Ragtime (1981)

Ragtime
Directed by Milos Forman
Written by Michael Weller from a novel by E.L. Doctorow
1981/US
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/YouTube rental

Younger Brother: What kind of music do you play?
Coalhouse Walker Jr.: Anything they ask me to, and then I play ragtime.

This was even better than I remembered it.

The story takes place in New York City and its environs in the days before WWI.  It is intended to give a panoramic view of the time.  Mother (Mary Steenbergen), Father (James Olson), and Younger Brother (Brad Dourif) are an upper middle class family living in New Rochelle.  Father is very proper and conventional but in the end is not such a bad guy.  Mother and her brother march to a different drum.

A maid finds a black baby in the garden and Mother immediately wants to take it in.  Finally, the mother (Debbie Allen)  is found and Mother insists on taking her in as well.  The father of the child, Coalhouse Walker Jr. (Howard E. Rollins, Jr.) soon makes an appearance.  His mastery of the piano has secured him steady employment and he is now prepared to marry.

Simultaneously we follow the story of Evelyn Nesbitt (Elizabeth McGovern) and her jealous husband Henry Thaw.  Thaw becomes enraged when a nude statue, rumored to have been modeled by his wife, is placed atop Madison Square Garden.  Although millionaire Stanford White denies this, Thaw starts following him with murderous intent and finally achieves his aim at a show in the Garden.  He comes from a wealthy family who secure him the best defense attorney (Pat O’Brien) and pay off Evelyn to lie on the stand.

Also simultaneously, we meet a Jewish immigrant artist (Mandy Patinkin) who eventually  becomes an early movie maker.

Little Brother becomes obsessed with Evelyn but she is a ditzy free spirit who is certainly is not ready for any type of commitment.  This leaves him ready to perform any number of rash acts.

Coalhouse is very proud of his brand new Model T.  Right before his wedding day, the car stalls in front of a fire department.  The firemen resent the idea that a black man could have a new car and dump excrement on the front seat.  Coalhouse demands that they clean it.  But they don’t and the authorities take their side.  The car is badly damaged overnight.  Things subsequently spiral out of control as Coalhouse seeks justice.  With James Cagney, in his last film, as a police commissioner and Donald O’Connor as Evelyn’s  dance instructor.

It is hard to single out a performance from the ensemble cast as they are uniformly excellent.  The movie is long but the story is gripping.  And it was so much fun to see all the old movie stars.  Cagney has a substantial part and is fantastic.  Forman never made a bad film and the period detail here is out of this world.

I have a friend who has done extensive research on Nesbit and am wondering what she thinks about her portrayal in this film.

“Ragtime” was nominated for Academy Awards in the categories of Best Supporting Actor (Rollins), Best Supporting Actress (McGovern), Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Best Costume Design, Best Original Score (Randy Newman), and Best Original Song.

Theme song for another movie but appropriate here.

Amazing Grace (2018)

Amazing Grace
Directed by Alan Elliott and Sydney Pollock
2018/US
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube rental

Rev. Franklin: I went in the cleaners one day in Detroit to pick up some clothes, and Aretha had appeared on a recent television show. And she told me, “I saw your daughter Aretha last night.” I said, “Yes? How did you like it?” She said, “It was all right. But I’ll be glad when she comes back to the church.” I said, “Listen baby, let me tell you something. If you want to know the truth, she has never left the church.”

This concert film captures a two-day session that produced the tracks for Aretha Franklin’s  “Amazing Grace” album (1972), which remains the best-selling gospel album of all time as well as the best-selling album of Franklin’s career.  It was filmed at the New Bethel Baptist Church in Watts, Los Angeles on Jan. 13 and 14, 1972, with a crew of film and sound engineers and five 16mm cameras, all directed by Sidney Pollack.  She was backed by Rev. James Cleveland and the Southern California Community Choir.

Unfortunately, Pollack had never made a concert film and the editing process was beset with technical difficulties.  Pollack turned it over to Alan Everett in 2007 when he was dying of cancer.

If you love Aretha Franklin, as I do, you will not want to miss this.  She really pulls out all the stops.  Recommended.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPcrD-wD_LYy

Quest for Fire (1981)

Quest for Fire (La guerre du feu)
Directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud
Written by Gerard Brach from a book by J.H. Rosny Sr./Anthony Burgess creator of special languages/Desmond Morris creator of body language and gestures
1981/Canada/France
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube (free)

[first lines] Title Card: 80,000 years ago, man’s survival in a vast uncharted land depended on the possession of fire. / For those early humans, fire was an object of great mystery, since no one had mastered its creation. Fire had to be stolen from nature, it had to be kept alive – sheltered from wind and rain, guarded from rival tribes. / Fire was a symbol of power and a means of survival. The tribe who possessed fire, possessed life.

I was mesmerized by this very strange movie.

The film is set in the time of pre-history when Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis co-existed. The population has migrated to a climate with cold winters. Fire is essential to humans for heat, cooking, and to scare away wild animals. We are introduced to a group who disastrously loses its carefully tended fire supply to marauding Neanderthals. Three of its young men are sent out in search of more. They have many harrowing adventures.

The group battles another that has captured women from yet another tribe.  One (Rae Dawn Chong) escapes and attaches her self to the men, who eventually accept her.  She has a more sophisticated language and leads them back to her little village.  In the course of more wandering, fire and romantic love are discovered.

I was a bit nervous going in but I totally loved this.  There is no dialogue that we can understand and no subtitles.  And way too many things are discovered in a very short period. I’m sure the accuracy could be picked apart in many other ways.  But the filmmakers have created a world here and, once one surrenders to it, it is totally engrossing and thought-provoking.  Rae Dawn Chong does an amazing job and so do her male counterparts.  Recommended.

Quest for Fire won the Academy Award for Best Makeup.

Missing theme song

Neil Young: Heart of Gold (2006)

Neil Young: Heart of Gold
Directed by Jonathan Demme
2006/US
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube rental

 

Neil Young: [singing] I want to live, I want to give, I’ve been a miner, For a heart of gold, It’s these expressions, I never give, That keep me searching, For a heart of gold, And I’m getting old…

Jonathan Demme (Stop Making Sense) gives us another excellent concert film.

This beautiful film was shot during a two-night performance by Neil Young at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium.  We also get interviews of Young and the members of his band.  Emmylou Harris is one of his backup singers.

How much you like this will depend on how well you like Young’s music.  I like his old songs, which thankfully he includes, better than his newer material.

Arthur (1981)

Arthur
Written and Directed by Steve Gordon
1981/US
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/YouTube rental

Lola

Lola
Directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Written by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Pia Frohlich and Peter Märthesheimer
1981/West Germany
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Criterion Channel

 

Lola: A whore is something for sale, like that Ming thing there. Except you can touch them, and they’re not so rare.

Fassbinder’s scathing critique of capitalism in the “New Germany” is also a feast for the eyes.

The year is 1957.  Lola (Barbara Sukowa) is a singer/prostitute and a favorite at the brothel she works at.  She is being kept by a wealthy and thoroughly corrupt building contractor, Schuckert.  As the movie begins, Lola is thinking she does not get nearly the respect she deserves. Simultaneously, a new building commissioner is coming to town.  Van Bohm (Armin Mueller-Stahl) is a kindly, traditional, strait-laced man with a vision of building apartments for the community.

At first, von Bohm is enthusiastic about Schuckert’s proposal.  Schuckert is enthusiastic because he can milk millions out of the community.  The community fathers are as corrupt as he is.  When Schuckert tells Lola Von Bohm is too good for her, she accepts the challenge.  Before too long, Lola figures out how she can play the two men against each other and come out on top.

This film is Fassbinder’s take on The Blue Angel (1930).   He adds brilliant color to the story as well as a lot of wit.  The acting is fantastic and so is the script and filmmaking.  Recommended.

No trailer with subtitles

Too obvious but the only possible missing theme song

Escape from New York (1981)

Escape from New York
Directed by John Carpenter
Written by John Carpenter and Nick Castle
1981/US
IMDb page
First viewing/Criterion Channel

Bob Hauk: It’s the survival of the human race, Plissken. Something you don’t give a shit about.

I loved the setting for this dystopian action adventure.

It is 1997.  Since the late eighties, Manhattan Island has been used as a maximum security prison.  The prisoners are allowed to govern themselves.  Provisions on the island are scarce and gasoline is precious.  Punishment for escape is swift and fatal.

As the story begins, a plane is hijacked and the President (Donald Pleasance) is ejected via an escape pod.  He is deposited in the center of Manhattan.  He carried a briefcase containing a tape explaining nuclear fusion that he was supposed to reveal at an international summit (a more McGuffinish McGuffin is hard to imagine).  Prison warden Bob Hauk (Lee Van Cleef) is tasked with rescuing the President and the tape.  His only hope is Snake Plissken (Kurt Russell), an ace pilot and bad ass.  Snake has 24 hours to complete his assignment.  He will die if he does not complete it by the deadline.  He will be pardoned for an offense that was about to send him to Manhattan if he succeeds.

Snake lands atop the World Trade Center.  The first person he meets is loopy cab driver Cabbie (Ernest Borgnine) who somehow secures enough gas to drive him around town.  Next he hits up “friends” Brain (Harry Dean Stanton) and Maggie (Adrienne Barbeau). Brain knows that the Duke of New York (Isaac Hayes) and his minions are holding the President as a bargaining chip to escape via the Brooklyn Bridge.  Much action follows.

This is the kind of thing I would not have sought out in 1981 but decades of movie watching have made me realize it is something special.  The concept is intriguing and the production is out of this world.  I particularly liked the black and grey vision of New York.  In this case style over substance won me over.  If the concept appeals, I can recommend it.

I’m with Gene on this one.

Reds (1981)

Reds
Directed by Warren Beatty
Written by Warren Beatty and Trevor Griffiths
1981/US
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/YouTube rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Witness: I think that a guy who’s always interested in the condition of the world and changing it, either has no problems of his own or refuses to face them.

This was better than I remembered it from original release but is still too long.

The story begins in Portland, Oregon in 1915.  John Reed (Warren Beatty) is a brilliant investigative journalist with a definite leftist slant.  Louise Bryant (Diane Keaton) is a married dilettante that is trying to find a her voice as a writer. When the two meet, sparks fly.  They are kindred spirits and Louise is ready to move to New York with Jack soon thereafter.  She constantly fights for her own career without pursuing it with much vigor.  They also are anti-WWI activists at home.  Neither of these activities make them popular with the authorities.

For awhile, the couple lives in sort of an artists colony by the shore.  One of their best friends is Eugene O’Neill (Jack Nicholson).  O’Neill is strongly attracted to Louise and they have an affair when Jack leaves Louise behind to agitate at the 1916 Democratic National Convention on behalf of Woodrow Wilson, who at the time was an anti-war candidate.  Jack finds out about this and opts to propose marriage.  Simultaneously, he is secretly suffering with kidney disease.

Although there is a rift in the marriage, Jack and Louise make up and he convinces her to travel to Russia with him as his “comrade”. The inspiration the two find in the Russian revolution binds them again as lovers.  Jack illegally enters Russian again planning to stay only several months  and finds leaving is not so easy.  Louise goes through hell trying to join him.  With Maureen Stapleton as Emma Goldman.

I saw this in the theater and after so many years my main memory of it was Jack Nicholson’s performance.  He is still the best thing about the movie according to me.  But it is also very good looking and works well as an epic romance.  The intricacies and importance of infighting within the American socialist movement not so much.  In fact, by the end I felt that a lot of good minds were wasted on a project that never would have succeeded in America in the first place.  The three-hour plus film required an intermission, never a good thing in my book.

Reds won Academy Awards in the categories of Best Director, Best Supporting Actress (Stapleton), and Best Cinematography.  It was nominated in the categories of Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor (Nicholson). Best Original Screenplay, Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Best Costume Design, Best Film Editing, and Best Sound.

 

Mommie Dearest (1981)

Mommie Dearest
Directed by Frank Perry
Written by Frank Yablans, Frank Perry, etc. from a book by Christina Crawford
1981/US
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube rental

Joan Crawford: Why can’t you give me the respect that I’m entitled to? Why can’t you treat me like I would be treated by any stranger on the street?
Christina: Because I am NOT one of your FANS.

This film might have been saved by a better script and a different leading lady.

Joan Crawford (Faye Dunaway) has it all and fights constantly to keep it.  One thing the much-divorced actress lacks is a family.  She can’t have children of her own or convince an adoption agency she is a fit mother so she essentially buys two, Christina and Christopher.  They make great props for her press events.  She shows them much affection until they demonstrate that they have wills and needs of their own.

Joan gets into a running battle with the strong-willed Christina.  She must resort to harsher and harsher punishments but they just terrify the little girl.  It doesn’t help that Joan becomes a belligerent drunk and loses her mind as her career goes down the tubes.

This movie destroyed Faye Dunaway’s career and with good reason.  She was horribly miscast.  She was a good actress but not one who could disappear into a character.  So her Joan Crawford just seems like Faye Dunaway on a rampage.  In addition, she reportedly was extremely difficult to work with and thought she was turning in an Oscar-winning performance.  The script is pure sensationalism and exploitation.  The film does have some camp delights but not enough to recommend watching it.

 

Coup de Torchon (Clean Slate) (1981)

Coup de Torchon (Clean Slate)
Directed by Bertrand Tavernier
Written by Jean Aurenche and Bernard Tavernier from the novel “Pop. 1280” by Jim Thompson
1981/France
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime channel

Lucien Cordier: They say we are made in God’s image though if that were true I wouldn’t want to meet him in a dark alley!

Is this a jet black comedy?  It is certainly not a murder mystery.

It is 1938 in French West Africa.  Lucien Cordier (Philippe Noiret) is the Chief of Police in a small town.  He is a real sad sack, hired because of his laziness and ability to turn a blind eye.  He is the butt of everyone’s jokes.  He is married to Huguette (Stephane Audran), who is openly having an affair with her “brother” that lives with them. He takes up with Rose (Isabelle Huppert), a sex pot who is the victim of her husband’s physical and verbal abuse.

After his latest humiliation, he goes to the big city and is  told to give back double of what he gets from his tormentors.  Somehow Lucien believes this is a license to kill, which he does with abandon for the remainder of the film, being careful to always have a fall guy for his crimes.

The story this has most in common with is Taxi Driver (1976).  The Philippe Noiret character is a complicated mix of clown and avenger.  He comes to view his job as taking out the trash.  There is not one sympathetic character in this movie.  The story could have been told in a more compelling way but I love the actors and the staging so much that I can recommend it.  But only if you like well-done dark stories about unpleasant people.