however stylized and unrealistic the films became, they never lost their bite; not that Altman was solely interested in biting. M*A*S*H and Nashville are too universal to be promoting narrow political agendas or cataloging social ills. Altman watched and listened to everyone and in the end told us everything. This includes things which, for politeness sake, might be better left unsaid; but what is the fun of eavesdropping on a censored conversation?

    The Player is a censored conversation. Don't let the blatant negativity and the general reprehensiveness of everything and everyone, fool you. Altman decided to climb on a soap box and preach. When players done white collars - watch out! They'll do anything to attract a congregation. Whatever they say remember: the only real sin is sitting on the bench. How do you redeem your player-status when you've been drifting in the desert of small-film, small audience limbo for so many years? How do you come back when you are worse than an unknown - you are a has-been? You do what all great players do - you play the part. They think you an outsider - you're the king of the outsiders! The system stinks. Down with the system! Altman is the cinematic Jerry Brown, the outside-insider coming clean, imploring the masses to join him in screaming "Oh the horror, Oh the horror". If you get all the inside jokes and can identify the supporting cast - all the better. We all love the speeches - but really is this for real? Can every star in Hollywood truly hate a system which created them? More likely Altman's film is the consummate insider's joke. Altman is no Sammy "the Bull". He's not a stool pigeon. He's an underboss; and a damn good one at that.

    The Player has no heroes. The murdered screenwriter, who along with the ex-girlfriend are the only people who posses some degree of integrity, is very deliberately shown to have no talent. There are hints that he might be good. He dutifully goes to watch the Bicyle Thief; his screenplay sounds somewhat intriguing. Then his friend undoes him by reading an unfinished work at his funeral. There can be no doubt; a dead, well intentioned, buffoon. At that cemetery Altman completely puts to rest any hint that the issue is the system suppressing the truly gifted in favor of the thoroughly crafty. This is a Machevelian cultural wasteland devoid of talent. The only nod at greatness comes from the obligatory nod at De Sica, Hitchcock, Bogart…. Creativity died years ago in a galaxy far far away. With the "talent" issue in the grave, what remains is hollow scoundrels and pathetic victims. Ironically with no heroes there can be no real villains. This is a cartoon and unlike Pop Eye, not a very daring one. It is the deliberate timidity which is so infuriating. Everyone dressed up but unfortunately no one really played. Altman created even what the most cynical of studio executives could never hope to achieve: an Altman parody.

    Even in the most obvious of Altman devices the master's hand seemed deliberately tied. The primary mystery character, for example: M*A*S*H had the disembodied voice on the P.A. system; in Nashville it was the unseen politician. In both cases they served the roll of linking seemingly obscure events and pulling the film forward unobtrusively. They are  familiar touchstones which the audience might return to after a strange or disquieting interlude. (A friendly stranger in the crowd - the man you see at the bus stop every morning whom you don't know but would dearly miss if he failed to appear.) The postcard writer attempts to serve this purpose in The Player. Since Altman abandoned his refreshing cinema verite approach to plot (and with it his nonsensical but masterful juxtapositions of the real and unreal) the post card writer becomes as gimmicky as Wayne's World's refrain of "NOT!". Every time a fax started clicking it was: here we go again, ha ha ha. Altman's insane artistic self-involved woman is another case in point. Geraldine Chaplin vs. Greta Saatchi. One is a multi faceted egomaniac whose eccentricities are charming. The other is a shallow bore whose expository merits are worthy of an episode of Kojak. Surely a person of Altman's talent can see the difference. He can and like the protagonist in his film he knows the only real sin is sitting on the bench.

    If Altman really tackled Hollywood would everyone be tripping over themselves for cameos? Not! Would Premiere magazine write a story giving that desperate media obsessed public tips on Hollywood lingo so they can better understand the film? Not! Would Altman have to return to the desert if he gave it his best effort? Yes. That is the real tragedy. Like the English writer who yells at the ex-girlfriend after she reprimands him for selling out: "No one at the test screening in Peroria liked the other ending! That's reality baby!". Well whether it is or is not reality Altman is guilty of the same crime. Fear of an alienating type of failure. Fear of losing the respect of the power brokers and audiences in the know. It would not have to be another Welcome to L.A.. With Altman's sensibility it would be entertaining. Unfortunately it would also be damning.

    Mr. Altman is only human. Why incur the wrath of everyone and everything and spend the rest if your days cranking out the film version of The Substance of Fire on a shoestring in upstate New York or Canada. Why not become the grand old man of integrity in the land of no integrity. Even at half speed the film will be better than most and probably the best Hollywood movie in years. Who will know? The long trip is finally coming to an end in a very comfortable place. Despite what Altman's comic book says, being a player doesn't mean you can't be good. It is, however, nearly impossible to be a Saint. That requires three miracles and so far he only has two.            

Patriot Games (1992)

The Hunt For A Good Tom Clancy Movie

  Tom Clancy is the undisputed king of the popular spy novel. He has single-handedly invented the techno-thriller. Graham Greene and John Le Carre spend pages plumbing the  souls of the cold warriors. Mr. Clancy is more at home with the inner workings of their props and routines. The old school focused on the man. Mr. Clancy zeroes in on his schedule and toys. This in a sense is the same evolution James Bond experienced (or suffered). In "Dr.No" we were interested in Bond himself by "Goldfinger" his car seemed more appealing. Clancy, however, gives the gadget gimmick a new life. Bond is in every sense a superhuman, a comic book spy: entertaining - yes, real - no. The unworldly cars, planes, guns… buttress his superhuman qualities and firmly place Mr. Bond in the world of fantasy. Mr. Clancy takes the opposite approach and uses the knowledge of "unworldly" props (Trident subs, missiles, training procedures…) to place the reader in the heart of the "real-life" clandestine world of espionage.  Clancy's "The Hunt for Red October" rarely touched on the individual character's themselves but rather Clancy's knack for minutia. "How did he know all that?", "This book should be classified!" were typical reactions. This is not to say people did not enjoy the book. Mr. Clancy created a passionate following. I remember being cornered after confessing to not reading spy-novels: "No Bram this is different this isn't just a spy novel; its how things really work, it's reality." I was not totally convinced but I did look forward to the film. Of course I knew there would be a film - the success of the book combined with the subject matter. I heard, I waited, I went; I was disappointed.

 "Patriot Games" is the newest of no doubt a number of Clancy books which will be turned into films. Once again I was disappointed. I began to wonder why these two popular blockbuster thriller suspense novels made for such lackluster ponderous movies. Was the problem in the direction or in the material in its original form? It would seem that even in the hands of the most untalented craftsman the substance of the Clancy works would carry themselves through with the minimum of downtime. "Patriot Games", for example, centers around the IRA assassinating a member of the royal family. An ex-CIA man, Harrison Ford, becomes embroiled in a messy shoot-out in London and incurs the wrath of a psychopath murderer bent on revenge against not only Ford but his pregnant wife and young daughter. The film goes from car chases in Maryland to terrorist training camps in Libya. On the surface, such a film might be badly made, but how in the world could it be boring? The answer lies in the material itself not in the direction.

    Strange as it may seem, Clancy's works should be reserved for filmmakers at the peek of their abilities.  Clancy's strongest suit, his emphasis on techno-jargon and "authenticity", are not inherently filmic. A writer will be able to impress his audience with attention to detail and a turn of phrase but how does that material translate on the screen? In Clancy's case the director's have focused on the plot line and turned everything else over to the art department. This is a critical mistake. The "plot" is not what makes a Clancy novel; it's the "attention to detail". This focus on minutia makes the reader feels he is an insider; a fly on the wall at CIA headquarters. The movies are simply melodrama.  A Tom Clancy movie is in effect the opposite of a Tom Clancy novel. The "reality", "insiders view" is transformed into a James Bond comic book fantasy. Unfortunately, since Clancy abandons character development in favor of techno-tid bits, the films lack the 007 himself: Does anyone remember the name of the central figure in the Hunt for Red October? Does anyone really care about Harrison Ford's (the name of the character escapes me) relationship with the CIA or his surgeon wife? The audience is left with tiresome stock characters falling into obvious plot lines which are dictated by a cursory view of international affairs. 

    How can Clancy's knack for description and technical detail be successfully translated to the screen? The key lies in giving the machines and technology a human face. The most successful moments in "The Hunt for Red October" dealt with the sonar expert who initially discovers the Russian submarine. In these, all too brief, scenes there is a successful merger of techno-jargon and plot line via a "colorful" character. (Pardon the pun - the audio expert happens to be a person of color but he is not vulgar racist characterture). The audience is presented with an audio virtuoso, who plays his highly sophisticated unworldly equipment like a concert pianist. More importantly he translates his obvious expertise into easy to understand language which fits beautifully with the drama. The sub has disappeared and they must be using a new type of engine because… The drama of the film comes to life. The audience is being technically "wowed" by a genuine figure who "knows his stuff". If only the Sean Connery character and the forgettable American were as "real" and interesting. (As for the American - saccharine touches e.g. bringing his daughter the Teddy Bear are the opposite of endearing)
   
    Speaking of the opposite of endearing let us examine Harrison Ford and his family in "Patriot Games". From the get go there was trouble: that cutesy opening sequence of them all playing monopoly. I was waiting for the young daughter to turn to her parents and start professing the desire to turn the world into a better place by working for "Dow Chemical". Harrison Ford and the wife could have started singing "Dow makes you do great things." I'm not sure the opposite approach, i.e. a dysfunctional family with a drug or incest problem, would have made any difference. This family, no matter how you slice it, was simply a group of set pieces which clumsily move the plot along. They were the first of an entire cast of bowling pins. (Actually bowling pins are more interesting because you never know which way they will fall.)  The only moment in this film which caught the spirit of the techo-thriller was when the CIA assassinates the terrorists in Libya. This scene, although saddled with self-conscious editing, was the diamond in the rough. Harrison Ford unexpectedly walks into a room filled with screens and satellite tracking devises. Quietly strange images appear. They are explained, in brilliantly casual understatement, as army troops attacking the terrorists. Silhouettes of soldiers and helicopters surround barely discernible human figures asleep in tents. The blobs in the tents move and tumble as flashes of light engulf them. One blob in particular is singled out as an officer in the room breaks the casual techno-chatter with a cat call and a clenched fist, "Hooray!". The horror on Harrison Ford's face truly reflects the horror of modern warfare.  It is the scene which gives anyone who witnessed the Gulf War on CNN a moment of pause.  This is the heart of the techno-thriller. Not the technology but the humanness. The technology only aids a modern audience in identifying with the action thereby making things "real".

    Can the intensity and inherent drama of this particular scene be sustained throughout a film? The answer is: Fail Safe. Sidney Lumet's "Fail Safe" is the father of all cinematic techo-thrillers. Here is a feature which successfully transforms the sange foid of modern high-tech drama into true human drama. "Fail Safe" brilliantly interweaves complicated modern war systems and the men behind them. A balance is struck. There are all the gadgets: nuclear bombers, warning systems… all the procedures: explanations of first strike attacks, fail safe points… and most importantly all the dedicated technicians running the equipment. An interesting case in point is "Fail Safe's" nuclear bomber pilot.  The heartfelt emotion in Lumet's film is gripping: the pilot chooses duty, turns off his radio, which is blaring the voice of his desperate pleading wife; and continues on a suicidal mission. Nowhere can anything that comes close to this level of feeling be found in either of the Clancy films. It is particularly interesting to note that the central themes of "Patriot Games" revolve around family and duty. Lumet manages to capture what the Clancy film so desperately tried to show (i.e. the eternal bond between husband and wife) without even showing the pilot and his wife together. (So much for cutesy monopoly scenes.) As for realism: I doubt anyone watching "Fail Safe", even thirty years after its debut, does not engage in some sort of serious discussion about nuclear war. Its realism will haunt audiences thirty years from now even when the weapons and strategies are unrecognizable.

    "The Hunt for Red October"'s legacy will be less enthralling. It will be akin to a contemporary audience's viewing re-runs of "Secret Agent Man". There is a campy sense of gratification which can attributed to nostalgia. The discussion might turn on how young a particular actor appears or the awkward style of dress or the primitivness of the production…  So much for Clancy's realism. At the heart of vacuousness of this film is the lack of effectively integrating the technology with the characters. Take, for example, two scenes in which sounds are used to highlight important breaking moments in international intrigue. In "Hunt" we have the central turning point in the film:  the American sub and the Russian sub meeting for the first time.  One "ping" is answered by another. This is mildly more exciting than my description. Compare that with the American President talking on the phone to someone in Moscow during the nuclear attack in "Fail Safe". The President is told that when the bomb strikes the phone in Russia will melt creating a high pitched whine. I will never forget that sound. It is the audio equivalent to Edvard Monk's "the scream".

    It would be interesting to know whether "Fail Safe" was a novel before becoming a film and if so whether the balance between man and machine was weighted differently than in the movie. Regardless, Walter Bernstien's screenplay strikes the perfect chord. Lumet was given superb material. I doubt a director tackling the newest Clancy work will have as tightly crafted a screenplay. The two previous director's emphasis on Clancy's less than memorable cast of character's and his ponderous plot lines have been, cinematically speaking, failures. A more interesting approach would be to place the hollow characters in the background and give the gadgets central billing. This seems to fly in the face of the notion of emphasizing the human side of technology but in fact the characters would come to life.

  The paradigm of this approach would be Kubrick's "2001". The central character on his own terms is really not much to digest: a successful scientist with an simple family. Kubrick's juxtaposition of this "ordinary" man with his extraordinary surroundings gives the film its deep resonance. Take, for example, Kubrick's having the man place a call to his home on earth. A young girl answers the phone and talks in a non-plused, childlike way about her birthday and the fact that her mother is out. What belies this seemingly meaningless interaction is how much it comments on man and his relationship to the literally "unworldly" surroundings. This scene is a powerful statement on the immutability of the family unit and man's overall relationship to technology. The film continues this trend on a grand scale: the future of mankind is explored via an ordinary man battling a machine.  Half the film centers around a single astronaut talking to a computer. On paper this would appear tiresome; which is probably why the original short story is only ten pages long. On screen, however, Kubrick creates an tale with epic proportions. This grand scale fits well with the overall grandness of the production. As with "Fail Safe", audience no matter what the state of technology, will be deeply moved by man vs."HAL".

   It would be foolish to expect Clancy's works to have the same impact as an undisputed cinematic masterpiece. However the principles which Kubrick applied should be utilized to give these films life beyond the maddening summer hype runs.  "The Hunt" is a case in point. The story is the epic struggle between to advanced technological societies with the submarines being the metaphors for each. Make all the characters secondary to the surroundings. In a sense, as with "2001", the machines are the primary characters. There should be groups of colorful experts, akin to the sonar officer, but none should stand out; not even the captains.  In demoting the stagy Sean Connery and his forgettable American nemesis turned-ally, the focus of the drama would return to the epic struggle between the US and the USSR. The driving force of the novels, the genuineness and realism, would also reappear. This approach would also ride the film of the tiresome plot-oriented approach and the annoying daytime television charactertures.

   The same methods apply to "Patriot Games". This is a drama which pits "spy" culture against "terrorist" culture. "Good" families vs. "Bad". The emphasis should focus on the routines and rituals of both worlds. Once again, large over-blown characertures, i.e. Harrison Ford and the Irish terrorist…, would not necessarily be replaced but redrawn to establish a broad spectrum of believable people going about their lives. Technology and gadgets would, once again, play centerstage. Both cultures live and die by the sword and that sword can be extremely cinematic: e.g. the previously mentioned night battled viewed on infrared screens.

 In short Clancy's work present an interesting challenge. A filmmaker must re-evaluate what makes Clancy's work live on the screen. It is the realism not the melodrama. One should be thinking more in terms of Fred Wiseman's "Missile" rather than a "Dallas" episode that touches on international intrigue. If anyone thinks my T.V. analogy is harsh let me paraphrase a poignant moment from "Patriot Games":

                      Harrison Ford
        (having second thoughts about attacking terrorist)
I can't be sure it's them. Maybe we shouldn't attack?

                                       Commander
We're going forward. What can you be sure of in life?

                 Harrison Ford
My daughter's love.

I'll leave on that note. This film speaks for itself and "The Hunt for Red October".