Film Series Home  < CAL Home

Fall 2008 film series


the eagleListen to Professors Paul Helford and Paul Ferlazzo discuss the films in the series (and kibbitz about movies in general) every Tuesday morning at 8:20 on The Eagle, 103.7. For more information contact Paul Ferlazzo 523-9312.

The College of Arts and Letters and Cline Library Present
Cinema and the City
Our Fall 2008 series focuses on films which have “the city” as setting and metaphor.  From the sweeping travelogue shots of Paris and Rome in Gigi and Three Coins in a Fountain tothe gritty and grainy neo-realism of those cities in The 400 Blows and Roma: Open City; from the hard-boiled Noir of New Orleans in Panic in the Streets to the urbanity of Manhattan in Woody Allen’s Annie Hall, we will explore the cinematic spirit of the city, be it cold and impersonal or enlivening and vital. From the light and patriotic Mr. Smith Goes to Washington to darker evocations of the city in The Day the Earth Stood Still, Blow-Up, and Ghost Busters,   the cinematic metropolis has always been used as an allegory for civilization and its discontents, including early gems like Chaplin’s City Lights and Cagney’s Angels with Dirty Faces right up to Dirty Harry and Amadeus.  We will have a special focus on the streets, the hills, and the fog of San Francisco, with films like Vertigo and The Maltese Falcon, as well as many others mentioned above.     

 

city lightsAugust 26
City Lights
(Charles Chaplin, 1931, 87 minutes)
“Tomorrow the birds will sing.”

“Conceived as a “comedy romance in pantomime,” Chaplin’s City Lights is at once filled with humour, social commentary, and romance, all with poignancy that helps transcend its heartrending melodrama. At the time of filming, audiences were coming around to talkies with the advent of sound. However, Chaplin gambled, against all advice, and refused to introduce synchronized sound into the film, leaving The Little Tramp, his classic and most famous character, silent. The film begins with the Tramp being instantly smitten with a blind flower girl, but with no money, his infatuation with the woman (Virginia Cherrill) can only be realized from afar. After rescuing an eccentric and inebriated millionaire (Harry Myers) from committing suicide, the two strike up an unlikely friendship that allows the Tramp to get involved with several high-class predicaments, such as a drunkenly night out on the town. This action is paralleled with his desire to get the money needed to help the blind woman and her grandmother, forcing him to take odd jobs throughout the city, including a fixed-boxing match against a formidable opponent. Of course, all of the action is staged with impeccable timing and precision, and is usually captured in just one shot. It’s impossible not to be in awe of Chaplin’s graceful performance. It’s genuinely funny, filled with enough eccentricities to always keep it interesting, and honestly balanced between emotional nuance and outright slapstick. The romance between the Tramp and the blind flower girl, though, is where the film really delights. Beautifully acted, it’s a remarkable example of cinema’s powerful emotional effect. This all culminates in a terrific ending that movingly encapsulates the pathos, humour and insecurities of all involved. I’m not saying anything most people aren’t aware of, but Chaplin’s City Lights is an endearing classic,” Richard X, Cinephile Magazine.
Entered into the National Film Registry, 1991.   City Lights was named the # 10 love story ever by the American Film Institute, and was named in their top 100 films of all time.  It places in the top 50 romantic comedies of all time in their current “genres” competition.

angels with dirty facesSeptember 2
Angels with Dirty Faces (Michael Curtiz, 1938, 97 minutes)
“Always remember: Don't be a sucker.”

“The great success of Dead End, the 1937 film that starred Joel McCrea, Humphrey Bogart, and the 'Dead End' kids, inevitably led to a sequel. Angels with Dirty Faces reunited Bogart and six of the 'Dead End' gang. Because the producing studio had been changed from United Artists to Warner Brothers, the character names were also changed. McCrea was both romantic lead and good guy in Dead End. In the sequel, James Cagney takes over as leading man, while the good guy is the priest played by Pat O'Brien. The plot tells the familiar story of childhood pals going separate ways, become rivals as adults. Rocky Sullivan (Cagney) grows up to be a career criminal and racketeer, while Jerry Connelly (O'Brien) becomes a priest. They both vie for the souls of the 'Dead End' kids, who seem destined to become the next generation of Rocky Sullivans. Other story lines have Sullivan double-crossed by his lawyer/partner Frazier (Bogart), and Sullivan romancing a reluctant Ann Sheridan. Cagney is excellent. He is perfectly cast as a gangster, the little tough guy with a deeply hidden heart of gold. During shootouts with the police or rival gangsters, one can't help but root for him, all the while aware that the 1930s code requires him to come to a bad end. Bogart's character is cowardly and two-faced when compared to his aggressive character from "Dead End", while the hoodlum kids have been softened and placed in more secondary roles. Angels with Dirty Faces is Cagney's film, and he dominates every scene he is in. …Cagney was already very familiar with gangster roles, having played them with regularity since Public Enemy from 1931. Angels with Dirty Faces received three Oscar nominations; Best Actor (Cagney), Best Director (Michael Curtiz, who would go on to direct Casablanca) and Best Original Story (Rowland Brown)”—Brian Koller.  Nominated for three Oscars.  Angels with Dirty Faces was nominated as one of the top 50 gangster films of all time in the current American Film Institute’s “genres” competition.

maltese falconSeptember 9
The Maltese Falcon(John Huston, 1941, 101 minutes)
I don't mind a reasonable amount of trouble. “
“One of the first and best film noirs to ever come out of Hollywood. Bogart finally gets the star treatment as street smart detective Sam Spade, a man caught in a sticky web of lies, betrayal and murder. He's drawn into the desperate search for the Maltese Falcon – a priceless 400-year-old, jewel-encrusted statue – by a lovely woman, played by Mary Astor, who does nothing but lie to him from the moment they meet. Despite this, he allows her to use him because he wants to see where her stories lead. The men she's battling for possession of the statue are extremely dangerous, but they only amuse Spade. He's not a threat since, for most of the film; he has no idea what they're looking for. However, Sam's no chump. He's only being amenable in order to be included in the final discovery. One really has to pay attention to the proceedings since everybody double-crosses everyone else at least once and sometimes twice. The film ends as it should, with the bad guys getting exactly what they deserve. The reason this film is considered a classic is because of the great dialogue, colorful characters, brilliant cinematography and intriguing story. Lorre and Greenstreet are two of the best character actors to ever come out of Hollywood and prove why here. Astor is bad to the bone, but gives the usual vamp role class and intelligence. Bogart moves up to the A-list with this performance. He has an ugly mug, but no one plays hard-boiled with a heart of gold better. A must-see worth seeking out”—Crazy4Cinema .  Nominated for three Oscars.   The Maltese Falcon was nominated as one of the top 50 mysteries of all time in the current American Film Institute’s “genres” competition and recently named as their the #31 best film of all time.

romaSeptember 16
Roma, Città Aperta (Rome, Open City, Roberto Rossellini, 1945, 100 minutes)
“It would mean there is no difference in the blood of a slave race and a master race. And no reason for this war.”
“Developed in Rome during the Nazi occupation, shot in the still war-torn Roman streets shortly after the Nazi withdrawal, Roberto Rossellini’s Open City stunned audiences the world over who recognized in it an unmediated authenticity more evocative of the documentary quality of wartime newsreels than of the artificiality of earlier, more conventional WWII dramas. This sense of raw reality was in part due to a number of factors that later became hallmarks of what would be called the Italian neo-realist movement — though Rossellini chose them more for pragmatic than aesthetic reasons. Rossellini shot with available light on real locations in the battered Roman streets in part because the studios had been bombed, and sets and lighting were out of the question. Because there was no money for a professional cast, he employed an ensemble of mostly nonprofessional actors who gave unmannered, naturalistic performances because they were simply enacting the drama rather than trying to create characters. Even for film stock he had only whatever miscellaneous leftover remnants he could find — including abandoned German newsreel footage — resulting in an uneven, assemblage-like quality. Just as important to the film — and to the later neorealist movement — is the humanistic values that unite Italian Catholics (represented by a heroic priest) and Communists against the Nazi occupation. The story, co-written by Rossellini and Federico Fellini, doesn’t center around a single heroic character, but tells an ensemble story that allows not just dedicated resistance leaders …like Giorgio Manfredi (Marcello Pagliero) but also ordinary citizens like pregnant single mother Pina (Anna Magnani), the priest Don Pietro (Aldo Fabrizi), and even children… to play a role in resisting the Nazi occupiers and fight for their country…”--Steven D. Greydanus.  Winner of the Grand Prize at Cannes, and Best Foreign Film from the National Board of Review and the New York Film Critics Circle.

panic in the streetsSeptember 23
Panic in the Streets
(Elia Kazan, 1950, 96 minutes)
“If there's a plague here, you're the most important guy in this town.”
“Elia Kazan's 1950 film noir, in which the noir element refers not to the darkness at the heart of humanity … but instead a potential outbreak of pneumonic Black Death plague in New Orleans, Panic in the Streets is a balancing act between race-against-time melodrama (the incubation period for the exposed parties is roughly 48 hours and the mystery of the murdered Patient Zero's identity isn't helping the authorities) and proto-naturalistic Kazan flourishes (clumsy-albeit-ruthless blocking, loping, occasionally unfinished conversations, veracious location shooting) that almost give off the sense that his refusal to give his characters the full slate, cinematic "real time" to solve their dilemma is an act of cruelty. Standing in for (as well as personifying) the stylistic Molotov cocktail are Richard Widmark and Paul Douglas as, respectively, Dr. Clinton Reed, Lieutenant Commander of the U.S. Public Health Service, and N.O.P.D. Captain Tom Warren. Assigned by the Mayor to work in tandem to apprehend whomever it was who shot the infected body, the gulf between their actorly sensibilities, with Widmark implosive resentment prefiguring Brando's method sensationalism in Kazan's next film and Douglas's studied fury and hardboiled professionalism, is as potent as their hunt through the coastline shanties and flophouses. (The heterogeneous chemistry between the two is more than matched on the flip side by antagonists Zero Mostel, the quivering jester of Off Broadway, and Jack Palance, whose matinee idol charisma practically in itself reads as shorthand for dastard-ism under Kazan's Actors' Studio mise-en-proscenium.) Though the events of the film threaten to bust wide open into chaos at every turn, Kazan's execution of the narrative is as tidy and nontoxic as Reed's endless supply of hypodermic inoculations he dispenses upon prying investigative testimonials from the film's cast of vaguely union-minded dock grunts (imagine!), insipidly grinning Chinese ship cooks, and crusted-over formerly glamorous street dames. As tense and pulpy as Panic in the Streets manages to be, opening on a loopy high note when the stumbling plague carrier narrowly misses walking directly into a speeding train's path, it still winds up in front of Dr. Reed's homestead outdoor porch with his vanilla family waiting for him, played by…Barbara Bel Geddes and … Tommy Rettig”—Slant Magazine. Won an Oscar for writing and the International Prize at Cannes. 

 

earth stood stillSeptember 30
The Day the Earth Stood Still (Robert Wise, 1951, 92 minutes)
 “Klaatu barada nikto!”

“Klaatu, an extra-terrestrial ambassador on a peace mission, and his robot, Gort, land in Washington D.C. in their flying saucer. Klaatu dismisses the Cold War consuming Earth as a "petty squabble" but fears its capacity for triggering mass destruction. Politicians, soldiers and the media are the enemy, squared off against the sane influences of women, children and an Einstein-ish scientist. The evocative Theremin score is by the maestro who wrote music for films from Citizen Kane to Vertigo and Psycho to Taxi Driver, thrillingly underscoring the mission of an interstellar Messiah. "Gort! Klaatu barada nicto!" …This film was envisioned from the beginning as an "A" picture with first rate production values and cast, and struck such a chord with Cold War audiences that Sci-Fi films have been taken seriously ever since. Robert Wise directed TDTESS. …In an interview, he was asked what "grabbed" him about TDTESS: "Two or three things. Number one, it was (for once) an alien from outer space who was not an evil alien. Also, it was a science fiction film set on earth here, and I thought that was marvelous. I liked the setting, the fact that it was in Washington, the heart of our country. I thought that made it very real, very believable, very mundane. I tried to heighten that with my casting, too. I wanted to make it just as credible and believable as it could possibly be, and I think that is one of its strengths”—Moviediva.  Winner of a special Golden Globe for “Best Film Promoting International Understanding”  TDTESS was nominated as one of the top 50 science fiction films in the AFI “genres” competition and as one of the top 100 thrillers of all time.

 

three coinsOctober 7
Three Coins in a Fountain (Jean Negulesco, 1954, 102 minutes)
 “Make it mine, make it mine, make it mine”
“So frequently is it seen and alluded to that Rome's famous Trevi Fountain virtually becomes a leading character in 20th Century Fox's lush, lustrous and completely irresistible 1954 early CinemaScope romantic bouquet Three Coins In The Fountain, which won two Academy Awards (Best Cinematography and Best Song) and was nominated for Best Picture…One of the two secrets of Fountain's massive success becomes immediately apparent in an absolutely stunning pre-credit sequence of more than four minutes duration, in which the (then new) CinemaScope cameras traverse the length and breadth of a deliriously idealized city of Rome to strains of the Oscar-winning title song sung so beautifully by the then recently invigorated Frank Sinatra….Indeed, with the possible exception of David Lean's full screen Summertime, no cinema cameras have caressed the nooks and crannies of an Italian city with such warmth and incandescence. The other secret of the film's success rests with the charm and earnestness with which its glamorous cast imbues the workmanlike though uninspired screenplay with. The ladies are each, in their own distinctive ways, warm and winning, and Rossano Brazzi (the leading man in the afore-mentioned Summertime) miraculously manages to inject believability into his role as the improbably noble love-sick Italian swain of the delectable Peters, while Louis Jourdan's stint as the rakish but similarly idealistic Italian Count is only marginally hampered by the fact that he is in fact a (gasp!) Frenchman, a fact which Jourdan makes no effort to obscure.  …Romantics will savor every moment of this deliriously sumptuous, if admittedly lightweight concoction, which transforms the reality of Rome into a fancifully inaccurate, but completely irresistible fantasyland”--   Dick Dinman. Nominated for three Oscars, it won for Cinematography and Music. 

 

vertigoOctober 14
Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958, 128 minutes)
You shouldn't keep souvenirs of a killing. You shouldn't have been that sentimental.”
“John Ferguson, ‘Scottie” (Stewart) is a detective who has left the police force because he believes his fear of falling (acrophobia, resulting in vertigo) caused a colleague’s death. When an old college friend pleads with him to investigate the eccentric actions of his psychologically perplexing wife Madeleine (Novak), Scottie’s life takes a new, obsessive course from which he never recovers, and which leads him to follow this mysterious woman to the death - but whose death? The journey that Scottie (Stewart) begins when he reluctantly accedes to his friend Gavin Elster’s (Henry Jones) request to follow Madeleine, the Mrs Elster (Novak), is full of irony, mystery, subterfuge and finally a love that bursts its banks into full blown obsession. Stewart rises to the challenge and so does Novak in creating a complex, double-sided character that is as haunting as she needs to be. It is full of great moments, and a building tension that is at once gripping and enjoyable. One of many scenes that is a tribute to Hitchcock’s cinematic instincts is a long sequence in which Scottie follows Madeleine in his car as she drives slowly around San Francisco, turning left, right, right, left: the details and continuity are so perfect that you almost reach out to touch the steering wheel in Scottie’s car to help him take a turn. Hitchcock’s perfectionist trait is at its peak here, with every tool of the filmmaker’s art used to maximum effect, from the tiniest sounds (lovingly recreated in this stunning restoration) to the most sweeping sounds of Herrmann’s score…. Do yourself a favour and see it"--Andrew L. Urban.  Nominated for two Oscars.  Nominated as one of the top 50 mysteries in the AFI “genres” competition, it was named their # 8 thriller,   #9 film, # 12 score, and # 18 love story of all time.

gigiOctober 21
Gigi (Vincente Minnelli, 1958, 116 minutes)
“Bad table manners, my dear Gigi, have broken up more households than infidelity.”

“Gigi was unfortunately the last of the great MGM musicals, but what a way to end a genre already filled with classics! Based on the novel by Colette, Gigi tells the story of a young girl (Leslie Caron) who is reared by her grandmother and great aunt to follow family tradition by becoming a courtesan. The family is scandalised, however, when the handsome and eligible Gaston Lachaille (Louis Jourdan) proposes marriage to her. Despite the delightful performances of Caron and Jourdan, the film is almost stolen by Hermione Gingold and Maurice Chevalier, who perform the classic and touching "I remember it well" - just one musical highlight in a film containing many. Gigi is a stylish triumph from start to finish, magnificently photographed in Metrocolor and CinemaScope by Joseph Ruttenberg to highlight the sumptuous costumes and sets. But the real praise deserves to go to the team of director Vincente Minnelli and producer Arthur Freed. Sustaining the brilliance of their earlier musicals, like Meet Me in St Louis and An American in Paris, Gigi once again displays brilliant use of colour and rare ability to portray a romance simply and delightfully without becoming bogged down in schmaltz...” --Kathryn Parkerson.  Won nine Oscars, including those for Picture, Director, and Cinematography.  Named the # 35 love story of all time by AFI, as well as having the # 56 movie song of all time (“Thank Heaven for Little Girls.”)

 

coupsOctober 28
Les 400 Coups
 (The 400 Blows, François Truffaut, 1959, 99 minutes)
“I have no socks left around these holes.”
“After watching this movie it's almost impossible, or maybe just in my case, to not want to go get a camera and start making a movie. The film is drenched with a love for cinema that's infectious. Truffaut fills every moment with an excitement to be living his dream. Every scene is engaging and unpredictable.  Films should strive for moments of life, as cinema itself is a dead medium, meaning it’s happened so there’s no chance for spontaneity. Within these constrictions Truffaut fills the film with life; there is a strong pulse in the movie. And with all this excitement and delight in watching it unfold it's a strange contradiction given how the film's story is quite sad. Leaud's Doinel is not really cared about, he longs to be free or to be loved, whichever, and finds himself in constant trouble. There's the dread of childhood mistakes whether it's lying, missing homework assignments, or stealing and the impending consequences. But even with the weight of the story, there's such an enthusiasm in its telling that hope and optimism are always on the horizon. The film could serve as a metaphor for the burgeoning French New Wave as well. A movement that sought to free cinema from its stylistic plot anchored shackles and let it go to places it hadn't been before. It's the cinema of exploration and experimentation, to create something new. It's what Doinel longs for, freedom from his constraints. And in the end, the final shot is a perfect summation for the limitless possibilities of freedom and the thrill of filmmaking.”—Paul Logan.  Director Truffaut was nominated for three awards at Cannes for this film, winning two.

mr smithNovember 4
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington 
(Frank Capra, 1939, 129 minutes)
Special Election Night Screening

“There was a time in the United States when Americans seemed to be in love with their President. Even most of those who opposed him greatly admired Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Perhaps that is why American cinema featured few political films. The Birth Of A Nation and Greed, two silent film classics, were political but were not about the American political process. Even through the Great Depression, there was little interest in serious political drama. It’s no surprise that Preston Sturges’ wonderful 1942 film Sullivan’s Travels, in which the lead character, a Hollywood director determined to make a serious social film entitled “O Brother, Where Art Thou?,” discovers that “there's a lot to be said for making people laugh. Did you know that that's all some people have?” In 1939, however, with conflict in Europe headlining the news, beloved filmmaker Frank Capra gave us the blueprint for future American political films with his stupendous Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. James Stewart, fresh from starring in Capra’s offbeat comedy You Can’t Take It With You, plays the lead as Jefferson Smith, a young, idealistic, and naïve hero from an unnamed Midwestern state. He is head of the Boy Rangers, an organization based on the Boy Scouts of America, and a state hero after single-handedly putting out a forest fire. Claude Rains plays Senator Joe Paine, who must work with the governor of the state (Guy Kibbee) and the party boss (Edward Arnold), to select another senator to send to Congress after Paine’s seat mate dies. Boss Taylor wants to appoint a political stooge but the governor fears that the state voters will rebel if he selects Taylor’s lackey. After much indecision, the Governor chooses political neophyte Jeff Smith. Although immediately criticized by the Boss, the young greenhorn politician proves to be a popular choice after praising Senator Paine and delivering a number of patriotic oratories. But all is not as it seems. Jeff Smith learns the hard way that America is not governed by truth and honesty but by graft and secret handshakes. Instead of accepting this corrupt world of politics, Jeff chooses to expose the system and all its faults. The love interest is cunning reporter Clarissa Saunders, played by Jean Arthur, who meets the young idealist while looking for a scoop but ends up helping him after seeing Jeff’s political naïveté. Plucky, brazen, and independent, Clarissa reminds me of Patricia Neal’s character in Elia Kazan’s A Face in the Crowd (1957) and Susan Harrison’s in Sweet Smell of Success (1957). With the help of Clarissa and other political stalwarts who see Jeff as a welcome change from patronage and corruption, he tries desperately to fight Joe Paine’s political machine.  Learning senate rules and procedure as he goes, Mr. Smith gives us an American civics lesson and a history of the American legislative process. It is informative, interesting and exciting, culminating with the famous line, “Either I'm dead right… or I'm crazy!” Like most Capra films, it is a story of redemption and while at times it seems a little corny and overtly patriotic, particularly to non-Americans and even non-Republicans, it nonetheless captures the inner-workings of Washington in a profound way. I first saw Mr. Smith Goes To Washington in high school, and it was one of the reasons why I got excited about politics and went on to study political science. Advise and Consent (1962), The Best Man (1964), The Candidate (1972), and Primary Colors (1998) are notable later films about the American political process. Each took their blueprint from this fine movie” -- Jamie Gillies.  Nominated for 11 Oscars and winning for writing, it also scored big in the American Film Institute’s rankings with Jimmy Stewart’s Jeff Smith voted the # 11 hero of all time, the film the # 26 best of all time and the # 5 most inspirational film of all time.


blow-upNovember 11
Blow-Up
(Michelangelo Antonioni, 1966, 111 minutes)
“Did you ever have to make up your mind/Pick up on one and leave the other behind/It not often easy and not often kind…”

“Antonioni’s masterpiece of British New Wave cinema set amongst London’s hippest denizens. Thomas, a photographer (David Hemmings) spends his time taking pictures of the loveliest models (spot the Verushka cameo!) in the outlandish fashions of the day. But, rather than a mere exercise in style and technique, Blow-Up is both a detailed portrait of a certain strata of mod London society and the emerging counterculture, and a satire of that same society. This is a film where irony resides in the gaze, doubly focused by the photographer’s lens. While Thomas enjoys the cachet of being a fashion photographer… he is also frustrated by the lack of creative scope. When he photographs a group of models, they are so utterly self-absorbed that his insults seem to bounce off right off their glossy faces.  While shooting in an eerily deserted park, Thomas happens upon an embracing couple. When the woman, Jane (Vanessa Redgrave), notices him, she demands he hand over his roll of film. Thomas refuses. It is only after he develops the prints that he notices something in the background of his shots: a body. Thomas obsessively makes increasingly blurry enlargements of the shot of the body in the hope of discovering whether a crime has really been committed. When Jane comes looking for the negatives of herself and her lover, Thomas is drawn even deeper into the mystery” -- Sarah Artt. Nominated for two Oscars, it won the Golden Palm at Cannes. 

dirty harryNovember 18
Dirty Harry (Don Siegel, 1971, 102 minutes)
“…you've got to ask yourself a question: Do I feel lucky? Well, do ya, punk?”

“Ambiguous yet manipulative, uplifting yet depressing, sincere yet cynical, Siegel's masterpiece gave us one of the greatest and certainly one of the most profound police thrillers, as well as setting Clint Eastwood off on the path of consistently lucrative if increasingly derisory Dirty Harry sequels. When it came out it was Dirty Harry's fundamental ambivalence that split the critics, not to mention the inevitable political readings of the film. At grass roots, though, you've got a gripping police thriller, benefitting from a number of key elements which set it apart from the rest. Siegel uses the San Francisco locations to superb effect, switching from dramatic skylines to the cross in Mount Davidson Park, from the Golden Gate Bridge to the James Cameronesque steel mill. Bruce Surtees' photography is raw and grainy, giving an entirely applicable realistic gritty feel to the whole proceedings, while Lalo Schifrin's music oscillates between urban funk and disturbing singing and culminates in a memorable Fender Rhodes fade-out. Siegel also builds up an acrid portrait of San Francisco low life through the various walk-ons and bit-parts who intermittently stagger into the frame. Siegel's ambiguity remains though, whether he's relishing Callaghan's toying with his captive felons or conversely pulling away from Callaghan's misdeeds, as in the bird's eye shot at the cross, or the helicopter shots at the end of the film and at the end of the stadium scene, one of the most memorable scenes in modern cinema. It remains a stunning and rewarding film nonetheless, and one which will leave you deeply affected one way or another” -- Mark Radice.  Winner of the Edgar Allen Poe Award for Best Picture.  Named AFI’s # 41 best thriller and having one of the best film quotes of all time. 

 

annie hallNovember 25
Annie Hall (Woody Allen, 1977, 93 minutes)
Sun is bad for you. Everything our parents said was good is bad. Sun, milk, red meat... college”
“Woody Allen's best film.  “The story is centered around the main character, Alvy Singer (Woody Allen) as he recalls his relationship with Annie, the titular character, played by Diane Keaton. The movie jumps around as he recalls various events in their relationship, both the good and the bad. He also recalls other previous relationships and his childhood. All throughout this, there are little surreal moments of Alvy's fantasy, including a memorable one where he shows up a know-it-all blowhard who's standing behind him by pulling Marshall McLuhan out from behind a movie standee to tell him off. This movie also is the first Woody Allen movie to really have any real characters and not just be an assemblage of jokes. You really have a wonderful feeling for these characters and they're little quirks. For example, Alvy obsesses about death and unhappiness, which makes things difficult in his relationships. All of them seem to self-destruct, possibly due to his inability to experience joy. Annie is also a real character, with a distinct style. She comes from Wisconsin which is a distinct departure from Alvy's Brooklyn upbringing. Probably the most interesting thing about the film is just how non-linear it is. When we first meet Annie and Alvy, they're already in the relationship, and then we see them meet and get to know each other. It moves around back and forth for most of the film until we get towards the end where things get more linear. Sprinkled throughout the film are clear feelings Woody has regarding things around him, his preference for New York as opposed to Los Angeles, and him becoming physically ill at the sight of his friend adding fake laughs to a T.V show that he appears in.  Overall, Annie Hall is a thoroughly funny look at a romance that is a little quirky, a little neurotic and 100% Woody Allen” —Nate Anderson.  Nominated for five Oscars, winning for Director, Picture, Writing, and Actress.   Nominated as one of the top 50 Romantic Comedies in the current AFI “genres” competition, it was named #35 in the best films of all time list,  the # 11 love story,  and, of course having one of the best quotes, “La-dee-da, La-dee-da.”

 

 

ghost bustersDecember 2
Ghost Busters (Ivan Reitman, 1984, 105 minutes)
“Well, let's say this Twinkie represents the normal amount of psychokinetic energy in the New York area. Based on this morning's reading, it would be a Twinkie thirty-five feet long, weighing approximately six hundred pounds” …. “That’s a big Twinkie.”
“Ghostbusters is a head-on collision between two comic approaches that have rarely worked together very successfully. This time, they do. It's (1) a special-effects blockbuster, and (2) a sly dialogue movie, in which everybody talks to each other like smart graduate students who are in on the joke. In the movie's climactic scenes, an apocalyptic psychic mindquake is rocking Manhattan, and the experts talk like Bob and Ray. …The movie stars Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, and Harold Ramis, three graduates of the Second City/National Lampoon/Saturday Night Live tradition. They're funny, but they're not afraid to reveal that they're also quick-witted and intelligent; their dialogue puts nice little spins on American clichés, and it uses understatement, irony, in-jokes, vast cynicism, and cheerful goofiness. Rarely has a movie this expensive provided so many quotable lines.  The plot, such as it is, involves an epidemic of psychic nuisance reports in Manhattan. Murray, Ramis, and Aykroyd, defrocked parapsychologists whose university experiments have been exposed as pure boondoggle, create a company named Ghostbusters and offer to speed to the rescue like a supernatural version of the Orkin man. Business is bad until Sigourney Weaver notices that the eggs in her kitchen are frying themselves. Her next-door neighbor, Rick Moranis, notices horrifying monsters in the apartment hallways. They both apparently live in a building that serves as a conduit to the next world. The Ghostbusters ride to the rescue, armed with nuclear-powered backpacks. There is a lot of talk about arcane details of psychic lore (most of which the Ghostbusters are inventing on the spot), and then an earthshaking showdown between good and evil, during which Manhattan is menaced by a monster that is twenty stories high, and about which I cannot say one more word without spoiling the movie's best visual moment.  Ghostbusters is one of those rare movies where the original, fragile comic vision has survived a multimillion-dollar production. It is not a complete vindication for big-budget comedies, since it's still true, as a general rule, that the more you spend, the fewer laughs you get. But it uses its money wisely, and when that, ahem, monster marches down a Manhattan avenue and climbs the side of a skyscraper ... we're glad they spent the money for the special effects because it gets one of the biggest laughs in a long time”—Roger Ebert. Nominated for Two Oscars and Winning for the Saturn Award for Best Fantasy Film.  AFI’s # 28 best comedy of all time.

 

amadeusDecember 9
Amadeus (Milos Forman, 1984, 160 minutes)
 “I think you overestimate our dear Viennese, my friend. You know you didn't even give them a good bang at the end of songs, to let them know when to clap?”

Amadeus avoids the traps of the biopic genre by telling the productive career of Mozart through the eyes of his jealous rival Antonio Salieri. Forman makes what could have been an intellectually-alienating costume drama into an accessible and wholly engrossing masterpiece. The film is based on Peter Schaffer’s stage play, which he also adapts. Salieri (F. Murray Abraham), in his old age, tells the story from his days as the court composer during the reign of Emperor Joseph II of Austria (Jeffrey Jones). Before Salieri even met him Mozart’s talent was legendary having composed his first opera at age 12. But Mozart is not the man Salieri expected – he’s portrayed as a skirt-chasing self-effacing jokester. Mozart makes light of his own talent which indirectly mocks Salieri’s insecurities as a ‘mediocre’ composer. Salieri, who, as a child prayed to God to give him the talent to become a star, is incensed that God has given the world greatest music talent to an affable boob. Salieri’s insecurities fuel his hatred as he proceeds to slowly crush Mozart’s soul and drive him to madness. F. Murray Abraham gives a great understated nuanced performance. Abraham’s face reads unspoken emotions of jealousy, guilt, hatred as well as his genuine love for music. Salieri both loathes and idolizes Mozart and Abraham wonderfully expresses this contradiction at all times. Perhaps his best scene is Mozart’s first appearance for the Emperor. Salieri has composed a simple march on the piano for his entrance. The Emperor, who has no ear for music, plays the tune. The measured look of frustration on Abraham’s face is cringe-worthy. Forman accomplishes a feat of casting I’ve rarely see – casting American actors with their own accents in the lead roles. Tom Hulce plays Mozart with a dignified American accent but with a hint of his Detroit twang. F. Murray Abraham whom we then knew most recently as Omar Suarez in “Scarface” is also dignified-American, but it’s refreshing to not have them resort to a generic British accent. Jeffrey Jones would never be cast today as the affable Emperor, but his quirky humour serves the role well. When we first hear Elizabeth Berridge’s coarse accent on screen we are taken aback but as she develops the character her accent naturally fits in. Mozart’s music is used throughout the film, in the many staged set pieces and also as the score. The music fits in naturally with the narrative and it never seems like a greatest hits compilation. Though I can’t read a lick of music watching Salieri and Mozart discuss music is a thrill. The finale which has Mozart at his sickly bedside dictating the composition and notes of “Requiem” to Salieri is wonderful and energetic.  Cinematographer Miroslav Ondrícek provides the delicate texture of a renaissance painting. He compliments the lush costumes and production design with soft anamorphic lenses and ultra-low-key lighting. As a result the depth of focus is very shallow – throwing virtually everything out of focus. The best of Ondricek’s frames are in the theatres where Mozart conducts his orchestra (see image above). As Mozart sways his hands in time with the music, only he is in focus. But with the audience and amount activity in the background of the widescreen frame Mozart is isolated and magnified. They are marvelous scenes. Amadeus won the Best Picture Oscar, among many others, in 1984. The film is still enthralling and deserving of its awards. It’s one of the best films of the 80’s and one of greatest films about music”—Alan Bacchus   Won 8 Oscars and nominated for three more, it also won an Amada, four BAFTA, one Cesar, three Davids, four Golden Globes, and one Robert.

 

  • NAU HOME
  • ASK US
  • FAQ
 

© 2006 Arizona Board of Regents, Northern Arizona University
South San Francisco Street, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011