Saturday 9 October 2010

Put The Right One On

It's a widely held belief amongst many moviegoers and critics alike that if you are going to remake a movie, it's usually best to remake a bad one. Right off the bat there are a couple of good reasons why this might often hold true. Principally it seems logical that as the film-maker, your remake is far less likely to suffer from critical comparison or emotive negative reactions from a loyal existing fan-base if you make-over a half forgotten mediocre movie than a beloved classic. However, from a more objective position, the likely advantage of remaking a bad (or at least not very good) movie is that it probably leaves a lot more creative elbow room for re-interpretation. If the script, or the performances, or the staging or pacing of the original left a lot to be desired then it seems reasonable to assume that the makers of the new version are more likely to throw out a larger amount of what came before, and start again with just the bare bones of the concept or story. Rather than simply reshooting the same movie to the same, usually diminished effect, this freedom then brings a corresponding increase in the chances of actually improving on what came before, and if you are not aiming to do at least that, then why are you bothering at all?

David Cronenbergs' '80s version of The Fly for example, started life when Cronenberg watched the 1950s original, and left the theatre fuming about technical issues regarding mass loss and gain as a guys' head ends up on a fly, at fly size, while the flies' ends up on a man, with a corresponding increase in volume of matter contained therein. When he finally got his chance to remake it therefore, he and his co-writer took a fresh look at the original short story concept, and along with a modicum of improvement in the science (still somewhat outrageous, but slightly more rationalised from an internal logic point of view), the resulting movie comprehensively trounced the original in every department. From the grotesquely inventive special effects, through a beautiful and tender central relationship, one the finest ever to grace the horror genre, to Jeff Goldblums' career best performance of a brilliant man physically and mentally disintegrating.

Then a little more recently we had Ocean's Eleven, which in comparison to the above example sticks more closely to its forbears' formula. In this case an all-star comedy crime caper which was a fun, but rather lazy and unfocused vehicle for its Rat-Pack stars. Through fine, pacey direction, tight-as-a-barrel scripting, and a clutch of well oiled performances, Soderbergs' superficially similar retread soundly beats it for cunning, wit, thrills and all-round cool.

So if the above wisdom is so commonly accepted, it begs the question of why we so often get subjected to inferior remakes of top-rank classics. Was anyone really asking for re-imaginings (a hateful phrase that tries vainly to smear some creative justification onto this vile process) of Planet of the Apes, The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Wicker Man, The Ladykillers (proving that even the masterful Coen Brothers could not overturn this rule) or Psycho?

The answer of course is money. Old films have a limited scope for reaping further financial rewards for the studios that own them. There is but an ongoing trickle of budget DVD sales and some small royalties from TV showings which cannot attract high fees as the smaller audiences for each successive showing result in ever-diminishing advertising revenues etc. But there is a ready market of millions of people who wouldn't dream of sitting down on a Sunday afternoon to watch The African Queen on the telly, but who would pay top dollar at the box office if they heard of a new movie with the same name starring Angelina Jolie (yeah, I'd probably watch it too!).

The above list of recent offenders is of course evidence enough to all but the most cinematically-challenged observer that remakes of great films are generally a waste of time, money and creative talent that could have been so much better employed on something original. None of this is exactly news and frankly most of the time I couldn't care less about them. I, like most people who might give a damn, have seen those marvellous classics, I know them to be great, and should I be unfortunate enough to encounter one of these misbegotten cash-cows, it won't make a jot of difference to my love of the originals.

There is however, an evil, and insidious second thread to the remake scam and that is the remaking of recent foreign language films (foreign to us Western, English speaking audiences I mean of course). The motivation here is similar, but the effect, I believe, is far more damaging.

A high quality foreign-language film gets a bit of attention, maybe wins a couple of awards somewhere and earns itself some admirers. Now, if this were an English language film, with luck, a major distributor would pick it up, put a ton of money behind promoting it and make it the big hit it deserves to be. But it isn't, it's got, "GASP!", subtitles on it, and sadly there is (or is assumed to be) a huge proportion of the English speaking audience, particularly in America, where most of the big money is to be made, who just would not dream of seeing a subtitled movie, no matter how brilliant it may reputedly be. As English first-language speaking countries, we largely bring this on ourselves. We are notoriously lazy with regards to other cultures, having had the luxury of being brought up with one of the worlds' premiere international languages as our mother tongue. People in many other countries are used to seeing films, hearing music, and experiencing culture from around the world in multiple languages, such that seeing subtitles and dealing with tongues that they may not be so fluent in is part of daily life and not given a second thought. But not so here, and crucially not in Hollywood.

So what happens to our theoretical gem of a foreign movie? It may get a good critical response, perhaps does well in its own country, and is seen by a small, but fervently enthusiastic band of admirers around the globe. Now it is in the nature of cinematic enthusiasts (i.e. nerds like me), that when they discover a great film, but particularly one that hasn't been seen yet by every man and his dog, that they will recommend it to their mates, or take people to see it, because they want to share the experience of what they have found. In doing so, over time the films' reputation will spread, the screenings and the sales will grow, and it may, with luck, gain at least a share of the success that it richly deserves.

Except that is doesn't. What increasingly happens now is that Hollywood spots a good idea, just in the "wrong" language, and says "We'll have that!". And so, before the original film has even left the cinemas, a remake is in the can, made with ten-times the budget, pushed out there with a hundred times the promotional muscle and it's on the side of every bus before you can say "God damn you all to Hell!"

Is this so much worse than bad remakes of old classics? After all, in both cases the original version still exists for all to see if they so choose. Well, yes, in my opinion it is, for several reasons but the principle one is this: There is a magic in seeing a great movie for the first time (as there is of course with reading a great book or hearing a beautiful song), and that can never be experienced in the same way again. If you have already watched a remake of a movie before seeing, or indeed even being aware of, the original; you will never get to experience that movie the way it was meant to be experienced. You will know where the story is headed, you will be aware ahead of time of the fate of characters that you might have cared greatly about, or twists that change the meaning of everything you thought you understood. You will compare and contrast scenes, and dialogue, and performances, sometimes without even being aware that you have been removed from the first-hand experience of the tale and instead that you are now sitting outside of the world on-screen.  You are analysing the movie, rather than being immersed in it. The remake has robbed you of that gift, and you can never have it back.

So I come to Let Me In. It comes out here in the UK in just a few weeks. It looks pretty good, the trailers and posters look moody and atmospheric. It's directed by Matt Reeves, who made Cloverfield which I thoroughly enjoyed, and it stars that little cool-as-fuck girl from Kick-Ass. Sounds good? Let's go.

Except... have you seen Let The Right One In (or I should say "Låt den rätte komma in", and therein lies the problem)? Yes? Good on you. We can discuss the nerdy details later on. No? Well think carefully about where you spend your next 8 quid, because for me, Let The Right One In, which came out barely a year ago over here, is a true cinematic masterpiece. One of the most moving, melancholic, atmospheric and original films I have seen in a very long time. I could talk for hours about the stunning cinematography, the remarkable and captivating performances by the two child leads, the heart-breaking score and the sheer exhilaration of experiencing such an original take on an apparently familiar genre. But I won't, because you can experience it all for yourself, for the first time, and then get back to me and we'll talk.

In spite of having been a sizable hit for a foreign-language film, I regularly find myself talking to friends who have yet to hear of this movie, and of course I do my best to turn them on to it when I do. There are doubtless millions of people around the world who haven't experienced the dark enchantments of Let The Right One In but would in time do so. But in a few months time many of them will have seen the no doubt more commercially successful Let Me In, and the chance to have the same experience that I did when seeing it for the first time will be lost.

I have yet to see The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, by co-incidence another Swedish movie out in the last year and with excellent notices, and I thoroughly intend to do so at some point. However I have just recently learned that a remake is on the way (is it something against Sweden? Did the head of Sony Pictures get knocked down by a Volvo?). On paper the remake could not look more impressive. Directed by the formidable David Fincher who helmed Seven, Fight Club and Zodiac. Scripted by the same screen-writer as Schindler's List. I should be excited about this; it has every chance of being excellent... and yet, and yet... All I can feel is sadness and anger at the shameful pilfering of another apparently excellent work the minute it has gained a glimpse of recognition as such.

I will be making damn sure I see the original version of that movie before I go near the remake, if I do at all, and I urge you to do the same. However, before that, I implore you, see Let The Right One In. See it because it deserves to be a huge hit. Making a commercially successful movie in Sweden, with a small film industry and a modest ten million native speakers is a tough challenge at best, and the makers of this stunning work of art deserve all the success and recognition that they can get. See it because, by making original foreign language films more successful and snubbing American remakes a little more, we will be sending a message to those with the money to get films made and distributed that we, the audience, value originality, variety and creativity and will spend our money where we find it; and what we don't need, and crucially won't pay good money for, is to be spoon fed with lazy retreads and moribund imagination. This could pay us back dividends in the future by resulting in a greater choice of quality cinema, made by those who have the best creative minds, rather than simply by those with the most commercial nous. But most of all see it now! See it before the remake gets you and steals the magic, forever.

Friday 8 October 2010

Doctor Who and the malaise of British TV Sci-Fi

I suspect that some of us have a rather fuzzy rose-tinted childhood memory perspective on how "good" the old days of Doctor Who were. For me Tom Baker will always be the man, but I think it's likely his tenure too would leave me cold if I were seeing it for the first time today. However looking back at the earliest shows, well before my time, the first actors (Hartnell and Troughton in particular) managed to carry off their roles with genuine weight and grit in the midst of an embarrassment of shitty FX and cardboard sets. There is a sense that serious Science Fiction and original creative work was at least being attempted in the face of a hopeless lack of resources.

I did have hopes for the modern series in the early stages of the Ecclestone re-launch. He seemed to tame the worst excesses of the hammery that the role often seems to have brought out in many of the preceding, otherwise capable actors; and Billie Piper I thought was a genuine revelation as a real equal in character and not just a mini-skirted bit of fluff on the sidelines. But the scripts just became increasingly dire with every episode. full of lazy in-joke references and jaw-droppingly bad rip-offs from better SF (does anyone remember the "spiders" in an Ecclestone episode just months after Minority Report had given us the exact same thing? I couldn't believe what I was seeing). Tennant, a fine actor in better fare by all reports, seems to have been worn down by a mixture of poor scripting and lazy directing into gradually replacing performance with just a bag of overblown ticks and mannerisms. His eyebrows rise higher than Penfold's to express interest in anything.

What infuriates me the most are the audience-insultingly low aims of the whole venture. When you compare this to the best of US Science Fiction (the recent Battlestar Galactica reboot or the best of Star Trek for example), but even more when you compare it to the BBC's own world-class output of what they label as “proper” drama, the writing is just so smug, childish and lazily repetitive. That the BBC can lavish millions on what is considered to be a flagship program, but hand it over to such talentless hacks can to me only be explained as sheer arrogance. The attitude seems to be “It's Science Fiction, therefore it's only for kids who don't know any better, and it's Dr. Who. Everyone loves Dr. Who, so why should we try any harder? Everyone will watch it anyway, especially if the lead actor is good looking and we throw a few b-list celebs into the mix”

This sort of under-achieving attitude has been a sadly predictable feature of most attempts at home grown sci-fi in recent years. There seems to be an utter failure to grasp the kind of dramatic and conceptual scope that the genre, at its best, is capable of. Other recent disappointments include "The Deep", and the shockingly bad "Primeval". It is remarkable to consider that of all programs, the space set sitcom "Red Dwarf" is probably the most sophisticated and original sci-fi series to have made it off the BBC's drawing board in the last quarter of a century.

Meanwhile, as far as the good Doctor is concerned, I bailed the moment Catherine Tate appeared. This marked for me the point when any vestige of interest in making SF/Drama was stomped on by a BBC in-house back-slapping fest and spin-off marketing machine.

Made in Dagenham (2010)

Social drama and comedy can be a tough balancing act. In telling the story of how a small group of women working in a factory in the late 1960s began a minor industrial dispute that rapidly escalated into a spearhead movement for gender equality in employment, Made in Dagenham plays it mostly for drama and keeps the laughs low-key and naturalistic. A closer kin to say, Billy Elliot, than to The Full Monty.

Sally Hawkins, best known so far for her breakout role in Happy Go Lucky, becomes the accidental spokesperson in this dispute, and delivers a beautifully nuanced performance of a woman who is angry and frustrated at the injustices of her situation, but has never felt able to voice them until now. In her quiet, sometimes faltering delivery we can sense the well of deep-seated conviction that has been struggling to find its voice. However, it is in the relationships of the women that the film finds its most compelling moments. Few movies these days even attempt, and very rarely succeed, in painting such an honest and heartfelt picture of female relationships and interaction.

By comparison to the core group, some of the surrounding roles (Bob Hoskins magnificently excepted) are rather more coarsely sketched. A pair of dopey civil servants in particular seem to be intended (although certainly not succeeding) as comedy sidekicks and feel rather out of place.

However the story is told in such an understated manner, easy on the grandstanding, and rather working its way under the skin with warmth and honesty; that after being little more than mildly entertained for much of the running time, I was genuinely caught off guard by how I was suddenly seething with anger at the unfairness of their plight, or elated with each little success. In a tale with huge nationwide consequences, it's the personal victories that count the most.

Rating: 4/5

Tuesday 5 October 2010

Outlander (2008)

Vikings vs. Aliens vs. Disappointment

Let's be clear about this: As concepts go, Vikings vs. Aliens is indisputably the finest idea in cinematic history. How could such a perfect storm of genre-mashing possibly fail?

Well, let's start with the limp and creaking script; barely functioning to join the dots of the minimal story it offers us zero characterization, even less wit, great black holes of logic or just plain common-sense, and has everyone talking in a steadfastly modern parlance that might be anachronistic if only it could summon the energy.

Then there is the acting: Nary a flicker of emotion to be had from among any of the weary looking cast. Everyone speaks earnestly about something, but it might as well be directions to the bus stop for all the meaning that is imparted. Jack Huston as Wulfric in particular seems to have been shipped in as part of the set and accidently given a speaking role instead of "door frame no.7" as was clearly marked on the box. John Hurt however is an old hand at giving weight to grizzled royal pronouncements, but even he seems to be out to lunch for most of this one.

The effects are very much in the modern b-movie-cheap-CGI mould. Things are kept dark and mostly indistinguishable for much of the running time, with good reason, as when the monster is fully revealed in the light of day it comes across as a flat cartoon mash-up of bits of The Host and Godzilla, with none of the sense of weight or menace of either.

The story is essentially Beowulf, with a bit of Predator thrown in to the mix. But it totally misses the brooding atmosphere of the former and the outlandish fun of the latter. It has no memorable characters or frightening monsters. It is neither funny, nor scary, nor exciting. Nor for that matter is any of it even slightly original. When it's not stealing plot points from the above, it's playing out familiar scenes nabbed from The Descent, Reign of Fire, War of the Worlds and most criminally, several shot-for-shot sequences stolen wholesale from the excellent Disney fantasy Dragonslayer.

The film has just two moments where it momentarily threatens to spark in to life. The first is the apparently welcome entrance, half an hour into the proceedings, of the wonderful Ron Pearlman, who arrives by crushing someone's head between two massive war hammers. He then gets to make one brief speech which alludes to intriguing events which are never referred to again and then exits the film five minutes later to zero effect. The second is when the nominal hero of the piece (Jim Caviezel, scowling in neutral throughout) gets to explain his back story with the monster to the proto-feminist heroine (Sophia Myles), and of course, us. He words his story in ways that her native people might understand, but we the audience get to see through his memories scenes of intergalactic genocide that put a modern and more sympathetic spin on the monster's plight. While hardly Kieslowski, this is a momentarily interesting concept, which is also then promptly abandoned for the remainder of the film.

All of this might still be forgivable if the movie actually had a sense of fun, but it is a long, flat and dreary stumble through deeply familiar territory to an underwhelming finale. Some stuff just happens, people speak just enough to direct us to the next scene, some more stuff happens and two hours later it ends, finally. 

Rating: 2/5

Gran Torino (2008)

Clint! You just gotta love Clint. Yes it's a touch predictable at times, but there are few greater pleasures in cinema than watching mean old Clint being old and mean and still tougher than chewing a mountain of bricks while taking double calculus. There's mostly great support from some believably rough-edged young unknowns (and some cranky old ones), who are assuredly handled by Eastwood's usual unfussy directorial style, which effortlessly avoids the melodramatics that could so easily have mired such a story in less experienced hands.

Though a much smaller film, in both theme and execution, than Unforgiven, this sits perfectly as a companion piece to the former: A final deconstruction of the unstoppable vengeance-laying legend of yore, and if this is, as is rumoured, to be Clint's final stand in front of the camera, then it could not be a more perfect send-off. Full circle for both a definitive character and the career of this great screen legend. Would that some other elderly icons (I'm looking at you Sean) choose so wisely. I'm still not sure about the singing though.

 Rating: 5/5

The Mist (2007)

A thoroughly enjoyable creepy monster movie that disguises its relatively low budget with some wonderfully creative old-school creature FX. Director Frank (Shawshank) Darabont turns the screws on a colourful clutch of characters with a taught, claustrophobic and paranoid atmosphere (very reminiscent of The Thing which it knowingly references in the opening scene) and mixes in some nicely-judged black humour to keep you on board for the duration until he then punches you in the face with a desolate final act that will stay with you for quite a while.

Rating: 4/5 

The Wicker Man: Directors Cut (1973)

At last I have had a chance to catch the ninety-nine minute restored Directors Cut of this film. I won't waste time here re-reviewing this strange masterpiece of British Horror as a whole; suffice to say that the restored material makes it well worth re-visiting. Some extra opening scenes provide additional background to, and empathy with, Edward Woodward's devout police chief, while those added later on in the story give some well-judged breathing space to the slow-building tension as the initial quirkiness gives way gradually to something more sinister.

If you've seen and loved the eighty-odd minute edition that often turns up on TV then this edition is well worth seeking out. If you've never seen this film then I'd say this is now the definitive version to go for. But whatever version you are watching, for the love of god (or gods) don't go within a hundred miles of the hideous Nic Cage remake abortion!

Rating: 5/5

Venom (1981)

Za Snake Iz Loooze!

I've just had the pleasure of re-acquainting myself with this forgotten gem of early '80s British horror which scared me shitless as a little kid.

"High concept" years before the term was invented, the plot ostensibly hangs on a series of belief-stretching co-incidences which result in a hostage siege taking place in a posh London home, with the police camped outside and a deadly (as we are repeatedly reminded) black mamba snake loose in the heating ducts.

Made many years before CGI came along and gave us bloated nonsense like Anaconda and Snakes on a Plane the film-makers had to be fairly economical with their beastie's screen time. Going down the Jaws route , Venom makes highly effective use of POV camera shots, shadowy lighting and an unsettling score (an early work from the much missed composer Michael Kamen; and no, I have not forgotten that he was also responsible for that Bryan Adams monstrosity) to suggest the snakes' presence. When the creature is fully revealed it is more often than not the exceedingly dangerous real thing; borrowed from London Zoo, and provoked into getting pissed off in the direction of the nearest camera by their, at the time, resident reptile expert Michael Ball (who gets both an un-credited cameo in the film, and himself played by a cranky Michael Gough in to the bargain).

However, all of these slithery shenanigans are a mere aside to the real terror on show here. The casting of the infamously intense and insane Klaus Kinski opposite the famously drunk and antagonistic Oliver Reed. By all reports these two hated each other on sight and spent the whole shoot at war with each other, with Reed referring to Kinski as a Nazi at every possible opportunity. However, what must have a nightmare situation for director Piers Haggard (parachuted in after Tobe Hooper walked with shooting already under way) as they share virtually every scene together, paid off in dividends as the warring actors enthusiastically pour every ounce of their scenery-chewing one-upmanship onto the screen. Stir into this mix a few more well-renowned "difficult" actors: Nicol Williamson (The famously OTT Merlin from Excalibur) getting his Sweeney on, Sarah Miles, and Sterling Hayden among them; and what results is a glorious bombast of angry intense thesping, that grabs this would-b-movie by the balls and drags it into "forgotten classic" territory. A daft, wonderful, guilty pleasure. Seek it out.

Rating: 4/5 

Mongol (2007)

A powerful and moving dramatisation of the early years of Genghis Kahn's rise to power, this film looks beautiful in a very real earthy way that has been lacking from some digitally polished historical epics of late. The cast all give fine performances laced with naturalistic touches of humour and romance, and avoiding the grandstanding normally associated with biopics of great military leaders.

If Mongol has one small flaw, it is that things get a touch episodic at times as the film tries to cram in many pivotal moments in a twenty-year long nomadic odyssey. But overall this is a solid and gripping work that I certainly would like to see a sequel to as the real meat of the story is still to come.

Rating: 4/5

Audition (Ôdishon) (1999)

A subtle, slow-burning chiller; Audition is by turns touching, gently funny and rather melancholic, and comes on for half of its running time like some sort of Sleepless in Seattle as though directed by Ken Loach. However it slowly builds in layers of creepy unsettling atmosphere, before finally launching a full on assault in the last act that will leave you reeling.

The motivations and experiences of the main characters, all superbly played, seem to really have something to say about the traditions of Japanese male dominance and female submissiveness at odds with the modern world, and the dangerous psychology that can be nurtured by these restrictions and conformities. For me this raises this film not only above the level of other excellent recent Asian horror such as the much better known "The Ring", but easily knocks seven shades out of the current Hollywood trend for torture porn movies. Saw, Hostel and the like, which are just puerile adolescent gore-fantasy by comparison.

A deeply disturbing but profoundly moving experience. "kiri, kiri, kiri"!

Rating: 5/5 

Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (2006)

One of the most lavishly executed films I have seen in a very long time. Full of gorgeous cinematography painted with the richest of hues, beautiful  and haunting music (recorded by Simon Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic no less!) and boasting clutch of excellent and charismatic performances, especially the strange and magnetic presence of relative newcomer Ben Whishaw in the starring role.

This is a Grimm fairy-tale of sorts, a dark gothic fantasy with pungent overtones; a film to wallow in and drink up as sheer experience. In the cold light of day it is easy to pick holes in the faintly absurd and rather episodic story, and the whole enterprise overreaches itself just a little at the end with scenes of spiritual ecstasy that veer dangerously close to parody. But such analysis does no favours to the film or the viewer. Perfume is a deeply sensual experience and a remarkable achievement at bringing a famously "unfilmable" novel so richly to life. Oh, and Dustin Hoffman is worth the price of admission alone. Few characters in all of film history have made such a perfectly judged exit.

Rating: 5/5

Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007)

A movie anchored (sorry) by a superb performance from Cate Blanchett; by turns commanding, vulnerable and often world-wearied, together with fine support from a generally excellent cast (particularly Geoffrey Rush). However these are pretty much the only redeeming features of this rather ham-fistedly structured movie

There is no insight given into the political drama which forms the backdrop to the story, so instead the director resorts to parading A-Team style baddies. All the Spanish dress in black, and grin a lot while feeding "evil-plan exposition 101" to the audience. The middle act mixes in a few perfunctory classroom history highlights (Raleigh presenting tobacco to the royal court a typical example) presumably to try to add a veneer of authenticity quite at odds with the silliness on show, before the whole movie then lurches uncomfortably into a lacklustre and directionless battle filmed in such a stylized manner as to appear to have been lifted from Lord of the Rings effects sequence outtakes. Clive Owen in particular looks most uncomfortable at having to drop in a last minute bit of swash & buckle on board an utterly fake looking studio set galleon. Even Gena Davis put more back into it than that!

Rating: 2/5