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11/25/2015: The Social Network

Once a week for the past six years – a streak that could not be interrupted even by Superstorm Sandy – the New York Movie Klub has gathered its 20 or so members to share a film with each other. Cinephile City’s Mark Young is a member of the Klub, and every Monday he will share the previous week’s movie here.

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Gilliam on Gilliam

Even if he hadn’t been one of the founding members of Monty Python, a group considered The Beatles of Comedy by none other than George Harrison, or if he hadn’t directed several unique and influential masterpieces – though opinions vary as to which of his movies are masterpieces – Terrence Vance “Terry” Gilliam would have lived a life worthy of a memoir. It’s wasn’t just his coming of age in interesting times that makes the memoir, it’s his uncanny sense of knowing where to be during those times.

It’s a life that encompasses having to use an outhouse as a boy in Minnesota and playing Grand Theft Auto as an old man, aware that the game is having an effect on him even as he enjoys it. Between those two poles he wanders around Harlem with Robert Crumb while he sketches the people who live there, is hit on by the man who was the original model for Mattel’s Ken doll, gets chased out of a restaurant because his hair is too long, and spends a tense night in a hotel room with all the furniture barricading the door.

gilliam-bookcoverGilliam has had an interesting life, but one that was hardly unexamined. In addition to his frank DVD commentaries, much of Gilliam’s story has been told before: in the exhaustive oral history The Pythons; in Gilliam on Gilliam, a book-length interview; in the “making of” books The Battle of Brazil and Losing The Light; in the documentaries The Hamster Factor and Other Tales of 12 Monkeys and Lost in La Mancha. It’s a relief to find that Gilliamesque: A Pre-posthumous Memoir, written by Gilliam with Ben Thompson, isn’t a rehash of stories told elsewhere.

In fact, the most compelling material comes from Gilliam’s life before joining the Pythons: his trouble-free childhood and adolescence, working for his hero Harvey Kurtzman, traveling around Europe in the mid-60’s before expatriating himself and moving to England. It seems to be the pattern with memoirs that once a person finds success and becomes the persona that we know, their observations about the world around them cease and they only write about themselves and their work, perhaps with some juicy gossip thrown in if you’re lucky.

Concerning the latter, it’s a relief that at last Gilliam has put in print for all eternity Martin Scorsese’s honest appraisal of what it was like working with Bob and Harvey Weinstein: “It’s a horrible experience, but if it’s the only way for you to make the film, you’ve got to do it.” “Horrible experience” and “only way to make the film” are two phrases which tend to come to mind when discussing Gilliam’s work over the last 15 years. The text of Gilliamesque can’t help but have a rueful tone as the successes of his mid-career give way to the frustrations and disappointments of his later work.

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However, there is a book within the book, one that consists of the images found on almost every page. It’s Gilliam’s autobiography told through family photographs, cartoons, production artwork, set photography, story boards, cards given to friends; a small history of a compulsive creator. According to the introduction, Gilliamesque was originally conceived as an art book, but Gilliam got carried away while recording descriptions of the pieces and the project slowly turned into a memoir. Hopefully someday someone will publish a compendium of Gilliam’s artwork, similar to his long out-of-print Animations of Mortality. Ironically his success with Python and as a director has meant that his cartooning has been remained underrated. We know the story of his life and the stories behind the making of his films. Get the words out of the way: we’re not yet sated with his art.

John Hanlon was born in Wilkes-Barre, PA and currently lives in Brooklyn, NY.

11/11/2015: Trainwreck

Once a week for the past six years – a streak that could not be interrupted even by Superstorm Sandy – the New York Movie Klub has gathered its 20 or so members to share a film with each other. Cinephile City’s Mark Young is a member of the Klub, and every Monday he will share the previous week’s movie here.

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It Was A Happier, More Violent Time: The Faculty

Sometimes there’s a movie … I won’t say classic, because what’s a classic? But sometimes there’s a movie — and I’m talking about the subject of this column, here — sometimes there’s a movie, ah, it’s the movie for its time and place. It fits right in there. It’s time for Movie of the Moment.

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11/4/2015: Mad Max Fury Road

Once a week for the past six years – a streak that could not be interrupted even by Superstorm Sandy – the New York Movie Klub has gathered its 20 or so members to share a film with each other. Cinephile City’s Mark Young is a member of the Klub, and every Monday he will share the previous week’s movie here.

Continue reading 11/4/2015: Mad Max Fury Road

The Bond Identity: Casino Royale and the Remaking of a Franchise

Here at Cinephile City, we like to run a regular column called Movie of the Moment, where we talk about how a given film perfectly defines the era in which it was released. Well, looking at the imminent release of SPECTRE, we realized that just about every James Bond film is a movie of its moment. So we’re celebrating James Bond Week with Movie of the Moment pieces all week long, each about a different Bond film. Enjoy!

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Tomorrow Never Dies: Media Titans, Shaken But Not Stirred

Here at Cinephile City, we like to run a regular column called Movie of the Moment, where we talk about how a given film perfectly defines the era in which it was released. Well, looking at the imminent release of SPECTRE, we realized that just about every James Bond film is a movie of its moment. So we’re celebrating James Bond Week with Movie of the Moment pieces all week long, each about a different Bond film. Enjoy!

Continue reading Tomorrow Never Dies: Media Titans, Shaken But Not Stirred

License to Kill and the Very Fine Art of Blowing Shit Up… With Feeling

When asked to justify my go-to favorite Bond film, the ‘89 Timothy Dalton vehicle License to Kill, I’ve usually taken a practical approach: “Because they blow up six tanker trucks-worth of cocaine-laced gasoline and an entire monastery,” I say. That is, one of many reasons I enjoy and admire this installment is due to the fact that, in addition to being a solid, unapologetic sampler platter of the era’s hottest stars, political themes, technology, and leisure wear (all signs of a satisfying romp a la Bond) and a compelling story to boot, it also packs a very generous amount of firepower.

Most importantly, though, it’s firepower with a message: that James is pissed. 

Watching him exorcise that anger on an astronomical scale is a deeply joyful thing. But the fury that sustains James’ tremendous rampage–one he initiates despite M’s (not unusual) disapproval, and which virtually drives the film’s entire plot–isn’t just, as the script would suggest, in response to his losing about two-and-a-half dear friends in the wake of Robert Davi’s smarmy drug-smuggling. Rather, the thing that really frosts James’ biscuit and seemingly sets him on a mission to destroy a record-breaking amount of stuff is, y’know, everything.

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Just beyond License to Kill’s polyester ruffles lurks a film about the ‘real’ world of 1989: one in which women are still struggling for social traction; the U.S.’ “war on drugs” isn’t creating any additional health or happiness; the Cold War’s on its last, lukewarm legs, but people are still suffering; Thatcher, Reagan, and numerous civil wars have pillaged working-class millions around the world to within an inch of their lives and/or senses of sanity; and, in the West, Wall Street and popular culture have throttled the public with an unsustainable ideal of utter excess. As a result, people are understandably sick to death of the ‘80s and ready to move on.

It is at this moment in time and height of manic frustrattion that License steps in with a solution: lash-the-hell-out at what ails you. And, of course, do it in the high-’80s style that brought all of us to this enraged precipice: really, really big.

 

In the course of the film, James engages in a simply orgiastic series of destructive behaviors, each one of which would have the financial repercussions of several lifetimes’ worth of hard-earned paychecks (less taxes). Whether it’s tossing $2 million cash (and its slimy owner) to the sharks or methodically destroying tanker trucks and a monastery with nearly incomprehensible value, 007’s rampage serves to destroy many of the objects and causes of late-’80s frustrations (oil, drug violence, and flashiness among them) but also does so, with grim irony, in accordance with the excess en vogue.

A short, slightly fetishistic aside about the scale of Bond’s tantrum: say the wholesale price of cocaine in 1989, considered in 2015 dollars, was $67,400 per kilogram. In a single scene, then–one centered on, simply, an underwater act of vindictiveness, and in which a scuba-diving James drives his dagger into television-sized bundles of uncut cocaine, creating a billowing white trail on the water’s surface before magnificently commandeering a cash-stuffed seaplane midair (causing similarly sized bundles of cash to tear open and fall away)–our hero has personally destroyed at least $6 million worth of property, and in under four minutes.

James achieves all this not because those drugs would’ve funded a worldwide threat, or–as far as we know–because he personally opposes their use. Rather, he does it because he fricking feels like it, and, as a viewer who herself is not infrequently tempted to smash things, I couldn’t be happier about it.

In a 1997 review of Goldfinger, Ebert remarked that, “When it comes to movie spies, Agent 007 is full-service, one-stop shopping … He is a hero, but not a bore. Even faced with certain death, he can cheer himself by focusing instead on the possibility that first he might get lucky.” In this way, Bond films have always offered (at their best) the kind of whole-hog lark that can make a humdrum work week bearable, and even attempt to take on and quash our communal anxieties about the world, in their way (from Cold War paranoia to post-Murdoch lack of privacy).

The agent’s continuous survival inspires us, and every heavy punch, kick, insult, and bazooka-hit he lands–offered up as vicarious therapy for the audience–gives us enormous satisfaction. The films satisfy a rather serious emotional need with all their ass-kicking, and, for that reason, deserve separate and sincere appreciation for the spectacle they achieve.

Because sometimes what one really needs from the world of cinema is to see billions of dollars-worth of drugs, cash, vehicles, technology, and infrastructure blown up by an angry Brit. One who really f*@king means it.