Friday, January 4, 2019

The Mike's Top 10 Films of 2018

Now that I have your attention, I have a confession to make. My Top 10 Films of 2018 aren't all films from 2018. Also 10 is such a small number. It wasn't big enough for my list.

Look, I know it's special to rank films released during the year, but the year for me was so much bigger than those films. I fell in love with new movies, to be sure, but I also fell in love with a lot of other movies. Or, sometimes, I stayed in love with movies. That's a good feeling too. And I don't want to leave those movies off my top ten of 2018.

This seems like a gimmick, doesn't it? If that's what it takes to shine light on ten to forty-nine movies that made an impact on me in 2018 then I'm ok with that. Let's embrace that gimmick and have some fun!

The Mike's Top 10 Films of 2018!

Number 49 - Mandy
I'm pretty sure I didn't like Mandy. Then again, I didn't hate it as much as some of the people I know who did. I didn't think it was that artisitc, that pretentious, or that good. But it provided a lot of good discussion (that wasn't always good) and had a Cheddar Goblin so I'm starting my list with mercurial thing because that's a fun thing to do.

Number 48 - Speed 2: Cruise Control (1997)
I like Speed 2. I've seen it a few times, mostly 15-20 years ago, and always thought it was cheeky fun. I watched it again this year, right after I watched Speed for no reason, and I still liked it. Good job, Speed 2.

Number 47 - Hell Fest
This one came out in August to little fanfare and that's probably an accurate amount of fanfare. But, I had a great time watching its goofy horror concept at the theater. It reminds me of the horror movies from when I was a teen, when the horror genre had a bad reputation (because the plots were too goofy for critics and the gore and nudity weren't there for horror buffs) but still produced an effective thriller on occasion. If you like movies like Urban Legend from back then, you'll probably like this.

Number 46 - Real Genius (1985)
An old favorite that I watched a couple of times this year. It's aged so well. The soundtrack still rocks, Kilmer is still charming, and there's still plenty of intrigue trying to understand what Mitch is. You can make Uncle Rico jokes, you can admire a cross section of '80s comic actresses, and you can even laugh. Sometimes that's all you need from a movie.

Number 45 - Ghoulies II (1987)
I never saw this before, because I never thought I needed to. I was wrong about that. It's got that Killer Klowns from Outer Space vibe, which means it's cheeky and goofy and you can deal with it in about 80 minutes and then move on with your life until you repeat the process later. I'm for that.

Number 44 - To Be or Not to Be (1942)
This is in my top ten of all-time, it always makes me smile, and I watched it this year when I needed a laugh. So it's on the list.

Number 43 - Punk Vacation (1990)
An early release from Vinegar Syndrome, my favorite niche label for off the radar exploitation and genre cinema, this feels like the point where after school specials and late '80s z-grade action movies meet on a graph. I'm not sure why it stuck with me so much, but it feels one-of-a-kind as a pulpy bit of cheap cinema.

Number 42 - Three the Hard Way (1974)
If you only know the "blaxploitation" subgenre of the '70s by reputation of films like Shaft, you might be surprised by how varied the films led by African-American superstars of the time period were. One of the most entertaining entries from that time period I've ever come across, Three the Hard Way is fast paced and full of fight and chase scenes, featuring three unique leads - Fred Williamson, NFL Hall of Famer Jim Brown, and not-the-NFL Hall of Famer Jim Kelly - in roles that meet their specific talents. I had a friend recommend this as a alternative to a James Bond movie, and that's a fine comparison

Number 41 - Banshee Chapter (2013)
I still dig the heck out of found footage horror, even though trying to find good examples can be like playing Russian Roulette. This is definitely one of the good ones, with a character's pursuit of a deadly psychotropic medication leading her into a strange world and a meeting with Ted Levine. We all know by now, nothing good happens when Ted Levine shows up. It's rare that a movie gets under my skin anymore, but this one had moments.

Number 40 - Cat Ballou (1965)
This is the movie I sung lyrics from the most in 2018, even if I only remembered about two of them. It's darn catchy. Jane Fonda is beautiful as ever, and Lee Marvin won an Oscar for being goofy and cool at the same time, which seems like the best reason to win an Oscar. I don't think we'll ever see another movie like this, and I love that. One of my favorite 'OH MY GOSH I FINALLY SAW THIS" movies of 2018.

Number 39 - Body Parts (1991)
Eric Red had a hand in some of the most renowned horror films of the 1980s, and his work with Kathryn Bigelow on Near Dark and Blue Steel showed that he has a skill for working with dark characters in complicated relationships. While Body Parts, his second directorial effort, doesn't reach the heights of those films or The Hitcher, it's a high-concept sci-fi/horror flick that's never dull. There are some impressive set pieces here too, which makes it stand out against a lot of genre flicks released in the same era. I'm so excited I finally got to see this one in 2018.

Number 38 - Jill Rips/Jill the Ripper (2000)
Ever have that experience where you check out a Dolph Lundgren flick because it looks like an action movie that's a gender-swapping twist on a classic serial killer tale and then start watching it and realize it's really an attempt to cash in on that Nic Cage flick 8 Millimeter that's got way more BDSM and latex than you thought and is just all over the place but enjoyable and also a bit sexy? Man, that's a great experience. I recommend it.

Number 37 - Lost Highway (1997)
I've seen this a bunch of times but I just said "all over the place" and "sexy" for the last flick and no movie embodies those terms more than Lost Highway. So it gets a place on the list.

Number 36 - Trouble Bound (1993)
Back to back for Patty Arquette on highways! This time she's less mysterious sultry and more cute sultry. (Both work.) Southwestern noir had a nice resurgence in the early '90s, and this one isn't quite on the level of John Dahl's work on Red Rock West or Kill Me Again but stars Arquette and Michael Madsen (along with a supporting cast including Seymour Cassel and Billy Bob Thornton) help make it one of my favorite finds of 2018.

Number 35 - True Stories (1986)
I had this forced on me by people who were like "OH MIKE TRUE STORIES IS SO GREAT WHY HAVEN'T YOU SEEN TRUE STORIES WE WILL SEND YOU A COPY TO MAKE UP FOR YOUR ERROR YOU FOOL" and, y'know what? They were right. Sometimes you gotta talk that way to people. It's helping them out. Just...don't be a dick. Anyway, this movie is beautiful and I want to hug John Goodman and now I gotta buy the blu-ray to see it in widescreen. Thanks, rude people who are right.

Number 34 - The War of the Roses (1989)
This is one of those movies I've always "liked" but watching it as a middle aged dude really amps it up a notch. This is a mean goddamn movie. I dig that. Plus, the blu-ray has the absolute cutest introduction by Danny Devito, and that's stuck with me all year. It's a dual threat - cute intro, mean movie. A true achievement.

Number 33 - The Devil and Miss Jones (1941)
This is the kind of whimsical early '40s comedy that, if only for a split second, made me think "You know, maybe there's hope for people like Donald Trump." Then I remembered the man and moved on. It's charming and one of my favorite classic film discoveries of 2018. (Sorry if you like Trump, except I'm really not.)

Number 32 - A Place in the Sun (1951)
Back-to-back classics! I think this is the first Elizabeth Taylor movie I've ever seen. It's a heartbreaking drama, filled with forbidden love and murder and whatnot, kinda the anti-matter to The Devil and Miss Jones' matter. Also it had my favorite shot I saw in 2018, which combines beautiful nature photography with young lovers and my attraction to women's shoulders and necks whooooops I typed too much of my thought process but it's still beautiful. Just look at it!

Number 31 - Thirst (1979)
I watched this really early in 2018 and I don't remember why I loved it except that it was a unique, dramatic vampire film with a strong lead performance and some interesting wicker furniture. I need to watch it again, obviously, but I'm really excited to do that. Australian horror from the late 70s and early '80s is lowkey my jam. If it's yours too, find this one.

Number 30 - Celtic Pride (1996)
Ever not see a movie since 1996 and remember not really liking it in 1996 but still getting really excited whenever people mention it and wanting to see it again and then it gets released on blu-ray and suddenly the stars align and life feels great and you remember all the things you loved about that movie you didn't like? Well, I have. And that movie is Celtic Pride and I know it's bad and I believe it's a treasure. I'm not gonna say guilty pleasure. That's something bad people do.

Number 29 - Tapeheads (1988)
This is another film I revisited in 2018 that's suddenly way better than I remember it being because I'm older and wiser. Plus I had a really good reason to watch it, so it's here.

Number 28 - Dorm (2006)
A Stephen King-esque coming of age tale made in Thailand, this one's just on the list because every time I see it I feel the need to champion it as one of the best horror movies of this generation. If you have preconceived notions about early '00s Asian horror you're not alone, but I assure you that Dorm is a one of a kind film full of heart that provides some legitimate chills.

Number 27 -  The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948)
This could be my "most improved" movie of 2018, which is a ridiculous qualifier because the movie is 70 years old and has literally never changed. But again - this is a film I saw when I was young and was like "Oh, sure, it's ok but it's not Casablanca." It still isn't, but come on....that's a ridiculous comparison, Young The Mike. I saw this in theater this year and suddenly realized just how deep and human John Huston's work here was. I like realizing I've gained a better understanding of things with age. Makes me feel like I'm not just spinning my wheels.

Number 26 - Bloodsuckers from Outer Space (1984)
Oh my gosh, you guys, Bloodsuckers from Outer Space is on blu-ray! That blows my mind. I've always loved this little piece of genre cinema because it feels like something people could have made in the country around the farm I grew up on. Sometimes little charms are enough. And it's on blu-ray now! Thank God for Vinegar Syndrome. They are among the best people.

Number 25 - Bad Times at the El Royale
A 2018 release! And for my money (and I know I'm not alone on this) I feel like this is THE movie from 2018 that, 20 years from now, people will look at and not even realize that 2018 audiences basically ignored it. Comparisons to Tarantino did the film no favors, and I'm not sure they're even warranted. Sure it's pulpy and violent and a throwback to another time, but it's also got genuine surprises, great performances, and a soundtrack that shreds. I realize that sounds like a Tarantino movie too, but it's not! Stop mentioning him, people. Just enjoy this one for what it is, because it's pretty darn good.

Number 24 - A New Leaf (1971)
We all know Walter Matthau can do no wrong. Pretty sure it's one of the commandments or something. But most of the credit for A New Leaf, a film that's equal parts charming and infuriating (don't worry, in a good way) goes to writer/director/co-star Elaine May. This is one of the sweetest mismatched romances I've seen, and even though it creates a lot of debate as to why one character would put up with the other it comes off as a special treat and a truly great film.

Number 23 -  Bonnie's Kids (1973)
I've seen this slice of exploitation more times than is necessary, probably, but I always end up going back to it again. High melodrama with beautiful women and plenty of ridiculous twists, it's a favorite that just keeps popping back into my life when there are surely classier movies I could be watching instead. I gotta admire that kind of infectious film; it earns a spot on this list.

Number 22 - Eating Raoul (1982)
I borrowed this movie from my parents, who told me it was hilarious, when I was in my 20s and probably had the DVD with me for 10-15 years. I finally gave it back, and I think maybe I never watched it. So when I got the urge to watch it again (thinking I had watched it) during 2018 - I was in for something special. Two things came of this:
  1. I ended up with a new(?) favorite and a shiny Criterion blu-ray of it. 
  2. I ended up with A LOT OF QUESTIONS to ask my parents about why they would loan their son their copy of a murderous swingers comedy. 
Number 21 - Hereditary
I got to see a generational horror release in theater on my birthday this year, and that's an experience I'll never forget. I had a really great day in the middle of the worst weekend of my year, which reminded me that horror movies can still be a force of good, a healing force for the soul, and a form of art whose power cannot be denied. I don't know why this is so low on this list, except that all the movies on this Top 10 list are pretty damn important to me. This one's gonna have staying power, so maybe it'll be higher on my Top 10 of 2019. 

Number 20 - The Ambulance (1990)
I watched more Larry Cohen movies than any other director in 2018, and by a large margin. There are two kinds of filmgoers - those who replied to this sentence with "Who?" and those who replied 'OOOOOOOOHHHH YEAHHHH!" like Macho Man Randy Savage. I prefer the second kind. 

This new to blu-ray offering from Cohen is a film I'd never even heard of at the beginning of the year, and it blew me away as one fo the most enjoyable films I've seen in ages. It's an action/horror hybrid about a Marvel comics artist (Eric Roberts) who ends up battling a sinister vintage ambulance. That's almost all I need to say. This movie rules. 

Number 19 - Best F(r)iends Volume 2 
A lot of the films from 2018 that made this list are here in large part because of the theatrical experience, which I still value more than some Christians value going to church. (Conversely, you'll only find one film on this list that I first saw via a streaming platform, and that's Mandy which I basically just threw on the end of the list as a joke.) It's possible that I didn't have a better theatrical experience in 2018 than checking out the two volumes of Best F(r)iends with my real friendswho also enjoy the strange delight of seeing Tommy Wiseau on the big screen. 

I suppose you have to see Volume 1 to get to Volume 2 (It's a unique experience, I recommend it too), but Best F(r)iends Volume 2 is the most insane thing I saw in 2018. Following up on the Double Indemnity rip off that was part one, this introduces new characters and locations, particularly a strange (often shirtless and overly hairy) character named Rick who is like Uncle Rico from Napoleon Dynamite on steroids with a gun. It's a shame Greg Sestero can't act very well (Wiseau gets the hate but this guy is drier than the desert the film was made in) because this could have been the best thing I've seen all year with a better cast. 

Number 18 - Candyman (1992)
I didn't even watch Candyman in 2018, I'm just pumped it's on blu-ray in the States now. I adore it and am so happy its legacy continued in 2018. 

Number 17 - The Monster Club (1981)
No year is complete without Vincent Price. I finally got to this one in 2018 and I really wanna look at as the man's last film. It's funny, a little scary, and full of musical numbers and - when you combine that with the star and friend John Carradine as leads - it's more than you can ask for from any horror anthology film.

Number 16 - Laura (1944)
Treasure of the Sierra Madre was almost my "most improved" movie of 2018 but HOLD ON A SECOND because Laura is better than I remember and oh my gosh serious Vincent Price just swooped in with a steel chair and knocked The Monster Club's Vincent price out of the top 16. Such drama this late in the list!

That ridiculousness aside, I always loved Laura but for whatever reason when I watched it this year it just seemed tragic and amazing and pretty much perfect. I hate when people ask "Why don't people make movies like this anymore?" but in this case...ugh, it's fair.

Number 15 - The Midnight Hour (1985)
I got called "a movie sommelier" when I recommended this to a horror loving friend this year, which was cool because I pretty much lucked into finally seeing it. Sometimes you're just in the right place at the right time. This classic made-for-TV flick is ripe for new life on blu-ray (or at least someone could clean it up for digital sale, right?) but for now it lives on on YouTube as one of the best tributes to Halloween and classic horror tropes that came out of the 1980s.

Number 14 - Twelve Monkeys (1995)
Oh my gosh, Arrow's new blu-ray of this one is so cool. It's always been one of my favorite sci-fi films, thanks to the winding plot, nihilistic feel, and Brad Pitt's unhinged performance, so catching up with it on a shiny new blu with plenty of behind the scenes info was a highlight of my year. Thanks, Arrow.

Number 13 - There's Nothing Out There! (1991)
This one's coming to blu-ray from Vinegar Syndrome in 2019, so it just might show up on my best of that year list too. Of course I rewatched my DVD of it just before the blu-ray was released, because that just always happens. Why does the universe enjoy messing with me so much?

The good news is that I remembered why I love this meta-horror flick so much, and that made me more excited for the upcoming blu. If you're a horror fan and think characters in horror movies need to watch more horror films, this is the absolute best film you can find in 2019.

Number 12 - Unsane 
Keeping with horror, this is my favorite horror film released in 2018. Steven Soderbergh's in-your-face thriller, which made headlines by being shot entirely on a phone, feels intense and personal as we watch Claire Foy shine as a paranoid woman caught in a mental health/stalker dilemma. Foy had one helluva year and is quickly making a name as one of the best actresses available to filmmakers, and I think her work here is truly special.

Number 11 - Assault on Precinct 13 (1976)
I turn to this movie at least once a year, and it always inspires me to keep going. I realize that a convicts and cops joining up to take on a gang that's intent on killing them doesn't seem inspiring, but I look at it from a 'Hey, if they got through the night I can too" type of experience.That's all I ask of the movie, and it never lets me down. It's pretty much always going to be on my Top 10, even if it comes in at Number 11.

Number 10 - Game Night
Back to 2018! This one surprised me to no end. It's an adult comedy that avoids low hanging jokes and manages to be charming and likable while providing murderous intrigue and some blood and violence. The cast, led by Rachel McAdams and Jason Bateman, is perfect throughout but it's the script's insistence that audiences can deal with a smart comedy that elevates this to become a great movie.

Number 9 - The Virginian, Season 4, Episode 1 - "The Brothers" (1965)
The best thing that happened to me from a film-viewing standpoint was getting a chance to co-host Get A Clu!, the world's first (we hope) podcast dedicated to the career of Clu Gulager and how an actor moves through the changing landscape of Hollywood. We've only released two episodes so far, which seems like a small thing, but the effort put into this project by my co-host, the amazing Elbee, and myself has been a passion project. I hate that stupid cliche term, but trust me when I say that we've been digging as deep as we can to make sure we do the man's career justice.

Digging through a 60+ year career in film and TV led us to a lot of unique things, and the most unexpected treasure I found in 2018 was Clu's run as Emmet Ryker on The Virginian from 1963-1968. Each hour and a half of the series basically served as its own movie, focusing on different characters and surprisingly progressive stories. The best episode I saw features Ryker trying to deal with a pair of outlaw brothers involved in the accidental murder of a lawman. It's great television, even through 2018 eyes, with thought provoking human drama. (And, a young Kurt Russell!)

(By the way, if you want to hear more about this you can *CHEAP PLUG ALERT* check out Get A Clu! on iTunes or Ouch My Ego!  I'm prouder of this episode than anything else I did this year.)

Number 8 - Creed II
A couple of weeks ago I was convinced that Creed II was the best thing I saw in 2018, and I'm not unhappy with the me that believed that. The Rocky story never needed to extend past one movie, and now, 42 years and 7 films later, it's still thrilling and has created a new star to carry the torch. The latest entry has Sylvester Stallone and his '80s co-star Lundgren taking a backseat to another East vs. West battle, but it's the relationship between Michael B. Jordan's Adonis and his young fiance, played by rising star Tessa Thompson, that gives the movie real power. Creed II even manages to make the son of Ivan Drago, a one-note character from Rocky IV, into a sympathetic character. One of my friends said "I was kind of rooting for Drago" at the end of the film and if you're a Rocky IV fan who ever thought we'd live in a world where that sentence makes sense well....you're more of a dreamer than I am. This series may never die, and I'm fine with that if they keep finding ways to make movies that are this entertaining and moving.

Number 7 - Inside Llewyn Davis (2013)
Probably my favorite movie of this decade, and almost everything I could say about it I wrote on this site back in February. Just scroll down from this post, you'll find it. It says so much to me, and I honestly believe it got me through parts of this year. Thanks for that, Llewyn and cat.

Number 6 - Halloween (2018)
This doesn't belong this high on the list based on quality, but don't take that as me saying it's a bad movie. It's not. It's very, very good at what it is. If I was listing my favorite films released in 2018, it would probably be Number 6 there too. It thrilled me like nothing else I saw this year. Is that partially because the original film is one of my two favorite movies? Absolutely. That's human, anyone who says otherwise is just repressing their feelings.

You can't take 1978's Halloween out of the picture when looking at this film, and you can judge this sequwl based on that as you wish. Personally, I think this version added more to that film than anything else with the Halloween name attached to it. Jamie Lee Curtis carries it, using her experience in the series and perhaps her own personal demons (she plays an alcoholic well, that's all I'll say about that) to give Laurie Strode a new life. Michael Myers is intimidating as ever without sacrificing any of the mystique that the original introduced, and a backyard scene featuring motion activated lights is one of my favorite moments in the franchise. I was on the edge of my seat for the entirety of this film, and even though I know my history with these characters and this franchise influenced that - I don't really care. I love it. It's a great horror movie.

Number 5 - It's a Wonderful Life (1946)
I watch this every Christmas Eve, and it always inspires me to live better and be more thankful for the good in my life. If that's not worth a spot in the Top 5, I don't know what is.

Number 4 - The Blob (1958)
For about a decade I've been talking about visiting Phoenxivlle, Pennsylvania. That's a ridiculous sentence to most, but for me it was destiny. Phonexville is the home of The Blob, or at least the place where most if it was filmed, and the home of Blobfest, an annual celebration of the film hosted at the same theater where part of the movie was filmed.

The Blob has been one of my favorite films since I was a child, and seeing it in that theater, with a enthralled crowd - well, I don't know if I've ever felt more at home. That'll probably go down as my favorite film viewing experience of all-time until the day I die.

Number 3 - A Matter of Life and Death (1946)
Powell and Pressburger's story of a World War II airman who must win the right to return to his newfound love and the land of the living was released on blu-ray by the Criterion Collection this year, amounting to my favorite disc release of 2018. This film is gorgeous, mixing luscious color sequences on earth with rich black and white sequences in the afterlife, and features some truly moving speeches and dialogue choices. 2018 sure seems like a year where I loved melodrama, doesn't it? Yeah, it was that kind of year. I'm very thankful for the films that moved me, and this one moved me more than any other, even on a revisit.

Number 2 - The Night Visitor (1971)
My favorite film find of 2018 is Laszlo Benedek's The Night Visitor, a revenge story in which a wrongly convicted criminal seeks to dispose of the people responsible for his incarceration. That doesn't sound like a unique plot, but the catch is that the lead character is still incarcerated in an imposing tower in an old seaside prison. The way this film pulls its plot off - with daring escapes, plenty of tricks, and even an axe for the horror fans - is perfect. Max von Sydow is fantastic in the lead, and the final shot is....how do you do that chef's kiss motion while typing? Because that's how good the final shot is. This is a super cheap blu-ray, it's probably streaming somewhere, it's one of a kind, I'm ranting, you should see it in 2019.

Number 1 - Avengers: Infinity War
In the timeline that is 2018, it's ridiculous to me that I could claim any movie was more important than Infinity War. This is what movies were made for. That doesn't make sense in the context of the film - I don't think silent filmmakers were trying to create a world where comic book heroes jump from movie to movie, but it speaks to the filmgoing experience and the cultural impact that movies should strive for. It's a film full of jaw dropping moments, that culminates with perhaps the biggest single moment in a movie over the last I don't even know how many years. Probably since the ending of The Empire Strikes Back.

And yet.....no one actually seems to act like it's a great movie. I've heard "critics" call it "not even a movie" even though they liked it, which makes me think they should not be called critics. The general filmgoing audience liked it, but seemed more into Black Panther - even though that film offered absolutely no dramatic depth. Infinity War is an epic, moving dozens of characters through dozens of locations and intertwining different plots and locations while keeping everything clear. The addition of Josh Brolin's Thanos as an actual character in the franchise, finally, worked on every level, and interactions between established characters who hadn't crossed paths yet go off without a hitch. I'm pumped just thinking about.

Avengers: Infinity War isn't your traditional "Best of" film, but this is no traditional list. Movies are supposed to thrill us, make us laugh, make us feel, and make us talk after they're over. In a relatively weak year for new releases, this movie did all those things better than anything else. It's a triumph that I'll appreciate forever....unless the next film drops the ball and negates it. I don't anticipate that happening, but if it does....we'll always have Wakanda. I'll be disappointed if Endgame doesn't top Infinity War...but I'm sure I'll snap out of it when I remember this one.

By this point you might have guessed that this list is just the informal ramblings of one dude who likes movies. But I hope you found something you like, or maybe even something you'd like to see, among the things listed here. 2018 was a great movie year for me, and I had to share it. That's why we talk about movies, isn't it?

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Volume 18 - Inside Llewyn Davis and the Fractured Folk Tale

It's been a long time since the ol' Double Feature Picture show had something new for y'all, and I'd love to tell you I have a super exciting and cool reason for that. The truth of the matter is, well, this time of year always makes me cranky and reminds me of death. And when I'm not thinking about my real world work - which, thankfully(?), takes up a lot of my time, that's what I've been thinking about lately. And no, it's not the cool kind of death, like we see in Friday the 13th movies or other films of their ilk. It's the kind of death and sadness that's inevitably coming for us all and ready to send our lives into turmoil at any given moment.

So, that's a cool story, right?  Sorry, I don't want to think about it either. It's just who I am.

The good thing about movies is that there's a movie for every feeling, and one day while I was angry at how cold and dreary and threatening the world around me was I started to think about a movie where the lead character feels the same way. It's one of my favorite movies of the last decade, and I was inspired to stop being stuck in my own head and to talk about it here.  It took me a while to make sense of everything, and I can't promise what follows will make sense or be fun to read, but I hope you'll take a trip into this film's world with me and see where this double feature ends up. It might not be a fun trip, but life isn't always a fun trip either.

Inside Llewyn Davis
2013, Directed by Joel & Ethan Coen

We meet Llewyn Davis, played by Oscar Isaac, on a night where he's playing folk music in a dark New York City club. The year is 1961, the song is "Hang Me, Oh Hang Me" - a pretty depressing tune that asks just what the title implies - and the singer's body language is enough to make us assume he's either half asleep or entirely defeated. The venue is dark enough that we can't see the faces of the small crowd gathered around him, and if you weren't looking closely you might assume he's playing to a bunch of mannequins. Llewyn is doing the best he can, he just doesn't seem to be connecting to his audience. The night ends on a worse note for Llewyn, with a man he doesn't know confronting him in the alley behind the bar and, for reasons we don't yet understand, handing the emotionally distraught singer a physical beating. 

It would be nice to think that this is just a bad night in the life of the man, who we can already tell is very good at what he does, but the rest of Joel & Ethan Coen's film confirms a simple truth - life is not going very well for Llewyn Davis. He's homeless, the woman he's closest to (Carey Mulligan) has moved on and become vicious toward him, and the winter that fills the world around him seems cruel and unyielding. We learn early in the week we spend with Llewyn that he was once part of a successful folk duo and that his partner has died, with Llewyn later revealing in a moment of frustration that this partner committed suicide by jumping off the George Washington Bridge. We don't meet his band mate, only hearing others talk about "Mikey" in the past tense to Llewyn, and as we watch Llewyn stumble through a series of failures at times we lose focus on this part of his story.
Another thing that is repeatedly lost throughout the story is a cat. Llewyn, after spending the night on a couch at his friends' apartment, accidentally releases their pet cat into the city as he closes the locked door apartment door behind them. The cat becomes Llewyn's off-and-on traveling companion throughout the film, even riding along with him as he hitches a ride to Chicago to meet a producer that might be able to give him a paying gig. The ride to Chicago - shared with a rude jazz musician (Coen favorite John Goodman) and his gruff valet (Garrett Hedlund) - tests Llewyn's patience greatly. Llewyn goes from being quiet and disinterested early in the trip to lashing out in anger when pushed too far, and at this point in the film we've grown accustomed to seeing him react to stressors and questions in an abrupt, angry manner. We build up sympathy for the performer and the man as he moves from place to place, but what follows at the end of his trip is the film's most heartbreaking scene.

Llewyn gets a chance to meet with club owner & potential manager Bud Grossman (F. Murray Abraham), and is dejected to find that the man he's interviewing with did not receive the copy of his album, which shares its title with the film, that his agent sent ahead of him. Grossman decides that he will still give Llewyn a chance to perform for him - finally, the film gives Llewyn a break! - directly instructing him to "play something from Inside Llewyn Davis."

We know where Llewyn is mentally at this point. He's been insulted, beaten, and defeated for several days, and we can tell by his relationships with others that this is not a new trend. We've seen him lash out, we've seen him assume other people aren't as good as him, and we've seen him make mistakes - like turning down the chance at royalties on a comedy tune ("Please Mr. Kennedy," on which Isaac teams with co-stars Justin Timberlake and Adam Driver for the film's most humorous scene) because he needed cash in the moment. It's clear that Llewyn is committed to what he's doing, and it's obvious that he's really good at what he does. The issue, again, is that he's not connecting with anyone right now. 
Llewyn pulls out his guitar in the quiet club, sits down in front of Mr. Grossman, and plays and sings his heart out. The song he chooses is "The Death of Queen Jane," a variation of an old English ballad, and - as you might have guessed from the title - it's not the most uplifting choice. The song tells a fictionalized account of a Queen who begs for help to save her child during a difficult labor and, after being rebuked by her nurses and her King, dies during childbirth. Llewyn performs beautifully; we can hear the pain he's been through in every note. He belts out the final notes with his guitar silent, letting all of the emotion that's been trapped inside him, and waits a long moment for the first impression that he's made on Grossman.

Finally, the listener speaks.

"I don't see a lot of money here."

Anyone who's had a job interview knows that macabre tales about death aren't usually the best first impression, and it might be easy for viewers to wonder why the heck Llewyn would make that choice. But for Llewyn, this song is personal. He feels like he can't get help, he feels like the world is closing in on him, and he knows that if something doesn't change soon he's going to be gone and the music is going to be all he leaves behind. He's too proud for any of that. Llewyn and Grossman have a brief conversation, in which Llewyn is given a series of suggestions about doing more to connect with people including "stay out of the sun" and, most crushingly, getting back together with his partner. Llewyn is too far gone to tell Mr. Grossman why that's not an option at this point, he simply thanks him for his time and moves on. He's just given a beautiful performance that he put all of his energy into, he doesn't have the strength to talk about it anymore.

Despite everything that has gone wrong in his life and career, Llewyn continues to walk toward his next opportunity. The viewer might wonder if Llewyn still believes life has any value after a series of misfortunes and that's where his costar - the cat - comes back into play. No matter what is going on and how distant he seems from everyone else in his world, he keeps looking out for the cat that continues to get away from him. This simple act - trying to get the cat home safely - tells us a lot about where Llewyn is at. He wants to make things right and to be accepted, he just keeps getting knocked down as he tries.

Llewyn's first musical performance in the film makes him appear to be already worn out, and his performance for Bud Grossman pushes him closer to defeat. But when we get to his final performance of the film, an expanded version of the opening scene, we know more about the man.
After a full week of defeat and failure, we understand how little he has to show for his effort. The Coens frame the performance differently this time around and offer us a close up of the singer's face after the final note, so we see him wipe his nose and can see that his eyes are holding back tears. We've known for a while that the music is all he has, but here we can really see how much it means to him. He gets the same muted applause we saw in the opening scene as he jokes "You've probably heard that one before; 'cause it was never new and it never gets old and it's a folk song."
Then we see the part of his performance that was omitted from the opening scene. Llewyn turns back to the microphone and adds "Alright, one more before I go."

The song that follows, "Fare Thee Well," is one we partially heard earlier in the film; one that was abruptly cut short by another of his frustrated outbursts. His cat owning friends, the Gorfeins, ask him to play for them at dinner - Mrs. Gorfein even rebukes Llewyn's initial refusal by saying "I thought singing was a joyous expression of the soul?" - and the dejected singer does his best to belt out the tune before Mrs. Gorfein chimes in singing Mike's part, sending Llewyn over the edge. It's the angriest we see Llewyn throughout the film, and it's the moment we most understand how frustrated he is.

Now, safe from interruption on stage, Llewyn hurls himself into another performance of the song. While most of his performances in the film have been beautiful, this is the one that soars. What he's doing is far from being a joyous expression of the soul, what he's doing is a release of all the depression and loss that have been trapped inside. In this moment, Llewyn is done letting the troubles of the world, including the grief he feels after losing his partner, affect him. He is lost in the song, and his voice soars. I get goosebumps every time I watch Isaac perform this scene - which includes at least a dozen viewings of the scene in the last week - because it's a beautiful picture of a man who knows life is not going to take it easy on him; a man who is expressing himself and escaping the world in the only way he can.

Llewyn's moment might be short-lived - the performer that begins to sing after he leaves the stage appears to be a young Bob Dylan, singing a similarly themed song entitled "Fare The Well" - but it's impossible to miss how much being able to perform this song meant to Llewyn as a form of release. What follows is the second half of the opening scene, including the beating in the alley, but even in that moment we see Lllewyn differently than we did the first time around.

Llewyn isn't directly confronting his feelings about the world, but he's dealing with things the way he can. The people in Llewyn's life often think he's lost, and we can understand their reactions to seeing part of his life and part of his career. But we've spent the whole week with Llewyn Davis, and we can see things more clearly than we could during his first performance. We see that he's fighting to live through whatever the world throws at him, and that it's his music that's helping him deal with all the grief and loss in his life.

In short, we see that the heart of a survivor lives inside Llewyn Davis.

(One last note - I freakin' love this cat. Isaac gives one of my favorite performances ever here. And the cat, in true cat fashion, just looks at him like "Fuck you, I'm stealing all these scenes." And he does. You go, cat.)
I obviously wanted to say a lot about Inside Llewyn Davis (if you've read this far you must be sick of it by now), and when it became time to pick a double feature partner my mood changed quite a bit. Like Llewyn choosing "The Death of Queen Jane," the first impression I'm offering for this double feature might come off as a little morbid for some people.
  • We'll start with the obvious here - music is the heart of this movie. 
  • Considering the mood I've been in, the first instinct I had was to make this double feature about grief and loss. I thought about discussing a lot of my favorite dramatic films that make me feel the same emotions that Inside Llewyn Davis does.
  • But then I stopped and thought about how I felt while writing about Inside Llewyn Davis. And that's when I started to realize that while I was already feeling down about life - I was also working myself into a deeper emotional frenzy by focusing entirely on the topic of grief and loss. And that's when I started to realize that I couldn't keep going in that direction and create a double feature that I - let alone anyone else - would really enjoy watching if I didn't shake things up a little.
Based on those simple factors, I did what the proverbs told me to do and checked myself before I wrecked myself. Well, Llewyn wrecked me a little - but it was a good wrecking. Still, it's a wrecking that needs to be medicated - and we all know what more traditional proverbs say is the best medicine.

A Mighty Wind
2003, Directed by Christopher Guest

A Mighty Wind is another film about folk music that's set in New York City in the wake of a death in the folk music world, and if that makes it sound like an ideal companion for Inside Llewyn Davis to you....you should know that that's where the similarities basically end.

The third mockumentary from star/writer/director/all-around genius Christopher Guest follows three folk music groups as they reunite for a concert to honor the promoter that brought them all to fame. If you were to consider this the same folk music universe that Llewyn lived in, it has been more than forty years since his attempts to make it big and, considering these three bands, you'd probably assume he didn't make it.  If you took the film seriously you might also probably think that's a good thing for Llewyn. But that's ok - because you really shouldn't take this film seriously.

So, I'm telling you not to think about A Mighty Wind the same way as Inside Llewyn Davis. Why, then, in the name of common sense, am I telling you to double feature this with that film? I'll allow two better men than me to describe my reasoning.

Frankenstein's monster once said:

"Life, although it may only be an accumulation of anguish, is dear to me, and I will defend it."

I think Llewyn would agree with the big green monster on this point, though I doubt he would be willing to say it. (Again, he's too proud.) Llewyn is a man who is lost, but he doesn't give up. I've already made this point, but I need to repeat it, because it's the thing that keeps his film from being a total downer. That's good. But it might not be enough.
The second wise man I'd like to consult is Rod Kimble, the eponymous hero of the 2007 classic Hot Rod. He had a similar, but slightly different, take on life:

"Life is pain...and we've got to scrape the joy out of it every chance we get."

Like Llewyn, the characters in A Mighty Wind have been down and out. All three groups reached fame and lost it, and are now only back in the spotlight for a one-night only tribute concert. The Folksmen (Guest, Michael McKean, and Harry Shearer - reuniting in a band that's not quite Spinal Tap) were best known for one catchy song - "Eat at Joe's" - about a restaurant, and haven't made much of an impact on the folk scene since. They were replaced in the folk spotlight by The Main Street Singers, now reunited as The "New" Main Street Singers, whose aggressive cheerfulness makes them feel like a musical edition of The Brady Bunch. These two bands are informal rivals - they're not bitter against each other, they just don't exist on the same wavelength - and the difference between them is one of the film's most subtle jokes until it comes to a head during the concert.

The third group we meet is a duo, Mitch and Mickey (Eugene Levy and Catherine O'Hara), whose hit single "There's a Kiss at the End of the Rainbow" took over the music world as a symbol of true love. It's a sincerely great song (it even earned an Oscar nomination for Best Original Song that year), but unfortunately the performers had a severe falling out in the years that followed their success. Now, back together for one night, we get the treat of O'Hara's Mickey trying to pretend everything's fine while Levy presents Mitch as a man who's been through consistent emotional turmoil since the break up.  His performance is one of my favorite in comedy cinema, and the story arc that follows Mitch and Mickey is what pushes A Mighty Wind over the top as my favorite of Guest's comedies. (To be fair, it's a close race. Tomorrow I might say Waiting for Guffman is my favorite. The man is too good at what he does.)

Mickey is the closest comparison to Llewyn Davis that we find in this film, because he too is completely defeated by the world and seems to have lost connection with everyone around him. But again - that's where the comparisons stop. Because A Mighty Wind is not a film about the anguish of life, A Mighty Wind is a film that provides the joy we need to scrape out of life. It's a comedic tale about a lot of people that are down on their luck, presented primarily as a whimsical comedy with a few heartfelt moments where love and humanity triumph over pain. 

I was caught up in my own grief and sadness when I started writing this double feature, and that really helped me to appreciate Inside Llewyn Davis more. I watched it three times preparing this double feature and though it's always been a favorite it became almost medicinal this month. It means the world to me, and I love the reminders about life it provides. But it's also good to remember that life can make us laugh, that life can make us happy, and that life can provide us with love. And that's what A Mighty Wind, the second tale of defeated folk musicians we're talking about today, has to offer. 
I haven't said enough about A Mighty Wind, other than that I love it dearly for its heart and it's humor, but I also feel like saying how much heart and humor it has is enough to explain why it belongs in this double feature. It's important to understand loss and sadness, but it can't be the only thing we're focused on. That's no way to get through the day. We need people that make us smile and make us feel joy too. 

Maybe this double feature won't work for you, but it's the double feature I needed this month. Spending time with Llewyn Davis and Mitch & Mickey did a lot to remind me what I need to do to face the world. It got some good tunes stuck in my head, made me think about some great performances, and - like Frankenstein's monster and Rod Kimble - reminded me that life has some good in it. Sometimes that's exactly what we need.

Monday, January 15, 2018

Double Feature Picture Show Freestyle Party, Volume 2 - The Mike's Favorite Blu-Rays of 2017

The beginning of the new year is a time for lists, and if there's one thing I love as much as double features...it's lists. They're like longer double features with more features and more double, unless they have an odd number. Then it's like double and a half, I think. I'm not good at math. The point is this -  I think it's kind of fantastic that lists exist.

I will at some point make a list of my favorite movies released in 2017, but I'm not gonna do that yet. There's a simple reason for this: The Shape of Water isn't playing in my neck of the Iowa yet, and I'll be a monkey's uncle if I'm gonna make a list of movies I love without giving a movie that turns The Creature from the Black Lagoon into a noir love story a chance to get on that list.

The next idea I had was a list my favorite blu-ray releases of 2017, because blu-rays are a thing I buy a lot. A really cool thing about physical media in 2017 is that there are already a whole  lot of movies that are already on disc. Which means that companies really have to do some digging and work hard to find something collectors are going to go out of their way to find. Which means that a lot of one-of-a-kind blu-ray releases occurred this year, and that's a darn good thing.

As I was preparing this list, one of my favorite writers, Stephanie Crawford, tackled the same topic over at the delightful F This Movie! website. Because her list and mine would have overlapped a lot - Suspiria, His Girl Friday, Streets of Fire, Effects, Re-Animator, and Liquid Sky were all insta-buy-and-loves for me - I decided to link it here and let you see that list too. Her great list also allows me to focus on 10 films that didn't make that top 10, which means you all now have 20 movies you can buy.

I know! It's a list double feature! You are welcome.

As if that wasn't enough - and enough is never enough! - I'm also going to suggest double feature partners for each of the movies on my list. Yes, that's gonna be a lot of movies. If you don't like movies this list might not be for you.

The Mike's 10 Favorite Blu-Ray Releases of 2017

Honorable Mentions: Band of the Hand (Mill Creek Entertaiment), George A. Romero Between Night And Dawn (Arrow Video), Heat: Director's Definitive Edition (20th Century Fox), The Hidden (Warner Archive), Into the Night (Shout Factory), The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (Criterion Collection), The Old Dark House (The Cohen Film Collection), One Dark Night (Code Red/Kino Lorber), Slaughter High (Vestron Video), Snapshot (Vinegar Syndrome), The Vagrant (Scream Factory), The Valley of Gwangi (Warner Archive)

10 - Demon Wind (Vinegar Syndrome)

Vinegar Syndrome has been great at finding and restoring obscure genre flicks for a few years, and they might have been even better at finding and restoring adult titles in 2017. That's not to say they did a poor job of finding genre titles, because Demon Wind is the first of three movies they landed on this list. 
I didn't know Demon Wind before it was announced by Vinegar Syndrome this summer, but finding this low-budget Evil Dead 2 wannabe in 2017 was a real treat. It's a raw movie compared to Raimi's work, but it's a different kind of raw. The acting is a little goofier, the effects have some issues, and at times it seems more like a traditional demon/zombie flick than the inventive trilogy Raimi created. That's all fine and good - if we use the Evil Dead trilogy as a standard measuring stick for horror movies we're gonna be disappointed by most of 'em - because Demon Wind still feels charming and unique, and lands a few great in-jokes that poke fun at horror films of the era.

Double Feature it with: Demon Wind has some obvious connections to horror classics, and I even see some ties to John Carpenter's Prince of Darkness. But the look and tone of the film remind me of another goofy demon flick from the same time frame, Highway to Hell. Get lost with some bubbly-faced demons for a night, you'll thank me later. 

9 - Slither (Scream Factory)

James Gunn brought the Guardians of the Galaxy to the big screen twice in the last five years, and with his current power position in one of Hollywood's biggest franchises it was the perfect time to revisit Slither, his 2006 horror comedy about a town and its residents being overtaken by alien slugs. If you've seen the movie, you know it's funnier than it sounds, thanks to an A-list cast and some incredibly sharp dialogue.
Since this is a relatively recent film, Scream Factory had plenty of bonus features available to choose from. It seems like they picked all of them. Fans of Gunn and his Troma roots will find a lot to love about how this movie was made, and casual horror fans should enjoy the film's gore and humor. It might seem too soon to look at Slither as a cult classic, but I think this movie's going to stick around for a long time - and this blu-ray is going to help make that happen.

Double Feature it with: Slither works best with the 1980s horror comedy that its creatures most resemble, Night of the Creeps. This is only one of the influences on Gunn's film, but I think a then and (almost) now double feature of the two films would be a blast.

8 - Kill, Baby...Kill! (Kino Lorber)

Kill, Baby...Kill! has long been a holy grail for me as a collector, as the only decent DVD edition of the film was part of a box set that went OOP and jumped in price many years ago. I had seen the film, one of Italian master of horror Mario Bava's best offerings, a few times on a public domain DVD set, but seeing it restored on Kino Lorber's US blu-ray release was a highlight of the year for me.
The Kino blu doesn't look perfect, but I think that's a good thing for a film from 1966. You can tell it was hard to get the film to look this good, but it's nice that the restoration didn't  tinker too much and make it feel inauthentic. There are a lot of good blu-rays of classic Italian horror out there (being able to type that just made me a little aroused), and though this isn't one of the best looking discs you'll find it is probably one of the most important we've seen in a while.

(P.S. - Yes, I know I'm cheating and this was an honorable mention on Stephanie's list that I said I wasn't gonna steal from. But I HAD to.)

Double Feature it with: Bava's Blood and Black Lace, made two years before Kill, Baby...Kill!, might be the best looking horror movie of all-time. It was one of 2016's best blu-ray releases, and I see no reason why we shouldn't put the two classics together as a double feature now that they're both on blu-ray. Get down with Italian horror!

7 - One Million Years B.C. (Kino Lorber)

"The lovely Raquel," as Morgan Freeman once described her, gets a 4K update on this stacked disc from Kino Lorber, which features both the European and American cuts of the Hammer Films produced dinosaur epic that's full of Ray Harryhausen's magical monsters. The two cuts are nothing new - 20th Century Fox had them together on a bargain DVD for years, but the new image transfer on this disc is absolutely stunning to anyone interested in fur-clad men and women or dinosaur destruction or any of the other treats this cult classic offers.
One Million Years B.C. isn't one of the most important films of the 1960s, and the fact that it gets this kind of a package in 2017 is a special treat for kids like me that grew up in awe of Harryhausen's creations. My only wish is that the film featured a version of Raquel that's taller than the dinosaurs, as featured on the film's cover, because THAT would be one hell of a movie to see. 

Double Feature it with: Warner Archive restored another old-fashioned dinosaur special effects classic, The Valley of Gwangi, this year. Since I already listed it as one of my honorable mentions, it makes perfect sense to bring it back here. If you know a kid who likes dinosaurs and hasn't been too tainted by modern special effects yet, get both of these movies and watch their eyes grow. 

Hmmm...that might be a good idea for later in this list too. (Hashtag: foreshadowing.)

6 - Willard (Scream Factory)

A killer rat film with a revenge twist, Willard is one of the few American horror hits of the 1970s that for some reason never made its way to DVD. So when Scream Factory announced that it - along with the sequel, Ben - would make its debut on blu-ray - that was a pretty big deal. I didn't know much about the film until Crispin Glover starred in a remake in 2003, and I'd been waiting to see what the fuss was all about for a long time.
When I got the chance to watch both of these films this year, I was very pleased with what I found in Willard. Young Bruce Davison - who grew up to be quite the character actor - wasn't quite compelling yet, but acting opposite the likes of Ernest Freakin' Borgnine and Elsa Freakin' Lancaster protects him from a lot of potential problems. The film's rat actors are well-trained and surprisingly sympathetic. The movie's dated and feels a little bit like it was made for TV, but there's a charm to be found in that. This one was worth the wait.

Double Feature it with: I mentioned that Willard feels a bit like a made for TV, and I think it might be fun to pair it with my favorite made for TV horror of the 1970s, The Initiation of Sarah.  You'll get a male lead for one, a female lead for the other, and nice doses of bullying and revenge via mind control in both.

5 - Red Mob (Vinegar Syndrome)

If I had been snatched at birth by Russians - they steal elections now, who knows what they were capable of in the 1980s! - and then allowed to make a movie when I was 12 and The A-Team had just premiered in Mother Russia, that movie would have looked almost exactly like Red Mob.
This is kind of a cheat pick - Red Mob was offered only briefly as a limited edition on Vinegar Syndrome's website, and is being released to the masses later this month - but for my money this is one of the most unique special edition releases we've seen released in a long time. I don't know who the person is who sits in a room somewhere and says "Hey, I've got an idea - let's dig up this Russian action epic from the early '90s and make it pretty!" but whoever that guy is deserves a raise. This movie is excessive in all the right ways, which makes it pure entertainment. And yeah, I'm bumping it up the list a lot just because it's so crazy to me that this blu-ray exists.

Double Feature it with: I'm not sure what the American equivalent to Red Mob might be. It's got a little bit of Commando and a little bit of Red Dawn and a little bit of every other '80s and early '90s action movie in it. I might go with a Rutger Hauer flick to give the double feature a European feel, so let's say we double feature Red Mob with the Hauer vehicle Wanted: Dead or Alive, which also could use a blu-ray update.

4 - The Unholy (Vestron Video)

Do you like horror films about priests losing their faith? What about tempting redheaded demonesses? If you answered yes to one or both of these questions, The Unholy might just be the '80s horror movie for you.
The reboot of the Vestron Video label has provided a lot of '80s cult hits on blu over the last two years, and The Unholy was met with less fanfare than a lot of their other titles, particularly this years releases of The Gate and Slaughter High. What lifts The Unholy above these other titles for me is how dreamlike and surreal this film is, especially in the final act. Cuban born director Camilo Vila's film shares a lot of style with some of the great Italian horror films of the '70s and '80s, and this visually impressive film benefits more from the upgrade to blu than some of the other titles from the label. It's not a tight film, but it's haunting and seductive. I'll take that in a demon vs. priest film every day.

Double Feature it with: William Peter Blatty's not-quite sequel to The Exorcist, The Ninth Configuration, ticks a lot of the same boxes that The Unholy does. It doesn't rely on sex appeal and temptation as much as The Unholy does, but it does a great job of making the characters question their faith while keeping the viewer on the edge of their seat with great visuals and a twisting plot. Watch it first, then end the night with The Unholy's smutty finale.

3 - My Chauffeur (Vinegar Syndrome)

Vinegar Syndrome brought a horror film, an action film, and now an R-rated '80s comedy to this list. My Chauffeur is led by some great '80s talent - Valley Girl's Deborah Foreman and Flash Gordon himself, Sam J. Jones - and features a bunch of unique and entertaining side performers including Howard Hesseman and Penn & Teller.
Stuck on bargain DVD megapacks for decades, My Chauffeur finally shines with all the brightness of Foreman's charming smile on this blu-ray disc. It's a raunchy little romp that allows Foreman to show off her comedic talents throughout, and it's hard to believe she wasn't a bigger star of the era based on the few films she did shine in. Plus it's got one hell of an incest joke. If that doesn't sell you on the flick - OK, you might be more normal than I am.

Double Feature it with: As a child of the 1980s, I have a great fondness for the comedies of this era. My Chauffeur falls into a different category than a lot of the family comedies I saw growing up, thanks to its R rating and adult humor, much like one of my favorite movies - Secret Admirer. These movies don't have a lot in common in plot, but both do a great job of finding juvenile humor in adult situations.

2 - House: Two Stories (Arrow Video)

We're staying in the '80s again, this time with a packed two-disc box set from Arrow Video, led by House - which I think holds its own against the best horror comedies of its era. This is a goofy haunted house film from Friday the 13th Part 2 director Steve Miner, with a witty script (co-written by the great Fred Dekker) and winning performances by the cast (Night Court's Richard Moll is having so much fun haunting this house). It's paired here with its sequel, House II: The Second Story, which takes the saga in a crazier direction and pulls no punches while mixing '80s teen horror with random Aztec curses.
Both of these films had been through some difficult times on DVD, and Arrow's restoration of them here makes me so happy. I never even bothered to see House II, due to the DVD release being pan and scan, so the opportunity to see it for the first time as a double feature with the original that I love so much was one of my favorite horror viewing moments of the year. Add in the fact that Arrow always goes all out with special features, booklets, and a beautiful box to hold the discs, and this was nearly my favorite thing I purchased this year.

Double Feature it with: This is already a double feature, so why don't we double feature it with another original horror of the time and its sequel. I see a lot of parallels between House and Fright Night. And Fright Night also has a zany sequel (Fright Night Part 2, which just landed on Amazon Prime after near a decade out of print on DVD!) that's worth seeing too. A House/Fright Night week should keep any '80s horror fan happy.

1 - The Lost World (Flicker Alley)

Nearly 70 years before Jurassic Park - not quite an era, but a good chunk of time - special effects master Willis O'Brien brought the first dinosaur epic I remember seeing as a child, The Lost World, to silent cinema screens. Teaming with director Harry Hoyt and a cast that included future Oscar winner Wallace Beery and his amazing beard, O'Brien brought hid stop-motion animation talents to the production and created iconic images that helped future generations fall in love with dinosaurs. (As they should.)
For more than ten years the best way to see this film was as a special feature on a disc featuring a big budget remake from the 1960s (which is pretty entertaining too), until Flicker Alley released this disgustingly cool restoration of the silent classic in September. The studio, whose purpose is to preserve film history, also does an amazing job of supplementing the film with information about O'Brien's work, including commentaries, deleted scenes, and short films he made before The Lost World. But the coolest extra on the disc might be the test footage from an unfinished follow up film - Creation - which inspired producers to hire him to create the title character for a little film called King Kong.

If we're looking at the most important blu-rays of the year from a film history standpoint, it's hard to argue against The Lost World. It brought back an important piece of visual effects history and made sure that future generations will always be able to see how Willis O'Brien made things happen in the early days of the movies.

Plus it's got dinosaurs. Really, really cool dinosaurs. And that's a good thing too.

Double Feature it with: This is kind of obvious, and I already said it. The dinosaur action here ties in beautifully with the undeniable magic of King Kong, and spending the night with these two classic monster movies from O'Brien sounds like a perfect double feature to me. It's like they say, sometimes the simplest answer is also the correct one.

I hope you find something great for your collection this year, whether it's a disc from this list or Stephanie's. (Seriously, you need that Suspiria disc!) It's still a great time to be a movie collector, and here's to all these studios and the great work they're doing to make sure that some of these obscure and unique titles will never be lost in time. They had a great year, and I'm sure they'll keep it up in 2018.

Friday, December 29, 2017

Volume 17 - Say Anything...and The Indomitable Dreamer

You might not realize this when you read my rambling prose, but I consider myself to be something of a perfectionist. I'm not the kind of perfectionist that wants everything in my life to be perfect - I'm no dummy, I know what the real world can do to us all - but when I set my sights on something I want it to be perfect. That's why it takes two or three or four weeks for me to write one of these ridiculous double features, because I'm not willing to do less than my best when it comes to movies I love.

In this double feature, we're going to talk about a couple of my favorite moves, and a couple of my favorite young heroes. They also have a perfect idea of what they want to do with their life. They both approach life from different angles, but they're both pretty lovable and work hard to overcome their flaws.  They're the kind of people I want to be when I grow up, with a couple of reservations that we'll talk about as we go on.

This double feature starts with a timeless love story - something that's far from my expertise or my personal experience - and yet still it's a film that says something profound to me. Let's check it out.

Say Anything...
1989, Directed by Cameron Crowe

The tagline for this movie calls it "A Lloyd meets girl story," which sounds incredibly stupid until you meet Lloyd Dobler. I'm not sure there's ever been anyone on film quite like Lloyd Dobler, a one of a kind hopeless romantic. He doesn't seem one of a kind from a distance - we've all seen a white boy who thinks this girl is perfect and he must have her - but when you get to know him you can see why he's so special

Lloyd Dobler, as played by John Cusack, is a high school graduate/aspiring kickboxer who decides he wants to go out with Diane Court (Ione Skye). Diane Court is also a high school graduate, but is not a kickboxer. She's the class valedictorian, set for a bright future, and Lloyd decides that he's destined to be a part of it. The catch is that Diane Court barely knows who Lloyd Dobler is.

One of the common misconceptions when people talk about Say Anything is that Lloyd is a loser or a nobody when he starts to reach out to Diane. Watching the movie closely shows that's clearly not the case. Lloyd has friends, he's welcome to hang out with most anyone he knows, he's a caring brother and uncle, and he's trusted and kind of admired by almost everyone he meets. If you could walk into the beginning of this film and walk up to any character that knows Lloyd, I don't expect you would hear a single bad word about him. Even star-crossed lovers like his friends Corey (Lili Taylor) and Joe (Loren Dean) are both on good terms with Lloyd. I can't picture a scenario where Lloyd is bullied for anything he would do, because he always seems to be walking around with his head held high and his mind made up. He's someone who accepts others as they are, who dreams about what he wants to be, and who is willing to be straight-forward, honest, and respectful toward anyone he meets. In short, he's a real great guy.

So then, the question becomes this - why doesn't Lloyd accept that he's great and move on with his life and just be happy? That's when the perfectionist in Lloyd comes in to play. The thing about someone like Lloyd is that he's not really happy being liked by everyone - he wants to be loved by someone. And he doesn't want just any someone, he wants the someone he's decided is perfect to him. 
I once sat in on a presentation about stalking behavior where one of the first quips the presenter made was "We see stalking in the media all the time, like in John Cusack movies." While I understand that presenter's perspective, I still think they missed the mark entirely. Lloyd Dobler certainly is presented as being enamored with Diane Court, and you could argue he becomes obsessed as the film goes on. But to classify his actions as stalking is certainly a discredit to how much he cares about Diane's wishes, not to mention a slap in the face toward suspension of disbelief. Movies are a dramatic medium, and the behavior of this fictional character should not be looked at as suggestion of real world behaviors. If the argument that horror movies make people more violent is unfair (and I believe it is), then the argument that John Cusack could make people become stalkers is unfair too.

Lloyd does make some dramatic gestures to get Diane's attention - the iconic boom box pose that you see on every single Say Anything poster represents the biggest of them - but it's worth remembering that the little gestures Lloyd makes throughout his relationship with Diane are the ones that stick out to her. He thinks she needs a man who makes grand proclamations and plays a love song (OK, it's the song from the first time they had sex and yeah, that is a little stalkery) outside her window, but the more we get to know Diane the more we see that she's interested in some of his smaller actions. When she has to explain what she likes about Lloyd to her father - played by John Mahoney, who does not get near enough credit for how good he is here - she mentions a moment where Lloyd points out some broken glass in a parking lot and gently guides her to a safe path around it. Other moments where we can tell she's totally enamored with him include his attempt to convince a group of senior citizens to watch Cocoon (Fox had to keep trying to sell their own movie, this was the VHS era after all) and when he checks up on her from across a crowded party. Diane sees how important she is to Lloyd as he does these things, and those are the moments that make her fall more in love with him as the film goes on

Lloyd thinks he needs big words and big actions to impress her, and when he gets too focused on trying to do this he does turn a little dramatic and even loses his cool at times. During the film's darkest scenes, when things aren't working out, he utters the now famous rain-drenched decree "I gave her my heart, she gave me a pen" and it's a moment where we could think Lloyd is being a dope. Yet we, like most everyone else he knows, can see that he's a great person. He just doesn't believe it unless the thing he is focused on is going well for him.
One of my favorite moments to observe Lloyd is when he's confronted by his school guidance counselor about his future plans and offers a fantastic reply about how he's looking for a "dare to be great situation" when he is pressed to make a decision about what he wants to do. 

"How many people really know what they want though?  I mean, a lot of them think that they have to know, right? But inside, they don't really know, so, I don't know.  But I know that I don't know."

Lloyd doesn't really know what he wants to do with his life, and that's fine. That's not Say Anything's concern. This movie's concerned with introducing us to Lloyd and Diane - who also deserves recognition as one of the strongest and smartest female characters in teen cinema - and how much Lloyd is willing to give himself to the idea of being with her. 

The film's title, Say Anything..., is kind of obscure as it applies to the story. The two characters who tell each other that they "can say anything" during the film are Diane and her father. That's one more part of what makes Lloyd such an endearing character, because once you get to know him you know he's the kind of person who never has to be reminded that he can say anything. He wears his heart on his sleeve and says what he needs to say and lives fearlessly as he attempts to win over Diane. He could have accepted the good life he had, but he saw someone he thought was perfect and he put his entire being into making it happen
If Lloyd Dobler is one of a kind - which I already said he is - then it seems like it would be pretty hard for me to find a double feature partner that meets the high standard he sets. But a lot of the things I love about Lloyd and how this film portrays him are present in a lot of other characters I love. Let's take a look at a few things about Lloyd and see if we can find those in another lead character.

  • To simply sum up some of my thoughts on the character, I think Lloyd's biggest flaw at times is having a narrow focus. He's so interested in Diane that he lets other parts of his life - planning for his future and spending time with friends and family are two examples - slip to the wayside. This doesn't really effect Lloyd, because he's easy going and doesn't let it get to him. But you can see that others look at Lloyd a little differently because of his singular focus, and that makes his relationships with others and future prospects a little more difficult.
  • That bigger picture is of little interest to Lloyd, and that's fine with him. To him, time spent with Diane is the enrichment he's looking for in his life right now. The flip side of the narrow focus problem is that Lloyd is happy with what he's doing. That's pretty admirable. His approach to life fits pretty well with the central philosophy shared by the lead character in the film we're about to discuss. 
  • One thing that does have an effect Lloyd is his perception that Diane represents some kind of perfect or ideal being. Lloyd lets Diane define his world. If he's with her, he's happy. If he's not, he feels like he's failed.  This part of his character is what leads him to some internal conflict, because he won't accept anything less than what he believes she is. Lloyd's idea that anything less than perfection isn't good enough, makes it hard for him to understand the simple things that Diane already loves about him. This is a classic downfall of a dreamer, and one that shows up often for the lead character we're about to talk about
It's easy to find movies about high school dreamers who fall in love, but not easy to find ones with the same indomitable spirit that we see in Lloyd Dobler. The young man at the center of our next film is a little younger and a bit less stable than Lloyd - but he's got that spirit.

So let's talk about a young man named Max Fischer.
Rushmore
1998, Directed by Wes Anderson

"The secret, I don't know... I guess you've just gotta find something you love to do and then... do it for the rest of your life. For me, it's going to Rushmore."

When you're fifteen years old and in 10th grade, you don't necessarily have to be popular to be a big man on campus. That's the case for Max Fischer (Jason Schwartzman), who has very few friends but is involved in almost every extracurricular activity offered at the Rushmore Academy, including a number of clubs he started himself when bored with the school's other options. Max is not one of the cool kids - he's bullied by some and ignored by most - but he's someone who walks like he knows where he's going. Max thinks he's found the thing he loves most in the world - a school that lets him chase any dream that comes to his overactive mind - and he's happy to be a part of that.

There are some obvious barriers that hold back a 15 year old from achieving all their dreams. Max got into Rushmore because he was a child prodigy who wrote one of the best essays that the school's head master (Brian Cox, giving a wonderfully grumpy performance) has ever seen, but now he's failing most of his classes and on probation with a stern warning that one more failed class will lead to him being expelled from the school he loves. One would think this would light a fire under Max - except he's currently enamored with a teacher (Olivia Williams) and more focused on ways to show her how impressive he can be and win her heart. 

That's creepy, of course, because she's a teacher and he's a 15 year old, but don't try telling that to Max. He's living in his own reality, where pursuits like saving Latin courses and building an aquarium on the school's baseball field are achievable goals. Max's determination helps him work toward making these lofty goals come true, despite the wishes of the teacher or the school he is a part of. Much like Lloyd Dobler, Max is someone who won't take no for an answer. Because his goals are so outlandish, this gets him into some trouble. 
It would be easy to present a character like Max Fischer, who clearly doesn't understand major parts of his life, as a joke to the audience. Lloyd Dobler's goal of dating Diane Court is a reasonable, albeit lofty, one in his reality. Max's goal of winning the affection of a grown woman while getting through school on extracurriculars alone is clearly not going to happen, which is fine because Rushmore wouldn't work as a movie if it allowed those goals to come true. Wes Anderson's film had two options - become a pure comedy by making fun of Max for his failure to understand life, or show us how he grows and uses the good parts of his personality to become a better young man than he was at the beginning of the film.

Thankfully for all of us, Anderson chose the second option. The choice to present Max as a mostly harmless dreamer - or, as a young man who's simply fighting through a life where he doesn't fit in with the big crowd - makes Max Fischer one of my favorite film characters and Rushmore one of my favorite films. Max struggles to make things right as he goes through his time at Rushmore and beyond, but he's a kid and even when he's wrong we know that his aim is true and his goals are noble. We can see how much he cares about doing what's right, and that matters a lot.

Neither Lloyd or Max really "gets it" when it comes to the big picture of life, but who among us - outside of fictional character's who've been edited and rewritten until they're perfect - really does get everything life throws at them? Neither film ends up with a clear picture of where life may take either of these young men, yet I've never really stopped to wonder about what happened to them down the road. I trust that they both are on the right path to working out their issues, and that their hearts will guide them in their pursuits as they move forward.
I identify so much with both of these young men, and I mentioned earlier that they're the kind of people I strive to be in my life. But I don't want to be the versions of Lloyd and Max we see in these films, I want to be the better people they grow up to be. I want to be the version of Lloyd Dobler who has learned that he can't just focus on Diane, but can give her love and attention while still succeeding in his dreams. I want to be the version of Max that has learned he has to focus on meeting the needs of others sometimes, and who is able to balance that with his own pursuits for enrichment and achievement. I want to be the best things about both of these men, and live with the same confidence and vigor that they possess.

Some might say it's unrealistic to try to be the perfect version of two fictional perfectionists, the same way people said it was unrealistic for both of these men to work toward the goals they have. I get that. But I think Lloyd Dobler and Max Fischer would be proud of me, or any person who views their films, for being willing to tackle life with the same confidence and spirit that they show.

There's a saying out there that suggest that "if you shoot for the moon, you'll land among the stars." Iconic football coach Vince Lombardi summed that up differently by saying "Perfection is unattainable, but if we strive for perfection we will catch excellence." Lloyd and Max might not have known that was what they were doing, and dreamers like me or any of you readers who have an adventurous heart might not know it either. As we head into a new year, as everyone is striving to better themselves and meet new goals and change their lives in a positive way, it's nice to have characters out there who show us what we can do if we don't allow ourselves to be defeated as we chase our dreams. 
Lloyd and Max might not be perfect, but they fight for what they want. Those of us who want something better out of our life could do much worse than following their lead. That's what this double feature represents to me, two people who won't put anything less than their best into the things they love and two people who won't stop fighting for what they want out of life. I truly love that about them, and I think you will too.