Showing posts with label the moviegoer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the moviegoer. Show all posts

Thursday, July 06, 2017

Wes Anderson


I watched Moonrise Kingdom and The Fantastic Mr. Fox with my kids in the fall, which spurred me to revisit all of Wes Anderson's movies. I am a big fan, but I'm not sure that I love all of his movies the same way. Both The Life Aquatic and The Darjeeling Limited left me cold when I saw them in the theater. But his recent run of films won me back over. Anyway, revisiting his movies left me with a few thoughts, but listicles being what they are, let me also rank his films while I am at it.




1. Moonrise Kingdom: Bringing all of Anderson's obsessions to bear in a perfect package of nostalgia, regret, and danger, Moonrise Kingdom's greatness comes from taking the emotional life of its protagonists very seriously, even as it admits that there is a lot of absurdity here. The beating heart of the movie is the love between the kids at the center of the story, but it's also in the way that the adults around them, especially Bruce Willis's policeman and Edward Norton's scoutmaster, come to realize how all of the institutions and authority figures around them have failed them. This movie is, in short, a masterpiece.




1. The Fantastic Mr. Fox: Instead of pretending to be a lost children's classic like so many of Anderson's other films, Mr. Fox is actually an adaptation of a children's classic. Anderson pours his visual style into it, and it captures the main theme running through all of his movies: the refusal of exceptional people to be mediocre. Sure, Mr. Fox's bid for greatness endangers his family and puts his entire community at risk, but he also rages against the dying of the light better than just about any other middle-aged protagonists in a story for children. The movie is, in short, a masterpiece.




1. The Grand Budapest Hotel: The apex of Anderson's craft and a tour-de-force racing through Anderson's pet obsessions: impeccable visual style, the imposition of history into literature, the self-styled great man raging against the tides of both institutional indifference and mediocrity, intergenerational friendships, the delicate and precise art of creating an experience, all with deep wells of love and loss. The movie is breathless throughout, but bursting with life, even with a cast this large. Every character has clear motivations, and Anderson's bench is deep enough that dozens of his stable of talented A-list actors make what are essentially walk-on performances, each imbued with enough material that they tell little micro-stories. The movie is, in short, a masterpiece.




1. Rushmore:  Right out of the gate, Anderson's second film introduces Anderson's primary theme of the great person struggling against authority and mediocrity. While Max Fischer may not be quite as amazing as he thinks he is, his creative talent is a delight and the fun of his character struggling to be taken seriously because of his age and inexperience (shades of Moonrise Kingdom) meets up with his deadly-serious emotions. The movie is, in short, a masterpiece. (OK, I'm going to stop this now, but a post about Wes Anderson calls for a little self-indulgence.)


2. The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou: I really disliked this movie when it was released but now I think it is a only a second-tier Anderson film by a thin hair. Zissou is much like Mr. Fox but without the happy ending. The only thing keeping this film from being another number 1, really, is that it doesn't breathe life into the supporting cast the way that the above films do. However, there's some genuine pathos and danger in Zissou's reckless mid-life crisis, and the weird beauty of this film is both wholly an Anderson-style composition and yet unlike any other Anderson film. Additionally, contrary to his usual adoration of his iconoclast heroes, Anderson is aware of how irresponsible Zissou is and how this leads to the deaths of his best friend and his maybe-son. It's hard to call a film mature that explicitly idealizes the mind of an 11-and-a-half year old, but if any Anderson film can be called an examination of maturity and loss, it is this one.



3. The Darjeeling Limited and Hotel Chevalier: This movie, a distant third, wants to be an examination of maturity and loss, but it just doesn't work. Anderson is trying his damnedest to honor Satyajit Ray, but the movie lacks Ray's appreciation of sheer ordinariness. It comes across as mildly racist exotica, as the wealthy white explorers try to find themselves amid the backdrop of India's strange foreign ways. The character beats (the oldest brother's suicide attempt, the middle brother's fear of paternity, the youngest brother's recent break-up) seem more like tics than anything lived in or experienced. When the brothers finally literally let go of their father's baggage, it does not feel like an earned moment. That's my problem with the film - the central conceit just doesn't work for me. The movie is beautiful, though. The scene where the brothers rescue the kids from drowning is also among Anderson's best. The short released along with this film, Hotel Chevalier, was significantly better, with Schwartzman and Natalie Portman playing recognizable people with a difficult past and no idea about the future.



4. Bottle Rocket: I may have this one too low. I mean, I like it and it mostly works. But it also feels like a debut movie and the effort to make it shows. The quirky parts are too quirky, the composition style is not yet there, and the plot mechanics are a little too obvious.



5. The Royal Tenenbaums: I did not think that this movie would be so low on my list before I re-watched it. When it came out, I was blown away. I think of it as a gauntlet that Anderson threw down, an epic of composition and characterization built on classics of young adult or children's literature and a marriage of soundtrack and image that redefines the use of non-diegetic movie music (well, to be fair, Anderson had already hit those notes with Rushmore). And it is those things, but it is ultimately emptier than Anderson's subsequent revisiting of those same themes. The characters come across as jerks, not because of their losses and failures, as the movie would ask you to see them, but because they are just written as basically selfish jerks. When Nico's "These Days" erupts in the film, I was in tears during my original viewing in 2001, but in 2017 it seemed like a shortcut establishing a mood that has not quite been earned. Maybe I'll eventually come back around to seeing it as a masterpiece, but right now, it seems like the least of Anderson's work.

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

The Moviegoer: May - August 2010

I started this post two months ago!  But I didn't finish it before I moved cross-country and failed to finish anything.  And I have, unfortunately, been very bad about keeping accurate records of my media consumption over the last few months.  But here's what I have, following from the last installment here.

30. The Informant!: B+
31. Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call New Orleans: B-
32. The Abyss: D
33. Recount: B+
34. Last Tango In Paris: C+
35. Hellboy II: The Golden Army: B
36. You Don't Know Jack: B+
37. Rosemary's Baby: A+
38. Moon: B+
39. Zombieland: B+
40. Observe and Report: F
41. Becket: B+
42. Knife In The Water: A
43. The Ladykillers (2004): C-
44. The Best Years Of Our Life: B
45. Ghost Town: B-
46. Putney Swope: C
47. The Dead: A
48. The Asphalt Jungle: A
49. Frost/Nixon: B
50. Greaser's Palace: B+
51. They Live By Night: B+
52. Castle In The Sky: A-
53. Humpday: A-
54. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince: B
55. The Incredible Hulk: B
56. Funny People: B
57. X Men Origins: Wolverine: D
58. Temple Grandin: B+
59. Orphan: C+
60. John Adams: B+
61. To Kill a Mockingbird: B+
62. Toy Story 3: A
63. MST3K: Secret Agent Super Dragon: B
64. Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic: B-
65. Jason and the Argonauts: B+
66. The Lavender Hill Mob: B+
67. Godzilla: King of the Monsters: B+
68. Ong-Bak: The Thai Warrior: B
69. A Town Called Panic: A
70. Louis CK: Chewed Up: A-
71. For All Mankind: A-
72. MST3K: The Beatniks: B-
73. Monkey Business: A

Books Read:

1 Dead In Attic by Chris Rose
The Hundred Days by Patrick O'Brien
Across The Great Divide: The Band And America by Barney Hoskyns
Come Along With Me by Shirley Jackson
Anathem by Neal Stephenson

Monday, May 10, 2010

The Moviegoer: March - April 2010

March and April were busy months with the packing and moving and prepping the house for the market.  But I did catch a few movies and read a few books.  Picking up from last time:

Movies (not all were first viewings)

17. The Killers: B+
18. A Perfect Couple: C- (blah, first of two terrible Altman films)
19. H.E.A.L.T.H.: D (gah)
20. Monks: The Transatlantic Feedback: B
21. Bad Day At Black Rock: B
22. A Serious Man: A+
23. Near Dark: C+
24. The Passion of Joan Of Arc: A+
25. Lola Montes: B+
26. Alphaville: B+
27. The Friends Of Eddie Coyle: A-
28. X Files: I Want To Believe: C
29. Hubble 3D: B

Books (Jan - Feb):
1. Against The Day - Pynchon
2. Chronic City - Lethem (both reviewed here)
3. Farber on Film - Manny Farber
4. Inherent Vice - Pynchon (both reviewed here)

(Mar - April)


5. Inventory: 16 Films Featuring Manic Pixie Dream Girls, 10 Great Songs Nearly Ruined by Saxophone, and 100 More Obsessively Specific Pop-Culture Lists - the AV Club
6. You Don't Love Me Yet - Lethem
7. Radio City (33 1/3) - Bruce Eaton
8. Geek Love - Katherine Dunn
9. Bend Sinister - Vladimir Nabokov

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

The Moviegoer: January - February 2010

Just a few movies in the first two month of the new year.  These aren't all new to me, but I'm trying to keep an accurate log of all movies that I've screened.

1. The Good Fairy (1935): A
2. The Return of the Jedi (1983): B
3. Inglorious Basterds (2009): B
4. Fires On The Plain (1959): A
5. Passing Strange (2009): A-
6. Young@Heart (2008): B+
7. Performance (1970): D (I still can't stand Nic Roeg, sorry)
8. I'm Not There (2007): A+
9. Grey Gardens (1975): B+
10. Frankenstein (1931): B+
11. Capturing The Friedmans (2003): A
12. Scott Walker: 30th Century Man (2006): B
13. The Hurt Locker (2009): B
14. The Ladykillers (1955): A-
15. The Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009): A
16. Sleeping Beauty (1959): B+

Sunday, January 03, 2010

The Moviegoer Parts V & VI: September - December 2009


After extensive scientific investigation, I have determined that I failed to update readers about my moviewatching habits for September and October of 2009, so this is an extra-special long version of this supposedly bimonthly feature.  Remember that some of these movies are re-viewings.

Movies Watched:

93. Adventureland: B+
94. Kiki's Delivery Service: A-
95. Red Beard: B+
96. A Bug's Life: B+
97. Point Blank: B+
98. Watchmen: F
99. La Strada: B+
100. Anvil!: The Story of Anvil: B+
101. Juliet of the Spirits: B
102. The Virgin Spring: A
103. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang: A-
104. Drag Me To Hell: A-
105. The Night of the Living Dead: A
106. The Earrings of Madame de...: A
107. Songwriter: B
108. The Shop Around The Corner: A+
109. Slumdog Millionaire: B-/C+
110. The Empire Strikes Back: A-
111. Trouble The Water: B+
112. District 9: C+
113. Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince: B+

Here's the shameful part.  I have only finished one book in the last four months.  I've been re-reading Gravity's Rainbow for the fourth time, and I'm lingering over it.  I've also been reading occasionally A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again and, in the last couple of weeks, Farber On Film. But I have yet to finish either.  So the only book I finished was Richard Price's Samaritan, which I polished off in a day or so.  Oh, and I read a couple of Roald Dahl books to my son, too: James And The Giant Peach and The Giraffe, The Pelly, And Me.  His mom is reading Mathilda to him now.

I intend to continue to document my pop culture intake in 2010, but I'll have to change the numbering scheme for this feature because the run-on roman numerals just won't work.

Here's the whole list for 2009:


  1. Dr. T and The Women: B
  2. Encounters At The End of the World (this was the third viewing in two weeks): A+
  3. Amarcord: A+
  4. Out of the Past: A
  5. Pineapple Express: B
  6. Man on Wire: A-
  7. Kung Fu Panda: A-
  8. Last Night At The Alamo: A
  9. The Order of Myths: A
  10. M. Hulot's Holiday: A
  11. Peter and the Wolf (2008 short): A+
  12. Wagon Master: B
  13. Paranoid Park: A+
  14. Kiss of Death: B
  15. The Night of the Hunter: A+
  16. Topsy-Turvy: A+
  17. Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains: B-
  18. The Day The Earth Stood Still (original version): A
  19. Burn After Reading: B+
  20. Drunken Angel: B+
  21. I Live In Fear: Record of a Living Being: A-
  22. Wattstax: B
  23. Aliens: A
  24. Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist: A-
  25. Hamlet 2: B-
  26. Eyes Wide Shut: B+
  27. Lessons of Darkness: B
  28. Stroszek: A+
  29. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory: A
  30. Pootie Tang: C+
  31. The Trial: B
  32. Trafic: A+
  33. This Is Not A Photograph: The Mission of Burma Story: A-
  34. WALL-E: A+
  35. It Happened One Night: A
  36. Beeswax: B
  37. American Prince: B
  38. Best Worst Movie: A
  39. American Boy: A-
  40. Wild Strawberries: A+
  41. The Face of Another: A
  42. Synecdoche, New York: A++
  43. Visions of Light: The Art of Cinematography: B+
  44. The Hemingway Night: A+
  45. Around: B-
  46. Monsters Vs. Aliens: B
  47. Duma: A
  48. Bicycle Thieves: A
  49. Visages d'Enfants: B
  50. The Strangers: B-
  51. Miss Pettigrew Lives For A Day: B
  52. The World's Greatest Sinner: A-
  53. F For Fake: A+
  54. Tokyo Story: A
  55. The Comedians of Comedy: B
  56. Zach Galifianakis Live: B
  57. Morvern Callar: A-
  58. Grindhouse: B-
  59. Let The Right One In: A
  60. The Burmese Harp: A
  61. Futurama: Bender's Game: B
  62. Kiss Me Deadly: A
  63. Rachel Getting Married: A
  64. Torn Curtain: B
  65. Real Life: A+
  66. Forbidden Planet: A-
  67. Star Trek: B+
  68. My Neighbor Totoro: A+
  69. Mon Oncle Antoine: B+
  70. Salesman: A
  71. Milk: B+
  72. Role Models: B+
  73. Fast, Cheap & Out Of Control: A-
  74. Up: A
  75. She Wore A Yellow Ribbon: B+
  76. Theremin: An Electronic Odyssey: B+
  77. Hour Of The Wolf: B
  78. Directed By John Ford: B
  79. Castle In The Sky: A
  80. Fury: B+
  81. After The Thin Man: B+
  82. Monsters, Inc.: A-
  83. The Wages of Fear: A
  84. The 39 Steps: B+
  85. Un Flic: B
  86. Only Angels Have Wings: A-
  87. The Passion of Anna: B+
  88. The Limey: B+
  89. The Old, Weird America: Harry Smith's Anthology of Folk Music: B
  90. Pinocchio: A+
  91. The Incredibles: A
  92. Ponyo: A
  93. Adventureland: B+
  94. Kiki's Delivery Service: A-
  95. Red Beard: B+
  96. A Bug's Life: B+
  97. Point Blank: B+
  98. Watchmen: F
  99. La Strada: B+
  100. Anvil!: The Story of Anvil: B+
  101. Juliet of the Spirits: B
  102. The Virgin Spring: A
  103. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang: A-
  104. Drag Me To Hell: A-
  105. The Night of the Living Dead: A
  106. The Earrings of Madame de...: A
  107. Songwriter: B
  108. The Shop Around The Corner: A+
  109. Slumdog Millionaire: B-/C+
  110. The Empire Strikes Back: A-
  111. Trouble The Water: B+
  112. District 9: C+
  113. Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince: B+


    And here's the prior entries.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

The Moviegoer Part IV: July - August 2009

Part four in the six-part series documenting my entertainment consumption in 2009! Not many movies on this one, though. As you can see, when picking up from last time, I've been reading more over the last two months and thus neglecting the movies. Let's dive in, shall we?


Movies viewed:

82. Monsters, Inc.: A-
83. The Wages of Fear: A
84. The 39 Steps: B+
85. Un Flic: B
86. Only Angels Have Wings: A-
87. The Passion of Anna: B+
88. The Limey: B+
89. The Old, Weird America: Harry Smith's Anthology of Folk Music: B
90. Pinocchio: A+
91. The Incredibles: A
92. Ponyo: A


Books read:

Faulkner - The Hamlet
Roald Dahl - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Jon Holmes - Rock Star Babylon
Jeff Roesgen - Rum, Sodomy and the Lash
Rob Sheffield - Love Is A Mix Tape
William Bolitho - Murder For Profit
Laura Lippman - What The Dead Know
Tom McCarthy - Remainder
Thomas Pynchon - Against The Day

I had just finished Faulkner's The Hamlet last time. I think I failed to mention that I was also reading Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory to my four-year-old son. In early July, I read Jeffrey T. Roesgen's excellent 33 1/3 book on the Pogues' Rum, Sodomy, and The Lash. Also read: Jon Holmes's Rock Star Babylon, Rob Sheffield's Love Is A Mix Tape, and William Bolitho's Murder For Profit. Read about them here. In late July, I read Lippman's What The Dead Know and McCarthy's Remainder. Read about those here.

I spent all of August reading Pynchon's Against The Day, which I have yet to review here. But I will and soon. I'm trying to decide if I like it better than Gravity's Rainbow, which is like trying to decide whether I better like having ears or fingers. Which has led me to start reading Gravity's Rainbow again, and maybe I'll have to wait to finish GR before I'm ready to talk about ATD. We'll see.

Friday, July 03, 2009

The Moviegoer, Part III: May - June 2009

This is Part 3 in our 6-part series of documenting the entertainments I have consumed in 2009! Here's what I have watched over the last two months:

63. Rached Getting Married: A
64. Torn Curtain: B
65. Real Life: A+
66. Forbidden Planet: A-
67. Star Trek: B+
68. My Neighbor Totoro: A+
69. Mon Oncle Antoine: B+
70. Salesman: A
71. Milk: B+
72. Role Models: B+
73. Fast, Cheap & Out Of Control: A-
74. Up: A
75. She Wore A Yellow Ribbon: B+
76. Theremin: An Electronic Odyssey: B+
77. Hour Of The Wolf: B
78. Directed By John Ford: B
79. Castle In The Sky: A
80. Fury: B+
81. After The Thin Man: B+

I also finished reading Rick Perlstein's Nixonland, a book that I started last fall and had to return to its owner just as Nixon was elected President at the halfway point. I found a copy used and put all else on hold while I read it. And read it. And read it. Either I've gotten to be a much slower reader or that was a seriously long book. But it didn't read like a seriously long book. In fact, time seemed to breeze away while I was reading it. It has the breathlessness of a political thriller, which, in some ways, it is. Highly recommended.

Having finished Nixonland, I turned my reading attention back to Faulkner's The Hamlet, which I was enjoying before I interrupted to re-read and finish Nixonland. I'd never read this one before (well, bits and pieces that showed up as short stories in some classes), but it's quickly becoming a favorite. Faulkner's clearly having a lot of fun. The subject matter isn't as weighty as any of the Compson books or Go Down, Moses, but the writing is gorgeous, and Faulkner's intellect and keen sense of story keeps it humming along at a good clip.

After this, I have a few other books piled up to read, but I'm especially looking forward to Jeff Roesgen's 33 1/3 book on the Pogues' Rum, Sodomy, and The Lash and William Bolitho's Murder For Profit, an out-of-print book from the 20s about serial killers that came highly recommended by Leonard Pierce.

Friday, May 01, 2009

The Moviegoer Part II: March - April 2009


Here's what I have watched in the last two months with an accompanying grade. Some of these were not the first time I'd seen the movie. There were 32 in the Jan - Feb list, so I'll start this one at 33 and count these cumulative for the year.
33. This Is Not A Photograph: The Mission of Burma Story: A-
34. WALL-E: A+
35. It Happened One Night: A
36. Beeswax: B
37. American Prince: B
38. Best Worst Movie: A
39. American Boy: A-
40. Wild Strawberries: A+
41. The Face of Another: A
42. Synecdoche, New York: A++
43. Visions of Light: The Art of Cinematography: B+
44. The Hemingway Night: A+
45. Around: B-
46. Monsters Vs. Aliens: B
47. Duma: A
48. Bicycle Thieves: A
49. Visages d'Enfants: B
50. The Strangers: B-
51. Miss Pettigrew Lives For A Day: B
52. The World's Greatest Sinner: A-
53. F For Fake: A+
54. Tokyo Story: A
55. The Comedians of Comedy: B
56. Zach Galifianakis Live: B
57. Morvern Callar: A-
58. Grindhouse: B-
59. Let The Right One In: A
60. The Burmese Harp: A
61. Futurama: Bender's Game: B
62. Kiss Me Deadly: A
That's 32 in the last list and 30 in this one. Oh, how I've wasted my life!
Read:
Wire's Pink Flag (33 1/3) by Wilson Neate
Go Down, Moses by William Faulkner

Sunday, March 01, 2009

The Moviegoer, Part I

I have been watching lots of movies this year. In years past, I've read lots of books, but this year I've opted to spend my time with cinema. This doesn't seem to be a conscious decision on my part, but perhaps a by-product of parenthood of small children and a shortened attention span. Anyway, I've finished only one book in the first two months of this year: David Simon's Homicide: A Year On The Killing Streets. I'm a big fan of The Wire, which Simon co-created. To a lesser extent, I'm a fan of the tv show Homicide, which was based on this book. I probably don't need to tell you that I loved it. But I did.

But that's it for literature this year. I have a couple of other books that I'm reading, and I'll probably follow up when I finish them. But I'm watching lots and lots of movies. Since January 1st, I've watched (and many of these were not the first time I'd seen them):

  1. Dr. T & The Women: B
  2. Encounters At The End of the World (this was the third viewing in two weeks): A+
  3. Amarcord: A+
  4. Out of the Past: A
  5. Pineapple Express: B
  6. Man on Wire: A-
  7. Kung Fu Panda: A-
  8. Last Night At The Alamo: A
  9. The Order of Myths: A
  10. M. Hulot's Holiday: A
  11. Peter and the Wolf (2008 short): A+
  12. Wagon Master: B
  13. Paranoid Park: A+
  14. Kiss of Death: B
  15. The Night of the Hunter: A+
  16. Topsy-Turvy: A+
  17. Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains: B-
  18. The Day The Earth Stood Still (original version): A
  19. Burn After Reading: B+
  20. Drunken Angel: B+
  21. I Live In Fear: Record of a Living Being: A-
  22. Wattstax: B
  23. Aliens: A
  24. Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist: A-
  25. Hamlet 2: B-
  26. Eyes Wide Shut: B+
  27. Lessons of Darkness: B
  28. Stroszek: A+
  29. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory: A
  30. Pootie Tang: C+
  31. The Trial: B
  32. Trafic: A+
That's 32 movies in 59 days. Judge me harshly, if you be so inclined.

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