Rapid Response: The Purple Rose of Cairo

Allen’s feather-light fantasy still has a lot of depth and laughs

purpleroseposterIn Woody Allen’s “The Purple Rose of Cairo,” a movie character in a classic, Old Hollywood, Depression-era costume drama steps out of the screen and falls in love with a woman in the audience. He later pulls her onto screen and into the fold of the movie and shows her a night on the town. A montage of lights and marquees with the two actors walking and smiling in black and white plays, and it’s a perfect, yet unremarkable moment typical of just about any film made from that era.

Step back though and you’ll remember this movie wasn’t made by some generic Hollywood director like Mervyn Le Roy or Leo McCarey, but was made by Woody Allen in 1985. Allen’s attention to detail in even just this simple montage is impeccable. And yet it’s all so light and frothy. Movies like “Crimes and Misdemeanors,” “Annie Hall” and “Manhattan” all have a special place in my heart, but some of my favorites of Allen’s are movies like “The Purple Rose of Cairo,” “Sleeper” and this film’s closest surrogate, “Midnight in Paris.” They’re effortlessly fun and seemingly insignificant romances and flights of fantasy, but they have surprising depth and insight about the world.

“I want what happened last week to happen this week. Otherwise, what’s life about?” That line could go almost unnoticed in the film. It takes place in a hilariously chaotic moment where the characters on screen are all taunting, showboating and arguing with the theater patrons watching them. One of the attendees says that line and it says so much about why we come to the movies, about how their predictability doesn’t just offer an escape but keeps us grounded. Continue reading “Rapid Response: The Purple Rose of Cairo”

Café Society

Cafe_SocietyPosterKristen Stewart is only 26, but she feels as though she could’ve been in Woody Allen’s movies since the ‘70s. The camera loves her face, her hair, and the way she dresses. Stewart was one of the biggest movie stars on the planet following “Twilight,” and in “Café Society,” a movie that’s all about how culture and class changes and effects people, Allen sees her as authentic.

Stewart plays Vonnie (short for Veronica), the center of a love triangle between her fun and care free boyfriend Bobby (Jesse Eisenberg) and her wealthy and married lover Phil (Steve Carell) nearly twice her age. Set in the 1940s in the heyday of Old Hollywood, Bobby has just moved to Los Angeles to get away from New York and try and make it by doing work at his uncle Phil’s agency. Of course, this is a Woody Allen movie, and Bobby can’t resist saying how much different and better New York is than LA at every turn. In fact Allen probably couldn’t have tolerated LA in any other period than the ‘40s, using it as an excuse to talk about jazz, so here we are. Continue reading “Café Society”

Rapid Response: Zelig

“Zelig” is Woody Allen’s genius mockumentary set in the 1920s.

What really works about Woody Allen’s “Zelig” and makes it brilliant is that no matter how outlandish, ludicrous and fantastical Leonard Zelig’s scandal or condition gets, you still kind of buy it. Allen’s got Susan Sontag and Saul Bellow giving plausible sounding and descriptive diagnoses of Zelig’s mental state, all of it following a sense of empathy and dramatic arc, and it’s all total nonsense.

“Zelig” is Woody Allen’s mockumentary, although to call it that conjures up ideas of “This is Spinal Tap” and “Best In Show” in which the subject being mocked is someone other than the director himself. “Zelig” is more accurately a real documentary on a fake person, and not just that, but a proto-Woody Allen, a version of himself we see in many of his films. It uses Leonard Zelig’s condition as a human chameleon to get inside the mind of a person always begging to fit in and be liked, even going as far as to say there’s really not much wrong with that. Changing our personality and even our appearance is something just about anyone does, and the movie acknowledges that this could be anything from lying about having read “Moby Dick” to pretending you’re an experienced psychologist so you can go to bed with your doctor. Continue reading “Rapid Response: Zelig”

Fading Gigolo

The thin premise of “Fading Gigolo” mines a surprising amount of depth and emotion, but it’s too distracted with its weird subplot and corny sex jokes.

It’s Woody Allen’s thing to be nebbishly uncomfortable, but he is so out of place in John Turturro’s comedy “Fading Gigolo” that even he can’t quite save it. Turturro’s script starts from a thin premise and manages to find a surprising amount of tenderness and emotion within, but it relies on plot contrivances and supporting players that simply don’t add up.

Allen plays Murray, and he comes to Turturro’s Fioravante with a simple idea: would you have a three-way for money? A “ménage”, he clarifies. This is one of those movies where old, fish-out-of-water men delicately giggle at every sexual word and idea as though they unexpectedly saw it in the Bible in Sunday School. And the bit gets tired fast when they start assuming their alter ego names Virgil and Danny Bongo.

They agree to do this on the basis of being strapped for cash, and the two of them together seem to have no trouble landing middle aged women in need of a pick-me-up. And that ultimately is what “Fading Gigolo” is about: providing women added confidence, care and attention.

Turturro does well to ensure there might be more behind each encounter than sex. In his first meeting with the wealthy and assertive Sharon Stone, there’s no sense that either would have any trouble performing, and yet Turturro finds the innocence in having two people experimenting and trying something new and potentially dangerous. They talk and timidly approach one another, suggesting this is like something out of high school, and the steady and calm Fioravante does something beautiful by sharing a slow dance with her first.

Continue reading “Fading Gigolo”

Click Bait: Woody Allen, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Bill Nye

This week Philip Seymour Hoffman, Woody Allen and Bill Nye were all in the news along with Green Day, The Beatles and George Zimmerman.

I read a lot of stuff, and not all of it makes it to my social media feed. “Click Bait” is my weekly roundup of links pertaining to movies, politics, culture and anything else I found generally interesting this week.

RIP Philip Seymour Hoffman

The outpouring of love and sadness that followed Philip Seymour Hoffman’s death last Sunday is not rare for an actor, but it is rare for an actor such as he, an actor better known for villainous, repugnant character actor parts, for the mourning period to be so fervent for so long and for him to have gone in such a horrible way, not unlike another great actor’s career cut criminally too short in much the same way, Heath Ledger.

I likely first noticed Hoffman in “Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead,” in which he could not look less like his supposed brother Ethan Hawke, but was in control and was simply scary good. It wasn’t long before I started seeing his face in half of the great American movies of the last two decades, most memorably for me in “The Master” and in his fiery scene stealing moment in “Punch Drunk Love.”

There have been a lot of eulogies written, perhaps why I didn’t write one myself. Here are clips from some of the better tributes I read:

A.O. Scott:

“Pathetic, repellent, undeserving of sympathy. Mr. Hoffman rescued them from contempt precisely by refusing any easy route to redemption. He did not care if we liked any of these sad specimens. The point was to make us believe them and to recognize in them — in him.”

Scott Tobias and the rest of The Dissolve:

“He set off small detonations whenever he appeared, and instantly amplified the stakes. He was the most electric actor of his generation.”

Derek Thompson in The Atlantic:

“He could puff himself up and play larger than life, but his specialty was to find the quiet dignity in life-sized characters—losers, outcasts, and human marginalia.”

Aaron Sorkin writing in TIME:

“So it’s in that spirit that I’d like to say this: Phil Hoffman, this kind, decent, magnificent, thunderous actor, who was never outwardly “right” for any role but who completely dominated the real estate upon which every one of his characters walked, did not die from an overdose of heroin — he died from heroin. We should stop implying that if he’d just taken the proper amount then everything would have been fine.”

And this troubling report about Hoffman and his appearance in the remaining “Hunger Games” movies Continue reading “Click Bait: Woody Allen, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Bill Nye”

Blue Jasmine

Cate Blanchett is stunning in “Blue Jasmine,” Woody Allen’s portrait of the have-more culture.

 

In a year filled with movies about the have-more culture, Woody Allen has laid bare how the upper half lives. Cate Blanchett is magnificent in “Blue Jasmine,” Allen’s dramatic “Streetcar named Desire” inspired portrait of a crumbling woman amidst infidelity, deceit and blissful ignorance.

I wrote recently about “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown” how women in movies tend to keep their composure better than men when faced with a personal crisis, and Jasmine has this down flat. Jasmine is the ever so prim and proper housewife of Hal (Alec Baldwin), an obscenely wealthy businessman and trader who turns out to be a massive crook. She’s been driven out of her home to live with her sister Ginger (Sally Hawkins) after Hal is arrested, and yet that complication doesn’t stop her from carefully micromanaging her life story such that she can stay in her protective bubble of wealth and stature.

Jeanette is Jasmine’s real name, but the floral connotation had a better narrative. She met Hal while “Blue Moon” played, but then even this appears to be a clever fabrication. Now she aspires to be an interior designer with a license she can obtain if she only figures out how to use “computers.” This will be perfect as it allows her to continue to adorn herself in glamour and luxury without having any inherent skills. Heaven forbid she bag groceries like her sister. Continue reading “Blue Jasmine”

Rapid Response: New York Stories

“New York Stories” is three interesting, if flawed vanity projects from some of the best directors living, Martin Scorsese, Woody Allen and Francis Ford Coppola.

How come filmmakers don’t make love letters to Chicago? That’s the movie I want to see. There are already enough odes to New York, and even in 1989 when Martin Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola and Woody Allen together made “New York Stories,” a collection of three short films taking place in the city, the three of them had already made movies in which the Big Apple was a vital player. None of these are as good as “Taxi Driver,” “Mean Streets” or “Manhattan,” and yet all three are at least interesting, if flawed vanity projects for some of the greatest directors living today.

New York Stories Life Lessons

“Life Lessons”

“Life Lessons” is so clearly a Scorsese film before the title credits even roll because of the stylization that dominates the film. Procol Harum’s “Whiter Shade of Pale” is blared at us as the camera lunges away from an abstract painting and swivels and edits with alacrity. It strongly asserts the magnetic, but strange relationship between the artist Lionel Dobie (Nick Nolte) and his young assistant Paulette (Rosanne Arquette). She’s returned to New York from a vacation in Florida even though she’s assured Lionel she is leaving and never coming back to him, a sure sign of how people may be reluctant to return to New York, but it always seems to call them back. Continue reading “Rapid Response: New York Stories”

Rapid Response: Bananas

Most great artists need a few films to come into form. One of the great examples is the extremely prolific Woody Allen, whose early films like “Sleeper” and “Love and Death” were leaps and bounds goofier than “Annie Hall” and his later masterpieces.

But then even before those was “Bananas.” The immediate difference is the lack of the classic Allen typeface, Windsor, to open the credits of the film. These big bubble letters alone show a more animated, musical film than the sophisticated wordplay of the later ones. Allen actually proves himself to be a very gifted slapstick comic here, but he’s definitely not at home quite yet, and “Bananas” lacks some of his other films’ narrative elegance.

Allen plays an unhappy product tester who one day starts dating a political activist (Louise Lasser, one of Allen’s wives) going door to door for petition signatures. Unlike in “Annie Hall,” Allen is not the smartest person in the relationship. In fact, he’s a putz, and she breaks up with him claiming that he could never be a daring leader.

But prior to them breaking up, he booked tickets to a fake Latin American nation currently in a state of political upheaval. The government plans to murder Allen and blame the rebels, but he’s rescued by the rebels and lives with them until the dictator is overthrown. When the new leader proves to be mad with power as well, Allen himself steps in as the dictator of the nation, donning a fake beard and military garb. Hilarity ensues.

Most of this is pretty dumb. Gags like a harp player actually being in the closet when the emotional music kicks in is an old hat bit that someone like Mel Brooks did a lot better at around the same time. There’s also the joke where the clerk yells in front of an embarrassed Allen buying a porn magazine, “What’s the price of Orgasm?”

But then there’s the opening scene, which is as daring as anything Allen’s ever done. He gets Howard Kossel to provide play-by-play commentary for the assassination of the Latin nation’s current president, asking him questions like “How do you feel,” just as he’s at his last breath. Movies today aren’t this knowingly cartoonish and cynically upfront about death and the media.

If nothing else, we can see some great style and bravura in all of Allen’s dopey gags. His movies always looked like art house productions, with careful framing in the Academy aspect ratio and not like sketch comedy routines in a Mel Brooks movie. This is not a great film of his, but it arguably has more innovative flair than movies he’s made in the last 20 years.

Side by Side: Sleeper and Love and Death

It’s hard to imagine a time now when Woody Allen was not a legend, when he was just a comic appearing on talk shows and “What’s My Line” and making completely ridiculous screwball comedies free of any Oscar pedigree.

But this is the period in the ’70s when Allen was at the top of his game. His two films just before his first masterpiece, “Annie Hall,” were two genre spoofs that, as Roger Ebert said in his review, cemented Allen at the top of comedic directors of the time, ousting even the less prolific Mel Brooks.

These two films are “Sleeper” and “Love and Death,” both of which I watched yesterday. To see the two films together is to realize how similar they are and yet how much they vary from some of his more personal and dramatic work to come later in his career.

“Sleeper” is an ingenious sci-fi farce about the owner of a health food store in 1973 Greenwich Village who wakes up 200 years in the future after never waking up following a simple ulcer operation. He plays much of the early sequences straight and allows himself to morph into a Marx Brother or Buster Keaton sitting in the midst of all this cosmic nonsense. Doctors pull foil off his face to reveal that he’s been wearing his glasses the entire time, and the fourth wall is instantly broken.

We get funny details about the future like how tobacco is actually the healthiest thing for your body, as are fatty foods, both completely opposite of what they believed in 1973. But Allen takes it a step further when they ask him to identify certain historical relics from his time. With a completely straight face he misleads them because, well what’s the difference anyway? “This is Bela Lugosi. he was, he was the mayor of New York city for a while, you can see what it did to him there, you know. This is, uhm, this is, uh, Charles DeGaulle, he, he was a very famous French chef, had his own television show, showed you how to make souffles and omelets and everything.”

“Sleeper” has an outrageous sitcomy premise that forces him to pose as a robot and as a doctor performing a cloning operation, and his slapstick and chemistry with Diane Keaton (who is likewise brilliant, at one point performing a hammy Marlon Brando in “Streetcar” with the utmost charm) is as good as most Chaplin or Groucho Marx.

But Allen adds something more to the comic hysteria. The film’s color palette makes it resemble a ’70s New Age bohemian lifestyle shot in an expansive style reminiscent of Kubrick, with Keaton’s oblivious character acting no better than a spoiled socialite and then a pseudo-intellectual activist. He makes no real attempt to hide the fact that his sci-fi is a blatant comedic allegory about the ridiculous notions of society he’s living in 1973.

And it’s a riot. He’s got as many great one liners as ever and just as many completely goofy sight gags. The orgasmatron. A robot dog. Two Jewish robots in a clothing store. Cops who can never seem to work their high-tech weaponry. “The NRA? It was a group that helped criminals get guns to shoot citizens.” “I believe that there’s an intelligence to the world with the exception of certain parts of New Jersey.” “I’m 237 years old. I should be collecting social security.” “Has it really been 200 years since you had sex? 204 if you count my marriage.”

I could go on, but I have another movie to talk about yet.

“Love and Death” pulls a similar gag as “Sleeper” by putting a modern day character in a completely fish-out-of-water scenario, this time 19th Century Russia to poke fun at stuffy costume dramas. With this film he is again toying with the conventions and cliche of a genre, not adhering to the storytelling rules like in a Mel Brooks comedy but kind of just going through the motions to allow for more punch lines.

Allen plays Boris, a cowardly peasant forced to fight in a war against Napoleon, only to miraculously survive and return a war hero. He sleeps with a voluptuous countess and is challenged to a duel he’s sure to lose. Anticipating his death, he confesses his love for Sonja (Keaton) and she agrees to marry him out of pity in certainty he’ll lose. Soon they grow to love each other anyway and plan to assassinate Napoleon by impersonating Spanish royalty.

All of these story lines are tropes of some Leo Tolstoy novel or something, but Allen glosses over them in musical montages. He introduces an African American drill sergeant, he exaggerates profound soliloquies into meaninglessly poetic monologues and he finds room for a few more vaudeville-esque slapstick routines.

He’s so obvious about how he’s poking fun at all these cliches that the actual wit and charm doesn’t come out as strongly. It’s a bit of a cheesier execution that also doesn’t get across Allen’s two cents as strongly in the end. But he has a lot of fun here, and the movie has its own aesthetic charms that a Mel Brooks film might lack.

What I noticed about Woody Allen in this period is that he plays a character in much the same way Chaplin or Keaton did. It’s an extension of himself and ultimately synonymous with him, but he is acting. In “Sleeper” he seems to play the part of the neurotic coward to get out of assisting in a government revolution he has no care for. We know he has a backbone somewhere. And that’s because in both films he’s somehow an alluring sexual figure, capable of effortlessly seducing women because he exists in the modern day and not in this fantasy he’s constructed.

This is the opposite of how Diane Keaton acts. In both films she’s a loose sex symbol, sleeping around with multiple guys and emanating an innocent verve as she does. It’s a perfect screen persona she shares with Allen, one that allows her to be lovable and yet cynically funny. It’s a far throw from Mia Farrow’s surly character in another Woody Allen spoof, “Broadway Danny Rose.”

Now I find it hard to watch both of these films and not watch “Annie Hall” next, so maybe expect a classics piece on that in just a few days.

To Rome With Love

“To Rome With Love” is a disappointing follow-up to Woody Allen’s delightful “Midnight in Paris.”

Woody Allen’s “To Rome With Love” is a movie about living out your fantasies of love and discovery. Its stories aren’t likely, so it’s a fantasy of its own, but not in the way of “Midnight in Paris.” Rather, it’s like the warm and gooey dream that feels embarrassingly stupid after you wake up.

In the last few years, Allen has made a trilogy of films in Europe, first in Barcelona, then in Paris and now the Italian Eternal City of Rome. The first problem is that this feels more like a travelogue than any of the others. It invites you into the city and makes time for sightseeing and an admiration of architecture, but then it makes its native Italians into goofy caricatures.

We see Romans as adulterers, Communists, sex craved, tabloid craved, wanderers with no sense of direction and angry mothers brandishing butcher knives.

The movie itself has this two-handed approach to its fantasies. “To Rome With Love” simultaneously tries to pull you toward and away from the romance of the story. The four anecdotes it tells are too dopey to be taken seriously and too familiar and incidental to really laugh at. Continue reading “To Rome With Love”