Thursday, 23 July 2020

Batman Ninja (2018)

[***1/2 stars/*****]

The tale begins at Arkham Asylum where a time machine made by Gorilla Grodd ends up transporting the major villains of Gotham, Batman and his crime-fighting team to ancient Japan.

Batman, last to be enveloped by the time machine, arrives two years later back in time.  

The villains have wrecked havoc in the meantime, displaced the original feudal lords, built weapon-heavy super castles and are constantly battling each other for supremacy and dominance.      

Batman now has the cliffhanger test in stopping the master criminals from rupturing the past and consequently, the present. 

He then has the seemingly impossible task to taking everyone safe and sound, back to the present. 



Batman re-imagined
What happens when manga-based illustrators carve their magic to reinvent Batman and his enemies via time-travel in ancient Japan? 

You get Batman Ninja, richly illustrated, stylish Batman animation movie that is particularly good and has a lovely, beautifully orchestrated Batman-Joker finale fight that more than makes up for some sluggishness and lack of any major surprises. 

That giving up is not even an option for Batman is a lovely emphasis, as is the plot element when, in the absence of modern technology, Batman is left with only his will to overcome his enemies.  

The illustrated rich manga texture, bold colours and style, lavishly imagined battle of the castles may not be everybody's plate of Sushi, I loved it though. 

The Joker, brilliantly voiced (Wataru Takagi, Japanese version) and drawn is the scene-stealer. 


Eternal enemies 
Why is the Joker way ahead of the pack in Batman villains? Batman Ninja gave me more reason to wonder on the uncanny Bats-Joker chemistry. 

They are a perfect foil, one can sense Batman having empathy for Joker - after all the Joker is deranged and delirious, he may be less at fault as compared to other foul-minded villains. 

But the madness and the dash of unpredictability also makes him the most dangerous of the lot. 

Batman almost has his face ripped off by a Joker move and yet, Batman holds his ground, avoids killing anyone, and fights clean against all odds. 



Japanese touch 
For more fun, watch the Junpei Mizusaki-directed Batman Ninja in the original Japanese audio version with subtitles. The Batman story attains a nice, robust rural flavour in that language. 

Definitely worth a watch for fans of Gotham's eternal protector.  

(Batman Ninja is streaming on Netflix (India).)


Sunday, 19 July 2020

Thazhvaram (1990)

[**** stars/*****]

There is a framed black and white photograph of two smiling friends on an indistinct wall. A hand picks up the frame, places it on the ground, picks out the photograph. 

Then with a sharp pointed knife, the photograph is cut into two. 

In the deadly silence, the photograph is further cut to the size of a profile from the chest up. We are introduced to an untidy, stubble-faced Balan (Mohanlal) looking down gravely at the photo of his childhood friend Raju (Salim Ghouse).     



Then with a view of pointed cliffs, beautiful streams and a green landscape, Balan sets out in search of Raju. 

What has transpired between the two friends? What is it a weary Balan seeks among Kerala's desolate hills and valleys?    


Friends, foes and lovers 
Thazhvaram (The Valley) is a Malayalam thriller coloured in shades of Spaghetti Western movies (The Dollar trilogy), nature of an old world tale of deceit, innocence, revenge and greed. 

It is also a fascinating study of rural life, human settlements, good and evil, life choices and consequences. 



Balan has shades of Clint Eastwood's unnamed character from the Sergio Leone trilogy on the exterior. But as the tale unfolds, we see a simple, naive village man who is undone by the company he keeps. 

The extended battle with a former friend is constantly fascinating, as Balan and Raju try to outwit each other, leading to a fiery climax featuring vultures and explosives.  

Thazhvaram is also a window to Kerala's enigmatic allure. 

The southern-most Indian state, with its isolated, resplendent unspoiled natural beauty, earthy people and snail-paced urbanization makes a far-off, abandoned appearance.   



Mohanlal, the born actor
The Johnson background score is sparsely, effectively used. Silence adds to the suspense and gravity in key scenes. 

Bharathan directs with sure-footed assurance, building on noted writer M. T. Vasudevan Nair's gritty story, using simple every day elements and mirroring basic human nature to carve out a throbbing realistic drama. 

Mohanlal is extraordinary, and Thazhvaram is further proof of why he is considered among the best actors in the world. 


Hindi movie audiences will remember Mohanlal as Mumbai Police Commissioner V. Srinivasan in Ram Gopal Varma's underworld drama Company (2002).


Salim Ghouse makes a good villain, the sturdy supporting cast includes Sumalatha, Anju and veteran actor Sankaradi as the chatty father.  

Venu's cinematography is steady, editing cuts by B. Lenin and V.T. Vijayan keep it crisp. Lip-synced songs, though brief, mar the narrative.        

Watch Thazhvaram to witness how cinema can exist in minimalism, and consistently engage thanks to sheer film-making passion. 



Cinema, down south 
The golden age of Malayalam cinema extended from the 1980's to the mid-1990's. 

Directors like Bharathan and Padmarajan balanced art and commercial elements in free-flowing narratives to create compelling middle-of-the-road cinema.

Many of these films are regarded today as iconic, path-breaking and classic. 

As a cinema lover, would love to see many early Malayalam classics restored and redistributed to a larger world audience.  

In popular culture, Bharathan is best-known for directing the Kamal Hassan Tamil starer Thevar Magan (1992), later remade as Virasat (1997) by Priyadarshan. 

The multi-talented Bharathan passed away in 1998, he was only 51.   

(Thazhvaram is streaming with English subtitles on Disney + Hotstar (India).)


Saturday, 18 July 2020

The Shining (1980)

[**** stars/*****]

There is a job vacancy at the remotely-located 1909-established Overlook Hotel, Rocky Mountains. 

Wanted: A caretaker during the off-season snow-drowned winter months. 

For aspiring writer Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) the job might offer just the solitude he needs to work, with wife Wendy (Shelley Duvall) and son Danny (Danny Lloyd) for company.

Jack seems to have aced the interview. Manager Stuart Ullman (Barry Nelson) adds just one little detail. The previous caretaker, Charles Grady, got a wee bit restless during his stay. Grady ended up killing his wife and two little daughters in the process. 



Jack is unaffected and says that his wife loves hearing horror stories. The job is his. Meanwhile, back at Jack's home, Danny has a blood-flowing nightmare about the hotel. 

The Torrance family moves in soon after, days began to pass, snow begins to gather and things start to unravel at the good old Overlook Hotel.   



A master at work 
Apart from extracting incredible performances from the three main cast members, director Stanley Kubrick literally weaves a maze of visual and audio intricacies to terrify the audience. 

The overbearing sense of location, the maze, eye-catching use of geometrical shapes, I can't get my mind off the sublime John Alcott cinematography, the terrific score by Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind. 

The Shining is a learner's guide to making a timeless horror movie. 



The hypnotic use of enclosed spaces, of movement, sound, colours and textures is unbelievably precise. The wolf and the three pigs story is twisted about for axe-pounding scares.   

The strong green paleness of Room 237, shroud white curtains, calculated lighting, lingering tense pace, ominous use of red...how the hell did Kubrick get Danny Lloyd to give such haunting expressions?

Nicholson's highly enjoyable act in the final parts is a prelude to his Joker in Tim Burton's Batman (1989). Shelley Duvall is a great horror movie face, that's how a scared-to-death woman should look.  



I saw The Shining on my cell phone screen, and its distinct imagery has stayed with me for over two days. I wonder what a late evening big screen experience would have done. 

This is a magnificently orchestrated horror masterpiece.  

If you love horror movies (otherwise the genre has gone redundant lately), among the clutter of jump scares and cheap tested tricks, The Shining is what Lionel Messi is to football...unspeakable brilliance...something else.  


Thursday, 16 July 2020

Eyes Wide Shut (1999)

[*** stars/*****]

What does monogamy in marriage mean? Surely fantasizing about another person is not betrayal? 

How many of us assume that faithfulness in marriage is natural ...or as Bill puts it - woman are loyal to their partner by nature?  

Dr. William "Bill" Harford (Tom Cruise) and Alice Harford (Nicole Kidman) seem happily married, and live in New York with Helena, their seven-year-old daughter. 

Then one Christsmas eve, the handsome, beautiful, and well-off couple are at a party hosted by one of Bill's affluent patients, Victor Ziegler (Sydney Pollack).

Bill ends up running into good friend Nick Nightingale (Todd Field), medical school dropout and now pianist. 



Meanwhile, a Hungarian businessman Sandor Szavost (Sky du Mont) attempts to unsuccessfully seduce Alice. 

Bill is flirted at by two young models, then abruptly called in by his host to help Mandy (Julienne Davis), who apparently overdosed on a drug while having sex with Ziegler. 

Mandy recovers, thanks to Bill's timely intervention. 

The next evening at home, Bill and Alice smoke marijuana, and idly discuss monogamy and temptations. 

Bill sounds traditionally righteous, that he is never jealous of other men hitting on Alice, as a women's nature is to be faithful. 



Alice laughs at this remark, and reveals how she fantasized having an affair a year ago. 

She was charmed by a naval officer whom she never met, during their summer vacation hotel stay back then. 

Alice casually admits that she considered leaving Bill and Helena for the officer.

The disclosure shakes up Bill, and in a turn of events over the next couple of days, he strongly considers having sex outside marriage, leading to dangerous, alarming events.  



Kubrick's last hurrah 
Though Eyes Wide Shut limps to its last act, turning into a mitigated, ambiguous social satire (hence the title) from an erotic mystery thriller, I was blown away by the sheer visual power. 

The Larry Smith cinematography, the Jocelyn Pook score and eerie use of classical music, including a Tamil song in the shocking mansion scenes, director Stanley Kubrick lured me unblinkingly deep into the half-baked conflict.  

Every frame is magnificent and painstakingly clean in detail, the art direction is exemplary. 



Adapted, with many major changes, from Traumnovelle (Dream Story), a 1926 German novella by Arthur Schnitzler, Stanley Kubrick last film (he died six days after a director's cut screening to Warner Brothers and the lead cast) is undone by its writing and boxed characterization

Prominent questions are seldom confronted or juggled around with. 

The one-track journey of Bill's search for sexual encounters, required a varied voice of Alice to build up the drama. 

But Alice's side in largely muted by Bill's journey, which, despite the shock, doesn't add up. 

Bill is played up as a Hollywood hero, rather than a person, creating a detached feel - Cruise only lacks a superhero cape.  

Eyes Wide Shut is muted in voice and reason, neither does it deliver on its dark and potentially devastating premise. 

The resultant nudity, sexual imagery and orgy scenes end up as gimmicky, having no bearing on the story. 

Eyes Wide Shut is worth a watch for its incredible visual charisma, the Cruise-Kidman and ensemble acts, despite the failed yet assured attempt at cinema immortality as in Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket (1987) and The Shining (1980). 

Wonder what more lethal worlds Kubrick would have conjured, if he had lived a decade more. 

(Eyes Wide Shut is streaming on Netflix.) 


Wednesday, 15 July 2020

Uncut Gems (2019)

[***1/2 stars/*****]

Howard Ratner (Adam Sandler) is a bumbling, restless, shrewd, gambling-crazy New York City jewelry store owner. 

We first meet Ratner on the brink of cracking a huge deal, in his street-smart rambling 'Sandler lazy casual-drawl' manner.

But life is not a bed of priceless gems.  

Ratner has a huge gambling debt to pay off, including over $100,000 to his menacing brother-in-law Arno (Eric Bogosian). 

But that doesn't stop Ratner on his roller-coaster madcap ride for infinite wealth...even when Arno sends over his men to the jewelry store - short-tempered Phil (Keith Williams Richards) and Nico (Tommy Kominik) to physically intimidate and embarrass Ratner before his customers


Things come to the head when a black opal, a rare priceless gem extracted by Ethiopian miners reaches Ratner, setting off a chaotic chain of events

Already, Ratner is on the verge of divorcing his separated wife, barely has time for his children, and is having an affair with his employee Julia (Julia Fox). 

Is there a rainbow waiting for Ratner as he spirals out of control, curving down his adrenaline rush for money, money, and more money? 



Fast-paced entertaining drama 
Writers Josh Safdie, Benny Safdie (also co-directors) and Ronald Bronstein churn a madcap, hypnotic, feverish drama thriller, symbolically pinning the black opal, and channeling insatiable greed through Ratner's circling fetish for gambling.

The turbulent celebration in Daniel Lopatin's brilliant background score is magnetic, as is the constant deliberate busy shift in Darius Khondji's cinematography.    


Adam Sandler is a revelation, superb and immensely compelling as Howard Ratner. 

Sandler's intonation and body language to create a man consumed and not in control of himself is unforgettable. 

A city beast throbbing in a unabated blood rush, this is a career-defining performance.

I won't ever take any competent typecast actor for granted, thanks to Sandler's wolfish, trippy act.   

Lakeith Stanfield, Julia Fox, basketball player Kevin Garnett (as himself), Idina Menzel, Eric Bogosian and Judd Hirsch make a good support cast. 

The Jewish-American community representation steers clear of stereotypes. The directors ensure that it is only incidental to the pulsating drama. 

Striking tension-induced mood settings makes up for the sketchiness, Uncut Gems is a whirlwind manic thump of a drama. 


(Uncut Gems is streaming on Netflix.) 

Saturday, 11 July 2020

The Disaster Artist (2017)

[*** stars / *****] 

What is it to sit through the premiere of your debut movie, and witness the audience laugh out loud at what was intended to be serious drama? 

The Disaster Artist is about how a really bad movie got made. 

A movie so bad that audiences the world over still love it for its unintentional humor, incredibly bad acting and lame storytelling. 

The Disaster Artist is a neat, well-paced chronicle of how Tommy Wiseau's cult 'so baaaad that it is goooood' flick, The Room (2003) was made. 

James Franco does an impressive turn directing the movie and playing Wiseau, mimicking the strange spirit, drawl and body language of the determined man. 

Franco's brother Dave, playing Wiseau's friend and co-star Greg is sincere too.  

The Disaster Artist is a good, often funny and engaging experience about what most critics call the "best worst movie ever made." 

It is a brave, clean attempt, and in its way, applauds friendship against all odds and is a cheerful shout out to every one out there who find the courage to follow their dreams. 

The Disaster Artist tells us why pure conviction and drive matters, irrespective of the outcome. 

A little nitty-bitty funny fight of a film. 

Wednesday, 8 July 2020

The Sweet Herafter (1997)

[***3/4 stars/*****]

Once upon a time on a snowy day in the little town of Sam Dent, British Columbia, a school bus driven by the experienced Dolores Driscoll (Gabrielle Rose) cuts across a road barrier and falls into a lake, killing 14 children. 

Mitchell Stephens (Ian Holm), a lawyer fending off personal issues with his separated drug-addict daughter Zoe (Caerthan Banks), descends vulture-like on the town folk and grieving parents, literally manipulating them to ask for damages. 



Stephens plans to build a case based on alleged negligence of the bus manufacturer and the road barrier makers. His condition is to keep one-third of the damages won, and take no fees if he loses the case. 

As Stephens goes around craftily persuading affected parents to fight the case, the quiet town is divided for and against filing charges. 



Billy Ansel (Bruce Greenwood) who was driving his car behind the school bus as usual to wave at his children when the accident occurred is furious with Stephens, threatening to bash him up for good. 

Meanwhile Stephens wants Nicole Burnell (Sarah Polley), 15, accident survivor, now paralysed from the waist down, to make the 'right' statement to win the case. 

But there is more to the grieving and tragedy - an illicit affair, child abuse, daddy issues, unashamed need for money, guilt and greed. 



Haunting moments 
Based on the 1991 novel, The Sweet Hereafter by Russell Banks, a book loosely inspired by the Alton, Texas bus crash that killed 21 students, the screenplay by Canadian director Atom Egoyan is a near-masterpiece. 

The events go back and forth, cutting across timelines, Egoyan keeps us guessing and intrigued, building up the drama like a snow sculpture, that gradually shapes into coherence.  

The recently deceased Ian Holm is particularly terrific as the immoral lawyer. 

This may be the act that won him the role of Bilbo Baggins in Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings trilogy. It is a seething, nervy act. 

Bruce Greenwood as the righteous angry dad and Sarah Polley as Nicole are excellent, the rest of the ensemble is superb too. 



The Pied Piper analogy 
The haunting bits involve Nicole's reading of 'The Pied Piper' fairy tale to Billy's children, emphasized and revisited in effective voice-overs to match the tragedy of the tale and the bus tragedy.

How the fairy tale ominously runs parallel to the tale are parts that elevate the drama in The Sweet Herafter.  

The part about the dying baby and the implications of what a father needs to do to save its life - the telling is pure cinema.    

The Sweet Herafter cuts above many, similar, slow-burner movies, for its haunting, snow-lush quality, despite the absence of anything overtly dramatic, apart from the accident scenes. 

Cinema lovers will find a lot to admire

My take - this is how you make a sensitive fictional drama based on a real-life tragedy.  


Tuesday, 7 July 2020

To Catch a Thief (1955)

[***3/4 stars/*****]


Francie: "Do you want a leg or a breast?"
Robie: "You make the choice."


John Robie (Cary Grant), a former master cat burglar enjoys a leisurely retired life in a splendid, airy French villa. 

But when a string of  jewel robberies occur at the French Riviera, Robie is the main suspect, forcing him to go on the run.  

Robie seeks help from his old (now restaurant-managing) gang, who are on parole for their World War II heroics as part of the French Resistance. He is met with hostility, as they are now prime suspects too. 



Robie escapes the police again, and schemes to catch the elusive burglar in the act. 

He arranges to meet H. H. Hughson (John Williams), an insurance agent who trusts Robie enough (and can't afford more robberies of insured jewels) to disclose the list of the wealthiest jewel-owning Riviera folk. 

American tourists, rich widow Jessie Stevens (Jessie Royce Landis) and daughter Frances (Grace Kelly) incidentally top the list. 

Engaging romance, screeching car chases, sunny French locales and throbbing rooftop chases ensue. 



Not Hitchcock's best, but utterly enjoyable
The cat analogy, superb French locales, trademark witty Hitchcock remarks, breathtaking locations, the uncanny Cary Grant-Grace Kelly chemistry, stirring, timely background score - To Catch a Thief  is a breezy suspense drama, low on thrills and surprises, compared to other superior Hitchcock suspense movies. 

The stretched climax threatens to derail the fun, the buildup to the final rooftop chase makes up for it, even if the gun-shooting part is a tad lame. 

Just when it seems to lag, there are enough twists and character development that keep To Catch a Thief engaging. 



Grant and Kelly sparkle like priceless jewels. 

Their jovial presence allowed me to largely ignore that To Catch a Thief  is robbed of the usual Hitchcock bounce.   

The graceful, elegantly beautiful Kelly was half of Grant's age during filming, nowhere do their flirtatious scenes seem sleazy or awkward. 

It's a pairing of a lifetime.  

The clever dialogue interplay, the implied sexuality, relationship dynamics that run smooth with the main plot - elements we sorely miss in modern crime thrillers. 



Take the final unexpected dialogue, "Mother will love it here," and Grant's startled expression to top it off. Superlative, fun cinema despite the lightened proceedings. 

To Catch a Thief  is not vintage Hitchcock, but a happy vacation-mode, hard-to-ignore sunshine of a drama, a lovely rush of springy energy and charm. 


Sunday, 5 July 2020

Whiplash (2014)

[**** stars / *****] 


Terence Fletcher: "Truth is I don't think people ..understood..
what it was I was doing at Shaffer. 
I was there to push people beyond what is expected out of them.... 
I believe that is an absolute necessity...otherwise we are depriving the world of the next Louie Armstrong, next Charlie Parker...I told you that story about how Charlie Parker became Charlie Parker, right?" 

Andrew Neiman: "Joe Jones threw a cymbal at his head." 

Terence Fletcher: "Exactly." 


Andrew Neiman (Miles Teller), a 19 year-old drummer at Shaffer Music Conservatory, New York, seeks the attention of Terence Fletcher (J.K.Simmons) a reputed teacher /composer. 

Aspiration meets reality when Andrew is selected as alternate drummer in the Fletcher-headed conservatory band. 

Then all hell breaks loose.  

Neiman experiences firsthand why other band members cower like nervous school children at Fletcher's arrival. 

In his cream-lighted indoor dark room sessions (recurring movie ambiance), the teacher subjects the band and especially Neiman to utter humiliation, abuses and insults. 

Always wanting to be a great drummer and nothing else, a demonic rush to please Fletcher seizes Neiman. 

Drumming becomes a sole, life-threatening obsession. Everything else becomes insignificant, even as his love life lies ruptured.    

Intense, Fiery 
There is no escaping Whiplash's well-directed intensity. 

The major storytelling triumph is the minimalist, straight-forward character-driven approach. 

The story vein stays with the two main protagonists, both fiery, unyielding, turbulent and riveting. 

Fletcher and Neiman are the film's metaphorical wrestlers and bookends. 

Barely a dull moment, barely. 

Beyond the Music
Director Damien Chazelle doesn't use any jazz-based soundtrack for inducing overwhelming emotions from the audience. 

Instead, unlike many other music-based movies, he banks on revealing the uneasy, stormy, agitated human spirit. 

That demented spirit behind the seemingly tranquil music making. 

Top grade performances by Teller and Simmons, a clean screenplay and razor sharp editing (love the ending) makes Whiplash a mini-classic, a must-watch.

Saturday, 4 July 2020

Memento (2000)

[**** stars / *****] 

As far as cinematic experiences of the mind go, nobody has influenced and hypnotized us in recent times like director Christopher Nolan. 

Though often leaning towards the incomprehensible, incoherent and logic-defying, The Batman trilogy (2005-2012), Inception (2010), Interstellar (2014) and Dunkirk (2017) were unforgettable big screen experiences.




Nolan's best movie yet?
For me Memento is Nolan's finest, grounded and most convincing 'mind-awe' film. 

Based on a short story by Christopher's brother and frequent collaborator Jonathan Nolan, Memento is a jigsaw puzzle that comes together with alarming clarity.




Memento story 
The reverse-chronological narrative cuts across two timelines. 

Both story nerves feature at its center, Leonard, an insurance investigator who suffers from anterograde amnesia (short-term memory loss). 

Leonard's condition, as he puts it, is a consequence of two men attacking, raping and killing his wife, while severely injuring Leonard. 

The first attacker was caught, Leonard is in search of the second fugitive attacker, believed to be called John G.




Memento review 
As habitual viewers of linear storytelling, Memento may get you disconcerted and impatient at first. There's a good chance you will pause and opt for another movie. 

Don't. 

Hang on and watch carefully. 

Cinema lovers will relish if they are patient, as the threads untangle the horror and puppetry of it all.

As a vindication of Christopher Nolan's early, unmistakable genius, Memento is his finest psychological/mystery thriller film yet.

(Yes, Indian film viewers will identify the similarities to A.R.Murugadoss directed revenge films, the Tamil version, Gajini (2005) and the Hindi remake Ghajini (2008). Both films just used Leonard's memory loss premise, rest was a rehashed formulaic revenge saga, at best.)