
Alternative monitoring of popular culture ~ broadly defined ~ in the pursuit of deeper understanding



Josh Safdie's Marty Supreme is a thrilling, exhausting, enraging, endlessly creative, chaotic, coarse and tender, and superb character-driven escapade that has a turbo-charged Timothée Chalamet at center stage (center screen?) -- a space he was born to occupy.
Chalamet, who also produced the film, stars as a New York table tennis phenom in the '50s who can't get out of his own way. Though he has lightning reflexes and a blazing entrepreneurial spirit, he is also a liar, conman, emotionally stunted lothario who can smell money when it enters a room and will debase himself -- and others -- to get what he thinks he wants.
That alone would make Safdie and co-writer Ronald Bronstein's tale of games won and lost a fascinating venture, but they also surround the "hero" with other conniving personalities, played by Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A'zion, Kevin O'Leary and Tyler Okonma, among others.
Marty Supreme is a wonderland of mirth and misery featuring a commanding central performance by a star who just keeps rising.
The late Denis Johnson's stories are often poetry that contain aspects of both outsider and insider fiction -- the lives of people living both on the outside and on the inside of their times.
Clint Bentley's visually captivating film version of Johnson's celebrated Train Dreams (2011) gets as close as possible to capturing that which breathes best and most believably on the written page. It's a stunning accomplishment.
Aussie Joel Edgerton, an actor who is gifted at personifying quiet introspection, plays Robert Grainier, an Idaho logger in the first half of the 20th century, experiencing life's exigencies and horrors with stoic detachment. Then Robert falls in love with Gladys (an iridescent Felicity Jones) and discovers connection and beauty and joy, but then loses them, and perhaps his grip on sanity, to nature's seeming indifference. It's an existentialist's dream (nightmare?).
Grainier speaks maybe 200 words through the entire picture, but Edgerton's essential, "articulate" presence never leaves the screen. The character's longest speech comes as he stands on a Forest Service tower with a ranger named Claire, the always wonderful Kerry Condon, and tells of his great loss and sorrow in words that are both spare and resonant.
Edgerton's delivery is the work of a master craftsman, delivering with truth and maybe reverence Bentley's benediction for Johnson, who died of cancer in 2017, and for true purity of purpose and the human ability to find even small things restorative and affirming.
Finnish writer / director Jalmari Helander's Sisu: Road to Revenge is the sequel to his 2022 marauding mayhem movie Sisu, which also starred his brother-in-law Jorma Tommila, as a Finnish WWII soldier battling in the first film thieving Germans and this time sadistic Russians.
Tommila's Aatami Korpi has killed scores of Russian officers to avenge the destruction of Finnish villages annexed by Russia after the war. Homes were destroyed, people were displaced or killed, like Korpi's family. Korpi has returned to the homestead, with the family's Bedlington terrier (a nice touch, BTW) to retrieve what's left of his life.
A Russian officer (Richard Brake) tells a psychopath chained up in a Siberian prison -- Stephen Lang's curdling Yeagor Dragunov -- that in exchange for his freedom and a sizeable monetary reward, Dragunov is to take out Korpi before he makes it back across the Finnish border.
The stage is set for a chase, and like all films in the road rage genre that began with George Miller's Mad Max in 1979, Sisu 2 is structured around escalating levels of vehicular carnage. In this case, deaths start with evisceration and decapitation and increase outlandishly over the picture's 90 minutes.
Tommila is in his mid-60s and is an impressive avenging angel; he doesn't speak a word in the picture but conveys great emotional intensity, nonetheless. Though covered with grime, dirt and blood for the entire movie, Korpi's pure industriousness will win over audiences, even while he's emptying machine guns into a platoon of Red Army fighters.
In a way, Road to Revenge could have been given the pitch line "Wicked for Good," but I understand that's been taken.Finnish writer / director Jalmari Helander's Sisu: Road to Revenge is the sequel to his 2022 marauding mayhem movie Sisu, which also starred his brother-in-law Jorma Tommila, as a Finnish WWII soldier battling in the first film thieving Germans and this time sadistic Russians.
To say South African director Oliver Hermanus's The History of Sound is a gay drama is pretty reductive.
This quiet and pretty film is so much more than a love story; it's mainly about the many things in life we can keep and those we inevitably lose.
Paul Mescal and Josh O'Connor star as Boston Conservatory students around the start of World War I who are drawn to each other by their love of folk songs.
During their meeting at a smoky local pub, Mescal's retiring singer Lionel and O'Connor's commanding composer David perform the folk ballad Silver Dagger, which David insists Lionel, who was reared on such songs back home in Kentucky, sing to bar patrons.
It's an important moment, and song, for the picture's narrative and will resonate as the friends become lovers and then partners on a project to record native songs on Edison wax cylinders all over New England.
Don't mistake, it's the songs -- not the romance between the schoolmates -- that lends weight and passion to the picture. Some might see that as the movie's biggest weakness. They wanted more Brokeback Mountain but skin and heat is not all the story is about.
Astute viewers will realize fairly quickly that David is a chameleonic charmer and begin to wonder, as Lionel does, what is real and what is artifice. But also like Lionel, the viewers' wariness will not keep them from being swept into David's world, his desire to preserve what is vanishing is palpable.
When the friends part after the song collecting project, they lose touch. Lionel goes abroad to perform, but eventually finds Rome and London can't offer him what he had while traipsing through the woods hunting songs with David. The last quarter of the film is Lionel trying to recapture that fire.
O'Connor is a wonderful actor, who breathes life into domineering David, but this is Mescal's picture, from start to finish, for he is like many of us -- not sure of what we want until it's gone.
And, perhaps more to the point of The History of Sound, not sure of who we want to be until we aren't that person anymore.
James Vanderbilt's Nuremberg is an interesting but not fullyu satisfying approach to the much-visited subject of the trial of the surviving Nazi high command after Germany's surrender in 1945 and the death of Adolph Hitler.
Vanderbilt's picture, based on The Nazi and the Psychiatrist by Jack El-Hai, is a character study of U.S. Army psychiatrist Douglas Kelley as played by Rami Malek and Reichsmarshall Hermann Göring, a dedicated Russell Crowe.
Vanderbilt has written an often riveting battle of wits and wills between the self-assured (and self-interested) Kelley and the imperious Göring, as the psychiatrist tries to crack the Nazi mindset.
Kelley is asked by the head of the Nuremberg multinational tribunal, US Associate Justice Robert Jackson (Michael Shannon), to share his insights and analysis with the prosecution team, but Kelley refuses, at first. He hopes to keep whatever he finds during his interviews for later publication. What develops is a strangely symbiotic friendship with Göring, including carrying letters between the German and his family.
Kelley is aided by Army translator Sgt. Howie Triest (a nicely tempered performance by British actor Leo Woodall), who translates interviews between the psychiatrist and the prisoners and offers Kelley invaluable insight of his own. It's Triest's monologue near the end of the picture that lands most compellingly for the viewer.
Though Vanderbilt includes devastating footage of the concentration / death camps taken by Allied Forces during liberation -- including the disposal of mounds of corpses -- the picture falls short of convincingly depicting the monstrosity of the Reich and the men who led it.
Part of the problem is casting the affable Crowe as Göring. Kelley (and, ergo, the film) suggests Göring's enormous self-regard -- depicted in the scene when his escaping car is stopped by American soldiers and he asks them to get his luggage -- made the man incapable of harboring malice toward anyone -- including Jews. He simply did not care about anyone but himself. This is an interesting -- but unpersuasive conceit.
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Kelly Reichardt's The Mastermind gives the reliably fascinating English actor Josh O'Connor an opportunity to fully own a picture that plumbs the depths of a character who appears to have few redeemable qualities but manages to convince others to follow him into disaster.
O'Connor's James Mooney is an unemployed Massachusetts cabinet-maker, husband and father of two, son of a judge and art thief in 1970. An unkempt and morose figure, James plans the theft of four abstract pieces from the local museum with three accomplices Larry, Guy and the spitfire Ronnie (Eli Gelb, Cole Doman and Javion Allen, respectively).
The heist is both bungled and successful, with James getting away with the paintings and storing them in the loft of a barn outside of town. When Ronnie gets arrested during a bank robbery, he fingers James as the "mastermind" of the museum job, which leads to James sending his family (Alana Haim and Sterling and Jasper Thompson) to stay with his parents (Bill Camp and Hope Davis) and him hitting the road.
James's desultory wanderings to avoid capture reveal, slowly but wonderfully, the depths of disconnection with the world around him. Though others appear to be drawn to him -- like his starstruck friend Fred (John Magaro), James shows little but the most pragmatic regard for other people, includin ghis wife and children.
And yet, it's difficult to dislike this character. He's so pitiful in his deception that the viewer's heart goes out to him -- which, of course, in real life is how people like James Mooney get through life.
I start volunteering with a reading program at a neighborhood grammar school this week, and I've been reflecting on my experience with...