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Screen Trek - An Intersection of Movie Reviews, Articles, Essays and Conversation

Screen Trek - February 2009

GHOST TOWN: THE SYMPATHETIC DAVID BRENT

February 25th 2009 08:44
Ricky Gervais in Ghost Town
He does't want to see dead people: Ricky Gervais stars as Doctor Bertram Pincus in Ghost Town.

While Ricky Gervias’ sitcom, Extras, didn’t receive quite the exposure of his breakthrough effort, The Office, it still did much to further highlight the Londoner’s talents in front of the camera. With Extras’ Andy Millman, Gervais proved that he was no one-trick pony, gently colouring the struggling writer with many shades of hope, humour, ambition and disappointment, thus creating a sympathetic and ultimately compelling character. It’s this talent in front of the camera that steals the show in Ghost Town, as Gervais once more illustrates, almost grudgingly, what a fine actor he is.


He plays New York-based misanthropic dentist Bertram Pincus who, as a result of a botched colonoscopy, dies for 7 minutes. Unaware of his brush with the afterlife, Pincus leaves the hospital only to then be pursued by a variety of ghosts who, once they realise that he can see them, want his help to resolve the issues they have with the living they left behind. The most persistent is Frank, (Greg Kinnear), who offers to keep at bay the rest of curmudgeonly dentist’s pursuers if Bertram will intervene in his widow, Gwen’s (Tea Leoni) planned re-marriage to a human rights’ lawyer. Bertram, desperate to get rid of these ghosts, finally agrees to help Frank. But when he actually meets the ghoul’s erstwhile Egyptologist wife he can’t help but fall for her himself.


While the concept might be typical of the increasingly bizarre high-concept material that drifts like charred flotsam out of Hollywood these days, Ghost Town has a number of things going for it. Firstly there is the screenplay, which runs with the experience of its writers, John Kamps and in particular David Koepp (who also directed). This isn’t innovative stuff but classic old-school screenwriting, all crafted with the care of a master carpenter. On first glance, Pincus is an acutely dislikeable character, until you quickly realise the clever depth that’s been written into his existence. His aversion to people is simply a focused version of the dread everyone feels at times when we have to check the box of a social event and would rather just stay at home with our feet wedged firmly into our Danger Mouse slippers. And while an excuse is proffered later for his moribund behaviour, it’s almost not needed.

Of course, it’s hard to think if any of this would have been possible without the involvement of Gervais. Pincus seems to be virtually written solely for him, so well does he inhabit the character. Rolling with Ghost Town’s dramedic nature, where the film starts off tossing about zingers like a smartarse kid on a cola high before stitching itself more closely to its serious theme, Gervais illustrates the tight relationship that exists between comedic timing and dramatic timing. He now displays such a beautiful grasp of nuance – first on display in The Office and later developed in Extras – that it’s hard to think that he’ll ever be underestimated as an actor in the future. Throughout, he receives great support from Kinnear, with whom Gervais shares an undeniable comic chemistry, and Tea Leoni, an actress who Hollywood would be wise to rediscover, such is her gentle versatility.

Ricky Gervais in Ghost Town
Pincus can't avoid becoming the go-to guy for all sorts of ghostly problems.

Meanwhile, Koepp the director keeps things rolling at a handy clip and the performers all on the same slightly-oddball page. Even the most minor parts are handled meticulously by Koepp and delivered beautifully by their performers, whether it be Kristen Wiig as a spray tan-obsessed surgeon or Dana Ivey as a particularly mournful ghost. While the director does let things get a little loose and mawkish towards the end of the film, it’s almost unavoidable once Pincus realises what he has to do to turn his life around, and Koepp avoids sinking the whole affair by quickly returning focus to the film’s central character.

It’s a delicate balancing act but one that Koepp and his collaborators pull off. The love story set amongst a world of ghosts anxious to communicate with the living isn’t a new one, but the clever work on display in Ghost Town manages to toss some fresh spice into the mix and in the process illustrate that, in film-making at least, old-fashioned doesn’t necessarily mean out-of date.

Check out the trailer for Ghost Town below:











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DAN METH'S TRILOGY METER!

February 20th 2009 08:42
Dan Meth's Trilogy Meter
The Trilogy Meter: Is T2 really that much better than the original?

Confused over which discounted box-set to buy as your local DVD retailer crumbles under the weight of global financial doom? Well, leave your abacus at home because prolific web cartoonist Dan Meth has created the go-to guide for all sorts of box-set problem solving with his Trilogy Meter.

Of course, it’s also likely to start an argument of truly geeky proportions the next time you and your buddies get together with a carton, some exploitation films and a round or two of beer pong. Is Beyond Thunderdome better than the first Mad Max film? I doubt it. Does the flawed Die Hard 2 eclipse the fun and deceptively clever Vengeance? Wouldn’t have said so. And what is everybody’s problem with Alien 3? Watch it again, push aside some abysmal CGI and it’s not that bad.

These are only opinions, however, and there’s no faulting Dan’s brilliant little piece of graphic design. And while the man himself excuses the lack of a fourth bar for the quadrilogies among this bunch with the rather cogent point that none of them were ever meant to go that far, a friend did mention that it would have been fun to see some of the bars go negative – I’m looking at you Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. In any case please peruse, enjoy and comment away.

***

A note on Dan Meth, taken from the bio on his website:

Dan Meth was born and raised in the suburbs of New York City. As a kid, he obsessively absorbed every form of cartoon he could lay his eyes on. Later he studied illustration at Syracuse University. It was here that he first unleashed his cartoons on a mass audience; his comic strip ran in the school paper almost daily for four years.

After college, Meth became one of the internet’s better known go-to guy for funny viral web cartoons. His client-commissioned ads and personal short films have received much attention, traffic, and press.

In 2006, Dan Meth was hired by Fred Seibert to help develop new cartoon, podcast, and TV projects at Frederator Studios. His first two series, “The Meth Minute” and “Nite Fite” were both fan favourites, getting millions of views and press attention.


Special thanks to Dan for allowing me to post the Trilogy Meter. Check out his excellent site here.


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RETROSPECT: THE WARRIORS (1979)

February 17th 2009 10:10
The Warriors
The Warriors: A long way from home.

Released in 1979, The Warriors was initially noted for allegedly sparking violence in the cinemas where it first played. Paramount prematurely pulled the advertising campaigns for the film to appease those who saw the picture as a call to dystopian violence and The Warriors was seemingly pushed aside and forcibly forgotten by highbrow critics and intolerant conservatives. Over time, however, the engaging comic book stylings of The Warriors at first garnered cult status, then grudging admiration and finally, now 30 years later, the motion picture is regarded as something of a minor classic. It’s respect well deserved for this kinetic, frenetic and highly stylish film.

It’s the 1979 near future and New York is slowly being taken over by hundreds of well-organised (and well dressed) gangs. The police force is struggling to cope and in an attempt to finally bring the city to heel, Cyrus (Roger Hill), the leader of the biggest crew of all, the Gramercy Riffs, has called a meeting. Nine members from each of the most powerful gangs in city are invited to the Bronx to take part in the gathering and the Coney Island-based Warriors are part of the mix. At the meet, the charismatic Cyrus gives an impassioned speech to an eager throng numbering in the thousands, explaining his grand plan for the squabbling gangs to come together and take over the city.

Unfortunately, Luther (David Patrick Kelly), leader of the misanthropic Rogues, has different ideas and mid speech, he ruthlessly guns down Cyrus. Unfortunately for the Warriors, one of their crew witnesses the assassination, and Luther is quick to push the blame onto the pragmatic Coney Island operators. So begins are mad dash for safety, as the Warriors try to navigate their way back across the city. Meanwhile, the Riffs have put out the call for vengeance, leaving every gang in the city baying for Coney Island blood.

It’s a simple setup with ancient roots, being based upon the Greek work, Anabasis, in which the writer Xenophon tells the true tale of his accompaniment of the Ten Thousand, a large army of Greek mercenaries hired by Cyrus the Younger, who aimed to seize the throne of Persia around 400 BC. While Cyrus's army was victorious at Cunaxa in Babylon, Cyrus himself was killed in the battle, rendering the victory irrelevant. Leaderless, stranded deep in enemy territory and without supplies other than what they could obtain by force, the 10,000 had to fight their way northwards through Kurdistan and Armenia to the safety of the Black Sea, making ad hoc decisions about their leadership, tactics, and destiny as they went. The Warriors sticks closely to this ancient Greek blueprint, right down to some of the different names and purposes of the opposition gangs, such as sirens who appear in the form of the all-girl gang, the Lizzies, and the nomenclature of the Baseball Furies, based upon the well-known Greek deities of vengeance.

There are many elements that make The Warriors a fantastic film, but it’s the combination of a lean script, muscular direction and efficient editing that really provide the basic framework around which so much brilliant work been constructed. The first frame pops up on the screen and things are immediately propelled forward; as the opening credits roll the characters are quickly sketched out for the audience and the nature of their journey from Coney Island to The Bronx established. The sheer distance they are travelling from home is also cleverly shown as stations rush past and members of the crew chart their progress along the labyrinthine New York subway system. The result is that by the time the credits end and we are at the meeting in the Bronx, the audience knows exactly what’s going on, who’s there and why, and the high stakes involved. It’s a great piece of filmmaking and sets up beautifully the dangerous journey back home that is about to take place.

Michael Beck in The Warriors
Michael Beck as Swan in The Warriors.

And this is only the starting point when it comes to describing the great work that has gone into this film. Indeed, it’s like everybody involved in the picture read the script and just ‘got it’ immediately, so of-a-piece is The Warriors. Andrew Laszlo’s rich night time photography captures a wet New York dripping in darkness and primary colours. It jibes brilliantly with some inspired lighting, framing the characters and their antagonists in spooky tones that tell of danger around every corner.

Danger there is in spades, too, with some of the most artistically vivid and beautifully over-the top-gangs ever. The Rogues; the Electric Eliminators; the Turnball ACs; the Orphans; the Baseball Furies: they’re all on the Warriors’ tail and packing some of the most imaginative costume design ever conceived. The Baseball Furies in particular are truly frightening, with their baseball outfits, bats and menacing two-tone face paint.

Baseball Furies
Don't mess with the Baseball Furies.

The relatively young cast on The Warriors also rise to the occasion. Michael Beck has ice in his veins as Swan, the ad hoc superior of the Warriors while James Remar is all spike and punk as Ajax, the muscle of the group who wins the audience’s admiration and sympathy despite his antagonistic claims on leadership and reckless actions that will eventually hand him a fate in keeping with the ancient Greek origins of his name. Elsewhere, David Patrick Kelly chews scenery and spits it out as the nihilistic Luther. All of the minor players are great in their own way; even if the performances are sometimes a touch wooden they still capture the trash-talking machismo of the different gang members perfectly.

Of course, directing all this machismo is Walter Hill, a man who is at his best when working with such testosterone-laden material. He gives everything a brilliantly modern and ever-so-slightly surrealistic tag, the result being a film that doesn’t feel 30 years old. The fight scenes in particular are mesmerising, over the top bone crunchers. One that takes place in a station men’s room is particularly dynamic in its comic book framing and brutality.

Ultimately, The Warriors is a film that operates successfully on more levels than you would initially suspect. So many aspects are so well thought out, but it’s the skill of the storytelling on show that resonates most, from the beautifully simple implementation of the setup right through to the radio DJ who taunts and tracks the Warriors’ chaotic progress from one danger-laden borough to the next. A fantastic piece of celluloid that perhaps still isn’t shown quite the respect it deserves, yet with each passing year draws more and more people into its unique corner of popular culture. Perhaps just pray that Hollywood bum director, Tony Scott, rethinks his ridiculous idea of a modern LA remake.

As an extra note, when it comes to picking up the DVD of The Warriors, try getting your hands on an original cut of the film. Walter Hill's director's cut is currently doing the rounds and isn't quite as snappy, due to the addition of some rather redundant comic book drawn frames in the scene transitions. If there's a disc available that lets you watch the original version, make sure you pick that up instead.

Check out the original trailer for The Warriors below:














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Angelina Jolie Changeling
Angelina Jolie stares down the system as Christine Collins in Changeling.

The second part of Clint Eastwood’s two-pronged attack on this year’s Academy Awards, Changeling is an altogether different beast to Gran Torino. Where Gran Torino is small and tight, Changeling is sprawling; while Torino is intimate, Changeling is sweeping in its scope. Unfortunately, for all its ambition, Changeling turns out to be the weaker of the two films, a victim of its own ambition and a shockingly bizarre true story.

[ Click here to read more ]
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GRAND TORINO: EASTWOOD GOES INDIE

February 9th 2009 13:05
Clint Eastwood Gran Torino
Clint Eastwood gives perhaps his last screen performance in Gran Torino

At 78, time is running out for Clint Eastwood to drop his dust coat, bare the knuckles and load his Winchester, but in Gran Torino the grizzled performer gives the audience perhaps one last bite of the cherry when it comes to zinging profanity and stark, masculine aggression. Conversely, Gran Torino also illustrates that Eastwood the director doesn’t seem to be getting tired of producing films concerning the racial prejudice that exists in American society.

[ Click here to read more ]
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RETROSPECT: POINT BLANK (1967)

February 6th 2009 04:47
Lee Marvin in Point Blank
Angie Dickinson, Lee Marvin and Carroll O'Connor in Point Blank

“I want my money back!” growls Walker (Lee Marvin) about twenty times during director John Boorman’s elliptical and hallucinatory Point Blank. But rather than being a lazy piece of writing from a washed-up screen scribe, this repetition is part of a rich visual poem and Walker’s story turns out to be more complicated than that of a man simply after $93000, that is of course if he exists at all.

[ Click here to read more ]
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