Most Wanted
Email here for additions & corrections.

Il Grido
(Antonioni, 1957)

The Fortune
(Nichols, 1975)

-30-
(Webb, 1959)

Betrayal
(Jones, 1983)

Play It As It Lays
(Perry, 1972)

The Outfit
(Flynn, 1973)

Alex in Wonderland
(Mazursky, 1969)

The Legend of Lylah Clare
(Aldrich, 1968)

In The Cool of the Day
(Stevens, 1963)

That Cold Day in the Park
(Altman, 1969)

The Fox
(Rydell, 1967)

Thumb Trippin'
(Masters, 1972)

Midas Run
(Kjellin, 1969)

At Long Last Love
(Bogdanovich, 1973)

Brewster McCloud
(Altman, 1972)

Outcast of the Islands
(Reed, 1951)

Mike's Murder
(Bridges, 1984)

Reader Submissions

1930's-1950's
The Moon's Our Home
(Seiter, 1936)
Sh! The Octopus
(McGann, 1937)
The Mating Season
(Leisen, 1951)
Bad for Each Other
(Rapper, 1953)
The Phenix City Story
(Karlson, 1955)
Run of the Arrow
(Fuller, 1956)
House of Secrets
(Green, 1956)
Saint Joan
(Preminger, 1957)
Macabre
(Castle, 1958)
The Fiend Who Walked the West
(G. Douglas, 1958
Five Gates to Hell
(Clavell, 1959)
1960's
Key Witness
(Karlson, 1960)
Summer and Smoke
(Glenville, 1961)
The Chapman Report
(Cukor,1962)
Bachelor Flat
(Tashlin, 1962) [on Hulu]
The L Shaped Room
(Forbes, 1963)
The Chalk Garden
(Neame, 1964)
A Thousand Clowns
(Coe, 1965)
You're a Big Boy Now
(Coppola, 1966)
The Whisperers
(Forbes, 1967)
Dark of the Sun
(Cardiff, 1968)
Skidoo
(Preminger, 1968)
Last Summer
(Perry, 1969)
The Comic
(C. Reiner, 1969)
1970-1974
The Revolutionary
(Williams, 1970)
The Landlord
(Ashby, 1970)
Diary of a Mad Housewife
(Perry, 1970)
Tropic of Cancer
(Strick, 1970)
I Never Sang for My Father
(Cates, 1970)
Sometimes a Great Notion
(Newman, 1971)
Marriage of a Young Stockbroker
(Turman, 1971)
'Doc'
(Perry, 1971)
The Music Lovers
(Russell, 1971)
Drive, He Said
(Nicholson, 1971)
The Steagle
(Sylbert, 1971)
The Last Movie
(Hopper, 1971)
Made For Each Other
(Bean, 1971)
The Day the Clown Cried
(Lewis, 1972)
Hickey & Boggs
(Culp, 1972)
The Carey Treatment
(Edwards, 1972)
Pete 'n' Tillie
(Ritt, 1972)
Slither
(Zieff, 1973)
Love and Pain and the Whole Damn Thing
(Pakula, 1973)
Man on a Swing
(Perry, 1974)
Open Season
(Collinson, 1974)
The Tamarind Seed
(Edwards, 1974)
Law and Disorder
(Passer, 1974)
Homebodies
(Yust, 1974)
Stardust
(Apted, 1974)
Celine and Julie Go Boating
(Rivette, 1974)
1975-1979
Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins
(Richards, 1975
At Long Last Love
(Bogdanovich, 1975)
Hearts of the West
(Zieff, 1975)
Welcome to L.A.
(Rudolph, 1976)
W.C. Fields and Me
(Hiller, 1976)
Citizens Band
(Demme, 1977)
Twilight's Last Gleaming
(Aldrich, 1977)
Looking for Mr. Goodbar
(Brooks, 1977)
Girlfriends
(Weill, 1978)
Movie Movie
(Donen, 1978)
The Medusa Touch
(Gold, 1978)
American Hot Wax
(Mutrux, 1978)
Hot Stuff
(DeLuise, 1979)
Scavenger Hunt
(Schultz , 1979)
Players
(Harvey, 1979)
Rich Kids
(Young, 1979)
Nightwing
(Hiller, 1979)
Screams of a Winter's Night
(Wilson, 1979
When You Comin' Back Red Ryder?
(Katselas, 1979
1980's
Resurrection
(Petrie, 1980)
The Awakening
(Newell, 1980)
Simon
(Brickman, 1980)
God's Angry Man
(Herzog, 1980)
Fast-Walking
(Harris, 1982)
Twice Upon a Time
(Korty & Swenson, 1983)
Trouble in Mind
(Rudolph, 1985)
When the Wind Blows
(Murikami, 1986)
Housekeeping
(Forsyth, 1987)
The Glass Menagerie
(Newman, 1987)
Patty Hearst
(Schrader, 1988)
Running on Empty
(Lumet, 1988)
Drowning by Numbers
(Greenaway, 1988)
Haunted Summer
(Passer, 1988)
The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years
(Spheeris, 1988)
1990's
Men Don't Leave
(Brickman, 1990)
Old Times
(Curtis, 1991)
Prospero's Books
(Greenaway, 1991)
City of Hope
(Sayles, 1991)
The Baby of Macon
(Greenaway, 1993)
King of the Hill
(Soderbergh, 1993)
Dadetown
(Hexter, 1995)
SubUrbia
(Linklater, 1997)

Upcoming

June 11

Tetro

June 12

Call of the Wild 3D

Food, Inc.

Imagine That

Moon

Sex Positive

The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3

Youssou N'Dour: I Bring What I Love

June 16

Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg

June 19

$9.99

Dead Snow

The Proposal

Whatever Works

Year One

June 24

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen

June 26

Cheri

Fireflies in the Garden

The Hurt Locker

My Sister's Keeper

The Stoning of Soraya M. 

Surveillance 

July 1

Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs

Public Enemies

July 3

The Girl from Monaco

I Hate Valentine's Day

July 10

Bruno

I Love You, Beth Cooper

Soul Power

July 15

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

July 17

(500) Days of Summer

All the Boys Love Mandy Lane

July 24

All Good Things

The Answer Man

G-Force

In the Loop

Orphan

The Ugly Truth

July 29

Adam

July 31

The Cove

Funny People

Lorna's Silence

They Came from Upstairs

August 7

G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra

Julie & Julia

Paper Heart

Shorts

When in Rome

August 14

A Perfect Getaway

Bandslam

District 9

The Goods: The Don Ready Story

I Sell the Dead

Ponyo

Pool Boys

Spread

Taking Woodstock

The Time Traveler's Wife

August 21

Five Minutes of Heaven

Goose on the Loose!

Inglorious Bastards

It Might Get Loud

Post Grad

World's Greatest Dad

August 28

The Boat that Rocked

Final Destination: Death Trip

H2

September 4

All About Steve

Amreeka

Black Dynamite

Carriers

Citizen Game

Extract

Pandorum

Shanghai

September 9

9

September 11

The Red Canvas

Tyler Perrys: I Can Do It All Myself

Whiteout

September 17

The Burning Plain

September 18

Armored

Brand New Day

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs

Jennifer's Body

Splice

September 25

Fame

The Invention of Lying

Surrogates

October 2

A Serious Man

More Than a Game

Sorority Row

Toy Story/Toy Story 2

Che in Hollywood

Steven Soderbergh's Che shows tonight at the AFI Fest inside the big Chinese theatre, and I will be in attendance. This will be my third time and the honest-to-God truth is that I can't wait to slip into it again. For me the Che experience is not unlike how Tom Wolfe once described the experience of settling into the Sunday New York Times -- "that great public bath, that vat, that spa, that regional physiotherapy tank, that White Sulphur Springs, that Marienbad, that Ganges, that River Jordan for a million souls."


Che, in other words, isn't a pamphlet or a short story or tight three-act "movie" to be savored with a tub of popcorn and a "do it to me" attitude. It's about luxurious feasting as long as you understand the kind of feast that it is. A big and filling one, certainly, in terms of realism and theme and transportation, but served without conventional "story", patented emotionalism, movie moments, dessert, coffee, appetizers, waiters, napkins, brandy or any of your standard four-star restaurant perks.

Obviously I'm not mentioning Che's subject matter, cinematography, real-life history, performances, etc. I just can't do it again. Not now anyway. I've written about it so many times it's coming out of my ears.

The people who nip-nip-nipped into this film in Cannes will, I believe, someday eat their words. If, that is, the prevailing opinion trend, which I'm told is starting to move for Che after six months of Cannes after-effect, actually manifests. Among the guilds and the branches, I mean. In which case the nip-nippers will begin to pretend that they liked it all along.

Perhaps there is, in fact, some kind of positive counter-surge brewing among those who are not critics. In the same way that 2001: A Space Odyssey, dumped on by big-city critics when it opened in April 1968, was saved by doobie-tokers. By this I mean people with the apparent capacity to enjoy a film that doesn't do "drama" and just roll with what it is and what it does.

For me this boils down to the savoring of naturalistic experience, behavior, aroma -- a kind of high-end movie versimilitude trip that isn't trying to arouse and soothe in a campfire-tale sort of way but is strangely immersive all the same.


"Both in its contentious content -- Guevara is a hero to some and a scoundrel to others -- and its demanding form, Che is a direct challenge to audiences," declared L.A. Times guy Mark Olsen in a 10.31 article. "Depending on who you ask, Che is either Soderbergh's greatest masterwork or his grandest folly."

Che is so fully realized and so completely off on its own humid jungle trail that many don't get what it's doing. It is in no way a folly.

Seven weeks ago in Toronto Che producer Laura Bickford called it "this generation's Lawrence of Arabia." I made this analogy exactly two years ago, and have been flogging the Lawrence thing like a dead horse ever since. I said it in an April '08 piece I wrote for the Huffington Post. I said it again in an interview in La Opinion.

IFC yesterday announced its release plans for the two-art epic. The entire four hour-plus version (with a half-hour intermission) will have a digital roadshow booking on 12.12 at Manhattan's Zeigfeld and the Landmark in LA. The film will return to those two markets on 1.9.09 in two parts, expaninding into the top 25 markets on 1.16.09 and 1.22.09. On 1.21.09 both parts -- titled The Argentine and Guerilla -- will be available separately in both standard and HD via the company's cable VOD platform. An exclusive Blockbuster home video release will follow.

Exclusive to Blockbuster? Those people are evil.

In the HuffPost piece, written last April, I wrote, "Hey, how about presenting the two films as a single, gargantuan Lawrence of Arabia-styled deal with an intermission, running between four or four and a half hours?" I was half-joking at the time.

I also wrote, "Given the indisputable fact that we are living in the most dumbed-down era of American moviegoing (certainly in terms of the mass audience) since the invention of the movie camera, how many popcorn-munchers are going to be willing, much less eager, to go four hours plus with Che Guevara? Especially given their reluctance to support even Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez's Grindhouse, a two-part, three-hour popcorn movie about hot women, zombies and car chases?"

Quantum Opener<< previous | next >>Hemlock

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on November 1, 2008 at 11:26 AM

comment #1

BurmaShave Author Profile Page says ...

So what will be eligible Oscar-wise? The single opus, or each of the two parts?

Posted by BurmaShave Author Profile Page at November 1, 2008 1:35 PM

comment #2

LexG Author Profile Page says ...

I will be getting OWNED by this in t-minus 3 hours.

Posted by LexG Author Profile Page at November 1, 2008 3:10 PM

comment #3

Chase Kahn Author Profile Page says ...

I can't wait to be able to sit down in a big theater and just soak it all in at once (including 30 min intermission). I hope I get the opportunity.

Posted by Chase Kahn Author Profile Page at November 1, 2008 3:16 PM

comment #4

Edward Author Profile Page says ...

I too would love the full immersion. Excited about seeing how the Red digital looks too.

Posted by Edward Author Profile Page at November 1, 2008 3:36 PM

comment #5

TedM Author Profile Page says ...

Yeah Blockbuster ... apparently they have the exclusive on IFC releases and I'm pissed about it. I missed a couple of films that were available on demand because of travel and work and now I can only get them through Blockbuster. I just am not sure if I want to join that craptastic company just to see the movies or if I should wait another year or so until they turn up on IFC's TV channel.

Posted by TedM Author Profile Page at November 1, 2008 4:13 PM

comment #6

Balthazar Author Profile Page says ...

WTF is Orlando Bloom doing in the dead center of that first photo??? Is he in this? It must blow.

Posted by Balthazar Author Profile Page at November 1, 2008 10:00 PM

comment #7

LexG Author Profile Page says ...

It's not Orlando Bloom, it's Rodrigo Santoro, from Lost and Redbelt and Carandiru. Guy fucking owns.

Anyway, the only thing more awesome than seeing this all at once at the Chinese, was seeing Wells skulking around the place looking every bit as awesome and grumpy and bad-ass as he comes off in print. May I just say, that is one guy I would NOT mess with. At one point the guy was standing around eyeballing the crowd like five feet away, and for a split second I thought, hey, maybe I should introduce myself as a HE regular...

...then IMMEDIATELY thought the wiser.

Excellent movie; Reminded me a lot of TRAFFIC in terms of coolness of tone combined with impeccable filmmaking. Seeing them back to back was interesting, because each definitely has its own tone and look (and even ASPECT RATIO!-- the first half is in lush widescreen, the second is in desaturated 1.85 '70s stock)...

Thought there was a bit of a loss of berrings somewhere in the first half of Part Two, kind of a Full Metal Jacket vibe where it feels itself out and kind of dawdles before rallying at the end with an intense climax both epic and intimate.

Though still not sure a movie that's 95% subtitled is a good idea at the CHINESE, where there isn't stadium seating... ushers and latecomers were making people furious over missing random titles, plus most of us spent four hours craning over people's big-ass heads to see the chyron.

Big tip of the cap to the lady with the crimped high ponytail sitting directly in front of me.

Posted by LexG Author Profile Page at November 2, 2008 12:58 AM

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