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Peter Sarsgaard: Remember that name. A seasoned actor, smart enough to take both large and small roles, he bids for name stardom in the new An Education, depending on audience-and-industry attention. If you want to investigate this terrific actor further, see these movies on DVD: The Mysteries of Pittsburgh; Kinsey; The Dying Gaul.

Green Movies

Movie production is highly polluting, leaving Yeti-sized footprints. However, with care, careful production—savvy and caring—can reduce such pollution a whole hell of a lot. The first GREEN film was Baraka, whose producer (Mark Magidson) was a university environment studies major—and employed all he knew in this cult film, whose sequel, Samsara, finishes shooting mid-December.

Recent Green movies include Away We Go, a delightful comedy… and The X-Files II (2008-9) On the DVD extras, writer/director Chris Carter explains what was done in production to make this one (a highly-underrated film) as GREEN as possible.

DVDs good enough to give

DVD Gifts for hard-core film buffs, who won’t mind if the movies are “old,” just that they’re of old-fashioned quality.

Comedy

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead—one of the funniest comedies ever filmed, written & directed by Tom Stoppard; good extras on 2008’s re-issue.

Planes, Trains and Automobiles— classic comedy (from the late John Hughes) starring Steve Martin and the late John Candy. Some good extras here.

Drama

In the Valley of Elah—a terrific if tough drama about the effects of W’s Iraq war on young combatants.

(Warning: This is not a trailer, but a clip and contains minor spoilers)

TV

Lost: The Complete Fifth Season—and maybe the best season of all in what proves to be the best real sci-fi in years, movie or tv.

BBC

Monty Python: Almost the truth—six-hour doc with generous clips…and discussion from group survivors.

Top 10 movies for 2009

Top 10 movies for 2009

Everybody’s top-ten movie list is trembling on the holiday horizon, so let’s get (some of) our licks in first.

Best films (thus far)

(Remember: the Oscars this year will have l0 nominees instead of the traditional five.)

Worst films of the year (thus far)

Underrated movies of the year

News (you might be able to use)

The bloodletting at the state film office has ended, and there’s a new honchette (with some experience) in charge—with a smaller staff. Exit Donne Dawson, who, despite her occasional abrasiveness, did a good credible job….Alexander Payne, writer/director of the film version of that “selective” satire of Hawai’i shenanigans The Descendants is still on track to do the film here but casting is said to be crucial. (Rumors are aswirl that Clooney—whom Payne allegedly turned down for Sideways—wants to do it.)… Lost, the best series ever shot here (there, I’ve said it) is on the way out:its 6th season begins Feb. 2 (a Tuesday night). Too bad: it was a class act (most of the time), and made stars of a large ensemble of first-rate actors. Aloha (really)….UH’s Academy of Creative Media is enlarging its screenwriting program…

To DVD or not DVD?

Is there any question. Here’s the best of the lot, well-suited to any movie nostalgist.

North by Northwest: 50th Anniversary Edition

The last of Alfred Hitchcock’s light thrillers, this deliberately nonsensical concoction—so skillfully done that it’s charged with wit, is a high-gloss chase movie with set pieces that, after 50 years, holds up beautifully. Its inception was a dream: Hitchcock has said that the imagery in this dream, his dream, was so vivid that it waked him. The image was of a man being chased across the giant rock faces of U.S. presidents at Mount Rushmore.

Now came the hard part. It took Hitchcock a year to develop it into a story—and, then, with a screenwriter a script (of many drafts). Who was that man being chased at Mount Rushmore? Who was chasing him? And why?

The Result? A slick, sly chase from New York City to the Dakota badlands, replete with spies (from two different factions), a “wrong man” theme (our hero is mistaken for someone else, someone, as it turns out, doesn’t exist), a beautiful blonde, a suave villain, and the celebrated sequence in which star Cary Grant is chased by a sinister crop duster through cornfields. And the dialogue? It’s full of double entendre, Freudian sexual imagery, and witty asides. Star Cary Grant was never better, and he’s ably abetted by Eva Marie Saint, James Mason, and a terrific music score by the great Bernard Herrman (Citizen Kane, Psycho). Thrillers this playful and graceful just don’t come around that often. This is a true classic. See it for the first time, or see it again. You’ll be surprised.


Back to the movies of 2009

Be on the lookout for the following promising movies:

  • Pedro Almodovar’s Broken Embraces (with Penelope Cruz)
  • The Road (from Cormac McCarthy’s novel, with Viggo Mortensen)
  • Up in the Air (highly-touted comedy with George Clooney)
  • The Lovely Bones (Peter Jackson’s adaptation of the best-seller)
  • Avatar (James Cameron’s big 3-D bonanza, $l50 million worth)
  • Invictus (Clint Eastwood directs Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela, post-Apartheid
  • A Single Man (Fashion icon Tom Ford directs his version of the Christopher Isherwood best-seller)
  • Sherlock Holmes (An unfaithful version of the legend, starring Robert Downey, Jr.)

All of the above will appear in the next month and a half.

Adrift in Japan

The Weekly reviews three new Japanese films

The Honolulu Academy of Arts Doris Duke Theatre offers up “Six cinematic views of Japan” in the next two months in a diversity of styles and themes but favoring that country’s youth in various states of turmoil and aspirations. (Japan has the second largest movie-going public in the world, tending, as in the U.S., toward the ages l4-35 demographic.) For the Japanophile, this six-parter is a treasure, but only moderately-interested moviegoers might need a little help. We’ve seen most of them, and hereby present our take on the most “interesting” three.

K-20: The Fiend With Twenty Faces (2008)

This highly-derivative super-hero flick (starring heartthrob Takeshi Kaneshiro) is Japan’s bid in the international action-film franchise sweepstakes. This thing steals from every established superhero series in the book; in fact, it overstuffs and practically smothers itself. Worst of all, the bombastic music score, with orchestra sawing away relentless, is an amalgam of (early) Superman, Indiana Jones, Spiderman and others of that kind, loud and deeply-shallow. In the interest of being fair, let’s just say that this movie is interestingly banal, with poor Takeshi trapped in a cyclone of clichés. The newest of those clichés is interest in the electrical-energy theories of inventor/eccentric Tesla (treated far more intriguingly in Chris Nolan’s The Prestige). In K-20, WWII has been avoided, and in its opening,taking place in l949, we see a conference endorsing Tesla’s wireless electricity interrupted by K-20 himself, a master of disguise who wants to take over the world. Later, the villain places the blame for a desecrated wedding on a circus acrobat/magician (our hero). In order to clear his name, said hero hones his skills and becomes a K-20 stalker/nemesis. And, if we may say so, blah, blah, blah. If you can’t fill in the blanks here, you haven’t been to a movie in 25 years.

20th Century Boys 1: Beginning of the End

A slam-bang cinematic jamboree that has to be seen to be disbelieved The story, taking place in l973, 20l5, l990, and a few other dates (quite briefly) is a sci-fier, based on the manga book phenomenon by Naoki Urasawa. (In fact, this one is the first of a trilogy). Designed for kids, and people with kid-like minds, this puzzler needs a high-energy audience—its conceits are priceless—and a definitive suspension of disbelief. As they say, there’s less here than meets the eye, perhaps, though, turning it into a linear story-line will help for a second or two. In the late 60s, our main character, called Kenji, and his kid friends write The Book of Prophecy, about a sinister group out to destroy our planet. Twenty years later, the Book seems to come to life, at the hands of a mysterious figure called Friend. Only Kenji and company have the knowledge to thwart Friend’s plans. To and fro in time we go as the action picks up.

Adrift in Tokyo (2007)

A low-key grown-up movie, quirky and engaging, this slices-of-Tokyo life comedy has an improbable conceit but shows us more of Tokyo (outside of lurid, neon-haunted downtown) than any movie yet shown here. (And that’s a very good thing.) Here’s the deal: college law student Fumiya, nice but naïve, has an 840,000 yen debt, and is visited by loanshark Fukuhara with a warning to pay up within 72 hours. Later, however, a disturbed Fukuhara changes his mind, and says he’ll pay the debt for the student if Fumiya will accompany him on a walk to a police station across town to give himself up: the loanshark has just killed his unfaithful wife. Off they meander, with no time-frame (it could be thee days or three months, Fukuhara says) to the world of the “other” Tokyo: mom-and-pop shops, localized street festivals, places which hold memories for the loan shark and, eventually, his companion. We see Tokyo characters of every stripe (played by character actors familiar to Japanese audiences) and kind, a treasure of local color and locations. One of those rare movies in which we get to know the characters at the same time they get to know each other. (And that’s a very good thing, too). Fumiya and Fukuhara might not be out to save the world, but they seem to understand that perhaps it’s best, anyway, to start out by saving oneself. Highly recommended.

Best movie book for the over-the-top, serious-to-a-fault movie buff

The Phantom Empire (amazon.com link), by Geoffrey O’Brien. (Trust me; Have I ever lied to you before?)

O’Brien examines the cultural and psychological effects of movie-watching over the past 100 years, analyzing a variety of genres within the medium.

Preview the book on Google Books

Missing In Action

“They” keep saying these long-shelved movies will be released soon but that the time isn’t quite right for them yet.

Benicio del Toro in Wolfman makeup

The Wolfman — Benicio del Toro stars in this re-make of the horror Classic starring Lon Chaney, Jr.

Photo from First Showing.

I Love You, Philip Morris( — Gay love story (a dramedy) starring Jim Carrey

To escape from a Texas jail or prison once is unusual. To do it four times is incredible. To do it four times in five years and always on a Friday the 13th is the stuff of legend. Welcome to the world of Steven Russell. Con artist. Thief. Swindler. Embezzler. Hopeless romantic. A husband and father, Russell was a church organist, prosperous businessman, and onetime Boca Raton cop before turning to his life of crime. Arrested for a string of felonies, with a specialty in fraud, his real expertise turned out to be his uncanny ability to escape from jail. Between 1993 and 1998, he orchestrated a string of prison breaks that were as audacious as they were ingenious. Using whatever unlikely materials were at hand—a Magic Marker, a pay phone, a walkie-talkie, a pair of stolen bright red women’s stretch pants—along with an innate talent for analytical thinking and boundless quantities of sheer nerve, Russell again and again arranged his own “early releases” from jail. Unfortunately, for Russell, staying out of jail is another matter entirely.

Description of the book on which the movie is based from amazon.com.

Brief Interviews With Hideous Men — Actor John Krasinski directs this verision of the David Foster Wallace novel.

A graduate student (Nicholson) endeavors to explore the male psyche for her thesis by interviewing a cross-section of men. The men’s twisted and revealing stories are juxtaposed against the backdrop of her own experience. As she begins to listen closely to the men around her, she must ultimately reconcile herself to the darkness that lies below the surface of human interactions. Krasinski and his fine cast successfully bring the first-ever David Foster Wallace work to the big screen with a film that audiences will be talking about for a long time.

Description from IFC Films

Movies so bad they’re wonderful–sort of

Mame (l974) Sounding like Count Dracula, baritone Lucille Ball sings up a storm in this slow, clunky abomination.


Lions For Lambs(2007) Robert Redford directs Tom Cruise in this anti-war propaganda piece for Cruise’s new studio. Preachy and woodenly-acted.


Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (1993) Gus Van Sant misdirected this version of the Tom Robbins’ novel. Give this one to your enemies for Xmas.


DVD sets

Even though it’s not even Thanksgiving yet you do need to start thinking about what to get the film buff in your life if you want your gifts to arrive in time for the holidays.

The Paul Newman Tribute Collection (l958-l972, boxed), the first part released for Christmas giving, the second due later on.


25 Films of Akira Kurosawa (Deluxe cloth-bound collector’s set, with a 96 page book–re-tooled by the geniuses at the Critersion Company. Out Dec. 8; can be advance ordered at [Criterion.com]. The price? $3l9 smackeroos.