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50DMC #14: A Movie That Made You Cry

The 50 Day Movie Challenge asks one question every day, to be answered by a few paragraphs and a clip, if possible. Click here for the full list of questions.

Today’s prompt: What’s a movie that made you cry?

I like to think of myself as a pretty stoic moviegoer, able to take tearjerkers in stride and not get carried away with them…but it’s totally untrue. I cry in a lot of movies, and barely hold myself together in countless more. So there could be a ton of answers to this question, especially since it doesn’t even ask for a favorite or anything. Just any one that made me cry. I’ve just done a couple of older films; let’s jump way up to 2009 for this one, Pixar’s Up.

The five-minute segment of Up that tells the whole of Carl and Ellie’s life together is one of my favorites in all of cinema, and that’s a bold claim I rarely make for films this recent. Regardless of how you feel about the rest of the film (I enjoyed it, but it certainly pales in comparison to this), you can’t deny that this, taken alone, would be among the best shorts that Pixar has ever made, and by extension, that anyone has ever made. It’s joyous, it’s life-affirming, and it’s heart-wrenching. And all with no words whatsoever. It’s gotten to where all I have to do is think about this scene for a moment and I start tearing up. In a good way.

Best Films of 2011: So Far

The first half of 2011 is now behind us, and you know what that means…half-year lists! So here are my picks for the best films of the first half of 2011. Criteria – it had to be released in the US from January 1 through June 30, which means late 2010 releases that went wide in 2011 are not eligible, nor are festival releases I saw in 2011 that have not yet been released in theatres (i.e., most of that stuff at the LA Film Fest). Why do half-year lists? Well, firstly, because lists are fun. But also because film releases are usually stacked toward the end of the year, which means films released in the first half of the year, even really good ones, often get lost in the year-end shuffle. I didn’t limit it to a certain number of entries, just picked my top tier of favorites to write about, and then my second tier to list without writing about.

#6 – MEEK’S CUTOFF

Although Kelly Reichardt’s two previous films Old Joy and Wendy & Lucy are highly acclaimed, I have so far failed to catch up with either. When I heard she was doing a slow burn western with Michelle Williams (and an unrecognizable Bruce Greenwood), I vowed I wouldn’t let it pass me by, and I’m glad I didn’t. I won’t say I loved the film, because it’s frankly a tough film to love. Slow burn doesn’t quite cover it; the film is mostly the agonizingly slow progress a small group of Oregon Trail pioneers makes across a near-wasteland, their trust in their guide Meek dwindling with every hard-won step. It’s not easy to watch, but it wasn’t easy to live, either, and the film captures that with a visceral intensity that belies its slow pace. Williams’ strong central performance grounds the film further, while an existential streak pulls the other direction, giving the film a metaphorical level and heightening the hell that surrounds our struggling pioneers.

#5 – RANGO

Apparently it takes a live-action director like Gore Verbinski (even sharper than he was in the first Pirates of the Caribbean movie dipping his toes in the animation waters to get an amazing pop-culture pastiche like Rango – with somewhat abrasive and unusual character designs, a dryly witty script, and references to a boatload of movies from Chinatown to Apocalypse Now, there’s not much I didn’t like about Rango, which serves as an antidote to the cutesy, kidsy animated features that make up the majority of the landscape these days. Films that draw this much on cinematic history walk a fine line, as the references can easily come off unearned, but here, the very narrative of the identity-challenged gecko who takes on the persona of Rango, gunslinger extraordinaire, almost make it inevitable that he will build that persona out of iconic stories, and it all works perfectly. Crucially, it works whether you get the references or not, because it’s a well-written and well-made story on its own – realizing where the tropes and images come from is just icing on an already delicious cake.

#4 – JANE EYRE

My reaction on hearing that this film was in production was a) “another version of Jane Eyre” and b) “but wait, it’s directed by Sin Nombre director Cary Fukunaga and stars Michael Fassbender? Okay then.” And turns out the second reaction is more accurate, since this version of Jane Eyre betters all the other ones I’ve seen, really highlighting the gothic novel aspects while never losing sight of Jane, brought to life with a strong but subtle portrayal by Mia Wasikowski. This Jane is attractive, but not beautiful; she’s quiet, but not weak; and she’s both restrained and passionate as necessary. Fassbender brings a menace and a sadness to Rochester. This is also one of the first versions I’ve seen of the story that has a really strong sense of place, of being on the wild moors of northern England. For some reason most adaptations of Jane Eyre treat it as if it’s a Victorian novel, full of social niceties and straight-laced propriety, but this is a romantic gothic novel, with weirdness and madness all around the edges. This is the first time I’ve seen that in a film version, and it was breathtaking.

#3 – HANNA

When I heard Joe Wright was doing Hanna, I was a bit skeptical – I mean, his previous two films were both sumptuous period piece literary adaptations (Pride and Prejudice and Atonement). How would he handle an action film about a teenaged assassin? Answer: mighty well indeed. Hanna is a genre mashup of the best kind, mixing well-played long-take action with Run Lola Run style techno and James Bond espionage plots with the slow burn quality of more serious spy drama, with a thoughtful bit of coming of age drama as well. Saoirse Ronan is fantastic as the title character, and you’ll love to hate Cate Blanchett as her ice-cold nemesis.

#2 – CERTIFIED COPY

Technically a 2010 release in France, but it didn’t release at all in the US until 2011 (except festivals), so I’m counting it here. Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami’s first film outside his home country, set in the Europe of the arthouse cinema. Part philosophical treatise on the value of copies vs originals, as argued by art critic William Shimell and reader Juliette Binoche in the first half of the film, and half exploration of a marriage between the two which may or not be real – that is, it may be an original, or it may be a copy. In doing so, Kiarostami manages to comment on cinema, art, and life itself. It’s a very cerebral film, and one that took me some amount of time to warm to after seeing it, but it’s only been growing in my estimation since.

#1 – THE TREE OF LIFE

Terrence Malick’s newest film has been at the top of my most anticipated list, and while it’s gathered some mixed and even polarizing reactions from critics, it didn’t disappoint me a bit. He mixes the micro (one family in 1950s Texas, especially one specific summer from the point of view of the oldest son at age twelve) and the macro (the creation, evolution, and destruction of the entire universe), a concept that’s ambitious at the least, and for me at least, it ended up being an emotionally gripping and beautiful experience. Though it has a narrative in it, surrounding the twelve-year-old’s uneasy relationship with his dad, it really works on an associative, poetic level – pulling associations from the audience to make its illusive statements rather than laying it all out itself. But it’s clear that Malick has put his heart and soul into this film, and I was more than happy to go on the journey with him. Easily the best of the year so far for me.

Honorable Mentions

50DMC #13: Favorite Female Performance

The 50 Day Movie Challenge asks one question every day, to be answered by a few paragraphs and a clip, if possible. Click here for the full list of questions.

Today’s prompt: What’s your favorite female performance in a movie?

For the female version of the favorite performance question, I finally narrowed it down to two options – Naomi Watts in Mulholland Drive, a performance that vaulted her into the top echelons of Hollywood out of almost nowhere and one that continues to enthrall me every time I see the film, and a Bette Davis role in a film that I only saw for the first time last year, Whatever Happened to Baby Jane. Both roles are explicitly cinematic in that Watts’ character is a wanna-be actress who turns out to be far better than you’d expect, which all plays into the central conceit of the film in a marvelous and initially unexpected manner, and Davis’ character is a former child vaudeville star who failed in Hollywood and has never recovered, turning her into a bitter old woman whose desire for past glory sometimes throws her over the edge of sanity. Both partake of camp to some degree, deliberately overacting to achieve a specific emotional effect. I ended up going with Bette Davis almost solely because high quality clips from Mulholland Drive get suppressed on YouTube. Them’s the breaks. (There is one from MovieClips on YouTube now – they must’ve just started putting them on – but it starts later into the scene than I would like.)

By the time Whatever Happened to Baby Jane came out in 1962, Bette Davis had of course already been a major Hollywood star for thirty years. In fact, she was one of Warner Bros. most prominent and dependable (in terms of quality acting and solid films, though volatile in personality) stars, and one of the better businesswomen to force her way through the studio system. In one way, it’s kind of amazing that Robert Aldrich even got her to do Baby Jane, the character is so ugly most of the time, and almost a self-parody, but it’s also absolutely perfect. Aldrich is able to use clips from Davis’s 1930s films as the young Jane’s failed acting attempts (I do wonder how good of a sport Davis was about that), plus the crippled sister that Jane psychologically tortures is played by Joan Crawford – the two were long-time nemeses in the 1930s and 1940s, and their hatred of each other played out on screen here as well as off. Reports are that Joan filled her pockets with rocks for the scene where Bette has to drag her, increasing her weight just to make Bette have to work harder. So some of their intense outlashes at each other are probably not acting at all. But the scene that floored me in this film is Bette at her campy best – and make no mistake, I don’t mean campy in a bad way. High camp is a wonderful thing when done right, and there’s no one better at it than Davis, and there’s no better example of it than this, when Jane experiences a psychotic break and becomes young Jane again, the vaudeville star of yesteryear. It’s grotesque and terrifying and moving and wonderful.

50DMC #12: Favorite Male Performance

The 50 Day Movie Challenge asks one question every day, to be answered by a few paragraphs and a clip, if possible. Click here for the full list of questions.

Today’s prompt: What’s your favorite male performance in a movie?

Holy crap. Do you know how many performances I’ve seen in my life, when you consider that every film probably has, on average, three to five performances that would qualify? There’s absolutely no way this answer will have any long-term viability. Or possibly any short-term viability. Confession: I prewrote all of the entries up to this one, then scheduled them all, and have put off writing this one for about two weeks because I couldn’t figure out how to approach it. Now time’s almost up, and I’ve got to bite the bullet and just choose one. So I’m just choosing the first one that came into my head, which I certainly like a lot. Is it my favorite? Who knows. But I certainly love Humphrey Bogart as a performer, and Nicholas Ray’s In a Lonely Place contains his best performance, if you ask me. And you are asking me. Obviously.

Bogart generally played within a fairly set range of tough-talking, sad-eyed characters – gangsters, world-weary war vets, grizzled prospectors and the like. He brought his persona along with him to every role, making him a top contender for Greatest Movie Star lists but not usually for Best Actor ones. He did, in fact, win a Best Actor Oscar for The African Queen, but I think that role (and that movie, for that matter) pales in comparison with the previous year’s In a Lonely Place. Bogart’s In a Lonely Place character Dix Steele is a screenwriter whose name was made before the war, but he’s had little luck since and is generally considered to be washed up. He also has a reputation for his violent temper. We see this break out in a bar fight early on, but we also see his surprisingly sensitive side as he talks with a washed up Shakespearean actor. There are also times, as new love interest Laurel (Gloria Grahame, who also gives a career-best performance here) supports him as he starts writing again, that he is genuinely giddy with happiness. But other times, as when a murder investigation in which he is a suspect draws and closer and closer to him, paranoia and anger get the better of him. Dix is a complex character, capable of great sympathy and vulnerability, but with rage simmering under the surface, ready to erupt with scary intensity. Bogart plays him perfectly, taking a role that’s almost tailor-made for him and running with it to utmost.

This clip comes closer to the end of the film, so it’s spoilery in some ways, but not for the very end. It does contain kind of a cross-section of Dix’s character, though.

50DMC #11: Movie I Walked Out Of

The 50 Day Movie Challenge asks one question every day, to be answered by a few paragraphs and a clip, if possible. Click here for the full list of questions.

Today’s prompt: What’s a movie you walked out of in theatres?

As far as I can remember, there’s only one film I’ve walked out of in a theatre because I didn’t want to watch the rest of it. That was White Fang when I was about ten. We didn’t go out to a lot of movies when I was little, and most of my home viewing had been classics, so even though this was Disney, it was apparently too much for me to take. I remember being scared when the coffin they were transporting fell down the mountain and the corpse fell out of it, and between that and the extra-loud sound that had my mom none-too-happy, we were done and left. I’ve never watched the whole thing, but I’m pretty sure that part is in, like, the first ten minutes.

Since then, I’ve pretty much stuck it out for everything; the only things I’ve left early were festival screenings where I had to rush to the next thing, and the second half of a rep cinema double feature, where I was rushing to get to a screening at a different rep cinema few miles away. That one was The Virgin Spring, which I HATED leaving, but still haven’t managed to see the rest of yet. I will, though. White Fang…not so sure.

Looking up clips on YouTube, the whole movie’s uploaded, and the part that scared me is right at the end of the second clip, so it’s within the first twenty minutes. I was close. :)

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