THE WOLF OF WALL STREET (2013)
A few well-written, insightful films,
“Margin Call,” “Arbitrage,” and HBO’s “Too Big to Fail,” have done well in
showing how questionable ethics and unchecked avarice led to the financial
meltdown of 2008. But what Martin Scorsese’s new film does is rub our noses in
what the financial world has permanently become; it pushes us into the
excrement that was (as in) the lifestyle of many of Wall Street’s new wave of
stock brokers.
As
seen through the memoirs of Jordon Belfort, the introduction of 401ks and the
rush to make a killing in the stock market turned traders into kings,
especially those who weren’t hung up on ethics. Like young athletes scoring
their first multi-million dollar contract, Belfort and his colleagues weren’t
shy about spending their questionably earned profits on clearly illegal
activities.
Few film have ever been so focused on
depicting debauchery; the nonstop sex, drugs and full-contact partying starts
out looking like great fun, right up until one loses consciousness. And then
you get up the next morning, convince your clients to reinvest their money or
invest additional funds—anything to increase your commission—and then start the
partying all over again.
Some critics and many filmgoers have been
offended by what they perceive as the glorification of Belfort’s lifestyle and the
failure to show the wrecked lives and devastated companies that often were the
sources of these brokers’ ill-spent riches. Yet it’s crystal clear to me that
Scorsese, by making the nonstop abuse of pills and cocaine the focus of the
film and emphasizing the treatment of women as pleasure chattel, finds the
entire culture both criminal and lacking in any redeeming value. He leaves it
up to his audience to recognize that the obscenity isn’t the rampant sex and
profanity, but the manner in which their money is earned.
Truthfully, would it be less offensive if
the brokers were spending (as obviously many do) their money on their
children’s education, homes for their parents or creating charitable
foundations? The virtually unregulated financial industry has turned the
economy on its head in the past 20 years; you can become a millionaire by
selling shares in a company at the same time, and often because of, thousands
of workers are being shown the door.
What propels this movie beyond its social
commentary is what may be Leonardo DiCaprio’s most impressive, audacious
performance. His Belfort starts out as an ambitious but naïve broker, a quick
learner who turns his success in pushing penny stocks into creating his own
company aimed at high-end investors. DiCaprio’s performance makes you believe in
the devotion of Belfort’s workers and how this master salesman could build a
huge, loyal client list. DiCaprio takes a hold of this role like Nicholson or
Pacino once did, dominating every moment of the film, filling the room with
charismatic energy. You don’t root for Belfort because he is such a despicable,
arrogant ass, but DiCaprio makes you understand his truth, his bent view of
life.
He
leads his cadre of sycophants, led by wide-eyed and shameless Donnie (played
with unchecked gusto by Jonah Hill), into believing that they can do no wrong,
that no behavior is unreasonable. Not even when the FBI and SEC are closing in
does he believe anyone can touch him.
A
voice of reason amid this unending celebration of money is Belfort’s old-school
father (hilariously played by Rob Reiner) who, at least at first, is appalled
by the waste of money, the drugs, the sex. Reiner has never been funnier, more
authentic, as he speaks the outrage the audience feels.
Do I even need to mention that this film
isn’t for everyone—and a far cry from Scorsese’s last film, the 3-D fairytale
“Hugo”—as “Wolf” is stuffed with more bad behavior than Caligula ever dreamed
of. I don’t try to understand the movie ratings system, but how this film
avoided the dreaded NC-17 is baffling. The opening scene showing Belfort
snorting coke off a prostitute’s naked body would have earned nearly every
filmmaker not named Scorsese the restrictive rating.
“The Wolf of Wall Street” is very
comparable to the director’s “Casino” (1995) in both style and substance. Both
films are about organized crime and the handsome payday corruption offers,
portraying charismatic men who are very good at their job and refuse to live by
anyone’s rules but their own. In the mob world, inevitably, you pay the price
for your mistakes; less so in the “legit” world of high finances. But until
getting rich quick goes out of style, guys like Belfort will always be around to
take your money.
THE BIG SLEEP (1946)
One of the great ironies behind the
creation of this timeless detective movie is that, despite the involvement of
so many extraordinarily talented artists—director Howard Hawks, actors Humphrey
Bogart and Lauren Bacall, screenwriters William Faulkner and Leigh Brackett
and, of course, the originator, Raymond Chandler—it was the suggestions of a
talent agent that helped cement its place in cinematic history.
Charles K. Feldman, representing Bacall,
wrote Jack Warner, head of Warner Bros. studios, urging him to reshoot and add
scenes to the finished film to help boost the 21-year-old’s career. The film,
completed in early 1945, had been shelved by the studio because it needed to
get all its war films into theaters before the actual conflict ended. But
Feldman was concerned about the bad reviews his client received for
“Confidential Agent,” her second film after bursting on the scene in 1944
opposite Bogart in “To Have and Have Not.” Feldman wanted more of the feisty
character that made her such a sensation in “To Have and Have Not,” which was
not much in evidence in the original version of “The Big Sleep.”
In early 1946, Hawks and newly married
Bogart and Bacall, along with some other cast members, reshot about a
half-dozen scenes for the film, most importantly the now famous “horse racing”
seduction scene, reportedly written by Jules Furthman, who, with Faulkner, had
written the screenplay for “To Have and Have Not.”
The beauty of the movie version of
Chandler’s crackling first novel is that, unlike most Hollywood detective yarns
to that point, the film treats the convoluted plot as an outlet for character
development and romance. Faulkner and Brackett, working separately to adapt different
sections of the book, muddy the plot beyond what Chandler wrote, in part
because they can only suggest that Carmen Sternwood (Martha Vickers) is a slut
and mostly because the point of the movie (as Mr. Feldman so wisely pointed
out) was to cash in on the Bogart-Bacall chemistry.
Three years earlier, Bogart had played a
much more serious detective in “The Maltese Falcon,” a great film but one that
is devoted to getting to the bottom of the crime. Who has the black bird? In
“The Big Sleep,” no one cares who killed Geiger or why Joe Brody was shot or
how the Sternwood chauffeur ended up dead (even Chandler couldn’t answer that
one)—just sit back and savor Bogart offhanded delivery of some of the funniest
lines ever written for a crime novel.
The opening sequence showing Marlowe’s
first encounter with all the Sternwoods at their mansion is taken virtually
word for word from the novel. Not only does it quickly establish Marlowe as a
blunt-talking, sarcastic, yet ethical detective, but it prepares the audience
for the type of film it’s about to see. It’s a textbook introduction that lays
down the visual and vocal grammar of the movie and mentions, at least in
passing, virtually everyone who is going to play a key role in the story and its
blackmail scheme.
The script diverts from Chandler’s
original for a sparklingly frisky scene in which Marlowe flirts with a
bookstore clerk, who closes the shop and pulls down the shades as the detective
waits for a man to arrive at a store across the street. The suggestion of what
goes on is pretty clear for a 1946 film after the clerk (played by Dorothy
Malone) takes off her glasses and undoes her hair.
Even as Bacall’s Vivian lies to Marlowe
and tries to get him off the case, it’s obvious that she wishes they would have
meet under different circumstances. In terms as blunt (and vulgar) as movie
dialogue could be 65 years ago, he tells her, in horseracing parlance, “…I
don’t know how you’d do over a stretch of ground,” and she replies, “A lot
depends on who’s in the saddle.” As marvelous as the scene is, it completely
interrupts the arc of their relationship and makes a later scene, in Eddie
Mars’ casino, confusing. Suddenly, she’s acting demure and surprised by his
attention, after practically inviting him into her bed minutes earlier.
In the novel, Vivian is corrupt and too
involved in the crimes to ever end up with Marlowe, but in Hollywood, even as
the studio’s romantic period was coming to a close, the pair is destined for a
final clinch. But typical of a Hawks film (see “Only Angels Have Wings,” “His
Girl Friday,” “Ball of Fire”) the film is filled with free-thinking,
independent women, including Vivian, the bookstore clerk and con artist Agnes
(Sonia Darrin).
There’s
a bit of rain and fog to give the Southern California setting a sense of the classic
noir alleyways and shadowy nights of New York (though a pair of henchmen
manages to find an alley to drag Marlowe into and pummel him), but the
desperate disillusionment of film noir was not in Hawks’ vocabulary. By
emphasizing the comedy, the witty wordplay and the romanticism of Bogey and
Bacall, he’s made something quite different from a crime film. He, and his
illustrious writing team, turned Raymond Chandler’s prose into a Howard Hawks
film. It doesn’t get much better than that.
NEBRASKA (2013)
There’s nothing very original about a
character and those around him coming to terms with their lives by returning to
their hometown. It’s a story that has become a virtual rite of passage for any
budding fiction writer. Yet director Alexander Payne and writer Bob Nelson,
with insightful detail, subtle Midwest humor and sincerely crafted characters,
have brought something fresh to this well-worn scenario.
Not
unlike Payne’s “Sideways” and “About Schmidt,” this new film offers a
collection of characters whose lives are not turning out as they planned and
they are pretty clueless as to how to rectify their state of being. David (Will
Forte, longtime “Saturday Night Live” writer and cast member) is sliding toward
middle age with a dead-end retail job and a broken marriage. He is also always
on call to handle his alcoholic, obstinate father (a dazed, unkempt Bruce
Dern), whose dementia symptoms have his wife and other son convinced he should
be put in a nursing home.
Woody’s latest ridiculous whim is that
he’s determined to walk (his driver’s license has been revoked) from his home
in Billings, Montana to Lincoln, Nebraska, where he expects to collect the $1
million he believes he has won. No matter how many times David explains to his
father that this is just an advertising come-on, the old man insists on going
to Lincoln. Ignoring his mother’s objections (she’s tired of him catering to Woody),
David agrees to drive him to Lincoln and satisfying his crazy notion that he’s
won.
Just when Woody’s antics and David’s
mopiness are starting to become tedious, they make a stop in Hawthorne, the
father’s hometown, to visit his brother and other relatives. It’s here where
the film really shines, brilliantly capturing the world of small-town, rural
America; especially the men, who are stoic, nonverbal, seemingly waiting around
to die. At his brother’s home, the conversation mostly centers around how long
it took them to drive from Billings, until Woody reveals that he’s about to
become a millionaire.
Payne has made a touching, funny movie
centered on a rather unpleasant person, Woody, who has been a sad excuse for a
father, not much of a husband and is nearing his end filled with regrets. Yet,
Dern, one of the most enduring actors of our time—he made his debut on TV in
1960—clearly has a bead on Woody and he slowly emerges as someone we sympathize
with. There is a memorable scene when he returns to the home he was raised in
and walks from room to room remembering his severe upbringing. Looking out on
the barren fields, he says, “The barn’s still standing.” Meaningless, it seems,
but loaded with every sad memory that has turned him into the man he is.
Shot in soft, almost drab black and white,
“Nebraska” sometimes feels like a journey to the past, but, in fact, it looks
at a contemporary world that just hasn’t changed much in the past half century.
And like so many people who live out their lives in remote locals, these
characters never stop reliving the past, revisiting old disputes, lost loves,
bad decisions.
The acting, as in every Payne film, is
exquisite, led by Forte’s low-keyed portrayal of David, who, most importantly,
makes us see his father’s seemingly idiotic belief in the million dollar
sweepstakes as something with deeper meaning. Dern’s performance slowly
emerges; at first he’s just a cliché of the crazy old man but as more is
revealed and he opens up, mostly in heated arguments with his son, we discover
a more complex character.
The most surprising and humorous
performance in the film is by June Squibb, as Woody’s blunt speaking wife who
loves him in her way, but prefers to ridicule him in public. Stacy Keach is
hilarious as a bullying, pseudo tough guy who once was Woody’s business partner
and Angela McEwan gives a moving, quietly powerful portrayal as the editor of
the local paper and a former beau of Woody’s. She has a moment near the end of
the film that wordlessly conveys everything there is to know about regret, lost
chances, the life not lived.
Without the media hype of his
contemporaries—Wes Anderson, P.T. Anderson, the Coen brothers, David O.
Russell—Payne has emerged as one of the finest filmmakers in America; he doesn’t
need supercharged characters or outrageous storylines to excavate the truth
about the ways we live our lives and what we do to make sense of it all.
INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS (2013)
Focusing on a struggling, grumpy folk
artist, the latest quirky offering from Ethan and Joel Coen captures the
evolving Greenwich Village coffee house scene of the early 1960s, the tail end
of the beatnik era that served as an incubator for the poets, comics, folk
troubadours and jazz geniuses who would influence entertainment for the next 20
years.
Llewyn Davis (a perfectly cast Oscar Isaac)
sees himself as a serious alternative to the chipper, comfy folks acts gaining
popularity—just before the ground-shifting arrival of Bob Dylan—as folk enjoys
its short time in the spotlight. It filled the vacuum between Elvis being
drafted and the arrival of the Beatles.
This moody ne’er-do-well, walking the
winter streets of New York without an overcoat but always with his guitar,
leads the viewers through the folkie world, starting with his close friends
Jean and Jim (Carey Mulligan and Justin Timberlake), whose couch is one in a
series he crashes on. The seemingly demure Jean lets loose a torrent of
profanity every time she sees Llewyn, who may or may not be the cause of her
unwanted pregnancy. It’s just the latest travail in his life as he is still
recovering from the suicide of his singer partner. But whether it’s the crass
commercialism of folk music, his friend’s pregnancy or losing the Gorfein’s
cat, Llewyn (partially based on real life folkie Dave van Ronk) remains
convinced that life is a conspiracy against him.
His journey (led by, what else, but a cat
named Ulysses and its doppelganger) takes a strange detour when he agrees to
help drive a crippled, drug-addled hate-spewing jazz musician (John Goodman at
his grotesque best) to Chicago. Once there, he visits a legendary music
producer Bud Grossman (F. Murray Abraham in one of the best five-minute
performances you’ll ever see) who, after hearing Llewyn perform, offers up a
decisive, God-like verdict. The simple, brilliantly set-up scene in a dark,
empty nightclub may be the quintessential statement on creativity vs.
commercialism, art vs. business, emotional depth vs. surface gloss.
Isaac’s performance holds this rambling,
discordant picture together; an impressive starring debut (his most prominent
role previously had been as the evil Prince John in the Russell Crowe version
of “Robin Hood”) for this Juilliard trained actor-musician who must make the
audience care about an abrasive and sarcastic discontent. The writers-directors
aid in overcoming this obstacle by having Davis, and the other performers, sing
their songs in full, creating an intimacy and bond not unlike what happens when
you actually see a musician in a small club.
Like so many of the Coens’ films (“The
Hudsucker Proxy,” “The Big Lebowski,” “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” “A Serious
Man”), “Inside Llewyn Davis” is made for an audience with a particular
sensibility, far from the typical Hollywood moviegoer. Let’s face it, the
audience for a movie about the New York folk scene of the 1960s is pretty small.
But in this franchise driven world of moving making, it is a joy to see
acclaimed filmmakers (actually Oscar winners) who are willing and able to
explore whatever interests them.
Don’t believe the ads and gushing reviews
though; this isn’t the Coens’ best film or even a film that will appeal to 10
percent of filmgoers. But it’s a superbly made period piece (the era beautiful
recreated by Bruno Delbonnel’s camerawork—it looks like the cover of “The
Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan”) that addresses a timeless issue that every artists
faces: Who will I serve, my artistic vision or the tastes of the audience. We
know which side the Coens come down on.
CLEO FROM 5 to 7 (1962)
As much as I recognize
the importance of the early films and filmmakers of the French New Wave, I
always felt they were largely overrated. Of course the movement produced some
wonderful, influential movies, including Jean-Luc Godard's
"Breathless," Claude Chabrol’s “Le Beau Serge,” Francois Truffaut’s
"The 400 Blows” and "Jules and Jim," and Alain Resnais’ “Last
Year at Marienbad.” Yet just as interesting, experimental and entertaining
pictures were being made at the same time in Italy, Poland and even
Britain.
But one New Wave
picture I overlooked until recently was Agnés Varda’s "Cleo From 5 to
7," which turns out to be one of the best of the era, a subtle, poignant
character study of a pampered pop singer who is dealing with the news that she
may have cancer.
Corinne Marchand, a
picture-perfect blonde beauty who had a small role the previous year in “Lola,”
a film made by Varda’s husband, Jacques Demy, plays Cleo (short for Cleopatra),
a pop singer who the camera follows from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. on the day she's to
learn the results of her tests.
We
first meet her as she rides in taxi with her personal assistant, struggling to
deal with the state of her health while clearly drawn to the world around her.
She’s impatient with everyone around her—her motherly assistant; an older,
uncaring lover and a pair of songwriters, one played by soon-to-be legend
Michel Legrand, crafting songs for her—until she heads out into the streets on
her own.
The coddled, privileged
woman finds some comfort in confessing her fears to her best friend and then,
meeting and bonding with a young soldier, also facing the possibility of death,
as he heads off to war.
The many long shots of
street scenes, with Cleo mingling in with the reality around her, give the film
a documentary-like look while the dialogue is equally down-to-earth. It is the
rare New Wave film that manages to create both an entertaining, watchable story
and utilize the cutting-edge, unadorned, anti-Hollywood filmmaking style of the
movement.
What makes the film
work so well is Marchand, who finds just the right balance between showing a
woman who enjoys her life of comfort and being catered to, while appreciating
the small things in life, especially as she contemplates the possibility of
sickness and death.
Both sides of Cleo are on display in a revealing,
thoughtful scene set in an outdoor cafe in which she plays her hit song on the
cafe's juke box and then walks among the customers hoping to see them react. I
think she expected someone to recognize her or at least notice the song, but
everyone is too indulged in their own world, their own conversations, to notice
her or the song.
Marchand seems like a
film star in the making—charismatic, enigmatic and extraordinarily
photogenic—very much like the equally beautiful and subtle actress Catherine
Deneuve, who, ironically, became a star in Demy’s “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg”
two years later. Marchand spent the rest
of her career working on French television while Deneuve has gone on to have
one of the greatest careers in the history of film acting
Varda has focused her career—still going
strong at age 85—on making political documentaries, best known for “Gleaners
and I” (2000), about the French lower class, and the biographical “Agnés at the Beach” (2008). Her most successful
feature since “Cleo” was “Vagabond” (1985), which earned numerous international
awards for the director and the film’s young star Sandrine Bonnaire, now one of
France’s finest actresses.
AMERICAN HUSTLE (2013)
What’s most disappointing about hot
director David O. Russell’s latest comedy-drama is that there is so much to
like about the film.
The picture features at least half-dozen
hilarious, superbly acted scenes that perfectly capture the excesses of the
late ‘70s; a nutty yet partially true scenario that keeps getting stranger and
stranger; an endless array of outrageous characters; and another
chameleon-like, mesmerizing performance by Christian Bale. Despite all that,
Russell fails to deliver the great film he was clearly aiming for.
What sinks “American Hustle” is its
pedestrian, repetitive script (by Russell and Eric Singer), which fails to
provide these wonderfully costumed and coiffed actors with anything interesting
to say, along with Russell’s plodding pacing. This tale of a pair of brazen con
artists forced to help a rogue FBI agent entrap bribe-accepting politicians
plays out in a such a leisurely manner (at 2:17, at least 30 minutes too long)
that the tension and energy are all but drained out.
At
points in the film I felt as if I was watching a first run-through of a scene;
that Russell was letting the actors work through it before he settled on how he
was going to shoot the final version. Maybe, I theorized, that since he was making
a film about the 1970s, the director was trying to capture the less-structured,
spontaneous feel of movies of that era. For me, it didn’t work. But, as
evidenced by the glowing reviews and critic awards, most filmgoers are forgiving
of the slow pace, weak script, flabby filmmaking and happy to bask in amusement
over these wonderful characters.
And I’ll admit that the film is well worth
seeing, if only for Bale’s unforgettable Irving Rosenfeld, a born hustler who,
as a kid, helps his father’s glass repair business by breaking windows. Now,
with a comb-over/hairpiece contraption that has to be seen to be believed and a
beer belly that makes him look 10-months pregnant, Irving hooks up with sexy
Sydney (Amy Adams), who reinvents herself as British aristocrat Lady Edith
Greenleigh, and their first-rate con game is on. Promising loans for an upfront
fee of $5000 (in an era when interest rates were 15%), the pair make a killing,
though the film never explains why victims don’t immediately go to the cops or
seek revenge.
Of course, the law eventually catches up
with them, in the form of ambitious FBI agent Richie DiMaso (Bradley Cooper),
who recruits them for what became known as Abscam, a real-life sting operation
that netted a handful of congressmen. In
the film, the focus of the operation is to entrap Carmine Polito (Jeremy
Renner), a sincere New Jersey mayor who wants to rebuild Atlantic City as a
gambling magnet. For all involved, things get complicated; especially when they
forget that to build a casino (even if it’s just a make-believe scam) you have
to go through the mob.
Of course what really becomes sticky are
the relationships: Irving and Sydney, Irving and his hair-brained wife
(Jennifer Lawrence), Richie and Sydney, Richie and his boss (Louis CK) and Irving
and Carmine, just to name the prominent.
Bale, who won the Oscar for his work in
Russell’s “The Fighter,” nails the sleazy smarts that have made characters like
Irving a staple of America’s criminal class, along with his Jersey accent and
unlikely appeal. As his wacky wife Rosalyn, who has a knack for getting things
to go her way, Lawrence plays another, if very different, needy, quirky young
woman to follow her Oscar-winning performance in Russell’s “Silver Linings
Playbook.” She’s convincingly clueless and self absorbed, even as she nearly
brings down the entire operation.
Adams and Cooper, also Russell alumni,
give less satisfying performances, in part because the script never really
finds the heart of their characters. Renner is fabulously flamboyant (with a
great bouffant hairdo) as Carmine as is Elizabeth Röhm (once of “Law and
Order”), unrecognizable as Carmine’s loud, devoted wife.
There’s a long, beautifully structured
sequence with Irving and Rosalyn having dinner with Carmine and his wife in a
traditional Italian restaurant that is intercut with Sydney and Richie getting
sweaty in a decadent disco club. In those 15 minutes, we get a taste of how
good this film should have been and occasionally is, but Russell never manages
to close the deal.
FRANCES HA (2013)
It seems that in every Noah Baumbach’s film
there is a character, or two or three, who makes inappropriate, insulting
comments in social settings and we’re expected to find it endearing. Immature,
yes; slightly amusing, sure; but at some point the clueless behavior just
becomes irritating and an easy way to label the character as eccentric, quirky,
someone “special.”
This approach takes center stage in “Frances
Ha,” a rather pretentious slice-of-life look at a twentysomething woman
attempting to find her focus. Frances (an energetic Greta Gerwig) shares a New
York apartment with her college roommate Sophie (Mickey Sumner); the pair seems
so attached that, at first, it’s easy to assume that they must be lovers.
They’re not, but it doesn’t make it any less painful when Sophie announces that
she’s moving in with her boyfriend. Frances, barely making a living as a
less-than-principle dancer in a small modern dance company, ends up moving in with
a couple of guy pals.
Not much happens in Frances’ life, even
when she tries to spice it up with an unplanned, ill-advised weekend visit to
Paris. Which is the point: In this world of ambitious young professionals and
cut-throat go-getters, is there still a place for the free-spirit who has
bigger dreams than talent, who isn’t on a well-plotted path toward an
acceptably defined successful life?
I so wanted to like Frances, highly
verbal and self deprecating (describing herself as “undateable”) and this
movie—Baumbach shot it in black and white to further entice me—but halfway
through I starting hoping another character would appear to hijack the movie.
And, in maybe the ultimate sign of the times, Francis seems to accept her
limits and make the best of them, instead of, like Bobby Dupea of another era,
walking away and hitching a ride out of town. Being a discontented eccentric
isn’t what it used to be.
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