Knight and Day (Three Stars)
U.S.; James Mangold, 2010
Knight and Day doesn’t make much sense, but do we really want it to?Giving
us an eyeful of Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz as Roy Miller and June
Havens, a couple pursued (seemingly) all around the world by rogue
C.I.A. agents and murderous international gun-runners, all after a
mysterious new energy source called The Maguffin (excuse me, The
Zephyr), this is a big, splashy top-star romantic comedy that tosses
logic to the winds. It‘s a nightmare fantasy love-on-the-run chase
thriller and it tries to revive some of the glamour, fun, and crazy
paranoia of a classic suspense romp like North by Northwest or Charade,
while pulling them into the CGI era.
Sometimes, it succeeds.
Actually, Knight and Day is a movie so charmingly senseless, so
knowingly and unrepentantly way over the top, and so cannily exploitive
of the killer grins and happily narcissistic sex appeal of both Cruise
and Diaz, that it entertains you almost in spite of yourself. I kept
waiting to get tired of it, but the movie was always a skip or two ahead
of me. It kept me smiling, even though it doesn’t really have an
original bone in its body (any more than Cruise or Diaz have a tooth out
of place in their smiles).
Did we just see Roy and June meet cute in the Wichita airport,
banging heads over June‘s over packed luggage? Soon they’re on a
strangely under-populated plane to Boston, flirting like mad, and when
June takes a bathroom break to hyperventilate over Roy’s sheer cuteness,
the entire population of the plane disappears — before the plane
crashes in a cornfield (North by Northwest) and Roy slips June a mickey,
the first of many. (To get her through the bad spots, or so he says,
Roy keeps drugging his ladylove unconscious — a treatment the movie‘s
detractors may wish for themselves.)
Has June just tumbled into the hands of Roy’s antagonist, the maybe
sinister FBI agent Fitzgerald (Peter Sarsgaard), about whom she‘s been
warned by Roy? Soon, they’re all in a mad Boston freeway chase, with Roy
bounding from roof to roof like the young Jackie Chan, and June driving
the driverless car (“You’ve got skills,“ Roy admiringly marvels after
popping through a window to take the wheel), while guns blaze, windows
shatter, cars flip, and bad guys splatter like ripe tomatoes.
Did June just wake up after one of those mickeys, to another dazzling
Roy grin, and with June herself rather suspiciously wearing a pinkish
bikini, which she suspects Roy put on her (just in a professional way he
insists), on a Pacific isle that looks about the size of one of those
joke desert islands in a New Yorker drawing or a Looney Tune? Well soon,
thanks to an imprudent cell phone call, that palmy paradise will be
strafed by airborne killers and the not-quite-yet lovers will be
vamoosing in a helicopter.
And are Roy and June — joined by dorky Simon Feck (Paul Dano), the
nerdy inventor of the Zephyr — speeding through Austria on a
Hitchcockian train? In seconds, who should pop up but the murderous
Bernhard (Falk Hentschel), who treats us to what seems a homage to the
Robert Shaw-Sean Connery trainbound tussle in From Russia With Love?
And did we just get dropped off in Spain, home of the sadistic but
well dressed gun runner Antonio Quintana (Jordi Molla) and his endless
supply of vicious thugs? Do I have to tell you that the bulls are
running in the streets? And that we‘ll get stuck in the stampede?
You can’t walk into a warehouse in this movie, without dozens of CIA
ninja-looking commandos dropping though the roof on you. You can barely
board a plane without everybody getting killed. You can’t try for a
little star-to-star smooching without a fresh troupe of killers and
kibitzers running by. And, as for that Maguffin, you get the definite
feeling that if we don’t get a new energy source by this movie’s end,
Knight and Day may have used up half the world’s existing oil reserves
in car chases and explosions (and hair oil for Cruise). “There’s a
reason for everything,” Roy tells June as he cuts aboard the Boston
plane ahead of her. Sure. Sure.
The movie is senseless, and its also too fast and loud and
relentlessly CGI-filled, but it’s fun to watch anyway. Anyway,
complaining about the senselessness of a big Hollywood action movie may
be a bit like walking into a bordello and complaining that there are no
prayer meetings. When was the last big modern action movie you saw that
made much sense? I agree that that’s wrong and that movies should make
sense, and that even action movies are much better when they do make
sense. But I‘m just grateful that one of these exploding blockbusters
could laugh at itself.
What makes Knight work is the way Cruise’s Roy and Diaz’s June keep
reacting to the chaos around them. We tend to accept every crazy thing
that happens because the characters keep playing against it. June is
unnerved by the chaos, as well as by seductive Roy, though she gradually
learns to enjoy them both , And Roy all but smirks at the insanity,
insanely confident of his ability to survive and of his “skills.“
She‘s bewildered and nervous at first, starting about the time she
sees a planeload of passengers roll off their seats, but he keeps
smiling and trying to calm her down, explaining that he‘s a pro, that
he’s on top of everything and that everything will be all right. There’s
even a loony logic in his response; after all, he is Tom Cruise, and he
is going to survive anything that director James Mangold (Walk the Line
and 3:10 to Yuma) and co-writer Patrick O‘Neill throw at him. Their
movie is a bit like Scream, the reflexive horror move that kept
commenting on itself.
Roy and June don’t talk about North by Northwest; they just live it,
magnified. Knight and Day, at its best, is a reflexive action
thriller-rom-com that keeps grinning at itself. And, in Cruise and Diaz,
it has two of the worlds champion grinners.
Roy is amusing, precisely because of his affable persistence, the
insistence with which he keeps trying to be a nice guy though all the
gunfire and mayhem. He‘s always trying to reassure June and calm her
down, even when they’re surrounded by assassins, machine guns are
blazing, commandos are dropping and a plane or two has just crashed.
Among Hollywood stars, Tom Cruise has always struck me as the prom
king. With his young-wolfish smile, he looks like he‘s on top of the
high school Hollywood game, even if he knows it’s a crock. (That’s why
it hurts Cruise more than most if he does something stupid-looking. We
expect him to be sharp.) And Diaz is sexy enough to be his prom queen,
if maybe a little sleepy-eyed and un-clothes-horsey. But she can
certainly match Cruise smile for smile. and whip through the part she‘s
playing here: a Boston car restorer plunged into several days of
insanity with a cute guy she doesn’t completely trust. If there’s a lot
of murderous, improbable stuff happening around her, that’s just part
of the movie’s dreamlike structure: It plays like a nightmare.
You don’t want Meryl Streep playing parts like this, or Gwyneth
Paltrow or Kate Winslet, or even Amy Adams. But Diaz looks a little
dreamily out of it anyway. She has such a what-the-hell curve to her
smile, and such a talent for screaming and conking out, that she can
make us laugh at all the scenes that would seem unintentionally
ridiculous..
By the way, one thing in this show that definitely doesn’t work, is
the title. Why Knight and Day? Why not “Zephyr?” Or “Love on the Run?”
(Truffaut didn’t have a patent on it.) Or “South by Southeast?“ Or “The
Guy with the Grin?” (Sorry.)
In a way, I agree with some of this movie‘s detractors. It’s too
loud. It’s too big. It’s too phony. It’s also too slick and cold. It
would have been a better show with half the action and twice the
romantic comedy. Tony Scott is right: Day and Night, the Teddy Newton
cartoon running with Toy Story 3, is a better show. In fact, so is Night
and Day, the Michael Curtiz musical, in which Cary Grant played Cole
Porter as a heterosexual. (Night may win any competition just on the
strength of Mary Martin singing “My Heart Belongs to Daddy.“) But then,
nobody in Day or Night or Toy Story 3 can wear a bikini like Cameron
Diaz. And nobody can try to reassure us, even when the house is falling
down, quite like Tom Cruise.
_____________________________________________________________
Wild Grass (Four Stars)
France; Alain Resnais, 2009
Alain Resnais’ latest film Wild Grass, which premiered at last years’
Cannes Film Festival, helped win him that fest’s Life Achievement
Award. Of course, Resnais’ earlier New Wave era classics — the brilliant
pacifist romance Hiroshima Mon Amour, the shattering Holocaust
chronicle Night and Fog, the plush modernist enigma Last Year at
Marienbad and the anti-chronological puzzle Muriel — probably were the
main factor in the prize. But even though Resnais has favored a more
classical approach in the last few decades, Wild Grass is not a film
that wears its age on its sleeve. It’s one of the most exuberant and
visually inventive Resnais has made in years.
Not that his recent films, like Private Fears in Public Places have
been staid or tired. Resnais has remained a master. But there’s a
special liveliness and creative spark that makes Wild Grass glow.
Adapted from a very dark romantic comedy called L’Incident by novelist
Christian Bailly (But is it romantic? Is it comic?), Wild Grass is a
paradoxical delight: the work of a cinematic sensibility fully mature
and wise, but also joyously, youthfully stylish. It’s a film by an
artist who, like the older Alfred Hitchcock (the filmmaker Wild Grass
most recalls), still loves making movies and relishes the chance to
share that love.
Wild Grass stars two of Resnais’ favorite actors and constant
collaborators — his wife Sabine Azema and his friend Andre Dussollier —
both of whom have been regularly appearing in Resnais’ movies since his
great Henri Bernstein play adaptation Melo in 1986. As always, Azema is
entrancing, radiant and outgoing; Dussollier is subtle, inward and
perfectly controlled. They’re an ideal mis-match, especially in this
tale of a maniacal love affair, in which unmarried dentist and aviatrix
Marguerite (Azema) has her purse stolen by a skateboarder, then
recovered and returned by the mysterious bourgeois family man Georges
(Dussollier), who promptly becomes obsessed with her, driving them both
into darker and more dangerous waters.
There’s a great supporting cast, including the major current French
stars Anne Consigny as Georges’ too-tolerant wife, Emanuelle Devos as
Marguerite‘s fellow dentist/pal, and Mathieu Amalric as a kindly, nosy
cop. Eric Gautier’s brilliantly hyper-active cinematography is packed
with Hithcockian pans, cranes, tracking shots, a feet-only opening
sequence straight out of Strangers on a Train, and dreamlike overhead
shots straight out of Resnais‘ favorite Vertigo. Mark Snow’s
jazz-and-Bernard Herrmannesque score is lyrical and hip. The fine, witty
script is by newcomers Alex Reval and Laurent Herbiet. The film has
been underrated. It is superb. In fact I’m not sure that my three
favorite Resnais feature films right now aren’t Hiroshima, Mon Amour,
Night and Fog and this one.
_____________________________________________________________
Grown Ups (Two Stars)
U.S.; Dennis Dugan, 2010
Adam Sandler, who produced, co-wrote and stars in the amiable
basketball nostalgia comedy Grown Ups, seems to have designed it at
least partly to show off his cadre of friends and fellow comedians, as
well as to dazzle us with his highly accurate long bank shot from the
right side of the court.
Both are impressive. The fellow actors and friends include Chris Rock
(playing hen-pecked house chef Kurt McKenzie), Kevin James (as affable
over-eater Eric Lamonsoff), David Spade (as smarty-pants skirt-chaser
Marcus Higgins) and Rob Schneider (as shameless vegan sort-of-hippie Rob
Hilliard), who are the other four 12-year-old starters on Lenny Feder’s
(Sandler’s) long-ago middle school championship basketball team,
reassembled in heir 40s to bury and pay tribute to their recently
deceased coach. The rest of the cast includes Salma Hayek (who’s added a
Pinault to her last name) as Sandler‘s Hollywood wife Roxanne
Chase-Feder, and Maya Rudolph, Maria Bello and Joyce Van Patton as the
wives of Rock, James and Schneider. (Spade is a horndog who plays the
field.)
And, at one point, Sandler knocks in five or so straight of his
specialty bank shots, apparently without any help from CGI or the
editing. This is doubly impressive because in the movie, Lenny Feder is a
ball-hog who takes (and makes) most of the shots, especially in this
movie‘s climax the final big game, which happens inevitably when their
old championship game opponents show up, hungering for revenge — putting
the capper on the lazy, golden-oldie-filled cabin weekend that the
champ quintet is enjoying, along with their wives, their kids, and
Kurt’s embarrassing mother-in law (Ebony Jo-Ann), who is around to
supply the movie with all the inappropriate farting and swollen bunion
jokes it can handle. (Tyler Perry, eat your heart out.)
It’s a lazy but likable movie with a large, really good ensemble cast
and a sloppy, if fitfully warm-hearted script that believes God put dog
doo-doo on earth for people to step on or fall in. Grown Ups has a
familiar problem: an oversupply of dumb, crude, not-very-funny jokes.
Sandler and director Dennis Dugan (Don’t Mess with the Zohan) cover this
by trying to deepen the characters more than usual, and by having the
cast laugh at a lot of their own stuff.
That’s not a bad strategy. Onscreen laughter can be infectious.
Besides, if you were spending the weekend with an overweight
mother-in-law who kept cutting the cheese and exposing her bunion, or
with a comely blond mother (Bello), who kept breast-feeding her
four-year-old son, or with friends that pissed in the lake, or an
injured old basketball rival (Steve Buscemi), locked in a body cast that
turned him into a white Gumby, you might laugh too. It just depends on
how real these people are to you.
The movie starts out with the coach‘s funeral, which it tries to play
for laughs, along with an unlikely surprise when Lenny’s called upon
(apparently without advance warning) to deliver the eulogy before his
chortling pals and a full church.
Another funny funeral? Ye Gods! I don’t want to come across as a
party pooper, but I’m getting sick and tired of rib-tickling movie
interments, whether here or in either of the two Death at a Funerals.
These laugh-fests for the dead are especially wrong-headed when, like
here, the deceased is supposed to be a sympathetic character that people
cared for. Funerals are mostly only funny if the deceased was less than
well-liked. (“It just goes to show: Give the people what they want and
they’ll show up,” Billy Wilder supposedly said at Harry Cohn‘s crowded
last farewell.)
After those would-be hilarious last rites, the movie settles down to
laid-back ensemble comedy at the lakeside cabin, and though Sandler,
Dugan, and co-writer Fred Wolf (an SNL vet) get the right relaxed mood,
the movie is too trapped in the crap, piss, boobs and boners school of
embarrassment humor to be the heart-tugging, laugh-packed party it wants
to be. There’s not enough modulation and contrast. For example,
shouldn’t there have been a funny-sad scene at the cabin where they
remember the coach and his quirks and how he picked on them and how much
he meant to them — at least something to make up for those lousy
funeral gags or the fact that they just seem to forget about the guy as
the movie goes on? And what’s so funny about having an arrow roulette
scene (much less two of them) where guys stand in a circle, shoot an
arrow in the air, and try to see who will run away last?
The movie also errs, I think, in suggesting that a basketball team is
only the starting five. In any team I ever played on, except for
pick-up playground games, there were always seven or eight regulars and
we all palled around together. My neighborhood friends all through
middle and high school (Allen Anderson, Dave Watson, Terry O’Grady, Pete
Allen, Don Osborne, Butch Voegeli and the late Andy Allen and Kim
Burch) were much of the eventual ‘63-‘64 team at Williams Bay, Wisconsin
— 13 and 6, and second in the conference — and by the time we
graduated, we must have played thousands of games together, from sixth
grade on.
Basketball was even responsible for my one shining moment in high
school: a high-arching swish from behind the half-court line that I
somehow made in the last seconds of a game at Union Grove. (A good thing
I made it too. Confused about the time, I shot with ten seconds left in
the game, and I would have looked like an idiot if I missed.) So,
speaking as an old bench warmer, who had one fleeting moment of glory, I
would have like to see some subs get to shine in this nostalgic
basketball show, and definitely more guys on the court for the last
scene. But I suppose we should be thankful Sandler didn’t take every
shot.
Give Sandler some credit. He’s trying to put more grown-up stuff,
more humanism and artistry, in his movies lately, and he probably
doesn’t get as much credit as he should for risky shows like Punch-Drunk
Love, Spanglish, Reign Over Me or Funny People. But there are aren’t
enough swishers in this movie, and too much doo doo. Good thing the guy
still has a bank shot.
_____________________________________________________________
Winter’s Bone (Three and a Half Stars)
U.S.; Debra Granik, 2010
Set in the backwoods, adapted by writer director Debra Granik (Down
to the Bone) from a novel by Daniel Woodrell, this is the harsh-edged,
heartfelt story of a 17-year-old girl, Ree Dolly (Jennifer Lawrence),
who sees her fragile family begin to crumble when her dad disappears,
forfeiting the bond pledged for his court appearance. This may mean the
sacrifice of the home where Ree Dolly lives with her mom and two younger
siblings — where she’s had to become head of the house by default. The
world around her, which she begins exploring further in search of her
dad or his corpse, is scary at hell but totally convincing, run by
drug-cookers and dealers who’ve seemingly slipped into the shoes of the
old bootleggers.
Most of the critics seem to like or love this one, and they’re right.
In fact, this is exactly the kind of film more American moviemakers
should be trying to make: low-to-medium budget, on location,
well-written, well-acted, and a mirror of the world around it. Winter’s
Bone is in the vein of last year’s excellent regional indie Ballast. It
also strongly suggests the work of some great directors Granik says she
admires: Mike Leigh, Ken Loach and the Dardenne Brothers — and I mean
that as the highest praise. The photography (Michael McDonough) is
chilly and evocative. The acting (John Hawkes, Dale Dickey, Shelly
Waggener, Valerie Richards and the rest) is near-flawless. The music and
songs weep.
I’d call this movie a masterpiece but the ending seems to me a slight
letdown — even though it’s what I wanted to see. I don’t have any doubt
though that Granik will make great films some day, and that maybe
Lawrence will act in them. Don’t think twice. See it.
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