Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Homage, reference, and free association: Round 2

Here's another bunch of scenes, shots, and movie moments that may have been inspired by others.

Star Wars Episode 4: A New Hope (1977) 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
The introduction of Darth Vader's massive spaceship — entering the frame from above the camera and almost filling the screen for several moments until it has finally passed — is similar to the entrance of the Discovery in 2001. The Death Star's docking bay, meanwhile, bears a strong resemblance to the one on 2001's space station.
Cars (2006) Cool Hand Luke (1967)
In an apparent nod to Cool Hand Luke star Paul Newman, who voices Doc Hudson in Cars, Lightning McQueen is sentenced to repair a road by towing a large paving machine. He pulls the machine as quickly as possible to finish his task in a hurry. As the title character in Cool Hand Luke, Newman inspires his fellow chain gang prisoners — also tasked with repaving a road — to work as quickly as possible in order to confound their overseers.
Dirty Harry (1971) The Law and Jake Wade (1958)
After a shoot-out with bank robbers, Harry confronts one of the injured perps who is thinking of reaching for a nearby gun. "I know what you're thinking," Callahan tells him, pointing his own gun at the man, "'Did he fire six shots or only five?'" The man surrenders, then begs Harry to tell him if Harry did in fact have bullets left in his gun. Harry takes aim at the man and fires, then chuckles when the gun clicks harmlessly. After being held at bay by a pistol that has been buried for several years — and which may or may not have been able to shoot — outlaw Clint Hollister asks Marshal Jake Wade not to keep him in suspense and to let him know if the gun would have fired. Jake points the weapon at Clint and pulls the trigger, only for the gun to fail.
Toy Story 3 (2010) Mission: Impossible (1996)
Woody's pull string gets snagged as he falls from a tree, putting him in a similar position as Ethan Hunt during the infiltration of CIA headquarters.
Toy Story 3 (2010) Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi (1983)
Lotso's enforcer, Big Baby, finally decides he has suffered enough at the hands of the bullying bear and tosses his boss into a trash dumpster in the same way Darth Vader redeems himself by throwing his oppressive master, the Emperor, down a shaft of the Death Star.
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001) Pee-Wee's Big Adventure (1985)
Bilbo's momentary but unexpected transformation as he lunges for the ring around Frodo's neck is reminiscent of the equally jarring split-second metamorphosis of Large Marge.
Jaws (1975) The Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)
Steven Spielberg seems to have taken inspiration from the Gill-man's first film. The shark's first victim is "stalked" in underwater shots of her swimming and treading water, just as Kay is watched by the Creature. Above the surface, the woman reacts to the first bite, as Kay responds to the Creature touching her leg. The Orca's boom winch strains as the shark pulls on Hooper's diving cage in the same way the Rita's winch strains when trying to recover the Creature in a fishing net. When cage and net are finally brought to the surface, they are both badly damaged.
The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) The Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)
The Creature from the Black Lagoon is also echoed in another Spielberg film, this time as the captain of the boat taking Malcolm to Isla Sorna refuses to get too close to the island, claiming that it is known as the "Island of the Five Deaths." Similarly, Captain Lucas tells his passengers that their destination is referred to ominously as the "Black Lagoon," and that no one has ever returned from it alive.
Jurassic Park (1993) The Valley of Gwangi (1969)
Spielberg may also have taken inspiration from master stop-motion animator Ray Harryhausen's 1969 film about an isolated valley still teeming with prehistoric life. In one scene from Jurassic Park, a Gallimimus is snapped up by a T. rex, which appears seemingly out of nowhere, in the same way a similar dinosaur is taken by Gwangi, himself a T. rex look-alike. In another, a banner in the Jurassic Park visitor center falls to the floor as the escaped T. rex wreaks havoc in the lobby, echoing the "Gwangi the Great" banner seen when Gwangi breaks free from his cage and terrorizes the town.
The Valley of Gwangi (1969) Mighty Joe Young (1949)
Harryhausen, in turn, used in Gwangi a trick from Mighty Joe Young (a film he worked on with mentor Willis O'Brien), in which Gwangi, like Joe before him, is lassoed by cowboys.
Jurassic Park (1993) Destination Moon (1950)
Spielberg also used a technique similar to one found in a classic 1950's sci-fi film. To explain the science behind cloning dinosaurs, theme park owner John Hammond shows his guests a cartoon featuring an animated character named Mr. DNA. In Destination Moon, investors are shown a Woody Woodpecker cartoon to be taught the technicalities of rocket science.
Jurassic Park 3 (2001) Strangers on a Train (1951)
The third Jurassic Park film includes a reference to the Hitchcock thriller, where Mrs. Kirby, trying to impress with exaggerated tales of her adventuresome spirit, tells once-renowned archaeologist Alan Grant that she and her husband have reservations for the "first commercial flight to the moon." The impulsive Bruno Antony, trying to impress tennis star Guy Haines, boasts of similar plans.
Jurassic Park 3 (2001) Peter Pan (1953)
Jurassic Park 3 also includes a reference to Disney's animated Peter Pan. The presence of the Spinosaurus is preceded by the musical ringing of a cell phone the dinosaur has swallowed. The crocodile in Peter Pan is ominously announced by the ticking of a clock that the reptile has eaten.
Deliverance (1972) Zardoz (1974) Excalibur (1981)
Director John Boorman seems to have inspired himself: he has used shots of hands emerging from below the surface of water in two of his films. A third, Zardoz, offers a slight variation, with the hand rising from a pile of grain.
Christmas Vacation (1989) Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982)
Clark's swimming pool fantasy from Christmas Vacation is remarkably similar to Brad's fantasy from Fast Times.
Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002) Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace (1999)
This scene, in which Frodo, Sam, and Gollum watch the Haradrim army and their giant elephant-like Mumakil marching toward Moria reminds me of the Gungan army and their giant fambaas (seen as the shot above pans right) en route to engage the Trade Federation's battle droids.
Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace (1999) Seven Chances (1925)
During the battle against the droid army, Jar-Jar Binks inadvertently looses a wagonload of boomers, boulder-sized explosive balls which roll down the hill as he scurries to avoid being hit by them. Buster Keaton has owned this gag since his 1925 film Seven Chances, which found him running down a hill pursued by an avalanche of dislodged rocks.
The Avengers (2012) Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace (1999)
The battle against the invading Chitauri aliens in The Avengers is similar to the battle between Gungans and battle droids in The Phantom Menace in that the invading army is controlled by an orbiting "mother ship." Once Iron Man destroys the ship, as Anakin destroys a similar one in Phantom Menace, the Chitauri collapse, as do The Phantom Menace's battle droids.
Batman & Robin (1997) Blonde Venus (1932)
Poison Ivy's emergence from a gorilla costume in Batman & Robin is a direct lift from Marlene Dietrich's "Hot Voodoo" number in Blonde Venus.
From Russia with Love (1963) North by Northwest (1959)
The James Bond film contains a scene in which Bond is chased and fired upon by a gunman aboard a helicopter, reminiscent of the famous crop duster sequence in Hitchcock's film.
Independence Day (1996) The Right Stuff (1983)
An anonymous comment on my original Homage post pointed out a similarity between the end of Independence Day and the Chuck Yeager crash scene toward the end of The Right Stuff. Rightly so.
Pale Rider (1985) Shane (1953)
Clint Eastwood's Pale Rider borrows heavily from one of my favorite Westerns, Shane. Two notable examples are when Preacher helps Hull break a rock that the miner has been working on for a long time, just as Shane helps Joe Starrett clear the tree stump that has vexed Starrett for just as long, and when Spider is shot down by hired guns in much the same fashion that Stonewall Torrey is killed by Jack Wilson.
Total Recall (1990) Forbidden Planet (1956)
The Arnold Schwarzenegger hit is similar to the 50's classic in that it, too, features an expansive machine of unknown purpose deep under the surface of another planet. It's not until the end of each movie that the function of the alien technology is discovered.
Iron Man (2008) Alien (1979)
The lab where Pepper seeks out Obadiah, who has suited up as the sinister Iron Monger, is dark and rife with hanging chains, making it eerily reminiscent of the section of the Nostromo where Brett searches for Jones, the cat . . . and finds the alien.
Kiss Me Deadly, et al.
Kiss Me Deadly (1955)

Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Repo Man (1984)
Pulp Fiction (1994)
Goldmember (2002)
Captain America (2011)
A handful of films have used this before — a character opens a mysterious closed container (the Ark of the Covenant, a car trunk, briefcase, wooden box, even his own pants) and is lit up by a glow from within.
Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones (2002) and Ray Harryhausen
Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones (2002)
The 7th Voyage of
Sinbad
(1958)
Mysterious Island (1961)
One Million Years B.C (1966)
Obi-Wan's weapon of choice when battling monsters in the Geonosian arena? A stick — the same preferred by the creature-fighting heroes of many a Harryhausen film.
Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones (2002) Minority Report (2002)
It looks like George Lucas and Steven Spielberg were thinking alike when they plotted these chase scenes, both from 2002. Each director set their chase on an automated assembly line, where swinging robot arms posed as much danger to the protagonists as did the pursuers. Pictured above, both Anakin and Anderton nearly lose their right hands as machine parts clamp down upon them.
Salt (2010) Die Another Day (2002)
If you thought the opening moments of Salt looked familiar, you'd probably watched the same scene eight years earlier in Die Another Day. Both films begin with a secret agent being taken captive in North Korea, tortured, then released many months later during a prisoner exchange in the demilitarized zone.
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) Major Dundee (1965)
Aragorn's plea to the Army of the Dead — ghosts of soldiers who deserted their king long ago — to aid him in defending Minas Tirith recalls Dundee's proposition to the Confederate prisoners he hopes will help him battle the Apaches.
The Lady from
Shanghai
(1947)
Gorilla at Large
(1954)
The Man with the
Golden Gun
(1974)
The hall of mirrors scene at the end of Orson Welles' famous film noir has spawned its share of imitators.
Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997) The 10th Victim (1965)
The bra gun wore by Dr. Evil's "fembot" assassins is based upon a similar device worn by a killer played by Ursula Andress in The 10th Victim.
See also:
Homage, reference, and free association
Homage, reference, and free association: Harry Potter edition

Thursday, January 24, 2013

The Stalking Moon

The Stalking Moon (1968)

For a film which at first seems akin to the traditional captivity narrative, there is a surprising lack of shunning in The Stalking Moon (1968). Sarah Carver, a white woman who was held captive by Apache Indians for ten years, conceiving, giving birth to, and raising a son during that time, is not shunned by the soldiers who find her, nor by the scout who offers to escort her to safety. She is not shunned by the Apache women of her tribe, who stand by as mere set dressing as Sarah chooses to rejoin white society and ask the Army's help in fleeing from her Apache husband, who's on a murderous rampage to reclaim his son. She's given some contemptuous looks at a stagecoach station, where one man makes some hostile comments about Indians, but ultimately this is not a movie concerned with the more complex ramifications of the captivity scenario.

"You can't escape
The Stalking Moon"
The Stalking Moon instead presents itself as a horror thriller, the type where a deadly and inexorable hunter kills everything on its way to a final showdown with the film's protagonist. When this threat is in the form of a giant shark or a masked psychopath, its relentlessness is not questioned — it's a one-dimensional killing machine with no profound motives. But from the viewpoint of the early 21st century (post-Little Big Man, A Man Called Horse, Dances With Wolves, post-Elián González), when that threat is an American Indian who will stop at nothing to reclaim his son, he's not so much a horrific threat, just a dedicated dad. Granted, this father, an Apache named Salvaje, kills every white person along the way, even those not directly connected to his quest. But after decades of films that have changed the portrayal of American Indians in Westerns, this murderous rampage is more understandable, arguably excusable, to today's audience.

I would almost say that this is the main reason the film fails as a thriller, and that it does so only in a modern context, if it weren't for other, more fundamental problems it has in setting up its thrills. The suspense leading up to the eventual confrontation with the film's protagonist, the scout, Sam Varner (played by Gregory Peck), is diminished by one of the techniques presumably intended to build it, namely that Salvaje is not seen, even briefly, until he reaches Varner's homestead for the climactic fight. Successful horror movies often withhold from view the face of the killer but give you increasing glimpses — the silhouette of Norman Bates on the shower curtain in Psycho, for example, or the first flashes of fin and teeth in Jaws — or force the audience to see through the killer's eyes in POV shots. The Stalking Moon does neither, and while we await the arrival of Salvaje, we don't necessarily fear it. (The evident trappings of classic Westerns also dull the tension: in the final showdown, the good guy almost always wins.)

"Aim the gun, dammit!"
The deliberate teasing of the audience also works against the film. The first time Varner leaves his home — and therefore Sarah and her son — only to find that the Apache has taken advantage of Varner's absence to attack, was an acceptable (albeit predictable) contrivance. But when Varner does this again, and nearly a third time, suspense is replaced by amazement at how this man ever found work as a scout. Furthermore, as Salvaje — who arrives in a less silent manner than Sarah (and the movie's poster!) indicates he will — comes through the door of Varner's homestead, Varner is waiting for him, rifle at the ready. But Varner hesitates and waits until the Apache can see him before even lifting his gun to aim. Sure, this delay creates tension, but strains credibility to the point of annoyance. (In his 1969 review, Roger Ebert recalled "mentally urging" Varner to "Aim the gun, dammit! Shoot him!" My reaction was the same, only audible.)

Peck's portrayal of Varner is a bit stiff (more so than the usual Peck), and I'm not convinced that his character really thinks through his offer to bring Sarah and her son home, nor that he is genuinely moved to do so. For me, the emotional high point is when the boy, realizing his father has come for him, runs from Varner's house and tries to reach his father's hiding place. The bond between father and son that this scene implies is stronger than any other interpersonal relationship in the film: that between Sarah and her son, who seems indifferent towards his mother, between Varner and petulant junior scout Nick, who barely conceals his hurt at being left by Varner when the elder scout retires, or between Varner and Sarah, who are paired only out of sympathy and necessity.

Varner's homestead
The Stalking Moon is a nice-looking movie, though, with some fine location shooting. My favorite is Varner's homestead, an idyllic frontier Eden, one of the nicest locations I've seen in a Western. It would have been nice if the scenery had been backed up by some depth to the characters, particularly the Apache pursuer — insight to his thoughts about retrieving his son, about his original abduction of the boy's mother, about his vendetta against the white settlers — and perhaps an ending that reunited him with his son. That would have been interesting.

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Happy Birthday, HAL


Good afternoon, Gentlemen. I am a HAL 9000 computer. I became operational at the HAL plant in Urbana, Illinois on the twelfth of January, 1992.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Happy Birthday, Robert Ryan

Robert Ryan
I first became aware of Robert Ryan in my early twenties when I saw him in On Dangerous Ground, which rocked my naive assumption that the cop-on-the-edge had been invented by Clint Eastwood in Dirty Harry. The scene where Ryan's Jim Wilson beats information from a belligerent perp showed a man frazzled from a life patrolling the underbelly of society, worn out as much by his own violent tendencies as by the criminals he unleashed them on. Jim Wilson was the type of part I would later discover Ryan excelled at: the tough guy with a bit more going on inside.

As I watched more of Ryan's films (there are many), I found this to hold true. His character in The Wild Bunch has an outlaw past, but the man we see is a forlorn turncoat hunting down his former gang and silently wrestling with what that means. His Cotton Ryan from Lawman is a sellout sheriff who eventually has to confront his own complacency. In The Professionals, he's one of four men assembled to rescue a woman kidnapped by a Mexican bandit. Each of these men has a specialty — weapons, explosives, tracking. Ryan's Hans Ehrengard's skill is horse wrangling, and Ryan plays him with a sensitivity that could mislead one into thinking he's soft — until he KO's a man over the mistreatment of a horse.

At other times, Ryan was just fun to watch. I forget where I read this, but someone said that the trick to his Ben Vandergroat in The Naked Spur was that Ryan just laughed when delivering each line, making his character not only sinister, but unexpectedly likable.

This is why, in his Western roles especially, Ryan stands out among other leading men of the genre. While I certainly consider John Wayne one of the great Western stars, Ryan displayed in his supporting parts a much greater range. (So much has been said about Wayne's inability to act that this may not be the most effective comparison, though I've always felt such criticisms of John Wayne were overdone.)

And I would be lying by denying that the little I know of Ryan's personal life contributes to my affection for his work. His tough guy credentials included being a former Marine and boxing champ, but he was also a civil rights advocate and Democrat who supposedly clashed with John Wayne over HUAC on the set of Flying Leathernecks, living for real the complexity he played on screen.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

McCabe & Mrs. Miller

McCabe & Mrs Miller: Warren Beatty & Julie Christie

McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971) is a highly praised movie (Roger Ebert called it "perfect", Pauline Kael called it "a beautiful pipe dream of a movie") that seems to make its way onto lots of internet "Best Westerns" lists (for what they're worth), so I understand I am in small company by not loving it. I don't entirely dislike the movie, though it does baffle me to the point of frustration.

"He looks just like Jesus!" — McCabe in the tub
In his review, Vincent Canby of the New York Times — a critic who did not like the movie — commented on the scene in which McCabe, played by Warren Beatty, soaks in a bathhouse tub prior to visiting Julie Christie's brothel madame, Constance Miller, describing Beatty with "his arms draped along the sides, his eyes closed, and his bearded face hanging limply forward." Continues Canby:

When such a shot prompts the woman behind you to hiss..."He looks just like Jesus!" you may be sure you're in the presence of a movie of serious intentions. Shots that make the characters look just like Jesus don't happen by accident.

The intentions of McCabe and Mrs. Miller are not only serious, they are also meddlesomely imposed on the film by tired symbolism, by a folk-song commentary on the soundtrack that recalls not the old Pacific Northwest but San Francisco's hungry i, and by the sort of metaphysically purposeful photography that, in a tight close-up, attempts to discover the soul's secrets in the iris of an eye and finds, instead, only a very large iris.

This, I think, is my main sticking point with McCabe & Mrs. Miller: Scenes like these suggest something greater at work, some deeper meaning that I should be able to assemble from the various images and moments that look like so many puzzle pieces. Chief among these pieces are the presence of the church and McCabe's death, yet despite much mental juggling, I come up empty.

The name of the town — Presbyterian Church — begs examination, as does the fact that the actual church is never completed. This may be nothing more than a joke — the town may appear pious to anyone on the outside, though religion is the farthest thing from the minds of its people. But the church fire, and the role of the reverend in it, seem to suggest something that never quite materializes.

McCabe's death
As for McCabe's death, I have no objection to it, but I can't resist wondering what it signifies. Is McCabe some sort of sacrifice for the town, to lead the people closer to God? After all, they come together to put out the church fire, a fire started by the gunfight, a gunfight started by McCabe's refusal to sell. Something tells me no, and not just the alcohol-fuelled revelling that happens immediately after the fire is extinguished. What about a sacrifice to lead the town to a better future, a future of potential economic prosperity under the mining company? Maybe, but nothing about the company — which sends the hired guns to the town to kill McCabe — suggests it will provide a better life.

Is McCabe's death instead a penance for bringing the killers to town, or rather for his pride in refusing to sell, which brings the killers to town? Is it merely symbolic of the oppression of corporate America, of The Man? Or does it preach the lesson that by participating in violence, one is ultimately done in by violence?

Boilerplate writeups of this film frequently mention how it "subverts" the conventions of traditional Westerns, and perhaps this is an example: The protagonist's death makes no larger statement about the genre. Though perhaps I'm not thinking of "traditional" Westerns. I have in mind a group of films which sacrifice, via exile or death, their heroes as a form of commentary: The Searchers, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, High Noon, Ride the High Country, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Shane.

At the very least, McCabe's death appears to be the realistic outcome of a gunfight between an inexperienced gunman (which is what we discover McCabe is) and three professional killers. Indeed, that McCabe is able to kill any of these men — let alone all three — is the real puzzle.

I am aware that looking for everything to "add up" is to perhaps miss what others like about this film. Roger Ebert says that McCabe & Mrs. Miller "is one of the saddest films I have ever seen, filled with a yearning for love and home that will not ever come — not for McCabe, not with Mrs. Miller, not in the town of Presbyterian Church, which cowers under a gray sky always heavy with rain or snow. The film is a poem — an elegy for the dead."

Amadeus: Quicklime on a common grave
This is as appropriate a description as any, I suppose. I recall only one sunny scene in the movie (the arrival of the first three prostitutes); the rest of the time the town is deluged by rain or shrouded in snow, which, in light of Ebert's words, makes me recall the funeral scene in Amadeus, the cloud of rain and quicklime falling onto the bodies in the common grave, and the final lines of James Joyce's The Dead:

A few light taps upon the pane made him turn to the window. It had begun to snow again. He watched sleepily the flakes, silver and dark, falling obliquely against the lamplight. The time had come for him to set out on his journey westward. Yes, the newspapers were right: snow was general all over Ireland. It was falling on every part of the dark central plain, on the treeless hills, falling softly upon the Bog of Allen and, farther westward, softly falling into the dark mutinous Shannon waves. It was falling, too, upon every part of the lonely churchyard on the hill where Michael Furey lay buried. It lay thickly drifted on the crooked crosses and headstones, on the spears of the little gate, on the barren thorns. His soul swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe and faintly falling, like the descent of their last end, upon all the living and the dead.

(Though I find it curious that much of the snow in McCabe looks unnatural — not like fake snow, but like a separate film of snow superimposed over director Robert Altman's footage, as if the snow-shroud is being applied to the film, not to the town in it.)

Ebert's suggestion also brings to mind an actual poem, my favorite by Richard Hugo, Degrees of Gray in Philipsburg, another elegy to another dying mining town. I don't think, though, that the film conveys a sense of sadness and death about everyone in Presbyterian Church the way it does for McCabe and Constance.


McCabe talks about poetry as well, and seems to recognize the danger of trying to turn the abstract into something concrete. "Well, I'll tell you something. I've got poetry in me. I do, I got poetry in me," he says to himself, wanting to say the words to Constance instead. "I ain't gonna put it down on paper. I ain't no educated man. I got sense enough not to try it."

Which might almost suggest this verse by Emily Dickinson:

Tell all the truth but tell it slant,
Success in circuit lies,
Too bright for our infirm delight
The truth's superb surprise;

But I'm not convinced the truth of this film is fully defined, or that it is a certainty that can be revealed, even slowly. I think instead these errant "puzzle pieces" provide material for a suggestion of truth, a suggestion of a truth that will be discovered, if it is discovered, as different to each viewer, but which may evaporate if scrutinized.

Pauline Kael seemed to acknowledge something like this in her review:

A movie like this isn't made by winging it; to improvise in a period setting takes phenomenal discipline, but McCabe & Mrs. Miller doesn't look 'disciplined,' as movies that lay everything out for the audience do. Will a large enough American public accept American movies that are delicate and understated and searching — movies that don't resolve all the feelings they touch, that don't aim at leaving us satisfied, the way a three-ring circus satisfies?*

I may have a different idea of what "delicate and understated and searching" means (I'm sure we all do), but in the end, I don't connect with McCabe in the same way I do with several other movies which don't "lay everything out": In the Course of Time (aka Kings of the Road); 2001: A Space Odyssey; Apocalypse Now; Aguirre, the Wrath of God; A Serious Man; or The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou. Perhaps coincidentally, none of these films are Westerns, and all of them present, to varying degrees, characters looking for answers, for a kind of truth, even if they or the audience never arrive at a single, solid understanding of that truth. So it may be that my expectations about Westerns are what get between me and McCabe; I never had this trouble with another non-Western, Barfly (1987), which has a similar ring.

Incidentally, my experience with McCabe and Mrs. Miller is similar to my experience with The Life Aquatic. Wes Anderson's movie leaves me in a similar lurch, scrambling for meaning: Why does Ned need to die? How does Ned's death revitalize Zissou's career? What is significant about Ned not really being Steve's son? I still don't think everything adds up, but for whatever reason it doesn't bother me as much as with McCabe, and I count The Life Aquatic among my favorite movies.

The Life Aquatic: Eleanor
McCabe: Constance

One shot from The Life Aquatic particularly echoes McCabe: During Ned's funeral, Eleanor lies in the depths of Steve's ship, cigarette in hand, with a look that could imply sadness, though her thoughts about Ned and what he represents are never quite clear. Similarly, at the end of McCabe & Mrs. Miller, as McCabe slumps, dead, in the snow, Constance lies on a cot in an opium den, cradling her pipe, with an equally ambiguous expression that is equally evocative of what-have-you. (She also examines, in the extreme close-up referenced by Canby, a small bottle, the significance of which is lost on me — though it may be nothing more than Christie's and Altman's portrayal of the effects of an opium high.)

Hugh Millais as Butler
I would like to point out two scenes from McCabe and Mrs. Miller that I really like. The first is the meeting in Sheehan's saloon between McCabe and Butler, the killer, played by Hugh Millais. Millais is perfect in the role, dominating the scene with his imposing stature and easygoing menace (not to mention two backup gunmen), and Beatty plays well against him; he makes a brilliant move in stooping to pick up a tray dropped by the killer, showing how McCabe is completely without recourse in the face of this threat. Every line in this scene is perfect.

Shootout on the bridge
The second is one of the most memorable gun fights I've seen in the movies, between "the kid" (one of Butler's killers, a blond, baby-faced punk) and a young, affable cowboy (played by Keith Carradine) on a small, low-hanging rope bridge. It's a terrifying scene whose outcome is preordained the moment the cowboy steps onto the bridge, though I find myself hoping it will end differently each time I watch it.

Sources:
McCabe & Mrs. Miller by Roger Ebert, November 14, 1999
Pipe Dream by Pauline Kael, published in The New Yorker, July 3, 1971
McCabe & Mrs. Miller by Vincent Canby, published in The New York Times, June 25, 1971


*[4/8/2013 update]
Or, as Jonathan Rosenbaum writes in his comments about "puzzle movies" like Memento and the actions of the critics featured in Room 237:


One way of removing the threat and challenge of art is reducing it to a form of problem-solving that believes in single, Eureka-style solutions. If works of art are perceived as safes to be cracked or as locks that open only to skeleton keys, their expressive powers are virtually limited to banal pronouncements of overt or covert meanings — the notion that art is supposed to say something as opposed to do something.

Though I think my scrutiny of McCabe & Mrs. Miller, as I mention above, was in response to a missing emotional connection with the film.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Happy Birthday, Charlton Heston

Charlton Heston in Hamlet (1996)
Charlton Heston is an axiom. He constitutes a tragedy in himself, his presence in any film being enough to instill beauty. The pent-up violence expressed by the somber phosphorescence of his eyes, his eagle's profile, the imperious arch of his eyebrows, the hard, bitter curve of his lips, the stupendous strength of his torso — this is what he has been given, and what not even the worst of directors can debase. It is in this sense that one can say that Charlton Heston, by his very existence and regardless of the film he is in, provides a more accurate definition of the cinema than films like Hiroshima mon amour or Citizen Kane, films whose aesthetic either ignores or repudiates Charlton Heston. Through him, mise-en-scène can confront the most intense of conflicts and settle them with the contempt of a god imprisoned, quivering with muted rage.

— From In Defense of Violence, by Michel Mourlet, 1960

While I'm not sure I entirely agree with Mourlet (or even fully understand him), I certainly enjoy Heston's acting and films enough to acknowledge a glint of truth under the inflated praise. His "presence in any film" certainly makes the movie more entertaining, and he seemed to emerge from most of them unscathed by any of their failings. Jonathan Rosenbaum has suggested the same about Arnold Schwarzenegger, which is fitting. Before Tim Burton re-made (sorry, "re-imagined") Planet of the Apes, I had heard a rumor (or perhaps I had merely made a wish) that James Cameron was planning a remake with Schwarzenegger in Heston's role, which seemed entirely appropriate. In fact, Schwarzenegger is perhaps the only star who could survive such a film and the expectations placed upon it, regardless of its success or failure (see: Batman and Robin).

Similarly, Heston was seldom bested by the often-fantastic grandeur of his films. Chariot races, talking apes, nocturnal mutants, hijacked planes, walls of fire: I don't know if he elevated such things or simply remained above them, but he certainly committed to the at-times over-the-top machismo of the characters who confronted them. This added greatly to the effectiveness of Heston's relatively understated roles. Mike Vargas in Touch of Evil, despite the makeup and mustache, is one example (certainly it was difficult for even Heston to overpower Orson Welles), and his turn as the Player King in Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet is perhaps my favorite, though it probably wouldn't have been if it hadn't been preceded by the gusto of "Take your stinking paws off me, you damn dirty ape!" or "Soylent Green is people!"

The quality identified by Mourlet is perhaps what made Heston the ideal spokesperson for controversial conservative causes later in life: The theatricality of "From my cold dead hands" is a line I would have cheered in one of his films, regardless of my feelings about this sentiment in the real world.