Tuesday, January 20, 2015

The journey begins...






...anew.

Here I am.  Films 1-5 on this year's attempt to get through all 100 of the AFI Top 100 (10th Anniversary Edition) in one calendar year, then write my thoughts about each.  I had not watched these films in their entirety before now, which may seem like blasphemy on one of these, but that's the way it is.

I'm not going to talk much now.  I've just written a summation of this journey a couple of days ago.  Time to get started.  Here goes.  For real.  I'm starting now.

Films 1-5

















1.  "The Gold Rush" (AFI Rank #58)
I started this quest this time with a film by the man who is, by all rights, arguably the biggest star that film has ever produced.  Charlie Chaplin, when given the chance to entertain, never fails to do so.  Seriously.  I showed my kids "City Lights" last year a couple of times.  They LOVE it.  Adults LOVE it.  And most of what this man did was filmed almost 100 years ago.  The YouTube video of the standing ovation he received when he was given an honorary Oscar in 1972 actually cuts short the amount of time that the audience applauded.  Multiple internet sources say it was 12 minutes.  I find that hard to believe, but...who knows?  I don't.  Someone does.  Another poignant story about Charlie Chaplin comes from none other than Roger Ebert.  I'm getting off track.  You know who Charlie Chaplin is.  If you don't, crawl out from under the rock you appear to have chosen as your home, and get familiar.  Now.  I've watched a lot of Chaplin shorts in my time, a few of his films, a lot of scenes from "The Gold Rush," but I hadn't watched it in its entirety before now.  I'll be showing it to my children soon.  Simply put, take the Tramp, put him in Alaska, and give him problems to solve/create.  Yet, somehow, that doesn't do the genius on display even the slightest bit of justice.  The Tramp is all of us.  A dispassionate observer, a man who never speaks, but somehow, always, ALWAYS is in the right/wrong place at the right/wrong time.

I don't really know what more to say about "The Gold Rush."  It features one of the Tramp's signature bits, the dinner roll dance.  It also features more than a few hilarious sight gags.  And then it features that which we love about the Tramp, and that which took him beyond simple tool into iconic character.  Hope.  Love.  An ability to adapt.

I chose the picture above, because, well, because it's the right moment to show just what the Tramp is in "The Gold Rush."  Outsider.  Struck dumb by beauty, wearing a boot crafted from a blanket because...well...because he and his friend ate the real boot.  And for that matter, it kind of sums up the Tramp.

He is us.  All of us, and Chaplin knew it.  What a gift that he left him for us to watch on film.  Go watch "The Gold Rush."  Go do it soon.  This is a beautiful film.






















2.  "Singin' In The Rain" (AFI Rank #5)
OK.  Blasphemy.  I'd not watched "Singin' In The Rain" before now.  There, I said it.  It's the truth, and I'm not particularly ashamed of it.  Maybe I should be.  I don't know.  This is also the first film in the list that I watched with my new viewing partner, Julie.  We will probably be watching a bunch of these together, and her comments may be published from time to time. I'm drifting.

I'm not here to give you a synopsis.  I'm here to give you an account of my feelings on the film.  Here they are.  Also, some of these thoughts are conceivably blasphemous.

The story is fantastic, well constructed, and remarkably fresh.  Of course, the love story seems a little forced, but this is a musical.  Sarah fell for Sky in Havana, these things happen.  Anyway...we have this wonderfully filmed story...then we get the Broadway Ballet number.  17 minutes of mostly unnecessary film, that doesn't advance the plot at all, but makes us all feel good about the talent on screen.  Oh, and it gives us Cyd Charisse, in what was her breakout role. I guess that makes the 17 minutes worthwhile.  The number is quite stunning, truly, it just takes the story on a detour I didn't need.  Yes, I realize that it was simply a convention of the time. I've been in "Oklahoma!" in my day.  Still, I wish it wasn't there.

If the number "Singin' In The Rain" didn't exist, it's conceivable that "Make 'Em Laugh" would be THE iconic dance number in film history.  As it is, relegated to second fiddle in this film, I'd never seen it before.  I can assure you I've seen that other number a bunch.  Perhaps because I've seen the other so many times, and "Make 'Em Laugh" was new to me, but I found myself much, MUCH more impressed with that number than the title piece.  I included the photo above from the film to explain why.  In the photo, on the left, you see a guy going for it, consequences be damned.  On the right, you see a technician, measuring his distance to the ground, and preparing, in complete control.  One looks joyful, the other looks polished.  I'll take Donald O'Connor's joyful.  Any day.  Gene Kelly amazes me.  O'Connor thrilled me.  Julie and I discussed this afterwards.  She contends that she's always viewed O'Connor's dance as equal to Kelly's.  I had to remark that...having never seen it...that may work for her.  For me, it gets the short shrift to the ignorant public.  I was one of those a couple of weeks ago.  No more.

Debbie Reynolds was great, but felt under utilized.  It was obvious, as a veteran of a stage production of "Born Yesterday," that Jean Hagen was channeling Judy Holliday.  Still, a remarkable film.  I wasn't so sure it belonged so high on the list when I saw it there.  The longer I chew on my viewing of it...the more I'm getting it.  Still not sure, but getting there.   Definitely belongs on this list, I can say that.
















3.  "Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?"  (AFI Rank #67)
This film I consider the beginning of what many consider to be film's best era.  At least, in terms of this list.  This was the harbinger of what was to come in the late 60's and the 70's.  It's the beginning of film really growing up.

OK.  More blasphemy.  I'd never seen this film in its entirety, either.  The reason that it is blasphemy...is because in 2001, I played Nick in the play from which this movie was created.  It was a challenging, gut-wrenching experience, one that saw me playing opposite my then girlfriend, eventual wife, eventual ex-wife.  True story of the experience.  We were sharing a hallway backstage with a group of high school kids performing "42nd Street" in an adjacent, much larger, theatre.  It was always funny to me, as the four of us walked down that hallway, beat to shit from the night we'd just given the audience, and here are a bunch of energetic teenagers performing in one of the most innocent of musicals, playing like...well...like schoolkids.  It was quite the juxtaposition.  And, a metaphor for the play.  We were George and Martha, we'd seen it all, had just beaten each other up, and they were the newcomers, Nick and Honey, the ones who hadn't experienced it yet, but who would, if they kept on their path, be us some day.  I always get a slight smile when I remember that.

That has nothing to do with the film.  The film...the film is brilliant.  It's every bit the emotional gut punch that the play is, and surprisingly to this viewer, it works, just WORKS on film.  I, for reasons known only to me, still have most of the dialogue memorized, and the film got almost all of it.  Amazing.

This, from what I discovered, was Mike Nichols' first film.  You can see a meticulous theatre director at work.  Whether it's the mail left in the mail box outside the home on a Saturday night, or Martha leaving the turn signal on when she drunkenly drove on to the lawn, the attention to detail is stunning.  There is a shot stolen from the film "A Streetcar Named Desire" on the line Edward Albee stole from the play.  It's wonderful filmmaking.  Shit.  Forgot a moment.  If you don't know the script, try to watch the scene where George gets the gun and tell me he's not going to blow Elizabeth Taylor's head off.  Wonderful tension in that moment.

Another observation.  The play gives us intermissions.  So did Nichols.  Being as familiar as I am with the play, I knew when the intermissions were supposed to happen.  I was looking forward to the break.  Then I realized it was film, and I wasn't going to get that.  Except Nichols used those moments to give us a minute or two with no dialogue, and a complete resetting of the scene.  It's also shot monochromatically, at a time when color was the predominant choice.  I won't say black and white, because it's awfully gray.  It was the absolute right choice.

The acting is tremendous.  Elizabeth Taylor looks downright sexy as a slightly paunchy, slightly beat up souse.  Richard Burton was only 40, but looks every bit of 50.  George Segal didn't make me want to tell him to shut up, which he often does now, and Sandy Dennis was so wonderfully detached, yet entirely in the moment.  All four actors were nominated for Oscars, with Dennis and Taylor each winning.  The dialogue is repetitive, to be sure, and it's a bitch to perform, but it doesn't feel stilted or forced by any of the actors.  It's inspiring.  It's depressing.  It's...well...it's right.

Watch this film.  Please.  Appreciate it, because we won't see anything like it...thematically, theatrically, nor acting wise...well...not for a long time.

















4.  "Bringing Up Baby"  (AFI Rank #88)
I can see no reason for this film to be in the top 100, except for the following facts:  it stars Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant; and it is directed by Howard Hawks.  It also features the first use of the term "gay" to mean homosexual.  Beyond that...huh?  Elizabeth Taylor, mega movie star, is on the list ONLY for "Who's Afraid...," yet, Kate Hepburn appears on the list time and again, mostly in not very good films.  This, however, is the only appearance on the list by Hawks.  That must be the reason for its inclusion.  It must be.  
I tried to watch this with perspective.  I did.  I tried to think about the era during which it was made.  Nope.  I don't like it.  It manages to make the incredibly suave Cary Grant look foolish trying to play against type. 

I'll give the film this. Hepburn is delightfully natural, airy, and decidedly in control of her environment.  She is at once sexy as hell, yet decidedly cool.  A friend of mine was reminding me of the following Dorothy Parker quote:   “Well, let’s go back and see Katharine Hepburn run the gamut of human emotion from A to B.” 
Hepburn had far more chops than that. Her performances were nuanced at a time when nuance was new. I did enjoy her in this film.

Beyond that...nothing. It's a screwball comedy that often misses, drags the bits out too far/too long/not long enough/not far enough.

And there's a leopard. Or two.

Watch it because everyone should. I'm glad I have. I'm hoping I get through this list this year so I don't have to again.















5.  "Sunrise"  (AFI Rank #82)
I screwed up.  I put this and "Bringing Up Baby" in my Netflix Queue before I realized I'd be watching them back to back, and that they were from films 81-90.  I had already watched the first three films in this post, and I didn't have the chance to go back and fix the order...so I chose to do this.  I couldn't make the genres, era and AFI rank line up.  I sacrificed, this one time, on going back to back on AFI rank.  The rest of the 100 won't do this.  They're all lined up.  I digress.

Last up for this blog post is the silent film "Sunrise."  Subtitled "A Song Of Two Humans," this is a morality tale, featuring characters simply named "The Man,"  "The Wife," and "The Woman from the City."  Made in 1927 by FW Murnau, the German filmmaker responsible for the remarkable film "Nosferatu," "Sunrise" is lauded now as a technological masterpiece.

Keeping that in perspective, it was a very good, if not great, film.  The tracking shot was invented for this film.  There are lots of trickery with the camera, filmed within the camera, and lots of spectacular sets.  The story is familiar.  Good, represented by The Man, is tempted by Evil, represented by The Woman from the City.  He is asked to get rid of that which is complicating his life, his loyal, if unhappy wife.

Lots of stuff happens.  Eventually, things work out the way they should, just as the sun rises.  I'm not going to give a rundown.  Watch the film.  I watched this with perspective.  The above shot is beautiful.  Shadows, emotion, contrast, everything.  This film is a feast for the eyes.  The set piece of the fun fair is phenomenal.  The traffic jam, the town, everything.  It's a gorgeous film.

Then, there is the couple.  I have to confess that Janet Gaynor, who plays The Wife, is a dead ringer for a girl I dated in high school, and it was very hard to watch this without seeing her.  Ms. Gaynor's performance is at times over the top, at times incredibly subtle.  Just what silent film was great at.  The Man, played by George O'Brien, is awfully melodramatic at times.  But, that's precisely what he is supposed to be in this era of film.  The story, a little on the adult side...is a welcome change from our staid image of the era and what is portrayed in film.

I enjoyed this movie.  I really did.  Watch it, if you get the chance.



All righty!  That's FIVE!  The next five are films I've seen before, so I look forward to this year's perspective.  Thanks for reading.

Monday, January 19, 2015

Let's try this again...





...shall we? 

Last year, I attempted to watch all 100 of the Tenth Anniversary Edition AFI Top 100 Films in a calendar year.  It's a crazy little goal, but I think perspective, age, etc. are wonderful things, and seeing all of them in a year seems...not crazy.  To me.  It may to others.  I expect it does.

I stopped after about 27 in 2014, because LIFE got in the way, and then I just couldn't get started again...then...when things finally got a little saner, I had to watch 73 films in like 9 weeks.  That's more than I think anyone should/can do...and blogging that much would have been nigh impossible, so I'm back.  Trying it again in 2015.  Off to a good start already.  I've gotten through films 1-5 on this year's quest.  Huzzah!

OK.  Let's talk about how crazy I am.  Last year, I had (amazingly) only seen exactly half of the films in the list before I started, so I decided to break the year up by fives.  I would watch 5 films I hadn't watched, followed by 5 I had, and so on, until I got to 100. What sucks about that for this year, is I actually watched 15 movies I hadn't before, so this year, I start with the tally 65-35.  I didn't watch any new-to-me films in the top 100 last year, because I still had this notion in my head that I wanted to do this in a calendar year, even if I was 80 years old.
Can you imagine me trying to do this at this age?


Wait.  That's not the crazy.  Well.   Not the real crazy.  So.  Because I have the score at 65-35, I had to abandon the idea of 5 not watched, 5 watched and so on.  I toyed with the math.  I then came to the pattern that works best, and will probably help me get through this more easily.  I'm doing 5 I haven't watched prior, 5 I have, 5 I haven't...then 10 I have, 5 I haven't, 10 I have...to 100.  Yes.  I sat and did the pattern.  It works.  I end with 10 films I have watched before this year.

Oh, gentle reader, it gets so much more crazy.  ANYONE can watch the films 100-1 or 1-100.  Because I wanted to watch them 5 not watched, 5 watched, etc., that wouldn't work.  It takes a different kind of insane person to do what I did.  I created an Excel spreadsheet.  On it, I have columns with the following information: AFI Rank; Watched Previously; Title; Year Released; Personal Film # (2015).  That doesn't seem that out of line. Compose them all in their AFI order, then sort the data by the "Personal film #" column, and voila!  I can sort them by AFI Rank, resort them, and the ones I've watched go to the top of the list, in the order I've watched them, and the rest stay in order.  And, if I screw it up, I can always reshuffle the decks and start again....how simple.  The "Watched Previously" column was just an X in the cell.  Then, I just did a count function at the bottom of the column, and presto!  (That's 2 expressions like that so far - expect a 3rd) I didn't have to actually count.  I let technology do it for ME!   I broke the "AFI Rank" column of 100 down by groups of 10, and filled the cells with different colors, so that I could readily see that red is films 1-10, light blue is 11-20, and so on.  I'm visual, and I like to be able to see that easily.

Yes.  This is a visual representation of my brain.
My brain is Marty Feldman's eyes.


We're still barely skimming the surface of my crazy.

Remember the column marked "Year Released?"  Yeah.  I broke them down by what I defined as ERAS.  The first era was called "Pre "Snow White...""  because that was a breakthrough film, that kind of started the next portion of film history.  Turns out there are 11 films on the list from that era.  In case you were wondering.  Most of those are screwball comedies/silent films, which is why it got its own era.

Next, we have an era called "Snow White" to "Double Indemnity."   Often defined as Hollywood's "Golden Age," this era features a lot of advances in storytelling, technological breakthroughs, 2 of the greatest 3 films, and 4 of the top 10.  It also took place over only an 8 year period, and had 13 films included on the list, 7 of which  landed in the top 30.  I'm going to do a "Holy crap, look at the math on this" when this project is finished, but for now, that's a hell of an era.

Next I did an era called "Post WWII -1965."  There are a few films with some grittiness in this era, but the overwhelming theme of this era on the list is good times, Hitchcock, or wide, sweeping musicals/epics. It also contains a film that I'd probably say started the next era, but "The Sound of Music" came after it, so I left it in this portion.  ("Dr. Strangelove...")    A 20 year period, this era yielded 27 films in the top 100.

Next...well.  I defined it as "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" to "Raging Bull."  This is a 16 year period from 1966-1980, when film was perhaps at its best.  It features 30 films on the list from a time when filmmakers were finally freer to feature cursing, to show nudity, and to generally be more "real."  Huge technological strides were taken, and really terrific stories were told.  I ended it with "Raging Bull," because it was the last of these "grittier" films that I knew, and well, "Raiders of the Lost Ark" doesn't really feel like it's part of the same filmmaking era as "Midnight Cowboy."
Right now, you could use a pretty picture.  You've been reading a lot.


Next comes "Modern Films."  I don't really have to explain that.  It's the films of the last (at the time of the list) 27 years.  This era has 19 films in it, including THREE from 1994.

I assigned a "fill cell color" in the "Year Released" column for each era, again, because I'm visual.  So, now I can see what era a film falls in quickly.  Sorting this shit is getting easier.  And much, much more complicated.

So.  All of that, on its surface, still seems crazy, but not overtly so.  No, I've got deeper to go.  Now, we start really defining it.

I didn't want to watch any two films from the same group of 10 in terms of AFI Rank consecutively, nor did I want to watch any two films from the same era consecutively.  This presents organizational challenges, to say the least.  There are 57 films from two eras, after all, and trying to keep the #76 film from being watched back to back with #71 was going to be a bitch.

No.  I HAD to make it worse.  I then decided to use a "cell fill color" in the "Previously Watched" column.  The reason for this?  To define films by Genre.  The 9 categories of genre are:  Musical, Western, Crime, Horror, Epic, Drama, Comedy, War, Science Fiction.  Again, that seems reasonable.  It makes a visual depiction of the major genres of film.  I haven't totaled them up yet, but I will, I assure you.

Now.  Now, I define myself by the depths of my insanity.
The above may be slightly saner than me.  Might be.


To sum up:  I didn't want to watch films consecutively by any of the following parameters:  AFI Rank, Era or Genre.  Do you have any idea how insanely hard that is to do?  Two variables are a bitch.  Three?  Fuck it.  That's downright cuckoo.  Oh, it gets better.  Not only is it by those three, but I carefully scanned the list to make sure I didn't have major stars in back to back films, nor directors.  I also wanted the last 10 to be movies I really wanted to save until last.  That proved impossible.  I had 4 Spielberg movies.  He was THE director my age, and I wanted to save him for last.  I couldn't.

Anyway, as a result of this, I had to plot out all 100 films in advance.  I really did.  I'd never be able to keep that many things straight, otherwise.   It took me a few hours.

I also highlighted the titles of the film by the source I'd need to use to watch them.  Either DVR, something I owned, Netflix, Amazon Prime...or Netflix DVD.  It tried very hard not to rely on Netfilx DVD too much in the timing, because I'd hate to have to wait for a film in Queue and slow this down.  So.  I think I'm up to 4 sorting criteria thus far.  I admit, I blew one of them, as I hadn't done all the work yet, and had watched my first two films of the year, and had ordered two from Netflix DVD after, but again BEFORE I had completed this sheet, and they were both in the AFI 80's, and well...I decided Genre and Era outweighed AFI rank on that one, so...there are two from the 80's back to back in the first five.  Forgive me.

Here, my friends, is your visual evidence.  Bada Bing!  (told you there was a third expression like this coming) This may be used at my commitment trial.  It's illegible, but I'm not going to show you more, yet, because I'm not sure how to make this interactive online.  Not yet.  By the way, the yellow highlighted first 5 lines?  Those are the ones I've watched thus far this year.  I'll let you digest this, then write up the first 5 later in the week.



So.  I'm off again.  I've watched 5 already, taking my total from the list to 70 in my lifetime.  5 this year though, and that's the point of this exercise.  Hope you stay with me.  I'm going to stay with you this time.

Thanks.

Remember when this guy used to write about steak?
Can't he go back to that?