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Talk about Talkies - Movies by Rake Staff

God Is In The Details

Submitted by Peter Schilling on Friday, March 2, 2007

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Zodiac
, 2007. Directed by David Fincher, written by James Vanderbilt. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Mark Ruffalo, Robert Downey Jr., Anthony Edwards, Brian Cox, John Carroll Lynch, Chloe Sevigny, Dermot Mulroney, Philip Baker Hall and Elias Koteas.


Now showing in theaters around town.

There's a scene early on in David Fincher's masterful Zodiac, in which we see the opening routines of the day at The San Francisco Chronicle and a mailman's route to said newspaper. A letter is sorted; simultaneously the reporters grab their coffee en route to work. We see that the letter is hauled in bags through the streets, into the Chronicle building. There, the scribblers meet, sweat over articles, and gather in the editor's office to chew over the events of the day and how they'll lay on the front page. Finally, the secretary has opened the letter and bursts in on the pow-wow, and hands off the note--now bearing dozens of fingerprints--to the editor, who reads the Zodiac killer's note. The chase is on.

Zodiac is not your usual serial killer movie. In fact, those folks with a serious blood lust, hoping for another Se7en experience will be disappointed--there is precious little blood in Zodiac. What we get instead is a very detailed investigation, a chase that takes a path so twisted, so winding, that's it's a wonder that Fincher's able to keep us abreast of everything. But he does. The result is a film about brilliant people (including, perhaps, the killer) and how their pursuits can, and do, warp them. And eventually liberate them, giving them something to live for.

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On a hot Independence Day in 1969, a young couple is seen waiting patiently for the other to make the first move in a secluded spot outside of Vallejo. It's the usual scene: girl with braces, a guy trying to be cool, leading up to the first clumsy kiss. But the girl is married, and a car pulls up. Is it the husband? Thank God, no, they think, until this stranger, a silent, lumbering man, brutally empties his gun into these two. The young man, Mike Magau survived; his date, Darlene Ferrin was pronounced D.O.A. at the hospital.

A short while later, the Chronicle receives that first letters from the killer, who as yet remains nameless. But as the white shirts in the newsroom ponder what to do with this thing, Robert Graysmith (Jake Gyllenhaal), a political cartoonist for the newspaper, finds himself with an unquenchable curiosity, and scribbles down the anagram that the killer included in his letter, and which the murderer claims will identify him, if broken. Assigned to the story is the flamboyant crime writer Paul Avery (Robert Downey Jr., in full-on stoner mode, and outstanding). The two men could not be a better study in contrasts. Graysmith is an avowed Eagle Scout first-class who wants to solve the case Hardy Boys style, while Avery is a coke-snorting, booze-hound who is as eager to analyze the Zodiac killer (making the claim that the guy is a repressed homosexual).

Mirroring these two in the police department are the investigation team of David Toschi (Mark Ruffalo) and William Armstrong (Anthony Edwards). Toschi is a famous cop, the inspiration for Steve McQueen's Bullitt, and eventually Dirty Harry and the Michael Douglas character in Streets of San Francisco. His squarer half, William, is a perfect foil--calm, collected, and both know exactly what they're doing. And when a cabbie is shot by the Zodiac in San Francisco, they're on it like bloodhounds.

The Zodiac killer appealed to this odd collection of men as crossword puzzles attract folks from every walk of life. Their personalities are honed on the chase--Graysmith's dogged civilian pursuit, combing libraries and files; Avery's crack reportage, needling the killer to the point that he (Avery) was a target; and the officers, who are seen pursuing this case with such precision and determination its like watching a great jazz trumpeter riff through the most difficult tune.

Zodiac is a movie about thinking, about how people set their minds to work out problems, and where that path leads them. Here, it leads them down strange alleys and darkened basements, routes that often, so painfully often, end up nowhere. The Zodiac himself changes so often he's like a ghost--he's ambidextrous, throwing handwriting experts off; his notes and cryptograms are so brilliant, referencing dozens of different sources, that three of the four have yet to be deciphered today; his M.O. changed on apparent whims. Obvious suspects are interviewed, investigated, closed in on, and then, with one contradictory piece of evidence, released--and in some cases, reopened, new evidence fingering someone, only, again, to watch that case fall apart.

The Zodiac shot young adults in the dark while they sat in their vehicles; in broad daylight, masked, he stabbed a couple and left them for dead by a lake (again, the man survived, the woman died); he shot a cabbie in one of Frisco's wealthiest sections; he threatened bombings and delivered perfect diagrams of a homemade explosive and threatened to shoot children as they departed a bus; he picked up hitchhikers, killed in the 'burbs and the cities of northern California. Then, when it seems as if the police have settled on a geographical range, it is discovered that he killed far south, near Los Angeles.

To make matters worse, the Zodiac took credit for other's crimes, and then we find there were likely murders he didn't take credit for, in places no one figured he'd go.

Fincher's Zodiac takes a long time to resolve itself, and its ending is profoundly frustrating. The Zodiac case is never wrapped up with tidy little bows and perfect folds, and at times takes on an almost otherworldly sense, as if murder and pursuit are somehow a part of a divine, existential game. Fincher's camera tracks police cars from on high, sometimes at the height of the spans on the Bay Bridge, through the fog. Like some sort of wicked God, he watches as the dots scurry and chase another elusive dot, one that has murdered yet another dot. There is very little emotion, very little terror, but remains an utterly compelling film, with mercilessly little backstory--we get nothing about Graysmith's first divorce, and Fincher never hovers over the marital, emotional, or substance abuse problems of his characters. All of whom, it might be added, are portrayed by a bevy of actors guided by a strong hand like I haven't seen in ages: Gyllenhaal's Graysmith is a wide-eyed Hardy Boy, Bryan Cox's Mario Belli is perfectly hammy, and John Carroll Lynch, as a suspect, is frightening, but never too much so. The rest of the cast is equally sound.

I doubt Zodiac will fare well at the box office, and one can only wonder what The Departed's chances would have been had this film been released in December. As it is, Zodiac is one of the most intelligent thrillers in many a year, and a truly great film.

In brief:

Black Snake Moan (area theaters) is a hideous motion picture. Opening with a wonderful shot of Christina Ricci flipping off a giant tractor, the film is a painful bore. Despite it's chained heroine, it's as timid as if it were written by Nicholas Sparks. Ricci's character finds a not-so-strange redemption from Samuel Jackson, spouting fire and brimstone (but with little of the thrill as his sermons in Pulp Fiction), the nudity is tedious, the direction mundane. A failure on every level (including the rancid singing by Ricci and Jackson)... Tears of the Black Tiger (Lagoon Cinema) is pulpy, violent, melodramatic, turgid and light years more fun than Snake. An homage to Thai westerns of the 60s and 70s, it's the story of a poor young man who cannot marry his true love, the daughter of a wealthy and powerful province governor. So this boy becomes The Black Tiger, and, of course, the girl (who still loves him), becomes engaged to an ambitious cop. A bit too long, but a hypnotic and colorful (my God, the colors!) entertainment... The Italian (Edina Cinema) is a relentlessly bleak film about a young orphan promised to a wealthy Italian couple. Hence his at times derogatory nickname. While waiting for the paperwork to come through, the boy watches in horror as the mother of an orphan long since adopted kills herself in despair. Determined to find his own mom, the kid hightails it from the orphanage and the hunt is on. In spite of its subject, and the myriad of defeats this poor little fellow goes through (try not to cry), The Italian is as hopeful a movie as you'll see, as small characters in this boy's life offer little kindnesses that help him on his way... Amazing Grace (Lagoon Cinema) is awful, a weepy tearjerker about the young stud William Wilberforce (played by the intriguingly named Ioan Gruffudd) who, through his dogged efforts to convince British Parliament to ban slavery, becomes a hero and nearly a saint. Of course, why spend even a lick of time with any of the African protagonists, like Oloudaqh Equiano, an prince who helped convince the hero to act--ignore Equiano's status as a guy who physically survived all the crap Wilberforce yaks about, or that Wilberforce's butler has more memorable lines, or, most egregiously, that Equiano's played by Sengalese singer Youssou N'Dour, who doesn't even sing the title song. A wretched and insulting movie.


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Children, Get Thee To The Library!

Submitted by Peter Schilling on Thursday, March 1, 2007

This weekend, Deb Girdwood and Isabelle Harder's throwing a little movie party at the Central Library downtown. Deb and Isabelle could be called the Queen of Children's Films in the Twin Cities, responsible for the Childish Film Fest at the forthcoming Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film Festival. Harder believes, quite rightly, that there's a dearth of good children's films available on the big screen. There's virtually nothing better than watching a bunch of kids howling with glee at their favorite film, although what they can choose from at the Cineplexes is simply awful.

So where do they go? As adults we get to decide between violence and special effects, stadium seating at the malls, costume dramas at the Edina or German Oscar winners at the Uptown. Children aren't so lucky, and neither are their parents. I wince just thinking about having to take kids to see the upcoming Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Well, to heck with that. What could be a better Saturday morning treat than to pull on those moon boots, ignore the cheap cartoons, and head down to the library to watch perhaps the greatest children's film ever made, The Red Balloon? There'll be dancing to a DJ, and then the classic Iranian film Children of Heaven.

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And you know what? Afterwards, the kids will find themselves... in a library! Where they can check out that delightful story Minn of the Mississippi, also recommended by the river-loving Harder!

The Red Balloon shows at 10:15 in the morning; Children of Heaven at 1:00 pm in Pohlad Hall. Red Balloon is appropriate for kids 3 and up; Children is for 8 and older (due to subtitles).

This series will continue through the 24th, and feature some awesome films. Look here for more information each Thursday!

Conversations Real and Imagined: Scorsese's Acceptance Speech

Submitted by Peter Schilling on Monday, February 26, 2007

At the mention of his name, and with a look of profound relief and that usual squirrel-spark in his eyes, Martin Scorsese nods to himself, rises from his chair and makes his way to the stage. Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola and that tall brunette, whose presence speaks of sold souls, waits to hand Martin his Oscar. Hugs are exchanged. Martin admires the little gold fellow. He steps to the mike, and begins.

Thank you, thank you everybody. Academy members, Steven, Francis, George, boy, this is an honor, thank you so much. I have so many people to thank, I barely know where to begin.

I guess I'll begin by offering my gratitude to Paul Greengrass, Alfonso Cuaron, Pedro Almodovar, Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, Guillermo del Toro, and any other director this year who made powerful and original films, much better than my own. It feels strange being up here, looking down at these directors, remembering when I was beaten by films like Rocky and Ordinary People and Dances With Wolves, a trio of perhaps the most embarrassing Oscar wins in its admittedly weak history. I know what it feels like, boys, to think about the little masterpiece you made and watch that big-budget, heavily-marketed, lugubrious film pass you by. Or the award for the guy who gets it just because he's paid his dues.

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See, I paid my dues. I know The Departed is far from my best, ignores so many of the things that made my other films great, and is such a bald-faced attempt at winning the little gold man that it's nearly embarrassing. But it worked. Now I can move on and make the movies you want me to make.

See, for the longest time I did exactly what I wanted to do, and look at my success--money, popularity, films that are not only acclaimed by critics but the public as well. Good god, you'd be surprised how many people will see me on the streets and go, "You lookin' at me?" or "You think I'm funny? Funny how? Funny like a clown?" or even that guy at the deli who calls himself Rupert Pupkin, claims that he even had his name changed legally. Well that's great. It's wonderful. People know me, they love me. But my best work--just like the best work of the directors I just thanked--didn't get me one of these.

Now you may ask yourself: why the heck do I care if I get an Oscar, when so many great directors never won the gold? Good question. In fact, a friend of mine--he's a sommelier at this great little restaurant in wine country--pointed out how similar my career was to Hitchcock's. Critical and popular. Thrillers that meant more, so much more. Old Hitch's immortal, just as I will be regardless of whether I ever win one of these. Well, my friend's right. I don't know what to say except that these little gold statues are an addiction, I think. I don't know.

A girl no longer in my employ also pointed out that, for a man who directed the life of the Dalai Lama, I sure seem to have jettisoned my Buddhist belief in rejecting attachment. Again, I have to say she's right.

The Oscars are a funny thing, aren't they? I mean, so many people watch them, and tomorrow the sales for The Departed are going to skyrocket. And that's great. If you're going to make it in Hollywood, really you have to sell your soul at least a little bit, and if you want one of these, you have to sell your soul a lot. The statue is a way of showing, to a world of people who might want to live a good and decent life, the sacrifices we make when we want to give you Taxi Driver or GoodFellas. I mean, I try to have it both ways, making those little PBS movies about Dylan and the Blues, but really I can't. I had to hurt or kill a very important part of myself to win an Academy Award, and I did it because... well, I'm still not sure. Right now I'm just giddy to be up here, spilling my guts.

The thing that scares me is this: that same woman who wondered about my Buddhist beliefs also wondered, once I've given myself over to making the kind of movies that will win me an Oscar, if I can ever go back. If I can ever be edgy again. Pure. Or if I'm stuck casting guys like DiCaprio and Nicholson, instead of talented, hungry newcomers. If I'll be able to make the cinema charged with electricity, the way guys like Cuaron and Lynch and Tarantino still do. Guys who don't give a shit about Oscars.

The answer is that I don't know.

Well, at least I've got my Oscar. That's out of the way. Francis, you've got yours. Stephen, you've got yours. Hmm. But I remember, Francis, looking at the your Godfather statuettes, behind that thick glass at your vineyard. I was surprised: yours were almost black. They tarnish so easily, don't they?

How Theater, Music, and a Little Love Toppled the Empire

Submitted by Peter Schilling on Friday, February 23, 2007

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Das Leben der Anderen (The Lives of Others)
, 2006. Written and Directed by Florian Hanckel von Donnersmarck. Starring Ulrich Muhe, Sebastian Koch, Christa-Maria Sieland, Ulrich Tukur, Thomas Thieme, Hans-Uew Bauer, and Volkmar Kleinert.

Now showing exclusively at the Uptown Theatre.

Legend has it that Lenin, upon encountering Beethoven's Appassionata Sonata, claimed that he could not bear to hear it anymore, for it made him want to stroke the heads of men... as opposed to smashing them in, which is what he felt he needed to do to get his revolution off the ground. Filmmaker Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck wondered to himself, "Was it possible to construct a situation in whcih Lenin would be forced to listen to the Appasionata?" In the Lives of Others a man, a functionary who has submerged all of his humanity in pursuit of a perfect state, is forced to listen. And he becomes real.

The Lives of Others begins in an interrogation room, with a poor man accused of... something. We are never sure what, and what doesn't matter. What are sure of, however, is that this is a paranoid country, East Germany, and the Stasi, the secret police of said country, is powerful. The man is shoved into a chair, told to place his hands beneath his thighs, and the questioning begins.

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This guy has no chance, as the state has men like Gerd Weisler (the great Ulrich Muhe) working diligently for them. This opening is brilliant--told in flashback, as Weisler is teaching other young hopefuls the art of wrecking the spirit of their countrymen. Weisler is perfect at his job, betraying only the slightest pride in a job well done, making notes to watch the student who wonders about the morality of some of his techniques. Weisler is almost a machine--he has the patience of a metronome ticking away through a long evening. He will do what it takes to make his prisoners confess, never questioning their guilt. For if they are in the chair in front of him, there can be no question.

His former classmate and now superior, the merrily ambitious Grubitz (Ulrich Tukur), asks his pal Weisler to come to a night of theater. Grubitz is interested in his friend's opinion of the playwright, Georg Dreyman (Sebastien Koch). Dreyman is the darling of the state, and a man who truly believes in the cause of the GDP. It's not enough--we know, deep down, that it is never enough. "I would watch him," Weisler says. And so the man too good to be spied up is spied upon.

Of course, it is Weisler who will spy on Dreyman, and to the snoop's surprise, he will begin to fall in love. Not with Dreyman's lover, the actress Christa-Maria (Martina Gedek), not with Georg, but with the ideas of love and art and honesty. By listening to the lives of others, Weisler comes to understand that they are quite alike.

Weisler's fall, if you can call it that, begins slowly. He is punctual and not to be undone by emotion. But as he listens, he is forced to hear the sounds of two people truly in love, people in love with their plays, with Bertolt Brecht, with their friends, and, in the case of Georg, in love with the idea of the state. This is the film's great conceit: Weisler and Georg are two halves of the same coin--passionate for what they do, ideal citizens, taking to heart what the country is supposed to mean--brotherhood and all its trimmings. Weisler comes to understand that they are more alike, in fact, than his superiors, one of whom is fucking Christa-Maria because he knows a secret that would get her kicked off the stage forever--she is a drug user. Weisler's soon discovers, too, that his friend is simply a pencil-pushing beaurocrat who only wants to move up in the world--he has no qualms ruining the life of a young man simply telling a joke, or ignoring warnings of sabotage if it will hurt his career. Weisler comes to see that it is his subjects who are true to the state, not the party functionaries.

Slowly we come to care for this Weisler, who steals a copy of Brecht, who listens to the music emanating from the apartment below, and who eavesdrops on their lovemaking not as a peeping tom in search of a cheap thrill, but as a poet in search of inspiration, hoping to find love in his own dark heart.

So Weisler intervenes, hiding information and trying to protect his charges, which leads to disastrous results. The Lives of Others is a remarkable film, for its tension, which locks upon you like a vice, forcing you at times to root for the wrong people (such as when Weisler has to bug Georg's building), and its nearly unbearable emotional charge. The film is funny in spots, humane, its plot, worthy of Hitchcock, never getting in the way of rich character development. We come to know every one of these people, and even the tiniest character is shown ground up by the state--and later freed, when the wall comes down.

The jokes in the film offer welcome relief of an almost unbearable tension, but also drive home what this whole world is about, and how disastrous and dehumanizing it was. At one point, Weisler elicits the services of a prositute who, in one of the films many damning jokes, is as much on a schedule as he is in his spy work. Life in the GDP is too comparmentalized to allow for love.

The Lives of Others has two endings. The first is expected, not predictable, but we know good things will not happen. And then the director surprises us, and time moves on, the wall comes down, and there is a brief moment of justice. After years of paranoia, of devouring souls and wrecking lives, the state is broken, and the individual is allowed to flourish. Left nearly broken, our hero, Wiesler, will grab at the small taste of love, poetry, and freedom.


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This Weekend: Gallic Alternatives in Downtown

Submitted by Peter Schilling on Thursday, February 22, 2007

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Le Fils (The Son), 2002. Written and directed by the Dardenne brothers. Starring Olivier Gourmet and Morgan Marinne. Showing Friday night at 7pm.

and for the children:

Les Contes de la Rue Broca. Directed by Pierre Gripari. Showing Sunday afternoon at 2pm.

Both films are being shown downtown at the Alliance Francaise de Minneapolis/St. Paul.

Sick of the Oscars? By now we've had nearly a month of 'controversies', a month of wandering past those bright yellow Little Miss Sunshine boxes at the video store, of hearing the film pundits bark about Dreamgirls. Yeah, you could go and see The Departed or Babel if you really want to, or you could see a movie downtown. And not at Block E. No, you could visit the Alliance Francaise in the heart of the lovely warehouse district, where you can catch, this Friday, the Dardenne Brothers' Le Fils. You could even enjoy the snow they predict will be falling, as you wander out of some fancy restaurant and walk through the romance to the Alliance. In fact, you ought to get some romantic mileage just saying "Alliance Francaise" over dinner--it just sounds sweet, doesn't it?

I do have to say, however, that Le Fils is not exactly an upbeat movie. But it is beautiful, a simple and yet compelling treatise on forgiveness. A week after Valentines Day, maybe you're back to fighting and need some of that. Le Fils is the story of a broken man, Olivier, a shop teacher at a school for wayward boys, who becomes obsessed about one of his charges. That is all you will get from me, for the story unfolds patiently, and when it reveals its secrets, it is devastating.

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More importantly, though, is the Alliance's Sunday children's show. It appears that the AF is going to screen children's features, aimed at the very young (under 7, please), the last Sunday of every month, at least through April. I say 'most importantly' because alternative children's films are scarce. Kids have it rough: where adults can take in Norbit or highbrow fare like Volver, what do kids have? Nothing but third-rate cartoons and CGI on the big screen.

In fact, I would argue that Le Fils would be good fare for the wayward teen. A great night out even if they aren't wayward. But I digress...

Frankly, I couldn't find much on Les Contes de la Rue Broca, except that it seems to be based on a popular French storybook about North African immigrants. The film will be in French (of course) without subtitles. So it looks to be not only a great afternoon treat for your kids in French immersion classes, but a really nifty story about a side of Paris we might not have ever thought about. Which is just what you want from a kids film!

Both features will have light refreshments (popcorn, pop, water--no wine, as this is Minneapolis, not Cannes), and a suggested donation of $5. For directions, visit the Alliance Francaise website.

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