Quartet of Pain

I’m definitely hot to see and am eagerly looking forward to Josh Safdie‘s Marty Supreme (12.25), of course. But that aspect aside, which end-of-the-year film do I want to see the least?

HE’s four most dreaded are, in this order, (a) Paul Feig‘s The Housemaid (12.19), (b) James L. BrooksElla McCay (12.12), (c) Jon M. Chu‘s Wicked: For Good (11.21) and (d) James Cameron’s Avatar: Fire and Ash (12.19)?

I know for a damn fact that each of these four films is going to deliver some degree of serious pain, angst, frustration or pique. Avatar especially, but I have to sit through them anyway so fuck me.

On Top Of Which

No offense but the 1972 Robert Redford (35 or 36) was much better looking than the 2025 Joel Edgerton (51 as of late June), so there’s that also. It’s always more involving, not to mention more pleasant, to watch a good-looking actor cope with grueling physical hardship and the relentlessly brutal terms of outdoor, hand-to-mouth survival than to watch a not-as-good-looking guy do the same.

I’m sorry but life is unfair. Always has been, always will be.

Plus there’s no scene in Train Dreams that delivers the eerie, take-it-or-leave-it finality of Redford reading Hatchet Jack‘s farewell letter.

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“Train Dreams” Is A Malick-y Forest-Primeval Meditation That (a) Initially Intrigues Due To Soulful 1.37 Treescapes and Joel Edgerton’s Minimalist Acting, But (b) Gradually Drains Your Soul Due To A Total Absence of Story Tension…Pollack’s Similar “Jeremiah Johnson” Was Better

Clint Bentley and Greg Kwedar’s Train Dreams (Netflix, 11.21) is a handsome, inoffensive spiritual snore of a period eyebath film.

I sat there like a sack of Idaho potatoes in my IFC Center seat. Not bored but waiting for some sort of narrative edge or obsessive psychology or story tension angle (like the “dirt-poor scruffs hustling a clueless rich guy” scheme in Days of Heaven) to manifest. But nothing happens. Pretty to look at, sure, but what’s that?

I began my viewing as a human being of flesh, blood and bone, but by the time Train Dreams had finished with me I had gradually dissolved into a bowl of soggy, half-warm granola. I didn’t dislike watching it — fine, fine, plodding along — but at the same time I was feeling more and more like 2001’s HAL as Dave Bowman disengaged his logic and memory terminals.

I knew Train Dreams would just shuffle and chop and saw and do the old beast-of-burden thing as it follows the early 20th Century logging life of Joel Edgerton’s Robert Grainier as he submits to a relentlessly exhausting, back-breaking, year-in-and-year-out regimen that will shorten his life and cut him zero breaks as he grows older and older and just mutters and putters and ponders…all of it happening in good old Idaho and the generally splendorific Pacific Northwest region…a life that guarantees black gunk under your fingernails and includes unfortunate brushes with sudden violence and racist ugliness and offers random samplings of shitsandwich fate…a life that fills Robert’s nostrils with pine-needle and wood-chip scents and gives him eyeball orgasms on a daily basis but to what fucking end, bruh?

The truth is that I know a whole lot more about this naturalistic realm than wussy, flabby-bellied film critics because I used to work as a tree-climbing, ornamental-pruning, rope-carrying, spike-wearing, pole saw- and chainsaw-wielding tree surgeon, and that work is solely for young strapping guys, lemme tell ya, as it gradually wears you down and kills your spirit as you get into your 30s and certainly your 40s.

Plus poor Grainier is restricted to axes and hand saws for most of the film (far more grueling than working with chain saws), and it’s sorta kinda like watching a not-bright-enough doomed guy commit slow suicide. You really, really don’t want to do this shit for a living…trust me.

Plus Robert is far too lucky with women, especially for a bearded mook (he’s no Gary Cooper) with zero education and without much access to bar soap or deodorant or dabbings of Aqua Velva.

First he lucks into a loving marriage with Felicity Jones’ Gladys (an actress-pretty buttercup, she pretty much drops into his lap), and a daughter soon follows. Then shit happens (no spoilers) but fortune again smiles as Robert slides into a nice, easygoing thing with dishy, 40ish Kerry Condon. And then a feral woman who may be his long-lost daughter turns up, and she’s rather pretty also.

Where are the homely women with disagreeable personalities and fried-egg breasts and feet badly in need of a pedicure? Robert is two or three steps removed from being a well-behaved gorilla, and yet he’s basically a young Errol Flynn…a babe magnet. Why? Does he give good cunnilingus or something? Being an uneducated logger of few words, does he even know what giving good head is, or what it can amount to?

Oh, and that “please see this on a big movie screen because you won’t get the full effect watching it on Netflix in your living room”? Bad advice because there’s no understanding at least half if not two-thirds of the dialogue (I heard Jones say “saw mill” to Edgerton but that was about it), and so you kinda need those Netflix subtitles.

Am I saying “don’t watch this”? No — it’s a gently touching, mildly engaging film here and there. It never quite bores, but it’s also nothing to jump up and down about. I’ll take Jeremiah Johnson over Train Dreams any day of the week.

Don’t Forget What Those Criterion Teal Lizards Were Up To Six Years Ago

Posted on 1.31.20:

To go by frame captures provided by DVD Beaver’s Gary W. Tooze, the Criterion teal monsters are back, and this time they’ve desecrated Pier Paolo Pasolini‘s Teorema.

Once again, natural or subdued blues have apparently been rendered with a garish teal-green tint. Look at the images. A year and a half ago I asked Tooze if there might be something off about the color tuning on his 4K Bluray players or 4K TV, and his emphatic reply was “I’ve been doing this 18 years, and it’s not me.”

So what is wrong with Criterion? This is vandalism, plain and simple. This is organizational derangement. This has happened three times previously with teal-tinted Blurays of John Schlesinger‘s Midnight Cowboy, Ron Shelton‘s Bull Durham and Brian DePalma‘s Sisters. And nobody has complained except for Tooze (half-heartedly), myself and a handful of thread commenters. And now Teorema.

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Howard Hawks & HE, Sitting Together, Melted Down During “Hamnet”’s Globe Theatre Finale

Early this afternoon Howard Hawks and I saw Chloe Zhao’s Hamnet together at the AMC Lincoln Square. It’s a slow, grim sit, all right…yes, it’s fair to call most of it “rural, less-than-hygienic Elizabethan misery porn”…but lo and behold the Globe Theatre performance finale turns on the feeling.

I actually began to melt, to be honest, and I sensed that hard-nosed Hawks was in a similar emotional place. When a powerful scene gets to you there’s no mistaking the effect. Your eyes slightly water, your throat tightens.

Especially when Jessie Buckley’s Agnes and several other serf-level patrons (i.e., huddled in the orchestra pit) offer gestures of compassion to a dying on-stage Hamlet (Noah Jupe). Yes, Zhao is looking to jerk our emotional chains, but it works. Jupe sells it and Buckley grand-slams it.

Buckley has the Best Actress Oscar in the bag…period, no contest, done.

But Lordy, what a glum, boring, miserable, mostly unsanitary, toil-and-trouble life everyone lived in 15th Century Stratford. Did anyone ever take hot baths? You can almost smell the body odor. I respect the grimy, sweaty, greasy-haired realism that Zhao was determined to convey, but my God…did the serfs have any kind of soap back then?

Friendo #1: “Buckley absolutely deserves the Oscar. Her name is already engraved. The Globe climax is far and away the best ending out of any movie this year. But does a great ending make a great movie?”

HE reply: “Honestly? I think the misery stuff is overbaked. It’s such a grim, grimey and anguished slog before that Globe theatre finale.”

Hawks to HE, Friendo #1: “It doesn’t have three great scenes and no bad ones. It has one great finale while Sentimental Value has at least three great scenes, if not four or five.”

Friendo #2: “The Globe theatre Hamlet sequence is beyond preposterous, but if you close your eyes and pretend that you know nothing about Hamlet, yes, it works in a rather fake but well-staged ‘Will showed his love and grief through his art!” Pavlovian tearjerker way.

“And yes, the Best Actress Oscar race is over.”

I Can’t Wait To Ignore “Rental Family” For The Rest Of My Life

And here’s why: The trailer offers a moment when a young Japanese girl (Shannon Mahina Gorman) not only overcomes her initial discomfort with her pretend daddy (Brendan Fraser) but rests her head on his shoulder. And then Fraser makes a typical actor’s mistake by looking at Gorman. I hate “looks” in tender scenes of this sort.

Let it in and feel it deep down, of course, but don’t fucking act it.

Sentimental Value has no emotional actorish “looks” at all. Every moment, every conveyance feels steady and bottom-line real.

Knopfler Tapped Into Something

Every so often a song will turn a lock and just…I don’t know, push some kind of hidden button in your head or heart, and a whole floodwash of feeling and memory will just pour out.

All hail the great Mark Knopfler, who turned 76 last August. Those Dire Straits years (especially the late ’70s to late ’80s) were wonderful.

One Of The Greatest Comment Thread Marathons…Ever

The snarky, morally reactive, curiously wild comment deluge in response to Scott Lemieux’s “The Inevitable Rehabilitation of Livvy”, an 11.15 riff about Jacob Bernstein’s N.Y. Times profile of Olivia Nuzzi, is one for the ages. Wowsah! Yowsah! The site is lawyersgunsmoneyblog.

Lemieux describes the Bernstein piece as a “horny profile,” and that kicks it off. 340 comments as of 5:30 am eastern, and a fair-sized percentage are (take your pick) pithy, nauseated (as opposed to nauseating), hilarious, raw, tasty, sobering and at times head-turning.

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