Discland
edited by Jonathan Doyle
Mafioso (The Criterion Collection, 3.18.2008) Nino Badalamenti is a supervisor in a car manufacturing plant who hasn't taken a vacation in over two years. On his way out the door to visit his beloved childhood hometown of Sicily -- with his blonde wife and daughters -- Nino is handed a package by his boss and asked to deliver it to a powerful and influential Sicilian gangster named Don Vincenzo. Once in Sicily, Nino has a hoot seeing friends and family, but his wife has trouble fitting in and is unfairly dismissed as a snob by Nino's family. Even more worrisome, Nino finds himself entangled in an intricate web of secret mafioso dealings and is eventually sent on an unexpectedly... elaborate errand. (continued)

Upcoming


July 2

Hancock

July 3

The Whackness

July 4

Diminished Capacity

Gonzo: The Life and Work of Hunter S. Thompson

Holding Trevor

Kabluey

We are Together

July 9

Full Battle Rattle

July 11

A Man Named Pearl

August

Eight Miles High

Garden Party

Harold

Hellboy II: The Golden Army

Journey to the Center of the Earth

Meet Dave

Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired

The Stone Angel

July 18

A Very British Gangster

Before I Forget

The Dark Knight

The Doorman

Felon

Lou Reed's Berlin

Mad Detective

Mamma Mia!

Space Chimps

Take

Transsiberian

July 22

Two Tickets to Paradise

July 23

Boy A




 

Lurie's Boxing Flick

I had only one medium-sized problem with the rough version of Resurrecting the Champ, which director Rod Lurie showed me several weeks before it played at Sundance '07. The problem was Samuel L. Jackson's decision to play the lead character, a homeless guy with a secretive past, with a "whinny" voice -- a raspy-reedy emission that feels like the polar opposite of Jackson's usual sonorous, street-cat tenor-baritone thing.


Jackson in Resurrecting the Champ; Brando in The Godfather

The performance itself is solid and emotionally on-target, but I felt two ways about the whinny -- it reminded me of Marlon Brando's voice after he gets shot in The Godfather ("We didn't have enough time, Michael....not enough time") and it felt a little too actorish, by which I sorta kinda mean indulgent. Like Kevin Costner's mid-Atlantic accent in Robin Hood, it seems to get in the way more than anything else. Forces of nature like Jackson should never do voices or accents -- movie stars should always be the same guy.

Jackson's performance has been totally captivating for some. The Hollywood Reporter's Duane Byrge called it "knock-out " and "terrific," so take my opinion with a grain. (For whatever reason, Variety didn't review it during Sundance.)

I wrote several weeks prior to Sundance that I'd seen a rough version of Champ. The version that was shown in Park City was, I'm told, 10 or 15 minutes shorter. I'm still not going to spill anything, but the script -- written by Lurie, Allison Burnett, Michael Bortman and Chris Gerolmo -- has a fascinating second-act turn. The nominal plot is about a youngish, not-quite-established sports reporter (Josh Hartnett) lucking into a big story when he discovers that a frail homeless guy (Jackson) is actually a former heavyweight boxing champion previously thought to be dead. But the title doesn't mean what you might think.

Alan Alda and Peter Coyote give the best supporting performances. The most unwelcome (for me, in the longer cut) was Kathryn Morris's performance as Hartnett's wife. Not because she's unskilled or unappealing (far from it) but because she chose to wear a pissed-off, nagging-wife, guilt-trip expression during the bulk of her screen time. I delicately suggested to Lurie that he do something about this in the final edit -- it's the same expression my ex-wife used to have when our marriage was falling apart, and as much of an asshole as this might make me sound, it felt irritating as shit to absorb this on a scene-after-scene basis.

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on January 30, 2007 at 10:13 AM

comment #1

Colin [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

That pic of Jackson makes me think of The Caveman's Valentine. Which makes me think of what happened to Kasi Lemmons, who also directed the terrific Eve's Bayou. Looking at imdb, I see that this summer, she Talk to Me, with Don Cheadle as "Washington D.C. radio personality Ralph 'Petey' Greene, an ex-con who became a popular talk show host and community activist in the 1960s. I'll have to check that one out (as well as Reign O'er Me).

Posted by Colin [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 30, 2007 11:30 AM

comment #2

Josh Massey [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

What is that from, The Caveman's Valentine II?

Also, the line "movie stars should always be the same guy" is depressing. I'm glad they don't listen to you.

Posted by Josh Massey [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 30, 2007 12:21 PM

comment #3

EDouglas [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

"The Hollywood Reporter's Duane Byrge called it "knock-out ""

I think there should some sort of financial restitution made by critics who use the word "knockout" to refer to a boxing movie.

Posted by EDouglas [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 30, 2007 05:23 PM

comment #4

LYTrules [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

Has Rod Lurie ever made a movie that didn't suck?

Granted, DETERRENCE in some ways seems eerily predictive of the Bush II administration, but it still ain't great. And THE CONTENDER and THE LAST CASTLE were uber-lame.

Posted by LYTrules [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 30, 2007 07:12 PM

comment #5

Breedlove [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...

not a sam jackson fan at all. one-note actor who has been good in maybe three movies - 'pulp fiction,' 'unbreakable,' 'changing lanes' - and made umpteen pieces of shit. josh hartnett is painful to watch as well. and kathryn morris has got to be ten years older than him - wierd casting for his wife.

Posted by Breedlove [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 31, 2007 04:08 PM

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