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Sep. 15th, 2024 12:56 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Over the summer I've seen a large-for-me number of movies, several of them in theaters (repertory and new) that I've been meaning to capsule review.
Johnny Eager
genarti and I went to go see this with
sovay back in -- damn, the documentary evidence says April, which is longer ago than I thought -- and I have been meaning to write about it all this time and now can't remember much of what I wanted to say except that for a movie the basic plot of which is "world's handsomest crime man gaslights girlfriend for crime reasons but Eventually Feels Bad" it's incredibly sharp and fun to watch ... now of course a big part of that is the fact that Mr. Johnny Eager has a sad drunken live-in boyfriend who is always there in the background making classical allusions at him, like Grantaire if his obsessive tastes swung in the exact opposite direction of the ethical spectrum. Every scene featuring Jeff is the least heterosexual thing I've seen since I watched Gilda (also with
sovay) (really an unsurprisingly incredible track record here). I came out of this movie desperate to make people watch Jeff's introductory scene as a teaser and was so disappointed that no one had clipped it that eventually I had to do it myself; :
and does Johnny Eager die tenderly clutched in his Boswell's arms while planning a fantasy vacation they'll never take? ABSOLUTELY he does. why would you even ask that question.
The Rocketeer
It came up that neither Beth nor I had seen this Disney movie about a 1930s stunt pilot who finds a jetpack and is subsequently pursued by a combo of The Mob and evil British actor Timothy Dalton, playing evil Nazi British actor not!Timothy Dalton. The lead is the most generic looking nineties action hero man I've ever met but Jennifer Connolly as his girlfriend who is trying to break into Hollywood is great and the whole lengthy in which she Exercises her Acting Ability against Evil Timothy Dalton makes the movie worth the price of admission.
I Saw the TV Glow
The one about a TV show that alters your understanding of reality and of yourself. I've turned this one over a lot in my head; I don't know that I have a lot to say about it, but I really wanted to see it in theaters and I'm really glad I did.
Thelma
Also really wanted to see this one in theaters for very different reasons! An grandmother who gets phone scammed sets out on an Epic Quest Across Town to get revenge on her scammer; uses its really charming riffs on action movie beats as a thoughtful exploration on aging, independence and autonomy. I loved the way the grandmother and grandson were both struggling for agency in the same way and also contributed to infantilizing each other; I also loved when Thelma went to her friend's retirement home the 'meeting a contact at a stripper bar' trope was repeated beat for beat with an in-house exercise class. Just an extremely fun time.
White Heat
Went to see
shati's to see this one as a double feature with Infernal Affairs which I also had never seen. The thing that's striking to me, though -- especially in contrast with Infernal Affairs -- is how much a g-man going undercover in prison to gain the trust of a gangster is not presented as any kind of corrupting or morally ambivalent endeavor. When FBI agent Hank saves Cody's life, gets Cody to trust and confide in him, and (textually, they talk about this) fills the psychological hole left by the death of Cody's ma, I think we're supposed to admire Hank's courage and competency but we are absolutely not supposed to think it tragic that Hank is building this relationship towards inevitable profound interpersonal betrayal; there is no lingering on the emotional element of this whatsoever, because Cody Is A Criminal Psychopath. And I don't like Cody any more than the film wants me to like Cody! He does so many murders! But I don't like Hank either because I do actually think you should feel bad for getting someone to trust you profoundly when you know you're going to betray them, and I do think it's interesting that Cody's the only person in the film who shows any sign of having human affection for anybody.
Infernal Affairs
Now here is a movie that understands that when you go undercover for a long period of time you are confronting the loss of your own identity and inevitable profound interpersonal betrayal! Sometimes the classics did have to walk so that the stories that we tell on top of them can run.
Johnny Eager
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and does Johnny Eager die tenderly clutched in his Boswell's arms while planning a fantasy vacation they'll never take? ABSOLUTELY he does. why would you even ask that question.
The Rocketeer
It came up that neither Beth nor I had seen this Disney movie about a 1930s stunt pilot who finds a jetpack and is subsequently pursued by a combo of The Mob and evil British actor Timothy Dalton, playing evil Nazi British actor not!Timothy Dalton. The lead is the most generic looking nineties action hero man I've ever met but Jennifer Connolly as his girlfriend who is trying to break into Hollywood is great and the whole lengthy in which she Exercises her Acting Ability against Evil Timothy Dalton makes the movie worth the price of admission.
I Saw the TV Glow
The one about a TV show that alters your understanding of reality and of yourself. I've turned this one over a lot in my head; I don't know that I have a lot to say about it, but I really wanted to see it in theaters and I'm really glad I did.
Thelma
Also really wanted to see this one in theaters for very different reasons! An grandmother who gets phone scammed sets out on an Epic Quest Across Town to get revenge on her scammer; uses its really charming riffs on action movie beats as a thoughtful exploration on aging, independence and autonomy. I loved the way the grandmother and grandson were both struggling for agency in the same way and also contributed to infantilizing each other; I also loved when Thelma went to her friend's retirement home the 'meeting a contact at a stripper bar' trope was repeated beat for beat with an in-house exercise class. Just an extremely fun time.
White Heat
Went to see
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Infernal Affairs
Now here is a movie that understands that when you go undercover for a long period of time you are confronting the loss of your own identity and inevitable profound interpersonal betrayal! Sometimes the classics did have to walk so that the stories that we tell on top of them can run.
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Date: 2024-09-18 03:31 am (UTC)The wild thing is, looking Billy Campbell up now, I see that he had large supporting roles in two things I've seen a million times: Bram Stoker's Dracula and the Tales of the City miniseries. And yet I could not have told you he was in either of those, or that the guy who played Quincey in the first was the same actor who played Jon in the second, or that either of them were the same actor as in The Rocketeer or Star Trek: TNG. It's like the man is a walking contagion of face blindness.