Four Recent Movies

Recent to me, I mean. Not very recently made.

Devotion

Made in 1946, this purports to be a biography of the Bronte sisters, but can most generously be described as "based upon." Among other historical crimes, it invents a love triangle involving Charlotte, Emily, and their clergyman father's vicar. It stars Ida Lupino as Emily and Olivia de Havilland as Charlotte. Bosley Crowther of the New York Times panned it pretty harshly when it came out: "a ridiculous tax upon reason and an insult to plain intelligence." Well, I guess so, and I wouldn't make any claims for it, but as an atmospheric 1940s Korngold-scored romance, well-acted and with a charming-if-ersatz English setting (and a funny mixture of accents), I found it enjoyable. I particularly liked the brief appearance of Sydney Greenstreet as Thackeray. Here's a review by a lover of old movies who calls it a guilty pleasure.


 

The Strange Love of Martha Ivers

I really had no idea what to expect of this one. I can't remember why I recorded it (from TCM) in the first place, because it was well over a year ago. Maybe I had heard the word "noir" associated with it. The title suggests something racy, if not semi-pornographic, but since it was made in 1946 I wasn't too worried about that. It's the story of a woman who as a teenager semi-accidentally kills the mean old aunt who is her guardian, and successfully keeps the secret for many years, until the childhood friend who may or may not know what really happened comes back to town. Martha is now rich and powerful; the friend, a boy from the wrong side of the tracks, is now a bit of a shady character, not exactly a criminal but not respectable, either. Martha thinks he intends to blackmail her. Things happen. 

It's an excellent story, and noir indeed. Unfortunately for me, Martha is played by Barbra Stanwyck, and I have never really found her convincing in these femme fatale roles (e.g. Double Indemnity). I also didn't care much for the actress who played the other major female character, Lizabeth Scott. I hadn't heard of her before. She looks rather like Veronica Lake but has some mannerisms that bother me–too bad it wasn't Veronica Lake. But these are just my quirks, and if you don't share them and like this kind of movie, this is probably one of the better ones.  Kind of a weird title.

 

Taxi Driver

So, thirty-five years later, I finally got around to seeing this film which I know to have been the source of the apparently pointless catchphrase "You talkin' to me?" I vaguely remember thinking, at the time of its release (1976) that I didn't need to see a movie about urban decay, violence, and child prostitution. As everybody but me (and my wife) has known for many years, it's about an alienated and slightly cracked New York City loner nursing fantasies of apocalytptic violence–a type who has become all too familiar to us. It's one of the movies that established Martin Scorsese as a big-name director, but I've never been terribly interested in his work, and the truth is that I only watched it now because it's considered such a classic and I've been trying, in a desultory sort of way, to fill in these gaps in my knowledge.

I was a little surprised to find that I more or less concur with those who think it's a great film. Maybe I wouldn't go as far as great, and I don't think it would make any list of essential works that I would compose. But it is really fine. I found the resolution unconvincing, but other than that it's a powerful piece of work. And I really liked the Bernard Herrmann score, his last. Robert de Niro's performance is great, as everyone has always said.

 

The Departed

I was not having a Scorsese festival, and didn't even realize that this was a Scorsese film until the credits. I only picked it because I'd heard it was an excellent crime drama. And it is. The basic premise almost guarantees intensity and suspense: two cops working for the Boston Police Department, one an informer for a mobster, trying to protect him, the other working undercover for that same mobster, trying to bring him to justice. Jack Nicholson is the disgustingly evil mob boss. Matt Damon is the bad cop, and Leonardo DiCaprio is the good cop.  Each becomes aware of the other's existence, but not his identity. You can imagine the sort of tension and paranoia generated by that situation.

Of course I'm familiar with DiCaprio's name, but the sort of movie that he stars in is not usually the sort of movie I see, so I didn't really know what sort of actor he is. But his performance in this movie struck me as stunningly fine. His character comes from a family with a lot of criminal associations–which helps him to infiltrate the mob–and is a pressure cooker of tension and conflict which DiCaprio renders with great intensity. 

This is not a big idea movie; it didn't leave me reflecting on its themes. But I'll certainly remember the people, especially Billy Costigan, DiCaprio's character. And it is a very gripping story. (It's also, of course, pretty violent.)

 

Interesting to see the change over the years in the way trailers–or "previews," as we used to call them–are made. The old ones were a little ridiculous, but the new ones are irritating. 


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16 responses to “Four Recent Movies”

  1. I’ve seen only The Departed, and it is one of my favourite films of its type. I’ve actually seen it twice, which is rare for me. Don’t you love that scene in which the two principals finally connect over the telephone? Neither says anything, but there’s so much going on between them during those few seconds. That’s good writing.

  2. Yes, that was a really well-done moment. I agree that it’s one of the best of its type, although I guess my acquaintance with the type is not that wide.

  3. I’d never even heard of The Departed, but I’ve seen the film I think it must be based on.

  4. Yes, it definitely was based on Infernal Affairs. That was mentioned in the Wikipedia article on The Departed (which contains a plot summary, so don’t read it if you don’t want to read spoilers), and it made me really want to see it. I hope it’s on Netflix.

  5. It is on Netflix, and is now at the top of my queue. I see that it’s part of a “trilogy”–or, more cynically, that it has two sequels. Do you know if they’re as good?

  6. I also heard that Scorcese’s was a re-make, and I watched the Asian original. In my opinion, Scorcese’s is far the superior film. The story is broadly the same, but a good director makes all the difference.

  7. The Asian director is on record (according to Wikipedia) as disagreeing with your second sentence, but I suppose he might agree with your third.

  8. I liked the Asian one better — hated The Departed — came close to turning it off. But then, I’m not much of a Scorcese fan. At one time I liked Goodfellas, but if I watched it now I don’t know if I still would.
    I did see Internal Affairs before The Departed, but I don’t think that had much to do with it. I just disliked the latter film intensely.
    Coincidentally, I happen to be going to see this one tonight:
    http://theaters.pittsburgharts.org/drug-war

  9. I’m curious as to why you hated The Departed. Especially as you’re going to see a gangster movie tonight. I would have had a hard time turning The Departed off after the first 20 minutes or so.
    In general I’m not a fan of the whole American Mafia-cool thing that’s been around since The Godfather. I watched about 15 minutes or so of Goodfellas and decided I wasn’t in the mood. I never watched more than a few episodes of The Sopranos, although I grant that it was really well done.

  10. I like some gangster films, I just really disliked that one. Part of it was the testosterone overload — that whole machismo/violent thing, which seems to imply that such a lifestyle is cool, as you say, really turns me off. Secondly, I thought the violence itself was way OTT. I mean, how many exploding head shots do you need in a movie? Scorscese was getting awfully close to Tarantino country there! And yes, I dislike that trait even in directors I admire, like Lynch and the Coens.
    Finally, it seemed to me that the whole plot was sort of an exercise in expounding of a gimmick, and that the plotline and characters existed for its sake. I didn’t find this to be the same in the original film, which was more character-driven.
    (spoiler alert)
    The scene where I came close to turning it off was the one where the body fell off the roof, hit the car, and the characters were sprayed with blood. I thought, ‘Geez, this is too much!’ (a la Tarantino) and almost shut it down.

  11. Oh yeah…ugh, I had forgotten that detail, which maybe is not surprising as it was very brief. But I may have missed some of the violence, because I saw it on a non-premium cable channel and I think it was edited a bit.
    I might half-agree about the gimmick, in that I think the Matt Damon character was not developed. You didn’t get much insight into why he was doing what he did. But I thought the other character was quite interesting.

  12. The sequels just did the same thing again. And then again. I fell asleep halfway through the second sequel.

  13. I thought the first Infernal Affairs was brilliant. I don’t know if a prior affection for the Hong Kong police/gangster genre helps in that respect. It’s better even than A Better Tomorrow or City on Fire.

  14. That’s interesting, Rob, that you preferred the original version. I don’t have those strong negative feelings about Scorcese’s films, though I grant that the violence of The Departed is much more brutal than in the original. I thought the cat and mouse (and mouse and cat) game played out with more tension and intelligence in Scorcese’s version, and that, for me, was the chief attraction of the film. To me it didn’t feel like a gimmick.
    Also, I found the direction and photography of the Asian film much flatter and less interesting. There was some pretty sappy music too, if I remember rightly.

  15. “the cat and mouse (and mouse and cat) game…for me, was the chief attraction”
    Yes, me too. Secondarily, there was the drama of Costigan’s (the DiCaprio character) position, requiring that he get very close to some very bad people, and the uncertainty as to whether he was being drawn to join them.
    I’m unacquainted with the Hong Kong police/gangster genre, although I’ll soon get acquainted with Infernal Affairs.

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