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Rhyme and Reason

~ Poetry Meets Film Reviews

Rhyme and Reason

Category Archives: Writing

Rocky III (1982)

04 Friday Jul 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

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Drama, Sports

Three years after Rocky’s win against Apollo Creed,
He’s still the champ and has the cash to finally succeed.
He’s no more just a bum; he’s Philly’s fighting favorite son
And can afford a charity match that’s turbulent but “fun.”
 
When Rocky’s famous statue’s being unveiled for a crowd,
A challenger named “Clubber” Lang intrudes a bit too loud.
He says he wants a match with Rock and will destroy the “fool,”
And Rocky wants to fight him too and take him back to school.
 
But something Clubber says makes Rocky ask his trainer Mick
If his past fights were set-ups, won through Mickey’s careful pick.
Though Mickey chose opponents Rocky certainly could beat,
He did it to protect him from the torment of defeat.
 
This Clubber is too hungry, too robust and young and strong,
For Rocky to face off against and share the ring for long.
Yet Rocky doesn’t listen, and he doesn’t train his best,
And when the fight arrives, poor Mickey clutches his own chest.
 
Mick’s heart is giving out, and this unsettles Rocky so,
That he can’t hold his own tonight and loses by K-O.
He cannot bring himself to tell his trainer that he failed,
And Mickey dies in Rocky’s arms, believing he prevailed.
 
Apollo comes to Rocky with an offer unexpected,
To train him that his pride and his career be resurrected.
He takes him to his L.A. gym where his own path began,
And Rocky relearns boxing through Apollo’s training plan.
 
But Rocky’s heart’s not in it; he’s afraid to fight because
Perhaps he wasn’t quite as skilled as he believed he was,
But Adrian, his wife, insists he salvage his career,
But he himself must do his best and conquer all his fear.
 
From then on out, he labors hard to raise his strength and speed.
Before long, he can outrun his new friend Apollo Creed.
The night arrives for Lang and Rocky’s rematch for the title;
While Rocky looks determined, Clubber’s looking homicidal.
 
As Rocky holds his own and Lang’s strong punching doesn’t work,
The former champ is trying to provoke, annoy, and irk.
Soon, Clubber’s rage is blinding, and then Rocky lets it rip
And knocks him out to retake the world boxing championship.
 
When all is said and done, when there’s no media or talk,
Apollo seeks a friendly rematch with his rival Rock.
_________________
 

Perhaps Rocky IV would have been a more patriotic film for Independence Day, and I certainly like it as well (it has some of the best musical montages of the whole series), but I prefer Rocky III over any of the other sequels. It’s pretty much the usual plotline with Rocky Balboa facing a big fight, which he ends up training hard for and winning at the end, but this third film throws in some variables that make it special.

Perhaps the biggest emotional punch is the death of Burgess Meredith’s gruff trainer Mickey Goldmill. Since he was already old at the start of the series, his heart troubles are certainly believable, and his death scene really is heartbreaking. The other thing that sets this film apart is Mr. T as Clubber Lang. Though he was nominated for a Golden Raspberry for Worst New Star, I think he’s the best antagonist of the Rocky films. While Rocky IV’s Drago was practically a machine and Apollo Creed was moderately sympathetic, Clubber is so in-your-face belligerent with his patented “I-pity-the-fool” delivery that it’s that much more satisfying when he is finally defeated. I also appreciate how Apollo becomes more of a friendly rival, helping Rocky to “rise up to the challenge of [his] rival.”

The training scenes aren’t the best of the series, but Hulk Hogan has a fun cameo as Thunderlips, “the Mountain of Molten Lust,” and the final fight with Lang is a stand-out. Unlike almost all the others in which Rocky’s hard head just takes a pounding to basically outlast the other guy, here he actually uses a strategy to make Clubber so angry that he tires himself out so that Rocky can overcome. Rocky’s actually active and more conscious by the end of the fight so that there can be a nice little post-fight scene with Apollo. Also, Survivor’s ”Eye of the Tiger” perfectly bookends the film and earns placement in my End Credits Song Hall of Fame. Rocky III may be rather predictable, but it’s formula done well.

Best line: (Rocky, referring to Thunderlips, the wrestling champ) “Wow, he’s awful big. Hey, Mick, how much do you think he eats?”
(Mickey) “About 202 pounds.”
(the announcer, introducing Rocky) “Weighing in at 202 pounds…”

 

Artistry: 7
Characters/Actors: 9
Entertainment: 9
Visual Effects: N/A
Originality: 8
Watchability: 9
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60

 

Next: #188 – Twister

© 2014 S. G. Liput

146 Followers and Counting

 

#190: Hello, Dolly (1969)

03 Thursday Jul 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

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Comedy, Family, Musical, Romance

Back in 1890 Yonkers,
Dolly Levi always conquers
Any obstacle she sees.
Love and money have compelled her
To seek Horace Vandergelder,
Who’ll be hers, she guarantees.
 
Though he is a cross curmudgeon,
He just needs a little nudge on
Choosing her above the rest.
As a mover and a shaker
And New York’s most loved matchmaker,
She’s not easily suppressed.
 
After Horace tears to pieces
A beloved of his niece’s,
He intends to look for joy.
With the cash at his disposal,
He is planning a proposal
To New York’s Irene Malloy.
 
Since his feed store must stay open,
He puts his reluctant hope in
His two unfulfilled young clerks.
Once he’s gone, Cornelius Hackl
And pal Barnaby then tackle
Life at large and all its perks.
 
Dolly tells the two assistants
Of the heaven-sent existence
Of two women meant for them.
So they journey with elation
To Irene Malloy’s location,
Thinking they’ll each find a gem.
 
While Irene and gal pal Minnie
Like the pair, naïve and skinny,
Both employees quickly hide
When their boss arrives to proffer
Miss Malloy a marriage offer,
Till he learns of men inside.
 
Dolly then begins preparing
For a date night they’ll be sharing,
Though the poor clerks are afraid.
She ties off her latest scheming
As the city streets are teeming
For the 14th Street Parade.
 
By the time that night is falling,
All the characters are calling
On the restaurant that she chose.
Both the clerks cannot afford to
Spend a lot, though they’re implored to,
And their bluffing frankly shows.
 
Dolly’s welcomed with much fanfare;
Horace is her chosen man there,
Though she causes him much stress.
Dolly has arranged a chance for
His niece and her beau to dance for
Contest money to impress.
 
Mr. Hackl starts confessing
With Irene and Minnie’s blessing,
For they knew it all along.
They then try to be the winner
Of the dance to pay for dinner,
But then everything goes wrong.
 
Horace sees his niece cavorting
With the man he’d banned from courting,
And he quickly goes berserk.
What a messy picture this is!
Both his workers he dismisses
When he sees they’re not at work.
 
During this confused occasion,
There’s some stealthy pay evasion,
As two couples sneak away.
Hackl and Irene now know that
They’re in love, and both then show that
In a song to end the day.
 
Dolly then leaves Vandergelder,
Who regrets he ever smelled her,
But that changes very soon.
Back in Yonkers, he’s unmarried,
With no workers to be harried,
Just a lonely rich tycoon.
 
Dolly and the rest come calling,
And he sees no point in stalling,
So he asks her in his life.
She suggests that he be smarter
And take Hackl as a partner,
And she’s glad to be his wife.
_________________
 

Coming just a year after her rise to stardom in 1968’s Funny Girl, Hello, Dolly gave Barbra Streisand yet another enduring musical role that seems perfect for her. Many criticized the fact that she was only 27 years old at the time, perhaps too young for the role of a pushy widow seeking a husband. Yet she makes the role her own and fills it with such fast-talking chutzpah that I can’t see anyone else playing Dolly Levi. Carol Channing may have been the immortal Dolly on Broadway, but in my opinion (and my VC’s) Streisand blows her away, in both the strength and the mellifluence of her voice.

Walter Matthau sings for the first and only time in his career (that I’m aware of) as the bossy and crotchety storeowner Horace Vandergelder. Michael Crawford also does a fine job as Cornelius Hackl and is so lovably nerdy that it’s hard to believe he’s the original Tony-winning Phantom of the Opera. All the other roles are filled ideally, and Louis Armstrong’s cameo during the title song is classic as all get-out.

The music itself is wonderful stuff. From Mr. Vandergelder’s humorously selfish “It Takes a Woman” to the charming, street-walking “Elegance,” the songs clearly have just the right balance of humor, clever lyrics, and hummable tunes. “Hello, Dolly” is another great number, and the entire part in the Harmonia Gardens Restaurant is filled with energetic physical comedy and Michael Kidd’s impressive choreography. And of course, there are the two songs made even more timeless by their inclusion in the Pixar film WALL-E, those being “Put on Your Sunday Clothes” and “It Only Takes a Moment.” A few of the unnecessary songs like “Love Is Only Love” slow the film down a bit, but showstoppers like “Before the Parade Passes By” truly make the film (Streisand’s long end note is awe-inspiring). My personal favorite, though, is the opening song “Just Leave Everything to Me,” which was written specifically for the film and Barbra Streisand.

Hello, Dolly isn’t my favorite musical, even though I love most of the songs. Perhaps I don’t care for Dolly’s overly pushy manner. I mean, Mr. Vandergelder was an overbearing, self-centered boor, but by the end, I almost sympathized with his exasperation. His turnaround and marriage proposal are rather sudden, yet it shows Dolly knew just the right buttons to push to get the desired outcome. Despite Dolly’s busybody personality, Streisand sells it for the most part, and she and Crawford are perfectly cast. My VC loves the film even more than I, and though other musicals and Barbra Streisand films are higher on my list, this one stands out as a Broadway-style gem.

Best line: (Vandergelder, to his niece’s beloved Ambrose) “You are a seven-foot-tall nincompoop!”   (Ambrose) “That’s an insult!”   (Vandergelder) “All the facts about you are insults!”

VC’s best line: (Vandergelder, while being shaved) “Eighty percent of the people in the world are fools, and the rest of us are in danger of contamination.”

 
Artistry: 8
Characters/Actors: 9
Entertainment: 9
Visual Effects: N/A
Originality: 8
Watchability: 8
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60
 

Next: #189 – Rocky III

© 2014 S. G. Liput

146 Followers and Counting

 

Joyeux Noël (2005)

02 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

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Christmas, Drama, History, War

In 1914, war began,
Embraced by most, except a few.
As nations called on every man,
The horror of it came in view.
 
The Scots, the Germans, and the French
Were fortified on Christmas Eve.
Each army huddled in its trench,
No reinforcements to relieve.
 
Then, lo, there rose a single voice,
A tenor on the German side,
Reminding them to still rejoice,
For Christ was born for all worldwide.
 
The Scots employed their instrument
To complement the brave recruit,
And everybody was content
To lend an ear instead of shoot.
 
The three commanders met that night,
To call a temporary truce,
To share champagne instead of fight,
To put their time to better use.
 
A Scottish priest performed a Mass
For every soldier, friend or foe,
And one attending German lass
Performed soprano in the snow.
 
Although the night soon ran its course,
The morning saw increased rapport.
They could not dole out death and force
On those they met the night before.
 
Instead, they gathered hand in hand,
The dead of every camp to bury,
And they transformed no man’s land
Into one large cemetery.
 
When shelling was to be dispersed,
The Germans warned their rival friend,
And when their places were reversed,
The Scots let courtesy extend.
 
Yet friendship was not meant to last,
For when superiors heard tell
Of what occurred, they were aghast
And punished all such personnel.
 
Though others thought their acts a shame,
The men who lived that silent night
Were proud to greet their foe by name
And share in peace on earth outright.
________________
 

Time to kick off Christmas in July with Joyeux Noël, which is French for Merry Christmas.There aren’t many foreign-language films on my list, but this one has a unique blend of languages, since it presents an amazing event during World War I from the point of view of German, Scottish, and French soldiers. All three languages are spoken side by side, not only heightening the film’s realism but also allowing English, French, and German-speaking viewers to hear their own language a third of the time.

The film wonderfully humanizes its characters and doesn’t set out to cast any side as the villain. True, Austria-Hungary and Germany were the aggressors, but, unlike the Second World War, I don’t believe there was true evil fueling the conflict. World War I was mainly fought over border disputes and entangling alliances, and the soldiers in the trenches were present only out of duty to their nations, not malice toward the opposing side. Of course, war forces countries to inevitably demonize their enemies in order to give their troops the drive to fight (as is hauntingly illustrated by the film’s opening poem, as well as the bishop’s sermon at the end), but most of those on the ground on both sides were ordinary people, real people, family men.

The film doesn’t provide as much characterization for the soldiers as I would have liked, but perhaps that was intentional. The war had just begun and the men were just getting to know each other, whether as friends, as enemies, or as something in between. Benno Fürmann stands out the most as the German tenor Sprink, along with his lover Anna, played by Diane Kruger of National Treasure fame. Guillaume Canet, Gary Lewis, and Daniel Brühl are also marvelous as the French lieutenant, a Scottish priest, and the German lieutenant, respectively.

The film is replete with moments of touching beauty, of enemies slowly coming together to exchange gifts, of a lovely operatic rendition of Ave Maria that leaves the troops spellbound, of kindness being shown even when they know it should be forbidden. It speaks strongly of the unifying power of music, religion, uncommon decency, and coffee/tea. Little details, such as a Frenchman’s clock-related habits or the back-and-forth claiming of an itinerant cat, help bring the story to life. (By the way, much of this story was previously featured in the music video for Paul McCartney’s “Pipes of Peace” back in 1983. Here’s the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7ErrZ-ipoE)

There are several profanities and a brief but unnecessary sex scene, but, as far as violence, the film is thankfully restrained enough to be realistic without being gory. Overall, Joyeux Noël is one of the most inspiring Christmas films I’ve seen, even if the ending is less than happy. As the 100th anniversary of these events approaches at the end of this year, the film remains a timely illustration of Thomas Hardy’s poem “The Man He Killed,” which ends with “Yes; quaint and curious war is!/You shoot a fellow down/You’d treat, if met where any bar is,/Or help to half a crown.”

Best line: (Scottish Father Palmer) “Tonight, these men were drawn to that altar like it was a fire in the middle of winter. Even those who aren’t devout came to warm themselves.”

 
Artistry: 9
Characters/Actors: 9
Entertainment: 7
Visual Effects: 7
Originality: 8
Watchability: 6
Other (language, sex): -4
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60
 

Next: #190 – Hello, Dolly

© 2014 S. G. Liput

146 Followers and Counting

 

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)

01 Tuesday Jul 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

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Action, Drama, Fantasy, Thriller

Indiana Jones is back! Within a Chinese bar,
A deal involving artifacts is going well so far,
But soon he drinks a poison, and sheer chaos then ensues
As he retrieves the antidote, since he’s too good to lose.
 
By accident, he grabs a girl named Willie, who can sing,
And young Short Round drives them away, with bad guys following.
They think they’ve flown to safety, but events change in a flash
As villains parachute away and leave their plane to crash.
 
Among the Himalayas, our three heroes have one hope:
They use a blown-up raft to then toboggan down a slope.
They soon locate a village with no children and no joy,
And Indy swears to find some stones and every girl and boy.
 
Marching through the jungle, Willie constantly complains,
But something else scares off their guides till not a one remains.
They find an ancient palace of a quite young Indian prince,
And everyone seems civilized, though dinner makes them wince.
 
But when night falls, a man jumps Indiana from behind,
And they discover passageways they were not meant to find.
Once done with bugs and booby traps, they see the head adult
Perform a violent ritual to serve the Thugee cult.
 
They see the stolen sacred stones and plan to take them back,
But all of them are captured in a sudden sneak attack.
While Shorty is imprisoned with the other captured youth,
Our hero’s forced to drink some blood that makes him act uncouth.
 
He helps prepare poor Willie for the coming sacrifice,
Behaving like he is bewitched and just no longer nice,
But Shorty knocks him out of it, and Indy saves the day,
Then freeing Willie and the kids, who quickly run away.
 
The trio’s chased in mining carts as all the tunnels flood,
But Mola Ram, the evil priest, still has a taste for blood.
Emerging on a canyon wall, they cross a rope bridge, where
The three are cornered by the priest, his thugs, and evil glare.
 
When Indiana takes a risk to cut the bridge in two,
He takes out most of Mola’s minions, leaving just a few.
While climbing up the broken bridge, the priest opposes Jones,
Who feeds him to the crocodiles but keeps one of the stones.
 
The British come a little late but save them from the cult,
And long-lost kids return back home, where parents all exult.
The elders thank our hero for their stone with magic strong,
And Jones and Willie share a kiss (but it won’t last for long).
______________________
 

Here we have the second Indiana Jones, both the second one released and the second one on my list. Temple of Doom is one of those films that is a strange mix of ingenious inspiration and unfortunate creative choices. On the one hand, there are sequences of sheer brilliance, such as the opening scene with the gong, the mine cart chase, the spiked-ceiling booby trap, and the rope bridge standoff, all scenes that blow away most action movies and have been frequently imitated.

On the other hand, Lucas and Spielberg threw in many violent and annoying elements that detract from the film’s overall watchability. Did anyone want to see a guy get impaled by a flaming shish kebab or someone’s heart be ripped out? Is that inflatable raft scene really plausible? Kate Capshaw is lovely (Spielberg thought so too), but she’s helpless and irritating with all her whining and I-broke-a-nail prissiness. The bugs Willie must endure are a bit much but nothing compared with that bizarre dinner table. Chilled monkey brains, anyone?

Thus, it has much to criticize, while retaining much of the entertainment value of Raiders. Harrison Ford remains the quintessential action hero, yet he’s even turned into a villain, caging Willie and striking Short Round, although he is being mind-controlled at the time. Young Jonathan Ke Huy Quan is surprisingly likable as Short Round, much more so than other eager young sidekicks, like, ahem, Francis in Swiss Family Robinson. It makes me wonder what happened to his character since he never appears elsewhere, as well as Willie for that matter. Oh, that’s right, she married Spielberg instead.

Overall, Temple of Doom is an unnecessarily violent film (it helped establish the PG-13 rating) that is still quite worthy of the Indiana Jones name. Until Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, it was considered the worst of the Jones films, but it has enough merits to still exceed many lesser adventure movies. It may be a bit bumpy, but it’s one heck of a ride.

Best lines (during the booby trap scene): (Willie, after seeing two corpses) “There are two dead people in here!” (Indy, in the shrinking room) “There’s gonna be two dead people in here! Hurry!” (and Indy, a little later) “Willie, we are going to DIE!” (the way he says it is priceless)

 
Artistry: 5
Characters/Actors: 7
Entertainment: 9
Visual effects: 9
Originality: 8
Watchability: 8
Other (violence, language): -4
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60
 

Next: #191 – Joyeux Noel

© 2014 S. G. Liput

146 Followers and Counting

 

To Sir, with Love (1967)

30 Monday Jun 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

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Drama

(This one’s rhyme scheme was inspired by the title song.)
 
Mark Thackeray, an engineer with no career, selects
A teaching job worse than he expects.
London’s East End is full of kids all on the skids, and they
Don’t care what Mark has got to say.
 
He tries his best, but everyone just wants their fun and games.
The most he does is learn their names.
Soon he is sick of how they’re rude and always crude and loud,
So he decides to join the crowd.
 
He tells his class that from now on all books are gone; instead,
They’ll speak of topics few have read.
He treats them all as new adults, which sparks results of note,
And “Sir” sees changes once remote.
 
They talk of life, of what a man and woman can and should
Expect from life, both bad and good.
He earns respect, and is thought of in terms of love by Miss
Pamela Dare, who’d like a kiss.
 
Though he declines, Mark’s liked and slips museum trips within
His schoolday, sites they’ve never been.
One Denham still likes to backbite until a fight with Sir,
In which the teacher proves tougher.
 
By end of term, Mark has improved and wholly moved them all,
But there’s a job he cannot stall.
Pam bids goodbye; barring romance, he still does dance with her,
And wants to stay this small school’s Sir.
__________________
 

Sidney Poitier had a good year in 1967, starring in Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, In the Heat of the Night, and this classic teacher film To Sir, with Love. Based on E. R. Braithwaite’s novel, which was likewise based on his personal experience, the film presents the rebellion of the 1960s and one man’s contribution to the lives of his students, as well as some racial tensions that are certainly true to the period. It omits the outright interracial relationship that punctuated Braithwaite’s book, but perhaps that was because Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner would already cover that topic later the same year.

Sidney Poitier gives an astonishing performance as Mark Thackeray, evoking both initial unease, eventual accomplishment, and overall authority. Why he didn’t receive another Oscar nomination is beyond me. The young actors, including Judy Geeson as Pamela, Christian Roberts as Denham, and pop singer Lulu as Barbara Pegg, also do a good job playing the myriad students who come to affectionately call their teacher “Sir.” Unlike many films (such as Hoosiers), just the right amount of attention is given to discriminating among the students. While not everyone in the large class is given equal screen time, enough of them make an impression. Lulu also sings the title song, which is played periodically throughout the film and deserves a spot in my End Credits Song Hall of Fame.

Many have stated that the sudden reformation of the young hoodlums in Thackeray’s class is unrealistic, and while that may be, it’s convincing enough to not detract from the film. As Thackeray is told, he’s probably the first real man most of his students have seen, one who doesn’t curse when he’s angry, who treats the ladies with courtesy, who is tough but doesn’t feel he must prove it. The girls are the first to move to his side, as they consider themselves becoming proper Misses, and many boys join in through the lasses’ influence. Once the students get to know Thackeray, he stands as a constant reminder that they can improve themselves through hard work and dedication. While it may seem unbelievable that delinquents would make such a sudden turnaround, it’s still satisfying to see the transformation of these young adults.

The film is a definite product of the sixties, particularly in its British Invasion-style music, dancing, and fashion. Yet there’s a thoughtfulness to it all, such as Thackeray’s lesson about rebellion, that is sorely lacking in other high school movies, such as Grease. There’s at least one more Sidney Poitier film higher on my list, but To Sir, with Love stands as one of his greatest accomplishments.

Best line: (one of many of Thackeray’s valuable lessons) “If you apologize because you are afraid, then you’re a child, not a man.”

 
Artistry: 9
Characters/Actors: 10
Entertainment: 8
Visual effects: N/A
Originality: 7
Watchability: 8
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60
 

Next: #192 – Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom

© 2014 S. G. Liput

144 Followers and Counting

 

Hoosiers (1986)

29 Sunday Jun 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Drama, Sports

In Hickory, it’s Indiana basketball that’s king;
And no one in the town supports a change in anything.
Thus, few are pleased when Norman Dale is hired as their coach,
And his divergent methods earn inspection and reproach.
 
His coaching days were years ago and ended poorly too.
He sees this as his final chance to try and follow through.
In time, he earns his team’s respect, but not so much the town’s.
Most citizens respond to him with gossip, boos, and frowns.
 
But fellow teacher Myra Fleener warms to Dale a bit,
Since Norman lets the mourning player Jimmy not commit.
Dale also helps one player’s father, Shooter, who’s a drunk,
Assist in coaching, only if he’s sober as a monk.
 
As victories don’t come in force, the town’s soon had enough
And wants to vote to oust the coach, who’s too headstrong and gruff.
When Jimmy comes to say he’ll play but only for Coach Dale,
They take a second easy vote that lets the doubters bail.
 
From then on, Hickory’s on fire, achieving great acclaim,
With underdogs and Shooter standing up to win each game.
Though Shooter still falls off the wagon and must stay in bed
And Dale is often banned from games, the Huskers forge ahead.
 
At last, they win the sectionals and onward still to state,
And Dale insists the giant crowds should not intimidate.
The small town players pray and play the best that they can do,
And Jimmy wins the championship of 1952.
___________________
 

To cap off the Gene Hackman trilogy started with The Poseidon Adventure and Superman, I have arguably his best film, Hoosiers. It’s a powerhouse crowd-pleaser that is often considered one of the best sports films ever. A sleeper hit that far surpassed expectations, Hoosiers has such a winning blend of drama and underdog success, sprinkled with romance and small town charm, that it had to make my list.

Gene Hackman is exceptional as Coach Norman Dale, who never doubts that he is right, even as the town criticizes him left and right and referees banish him for all his angry contentions. Barbara Hershey is a good match for him as Miss Fleener, though she’s a bit young (18 years his junior), and her character gives some sincere reasons for the appeal of small town life, its stability and faithfulness. Dennis Hopper even earned an Oscar nomination for his touching portrayal of town drunk and basketball expert Shooter Flatch. The actual team of eight is full of likable, realistic young men who do quite well in their playing and their interactions, such as Everett Flatch’s reconnection with his father and Strap’s recurrent prayers. However, the film fails to make them all stand out. I could pick out Ollie, the short one, as well as Strap and Jimmy from their usual actions, but most of the boys just blended together without clear distinctions.

The townspeople of Hickory may be stubborn and fickle in their “support” for Dale (or lack thereof), but there are a number of details that make the town something special cinematically. Religion is presented positively and without denigration, such as the high point when an underdog wins a game only after Strap silently prays for him. The redemption of Shooter is also well-handled, and though he succumbs to temptation, it’s clear that his son means enough to him that he is on the way to recovery. In addition, Jerry Goldsmith’s music is one of the great under-appreciated film scores, complementing the game montages perfectly with real basketball sounds incorporated.

While it is unrealistic in its brief depiction of integrated schools in 1952, Hoosiers is mostly clean and undeniably inspirational, rising above most other sports films. My VC (who is not a basketball fan, nor am I) loves this movie with a passion, particularly the score and the characters, and would probably have it in her top 50. It’s not quite there for my list, but it’s still a rousing drama that is sure to leave many viewers smiling and misty-eyed.

Best line (and last line): (Dale, as the camera focuses on a picture of the team) “I love you guys.”

VC’s best line: (Dale, during a game) “Buddy, 41 is killing us—he’s just killing us, all right. Stick with him. I mean, think of chewing gum. By the end of the game, I want to know what flavor he is.” (Buddy, later in the game) “It was Dentyne.”

 
Artistry: 9
Characters/Actors: 9
Entertainment: 9
Visual effects: N/A
Originality: 8
Watchability: 8
Other (brief language): -1
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60
 

Next: #193 – To Sir, with Love

© 2014 S. G. Liput

144 Followers and Counting

 

Gravity (2013)

28 Saturday Jun 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

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Action, Disaster, Drama, Sci-fi, Thriller

Three astronauts are conversing in space
As they work on the space telescope,
Till one gets a piece of debris through his face,
And the others are left without hope.
 
A medical engineer named Ryan Stone
Is sent whirling out in the void,
But Matthew Kowalski, with comforting tone,
Gets her to their shuttle (destroyed).
 
That onslaught of wreckage, an old satellite
That the Russians were unwise to blow,
Will orbit around and have them in its sight
In the next ninety minutes or so.
 
Matt calms her and tells her they’ll carefully soar
To the space station off in the distance.
Stone tells of her daughter, who died at just four,
And Matt tries to spur her persistence.
 
They make it, but Matt makes a bold sacrifice
And goes drifting away into space
To let Stone get aboard, though he gives her advice,
While she finds a way into the base.
 
As she floats through the halls, a fire breaks out,
And she narrowly gets to a pod,
A Soyuz spacecraft, which she’s happy about,
Till its chute won’t allow her abroad.
 
She tries to get loose but is hit by debris,
And she barely escapes that as well.
It shatters the station and sets the ship free,
But she’s out of fuel, she can tell.
 
She attempts giving up, but is spurred to survive
By Kowalski, or rather his ghost,
So she figures a way to (just barely) arrive
At a plummeting Chinese outpost.
 
She gets in the Shenzhou space capsule to land,
Determined to live or die trying,
She says that the ride down will truly be grand
And can’t avoid laughing and crying.
 
She tells Matt to visit in heaven her daughter,
And burns through the earth’s atmosphere.
She finally lands (just by chance?) in some water,
Thus ending her spaceflight career.
 
Her module and suit nearly cause her to drown,
But she swims to the pond’s muddy banks,
And, feeling Earth’s gravity weighing her down,
She walks off, relieved, giving thanks.
____________________
 

Gravity was the most eye-catching film of 2013 and with good reason. It is pure spectacle, full of long, continuous scenes designed to make the audience say, “How did they do that?” From the quietly tense devastation caused by the zooming debris to the seemingly simple weightlessness of the characters and everything else, Gravity is a wonder to behold.

At the heart of the Oscar-winning visual effects are the two leads, Sandra Bullock and George Clooney. Both are excellent, but I actually preferred Clooney’s performance. Bullock is certainly the star, but other actresses could have done just as well (Halle Berry, Cate Blanchett, or Julia Roberts, for example). Clooney’s smooth, reassuring voice gave his character much more personality, and I thought he was just as worthy of an Oscar nomination as Bullock.

Though it’s less than a year old, Gravity has already begun to earn a reputation as overrated, full of impressive special effects and little else. I agree to some extent, but it does offer more than just visuals. Ryan’s backstory is quite touching and emotional, as is her wish for someone to pray for her since she was never taught how.

In addition, films like Avatar and the Transformers movies were visual feasts for the eyes but were so long as to be overindulgent. Gravity is comparably short at just 91 minutes, and Oscar-winning director Alfonso Cuarón achieved much more artistry in that time than any of those films combined. The scene of Ryan floating as if in the womb and that of her rising from the water in the evolution-inspired finale (with a welcome “Thank you” sent heavenward) are two beautiful sequences that wouldn’t be found in other effects extravaganzas. The immersive, Oscar-winning score does much to build tension and emotion, especially paired with well-timed cuts to spatial silence.

My VC felt there was too much of Bullock just breathing hard, as well as annoying alarms going off, but I prefer these to the vast stretches of nothing in the similarly artistic but nowhere-near-as-entertaining 2001: A Space Odyssey. While there are similarities to other space disaster films like Marooned, WALL-E (hello, fire extinguisher!) and Apollo 13 (especially since Ed Harris played “Houston” here as well), Gravity is a film like no other, presenting seamless visuals sure to blow you away.

Best line: (Ryan Stone, in a massive understatement) “I hate space.”

 
Artistry: 10
Characters/Actors: 8
Entertainment: 7
Visual effects: 10
Originality: 5
Watchability: 6
Other (language and brief violence): -4
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60
 

Next: #194 – Hoosiers

© 2014 S. G. Liput

144 Followers and Counting

 

Swiss Family Robinson (1960)

27 Friday Jun 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

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Tags

Action, Disney, Drama, Family

The Robinson family is wrecked
On some rocks, and the ship’s crew defect.
Their ill-fated cruise
Leaves them much they can use,
Though they’re not sure what to do next.
 
The father and sons Ernst and Fritz
Get all to the shore in one blitz.
On the ship the next day,
They scare pirates away
With only a flag and their wits.
 
Since New Guinea’s off their radar,
The five just made do where they are.
A house like no other
Intimidates Mother,
And she wants a good safety bar.
 
But once the men finish, the tree
Proves a comforting place to sightsee.
The men’s great inventions
Calm her apprehensions,
And they settle down cheerfully.
 
Young Francis collects his own zoo
With ostrich and elephant too,
To join all the pets
That they rescued from threats
On the ship left behind by the crew.
 
To see if they’re all on an isle,
The older sons sail for a while.
They rescue a lad
But can’t save his granddad
From pirates both fearsome and vile.
 
They learn it’s a girl they retrieved,
Dressed up so she won’t be perceived.
Through forest and swamp,
With Roberta they romp,
Till they reach the treehouse, relieved.
 
The pirates will no doubt return,
So they build defenses in turn.
Both Ernst and Fritz vie
For Roberta’s fair eye,
But both of them have much to learn.
 
They all take a break for a race,
But soon pirates swarm the whole place.
They thwart their offenses
With homemade defenses
From high on a mountainous base.
 
With fruit bombs and many a pit
And one with a tiger in it
And logs and big rocks,
The small family blocks
The pirates, who won’t seem to quit.
 
They try climbing up from the back,
Which makes their defense nearly crack.
When a ship then arrives,
It saves all of their lives
By halting the pirate attack.
 
Roberta’s granddad gives advice,
But most of the family think twice.
Roberta and Fritz
Stay together; Ernst splits,
But the rest stay in their paradise.
__________________
 

Swiss Family Robinson was the best non-musical live-action Disney film made during his lifetime (and for some time after). It works well as both a loose adaptation of Johann Wyss’s classic novel and as a stand-alone adventure tale. There are a number of changes from the books, such as the inclusion of a pirate attack, a bigger role for the girl (named Emily in the novel), and the omission of a fourth son named Jack. Even so, the film expands on the amazing ingenuity of the Swiss family, furnishing their treehouse with all kinds of clever inventions. It also includes pirates, a menagerie of exotic animals, and countless other adventure elements to enthrall kids and their parents alike.

For me, the film’s biggest liability is young Kevin Corcoran as Francis, who is annoying in just about every scene he’s in. He’s a brat, who’s so enamored of animals that he ignores his parents’ warnings and common-sense safety, such as when he stupidly gives away their position to bloodthirsty pirates for the sake of two dogs! The other boys are fine, and Tommy Kirk as Ernst reminds me of Wil Wheaton’s Wesley Crusher (in a good way). John Mills projects authority and warmth as the Father, while Dorothy McGuire lends maternal warmth and worry to Mother Robinson.

The final battle with the pirates is one of the great early action sequences, but other moments shine too, such as the silent prayer Mother insists on when they first reach the island. (You wouldn’t see that in a remake nowadays.) Swiss Family Robinson is a marvelous family film that may not be on par with adaptations like Dr. Zhivago or Gone with the Wind, but it’s no less of a classic.

Best line: (Father, upon reaching the beach) “First thing we’ve got to do is to, uh, unload the raft. Then, uh… put up some sort of shelter for the night.”   (Mother) “No. That’s not the first thing.” [She kneels in grateful prayer, and the others follow suit.]

 
Artistry: 5
Characters/Actors: 7
Entertainment: 8
Visual effects: 8
Originality: 7
Watchability: 7
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60
 

Next: #195 – Gravity

© 2014 S. G. Liput

142 Followers and Counting

 

The Great Escape (1963)

26 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

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Action, Drama, History, Thriller, War

In 1943, the Germans thought they’d gotten wise
When they designed a camp to hold the most troublesome guys,
The prisoners who always tried escaping from their jail
And caused a lot of headaches for the Nazis on their trail.
 
But in their aspirations for a perfect prison dream,
In fact they put together the best liberation team.
The leader “X” was Roger, who was wanted far and wide,
And Danny was the “Tunnel King,” who dug three shafts outside.
 
The “Scrounger” was named Hendley, who finagled all supplies
And helped the “Forger” Colin Blythe, who lost sight in his eyes.
Then Sedgwick built all tools and had a big suitcase to carry,
And Hilts was called the “Cooler King,” who earned much solitary.
 
These men and more worked day and night to build three tunnels out
Named Tom and Dick and Harry, for there was no better route.
They masked their noise and hid the dirt in several clever ways
And tried to hide their plan below the Germans’ watchful gaze.
 
The Nazis still discovered Tom, which caused a suicide,
But all then worked on Harry to soon reach the woods outside.
The night arrived, and their whole plan discreetly took effect
As men began escaping through their passageway unchecked.
 
The hole came short of reaching woods but still they sneaked away,
Until the Germans heard a sound, to everyone’s dismay.
They stopped the flow but seventy-six escaped the camp in all,
Which launched a massive search for every man in this cabal.
 
Although they tried to blend right in, with forged passports and clothes,
Some chances and some poor mistakes and gaffes served to expose,
For all but three were seized again and fifty men were shot,
And Hilts marched calmly to his cooler when he too was caught.
Thus ended this escape attempt and their most brilliant plot.
_______________________
 

As I said in my Memphis Belle review, most war movies have different focuses than just a battlefield. In The Great Escape, POWs get the spotlight, and there’s not a single battle scene. Instead, we get a true story with an incredibly clever and detailed plot to escape from a German war camp. It’s one of those classic manly men ensembles of the 1960s, but here everyone is entirely likable, unlike, say, The Dirty Dozen.While the mostly British officers could just as easily have sat out the war, they instead fulfilled their “duty” to escape, and, though the film drags on rather long, it’s an incredible thing to see their plan put into effect, provided you have enough popcorn to keep you awake.

The actors are all skilled thespians, but sadly not all of them stick out, perhaps because they no longer have the star power they held in 1963. I recognized monikers like Ashley-Pitt, MacDonald, Sedgwick, and Cavendish, but I couldn’t tell who they were unless someone directly called them by name. Still, a number of the men make an impression, if only with their code names: Richard Attenborough as “Big X,” Donald Pleasence as the blind “Forger,” James Garner as the “Scrounger,” Charles Bronson as Danny, and of course Steve McQueen as Hilts, one of his most memorable roles. Interestingly, Bronson’s character of Danny is one of the few to reach freedom, just as he was one of the three who survived in The Dirty Dozen. I guess some guys are just lucky.

A number of elements of the film have been parodied to no end. The scenes involving the men wheeling down the narrow tunnel have found their way into several shows and movies like the similarly plotted Chicken Run, and the iconic score has also been imitated by shows ranging from Disney’s Recess to Hogan’s Heroes, which had a similar storyline involving POWs. And of course who can forget McQueen riding that motorcycle?

The actual escape is the tense highlight of the film, and it keeps the audience on their toes. Though it’s satisfying to see so many sneak away, the sad part is that most of them die. Considering the light-hearted tune in the score, it’s a rather dark ending, but one that is true to history. Overall, The Great Escape is an entertaining and clean war film that pays tribute to men who weren’t content to just sit around, men who harassed the enemy to the last and did their countries proud. To the fifty!

Best line: (Ramsey, having been told of the great resources used to guard the camp) “Well, it’s rather nice to know that you’re wanted.”

 
Artistry: 6
Characters/Actors: 7
Entertainment: 8
Visual effects: 6
Originality: 8
Watchability: 7
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60
 

Next: #196 – Swiss Family Robinson

© 2014 S. G. Liput

140 Followers and Counting

 

Doc Hollywood (1991)

25 Wednesday Jun 2014

Posted by sgliput in Movies, Poetry, Reviews, Writing

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Tags

Comedy, Romance

A cool young surgeon named Ben Stone
Is headed for L.A.,
But lands in Grady, little-known,
Where he is forced to stay.
 
He trashed a fence, which trashed his ride,
And must do doctor duty.
The townsfolk welcome him with pride,
Except one country beauty.
 
Because Vialula/Lou’s been burned
By city boys before,
She leaves the flirting doctor spurned,
Though he tries even more.
 
The townspeople are full of quirks,
Like squash fan Mayor Nick,
And Melvin the mechanic works
On Ben’s car, none too quick.
 
There’s also Hank, who can foresee
Insurance aspirations,
And mayor’s daughter Nancy Lee,
Who dreams of long vacations.
 
As Ben cares for the populace,
In simple, closer ways,
He starts to feel that he will miss
This town, despite the raise,
 
Especially when Lou soon starts
To soften up to Ben.
Yet he can’t bear to break their hearts,
Since he’ll soon leave again.
 
When Ben rescues the stodgy doc
Named Hogue, who thinks him rude.,
The judge allows Ben Stone to walk;
Ben feels oddly subdued.
 
He tries to sneak away at night,
But moms he can’t ignore.
While he assists one pregnant plight,
His car is wrecked once more.
 
The town gives him a one-way flight
To L.A., and he goes,
But as he lives his dream all right,
He rues the path he chose.
 
When Hank and Nancy Lee appear,
Ben craves more than success.
He chooses Lou above career
And finds his happiness.
_________________
 

Doc Hollywood is one of Michael J. Fox’s most entertaining movies, presenting a kooky but affectionate glimpse of cinematic small town life. It doesn’t present them as backwards or stupid but rather eccentric and focused more on life’s simple pleasures: squash festivals, nice-looking pigs, and fishing—with dynamite. It’s impressive how many memorable characters they pulled off, from David Ogden Stiers as Mayor Nicholson; Bridget Fonda as his eager-to-leave daughter Nancy Lee; Woody Harrelson as Haymitch—I mean Hank Gordon; Barnard Hughes as the crotchety country doctor Aurelius Hogue; Frances Sternhagen as the deadpan diner waitress Miss Lillian, who can only make Hungry Man dinners; and the lovely Julie Warner as love interest Vialula; not to mention the two quirky mechanics, the stern Nurse Packer, and the family who come to the doctor’s office just to have their mail read. By the time Ben leaves and has to say goodbye to all these faces, the audience bears the same feeling of loss, of leaving “Shangri La” as the mayor calls Grady, South Carolina.

Sadly, the film is not completely wholesome, featuring some language and a scene with Lou completely nude that could easily have been cut since it adds nothing to the picture. Plus, a scene involving urination was rather uncomfortable and weird and again unnecessary.

Aside from this, the wistfully scored film is a hilarious romantic comedy that surprisingly bucks Hollywood convention by not having the two leads sleep together, though they’re tempted. It’s one of the few such scenes I’ve ever viewed that laudably eschews the “romance” of a one-night stand. Overall, Doc Hollywood could be a family movie with the appropriate cuts and one that my family watches whenever it’s on (such is my definition for a Watchability of 10).

Best line: (a woman in the background, as her grill is clearly on fire) “Mayor Nicholson, can you help check these ribs and tell me if they’re done?”

VC’s best line: (Nancy Lee, in L.A.) “Is that a star?” (Hank, played by Woody of Cheers fame) “No, that’s Ted Danson.”

Other best line: (Melvin the mechanic, looking at Ben’s totaled car) “I think I can fix that.”

 
Artistry: 7
Characters/Actors: 9
Entertainment: 10
Visual Effects: N/A (except for two brief car crashes)
Originality: 8
Watchability: 10
Other (nudity, language): -2
 
TOTAL: 42 out of 60
 

Next: #197 – The Great Escape

© 2014 S. G. Liput

140 Followers and Counting

 

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