Monthly Archives: October 2020

Two English Girls (1971)

Two English Girls
Directed by Francois Truffaut
Written by Francois Truffaut and Jean Gruault from a novel by Henri-Pierre Roche
1971/France
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Criterion Channel

Claude Roc: I’d rather not be between you, I’d like to be able to look at both of you.

Truffaut looks at a love triangle from the distaff side. It’s pretty but it’s no Jules and Jim (1962).

The film is set in France and Wales at the turn of the last century. Young Frenchman Claude (Jean-Pierre Leaud) is an aspiring writer an a bit of a bon vivant.  He meets Ann (Kika Markham), an attractive and sensitive English woman.  Claude is smitten with Anne immediately.  She invites him to the estate of her mother and younger sister Muriel (Stacey Tendeter) in Wales.  Muriel has an eye condition that troubles her sporadically through the movie.  The three young people have fun together. Anne pushes Claude into the arms of Muriel.  Mother suggests the couple take a year separation and see how they feel about a marriage then.

Claude returns to Paris and within six months is living the high life with multiple mistresses. He breaks off the engagement.  Later Claude runs into Anne who is now an aspiring sculptor. They hook up but what about Muriel? What about Anne?  What about poor Claude?

First, the good and there’s quite a bit of it.  Truffaut and Nestor Almendros create scenes of luminous beauty, the cast is wonderful, and so is the Georges Delerue score.  The story explores religious and sexual attitudes of the period, sisterly love, guilt, and a host of other themes.  But for me it seemed like Jules and Jim, with the two ladies subbing for the gents and Leaud as the object of desire. The film lacks the sheer energy and playfulness that helped to make the earlier love-triangle melodrama a true classic.  I hate it when people can’t make up their minds and kind of torture each other for years.  If you are not an old curmudgeon you might like this film.

The Hellstrom Chronicle (1971)

The Hellstrom Chronicle
Directed by Walon Green and Ed Spiegel
Written by David Seltzer
1971/US
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube

 

Dr. Hellstrom: In fighting the insect we have killed ourselves, polluted our water, poisoned our wildlife, permeated our own flesh with deadly toxins. The insect becomes immune, and we are poisoned. In fighting with superior intellect, we have outsmarted ourselves.

This Oscar-winner is one odd documentary. I’m glad I gave it a try.

The film is narrated by Dr. Hellstrom who interrupts the nature photography every five minutes or so with his commentary. Some of it may be factual but most of it is alarmist pseudo-science used to prove his central thesis which is that insects will outlast man due to their superior adaptability and ability to cooperate.  Once Hellstrom uses a clip of an attacking giant ant from Them! (1954) to illustrate a point.

In between, we are treated to some beautiful shots of many different kinds of insects going about their business. Toward the end of the film the focus shifts to insects who live in colonies such as bees and ants. I learned a lot about termites!

This movie is what it looks like: some super cheesy science-fiction/horror-flavored filler narrated by an actor and intended to make a nature documentary suitable for wide-distribution to theaters. I actually enjoyed it.  The nature documentary and Lilo Schifrin score are pretty fantastic.  The other part appeals to the kid in me.

The Hellstrom Chronicle won the Academy Award for Best Documentary, Feature.

No video available from reviewed film so here’s some giant insect action from Kong: Skull Island (2017).

My Uncle Antoine (1971)

My Uncle Antoine (Mon oncle Antoine)
Directed by Claude Jutra
Written by Claude Jutra and Clement Perron from Perron’s story
1971/Canada
IMDb page
First viewing/Criterion Channel

 

Uncle Antoine: It takes a little punk like you to get me in a mess like this.

Beautifully shot film about growing up fast in rural Quebec.

It is Christmas time in rural Quebec sometime in the 1940’s.  It is the busiest season of the year for Uncle Antoine’s general store/mortuary. The store includes living quarters.  Uncle Antoine and Aunt Cecile also house Benoit, the 14-year-old at the center of the tale; shop assistant Fernand (played by Jutra); shop helper Carmen; and woodcutter Jos Poulin and his wife and many children.

Benoit is just at the age to start a flirtation with Carmen.   In other regards, he seems like a wide-eyed kid.  That is until he volunteers to help his uncle the undertaker pick up a body some distance away on a very cold day.  I will stop here.

Unfortunately coming of age is not always a fun-filled frolic but more an abandonment of childhood beliefs.  This is an interesting, often amusing, slice-of-life type movie  I liked it a lot.  The outstanding aspect was the beautiful images that kind of make one nostalgic for a time one never knew.

 

Fata Morgana (1971)

Fata Morgana
Directed by Werner Herzog
Written by Werner Herzog
1971/West Germany
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental

 

Perhaps I seek certain utopian things, space for human honour and respect, landscapes not yet offended, planets that do not exist yet, dreamed landscapes.  —  Werner Herzog

If you are going to watch a film in which nothing happens, it might as well be directed by Werner Herzog.

Herzog, his cinematographer Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein and a small crew wandered around the deserts of North Africa for 13 months taking pictures of things that interested them in 1968 and 1969.  Herzog came up with the concept for the film after shooting was completed.  

There is no narration other than a reading of a Mayan creation myth in the first time of the film nor are there any interviews. Mostly it is long takes through desert landscapes. But this is no Lawrence of Arabia desert.   There are shots of oil refineries, dead animals, an other evidence of the long reach of Western civilization.

Herzog has claimed that this is the film’s structure. “The planet Uxmal is discovered by beings from the Andromeda Nebula. They produce a cinematic report in three parts. “The Creation”: a plane lands, primeval landscapes unfold, burning vents and oil tanks come into the picture. “Paradise”: in the grip of nature and the remains of a civilization, people talk about the disaster. “The Golden Age”: a brothel singer and a matron sing. All three parts end with the greatest of all hallucinations, a mirage.” He obviously has a better imagination than I do.

I actually watched this because of the Leonard Cohen soundtrack. While Cohen’s songs “That’s No Way to Say Goodbye” and “Suzanne” are used in a portion of the film, the majority is scored with other (pretty good) music. Can’t recommend this except to completists.

The Last Picture Show (1971)

The Last Picture Show
Directed by Peter Bogdanovich
Written by Larry McMurtry and Peter Bogdanovich from McMurtry’s novel
1971/US
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Sonny Crawford: It could have been worse.
Sam the Lion: Yeah. You can say that about nearly everything, I guess.

What a year 1971 was for all those film school graduates!  In this one, young critic Peter Bogdanovich peaks early with a sophomore masterpiece.

The setting is small-town Analene, Texas in 1951.  The Old West died here years ago and the town’s death is following close behind.  The only attractions remaining are the pool hall, the cafe, and the movie theater, all owned by real-live old-time Texan Sam the Lion (Ben Johnson).  So both adults and teenagers seek excitement behind closed doors.  The principal teens we get to know are sensitive Sonny (Timothy Bottoms), slightly goofy Duane (Jeff Bridges), and his pretty girlfriend Jaycee (Cybill Shepherd).  Jaycee dreams of using her beauty as a ticket to bigger and better things.  Her pretty mother Lois (Ellen Burstyn) has similar ambitions for her daughter. Ambitions that do not include the hapless Duane.  Lois is having an affair with one of her oil man husband’s employees.

Jaycee isn’t doing too hot with the big city “in-crowd” and burns her way through both Duane and Sonny in her so far futile efforts to do so. In the meantime,  Sonny has an affair  his coach’s lonely, isolated wife Ruth (Cloris Leachman).  With Eileen Brennan as a maternal figure who runs the cafe.

[on making The Last Picture Show] I hope I’m not repeating what happened to [Orson Welles]. You know, make a successful serious film like this early and then spend the rest of my life in decline.  — Peter Bogdanovich

The plot sounds like a soap opera and in a way it is.  But the script reaches so far into the souls of its characters that the story turns out to be much much more.  The ensemble cast is perfect.  Bogdanovich shows his film geekery in all his films but by some special alchemy this one turned out to be less homage and more the definitive anti-Western. An absolute must-see.

Ben Johnson won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar and Cloris Leachman won for Best Supporting Actress.  The Last Picture Show was nominated for Best Picture; Best Supporting Actor (Bridges); Best Supporting Actress (Burstyn); Best Director: Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium; and Best Cinematography.

 

The Andromeda Strain (1971)

The Andromeda Strain
Directed by Robert Wise
Written by Nelson Gidding from a novel by Michael Crichton
1971/US
IMDb page
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

Dr. Mark Hall: Most of them died instantly, but a few had time to go quietly nuts.

A wordy, but visually impressive, movie about a deadly organism from outer space.  Turns out fact is scarier than fiction.

A satellite returns to Earth and the inhabitants of a nearby town all drop dead (literally in their tracks).  That is all but an aging wino with an ulcer and a perpetually squalling six-month-old baby. A team of scientists (Arthur Hill, David Wayne, Kate Reid and James Olson) are all summoned immediately to the massive and strictly hush-hush Wildfire Laboratory to try to identify and defeat the killer.

I hope it is not too much of a spoiler to reveal that we are dealing with a crystalline organism, which may be an intelligent alien being.  The story is devoted to the methodical efforts of the scientists to understand how the organism works, how it spreads and how to defuse it.  They also have to worry about the lab self-destructing if they are unsuccessful.

If I have to pick between an alien plague that is taken seriously and the current situation in my homeland where a real-life deadly, but containable, virus is made the subject of politics and virtually ignored or derided by a sizable chunk of the population, I know which one I would choose.  Would that life could resemble art.

As a movie, this is a little talkier than I would prefer but the effects and the settings are amazing.  Considering this was done before CGI makes it even more spectacular.  Wise does his usual competent job and even tries out a few of the New Hollywood’s tricks.

The Andromeda Strain was nominated for Academy Awards in the categories of Best Art Direction-Set Decoration and Best Film Editing.