Good to see theatres have re-opened again, at least in Michigan, as of Feb 1. And at 25 per cent capacity. Thrilling to see full page movie listings in Detroit dailies. Still locked down on Windsor side however as we’ve finally reopened into ‘Red’ phase but no indoor theatres and outdoor drive-ins, well, too frozen! Emagine’s CEO Anthony LaVerde told me it’s still “nearly impossible” to be viable at a quarter full. Art house Landmark Main is also using the same safety protocols devised by National Assoc. of Theatre Owners. Only question is: will they close a third time?
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Rapid-fire reviews from two weeks of flick watching
Here are rapid fire reviews and observations of movie watching over the last couple of weeks, in chronological order dating from last night. Kicking and Screaming (Netflix), Noah Baumbach’s 1995 first feature. Pedestrian and stilted compared to his later great films and – wow – college grads were so preppy then…Roger Vadim’s 1964 La Ronde (Criterion) featured a French-speaking Jane Fonda in this remake of licentiousness and male chauvinism…They Live by Night (Criterion), Nicholas Ray’s 1948 noir, featured Farley Granger (even then open about his bisexuality – bravo) and the sweet Cathy O’Donnell as a latter day Bonnie and Clyde…I love 1960s romantic comedies but Jack Donohue’s 1965 Marriage on the Rocks (TCM), with Sinatra, Martin and Kerr, descends into phoned-in silliness…Earl McEvoy’s 1950 The Killer That Stalked New York uncannily presages the Covid epidemic told from a public health perspective about a smallpox outbreak. Even the vaccines runout and officials have to kick drug companies’ asses to produce more…1950’s A Life of Her Own (Criterion) is a quintessential George Cukor “woman’s film” and a searing personal tale of ambition and greed starring Lana Turner…Lovers and Lollipops (Criterion) (photo) is a refreshingly candid window – with a documentary feel – into the lives of two people meeting and falling in love all the while trying to balance their relationship with the demands of a seven-year-old. Great 1950s NYC visuals and directed by Morris Engel and Ruth Orkin. My fave of all listed here..John Stahl’s 1935 version of Magnificent Obsession (Criterion) suffers I suspect from the same problem as the 1954 version, of which I’ve seen only part: a worthy but non-too-interesting story of loving devotion following tragedy, with Irene Donne and Robert Taylor…Finally Jacques Rivette’s 1957 Paris Belongs to Us (Criterion) follows a group of “lost” intellectuals, alienated to a T, in this kind of existentialist thriller, though don’t expect your adrenalin to overflow.
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