Month: August 2010

Great Scenes: The Big Sleep

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Originally posted on Row Three.

There’s pretty much nothing I don’t love about Howard Hawks’ The Big Sleep – Bogart’s world-weary but somehow still idealistic private eye Philip Marlowe, the chemistry between him and Lauren Bacall (now an off-screen couple starring in their second film together), the cast of colorful supporting characters like Martha Vickers as Bacall’s crazy sister, the witty and caustic script, the florid dialogue, yes, even the fact that some of the mystery isn’t even resolved. I love the very messiness of it. But when I think back about The Big Sleep, the scene that usually pops into my head is essentially extraneous to the main mystery, is unrelated to Marlowe’s relationship with Bacall’s character, and is basically an all-but-unnecessary interlude to the entire rest of the film. I’m talking about the scene where Philip Marlowe goes to a pair of rare bookstores to follow up on a clue.

Now, there are two parts to the scene, set in two bookstores. The first is plot-essential, as Marlowe follows up on a clue that leads him to Geiger’s Rare Books – it is Geiger who holds the promissory gambling notes that are being held over the Sternwood family. It’s really the second half of the sequence in the second bookstore that I find so memorable, but I’ve included both in the clip merely because Bogart delights me so much in the first part. Marlowe affects an effeminate persona with far more ease than you’d expect, presenting the brusque clerk with a erudite proto-nerd in search of rare editions. But Geiger’s is a front, as Marlowe is hoping this conversation will prove, and he is correct – the clerk sluffs off his queries without ever realizing the books he mentions don’t exist, while surreptitiously motioning a suspicious-looking character into the back room. I love that even after their business is complete from a plot perspective, she goes out of her way to attack him for saying “CER-amics” instead of “cer-A-mics,” understanding at some level his contempt for her and determined to regain the upper hand – he rebuffs with a backhanded slag suggesting the superficiality of her knowledge, leaving her little recourse beyond a childish retort.

After Marlowe establishes that Geiger’s bookshop ain’t all about the books, the plot requires him to wait a little while so he can tail Geiger to find out more. This could be done in a number of ways, none of which necessitate the second half of this sequence. But instead, we get a tiny little evocative scene as Marlowe goes to the bookstore across the street ostensibly to get a description of Geiger, where the girl DOES know something about rare books, confirming what we’d already guessed about Geiger’s being a fake. More importantly, she’s a quick study and figures out almost before Marlowe tells her what he’s up to, and gives him a description of Geiger with a level of observation worthy of Sherlock Holmes. Her immediate connection to Marlowe is both a mutual admiration based on intellect perceived in a matter of seconds and an attraction based on the promise of a brief but memorable encounter with a detective (a rather dashing and dangerous profession, at least in the minds of those who read novels, as she likely does) – she doesn’t hesitate at all to close her shop to spend an hour alone with this man, a stolen interlude before she puts her glasses back on and returns to the librarian-esque stereotype of her job and he walks out the door to continue his romanticized detective work.

Watching this scene, it feels like there’s a whole story here, a whole movie that could be written from this woman’s point of view about her brief involvement with this mystery. We hope she turns up again in the story we see, but she does not. Her character doesn’t even have a name. Yet she feels like a fully-formed character, and Dorothy Malone gives her far more of a personality and a presence than the script really necessitates. In a mere three and a half minutes of screen time, she manages to make us forget about Lauren Bacall’s existence in the film, and make her single scene as memorable as anything else in this supremely memorable film. I’ve only seen Malone in this and in Douglas Sirk’s Written on the Wind (for which she won a well-deserved supporting Academy Award ten years after The Big Sleep), but based on those two roles alone, I salute her.

Haven 1×06-1×08

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My intention was to write about these episodes as I watch them, preferably close to when they air, but I got sidetracked and three weeks happened. Oh well. We’ll just call this the least conventionally scheduled television column ever.

Post contains plot set-ups, but not spoilers for the endings, except in the case of one subplot, which I’ve set aside in a spoilery section at the bottom.

After my previous post about Haven, I got enough people interested in it that I hoped it would get better and show my cautious optimism was not in vain. And I’m happy to say that with the past three episodes, the show is starting to address the issues I had with it. Episode 1×07: “Sketchy” is easily the best of the season so far, and gives me great hope that the show is hitting its stride for real now. The characters are starting to become more interesting in and of themselves, and patterns are starting to emerge in the seemingly random weird events. The talk of the Troubles is getting more pervasive, suggesting that they are building toward a strong season finale.

In “Fur”, a man is torn to pieces in his car by something that appears to be a wolf – of course, this being Haven, our thoughts as well as those of Audrey and Nathan jump straight to werewolves, but, this being Haven, that answer is probably too easy. Could it be just a giant wolf that the hunters can take care of on their own? Could it be a hex by Jess Minion, a so-called witch living on the outskirts of town who is heavily disliked by the local hunters for her animal-friendly stance? Or is it something even more sinister and unusual? Well, this is Haven.

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The doctor Eleanor is starting to become a more central character, which is good for a number of reasons – she’s interesting and funny and she knows about the Troubles, which is helping to ground the show. She’s being set up as a wise confidant for Audrey, a role that is needed and has been largely missing up to this point. I also really like Jess Minion and her addition to the show is definitely helping Nathan come into himself. Plus, yeah, okay. I like her Quebecois accent.

Nathan’s innate inability to relate to people becomes explicit and a source of humor in “Sketchy,” as Jess tries to make up excuses to see him and he, much to Audrey’s amusement, is a total dunce about the whole thing. The monster of the week, too, is really good. People are being killed in really bizarre ways, from crushed and twisted in unnatural ways to having their faces suddenly go blank. The way this one plays out had me fully enthralled, and it may be the one time on the show so far that main plot and subplots have all worked so well.

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I’m not sure “Ain’t No Sunshine” was quite as strong an episode as “Sketchy,” but I’m fairly invested now and definitely ready to see the show through the finale. In this one, a couple of stabbing murders lead back to a hospital, where grieving family members are convinced their loved ones were killed by a “Dark Man.” The effects and tension were quite well done here, and aside from a slightly too-easy resolution, I can’t really fault the main story. And I liked what they did with the Nathan-Jess subplot during this episode, but the way they left it and set up the rest of the season in terms of romance subplots? Not so much. I’ll have some spoilers about that in a second. The Audrey-doesn’t-have-friends running gag ran a little too long.

So far, what ties all of the monsters of the week together is that they’re unintentional monsters – nobody who has these strange abilities can control them, and often they don’t even know they have them until Audrey and Nathan figure it out. Also, most of the powers, though not quite all, seem to be triggered by anger or fear, so perhaps heightened emotions are involved in some way. So, are these strange abilities themselves The Troubles, or are The Troubles something else entirely that merely cause these abilities to manifest? What happened last time they were here, why doesn’t anyone speak about them (except for Eleanor), and what does Audrey’s mother have to do with it? These aren’t really new questions since my post three episodes back, but I care about the answers now more than I did then.

*SPOILERS for the end of Ain’t No Sunshine, romance subplot, after the screencap*

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Giving Nathan a love interest OTHER than Audrey was smart, and they gave him a pretty interesting one, too. The end of this episode hints that they’re going to go the more conventional Nathan/Audrey ship, which….no. Boring. Done. The only bright spot is that the way Jess framed her leaving seems ripe for her to return. She doesn’t seem the type that would just run away to protect herself at others’ expense, so I can only guess that she actually has something to do with the Troubles and will eventually have to return by the finale. I do hope so.

Summer 2010 Soundtrack

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Or perhaps more correctly, this is the soundtrack to my own personal summer 2010, but hey. Semantics aside, these are basically my earworms of the summer. The few criteria I worked with: they had to be songs I’m listening to almost constantly this summer, or keep coming back to off their respective albums; they had to be off albums that were current (a full list of my earworms right now would include some Joan Jett, but that’s really it outside of this year’s releases, and that would seem anomalous); and they had to be good songs for listening to while driving with the windows down. At first I tried finding all really upbeat, summery songs, but that quickly ran askew of the first criterion, but even the slower/mellower songs on here rise to pretty awesome levels by the end. So it’s cool.

Download the full .zip file here.

01. The New Pornographers – Crash Years
02. Mates of State – Long Way Home (Tom Waits cover)
03. Admiral Radley – Sunburn Kids
04. Stars – We Don’t Want Your Body
05. Metric – Black Sheep
06. Seaspin – Reverser
07. Los Campesinos! – Romance is Boring
08. Arcade Fire – Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)
09. Beach House – Zebra
10. Charlotte Gainsbourg – Time of the Assassins
11. Broken Social Scene – All to All
12. Kathryn Calder – Slip Away
13. Kaki King – The Betrayer
14. The New Pornographers – Sweet Talk, Sweet Talk
15. Jenny & Johnny – Big Wave
16. She & Him – In the Sun
17. Kathryn Calder – Castor And Pollux
18. Best Coast – Our Deal
19. Arcade Fire – Ready to Start
20. Stars – Wasted Daylight
21. Broken Social Scene – Meet Me in the Basement

Haven – Season One Til Now

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*No plot spoilers*

Despite Syfy’s rebranding in an ostensible attempt to expand beyond science fiction programming, they appear to be committed to bringing original series with a dash of the deliciously weird, and Haven is this year’s summer debut. Lead character Audrey (Emily Rose) is an FBI agent who goes to the Maine seaside town of Haven following up on a regular investigation, but finds things in Haven to be more than a little freaky – as in, people who create massive storms when they get angry or whose dreams turn into very destructive realities.

She stays around firstly because she’s a little bit fascinated by the crazy stuff going on, but also because it seems her long-lost mother came through Haven decades previously and she has something of a personal quest to find out what she can about that. Meanwhile, she forms a de facto partnership with Nathan (Lucas Bryant), the junior member of the father-and-son police force in town (who has his own oddities, including an inability to feel pain).

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Haven is up to five episodes now, and a few longer arcs are already coming to play, notably the rivalry/feud between Nathan and Duke (Eric Balfour), the town’s excuse for a criminal element, which is largely confined to black market trading and pissing off the constabulary whenever he gets the chance. There’s also increasing mention of “the troubles,” apparently a previous outbreak of strange events that seems to be cycling back again.

I hope that the ongoing “troubles” arc addresses at some point what causes all the strange things to happen, because I’m all for weird and unexplained things, but Haven takes its weirdness a little too much in stride. There’s no Scully character here to try to find the logical explanation, yet the show also feels like it’s trying to take place in a “real” world in which the things that happen would be at least looked at askance. The only explanation for why they’re not is that people are used to such things in Haven, but why – and why does Audrey jump so quickly into that mindset when she’s the token outsider? The mundane and the unnatural can meld into some pretty great television, as many sci-fi shows have taught us, but the mix seems unwieldy in Haven.

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I’m also not drawn in as much by Audrey and Nathan as characters as I’d like to be – Duke is a much better character both as written and as acted, and I find the part where he’s on-screen much more compelling. Audrey’s not bad, and does have her moments when the dialogue helps her out a little bit (and she’s better when she’s playing off Duke), but Nathan is much too flat and bland for what his role in the show ought to be. He seems to be the main connection to “the troubles” (he’s the one who senses first that they’re back), but he’s so uninteresting that I’m only barely interested in finding out what “the troubles” are.

I’m still watching, but if this weren’t a summer show and had more competition for my time, I doubt I’d keep it up for much longer. That said, I do enjoy the almost lackadaisical quality of cable shows – I’m not sure how to describe what I mean by the difference between cable shows (especially Syfy and USA ones), but they just feel a lot more fun and less stressed than basic network shows. It might be the shorter running time, 13 episodes rather than 22, or it might be the lowered fear of cancellation, or the lack of pressure to appeal to everybody in the world, but I seem to be much more willing to keep watching cable shows lately, even when I have issues with them. I dunno. Maybe that’s the summer talking.

Haven on Syfy.com
Haven on hulu (all five episodes so far still available, but the pilot expires in 2 days, on August 13th)

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