Saturday, 28 February 2026
Hopscotch (1980)
This first-rate spy thriller from the competent Ronald Neame, known for a wide range of films including The Poseidon Adventure, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie and The Chalk Garden, provides a different kind of spy for the era in the person of Walter Matthau, the last entity someone might expect in the same genre of which James Bond is the most famous character. All through the 1970s there was a push to present "spies" in the manner they really existed, as ordinary-looking, easy-to-ignore nobodies who did quiet work without getting noticed. Hopscotch is the best of this counter-thriller spy culture, mixed with a dry comedic element than made the film fun. It was a sensation when it came out, a sleeper hit so called, and though dated to its time period, the intellectual elements of the film remain wholly intact. It's well worth the time, even though stealing from this film results somewhat in parts of it now being made predictable. Once again, the film suffers from doing it first and generally better than later copycats.
The film also includes Glenda Jackson at the apex of her career, just at the point where she began seriously considering moving to another career; becoming increasingly political, she considered numerous alternatives that culminated in her being elected a Member of Parliament in Britain, a position she held for 25 years. In Hopscotch she is an absolute gem, surly, sarcastic, a perfect foil for Matthau; they had appeared together in 1978's House Calls, another smash hit that did for the medical profession what this film does for the spy industry. Pairing them up again, given the chemistry they had, was a natural choice.
Matthau's career is so dependent upon his association with Jack Lemmon (they made nine films together) that modern audiences are sometimes unaware of Matthau's interest in choosing crime drama projects, the elements of which leak into this film also. His earlier performances in Kotch and Charley Varrick add to his credibility in the role of Miles Kendig, brilliantly hopping and jumping one step ahead of the C.I.A. as they attempt to muzzle him. Matthau is also at the height of his career, making films that interest him and having the box office numbers that permitted him to work with whomever he wanted at the time.
Ned Beatty and Sam Waterston round out the cast, the latter such a young kid it's hard to believe he's not still in short pants. Still, he's coming off an excellent performance in 1978's Capricorn One, and is thus getting bigger parts. Beatty has less range as an actor, but his small diminuative stature is good for this role; around this time, Beatty is absolutely everyone, becoming one of those "that-actor"s that everyone recognises but no one knows their name.
Thursday, 26 February 2026
Run Silent Run Deep (1958)
Sure has felt like a lot of dull title cards.
Robert Wise had been directing for 14 years by the time of this film, most famously to that time for the film The Day the Earth Stood Still. Of course, later he would obliterate that reputation by first directing the blockbuster (before the term was coined) West Side Story in 1961 and then The Sound of Music in 1965... given those two films, it's hard to imagine his directing a war picture with just two women characters in it. Yes, this is a film literally about sea men. Rim shot.
Unquestionably a cheap joke. I don't mean to disparage the film. Later, films like this would develop a reputation because they legitimately played upon an audience filled with men who had actually participated in the war on submarines, or in some capacity related to submarines or the navy. As such, a raft of such films exploded on the market in the post-war years, with male casts made up of hard, athletic bodies sweating in underwater cans stripped to their t-shirts, feeding a certain cultural phenomenon attached to gay culture in the 1970s. Steve Reeves was not in this, but it's the kind of film Frankie is talking about in The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
I'm not disparaging this film for this reason. It is a well-written, restrained, believably designed picture from the outset, with tight framing, careful actor blocking the fits the mood and reality of submarine mechanics, while maintaining a strong, reliable pace and solid elements of tactile, unsettling what-was-it-like for the men aboard these vessels. It's that combination of a film worth seeing and the later social shadow it cast upon other projects that makes the movie important as one in a filmophile's repertoire.
Other sub-films were made before this: more than a dozen in the 1950s before this one was released, most notably The Enemy Below, which had been released the previous year. Wise's picture differed in that he'd obtained an actual sub, the USS Redfish, a Balao-class boat, which provided serious constraints for the film's production given that a good third of the film takes place below deck. The film was also different in that it's the first in which the submariners do not partake in multiple operations divided betwene returns to base, but rather describes a single patrol where radio silence, a continuous threat and separation from what base command might consider important are factors driving the plot. This allows the two officers aboard ship, played by an aging Clark Gable and a troublesome actor of the period Burt Lancaster (in this case, also producing the film), to go at each other on matters of strategy, hierarchy and cowardice with no higher power present. This dynamic would be repeated again and again in other films where militaristic and other hierarchy-driven were deliberately cut off by the plotline in order to rehash the same uncertainties.
All sorts of properties in the 1960s, especially in content made for television, seized upon this argument in a vacuum, with no higher up to clarify who was right or wrong. Half a dozen Star Trek episodes, cast in space far from Earth, used this very trope, though it was not the only one. My reasons for Star Trek as an example comes from the writers use of Run Silent Run Deep as a textbook happens more than once: first in the Original Series episode, Balance of Terror, in which the Romulans and Federation fight a sub battle in space, then again in The Wrath of Khan. That's not a failing — it's stealing from an original as the sincerest form of flattery.
Whether or not the reader can appreciate the film in and of itself is irrelevant. Wise's practices here would prove fertile for the work of a lot of other people.
Monday, 23 February 2026
Straw Dogs (1971)
This is Sam Peckinpah's violent controversial film in which the assumptions we make about people, for good or ill, are subject to misconception. The phrase, attributed to Lao-tzu, is that "Heaven and Earth are not humane, and regard the people as straw dogs." Within the film, it can be seen that things which are seen as harmless are not necessarily so, and that misjudging them is something that we do to our peril.
It's not a spoiler to state that the film is violent; that element is so well known about the film that the value or purpose of the violence within the story's frame is conveniently ignored, misconstrued or fatally misrepresented. Much of that comes down to a class of people, particularly in the early 70s, who had become so isolated and preserved from real violence, they had come to perceive it as something unreal. Even the shocking events of Helter Skelter had done little except to imbue the cultural elite to the blindness of a four year old who, having burnt his fingers on a stove, now lives in such fear of the object that he won't go into the kitchen. Viewed in these terms, criticism of Straw Dogs at the time was little more than a cacophony of performative ignorance, as though violence was not a regular daily spectacle surrounding the Vietnam war.
These are just the surface reason why discussion of the film at the time went horribly wrong. Peckinpah created content for a mature audience while deliberately provoking an immature one. It is self-evident to anyone with their eyes open that he did not create this to "get attention," again, the sort of way a bad parent describes every action of their four-year-old, but to force attention, to create something that couldn't be ignored. He succeeded.
That said, it's not an easy film to watch. It's not for the faint of heart. There's quite a lot of it where the viewer is bound to ask, "Is something going to happen?" This is plainly intentional. Straw Dogs does not include Hitchcock-coded tension. It is normality to the point of banality, this being much of the point. It is a film that requires patience for something that is wholly unpleasant. One might ask why anyone would make such a film; or for that matter, what sort of person would like it.
I saw this film first when I was just 15. Imagine, television airing such a thing. It opened my eyes in a way that no film ever had. That feeling is hard to explain, particularly with a film like this.
Wednesday, 11 February 2026
Little Darlings (1980)
There were other films covering the same ground as this at the time, notably 1978's Pretty Baby, which in Alberta was rated 18+ (there was no national rating system at the time). I didn't see that until my parents did, at the Red Deer Drive-in, which we used to go visit on weekends during the summer; my parents cabin was 15 miles west of Red Deer, so occasionally, when we wanted to see a movie, we'd drive the distance and see what was there. Between 1976 and 1985, they used to run movies all night; sometimes we'd sit and watch four in a row, until the early dawn. My parents loved movies. They did not like Pretty Baby, which I saw when I was about 18. I didn't think much of it either.
Monday, 9 February 2026
The Naked City (1948)
Occasionally, films come along that create an entire genre with this origin. It Happened One Night from 1934 pretty much invented the "road picture," in which the plot revolves around the movement of two characters travelling, with the route itself being the primary scenery. Night of the Living Dead in 1968 heralded a long list of zombie movies. 1948's The Naked City essentially created the procedural cop drama, which later drifted into lazy tropes that this film vocally came out against. The film opens without visual credits. A narrator tells you that who wrote, photographed, directed and designed the film. It then takes the time to explain that the film wasn't filmed in a studio, but actually on the streets of New York, which in 1948 was unheard of.
The narrator then continues,
"Barry Fitzgerald, our star, Howard Duff, Dorothy Hart, Don Taylor, Ted de Corsia and the other actors, played out their roles on the streets, in the apartment houses, in the skyscrapers of New York itself. And along with them, a great many thousand New Yorkers played out their roles also. This is the city as it is. Hot summer pavements, the children at play, the buildings in their naked stone, the people without makeup."
Digging into the film (won two oscars, nominated for another), I found a great many inaccurate tags applied. It is not a "semi-documentary" in any greater sense than any film happens to occur in a real place. It is not a tour through everyday New York; it is a film that uses New York just as hundreds of films do now, every year, only this was made at a time when that wasn't done, except for newsreels. Much of the film does appear to be "newreel" in style, but this is because that was the only means of production that would allow filming in the outdoors, under these conditions, in 1948. It wasn't a director's choice. There were no other choices. The voiceover does not "clarify" the story, nor does it explain the character's motivations. It asks the same sort of questions anyone might, makes wry observations, gives no explanation of the story beyond what is seen.
The Naked City only seems to have the characteristics named above because it's difficult to explain, to a modern film audience, why things were filmed this way, or why the narrator spoke thus, or how the city unfolded, because in terms of film suspension of disbelief, this film in particular stands out as alien to most anything else we might see. It doesn't "fit" a genre, because it invented one. Prior to this, movies were detectives and bad guys, or cops and robbers... police officers weren't depicted as people with private lives, they weren't shown making jokes with each other, "cases" were solved by clever intuition, not by cops doing their jobs — and on that point, police work wasn't shown as a routine, repetitive, working man's job, until this film was made. The story takes the position that cases are not solved by brilliance, but by a lot of people doing small, boring things methodically, repeatedly, over time. It shocked the hell out of audiences at the time, revolutionised the idea of film and did a great deal to smash Hollywood thinking in the 30s and 40s... and yet, now, except in film courses, where the film is horribly mis-labeled and abusively misunderstood, it's almost unknown.
This isn't because the film failed, but because it succeeded too well. The concepts were copied almost immediately, like a tidal force, that not only invented the 1950s idea of the television "cop show," it revamped other genres as well, as western shows like Have Gun will Travel and Gunsmoke likewise became 19th century versions of the same cop-show pacing, very successfully. Amidst the deluge, the original film disappeared.
Also, because the film did use a lot of unknown actors willing to film in New York, perhaps working in the theatre there, a bunch of neat cameos appear of people so near to the beginning of their careers that they're unknown. Arthur O'Connell, the colonel from Operation Mad Ball, appears here much younger, barely recognisable, as a simple cop early in the film. David Opatoshu, is recognisable from Star Trek's original series episode, A Taste of Armageddon. A very young John Randolph, who would later play Clark Griswold's father in Christmas Vacation, is a virtually unrecognisable police dispatcher. James Gregory, familiar as Inspector Luger from Barney Miller, is here, quite obviously as a cop. All of the aforegoing were born in New York City. Molly Picon, who played Yente the Matchmaker in Fiddler on the Roof is here as a shopkeeper. Kathleen Freeman, the nun who goes at Jake and Elwood in The Blues Brothers is here, on a subway train. She was born in Chicago. Paul Ford is also here, best known as Mayor Shinn from The Music Man, but whom I also love in The Russians are Coming, the Russians are Coming. He was born in Baltimore. None of these are "cameos." They're all working actors at the beginning of their career, sprinkled like wedding rice throughout the picture.
Obviously, I don't want to talk about the story. Barry Fitzgerald has always been one of my favourite actors; he turns up in my favourite film, The Quiet Man. More's the pity, it's not available on youtube.
Thursday, 5 February 2026
The Commitments (1991)
Dublin in 1991, where the film takes place, was disasterously marked by unemployment, emigration, cramped housing and the pervasive feeling of decay and moral collapse. For those who have tried to be musicians, who have struggled with getting gigs, band members, doubt, a hope for fame and endless bloody frustration, this film was made. I'm frankly surprised by the number of working musicians who haven't seen this.
Most any review of the film would give a breakdown of the story and plot, and then talk about the music. The soundtrack is, frankly, a brilliant mix of utterly familiar soul music that does not need to be catalogued or talked about. The music itself is not the film. The film is ego, money, time, exhaustion and hopelessness grinding until it gives. In a very distant sense it reflects the struggle of black musicians in the sixties struggling to break out of their ghetto, where they created the music that paints the backdrop of this film. But this is not Detroit in 1965. This is Dublin.
What deserves note is that it's wonderfully, drily, unexpectedly eccentric and funny. All of it's played perfectly straight from beginning to end, which is why the comedy works. There are no comedic talents here — though Colm Meaney has always had good timing. What's here is comedy born of dire earnestness, superbly situational, absurd and fully not self-aware. I've seen the film at least a dozen times and still, which I watched this yesterday, I could not stop laughing or smiling.
It remains a little odd that in a film about a band, a member of the Celtic music group The Corrs is in the film, and she doesn't sing.
Wednesday, 4 February 2026
Zulu (1964)
It's likely difficult for a modern young audience to accept the depiction of the Zulus in the film — not because the film treats them badly, but rather because the film treats them excellently... which is bound to produce a sort of irrational resistance rather than a concession to the point. The Zulus are frightening because they're presented as strategic, effective, willing to sacrifice themselves, absolutely able to win the fight and, as soldiers. They are wholly unrecognisable as modern American black people, just as these brits are utterly unrecognisable as, say, me. Both depict persons of other cultures that presented themselves in a fight 150 years ago. Any sense that any modern person might "identify" with any of them, except in terms of say fear or bravery, is delusion. But then, delusion drives quite a lot of political rhetoric these days.
The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934)
The film will challenge some; it is old. The sound isn't perfect. Even as black-and-white, it's washed out, because of the durability of that old film stock and the filming itself. Still, Raymond Massey (whom most will remember from Arsenic and Old Lace) plays the villain with his typical style, like only a good Canadian can properly manage. There are rare films where he's not a villain, which I also love (The 49th Parallel). Few know it now, but his younger brother Vincent Massey would become the first Canadian born Governor General of Canada from 1952 to 1959. I just felt it needed saying.
Monday, 2 February 2026
Il portiere di notte (1974)
It is a not a pleasant film. It was deliberately made to confront and deeply disturb its audience of the time, compelling them to look at ugliness associated with the Third Riech and associations with the holocaust, at the messiness of human eroticism and the absurdities of obsession, culminating in what must be described as an unpleasant and deeply disturbing outcome. There is no happiness, no pleasantness, not rational sense that the characters are behaving as people with whom the audience might identify, or act in ways an uncouched audience could be expected to understand. If a viewer has an issue that might be subject to being trigger by visuals or story, this film will trigger it. It is not, it must be said coldly, for anyone who might remotely be considered "fragile." If this is remotely you, do not watch this film. It is the clearest content warning I can offer.
"Liking" is a consumer response, designed by those who make films as a consumer product. That is not The Night Porter. Films of consequence do not operate upon an axis of likeability. Many of the most consequential films in history were designed to resist pleasure, identification, comfort or even comprehension. They operate instead upon pressure, abrasion, endurance and implication — asking whether or not they were "enjoyed" is roughly equivalent to asking whether the scalpel that cuts and removes the tumour within felt "good." Films such as this one serve to unsettle, implicate, exhaust or refuse to orient the viewer in order to wrest them from an unconscious lack of awareness about the world, dragging that viewer kicking and screaming into the ugly, horrific unpleasantness of a bright, unyielding light. Filmgoers who would rather crouch in the dark of their escapism are not invited to attend.
Putting that aside. Bogarde in the film gives the performance of his career; his presence, the cruelty of his character, the intensely pathetic evil he possesses, such that he is able to literally shrink his body at will, expresses an artist with unimagined power within his craft. He is overshadowed, however, by the mere presence of Charlotte Rampling, with whom film directors fell in love with in the 1970s, expressly allowing the camera to pour over her for long minutes at a time, given her piercing stare and unimaginably beautiful features. She is hardly spoken of now, but the effort given in the Night Porter, portraying the actress not only in moments of extreme beauty but also in moments of repellant grotesquerie, was but one of numerous films in which the director was more than in love with her. Woody Allen's Stardust Memories would be another example. She is gravitational, a presence that cannot be explained. Her facial features are "perfect" but unlike any other star one might name, from Ingrid Bergman to Lauren Bacall to any of the less magnificent candidates these last twenty years, who cannot achieve the notariety of those who did it without make-up or botox injections.
But, without talking about the story or discussing its ramifications, I present it here, for those who have the wherewithal or the will to see it.
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