Showing posts with label Fred Murphy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fred Murphy. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

The Dead


 












Director John Huston

Huston on the set with his son Tony

author James Joyce, 1904











































THE DEAD                A                                                                                                            Great Britain  Ireland  USA  (83 mi)  1987  d: John Huston

A few light taps upon the pane made him turn to the window.  It had begun to snow again.  He watched sleepily the flakes, silver and dark, falling obliquely against the lamplight.  The time had come for him to set out on his journey westward.  Yes, the newspapers were right: snow was general all over Ireland.  It was falling on every part of the dark central plain, on the treeless hills, falling softly upon the Bog of Allen and, farther westward, softly falling into the dark mutinous Shannon waves.  It was falling, too, upon every part of the lonely churchyard on the hill where Michael Furey lay buried.  It lay thickly drifted on the crooked crosses and headstones, on the spears of the little gate, on the barren thorns.  His soul swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe and faintly falling, like the descent of their last end, upon all the living and the dead.

—James Joyce The Dead, last short story from Dubliners, originally written in 1904, with this longer story added in 1907, not published until 1914, The Dead by James Joyce

John Huston began his career as a screenwriter, and one of the obvious strengths of his work is his attention to dialogue, relying heavily upon literary adaptations as a director, where the great majority of his 36 features, and certainly his best-known ones, were drawn from novels, short stories, or plays, with Huston awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Literature from Trinity College Dublin.  In his storied career, one need only think of THE MALTESE FALCON (1941), a Dashiell Hammett novel, THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE (1948), an adventure novel by B. Traven, KEY LARGO (1948), based on a Maxwell Anderson play, THE ASPHALT JUNGLE (1950), a W.R. Burnett novel, THE AFRICAN QUEEN (1951), a C.S. Forester novel, MOBY DICK (1956), a Herman Melville novel, The Misfits, (1961), written by playwright Arthur Miller, THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING (1975), a Rudyard Kipling short story, and WISE BLOOD (1979), a Flannery O’Connor novel, among others, while this last and final film is an adaptation of what is perhaps James Joyce’s most perfect story from Dubliners, a collection of short stories focusing upon a series of characters connected only by the city in which they reside, written when Irish nationalism was at its peak, when a search for a national identity and purpose was paramount, made while he was sitting in a wheelchair while hooked up to an oxygen tank, on the verge of his own death (four months after shooting ended), suffering from terminal emphysema, bringing a vividly personalized atmosphere to the set.  Something of a love letter to Ireland and a merging of kindred artistic spirits, the youthful writer and the aging filmmaker, both coming to terms with their impending mortality, each wondering how they would be remembered and what they would leave behind, borrowing several biographical details from Joyce’s life, as both he and Gabriel Conroy reviewed books for the pro-British Dublin Daily Express, taught in college, became Europeanized, and were largely indifferent to the nationalistic aims of their native country.  Heavily impacted by Joyce ever since his mother smuggled him a copy from Paris during the 1920’s of the then-banned novel Ulysses, writing in his 1980 autobiography An Open Book, “It was probably the greatest experience that any book has ever given me,” actually influencing his decision to move to Ireland in 1952, thoroughly disgusted by the McCarthyist witch hunt spreading through Hollywood at the time, wanting to escape the “moral rot” ruining the lives of many of his friends in the movie industry, eventually becoming an Irish citizen.  Adapted by his son Tony Huston, with an opening dedication “For Maricela,” the director’s longtime nurse and companion Maricela Hernández, this mysteriously complex film also stars his daughter Angelica Huston, who he previously directed in PRIZZI’S HONOR (1985), winning her a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award, where the cast is all-Irish except Angelica Huston, but she grew up in Ireland, having moved there when she was just two years old, and doesn’t miss a beat, with most of the cast coming from Dublin’s Abbey Theatre company, yet what really stands out is the power of the performances.  Angelica Huston has never been so, well - - angelic, for lack of a better word, as she’s usually typecast as a much tougher person, darker and more imposingly complex, an actress whose strong onscreen physicality and elegance is hard to underestimate, yet here she plays Gretta Conroy, the wife of an academic, Gabriel Conroy (Donal McCann), modeled directly after Joyce’s wife, Nora Barnacle (also serving as Joyce’s role model for Molly Bloom in Ulysses), playing a more minor part than her husband, easily overlooked through most of the story.  While she’s outwardly kind and socially considerate, the picture of etiquette and social grace, the story turns on a dime near the end, where out of nowhere she becomes the central focus, almost by accident, as her actions suddenly influence the mood of the entire story, taking a decidedly melancholy trajectory, where all the banalities of ordinary existence and the much anticipated social pretensions, captured in all its drunken comedy and pathos, must be endured in order to appreciate the full emotional power of such a magnificently realized finale, like a beam of light streaming in opening our eyes to what the story is really driving at, suggesting a love for life can also express itself as a complicated love for the dead, becoming a labor of love so unlike Huston’s earlier films, beautifully blending in to the social setting of the turn-of-the-century era. 

Joyce had a complex relationship with Dublin, and Ireland, leaving the city for good after 1909, and after 1912 he never set foot in Ireland again, moving to Italy and then Paris where he was surrounded by like-minded contemporary writers like Marcel Proust, Ernest Hemingway, Samuel Beckett, Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot, and W.B. Yeats, where his reasons were both deeply personal and part of broader societal trends, reflective of what he saw as the spiritual “deadness” of Dublin, while also decrying Irish society’s conservatism, censorship, religious hypocrisy, and zealous nationalism, though his spiritual and artistic engagement with the city continued until the end of his life, while according to Huston, “All I know about filmmaking is in this film.”  Written in 1907 when he was just 25 from an apartment in Trieste, Italy, more than a decade before Ulysses was published in 1922, the film is about memory, loss, and the lasting power of the dead over the living, and while it’s a faithful adaptation, there are additions not included in the original source material, reassigning numerous lines to different characters, while also introducing an entirely new character in Mr. Grace (Seán McClory), who eloquently recites an English translation of an 8th-century Middle Irish poem Donal Óg.  Taking place in Dublin in 1904, a Feast of the Epiphany dinner party, held every year 11 days after Christmas, is hosted by two spinster sisters, Kate and Julia Morkan (Helena Carroll and Cathleen Delany), and their unmarried niece, Mary Jane (Ingrid Craigie), all music teachers, as horse-drawn carriages arrive with formally-dressed guests on the snowy night, where we learn that for years the sisters have functioned as the official center of the city’s cultural world.  While Joyce’s writing provides access to Gabriel’s internal, stream-of-consciousness perspective, including his rapidly shifting observations, memories, and emotional responses, a vantage point that is practically impossible to replicate on the screen, instead Huston fluctuates between newly arriving guests, a joyous occasion seamlessly shifting the perspectives, expressing a range of disagreements among the guests, often confronted with uneasy realities, where it’s easy to get swept away by the accumulative power of the experience, yet it’s also hard not to admire his purely cinematic adaptation for its faithfulness to the time period through lighting, costumes, music, and such eloquent diction, where the acute eye for detail is impressive.  Shot by Fred Murphy, it looks utterly spectacular.  Gabriel is sarcastically teased by the fiery temperament of Molly Ivors (Maria McDermottroe), an Irish nationalist colleague who berates him for writing for The Daily Express, which she refers to as an “English rag,” suggesting he should be ashamed of himself for betraying his Irish identity, calling him a “West Briton,” “someone who looks to England for our salvation instead of depending on ourselves alone,” a reference to the political slogan of Sinn Féin, as she leaves the party early, stomping off to attend a Republican meeting.  Over the course of the festive dinner party, where guests discuss topics of musical and local interest, Mr. Browne (Dan O’Herlihy) arrives with flowers which he likens to the gifts of the Magi (which does not appear in the Joyce story), featuring plenty of music and dancing, with the men hovering around a table in the next room with the drinks, some overzealously, as guests find themselves haunted by spectral figures of an older, near-forgotten Dublin, what Huston’s friend Orson Welles characterized as a “myth of the past.”  Yet Joyce was a literary realist, depicting the sensory texture of thought and feeling, where that consciousness constitutes the essence of human life, yet the past may continually push and prod its way into the present, or may leap into our thoughts at any time, and while the characters may be prone to nostalgia, the story is not.  The festive dancing sequences mirror equally enthralling scenes in a Jane Austen novel, as they are everpresent, with audiences watching the action from behind the camera.  When the dancing subsides, Mary Grace plays a virtuosic showpiece on the piano while Aunt Julie performs a Bellini aria for the guests, though her singing voice has clearly diminished with age, as the camera peers through back rooms filled with memorabilia, a reminder of the ephemeral nature of life, while Mr. Grace reads an extraordinary recitation about a girl whose life is ruined by her passionate love for a man who promised her things he failed to deliver, only to abandon her, as if in the absence of God, Broken Vows [The Dead (John Huston, 1987)] YouTube (3:38).  While Gretta says nothing, the camera lingers on her placid countenance, thinking something only to herself, where it makes you wonder about the poem’s effect on her.     

You have taken the east from me; You have taken the west from me
You have taken what is before me and what is behind me;
You have taken the moon, you have taken the sun from me,
And my fear is great that you have taken God from me! 

Mirroring those internalized, personal reflections, the conversation turns to whatever happened to the many great operatic tenors that once flourished in Dublin, lamenting that so few are like them today, turning to the tableside expert in the matter, Bartell D’Arcy (Frank Patterson), a celebrated tenor with a sizeable reputation.  While the name Caruso is mentioned, Aunt Kate recalls someone from her youth by the name of Parkinson, a name no one else recalls, yet just thinking about him stirs something inside, her eyes glistening in tears, with the camera holding on her face in close-up.  This is the magic of memory, where the long-dead continue to live inside, haunting us in ways that nothing else can.  As the guests begin to leave, politely exchanging pleasantries, Gretta gets halfway down the stairs before she pauses, struck by what she hears, as the tenor D’Arcy is singing The Lass of Aughrim offscreen, an Irish variant of a Scottish ballad, a song that shifts back and forth between two former lovers lamenting the failings in their relationship, accentuating the imperfections and fragility of human love which lead to heartbreak and to untimely death, sending her into a prayer-like trance, framed by a stained-glass window, immaculately dressed like the Virgin Mary, with a white shawl around her neck and shoulders, representing purity in every sense of the word, The Lass of Aughrim - Frank Patterson YouTube (2:22).  A flood of memories wash over her as she listens intently, while her husband can only imagine what’s captured her attention, frozen in the moment, aware of the “grace and mystery in her attitude.”  Literally the turning point of the film, the music and storytelling of the evening awaken such intense memories, yet the couple says nothing on the carriage ride back to their hotel.  Only then, with Gabriel having hopes of getting amorous, does she finally break into tears, recalling a tragic childhood romance with a young man named Michael Furey in Galway, who used to sing that song to her, feeling responsible for his death at the age of 17, as he died under the window of her room.  “He was very delicate,” she says, revealing to her husband that Michael was very sick, but left his sick bed and stood outside her window in the cold and rain to say goodbye before she returned to Dublin, dying a week later, confessing “‘I think he died for me.”  The song opened up the floodgates of the pain that she had long repressed, serving as a catalyst which motivates her to remember something so clearly from her past, and while she clearly loves Gabriel and calls him “a very generous person,” she knows that he has never sacrificially given of himself in the way that Michael did for her, which only serves to reveal the lack of true intimacy and genuine love binding the Conroys, bringing about an emotional distance between them.  The cathartic final scene of the film leaves audiences to ponder the strange hold of the past over the present, as well as the impenetrable differences of those who are closest to us.  As Greta tearfully falls asleep in the hotel room, Gabriel is left looking out the window at the falling snow enveloped in darkness and utter solitude, struck by an all-embracing epiphany, realizing that he’s been deceiving himself for all these years, as he was neither Gretta’s first love nor her greatest love, helplessly discovering that he is less than who he thought he was.  His mind wanders to the future, imagining sitting around Aunt Julia’s deathbed, contemplating how he’ll be remembered, if at all, where his place in the world feels so impermanent.  “Better pass boldly into that other world, in the full glory of some passion, than fade and wither dismally with age.”  The final lines of voiceover dialogue spoken over orchestral refrains from The Lass of Aughrim encapsulate his severe desolation and loneliness, questioning his entire life again, reflecting on his existential existence and what it means to be alive before turning into shadows in one of the most profoundly stirring passages in all of literature, The Dead (1987) End Monologue YouTube (4:15), a fitting epitaph for Huston, where it’s hard not to be affected by the extreme intensity and literary potency of the language, mirroring Molly Bloom’s infamous stream-of-conscious soliloquy at the end of Ulysses.  A second camera operator, Scottish Michael Coulter, captures the mesmerizingly beautiful snowy landscapes, where the snow is a metaphor for the vast wasteland and hopelessness experienced by Joyce during the time period, looking out into the uncertainty of his country’s future, while Alex North’s elegiac Celtic harp music plays over both the opening and the end credits.

Watch The Dead Full Movie Online Free With English Subtitles  FShare TV (1:23:10)

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Hoosiers












HOOSIERS                 B+                  
USA  Great Britain  (114 mi)  1986  d:  David Anspaugh

Often considered one of the best sports movies ever, the standard by which others are measured, this is a case where truth is stranger than fiction, as this is inspired by the real life story of the 1954 Milan High School Indians, with an enrollment of only 161 students, winning a state high school basketball championship, the smallest school to ever win a state basketball championship in Indiana.  This mirrors a similar incident in the state of Illinois in 1952 where Hebron, with an enrollment of only 98 students, beat perennial powerhouse Quincy, the fourth-winningest high school basketball program in the country as of 2010, holding the record for most state tournament appearances, to win the state high school basketball championship in overtime at a time when both schools competed against schools of all sizes.  These stories have a life of their own and reflect the state’s unique basketball-obsessed character, as unlike the film, in real life the game was much more dramatic.  Trailing in the 4th quarter 28-26 against 4-time state champion Muncie Central, the coach ordered a stall and Milan, with no time clock in that era, held the ball without moving for over four minutes before eventually missing a shot.  Tied at 30, they again held the ball for a full minute until 18 seconds were left, setting up a final shot that does in fact resemble the movie, called the Milan Miracle, where the newspaper The Indianapolis Star calls it the top sports story in Indiana history.  Sports movies tend to be laden with cliché’s and this one is no different, except here, despite the fictionalized dramatization, they all have elements of truth, where one of the film’s greatest strengths is capturing the essence of growing up in a small town surrounded by rural farmlands, where on Friday nights high school football or basketball games bring out the entire community, as it’s the biggest event of the week, becoming the religion of the town where everyone is a believer, as winning has a way of bringing everyone together.  Given a sense of authenticity from the director, who played middle school basketball in nearby Decatur, Indiana, and writer Angelo Pizza, as both met while attending Indiana University during the basketball frenzied Bob Knight era, winning an Olympic Gold Medal (1984 Gold Medal) and three national college championships (1976, 1981, 1987) in little more than one decade.

Set in the early 50’s, the opening sequence shot by Fred Murphy of driving through the beautiful back country roads offers the true character of the rural Midwest, where the new basketball coach Norman Dale (Gene Hackman) eventually lands in Hickory, Indiana.  Greeted by the high school principal, an old friend who’s apparently willing to overlook something that took place over ten years ago when Dale was coaching a college team, but left in disgrace, now given a second chance to resuscitate his fledgling career in lowly high school basketball.  He’s immediately met with open contempt by both players and parents when he changes the shooting oriented, offensive-minded coaching style, instead encouraging fundamentals, conditioning, and hard-nosed defense.  Even today at the professional level, not everyone buys into this philosophy, as it de-emphasizes showboating, individual talent and skill, and encourages teamwork where everyone works together, where no one star player is valued more than anyone else, as everyone plays a part in winning and losing.  Today, this team concept has become cliché, but only because of the success of people like coach K, Mike Krzyzewski, as it builds teamwork and solidarity where players learn to trust one another and at least have an opportunity to win even when they’re not playing their best.  But in many small towns, the parents think they know better than the coach does, initiating gripes and rumors that often lead to scandal, as it does here, where the town gathers a petition to remove the coach.  In dramatic fashion, the town’s best player, Jimmy (Maris Valainis), who’s been sitting out honoring the death of last season’s coach, agrees to return but only if the coach stays.  With his return, the team is quickly operating on all cylinders and starts a winning streak. 

While this is a basketball movie, with much of it set inside a gym or a locker room, the local flavor is provided by the brilliance of secondary characters, such as Barbara Hershey, an unmarried high school English teacher, who has her doubts about the coach’s secret past and the excessive attention paid by society to sports in general, but she is eventually won over by the coach’s ethics and occasional noble gestures, such as attempting to rehabilitate the town drunk, Dennis Hopper, still resting on the laurels of his high school past when he missed the game-ending final shot at Regionals.  His avid enthusiasm and knowledge of local teams, however, is unparalleled, and Dale encourages him to sober up and become his assistant coach, especially since he’s distracting the focus of his son, one of the team’s steadiest players.  Even in a cliché riddled film about a small farming community where the outcome is never in doubt, these actors rise above the predictable material, adding a degree of complexity that might feel surprising, as their interaction always feels dramatically interesting, never knowing where their side routes are going to lead, where the warm and heartfelt music by Jerry Goldsmith adds dramatic heft as well, always grounding the film in a sense of Americana and community.  Some may find an old-fashioned story about instilling moral values in a small, all-white high school basketball team that still takes set shots as outdated, as teams today play a much more physical and uptempo urban style game where high flying dunks are the norm, but consider the time, a post-war, 50’s, conservative era when America was just getting back on their feet, where it was these small town values that would lead them out of the darkness of world war and the Depression, where these kids were already shocked by the death of their earlier coach, so learning to take advantage of the second chances life offers is a valuable lesson.  The unsympathetic doubters in town become the team’s biggest boosters in the end as winning has a way of healing all wounds.  Shooting the finals at the legendary Hinkle Fieldhouse, one of the original basketball arenas built in America (1928), adds an air of historic authenticity to the film, as the Butler Bulldogs who play there still personify the tenacious Hoosier spirit, and both the arena itself is a National Historic Landmark, while in 2001 the film was also selected to the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress, claiming it is “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”