Wednesday, January 1, 2025


2024 Films

In descending order of preference. 

I’m woefully unprepared to proffer a best-of yet. Give me six weeks.

 

Anora (Sean Baker, 2024): 3.5/5

Lots of pleasure, humor and, finally, authentic feeling to be had, if no real surprises. Baker’s characters are almost always grating, but his breakthrough here is that he makes the most annoying characters the antagonists (and funny) and makes his protagonist down-to-earth and sympathetic. In what way is this tale of a sex worker with a heart of gold and a callous Russian oligarchic family an “American Story”? Discuss. Good example of a last scene deepening the characters as well as all post-film discussion. 

 

Megalopolis (Francis Ford Coppola, 2024): 3.5/5

A movie like none other—sui generis. Every frame beautiful and reconsidered from the ground up at every moment—absolutely nothing taken for granted or presented as rote. Admittedly clunky and undramatic emotionally, but it argues powerfully for imagining and striving for a new kind of perfection over continually shuffling the same bad cards around. “Practically everyone contemplated the idea of change with pleasure.” Accurately (and generously) diagnoses Trump this way: “a little crazy, no boundaries, and he’s an entertainer. That’s how you make a political leader.” 

 

Last Summer (Catherine Breillat, 2024): 3.5/5

Here’s a story that I’ve never seen before, very much about desire and sex, from the point of view of a middle-aged woman (not young, not happy, but not dead yet), and taboo. Finally, it’s an expression of the horrible cruelty, desperation and pain of love—like all of the Breillat films I’ve seen. Both messy and exact—as complex as a great novel. 

 

A Different Man (Aaron Schimberg, 2024): 3.5/5

An interesting pairing with The Substance. In that movie, there is no relief from the oppressive insistence that beauty is required and that it is imposed from the outside. This film begins there and even gives the main character a Substance-like transformation. But too late for our protagonist, it introduces the miraculous Adam Pearson, who completely turns over the equation not just for the protagonist but for the audience as well—revealing the obvious fact that beauty comes only from within. The fact that this doesn’t feel cloying is this movie’s real trick. I want to party with Pearson.

 

Janet Planet (Annie Baker, 2024): 3/5

An ultra specific and intimate account, like reading a diary, of a young girl looking out dubiously at the world around her, especially her mother. Lyrical, fragile, and real, but would it have killed them to provide a dramatic arc of any kind?

 

Juror #2 (Clint Eastwood, 2024): 2/5

I began by appreciating the movie’s old fashioned, unadorned efficiency, but by the end, it comes off as so square and so static. We understand the moral algebra at the 15-minute mark, and it never gets deepened or complicated—just stared at for an hour and a half. 

 

Smile 2 (Parker Finn, 2024): 1.5/5

I watched (and dismissed and forgot) the first Smile, but I still never got the gist of the rules here. What is happening to the protagonist and how can she solve it? The movie never makes this clear, and I’m bored and mystified. This ,plus disastrous act management: the explanation that moves the action into the second act doesn’t happen until 1:17. The movie should be wrapping up and it is just now beginning, etc. 

 

Moana 2 (David G. Derrick Jr., Jason Hand, Dana Ledoux Miller): 1.5/5

Moana is called to adventure, and we know she will go. But first we must endure the scene where she talks to her sister who doesn’t want her to go, talks to her mother who says she must follow her heart, talks to her father, talks to the ghost of her grandmother, sings a song, is involved in a sacred ritual involving her whole tribe, introduces three bland new characters who will go with her. Christ, just get in the fucking boat! There is a pacing problem throughout, and Jack is with me on this.

 

 

Speed Racer (Lana & Lilly Wachowski, 2008): 3.5/5

Interesting pairing with Megalopolis. Both blank check films maudit— inventive and weird, cartoonish, packed with color, and 100 percent synthetic. Both bad by any objective measure, but both essential watches for their absolute novelty in every moment. Is this the most colorful movie of all time? A dubious distinction! I’ve watched plenty of movies, but I’ve never seen this (and never hope to again).

 

Time and Tide (Tsui Hark, 2000): 2/5

A fragmented mise en scene, full of elisions, rack focus, freeze frames, Dutch angles, fast forwards, and gravity-defying camera moves—but seriously lacking in narrative cohesion, character development or really anything to give a shit about. At the time, this probably seemed like the future, but thank Christ it wasn’t. 

 

Conan the Barbarian (John Milius, 1982): 2.5/5

Over-written by Milius and Oliver Stone, it’s an epic and storybook tale, where landscape, “a sense that this is a story passed down,” and a shit-ton of gravitas stand in for specific and idiosyncratic character. Dramatically bloated, self-serious, full of manliness, pain, and myth—and determined to make the most of those expensive sets to manifest large-scale images. The modern equivalent is Eggers’ The Northman or Villeneuve’s Dune—both equally hollow and figurative, thick and slow with meaning. Richard Fleischer disingenuously praises it with the adjective “Wagnerian,” and wisely swaps pretension for self-depreciation and humor in his sequel two years later.

 

Les Dites Cariatides, 13m (Agnes Varda, 1984): 3.5/5

Varda shows us some of the beautiful decorative statues incorporated into the buildings throughout Paris, accompanied by Offenbach, Baudelaire, and her gentle and probing observations. 

 

 

Richard Fleischer Film Fest

After all these art films that I’ve watched, what does it mean to watch movies for pleasure? Fleischer distinguishes himself as an extremely talented journeyman in every genre. Not represented here (because previously watched and reviewed) are the provocative, essential, and bananas Mandingo and the grotty and horrifically unnerving 10 Rillington Place—as well as the really good George C. Scott heist drama The Last Run, and the George C. Scott/Stacey Keach 70s cop drama The New Centurions. 

 

Armored Car Robbery, 1h8m (Richard Fleischer, 1950): 4/5

Fleisher made seven movies between 1948 and 1949. This is a wonderfully efficient and black-hearted programmer features some good police procedural stuff and outstanding images of parts of LA still covered with oil derricks. Mentions making a turn at Figueroa, east onto Jefferson, but no mention of USC. The equally efficient The Narrow Margin, also starring “that guy” Charles McCraw (see also The Birds, Spartacus, In Cold Blood, and The Killers), would follow two years later.

 

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (Richard Fleischer, 1954): 2.5/5

Part ‘under the sea’ travelogue, part musical, part kids movie complete with a clapping pet seals—and part tale of obsessive and murderous misanthrope and justice warrior James Mason (an incredible snack in a beard, white turtleneck, and salt and pepper hair). The ample underwater footage is slow and boring but possibly innovative for its time. Not much adventure occurs until the last 45 minutes when are protagonists are chased by some spear-chucking cannibals then attacked by a giant squid—easily the best sequence in the film. Set design good. Emotional intensity bad.

 

Violent Saturday (Richard Fleischer, 1955): 4/5

Here’s a movie I’m surprised we haven’t seen more of—although maybe Reservoir Dogs comes close. In the 24-hours before a bank robbery, we get to know a constellation of 10 or so characters in a small town, plus four out-of-town thieves (including Lee Marvin), with melodramatic dramas spun around each. Then, when the bank heist plays out the next day, it means so much more because we know and care about all the players. 

 

Between Heaven and Hell (Richard Fleischer, 1955): 3.5/5

Efficiently and effectively blows through many war-movie clichés, and at 95 minutes, not a moment is wasted. Robert Wagner is well-cast as a callow cotton plantation owner who turns out to be brave soldier (who battles PTSD) and learns better values and a love for his fellow man, in combat. Full of miliary leaders both fatherly and insane as well as cowardly lieutenants, etc. 

 

The Vikings (Richard Fleischer, 1958): 2/5

A thin script pits two Viking half-brothers (Kurt Douglas and Tony Curtis with blue eyes and short-shorts) against one-another for the love of an English princess they have taken captive (Janet Leigh, in a series of boob-poppin’ bodices). The running time is padded out with a lot of footage of Norway, broad Viking lore and set dressing, and he-man stuff like axe-throwing and drinking beer out of animal horns by pouring it all over their face and chin while heartily laughing.

 

Compulsion (Richard Fleischer, 1959): 3.5/5

Love the music that codes it as a teen-spoliation movie, yet in the first minutes it demonstrates it’s a bit more than that, introducing a gleefully murderous dom/sub couple. Fleisher, the master of not showing, completely withholds the murder itself, as well as any image of the body even when the coroner is poking at it. Instead, we focus on the joy the dom takes in being part of (his own) murder investigation. All of this is 5/5 great. Unfortunately, the last third completely alters in tone and intent as lawyer Orson Welles speechifies at great length against the death penalty.

 

The Boston Strangler (Richard Fleischer, 1968): 4.5/5

A police procedural that trips realistically through the perverse corners of Boston then morphs into a psychologically intense portrait. Trippy and effective use of multiple split screens throughout. Tony Curtis, who is kept off screen for the first hour, is surprisingly good. Way ahead of its time—and an obvious influence on Zodiac, Memories of Murder, etc. This is how you follow up an historic bomb (Dr. Dolittle). 

 

Tora! Tora! Tora! (Richard Fleischer, Toshio Masuda Kinji Fukasaku, 1970): 2/5

The first half of this Pearl Harbor drama is more interesting formally than dramatically, as two Japanese directors (including Battle Royal-director Fukusaku) shoot the Japanese portions—mostly in long-to-medium shots, with clean lines of characters, and emphasizing ceremony and formality—and Fleischer shoots the American scenes, featuring a who’s-who of actors informally bunched up and slouching around in two- and three-shots. On both sides, though, they’re just historic mannequins. The attack in the last half hour is likely cutting edge for the time but not really worth the wait.

 

See No Evil (Richard Fleischer, 1971): 4.5/5

A corker of a suspense piece that makes the most of the dramatic irony between what the audience knows and what Mia Farrow’s blind character knows. Farrow enters a mansion where she is staying, makes tea and goes to bed, and still Fleisher won’t tell the audience whether or not the entire family inside has been butchered and is lying around. A cold and tense English giallo and certainly one of the very best.

 

Soylent Green (Richard Fleischer, 1973): 3/5

Obviously, the premise lives in the public consciousness, but the film is surprisingly undramatic. Heston is a cop solving a murder, but much of the screen time is funky and sweaty world-building. It’s set in 2022, and yeah overpopulation, global warming, ghoulish corporations, women that come with the apartment, and cannibalism—that seems about right. Small roles for ancient Joseph Cotten and Edward G Robinson (playing a proud Jew) effectively emphasize the worn-out nature of the world. Planet of the Apes and The Omega Man further attest to Heaton’s penchant for apocalyptic sci-fi at this time.

 

Mr. Majestic (Richard Fleischer, 1974): 3.5/5

Charles Bronson gives a typically soulful and confident performance as a probably Mexican guy who gets mixed up with a mobster’s hitman (i.e., the man). All he wants to do is get his watermelons picked (complete with reference to Caesar Chavez). It’s a rare original Elmore Leonard script (that he later novelized), and it’s filmed in the wide-open fields and hills of Colorado. An easygoing thriller and small, professional pleasure, with beater cars skidding around red-dirt roads, fisticuffs, and eventually shotgun blasts to the belly. The big baddie is played broadly by Al Letteieri—Sollozzo from The Godfather, two years earlier

 

Conan the Destroyer (Richard Fleischer, 1984): 2.5/5

Fleisher’s light touch is immediately evident, when compared to the original film—it manages to cut out 30 minutes and all the pretension. An occasionally thrilling Dungeons and Dragons kids adventure full of swordplay, roguishly admired thieves, and a comic embrace of the ridiculous aspects of Conan. “There is a key you must find—a key only she can touch—guarded by a wizard,” a line delivered to a character who—it’s suddenly clear—is half naked, ridiculous buff, and wearing metal underwear. The big baddie in the end is completely a guy in a rubber suit, and it’s perfect.

Michelle's Year in Review

MY TOP 20 FILMS OF 2024

20. Nightbitch (Marielle Heller, US)

19. I Saw the TV Glow (Jane Schoenbrun, US)

18. Love Lies Bleeding (Rose Glass, US)

17. The Room Next Door (Pedro Almodovar, Spain)

16. Janet Planet (Annie Baker, US)

15. Sometimes I Think About Dying (Rachel Lambert, US)

14. A Different Man (Aaron Schimberg, US)

13. Femme (Sam H. Freeman, Ng Choon Ping, UK)

12. The Beast (Betrand Bonello, France)

11. Nickel Boys (RaMell Ross, US)

10. Seagrass (Meredith Hama-Brown, Canada)

9. Problemista (Julio Torres, US)

8. The Feeling that the Time for Doing Something Has Passed (Joanna Arnow, US)

7. Flow (Gints Zilbalodis, Latvia)

6. The Brutalist (Brady Corbet, UK/US)

5. The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, France/UK)

4. Kinds of Kindness (Yorgos Lanthimos, UK/US)

3. No Other Land (Basel Adra, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal, Yuval Abraham, Norway/Palestine)

2. Challengers (Luca Guadagnino, Italy/US)

1. Anora (Sean Baker, US)

ADDITIONAL CATEGORIES
Overrated: TIE: Megalopolis (Francis Ford Coppola, US) and Wicked (Jon M. Chu, US)
Underrated: Juror #2 (Clint Eastwood, US)
Accurately Rated: Dune: Part Two (Denis Villeneuve, US)
Most Disappointing: Civil War (Alex Garland, UK/US)
A Pleasant Surprise: Rebel Ridge (Jeremy Saulnier, US)
Best TV Series: TIE: Baby Reindeer (Netflix) and The Penguin (HBO)

Favorite Rewatches/ Re-discoveries of 2024:
The Best Years of Our Lives (William Wyler, 1946)
Written on the Wind (Douglas Sirk,1956)
Favorite Discoveries of 2024:
Patterns (Fielder Cook, 1956)
The People's Joker (Vera Drew, 2022)
The Remains of the Day (James Ivory, 1993)
History is Made at Night (Frank Borzage,1937)
Hud (Martin Ritt,1963)

Worst Films of 2024 (in no particular order):
Twisters (Lee Isaac Chung, US)
Joker: Folie A Deux (Todd Phillips, US)
Unfrosted (Jerry Seinfeld, US)
The Front Room (Max and Sam Eggers, US)
Argyle (Matthew Vaugh, US)
This Is Me...Now (Jennifer Lopez, US)
Madame Web (S.J. Clarkson, US)
Afraid (Chris Weitz, US)
Borderlands (Eli Roth, US)
It Ends With Us (Justin Baldoni, US)

Monday, December 2, 2024

I spent most of November post-election in a depressive funk. I woke up on Wednesday Nov 6th, checked the internet, and promptly cancelled all my meetings and called out of work that day. Suddenly, watching movies for personal enjoyment didn't seem all that important in the face of being abandoned by a country I wasn't even aware that I loved. Here's what I was able to scrounge together though.

Memoir of a Snail (Adam Elliot, 2024): 3/5
"Life only makes sense backwards. But we have to live it forwards."
Touching and humane. Snails can only move forward, and so does time, and so must we.

 Goodrich (Hallie Meyers-Shyers, 2024): 2.5/5

Mr. Mom 2: Still Momming After All These Years.

The Penguin (Craig Zobel, 2024): 3.5/5
1960s: he's called the penguin because he's wearin a suit!
1990s: he's called the penguin because he was raised in a damn zoo!
2020s: he's called the penguin because he is disabled and has trouble walking and actually it's really fucked up to call him that. like i am a murderous gangster and i really think you should tone it down with the ableism
Please don’t remind me of any other Penguin performances from now on except Colin Farrell’s.


We Live in Time (John Crowley, 2024): 2/5
A postmodern weepy that's entirely too precious and baity. No doubt the movie wears its heart on its sleeve, but sadly has nothing else up it.

Smile 2 (Parker Finn, 2024): 2/5
This is exactly how It feels when some old geezer in the grocery store tells you “You should smile more”. Except that’s a little worse.

Wicked (Jon M. Chu, 2024): 1.5/5
Interminable. Mindless pop dribble akin to a Marvel movie or the Star Wars prequels. A cliche within a cliche warning us to not bully people because they look different. Filled with trite and contrived drama. The film is exactly the kind of adaptation of an adaptation of a book based on a movie that I expected a mess of IP salad to be. Bloated, asking for you to clap in the movie theater, expecting you to laugh at pedantic jokes that feel juvenile, and chock full of CGI.
I’m a contrarian. I’m grumpy. And I’m a loner with this one. And that’s fine by me.

Conclave (Edward Berger, 2024): 3/5
Like an episode of America's Next Top Model. Soooo silly it's gonna win every Oscar.

Saturday Night (Jason Reitman, 2024): 2/5
If I had made this movie it would have been about the 90 minutes before the Steven Seagal episode.

Sunday, December 1, 2024

 

We Live in Time (John Crowley, 2024): 4.5/5

Admittedly I’m in an emotionally vulnerable state at the moment, but this lovely and heart-felt story started working for me right away, and the waterworks persisted throughout. I guess people don’t like this movie as much as I did—too weepy?—but I don’t understand why Pugh isn’t at least being considered for best actress.

 

His Three Daughters (Azazel Jacobs, 2024): 3.5/5

Not much more than an actor’s showcase, but I was completely emotionally engaged. The resolution in the last 15 minutes was miraculously, magically effective and sob sob sob. Inspired a rewatch of Jacobs’ previous film, French Exit, starring the great Michelle Pfeiffer, and I liked it just as much as the first time.

 

Emilia Pérez (Jacques Audiard, 2024): 1/5

A complete disaster. Muddled themes and characters, and a mish-mashed garbage can of genre and razzle-dazzle that, to me, was horrendously distancing—making the experience not only grating and ugly but also remote and anti-human.

 

Conclave (Edward Berger, 2024): 1.5/5

So hushed and self-serious. And why the hand-wringing about making the Catholic church more liberal? The Catholic church is supposed to be conservative—conservatives need a church too and there are plenty of other churches for people who don’t like it. And the resulting film is so programmatic! "Oh, it’s going to be this guy. No, that guy is bad. So it’s going to be this guy. No, that guy is bad." Ho hum. In the current state of the world, the oh so shocking conclusion comes off as completely tone-deaf and cutely self-satisfied.

 

My Old Ass (Megan Park, 2024): 3.5/5

Sweet, gently insightful and surprisingly moving. The beautiful and talented Maisy Stella is going to be a big star, if she wants to be. (Although, big quibble: why make our protagonist gay in the beginning if she’s just going to fall in love with a man? This movie really isn’t interested in bisexuality, and it somehow feels like a “win” for the character that she can finally have a real love with someone, instead of all that unsatisfying lesbian stuff.)

 

Evil Does Not Exist (Ryūsuke Hamaguchi, 2024): 3/5

Kind of a slow, deliberate and serious remake of (the great) Local Hero. Does a good job of expressing the value of the film’s prized location through quiet attention.

 

Blitz (Steve McQueen, 2024): 3/5

Well-appointed but curiously unemotional—although McQueen’s other, more successful, films are also characterized by this restraint. The film mostly follows the episodic journey of our young protagonist as he travels across a torn landscape trying to go home, and unfortunately the movie this reminded me most of was 1917 (although this is better). The parts of the film that don’t follow the child are even less engaging. Why does the script devote time to Saoirse Ronan’s singing career? Paul Weller (of The Jam) himself plays the grandfather, and charisma radiates off him like the sun.

 

Challengers, rw (Luca Guadagnino, 2024): 5/5

What I love about Ingmar Bergman’s movies (and this one) is that every conversation is two people really telling one another what they think. The characters are always volleying points of view back and forth, making moves, and sometimes getting their feelings hurt and/or attacking the net.

 

Saturday Night (Jason Reitman, 2024): 3.5

I watched SNL several times in the first season because I was allowed to stay up late when my parents had a dinner party (which evidently was pretty often). Did I mention that one time I eavesdropped on my parents telling their friends that they had gone to see (and had walked out of) Deep Throat? Yeah, really entertaining film—a great cast, and it really moves.

 

Disclaimer, 7 eps. (Alfonso Cuarón, 2024): 3.5/5

Blanchett is stunning, and Cuarón directs the shit out of this OK plot. Whoever put Kevin Klein in his wife’s pink sweater for much of the run-time deserves a raise. Leila George turns in the sexiest performance of the year. More of her, please.

 

Interview with a Vampire, Season 1, 7 eps. (Rolin Jones, 2022): 3.5/5

My daughter Rosa actually wrote her master’s thesis on this season, and I rudely waited until now to watch it. Not bad! They make some good decisions in updating the text, including making Louis (Brad Pitt’s character in the film) a black man, and making the relationship between Louis and Lestat explicitly gay (not quite even subtext in the original book and movie). Rosa can provide the true insight into this content in my stead: “Dissecting lovers Louis and Lestat as psychological, social, and economic doubles reveals how their relationship aids Louis in accepting himself as a queer Black man in a heteronormative, White world through the doubling of his sexuality, race, and class with the vampire. This doubling implicates us in our own historic doubling as well. To explore the framed narrative of twenty-first century America (the audience) gazing in towards twentieth century America (Louis) looking at eighteenth century Europe (Lestat) is to see the present as a double of the past, endlessly repeating itself.

 

His Kind of Woman (John Farrow, 1951): 4/5

For most of the movie, an atmospheric and enjoyable romp with Robert Mitchum in an exotic location with mugging gangsters, Jane Russell singing, romance, comedy, drinks, gambling, and a crack script full of hard-boiled one-liners, ala To Have and Have Not and Key Largo. Then John Farrow was fired, new director Richard Fleisher (and Howard Hughes himself) reshot the final third, and we are abandoned to plot requirements. Still, the long series of shoot-outs is at least enlivened by mugging actor Vincent Price playing a mugging actor and, most importantly, Robert Mitchum stripped to the waist.

 

The Straight Story, rw (David Lynch, 1999): 3/5

One monologue places this firmly within the valorization of the Greatest Generation with their WWII memories and values, their wretched stubborn horizon gazing, and their emphysema. But I doubt Lynch thinks too much about that, and is probably just interested in these humans, with their will, their unknowability, and their dreams. A lot of the zen-like dialogue works great, and the acting performances of Farnsworth and Spacek are just perfect—although all the lyrical second-unit helicopter-over-corn smoothing shots grate. Pair with Herzog’s Stroszek to see more naifs wandering across the American landscape.

 

The Audition, 16m (Martin Scorsese, 2015): 3/5

Did you know that in 2015, Studio City Macau Resort and Casino gave Scorsese a $70m budget to make a commercial for their casino, starring Robert De Niro, Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt? I hope they all had fun in Macau! A complete trifle, but there’s no reason not to watch it on YouTube.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_KSYIZ61q0

 

Bollywood Film Fest

Joyous filmmaking. Fun fact: The term “Bollywood” is actually a bit offensive nowadays because (1) no one really loves a label and (2) the word Bollywood is based on the fact that once many Indian movies were made in Bombay—but today Bombay is now back to being called Mumbai, since the name Bombay was a corrupted Anglicization of the original name. Stupid English people. All these films were massive blockbusters in India.

 

Om Shanti Om, 2h49m (Farah Khan, 2007): 3.5/5

Contains probably every genre and mood, in a colorful succession—often fun but tiring at its length. Baz Luhrmann has watched and absorbed these films’ sense of spectacle and “moment” over emotional, dramatic and tonal coherence. And he even hired this (female) director to choreograph (the wretched) Moulin Rouge.

 

12th Fail, 2h26m (Vidhu Vinod Chopram 2023): 3.5/5

No genre mixing or dance numbers—just a broad and entertaining drama about one village boy’s attempt to move to the big city and become a regional policeman to clear out the corruption in his hometown. Still, the film’s length let’s one hang out with these people quite a long time, making the finale undeniably moving.

 

Dhoom 2, 2h31m (Sanjay Gadhvi, 2006): 3.5/5

Like the Fast and the Furious, but broad and outrageous. (!?!) I dig the over-the-top self-aware, shiny and plastic quality, which feels like future. I rewatched most of Mission Impossible: Fallout the next day and I recognized the similarity.

 

Sholay, 3h24m (Ramesh Sippy, 1975): 4/5

Lots of influence from Seven Samurai, The Good the Bad and the Ugly, and probably every other epic Western. Two really charismatic buddy protagonists, including Amitabh Bachchan—one of the biggest and most beloved stars in Indian cinema and star of 246 films. As these pages will attest, I have watched many Spaghetti Westerns, and this one is one of the best of the genre, in terms of fun.

 

 

Peter Hyams Film Fest

Hopping from genre to genre, privileging acting and character over narrative imperative—in the vein of Soderberg and Coens, although not nearly as arch and self-aware. Hyams (who also directed my beloved Busting, with Elliot Gould and Robert Blake) writes many of these as well. A staple of my 80s filmgoing.

 

Capricorn One (Peter Hyams, 1977): 3.5/5

A worthy addition to the paranoid government cover-up and assassination films of the 70s. At a little over two hours the narrative is shaggy, even lumpy, for a thriller, but the slower, 70s pace really leaves room for performance, and here we feast on loose performances from Elliott Gould, Hal Holbrook, and (wow) Brenda Vaccarro—not to mention Karen Black and Telly Savalas (!!)). James Brolin makes no impression, despite the screen time, and OJ Simpson is amateurish and has a head that is much larger than that of the rest of the cast. Good stuff on imposter syndrome.

 

Hanover Street (Peter Hyams, 1979): 3.5/5

Poses the question: Would Brief Encounter be even better if Trevor Howard was a wise-cracking but brave bomber pilot who, in the film’s last third, went on a dangerous mission behind enemy lines with Celia Johnson’s husband? Harrison Ford’s acting is a bit wooden, but he makes up for it with pure charisma, plus expert loud-nose-breathing between lines. 

 

Outland, rw (Peter Hyams, 1981): 3.5/5

A solid paranoid thriller that feels like a police procedural and a Western but happens to be set in space. In fact, I greatly prefer this competent, even expert, sci-fi story to Clair Denis’ abstract High Life, so sue me.  Like Alien and Star Ware, it prefigures a world where we have colonized multiple planets and the computers are still green-screen circa 1985. Expert work from Connery, Peter Boyle, and James B Sikking. Today, they complain that you can only get your script made if it can be fit into the Marvel universe, but it was ever so. Post Star Wars, if your genre script could be jammed into space, it was a go.

 

The Star Chamber, rw (Peter Hyams, 1983): 2.5/5

My 57-year-old self agrees with my 14-year-old self that this revenge-o-matic is altogether too moody, somber, classy, and cerebral. Hal Holbrook, James B Sikking, and various featured sweaty, drugged-out, low life criminals are all terrific, but Michael Douglas is too buttoned down and serious to be fun (unlike the more gonzo and enjoyable Fatal Attraction and Basic Instinct performances.)

 

Narrow Margin, rw (Peter Hyams, 1990): 3/5

A by-the-numbers thriller when “the numbers” included efficient storytelling, zero CGI, helicopter shots galore, perfect pauses at the one-hour mark for dramatic and character-revealing exposition before the implausible but well-presented action sequence conclusion. The many, many two-shots make the performances central, which is a real pleasure when we’re talking about M. Emmet Walsh, James Sikking (again, here complete with yellow-lensed shades: clearly evil), J.T. Walsh, and Gene Fucking Hackman.

 

The Relic (Peter Hyams, 1997): 2.5/5

Hyams is running out of juice here. Basically, Alien in a museum (The Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago. I’ve been there!), but then again Hyams’ power is not his originality. Acceptable victims here include local politicians, rich donors, and weaselly Chinese researchers.