Saturday, May 11, 2024

Challengers


CHALLENGERS   ***

Luca Guadagnino
2024
























IDEA:  Two former best friends and tennis doubles teammates - now bitter rivals for the affection of a former tennis prodigy, who's married to one of them and used to date the other - face off in a Challenger match.



BLURB:  Tennis, lust, power, and cinematic form are inextricably bound up in Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers, an often unwieldy but clever and energetic relationship melodrama. In Justin Kuritzkes’s script, tennis serves as a metaphor for the love triangle between Tashi, Art, and Patrick, its constant volleys and shifts in advantage echoed in the trio’s push-and-pull seductions and attacks. They all take turns as both player and ball in a torrid erotic game that’s all about scoring the winning point. This sort of amour fou gamesmanship is fairly rote stuff, and there’s disappointingly little depth to the characters to make their affairs transcend the petulant devices of a group of affluent, insecure, self-absorbed children (which is, to be fair, what they are). But it’s ultimately less the story than the visual and sonic language of Challengers that teases and thrills, the ways in which Guadagnino extends the tennis metaphor into the structuring principle for his film’s very form. The back-and-forth gameplay of tennis inflects everything from the narrative’s ping-ponging jumps in time to the swish-panning camera movements to Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’s score, which sounds like a techno translation of a tennis ball caught in an endless rally. For better and worse, Challengers fully embraces the repetition that’s an essential characteristic of the game; it has no wariness about how often it rehashes the competition between its protagonists, nor is it timid in its copious use of slow motion to protract a moment or linger sensuously on a face (or chest). Yet these formal expressions viscerally serve a thematic purpose, locating in repetition, frustration, fatigue, and calisthenic pleasure the ingredients of tennis as much as desire.

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Dreadnaught


DREADNAUGHT   ***1/2

Yuen Woo-ping
1981























IDEA:  A timid laundry man must rise to the occasion to take on a vicious, mute fugitive who will stop at nothing to kill him. 



BLURB:  As an unfettered showcase for ingenious, virtuosic martial arts choreography, Dreadnaught is pretty much impossible to fault. Without anything resembling a lull in its 95-minute runtime, the film serves up a breathless parade of action sequences that execute seemingly impossible acrobatic maneuvers with unpretentious, kinetic grace. A few standouts: a dance-fight between two pairs of men in Chinese lion costumes; a doctor’s visit in which the patient’s malady is treated with a dizzying flurry of slaps to the abdomen by hands aflame; and a battle on a dark stage with the literally two-faced villain, whose masked heads flip around like Janus on speed. Nearly every action in Dreadnaught is carried out in the fashion of kung fu, including a laundry-drying routine and a tailor’s fitting - literal fashion statements! It’s not only Yuen Woo-ping’s signature elaborate choreography that wows, but the way he edits the action in staccato rhythms to create a sense of crackling and ceaseless energy; the energy of bodies in motion, and of film as their conduit.

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

A Couple


A COUPLE   ***

Frederick Wiseman
2022























IDEA:  In the wake of her husband's death, Sofia Tolstoy laments the patriarchal oppression she experienced during her marriage.



BLURB:  A Couple is an interesting experiment that becomes fascinating when considered in the context of Frederick Wiseman’s oeuvre. The film is almost the perfect inverse of the director’s typical, documentary film: instead of a bustling social setting, it takes place entirely in depopulated nature, and instead of observing a panoply of people it features just one. Wiseman’s documentaries capture the sprawling canvas of society through a rhizomatic accretion of details, but here, in lieu of its physical presence, society is depicted through the didactic direct-address of monologue. Ultimately, it’s structure that binds A Couple to Wiseman’s other work; in formal terms, through his characteristic alternation between static interstitial shots and human activity, and in thematic terms, through his exploration of the structure of an institution, in this case heterosexual marriage. The film suggests that it is only divorced from her geographical and cultural context - literally removed from the material confines of society - that Sophia Tolstoy or any other 19th-century wife could voice her grievances as a woman. Wiseman underscores the temporal dislocation by adapting Tolstoy’s words into an entirely different language, recited by another in what amounts to a theatrical reading. It’s this quality of ventriloquy and the social realities it betrays that, ironically, make A Couple feel quite like a documentary after all.

Monday, April 15, 2024

A Matter of Life and Death


A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH   ****

Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger
1946
























IDEA:  Having miraculously survived after jumping from his burning plane during World War II, a British pilot conducts a romance with the radio operator he had communicated with before the incident while he simultaneously prepares to stand before a celestial court and defend his right to live.



BLURB:  Some films operate at such an audacious and formidable level - conceptually, thematically, aesthetically - that you can’t help but give yourself over to their astonishments. Powell and Pressburger’s A Matter of Life and Death is one such film. A quixotic, genre-mashing fantasia from an industry and an era not especially known for their formal daring, the film executes its loopy premise with a full-throated bravado and visual elegance that are, to risk cliché, heavenly. But A Matter of Life and Death is so confident in its approach and so ravishing in its design that it resists cliché, even as it openly courts it in Borzagian appeals to the transcendent power of love. Like that filmmaker-romantic, Powell and Pressburger exult in the possibilities of cinema to capture and expand the imagination. Their opulent, thoughtful use of Technicolor, courtesy of DP Jack Cardiff, remains nearly unmatched in sheer beauty, and their astute sense of how and when to employ practical effects - animation, motorized sets, puppetry - yields movie magic more potent than CGI. Such formal ingenuity serves a film that’s both a top-shelf work of fantasy and a distinctly postwar time capsule, and in ways that are inextricable. Portraying, wittily, a cosmic legal battle for one man’s right to life and love in the wake of World War II, A Matter of Life and Death fancifully recovers a human(ism) lost during the war and uses it to disarm the deadly follies of nationalism. Powell and Pressburger land their shots at both the British and Americans in keenly sarcastic ways; they know, having just won the war together, that the two are as close as Peter and June. Could the actual human romance at the center of the film be more convincing, and could June have been something more than a stock female love interest? Sure, but some films are so grand that their spells overwhelm, offering visions of life (and death?) that make other concerns finally feel so puny.

Saturday, April 6, 2024

My Little Loves


MY LITTLE LOVES   **1/2

Jean Eustache
1974
























IDEA:  Sent by his grandmother to live with his mother for a year in the city, the pubescent Daniel falls in with a crowd of older boys. 



BLURB:  My Little Loves is sort of an anti-coming-of-age film, in that its pubescent protagonist goes from a budding sociopath who rubs up against a girl at mass to, by the end of a languid two hours, a budding sociopath who smokes a cigarette and more unashamedly feels up a girl. Played by the gangly, wide-eyed yet impassive Martin Loeb, Daniel is at once an unassuming delinquent and a sullen cypher, like a more taciturn Antoine Doinel, or Laurent Chevalier from Malle’s Murmur of the Heart. Eustache’s austerely minimalist, deliberately stilted Bressonian style is an odd fit for material like this, sapping a portrait of childhood of its characteristic nervous energy and excitement, leaving instead a sense of glacial, almost monotonous drift. If the director’s intent was to convey the indeterminacy of this phase of growing up, he only partly succeeds, and more because of the hauntingly elliptical blackouts that punctuate most of his scenes than anything in the writing or the acting. Rather, the pleasures of My Little Loves are granular and sensory, largely attributable to the lush, limpid cinematography of Néstor Almendros, who spins visual poetry out of even the most meandering episodes of this curiously static quasi-bildungsroman. 

Sunday, March 31, 2024

Grand Jeté


GRAND JETÉ   **1/2

Isabelle Stever
2022

























IDEA:  A former ballerina, now working as a dance instructor, engages in an affair with her estranged adult son.



BLURB:  In Grand Jeté, motherhood is a sadomasochistic ritual as precious as it is perverse. When we’re first introduced to Nadja (Sarah Grether), however, it’s not in the context of maternity but the vocation she long ago substituted for her role as a mother. Instead of rearing a child, Nadja received her licks as a ballerina, pushing the limits of her body through an art at once graceful and unforgivingly grueling until her body could take it no more. Constantin Campean’s camera cleaves to Nadja’s undulating bones and scarred skin in closeups so tight they become synecdochic of a woman’s crumbling midlife prospects. This sense of loss drives her to engage in an emphatically Oedipal relationship with her estranged son, through which she finds a figurative and literal second chance at motherhood. It’s not exactly clear, in this largely withholding film, what’s driving the son (besides an evident shared affinity for bodily punishment and drinking from the sink faucet), but then this isn’t really the story of his desire. While it often plays like a leaden Piano Teacher-like erotic provocation, Grand Jeté becomes, in its final moments, the dementedly poignant fable of a mother’s (re)birth.

Saturday, March 23, 2024

The Boy Friend


THE BOY FRIEND   ***

Ken Russell
1971























IDEA:  In 1920s London, an assistant stagehand reluctantly steps into the lead role of a musical called "The Boy Friend" after the leading lady breaks her ankle.



BLURB:  The musical has often been noted as the one classical Hollywood genre in which narrative concerns can be subordinated to spectacle. Ken Russell’s The Boy Friend takes this logic to its extreme, tipping the scales so emphatically in favor of the spectacle that the narrative is close to a non-entity. Like the last act of a Busby Berkeley musical or the dream ballet sequence of a Freed-era MGM musical engorged to (long) feature length, The Boy Friend proceeds as a series of lavish production numbers, each one more decadently realized than the last. There’s a mythological Grecian bacchanal in a verdant wood; dancing figures atop supersized turntables; people dressed as glittery playing card suits climbing a golden lattice; and, in a number that must have resonated in an era of psychedelia, a frolicsome/feverish jaunt through a mushroom village. The implication in the Berkeley musicals - that these allegedly stage-bound spectacles could only ever be executed, and appreciated, through the medium of film - is made explicit by Russell through the meta-textual device of a Hollywood director viewing the stage show within the movie, intending to adapt it for the screen. Whether or not Russell’s film faithfully depicts (is adapt even the right word?) Sandy Wilson’s "The Boy Friend" is beside the point in this deeply irreverent pastiche, which seems to want nothing more than to fill our eyes and ears with only the borrowed, sugary excesses of movie-musical tropes until we're stuffed silly. One’s viewing ratio of pleasure-to-pain will vary, but the chutzpah of the endeavor is undeniable.