Flaccid Response to Interstellar Sound Problems by Trades, Major Print

Awareness of the Interstellar sound-mix issues have been kicking around since before the Paramount release opened two days ago. (I first complained about it on 10.24, or the day after the first elite-media screening on 10.23.) You’d have to be deaf and blind not to have heard about them by now, but reporters for the trades and the major print outlets have so far been asleep at the wheel. It’s obviously a huge story — a major filmmaker mixes a film in such a soupy and muddy way that people across the nation and in parts of Europe can’t hear certain portions of the dialogue and are tweeting complaints left and right — but for whatever reason the pros at Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, TheWrap, N.Y. Times, L.A. Times, Wall Street Journal and other print publications aren’t touching it.

From HE’s “Actionman,” received today: “You’re not lying. Either the sound mix was terrible or the people at IMAX said turn it up and keep it up because at the Cinemark in Manchester, CT, in their Imax-lite, you could barely hear dialogue that should’ve been heard. I don’t understand how something like this could happen.”

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Flies in The Face of Evil

This mildly amusing mock trailer is Fox Searchlight-generated and that’s cool, but I don’t think it’s good enough. Birdman Returns is a sequel, mind, so what’s with the generic “in a world of darkness…in a time of chaos” set-up? That’s the kind of broad-stroke, set-up narration you would use for a teaser for the first Birdman flick…no? And why not some dialogue snips of the 1992 Michael Keaton playing Birdman’s debonair alter ego?

No More Mr. Nice Guy

During last night’s A Most Violent Year after-party a friend was telling one of the producers that director J.C. Chandor is “so nice!” Right away I rolled my eyes. I understand the need to flatter and gladhand, but people have to come up with something besides “nice” when they want to show obeisance before power. I guess what my friend meant is that J.C. is extra nice as opposed to run-of-the-mill, no-big-deal nice. Except there isn’t a person in this town who doesn’t wear a pleasant, easy-vibe “nice” face in a professional or social situation. Saying that a person is nice is like saying it’s good that they have both feet or that they have ears on both sides of their head. This town could die of people with “nice” personalities. Regular nice. Effusive nice. Elbow-nudge nice. Extra double-strength gushy nice. Nicey-nice. Quietly nice. Triple somersault nice. Smooth nice. Nice with a double shot of espresso. “So” nice. Inherent nice. Silly playful nice. Perfunctory nice. Sincerely nice. I agree about Mr. Chandor. He’s a good-natured, real-deal alpha guy with a kindly core. And he’s fairly modest to boot. But whenever I hear anyone is “so nice!” it’s almost like chalk on a blackboard.

And Tuesday’s AFI Secret Screening Will Be?

Earlier today AFI Fest announced that a secret screening will happen on Tuesday, 11.11 at 9 pm at the Egyptian. The film that everyone wants to see, of course, is Clint Eastwood‘s American Sniper (Warner Bros., 12.25), but I’m guessing this won’t happen. (WB, a big-shot corporation, likes to show its own films its own way…harumph.) What I suspect is that AFI Fest will show some moderate interest mid-range title, and most likely a December release. Liv Ullman‘s Miss Julie, I’m thinking. Or Jean-Marc Vallee‘s Wild (Fox Searchlight, 12.5), which of course had its big debut at Telluride over two months ago. Or Ridley Scott‘s Exodus: Gods and Kings. Or Tim Burton‘s Big Eyes. It won’t be Angelina Jolie‘s Unbroken because that’s set for its big screenings on 11.30 and 12.1. Hey, what about Annie?

As Good As This Kind Of Thing Can Get

J.C. Chandor‘s A Most Violent Year (A24, 12.31), which screened last night at the Dolby on Hollywood Boulevard, is a smartly written, super-gripping, edge-of-your-seat New York melodrama about a driven but principled businessman (Oscar Isaac), married to the tough daughter of a jailed crime boss (Jessica Chastain), who’s struggling to keep his heating-oil business afloat as he deals with truckjacking, an unstable loan situation and possible prosecution for financial impropriety. It’s not some ultra-violent, blood-smeared thing about relentless shoot-outs and punch-outs and squealing tires. The title definitely misleads. But it’ll grab you and then some, especially if you’re over 15 or 16. If you’re semi-educated and over 25 or 30, pig heaven! Especially if you’ve been watching films all your life or…you know, if you’re an HE regular.

Every performance delivers although I wish more scenes and a grander, darker arc had been given to Chastain, who has three or four times the role here that she does in Interstellar, as well as to Albert Brooks, who scores as Isaac’s droll, even-tempered, slightly corrupt attorney. And every scene has been pruned to the bone, and almost every line is note-perfect. A Most Violent Year is not flawless but it’s damn close to that, at least for my money.

Those looking for visceral thrills (and let’s face it — a lot of apes out there are going to see this thing expecting an adrenaline-fueled ride with a lot of blood on the pavement) should know that A Most Violent Year has one of the best car, running-on-foot and subway chase sequences in a dog’s age or maybe decades. It doesn’t quite match the subway-car chase sequence in The French Connection but it definitely belongs in the same ballpark, and that means it’s been shot and cut so that you can actually follow the action. This sequence alone is worth the price, but there’s a lot more to savor and sink into.

And the sound mix! I realized last night that I’ve been more traumatized by Interstellar‘s soupy sound than I knew because as the lights went down I muttered to myself, “Please, God…don’t make this as murky and bassy and hard to fucking understand as Interstellar. I just want to hear the dialogue…please.” And I did! Every word, phrase and sentence was clear and crisp. I didn’t miss a damn thing.

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