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Month: May 2021

Deer Hunter, The (1978)

Deer Hunter, The (1978)

“What did you do — win the war all by yourself?”

Synopsis:
Three steel mill workers — Michael (Robert De Niro), Steven (John Savage), and Nick (Christopher Walken) — head to Vietnam shortly after Steven’s marriage to Angela (Rutanya Alda), with Nick promising to marry his girlfriend (Meryl Streep) once he returns; but the extreme trauma they each experience as prisoners-of-war changes them forever.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Christopher Walken Films
  • Friendship
  • Meryl Streep Films
  • Prisoners of War
  • Robert De Niro Films
  • Veterans
  • Vietnam War

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary describes this Best Picture winner by writer/director Michael Cimino as “infuriating,” noting that it’s “condescending to its white characters (we’re supposed to understand what happened to the three solders better than they or their equally naive friends do)” and “its view of Vietnamese (all are presented as beasts) is decidedly racist (remember how the Japanese were portrayed in American films made during WWII?).”

He argues that Cimino’s use of “Russian roulette as a metaphor — probably for the insanity of Vietnam, where there is no logic to who lives and who dies” — makes “us believe that our POWs were subjected to such treatment as a matter of course, when in fact there have never been reports of ‘Russian roulette’ during the war.” He concedes that the film has “visual power, a convincing performance by Walken (who won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar):

… and a couple of strong moments between De Niro and Meryl Streep… after De Niro returns home.”

But he notes that the “prewar scenes, involving the three men who are about to go to war and their male buddies, are as self-consciously directed and self-indulgent as the worse sequences in John Cassavetes’s films”:

… and “the wedding, full of characters ‘acting natural’ and being rude, stupid, and boring… is interminable.”

In Alternate Oscars, Peary refers to this film as a “con job” (!), voting for Coming Home (1978) as the superior film from the same year on a similar topic, and giving a Best Picture nomination nod to the underrated Go Tell the Spartans (1978) as well. I’m essentially — though perhaps not as vehemently — in agreement with Peary’s review, and also appreciated reading DVD Savant’s critical take-down of this much-lauded film, which he argues “slickly pushes the same old blather about honor and presents a story that grows increasingly pretentious.”

Indeed, given the power of its imagery (Vilmos Zsigmond’s cinematography is consistently stunning) and the infamously harrowing Russian roulette sequences, it’s disappointing that “this ‘progressive’ war movie” is really “the old BS in a different package,” in which “the tough survivors are the real men, and the others had unfortunate but fatal weaknesses.” I’m not sure it’s fair to reduce the three central characters to such descriptors, but it’s certainly true that De Niro’s stoic warrior emerges as the de facto hero of the piece, which is problematic. Film fanatics will likely be curious to check this film out once, but a “once-and-done” is plenty.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Powerful performances by the three male leads


  • Vilmos Zsigmond’s cinematography


Must See?
Yes, once, simply for its historical and Oscar-winning status.

Categories

  • Historically Relevant
  • Oscar Winner or Nominee

(Listed in 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die)

Links:

Out of Africa (1985)

Out of Africa (1985)

“I don’t want to live someone else’s idea of how to live; don’t ask me to do that.”

Synopsis:
A Danish woman (Meryl Streep) marries a Swedish baron (Klaus Maria Brandauer) simply for an opportunity to move to Kenya and help run a coffee plantation, but soon finds herself estranged from womanizing Brandauer and madly in love with an adventurous big game hunter (Robert Redford) who dips in and out of her life.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Africa
  • Historical Drama
  • Infidelity
  • Marital Problems
  • Meryl Streep Films
  • Robert Redford Films
  • Romance
  • Strong Females

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary refers to Sydney Pollack’s Oscar-winning adaptation of “the 1937 memoir of aristocratic Danish author Isak Dinesen (the pen name of Karen Blixen) and Judith Thurman’s 1982 biography, Isak Dinesen: The Life of a Storyteller” as “graceful, elegant, [and] sensually photographed.” He notes that Streep’s performance as “Blixen during her years in Kenya, 1913-1931” is “multi-layered, unmannered, [and] Oscar-worthy” — though he fails to point out that her Danish accent is patchy at best (and, unlike her linguistic work in Sophie’s Choice, distracting at worst). He asserts that “while this is a romantic film,” he doesn’t “consider it a love story” given that “it’s primarily about a stubborn, moral woman who, without changing or compromising or causing changes, achieves accommodation… and is accepted and respected” by those around her, with “no conquest, no power play, no ultimatum, no game-playing or attempt to obtain pity.” He adds that “if you’re bored by the film or resent how the blacks are used to show how nice Karen is to the natives rather than as individuals with their own lives, then you’ll at least be awed by the wide-open, sun-drenched African veldt.”

Indeed, cinematographer David Watkin’s work here is simply stunning; it’s no wonder that this film “inspired a great increase in tourism in Kenya.” Meanwhile, I agree with Peary that “young girls could find worse role models than Streep’s Karen,” who is “a writer, runs a coffee plantation, is willing to work with her hands, fearlessly rides through hostile territory during a native uprising, lives alone (after she kicks out [Brandauer]), calmly shoots a charging lion:

… and is even willing to humble herself by dropping to her knees in public to beg for land for the [local] Kikuyus after she leaves Africa.”

However, I do fall into the camp of being troubled by the centering of a white female’s exploits in colonized Africa:

As much as Pollack and screenwriter Kurt Luedtke admirably humanize a number of the African individuals in Karen’s life, she’s ultimately the main focus, with Kenya itself primarily exoticized as a beautiful lifestyle alternative for colonizing Europeans.

Redford is fine and believable as Streep’s commitment-phobic lover:

… but Brandauer (naturally) steals the moments he’s in, playing a surprisingly sympathetic, straight-shooting philanderer who notoriously gave Dinesen syphilis (for which he at least apologizes sincerely).

How much one enjoys this film (beyond the visuals) will depend largely on your investment in Dinesen’s memoirs, which I suspect aren’t quite as widely read or discussed these days.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • David Watkin’s stunning cinematography


  • Meryl Streep as Karen (but not her accent)

Must See?
No, though of course most film fanatics will be curious to check it out given its Oscar-winning status.

(Listed in 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die)

Links:

Sophie’s Choice (1982)

Sophie’s Choice (1982)

“Tell me why you inhabit the land of the living.”

Synopsis:
While living in Brooklyn, an aspiring young Southern writer (Peter MacNicol) befriends a guilt-ridden, Polish-Catholic survivor of Auschwitz (Meryl Streep) and her charismatic yet volatile Jewish lover (Kevin Kline), and soon finds himself falling for Sophie (Streep).

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Alan J. Pakula Films
  • Concentration Camps
  • Flashback Films
  • Meryl Streep Films
  • World War Two
  • Writers

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary writes that writer-director Alan J. Pakula’s adaptation of William Styron’s novel “has many powerful scenes, particularly those in the concentration camp”:

… but he argues that while “Streep gives a great characterization,” it’s “difficult to forget she’s acting and that her Polish accent is not real because Sophie is constantly struggling with the English language, stumbling over every other word.” He notes that “MacNicol’s timid, nervous portrayal complements the more demonstrative performances of his co-stars”:

… and points out that the film is “beautifully photographed by Nestor Almendros.” He posits an interesting if implausible theory about the film’s titular topic (“Sophie’s choice”):

SPOILER ALERT

… by questioning whether Sophie’s flashbacks are “accurate or only what she makes up for Stingo [MacNicol].” He wonders, “Could it be that she had no daughter and that she chose to save herself rather than her son? If he was taken away to be killed (she says he was taken to the children’s camp, not directly to the gas chambers), this would explain why she didn’t remain in Europe to search for him or get some confirmation of his death.” He does concede, “It’s doubtful that Styron or Pakula intended anyone to make this interpretation, but the structure of the film and portrayal of Sophie make it a possibility.”

Peary’s proposition is intriguing yet not particularly convincing; indeed, it seems to serve as simply yet another way to deny the incomprehensible inhumanity at play in the Nazi regime, when the whim of an officer could determine the fate of an entire family within seconds. I also disagree with Peary’s somewhat dismissive assessment of Streep, who rightfully won an Oscar for her portrayal as a multi-lingual, highly traumatized victim of war crimes attempting to find a way — and a reason — to survive. Meanwhile, Kline’s character is instantly insufferable:

… but we quickly learn why this needs to be the case, and as hard as he is to watch, he suits the storyline perfectly.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Meryl Streep as Sophie
  • Nestor Almendros’ cinematography

Must See?
Yes, for Streep’s performance.

Categories

  • Noteworthy Performance(s)
  • Oscar Winner or Nominee

Links:

Prelude to War (1942)

Prelude to War (1942)

“We were a nation that wanted peace — but we hadn’t yet learned that peace for us meant peace for all.”

Synopsis:
Walter Huston narrates a propaganda film produced by America’s Office of War Information (OWI) on why our country needed to become an ally in World War II.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Documentary
  • Frank Capra Films
  • Propaganda
  • Walter Huston Films
  • World War II

Review:
This first entry in Frank Capra’s “Why We Fight” series — comprised of seven films produced between 1942 and 1945 — was initially crafted to convince American troops to join the war effort, but eventually released more broadly to rally public support for the war. At the time, Americans were not inclined to involve themselves yet again in world affairs:

… so a strong case needed to be made on behalf of interventionism. At just 52 minutes, this short film covers the basics of how WWII began, focusing on the aggressions of Japan, Italy, and Germany.

It is very clearly a piece of propaganda, yet arguably a necessary one at the time, with an admirable focus on global unity and concern. As a title in the public domain, this film can be easily viewed at archive.org.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • A potent example of wartime propaganda

Must See?
Yes, once, simply for its historical relevance. Selected (along with the other six films in the series) to be part of the National Film Registry in 2000 for its “cultural significance.”

Categories

  • Historically Relevant

Links:

Shoah (1985)

Shoah (1985)

“It’s hard to recognize, but it was here.”

Synopsis:
Director Claude Lanzmann interviews survivors and perpetrators of the “Final Solution” against European Jews during World War II.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Documentary
  • Jews
  • World War II

Response to Peary’s Review:
In his “oral history of the systematic extermination of Jews by the Nazis in Treblinka, Auschwitz, Chelmno, and other concentration camps,” director Claude Lanzmann “uses no archival footage but instead takes his cameras to the concentration camp sites and surrounding areas to see what they are like today.” When “he takes us through Auschwitz and down into the cremation chambers,” it’s “a terrifying experience” — and when “he takes us to Treblinka,” we see “where the gas chambers stand solitary in the wilderness like Mayan pyramids in Mexico.” Meanwhile, “at Chelmno it’s hard to tell a camp existed.”

Lanzmann interviews many different impacted individuals, including “concentration camp survivors (their stories are horrific) who often did special work duties that kept them alive (one cut hair of women going to the gas chamber, another cleaned the crematorium, etc.).” They tend to “talk without emotion, then something snaps and they burst into tears, and Lanzmann [controversially] urges them to continue.”

Indeed, it may seem that Lanzmann is exploiting the “survivors, forcing them to reopen old wounds for what he believed would be the definitive film about the Holocaust” — but, Peary asserts, “because it is not, what they go through for him isn’t worth it.” Lanzmann “also speaks to former Nazis, a Polish train engineer who transported Jews to Treblinka:

… and the people who lived by the camps.”

He points out that “what is most terrifying is that these people would [seemingly] not protest the roundup and extermination of the Jews if it happened again” — unless, perhaps, it’s to protest the trauma they are put through in having to watch such atrocities occur; as one bystander casually notes:

“[It] gets on your nerves, seeing that every day. You can’t force a whole village to watch such distress.”

Peary calls out a particularly “revolting” scene in which the “one survivor of Chelmno stands with his Christian ‘friends’ outside a Roman Catholic church” and hears how “the people didn’t like the Nazis but still talk about how God intended Jews to be punished for what happened to Christ.”

Peary argues that while the survivors suffer in telling their tales, “we viewers do benefit from each recollection, each harrowing detail about the slaughter. And the obsessive Lanzmann insists on details: we get exact accounts of what happened, involving the amount of time prisoner trains took to reach the camps from their destination, what the prisoners were wearing, [and] how they were greeted by the Nazis at the camp.” Peary adds that while the “first half of the film contains much unforgettable material, [the] second half goes off on too many tangents (i.e., a long recollection about the Warsaw ghetto)” and “by the end you’re sick of Lanzmann (who often acts like Mike Wallace at his worst) and his techniques.” He concludes that this film remains “important viewing, but not consistently powerful, though it should be, considering its subject.”

I disagree with Peary on several of his points: I don’t think it’s up to us as viewers to say whether it was “worth it” for the survivors to be pushed in the way they were, and I don’t believe Lanzmann becomes annoying. Meanwhile, the “tangents” in the final portion of this lengthy film serve as an invaluable back-story for everything we’ve seen and heard until then: by starting with footage of the death camp sites, then moving back and forth in time and space to talk with various people who either participated in or saw what was taking place, we gradually build a collective sense of how this years-long genocide unfolded.

Indeed, Lanzmann is incredibly clear about what he’s determined to document, and refuses to compromise on his vision. Once you give in to the fact that this film 9 1/2 hour film will not relent — instead forcing you to watch, listen, absorb, and make sense of people’s memories without the mediating support or distraction of historical visuals — you begin to appreciate what Lanzmann is doing, and how, and why. Quotes from participants become seared into your brain:

“I was thirteen, and all I’d ever seen until then was dead bodies.”

“With rubbish, paper, and gasoline, people burn very well.”

“Claude, you asked for my impression: if you could lick my heart, it would poison you.”

In response to a question about his stylistic choice to not show any archival footage or stills, Lanzmann at one point noted that not a single photo actually exists of activity within the death camps — so, the only way to try to document this historic atrocity s to talk with people who were there. And if hearing Nazi bureaucrats discuss the logistics of exactly how the death camps operated doesn’t convince you, then what will? Take, for instance, this excerpt from Lanzmann’s interview with war criminal Franz Suchomel (being filmed secretly from a van parked outside):

“Treblinka then [in August of 1942] was operating at full capacity… Trains arrived. The Warsaw ghetto was being emptied then. Three trains arrived in two days, each with three, four, five thousand people aboard, all from Warsaw. But at the same time other trains came in from Kielce and other places… What’s more, the cars were French, made of steel. So that while 5,000 Jews arrived in Treblinka, 3,000 were dead. In the cars. They had slashed their wrists, or just died. The ones we unloaded were half-dead and half-mad. In the other trains from Kielce and elsewhere, at least half were dead. We stacked them here, here, here and here [points to a map of the camp]. Thousands of people piled one on top of another. On the ramp. Stacked like wood. In addition, other Jews, still alive, waited there for two days: the small gas chambers could no longer handle the number. They functioned day and night in that period.”

“We puked and wept… The smell was infernal… because gas was constantly escaping. It stank horribly, for miles around… It depended on the wind. The stink was carried on the wind… More people kept coming, always more, whom we hadn’t the facilities to kill. Those gents were in a rush to clean out the Warsaw ghetto. The [small] gas-chambers couldn’t handle the load… The Jews had to wait their turn for a day — two days, three days. They foresaw what was coming. They foresaw it. They may not have been certain, but many knew. There were Jewish women who slashed their daughters’ wrists at night, then cut their own. Others poisoned themselves. They heard the engine feeding the gas-chambers.”

“Because there were so many dead that couldn’t be got rid of, the bodies piled up around the gas-chambers and stayed there for days. Under this pile of bodies was a cesspool: 3 inches deep, full of blood, worms, and shit. No one wanted to clean it out. The Jews preferred to be shot rather than work there… It was awful. Burying their own people, seeing it all — the dead flesh came off in their hands.”

This lengthy narrative is followed immediately by interview clips with Jewish survivor Filip Müller, who describes what it was like to enter the incineration chamber in Camp 1 at Auschwitz and engage in disposal of corpses for hours on end — in his case, “doing the work” instead of “choosing” to be shot.

Suffice it to say that there is nothing in existence comparable to this documentary, which remains not only essential (albeit grueling) viewing for film fanatics, but an invaluable archive of facts that — shockingly — continue to be refuted and denied by some. Please do make the time and energy for it, though I recommend chunking it out into more manageable sessions (perhaps four).

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Invaluable oral evidence of inexplicable atrocities

  • Many raw, powerful moments

Must See?
Yes, for its ongoing historical and cinematic relevance.

Categories

  • Historically Relevant

(Listed in 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die)

Links: