The Rare Review

Movies, books, music and TV

“I Will . . . I Will . . . For Now”: Yes, Just For Now

It may be that in the 1970s, men and women were not quite sure what to do about marriage. The divorce rate was rising and they were perhaps fearful. Many started living together. The humorous I Will . . . I Will . . . For Now (1976) may reflect this uncertainty. In the film, “A divorced couple tries reconciliation through a legal contract instead of remarriage . . .” (imdb.com). They finally find themselves undergoing inane sex therapy, but are bereft of real solutions.

Directed and co-written by “Golden Age” Hollywood veteran, Norman Panama, with the help of old-time TV writer Albert E. Lewin, this flick, as a romantic comedy, is monumentally unmemorable. It might have been funny had it contained some true wit, but I don’t recall any. Elliott Gould and Diane Keaton enact the couple, Gould failing to be a thespian of taste while Keaton is bland. Victoria Principal was given a worthless role but is fine in it—and almost as beautiful as she was in Dallas. Paul Sorvino more or less succeeds but with Panama’s trivial script working against him. I’d like to see some of Panama’s other movies; maybe I Will is simply not Panamanian enough.

Cold Reality in McEwan’s Novel, “The Innocent” – A Book Review

It is the mid 1950s and Leonard Marnham, the English “innocent” of Ian McEwan’s 1990 novel The Innocent, has joined a group of mostly Americans in an espionage endeavor in Berlin.  A tunnel is to be used for spying on the Soviets (a real-life venture), and Leonard is duly put to technical work.  By and by he becomes romantically involved with a German woman called Maria, whose ex-husband occasionally, drunkenly batters her. . . An agonizing episode drives Leonard and Maria to kill the ex-husband in self-defense, and since the Berlin law cannot be trusted in this instance, the desperate couple dismember the lout’s body and place the parts in suitcases.  Alas, the love affair is undermined by this, and after a while the spying operation is subverted.

What Leonard encounters is a non-political violence between wars—the war against the Nazis and the Cold War.  The violence of the ex-husband is an ordinary violence, but no less shattering to the individual than national or collective violence.  Violence, like life, goes on, in war or in peace, and often it paves the way for either betrayal or what looks like betrayal, as it does here.

The trauma and the contingency which James Wood says McEwan’s novels (e.g. Atonement) are about rush to the fore in this gripping book.  They aren’t pretty.

The Innocent (novel)

The Innocent (novel) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Look God-Ward, Angel: The Movie, “Angels of Sin”

In Robert Bresson‘s first feature film, Angels of Sin (1943), which I saw on YouTube, righteous behavior intersects with the worldly behavior of a desperate soul.  Here, a zealous young nun, Anne-Marie (Renee Faure), tries to Christianly love a female ex-con (Jany Holt) taking refuge in Anne-Marie’s convent.  Unknown to the convent sisters, she is there after having committed a murder.

Less oddly directed than Bresson’s later films, Angels is also less spiritually vivid and resonant, and is far from first-rate.  It is a serious picture, though, and does well in showing the distinctive lives of nuns.  To my mind, frankly, it is about the impossibility of saintliness (but not sacrifice), albeit we also infer from it that the devout life is a good life.

(In French with English subtitles)

Naughty Society: Renoir’s “The Rules of the Game”

Poster for ''La Règle du jeu, directed by Jean...

Poster for ”La Règle du jeu, directed by Jean Renoir (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

In the late 1930s, film artist Jean Renoir was not happy with French society, which he exposed in La Regle du jeu (1939)—The Rules of the Game—as unserious and self-seeking and infernally adulterous.  Curiously, class distinctions take a step back (both Christine and her chambermaid cheat on their husbands), but the camaraderie we see is usually limited to one’s own class.  And yet this camaraderie, such as that between Christine and Genevieve de Marras, quickly departs, and certainly without it, there is mayhem.

For all this, The Rules of the Game is a “pleasant” movie (Renoir’s word, translated); it is pronouncedly comical.  It is a classic, made so partly by some excellent acting.  Marcel Dalio, for example, looks right as the Marquis Robert, but is also unerring with the character’s casual decadence and tired vigor.  Mila Parely, another example, cleverly plays Genevieve, the marquis’s mistress, displaying a range of emotion as admirable as her poise.  But why was Rules Renoir’s last great film?

(In French with English subtitles)

Celebrate? “The President’s Cake”

The President’s Cake (2025) takes place in the early 1990s, just after the first Gulf War. Said President is Saddam Hussein. Directed and scripted by Hasan Hadi, the film concerns poverty—and, to a lesser extent, the consequences of war—in Saddam’s Iraq. Baneen Ahmed Nayyef is compelling and touching as 9-year-old Lamia, required at school to bake tyrannical Saddam a birthday cake. But she and her grandmother may be unable to find and purchase ingredients for it, and in any case a more serious matter has arisen in that Granny has grown too old to properly care for Lamia.

The film’s narrative is well-written, absorbing. There is suspense in an unsettling scene where a sinister watch seller tries to lure Lamia into a room in which a movie is allegedly being shown. Technically accomplished, Cake offers smart cinematography (for a grave picture) by Tudor Vladimir Panduru and is effectively directed and edited. It is an outstanding work. I don’t care that it was a Cannes favorite, only that it is one of my favorites for ’25.

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