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A Long-Faced Film: “Therese”

Mauriac’s brilliant 1927 novel, Therese Desqueyroux, was filmed in recent years by French director Claude Miller, the result of which is, I think, a respectable but forgettable period piece.  It is called Therese (2013), and its title character (Audrey Tautou), like Therese in the novel, tries to poison to death her husband Bernard (Gilles Lellouch).

There is some astute footage in the film (an emaciated, declining Therese making an appearance for her in-laws, Therese starting a fire with a cigarette), but Therese is less interesting than the novel because of how the novel is structured.  Plus, Tautou goes around with such a saturnine face that she makes the movie a bit stifling.  No high spirits ever spring up, as they usually do in Antonioni and Bergman, and the acting is not as varied as that in the finest art films.  Such cold art this is!

(In French with English subtitles)

A Long-Faced Film: “Therese”

Mauriac’s brilliant 1927 novel, Therese Desqueyroux, was filmed in recent years by French director Claude Miller, the result of which is, I think, a respectable but forgettable period piece.  It is called Therese (2013), and its title character (Audrey Tautou), like Therese in the novel, tries to poison to death her husband Bernard (Gilles Lellouch).

There is some astute footage in the film (an emaciated, declining Therese making an appearance for her in-laws, Therese starting a fire with a cigarette), but Therese is less interesting than the novel because of how the novel is structured.  Plus, Tautou goes around with such a saturnine face that she makes the movie a bit stifling.  No high spirits ever spring up, as they usually do in Antonioni and Bergman, and the acting is not as varied as that in the finest art films.  Such cold art this is!

(In French with English subtitles)

Cutting To The Bone: “Bone Tomahawk”

S. Craig Zahler‘s shocking Bone Tomahawk (2015) is such a grungy, gory and searing Western that no one in the film is decent.  Right?  Wrong.  Most (but not all) of the white people here are basically decent enough.  Sheriff Hunt (Kurt Russell) is good to his wife, his deputies and others, in addition to being manly and brave.  Bravely does he search for the wife of another admirable man, Arthur (Patrick Wilson), after said wife and one of Hunt’s associates are abducted by cannibalistic Indians, unless only the word “savages” will do.

At first the Indians murder a black boy before doing their kidnapping.  A bigoted but smart man named Brooder (Matthew Fox) joins Hunt, Arthur, and Hunt’s “backup deputy,” Chicory (Richard Jenkins), for the pursuit, eventually losing their horses but also finding the savages.  Hunt and Chicory are taken captive.  They witness a horrifying atrocity the savages do to a man.

The film lets us know that in the 1800s a physical search could be harrowing, especially if one of the searchers (Arthur) had a broken leg.  Zahler, who wrote as well as directed the movie, conveys too that the civilizers were not always civil, but whatever the case they were among the barbaric uncivilized.  They could not always survive them.  Arthur seems to be a Christian, but in fact religion in such a world doesn’t appear to stand a chance.  It does, yes, but doesn’t appear to.

Bone Tomahawk is not invariably credible.  Hunt gets clubbed without suffering a bleeding head.  And why do the seekers so easily lose their horses?  However, this is minor:  the film is artfully made and authentically acted (Jenkins and Russell are great).  Although few Native Americans went in for cannibalism, like the savages in the film they often did scalp living people, among other very cruel things.  Thus BT can be called ferociously honest.

 

On “Heist”: Mamet’s 2001 Effort – A Movie Review

David Mamet turned into a very interesting (if not always good) film artist, but his Heist has one of the worst plots of any movie in 2001.  Amoral and almost a potboiler, it revolves around the machinations of thieves acted by Gene Hackman, Danny DeVito and Delroy Lindo.  It boasts some excellent dialogue, however:  “She could talk herself out of a sunburn.”  The first words out of Hackman’s mouth when he and Rebecca Pidgeon are ready to pull a job are “Nobody lives forever.”  “Frank Sinatra gave it a shot,” replies Pidgeon coolly.  Peculiar language for a caper movie—which is good.  Perhaps the film should be seen just for its dialogue.

Alas, it has flaws besides plot problems, though, such as a clumsily directed sequence in which Lindo gets tough with a couple of  cheatin’ fellow robbers.

Stick with Mamet’s The Winslow Boy and even State and Main.  You’ll do better.

Cover of "Heist"

Cover of Heist

“Tombstone” Force

Val Kilmer‘s Doc Holliday in the movie, Tombstone (1993), is ailing (from TB) but cool, a clever scoundrel whose masculinity is there but couldn’t be toxic if it wanted to be.  Kilmer is pronouncedly interesting, whereas Kurt Russell (as Wyatt Earp) is not as good, albeit he has more to achieve than Kilmer.  This is scenarist Kevin Jarre‘s version of the Earp-Holliday story, shot with a sound pace and pictorial energy as it tells of gun-firing losers who try hard to be winners.  Permanent winners.

Jarre’s dialogue could be better, but his narrative is compelling.  One assumes that Earp’s wife Mattie (Dana Wheeler-Nicholson) leaves the dude, as the narrator implies, before Earp begins his relationship with lovely Josephine (Dana Delany).  Otherwise the film’s ending would be immoral.

At any rate, Powers Boothe is his usual fine, gripping self as one of the “Cowboys,” a lawless gang.  Bill Paxton and Sam Elliott are satisfactory as Earp’s brothers.  One actor after another strengthens this conventional Western, well directed by George Cosmatos.

Page 83 of 271

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