Category Archives: 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Reviews of movies included in the book 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Le trou (1960)

Le trou (“The Hole”)Le Trou Poster
Directed by Jacques Becker
1960/France
Filmsonor/Play Art/Titanus

#353 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
Second viewing
IMDb users say 8.3; I say 9.0

 

Roland: Poor Gaspard.

Jacques Becker’s meticulously wrought Le Trou does not need appealing characters to get an audience rooting for its prisoners.  The director simply shows us prison conditions and the hard work and dedication of the men determined to escape its walls and we cannot help but wish them well.  He packs in so much tension that the two-hour running time flies by.

Le Trou 2

The hole

Claude Gaspard is tranferred into the cell of four men who have lived together for some time.  He is pending trial for attempted first-degree murder of his wife, which he claims was an accidental shooting during a scuffle after she drew a gun on him.  While something seems slightly “off” about the more educated and wealthy Claude, the others decide they have no choice to trust him and reveal their plans to tunnel out of jail.

Le Trou 1

The bulk of the movie simply follows the men working to carry out their plan without detection by the ever present prison guards.   We get so much information on how the men make their escape tools that we could practically replicate their feat.   At the same time, Becker shows us all the reasons prison is hell.  My favorite illustration is when the guard searches Gaspard’s package of food.  He takes the same dirty knife to cut through sausage and smoked fish that he uses to stir through the rice pudding.  The feeling of violation is profound.  There is no music and long periods without much dialog but I sat there rapt.

Le Trou

I loved the economy with which the characters were developed and the fascinating glimpse of the routines of prison life. Becker has also given an electrifying study of group dynamics. The actors were all new faces – in fact, one of the actors actually participated in the escape on which the story was based.  You could not have proved that they had no prior experience by me.  They were all superb.  This was Becker’s last film and a fitting swan song.

Montage of clips (unfortunately no subtitles)

 

Rashomon (1950)

RashomonRashomon dvd
Directed by Akira Kurosawa
1950/Japan
Daiei Motion Picture Company

#225 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
Several viewings

 

 

Commoner: In the end you cannot understand the things men do.

A priest, a woodcutter, and a commoner take shelter from a downpour under the Roshomon gate.  The priest and woodcutter are stunned by the horrible stories they have heard about a murder of a samurai and rape of his wife in the forest.  The woodcutter first tells about his discovery of the body and then proceeds to relate the accounts of the events given by the bandit, the woman, and the samurai (through a medium).  He follows with another eye-witness account.  The stories do not coincide and indeed there is conflicting evidence as to whether there was a murder at all.

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The commoner and the woodcutter

I love Kurosawa’s dazzling meditation on the nature of reality. The people are not so much lying as telling the story from their perspective and in a way that puts each in the best possible light. I think it is interesting that each of the principals claims responsibility for the death, as if what is most important is that s/he be seen as in control of the situation.  Sometimes Toshiro Mifune seems to be overacting as the bandit but when we compare his performances in each version of the story we can see subtle changes.  I love the vast differences between the classic sword fight as described by the bandit and the same sword fight reported by the woodcutter, when we see the two men struggling on the ground and gasping for breath.

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The cinematography is fantastic. The Criterion DVD includes excerpts from The World of Kazuo Miyagawa, a documentary on Rashomon’s cinematographer.  It was fascinating to learn how he achieved the long tracking shot of the woodsman entering the forest and the light and shadows on the characters faces.  Kurosawa truly captured a sun-dappled forest to perfection. Needless to say, each shot is exquisitely composed.

Clip – “A Ghastly Discovery”

 

The Muppet Movie (1979)

The Muppet MovieMuppetMovieCover
Directed by James Frawley
1979/USA
Henson Associates and ITC Films

First viewing
#656 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Kermit: [singing; repeated lines] Someday we’ll find it, the rainbow connection. The lovers, the dreamers, and me.

A Hollywood agent gets lost in Kermit’s swamp and tells him about an audition for frogs in Hollywood. Kermit heads for the promised land and picks up an assortment of friends along the way, including Fozzie Bear, Miss Piggie, and Gonzo. The group is pursued by Doc Hopper, who is determined to force Kermit to do the advertisement for his chain of frog leg restaurants.

The Muppet Movie

This is a cute film with plenty of cameos by famous people for the adults and all kinds of puns and other jokes for the kids. Unfortunately, I had never seen it before so I didn’t have the nostalgia factor going in. My favorite parts were the beginning and end with “The Rainbow Connection” song.

“The Rainbow Connection”

 

Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer (1992)

Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial KillerAileen Wuornos DVD
Directed by Nick Broomfield
1993/UK
Channel 4 Television Corporation and Lafayette Films

#852 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
First Viewing

 

Aileen Wuornos: [In court] I’m trying to save taxpayers money; you people don’t care. You wanna press on with a jury and everything else to try to impress the public. And all I wanna do is go back to prison, wait for the chair, and get the hell off of this planet that’s full of evil and your corruption in these courtrooms.

Aileen Wuornos was the inspiration for the character played by Charlize Theron in Monster, thought to be the first female serial killer in the U.S. Aileen herself disputed that, claiming that each of the seven murders she committed was in self-defense. This documentary is not so concerned with Aileen’s life, however. It largely focuses on how she got mixed up with her attorney and a woman who ended up adopting her. These people convinced her to plead no contest to six of the charges against her and proceeded to try to cash in on Aileen’s story. At the same time, certain police officers were also selling her story.

Aileen Wuornos 1

While this documentary was OK, I would not call it “must see” viewing. The film maker got precious few interviews with key players so there is an awful lot of filler. It seemed to me, also, that the documentarian himself was also cashing in on the story, while criticizing others that were doing the same thing.

Trailer

Anvil: The Story of Anvil (2008)

Anvil: The Story of AnvilAnvilTheStoryofAnvil Poster
Directed by Sacha Gervasi
2008/Canada
Little Dean’s Yard and AHIMSA Films

#1079 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die (Combined List)
First Viewing

 

Out of 1934 rentals again, I turned to Netflix Instant for another documentary from the  1001 Movies list.  While this was interesting enough, I can’t see why I should have made a point to see it before I died.

Steve ‘Lips’ Kudlow: Everything on the tour went drastically wrong. But at least there was a tour for it to go wrong on.

This documentary is the story of the comeback efforts of a Canadian heavy metal band called Anvil,which had some success as an opening act in the early 80s. The core members of the band, the lead singer/guitarist and drummer, have been together since they were 14 and are now in their early 50s, holding down blue-collar day jobs but continuing to play. The film follows the band’s comedy-of-errors tour of Europe and attempts to record and get a distributor for their 13th album.

anvil-the-story-of-anvil 1

While Anvil has been referred to as a real-life This Is Spinal Tap, I didn’t find it particularly funny. You had to hand it to these guys for their persistence and love of the music, but mostly it was kind of sad. I also had the nagging feeling that the film itself was something of a self-promotional comeback effort.

 

In the Year of the Pig (1968)

In the Year of the PigIn the Year of the Pig DVD
Directed by Emile de Antonio
1968/USA
Emile de Antonio Productions

#502 of 1001 Films You Must See Before You Die
First viewing

 

Made while the war in Vietnam was still raging, The Year of the Pig ïs an “advocacy film” intended to raise opposition to the war by appealing to both the emotions and the intellect.  Although I generally hate to feel manipulated, I have to admit that the film is brilliantly effective in what it sets out to do.

In the Year of the Pig 3

The film traces the history of conflict in Vietnam through disturbing images, ironic use of music and sound effects, U.S. television news footage, sound bites from U.S. government and military officials, and interviews with scholars and war opponents. The basic message is that the U.S. cannot win the war because it is a liberation struggle supported by the majority of the Vietnamese people, North and South.

[box] “Vietnam was the first war ever fought without any censorship. Without censorship, things can get terribly confused in the public mind.” – General William C. Westmoreland[/box]

In the Year of the Pig 4

De Antonio was a committed Marxist and made no pretense of objectivity in this film. Since I agree with him about the folly of that war, the propaganda does not bother me as much as it otherwise would. And we certainly had a lot of propaganda on the other side for it to counter!

I had never heard of this film before.  Thanks to whomever nominated it for the 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die Blog Club.

Clip – rickshaw drivers – life under the French

 

 

Tokyo Story (1953)

Tokyo Story (“Tôkyô monogatari”)Tokyo Story DVD
Yasujirô Ozu
1953/Japan
Shôchiku Eiga

#257 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
Multiple Viewings

Kyoko: Isn’t life disappointing?
Noriko: [smiles] Yes, it is.

This is one of my very favorite films by my very favorite director and I feel like I’m too close to it to find the right words to review it.  I love this and Ozu’s other films because they are unique in giving me a sort of nostalgia, like a bittersweet sadness for a time now lost.  Although I have no reason to be nostalgic for 1950’s Japan, Ozu shows us the core of family life, with its inevitable challenges, in a way that speaks to every time and place.   Ozu’s deliberate pacing and formal compositions encourage a contemplative attitude on the part of the audience, allowing our impressions to linger and evolve.

Shukichi (Ozu regular Chisu Ryu) and Tomi (Chieko Higashiyama) are an elderly couple who have not seen their scattered adult children for several years.  They eagerly set off by train to visit them in Osaka and Tokyo.  When they get to Tokyo, it gradually becomes clear that their son and daughter are too busy with their own lives to entertain their parents.    In contrast, Noriko, the widow of  a son who died in the war, (Setsuko Hara) takes time off from work and extends herself gladly to make her in-laws welcome.

tokyo-story 3

Daughter Shige (Haruko Sugimura) is particularly ungracious and stingy toward her parents.  We learn that she has built up resentments from childhood at her mother’s weight and her father’s drinking.  Shige comes up with the idea of sending the old people to a beach resort to avoid having to take them places.  During his stay with Shige, Shukichi goes out on the town with old friends and gets thoroughly drunk.  It turns out all the old men are disappointed in their children but Shukichi reminds the others that children must be expected grow up and live their own lives, that is just the way life is.  Finally, the old couple decide to cut their visit short and head back for home in the country.

tokyo story 2

Tomi falls in ill on the train and the two spend a night at their younger son’s place in Osaka.  While there, they reflect that their children are a disappointment but still are better than most children.

After they arrive home, Tomi is stricken and becomes critically ill.  The clan gathers once again at their childhood home.  They grieve when Tomi dies yet revert to their old ways after the funeral, Shige asking for some of her mother’s clothes almost before the corpse is cold.

tokyo-story-1953-family-seated

Kyoko, the couple’s youngest daughter who still lives at home, bitterly denounces her siblings as selfish.  The unselfish Noriko explains that it is natural that the older children have busy lives of their own and that eventually she, too, may need to think of herself first.  Life is disappointing but that is the way it is.

Shukishi urges Noriko to remarry and tells her she is a good woman who treated them better than their blood relations on the trip.  In tears, Noriko responds that she is not so good but is very lonely and at loose ends.  Kyoko has already left for work and Noriko now departs for Tokyo by train.  The film ends with Shukishi agreeing with a neighbor that stops by that life will be lonely now.

Ozu allows us to draw our own conclusions.  We are given ample space and time to get to know the characters.  Surely, we are meant to see that the Tokyo children treat their parents very badly but just as certainly we are meant to consider the parent’s acceptant response as admirable.  Life is disappointing, but it goes on.

Trailer

The Black Cat (1934)

The Black CatBlack Cat Poster
Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer
1934/USA
Universal Pictures

Second viewing

 

Highly enjoyable pre-Code Universal horror outing with boffo dual performances by Karloff and Lugosi.

Peter Allison: I don’t know. It all sounds like a lot of supernatural baloney to me.
Dr. Vitus Verdegast: Supernatural, perhaps. Baloney, perhaps not. There are many things under the sun.[/box]

Dr. Vitus Vendergast (Bela Lugosi) meets honeymooners Peter (David Manners) and Joan on a train and hitches a ride with them to their ultimate destination. On the way, the car goes off the road, the driver is killed and the party is forced to take refuge in the creepy modernist castle of Hjalmar Poelzig (Boris Karloff).

The-Black-Cat 2

This suits Vendergast just fine as he is on a mission to make Poelzig, his sworn enemy, suffer slowly. Poelzig left Vendergast to rot in prison for 15 years then told Vendergast’s wife she was a widow and took her for his own.

Hjalmar Poelzig: The phone is dead. Do you hear that, Vitus? Even the phone is dead.

The movie is basically a duel of wits between Vendergast and Poelzig, who also has plans to use Joan as the sacrifice in a Black Mass.   As for a black cat, well one wanders around, but it’s basically just an excuse to use the Edgar Allen Poe title

Black Cat 1

This is the kind of thing I just eat up. Sure it can be a little campy in places and Lugosi over-emotes furiously but that is part of the fun. The Expressionist cinematography and art direction are quite wonderful.  Recommended for lovers of classic Universal horror.

Slacker (1991)

SlackerSlacker DVD
Directed by Richard Linklater
1991/USA
Detour Film Production

#840 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
First Viewing

 

This is another of those unseen 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die titles on Netflix streaming. I could have lived without this one.

Hitchhiker: Every single commodity you produce is a piece of your own death!

This movie basically follows a whole bunch of twenty-somethings with time on their hands around Austin, Texas for a day. Most of the characters are oddballs with an axe to grind or and a willingness to go on and on about it. There are a few fragments that might be said to tell some sort of story but we leave all of those quickly. The end.

Anti-Artist: Uh, I don’t do much really, I just read, and work here, and, uh, sleep and eat, and, uh, watch movies.

Woman trying to sell Madonna's pap smear

Woman trying to sell Madonna’s pap smear

I would like to get 97 minutes of my time back. But don’t take my word for it. For some reason, this film is in the National Film Registry. Hip people probably get a lot out of it.

Trailer

 

The Phantom of the Opera (1925)

The Phantom of the OperaPhantom Poster
Directed by Rupert Julian
1925/USA
Universal Pictures

#26 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
First Viewing

 

This is another of the movies from The List that I had never seen before and was available from Netflix streaming.

Erik: Feast your eyes! Glut your soul on my accursed ugliness!

Erik (Lon Chaney), a self-taught musician and disfigured, criminally insane fugitive, has taken refuge in the cavernous cellars of the Paris Opera House. There he has been taken for a phantom that haunts the opera house. He develops a passion for rising opera singer Christine and promotes her career by writing threatening letters to keep the star diva from singing and by killing the audience with a chandelier when that doesn’t work. Eventually, he lures Christine to his realm where she soon learns of the hideous countenance hidden by his mask. He agrees to allow Christine to return to the opera on the condition that she stay away from her lover. Naturally, Christine cannot resist and all hell breaks loose.

Phantom of the Opera Technicolor

The Phantom as the Red Death

I must say that this is much creepier and more gripping than the 1943 Claude Rains version. The print I saw had quite a bit of tinting, two-strip Technicolor sequences, and a specially composed score that heightened the effects. Chaney was spectacular and, while I could have lived without some of Mary Philbin’s posturing, I really enjoyed it.

The unmasking scene