Daily Archives: January 22, 2023

The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (1978)

The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith
Directed by Fred Schepisi
Written by Fred Schepisi from a novel by Thomas Keneally
1978/Australia

IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

McCready: You can’t say we haven’t given you anything. We’ve introduced you to alcohol, religion.
Jimmie Blacksmith: Religion.
McCready: Influenza, measles, syphilis. School.
Jimmie Blacksmith: School.
McCready: A whole host of improvements.

This violent historical drama was not for me.

The story takes place in early 20th Century in rural Australia. Jimmie (Tommy Lewis) is a half-caste aborigine being raised in a missionary orphanage. The very racist Reverend (Jack Thompson) and his wife has high hopes for Jimmie’s future. They figure he can marry a white woman and that future generations will be more and more white.

But Jimmie is an aborigine in his heart and sneaks off to participate in the rituals of his culture. He knows how to talk a very smooth line though and has an easy enough time finding work. He also gets a white wife. But Jimmie is subjected to more and more abuse and finally goes on a rampage of vengeance.

The Australian countryside looks very beautiful in this film. I thought the cinematography and music were the best part though all the acting was quite good. The second-half of the movie features brutal violence and cruelty from all sides and was difficult for me to watch.

 

Interiors (1978)

Interiors
Directed by Woody Allen
Written by Woody Allen
1978/US

IMDb page
Repeat viewing?/Amazon Prime rental

Pearl: You only live once, and once is enough if you play your cards right.

After the massive success of “Annie Hall” (1977), Woody Allen was given free reign by his producers. He used it to make this super grim homage to Ingmar Bergman.

Eve (Geraldine Page) is an interior decorator aged about 60. Her aesthetic embraces the subtle, the pale, and the exquisite. She is negative and critical. She has reared three daughters, all adults and two married. The daughters could not be more different. Joey (Mary Beth Hurt) is in advertising and is married to Mike (Sam Waterson). She is the most lively and positive of the sisters. Renata (Diane Keaton) is a poet who is married to Fredrick (Richard Jordan). She sees an analyst and is introspective, self-critical, and feels her own poetry is not good enough. Flyn (Kristin Griffith) is an actress and is the closest of the three to their mother.

As the movie begins, Arthur (E.G. Marshall) the girls’ father, asks Eve for a separation. Eve is distraught and is sent to a mental hospital for a short time. She returns home and simply refuses to believe the separation is anything but temporary.

When Arthur returns from a long vacation in Greece, he has Pearl (Maureen Stapleton) by his side. Pearl is the polar opposite of Eve. She is warm, easy-going, and fun-loving. Arthur announces their engagement. This does not go over well with any of his female relatives as can be imagined. It forces even more introspection in this crowd

I like Woody Allen and I love Ingmar Bergman. I think “Interiors” fails as homage and fails as a film. Allen might have done a fabulous job parodying Bergman but this story is deadly serious. He takes the homage to the limit though almost to the point where it might be funny if half the characters weren’t suicidal. He is also superficial where Bergman would be complex.  I was not a fan.