The Monkey is Out of the Bottle

March 15th – March 21st

Coraline — The special effects were good, but they didn’t blow my mind. The stop-motion stuff wasn’t nearly as delicious as what Wes Anderson did with it in Fantastic Mr. Fox. It wasn’t as loved and lived in. And some of the CG effects just didn’t seem to mesh naturally with the more tactile stop-mo stuff. Good, but not special. The story was creepier than I expected. I think it would be scary for young children. And despite getting a little muddled at times and turning towards video game territory in the latter parts, it was still a refreshingly smart and interesting tale.

Phase IV – Last summer, we caught Brian Hearn’s live remix of this Saul Bass sci-fi film. That one was called Phase V and featured live actors dubbing new lines over an edited version of the film. I hadn’t seen the original work to that point. But I really enjoyed the remix. Well, now I’ve finally seen the inspiration which features some nicely filmed close-ups of ants. Unlike Them!, the other ant movie which I saw last week, these are real ants and aren’t shot to look bigger. Their size isn’t what is scary, it’s the evolving hive mentality that they develop which turns homicidal. The movie is a bit slow and veers off into 70′s sci-fi trippyland too much. But it’s still worth watching, if only for the fact that it’s the only feature that Bass directed. It also features an image that appears to be a direct homage to the Luis Bunuel/Salvador Dali short Un Chien Andalou (see below).

Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) — Number five in our Sci-Fi Horror Marathon. Before this one and Them! last week, I expected the sci-fi horror of the 1950s to be nothing more than drive-in fluff. I was expecting mindless creature features, but in both of these I’m finding something more profound. In Body Snatchers particularly, it is science fiction that entertains with rising tension and thrills but also comments on the concerns of the times. It does not spell anything out and can be read in different ways, but fear (intentional or not) clearly transcends. I’m curious about the 1978 and 1993 remakes, but also a little wary. I really liked this one a bunch.

Aguirre, Wrath of God – Okay, I’m now officially a card-carrying member of The Church of Werner Herzog. After hearing his voice work in Ramin Bahrani’s Plastic Bag short last week and reading up Herzog in the AV Club, I had a Herzog itch. Plus, I needed to see what this Klaus Kinski was all about. I was not disappointed. Herzog, in five minutes, shows more passion and competency in filmmaking than many directors will demonstrate in their entire careers. And a crazed Kinski is quite definitely compelling in his own right. Kinski’s performance, the location shooting in the Peruvian rainforests and rivers, and Herzog’s direction add up to a truly gritty and dirty production. Herzog brilliantly immerses the viewer in the location. Watching this movie practically invites swatting away Amazonian insects from the comfort of your own couch.

That this movie was made with a stolen camera and stolen monkeys; that the dialogue was delivered in English, dubbed in German, to stand in for Spanish; that it has inspired cinematic legend (namely Kinski acting at Herzog’s gunpoint) and influenced Coppola’s Apocalypse Now and Malick’s The New World–these all demonstrate the true brilliance of its maker. Keeping on the Herzog/Kinski track, I’m going to attempt a Fitzcarraldo, Burden of Dreams, My Best Fiend triple-feature sometime very soon.

Un Chien Andalou – For some reason, it has taken me this long to get around to this one. It is, of course, the eye cutting scene that initially brought me to the movie. And having seen it, I’m just kind of shocked that it’s such a tiny piece of the film, albeit a very good shot. This Surrealist filmmaking is fun to watch, but admittedly leaves me a bit confused. I know that’s part of the point. But, I needs me some narrative, yo. Still, it was pretty damn cool noticing a shot in this one that was mimicked in Saul Bass’s Phase IV which we had just seen. The shots in question involved people with ants crawling out a hole in their hand. There is a shot in this one…and a roughly identical one in Phase IV. I assumed some Freudian connotation–of death or destruction, vaginal. But maybe Dali just really likes ants and Bass really likes Bunuel and Dali. Nevertheless, the unexpectedness of catching Bass quoting Bunuel and Dali quoting Dali was pretty cool.

Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist – Not a great teen comedy (very few are), but a pretty good one. For me, it was special for breaking out of the mold and introducing some new things to the genre, especially the gay guy friends (who aren’t there just to be made fun of) and the sex scene (which seemed to be all about getting her off). The fact that the leads are Michael Cera and Kat Dennings sort of instantly subverts the genre. Although at this point, neither Cera or Dennings can be described as weird or off-beat, they are the popular kids now.

Pineapple Express – James Franco is the man. We can all agree on that. Now I wonder if he can edit. Because that’s exactly what this movie needed. Like Apatow’s Funny People it was overly long. A tighter movie would have been better for everyone. In several sequences, I found myself wondering why I was getting bored in a movie full of gags and chase scenes. It’s time for this Apatow family of players to find someone who has the ability to reign them in on occasion.

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