Showing posts with label Juliette Lewis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juliette Lewis. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

August: Osage County












AUGUST:  OSAGE COUNTY           B           
USA  (121 mi)  2013  ‘Scope  d:  John Wells               Official Site

This is the way the world ends, this is the way the world ends. 

This may not be one of the best directed films, playing it fairly straight, allowing the actors to control their own destinies, but it is one of the best written Tracy Letts plays, where you get your money’s worth with this winner of the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for drama, a modern generation follow up to Eugene O’Neill’s posthumously received Pulitzer Prize winning play Long Day’s Journey Into Night, written in 1941-42, but not published until 1956, one of his most autobiographical, downbeat, and searingly intense plays adapted into film in 1962 by Sidney Lumet, an unforgettable work that all but obliterates the American Dream.  Tracy Letts takes the original premise of a dysfunctional family, with the matriarch, in this case Meryl Streep, lost to the mad ravings of drug addiction and a lifetime of hard times and disappointment, set nearly half a century later, and there’s nothing even remotely close to a dream seen anywhere in this picture.  In fact, Letts writes his play around themes originated in T.S. Eliot’s 1925 poem The Hollow Men, which not only includes “eyes I dare not meet in dreams,” instead belonging to the arid desert of the dead, but then bookends his play to various passages from the poem, beginning with “Here we go round the prickly pear, prickly pear, prickly pear,” a parody of a children’s jump rope song that substitutes a desert prickly cactus for a “mulberry bush.”  Set in the hottest summer month of a flat and empty prairie landscape in Oklahoma, this is the family home of Beverly (Sam Shepard) and Violet (Meryl Streep), where Violet takes handfuls of pills to eradicate the pain from mouth cancer while Beverly, in his late 60’s, has been an alcoholic for over 50 years.  Beverly is seen hiring a live-in Native American housekeeper, Johnna (Misty Upham), and even hands her a book of T.S. Eliot poems in gratitude, a prelude for plumbing the depths of what’s to come.  After repeating the children’s song to himself, Beverly disappears, something he’s apparently done before, but due to Violet’s illness, this time she needs the family’s help, so like the cavalry, family starts arriving at her doorstep. 

First to arrive is Aunt Mattie Fae (Margo Martindale), Violet’s sister, and Uncle Charlie (Chris Cooper), followed by the youngest daughter who lives locally, Ivy (Julia Nicholson), and two other daughters that lead separate lives, escaping to distant states, Barbara, Julia Roberts, best she’s been since Mike Nichols’ CLOSER (2004), living in Colorado, separated from her husband Ewan McGregor and 14-year old daughter (Abigail Breslin), but arriving together in a united front along with the sexually fickle Karen (Juliette Lewis) from Florida, who has a young man with a red convertible sports car in tow (Dermot Mulroney), claiming he’s her fiancé.  Barbara immediately gets into verbal sparring matches with her mother, much of which is played for biting black comedy, where the audience is initially thrilled with the cast and is hanging on every line, but the mood turns darker and more somber when Beverly is discovered drowned, perhaps taking his own life, leaving the family in a state of turmoil.  Meryl Streep literally takes over the film at this point, with an accent that sounds just like Cher, but at the family dinner following the funeral she’s so over the top that she verges into Bette Davis and Joan Crawford territory in the gothic horror thriller WHATEVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? (1962).  While Violet shows a mean streak towards everyone sitting at the table, she expresses her scorn and bitterness one after the other, literally altering the landscape, as whatever sympathy may have been developing for her sickly character quickly dissipates with her venomous language, becoming a choreography of incessant attack mode, eventually met with fierce resistance by Barbara who starts fighting back, calling her a drug addict, and physically attacks her, going after her pill bottles, leading to sheer pandemonium and mayhem.  Screaming that she’s taking over now, Julia Roberts, America’s sweetheart, has never been seen uttering such physically aggressive, foul-laden profanity, where it’s literally a battle of wills, as Barbara orders a search of the house for all the hiding places and flushes the considerable stash of pills down the toilet.  After going for each other’s throats, the mood quiets down for some quiet family dialogue, where Violet opens up about what a viciously cruel mother she had. 

There is little doubt that this is one of Streep’s great legendary performances, stealing almost every scene in the film, but it’s also one of the most vile characters she’s ever played, where many in the audience are left aghast at her despicable foul-mouthed behavior.  She roars and bellows and bullies her way through every moment of the film as she relentlessly goes for the juggler, exposing the hidden weaknesses and vulnerabilities of the entire family, showing her contemptuous disgust with them all, claiming she went through hard times so they could lead relatively comfortable lives, but have they forgotten what she and her husband sacrificed and went through for them?  Did they even know the dire circumstances of their parent's youth, where in one poignant moment she reminds them of the worst Christmas she ever had, which is a decrepitly sorry excuse for a Christmas memory, yet this is what comes to mind when they’re all gathered around her.  It’s cringe worthy stuff, where painful truth is a piercing dagger stained in shared blood, becoming a bloodbath of revelations, but also meticulously drawn out feelings leftover from the Great Depression, which had a way of terrifying people, many losing their minds, but Violet was resolute that nothing and nobody was going to get the better of her, becoming an indomitable force of nature, like a hurricane or a blizzard, where no one was going to penetrate into her female psyche.  She’s a master manipulator at evoking sympathy or drawing attention, but everyone can see it’s all an exaggerated, often pathetic performance, yet there’s something indescribably delicious at watching a scene-stealer of this magnitude perform at this level of dubious moral ground, as behind the façade of sickly cancer patient is a shrewd old lady, perhaps with a greedy streak, who knows how to protect herself first and foremost and will walk over anybody who stands in her way.  She’s a Queen Lear type character, an über matriarch ripping at the spiteful nature of her ungrateful daughters, feeling like something out of a Jane Smiley novel, where life on the empty flatlands of America’s heartland is an arduous job, where each hundred degree day offers little comfort and no relief whatsoever, eventually becoming an endurance test.  While this film carves out the emotional extremes, every family has contentious moments like these, literally a lifetime of uncomfortable moments, where the last place you want to be is confronting a family elder or sibling, yet there you are screaming your fool head off, demanding a single moment’s worth of respect, yet you’re left utterly annihilated by the sheer force of exasperation and disgust, both at yourself and the undignified world you’re forced to live in.                   

Friday, January 18, 2013

Strange Days



















STRANGE DAYS                   B+                  
USA  (145 mi)  1995  ‘Scope  d:  Kathryn Bigelow 

Look, I want you to know what we're talking about here. This isn't like TV only better. This is life.  It's a piece of somebody's life. Pure and uncut, straight from the cerebral cortex. You're there. You're doing it, seeing it, hearing it... feeling it.                
—Lenny Nero (Ralph Fiennes)

It’s about the stuff you can’t have, right, the forbidden fruit, hmm?  Like running into a liquor store with a .357 magnum in your hand, feeling the adrenaline pumping through your veins, huh? Or, um, you see that guy over there with the drop dead Philippino girlfriend, wouldn’t you like to be that guy for about twenty minutes, the right twenty minutes?  Yeah, and I can make it happen and you won’t even tarnish your wedding ring. See I can get you what you want, I can, I can get you anything, you just have to talk to me, you have to trust me, you can trust me. Cos I’m your priest, I’m your shrink, I am the main conection to the switchboard to the soul.  I’m the Magic Man, the Santa Claus of the subconscious. You say it, you even think it, you can have it.     
 —Lenny Nero (Ralph Fiennes)

You love that red, white, and blue, but you hate that black, black, black... But a new day is coming. 2K is coming.  The day of reckoning is upon us.  History is, and begins again, right here, right now.                —Jeriko One (Glenn Plummer)

Look, everybody needs to take a walk to the dark end of the street sometimes, it’s what we are. Now, the risks are out of line. The streets are a war zone, and sex can kill ya. So, you slip on the trodes, get what you need, almost as good as the real thing, and a lot safer.   —Lenny Nero (Ralph Fiennes)

Paranoia is just reality on a finer scale.         —Philo Gant (Michael Wincott)

You know one of the ways that movies are still better than playback? Cos the music comes up, there’s credits, and you always know when it’s over. IT’S OVER!!                      
— Faith (Juliette Lewis)

You’re some piece of work, Lenny Nero. You’re just calmly backstrokin’along through the big toilet bowl and somehow you never let it touch you. I mean between working vice and your current so-called occupation you must have seen every kind of perversion. But you’re just like some Teflon man, still come out this goofball romantic.                
—Lornette “Mace” Mason (Angela Bassett)

Like Billy Wilder’s always popular The Apartment (1960), this is a terrific New Year’s eve movie.  Set in the year 1999, STRANGE DAYS is a wild look into the near future, a cyberpunk science fiction film, a picture of the world going out of control as we approach the New Year’s Millennium of 2000, told with a kind of apocalyptic over-kill, where already the streets of Los Angeles have been reduced to rubble, a veritable police state where citizens are openly beaten on the street by police in riot gear.  Written by former husband James Cameron and Jay Cocks, Bigelow’s approach is an over-the-top variation on the futuristic Blade Runner (1982), a picture of extravagance and largesse, oversaturated with kinetic energy, throbbing with a street life of filth, chaos and decay, showing a paranoid society on the verge of ruin, where law and order is all but absent, and the rules of society have been replaced by a rampant corruption.  Ralph Fiennes plays Lenny Nero, sort of a Harrison Ford gone to seed, as he’s a picture of sweat and grime most of the time, as if in need of detox, but his drug of choice is called playback, a video electronic device that records directly from the cerebral cortex, maximizing the potency of the experience when played back for the viewer, creating a virtual reality which, by its extreme intensity, overshadows reality.  Initially designed as a police surveillance tool, it has instead surged out of control in the rapidly developing underground black market, mostly targeting porno videos.  Lenny is a former vice cop who now makes his living selling these bootleg discs, where his expertise as a fast talking salesman are uncanny, but the world he thrives in is one of sleaze and smut, “I’m the magic man, the Santa Claus of the subconscious.”  His best friend is Max (Tom Sizemore), a private eye who roams in the subterranean realm, something of a moral cesspool, a guy with police connections everywhere but also seems to represent the scum of the earth.  Nonetheless, he’s the kind of guy that has Lenny’s back. 

While talking in a bar, a call girl friend of theirs named Iris (Brigitte Bako) arrives in a hysterical panic, afraid she is being pursued, but disappears in fright just as quickly, warning Lenny that his ex-girlfriend and still secret crush Faith (Juliette Lewis) is also in mortal danger.  Iris makes a panicked getaway on the subway, pursued by two equally manic cops, Vincent D’Onofrio and William Fichtner, who show no regard for shooting directly into the line of fire of the public.  When they attempt to grab her, all they get is her wig, which includes a playback headset, suggesting it was all being recorded.  Lenny, meanwhile, feels compelled to visit Faith, who has flat-out dropped him, refusing to return any of his phone calls, leaving him more eager to see her.  They are visited in the bar by his other friend, Lornette “Mace” Mason (Angela Bassett), a straight-laced bodyguard that sides as a bulletproof limo driver, protecting high-priced clientele.  She has a long history with Lenny and disapproves of his latest habit, as if he’s making a living distributing drugs and porno, but she’s a loyal friend.  In the bar, they view a socially relevant black rapper on the television, Jeriko One (Glenn Plummer), who uses the Millennium metaphor as the arrival of a coming judgment day, which is added to the mix of others who feel the world is coming to an end.  What’s perhaps most strange in this atmosphere of doom is the way the entire film is one long party sequence, all celebrating the coming New Year, where confetti, house music, and party revelers are seen and heard throughout.  What’s also obvious is Bigelow has a tremendous talent for building suspense, as the tension throughout is off the charts, creating a surreal and intoxicating mood and atmosphere. 

When Lenny hits the upscale nightclub where Faith hangs out, she’s unreachable, surrounded by security and her new boyfriend, Philo Gant (Michael Wincott), a sleazy music industry manager whose clients included Jeriko One, mysteriously murdered overnight, meaning his monetary value has only skyrocketed.  Faith ignores all his pleas to talk before going onstage and rocking the PJ Harvey song “Hardly Wait” Strange Days - Juliette Lewis "Hardly Wait" - YouTube (2:13).  Lenny gets his ass kicked by bodyguards for his efforts, but sneaks back in and meets her backstage, concerned for her safety, only to be told in no uncertain terms that it’s over between them.  What’s most disconcerting is receiving an anonymous disc that shows via playback a snuff recording of Iris’s death, which only sends Lenny into more of a panic, as some deranged person is obviously on the loose who enjoys the idea of sharing his demented thrills with Lenny.  STRANGE DAYS is a mixture of a societal panic spreading like a contagious disease, filled with incidents of racial turmoil and police brutality, a secret police death squad, a serial killer on the loose, and Lenny’s attempts, mostly through the aid of Mace, to figure it all out and bring some sense of rational order to the surrounding chaos spinning out of control.  Bassett was never in better shape in a movie, wearing a variety of form-fitting outfits while also kicking plenty of butt while aiding Lenny’s dangerous investigatory pursuits, as they meet plenty of bad guys along the way.  Lenny is more than a little scuffed up, where Los Angeles is simply covered in a seedy film noir depiction of endless brutality, where life is cheap and the end of the world is near.  Bassett makes a terrific femme fatale, while the usually affluent and upper crust Fiennes seems wearily overmatched through most of the film, yet the fact he’s such an odd choice only adds interest and intrigue to his dilemma.  Trying to survive in this shadowy world when forces are trying to destroy you is a thrill ride adventure, leading to a bizarre finale that fuses playback with reality, where all of the forces come together in a mish mosh of pandemonium and mayhem, all of which leads to the final New Year’s countdown, brought in with a bang.    

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Hick




































HICK                          D                    
USA  (95 mi)  2011  ‘Scope  d:  Derick Martini                        Official Trailer

You may not want to hear things that make you uncomfortable. But if you just allow girls to be more than one thing, not just virgins, not just whores, not just princesses, not just basket-cases, not just hot chicks, if you just allow us to be, say, human…you might just learn something.      —Andrea Portes (author of Hick)

Rarely has a film with a cast this good sputtered so badly, where one can only place blame with the director, whose previous film LYMELIFE (2009) was another dialog driven work aided by excellent performances.  Adapted by the author, Andrea Portes, from her first novel, there’s plenty of sharp dialog here written from a teen perspective, though it’s undermined by the crudeness of the characters and much of what was probably meant for humor gets lost in a whirlwind of white trash caricatures that thrive on the worst of human nature.  Ultimately this retreats into a horribly misguided and ugly mess, where were it not for the stars, this film should never have been released.  What was probably imagined as a kind of fatal attraction simply never gets started in this amour fou.  At the center of this storm is Chloë Grace Moretz, from HUGO (2011), LET ME IN (2009) and KICK-ASS (2009), an adorable, somewhat pouty young actress who has her work cut out for her, as she’s literally in every shot, also providing an inner voiceover narration and personal drawings as well, all offering insight into her thirteen-year old soul which is just getting started in life.  Moretz, herself, is charming, but no one else is, so she’s left on her own offering a spirited performace that drifts through a wasteland of aimlessness.  The child of two barnstorming drunks, Juliette Lewis and Anson Mount, both inseparable, locked in a tortured marriage, spending their lives arguing, getting wasted and having sex, while Luli (Moretz) survives the chaos existing on small fantasies and macaroni and cheese while drawing colorful pictures of a better life somewhere else, thinking anywhere is better than the dead-end life of rural Nebraska.  It doesn’t take much prodding for her to head for the open road the day after her 13th birthday, carrying with her a Smith and Wesson .45 given to her by her uncle.  Known for her flippant attitude and fast mouth, she’s something of a smart aleck who has survived by being a bigger pain in the ass than those deadbeats and losers around her, creating needed space for herself where she can be on her own.

Heading for Las Vegas, she may as well be heading for Nome, Alaska, as she never gets very far, finding life on the road filled with despicable characters all pretending to be on her side.  Putting up a strong front, she encounters a gimp-legged cowboy named Eddie (Eddie Redmayne), whose pathetic attempts at country charm only provoke crude descriptions of what she plainly thinks of him, expressed in a firebrand of foul mouthed invectives, where she’d rather walk than spend another minute with this loser, so she exits gracelessly.  Not to be deterred, she manages to get a ride with Glenda (Blake Lively), played as a red-haired coke sniffer whose idea of petty cash is whatever she can steal from the next cash register.  Using Luli as bait, the plan works perfectly, only the store clerk drops dead on the spot when Luli goes into her pretend seizure routine, meant only as a distraction, but apparently it was too much.  Glenda takes Luli under her wing, arriving soon enough at the home of a friend, an upscale Texas rancher, Lloyd (Ray McKinnon), a mean and quick-tempered lowlife who gets off degrading and humiliating others.  But it’s here that she meets Eddie again, as he’s working for Lloyd, where one might think fate is bringing them back together.  But they get along no better this time than they did before, still the same nervous lout he was in the beginning, though here he displays even creepier motives, cowardly using Luli as an enticement to settle a losing bet in a pool hall, and then when she’s half raped, he barges in like a bat out of hell to supposedly rescue her.  Despite all attempts to establish some chemistry between them, Eddie is too far off his rocker to be of any interest to anyone.  When he gets all liquored up, full of himself with his newly won prize, ready to reap the reward in some cheap motel for rescuing the fair damsel in distress, the story only gets more wretched, though there is an all too brief reprise with Rory Culkin that allows Luli to glow before she gets sucked into the darkness. 

What’s particularly distressing here is how the dark themes that inspired the book are treated with such a clumsy and heavy-handed manner here, where the story escalates into predictably unsavory territory without any of Luli’s spunk and personal flair for self-preservation that opened the film.  Despite more degrading horrors that lie in store for her, don’t think for a minute that she is beaten down or defeated, but the tone of the film fails to register with her interior moods and growing sense of independence, and instead uses stale and typically predictable country ballads and Dylan anthems that she probably never heard to express open road themes.  But despite being a road journey where the unknown lies around every bend, this film is terribly out of synch and dwells far too long on the ugly and awkwardly uncomfortable moments of a sick and twisted man’s rape fantasies.  This is as far removed from her drawings and voiceover narration as you can get, and the director does nothing to link or connect these polar opposites.  Luli is seen from the outset as a young girl that rails with a sense of personal pride and growing sense of independence, funny, always curious, with a keen intelligence, yet remains fragile and unsure of herself in this godforsaken world, needing love and guidance and something that she can hold on to, but this director has all but abandoned her perky wit and humor and instead allows Eddie’s disgustingly sick mentality to dominate and destroy the picture.  Even if little is graphically shown, nothing good can come from what the director reveals.  The headstrong and precocious girl with the snarky tone, she’s worth spending time with, her wounded life is worth exploring, not the psychopath that probably belongs in another movie who unfortunately takes center stage.  Initially Colin Farrell (as Eddie) and Kirsten Dunst (as Glenda) were slated to make the film, and perhaps things might have been different, but this is a film unworthy of the performance Moretz gives, that instead feels dirty and contaminated.