Wednesday, November 20, 2019

The Irishman versus Ironman: How Martin Scorsese Nearly Upended The Marvel Universe


In an interview in Empire, a British film magazine, in October 2019 while promoting his latest film The Irishman, Director Martin Scorsese was asked about Marvel movies, and he said, “I don’t see them. I tried, you know? But that’s not cinema. Honestly, the closest I can think of them, as well made as they are, with actors doing the best they can under the circumstances, is theme parks.” Needless to say, Film Twitter lost its mind, with Josh Whedon and Jon Favreau to pundits to Marvel fans chiming in. The crux of the controversy is that Scorsese films and Marvel films speak two very different cinematic languages for two different cinematic experiences, in terms of the genres they represent and how our fragmented, technology-driven, short-attention-span society views movies, considering what constitutes “cinema” now. 
What many of those criticizing Scorsese don’t realize is that he’s been around the block a few times, having started his career well before the core Marvel audience was born. He’s made films since the late 1960’s, finally won an Oscar for Best Director for The Departed, and Raging Bull has consistently shown up in Top 10 lists of the best films of all-time; that film changed the way I watch movies because he told a story in a way I had never seen before. But when you think of a Scorsese film, you don’t think of a blockbuster. His films are passionate and about characters’ lives, as are Marvel films. Save for The Wolf of Wall Street, which is his largest-grossing movie, and a handful of others, you’re not going to see the box-office take for the weekend and see a Scorsese film on it. 
The noise against Scorsese became so loud that he wrote an op-ed in The New York Times to clarify his original comments. In it, Scorsese indicates that at the core the issue is risk. But this is nothing new. Hollywood has always been about putting butts in seats, and this has gone on for decades. Fifty years ago, after Easy Rider, made on a tiny budget, was released and became a hit, every major studio in town broke the bank trying to make their own biker film (remember C.C. and Company, when the studio tried to cash-in on Joe Namath’s Super Bowl success?). 
But there have been two major paradigm shifts for the films themselves and how we watch them. The first happened with The Big Bang of Blockbusters, when in 1975 Steven Spielberg made Jaws and it became a massive hit like nothing the industry had seen before. Then in 1977 George Lucas released Star Wars, creating the first film franchise that echoes to this day, and, hence Marvel movies becoming the cash cow of the current era. But it was after this that the money of movies seeped into the mainstream media, when you would get the box-office results for the weekend on Monday mornings. Director Robert Altman, who battled his own Hollywood demons trying to get his films made, said, “How can I compete with a mechanical shark and two robots?”
     The second paradigm shift occurred with the advent and progression of technology changing the way we consume movies. And Scorsese’s quip about theme parks is not a criticism against the Marvel movies themselves, but rather about how we watch movies now. He reveres the “cinematic experience” (as do I) of going into a theater and letting the film happen, and now because of technology, the way most watch movies are pretty fractured. You could be in a cafĂ© and the person next to you is watching a movie, or you’re on the bus and someone is watching a movie on a smartphone. He’s not wrong. 
     One would think that with technology and Netflix at our fingertips that we would have better access to the movies, big or small, blockbusters or indies, we want to see, but what Scorsese is trying to point out is that, paradoxically, despite the technology,we still have a lack of access to smaller films. In other words, Marvel movies are sucking the air out of the theater. So Guardians of the Galaxy may be on four screens, and the only way a theater may get a small film such as 12 Years a Slave is to agree to take it as part of the package and play it for a week. So that film may play for a week but only at 9:45. 
      Scorsese has kvetched about the lava flows of blockbusters flooding the theaters, limiting access and distribution, but he is not immune to his own flows. Early in his career, his films were bloody and gritty, but more recently he became a bit giddy as well with technology. Remember when after he released Hugo, which was filmed in 3D, Scorsese claimed he would make every film thereafter in 3D? Didn’t happen. Could you imagine The Wolf of Wall Street in 3D? 
     Scorsese’s latest film The Irishman, is being release on Netflix after it plays for a few weeks in theaters to qualify for Oscars. And he’s playing the paradigm game because Netflix funded the film. But he also dipped his toe in the CGI waters because he employs this technology to age the characters throughout the film. The story arc is over several decades, and he claims he wanted to try this technology over extensive makeup to be “purely experimental.” He’s not a luddite, but he wants his stories to remain, at the core, about human connections. 
     So the cinematic experience as we once knew it is practically gone. It used to be an event, to go see something you’ve not seen before, or to have fun like, well, at a theme park. But I don’t want to pay to see a movie in which folks act like they are in their living rooms or snorting popcorn. In my eyes, there used to be collective experience of seeing a movie, then talking about it afterward. I’ve had many an argument after movies, and I miss that. Sure, we can discuss them, but now films can be downloaded and viewed at anytime, and the main way to have discussion is through social media. Again, fragmented not collective. 
     And the kicker to the Scorsese controversy? He was going to produce Joker, but when Netflix came through with financing for The Irishman, he had to leave the project. That’s Hollywood!

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Eighteen Years

On September 11th, it was one week hence of my moving back to the area from Clemson. That morning, I remember I had a dream where I was in the back of an empty tractor trailer, and two of my former Clemson students were in there. We felt something hit the truck, and the student said he thought we had been hit. 

I then woke up around 8:50 and turned on The Today Show, just after the first plane hit the North Tower. Like everyone, I thought it was an accident and wondering why a plane would veer off-course over Manhattan. Then the second plane hit. My first thought was, How are they going to get those planes out of there? And the people? 

I watched, confused like most at that point. Then the plane hit the Pentagon. Every morning I would go down to the bodega at the end of my street for coffee, and went down right after this happened. I knew the manager of the store, and I remember telling her what happened; I felt like I needed to tell someone what happened. I was trying to make sense of the chaos. 

After I got my coffee, then Flight 93 went down. I was baffled; this was a time when terrorism wasn't the immediate first thought. Then a few minutes later the North Tower collaped. I was stunned, unnerved at how fast it and the South Tower came down. 

I distinctly remember on CNN and on other news coverage people being interviewed kept saying, "It's like something out of a movie." Everyone was trying to make sense out of the chaos. I've never shaken that.

The day was surreal overall. Most channels, from the Home Shopping. Network to MTV, went off-air, the sole focus on the networks and the news channels. Imagine this happening with social media now. 

The next day was not much different. But I wanted to see the Jay and Silent Bob movie, so I went to theater. Most of north Johnson City was quieter than normal, the theater empty. The movie was a waste (save for Chris Rock), two hours I wouldn't get back. As I was leaving I looked at the marquee and saw the list of films playing, and at the bottom I saw, "God Bless America." I thought, What movie is that? Then it hit me. Patriotism began blossoming. But when the flags went up after about four days, the politics kicked in. 

Of all the writings and photos around that time, of people jumping and the endless loop of the planes crashing into the Towers, one image got to me. I picked up the book This is New York, a big photography book chronically every aspect of that day, from screen shots of the television networks off-air and photos from newsrooms to police and fire at work. Then I happened across of photo of a woman's severed leg, with painted toenails and a stiletto, presuming she was one of the jumpers. I thought, Did she know getting dressed and going out that...

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Fool's Gold: The MS Maven's Fearless (More So) Oscar Predix 2019

In the mid-70's, ABC aired Almost Anything Goes, an odd show hosted by Regis Philbin that was a three-episode blip on the radar it was so bad. ABC is apparently reviving it tonight in the form of this year's Academy Awards. 

For years I've yawped about how the Oscar season should be shortened, primarily because who the hell remembers movies from the previous year in April? This year was shorter but it's felt like the longest one yet. Lesson learned, be careful what you wish for. 

As usual for me, the film year ended with a handful of really fine (Can You Ever Forgive Me? (which, as Sasha Stone rightly said, should have been up for Best Picture), BlacKkKansman, A Star is Born, If Beale Street Could Talk) and fun (Bohemian Rhapsody, Isle of Dogs) films. Some had nice performances in mediocre films (Green Book and Vice). In other words, same shit, different year. (I still say television at the moment is better collectively than film, but that's an argument for another day). 

So tonight I think in terms of winners and the show itself anything goes. The sadly now late, great William Goldman famously said about Hollywood, "Nobody knows anything," and this year it's true in spades. Each year we pundits always hope for surprises to shake things up if it happens to be a predictable year. Not this one. This is one year I don't know anything. Too bad Goldman can't see this. 

Voting Academy members I know are all over the place with several categories, especially Best Picture. I think this year is a near-turning point because I'm not convinced Roma will win. I say near because there's a camp out there who's opposed to voting for a film you can stream at home; Steven Spielberg popped off that if a film is seen through a streaming service let it be up for an Emmy. I don't agree with this because I do think the way we watch films will shift to more streaming, but, like with every other technical innovation for watching, I don't think this will be the death of seeing movies in theaters. The problem with seeing movies in theaters now is two-fold: one, ticket prices, and two, the "theatrical experience," because of said-technology, is almost dead. Meaning, people come in and get on their phones or act like they're in their living rooms. Folks don't value the experience anymore. I digress, but my point is it may take a couple of years before Hollywood figures out a way to utilize streaming film to maximum effect, aka commodify it. And Spielberg will change his tune. 

Back to Best Picture, I'm also not convinced Green Book will win, either. It's pedestrian with two performances that save the film, and I won't be upset if Mahershala Ali wins because, as I've said, he's now in Denzel territory and I loves me some Ali because I've followed him from before House of Cards; again he's better in True Detective (memo to HBO: why did you schedule the season finale on Oscar Sunday? My DVR hates you). But I know a lot of folks who have problems w/ the film, but some also see the film as reflecting our times. Sorry, but Peter Farrelly (love his comedies) couldn't hold Barry Jenkins's jockstrap because the latter's film, If Beale Street Should Talk, based on James Baldwin's book published over 40 years ago, speaks greater to today's current cultural climate (and should have been up, along with Can You Ever Forgive Me? for Picture). 

So where does that leave us? My gut has said (and this year my gut was wrong with some of the nominations) Black Panther will win because it straddles the two elements that Picture represents (a powerful message and good storytelling) or whats to represent (a blockbuster film), which the Academy hasn't had in eons. This would be the perfect film for these pedigrees. I would love to see BlacKkKlansman or A Star is Born (man, talk about the air going out of a film!), but it won't happen. Some have said Bohemian Rhapsody, but there are too many folks who are upset about Bryan Singer but not with Rami Malek, so he will win but the film won't (it'll win for one or both Sound categories). And Vice will have to settle for Hair/Makeup because Adam McKay got too cute here; the performances are solid, but I can't see anyone winning because they were enjoyable, more than the film, but not earth-shattering. Some fun moments and the storytelling device is brilliant, but it doesn't hold together. Plus, I can't see Amy Adams finally winning for this film (but Meryl Streep did win for The Iron Lady, far from her best role, so there's that). Loves me some Christian Bale but this isn't his best, either. I don't see him beating Malek. 


Now, all of this said, should Roma NOT win Foreign-Language Film (and there have been upsets aplenty in this category), look out! I don't think it will win both film categories, but I also don't see it not winning FLF. Maybe Cuaron win Director and Cinematography (love the film, not the year's best, and a lot of the shots in it remind me of Fellini, as if watching a black-and-white Amarcord) but nothing else. 

The other conundrum is if Mahershala Ali wins Supporting Actor that may be Green Book's only Oscar. He seemed a lock most of the season, but the bulk of Oscar voters I know indicated they voted for Richard E. Grant. There has been a last-minute surge for Can You Ever Forgive Me?, happily, and I don't know anyone who has voted Ali, unless they're lying, and they do lie for a living. The blind Oscar ballots that come out around this time is ripe for this. Ali would be a safe way to vote for the film, but my gut has been saying Grant. Will I pull the trigger? I'm still deciding as I type this. I'm cool w/ Ali but I want Grant and am trying to put bias aside. 

Actress will go to Close (deservedly), but any one of the five nominees could win and I would be happy. A solid year for women. And Regina King will finally get some dap, an actress who has been so underrated over the years, despite her Emmy wins. 

I would be thrilled if Spike Lee wins for Director, but he'll win for Adapted Screenplay (I think). I would also be thrilled with Can You Ever Forgive Me? (and it could upset) or If Beale Street Could Talk. And Lady Gaga better win for "Shallow." She was hosed before in this category and am still pissed; do you even remember that Sam Smith song and that it was from a Bond film? Didn't think so. Now watch Diane Warren finally win. 

And speaking of hosed, that's what Bradley Cooper is this year, sadly. He's almost in Tom Cruise territory in terms of having industry respect but no Oscar. Will they Argo Cooper? Don't think so. And for the record, Jay Cassidy was robbed not being up for Editing. 

All of this is conjecture because every year we fall into the trap of thinking folks get together as if by committee and vote for what's "best," when the opposite is often true and voters back into getting it right. I think we may see some upsets because it may be a case of "Wait, I thought you were voting for..."

And I haven't even mention the show itself. Enough has been said about it. I think it will be fun as well as frustrating. We watch not for things to go smoothly but for a train wreck or two, and there will be a couple. And the producers can carp all they want to, but the show will not be at three hours  Give it up guys, you can deal with another 20 minutes. But if they don't try to revive Rob Lowe and Snow White from the last time the show was hostless with James Franco and Elsa from Frozen, we're good.

And my new mantra, now that Roger Deakins finally won last year: When is Wes Anderson going to win a goddamned Oscar? (Bradley Baby is still a bit young to qualify for this mantra, but he's close). 

So now there's nothing to be done but to sit back and watch the fur (or faux furs) fly. Here are my predictions with upsets. I don't know anything so here goes:

Picture: Black Panther
upset: Roma

Director: Alfonso Cuaron
upset: Spike Lee

Actor: Rami Malek
upset: Christian Bale

Actress: Glenn Close
upset: Lady Gaga

Supporting Actor: Richard E. Grant (pulled the trigger, on a coin flip)
upset: Mahershala Ali

Supporting Actress: Regina King
upset: Rachel Weisz

Original Screenplay: The Favourite 
upset: Green Book

Adapted Screenplay: BlacKkKlansman
upset: Can You Ever Forgive Me?

Foreign Film: Roma
upset: Cold War

Animated Feature: Spiderman: Into the Spider-Verse
upset: Isle of Dogs

Original Song: "Shallow"--A Star is Born
upset: "I'll Fight"--RBG

Score: BlacKkKlansman
upset: If Beale Street Could Talk

Cinematography: Roma
upset: Cold War

Editing: Bohemian Rhapsody
upset: BlacKkKlansman

Production Design: The Favourite
upset: Black Panther

Costume Design: Black Panther
upset: The Favourite

Sound Editing: First Man
upset: Bohemian Rhapsody

Sound Mixing: Bohemian Rhapsody
upset: A Star is Born

Visual Effects: Avengers: Infinity War
upset: First Man

Hair/Makeup: Vice
upset: Mary, Queen of Scots

Documentary Feature: Free Solo
upset: Minding the Gap

Documentary Short: Period. End of Sentence
upset: Black Sheep

Animated Short: Bao 
upset: Animal Behaviour

Live-Action Short: Marguerite
upset: Skin


Wins

Roma                          3
Bohemian Rhapsody. 3
BlacKkKlansman.       2
Black Panther.            2
If Beale Street/Talk.    1
Green Book.               1
Vice                            1

Running Time: 3 Hours 16 Minutes

My work is done here. Them's my predix, and I'm sticking to them. Per usual The Maven will be venting the annual rite of passage on the socials (@Franster23 on Twitter), so follow along or mute me til Tuesday. Again, no Oscar pool to save for the March Madness brackets and copious amounts of alcohol in case of emergency tonight.

Happy Oscar Sunday, peeps! And, of course, Shalom!








Monday, January 21, 2019

The Shithole Year: The Maven's Fearless (and Probably Foolish) Oscar Predix 2019

I've been late to the Oscar predix game this season and can't focus, at the moment because I'm still pissed about the no-call in the Saints game, but overall because I've not been bowled over by much filmwise this year. Granted, I'm still catching up to some films, and I shall plow the Oscar fields over the next few weeks. 

That said, another reason I've dragged my feet is because Film Twitter lost its damned mind. This is my 40th year of Oscar prognostication, my first being The Deer Hunter year of 1978. Remember when Allan Carr made EMI and Universal pull the film and open in New York and Los Angeles? A huge controversy then, but now it's de rigueur. That's tiddlywinks compared to the controversies that have popped loose this go-round, be it about Green Book, Bohemian Rhapsody, whatever. A film isn't black enough, there aren't enough women, etc. The Academy membership is evolving, and changes will take time, and some of these changes we'll see tomorrow morning. I will say this: I think if Laura Dern had been elected Academy President over John Bailey, things would be better. 

The Oscars have always been controversial and political, but our current cultural climate seems to have seeped into the Oscar race and caused a lot of personal finger-pointing and name-calling. As Sasha Stone says, they're just movies, they're just gold statues, and she's right. The controversies of the past were fun because we were looking at the Oscars from afar, poking fun. Now folks have made it a politically correct game and taking everything so personally, and it just plain sucks. Jesus, Larry, and Tito, they're just awards. Watch the movies (and the Oscars) and enjoy them, or not. There are more serious problems going on right now, folks. 

My problems with the film year has nothing to do with the PC game, it's just a collectively mediocre year. Call it a shithole year. That's it. There's a smattering of good films among them: First Man, Black Panther, Vice, BlacKKKlansman. For me, Roma (exquisite, reminds me of one of my favorite films, Fellini's Amarcord), If Beale Street Could Talk (I'm biased, I teach James Baldwin a lot, plus I'm a huge Barry Jenkins and Regina King fan; she better well win Supporting Actress). A Star is Born is a revelation. I love Bradley Baby, but Lady Gaga is stunning; I never thought a fourth try at this story would be this good. And Actress will come down to Gaga and Glenn Close, just as stunning, which is tough. Too bad they can't split here as well. 

And, like with a lot of years, many an Oscar bait film fizzled: Boy Erased, Beautiful Boy, Welcome to Marwen, Destroyer. Roma I don't think would be getting as much love as it is had it not been for Netflix. I see this year, for film and television, being a cultural shift in terms of how movies are marketed, distributed, and vamped for awards. The Hollywood Technology Paradox is that there are more platforms and outlets for watching and streaming, yet it's still hard to see the films. You still see five screens devoted to The Avengers. Calling the ghost of Allan Carr...

And Green Book. I'm not getting in the middle of the mess that erupted (plus, again, Sasha Stone wrote the best piece about this), but let me toss a bit of political theory at you as it pertains to the movies themselves and not the surrounding morass. Notice in turbulent cultural times that movies that win tend to be tame, pedestrian, and safe. During the horrific year of 1968 what won Best Picture? Oliver! In 1973? The Sting. In 1989? Driving Miss Daisy. So if Green Book should win (it won the PGA, but you can't go by this, not with recent history), I think it's Hollywood playing it safe with a film that touches the racial bases (yes, Driving Miss Daisy in reverse, as some have said) in a pedestrian way. Mahershala Ali may win Supporting Actor and could be Green Book's only Oscar, if at all. Ali at this point could read the phonebook and be great; plus, I think folks will think of True Detective, where I think he's actually better. 

A few last-minute thoughts:

1--First Man will do well, and I think it will be ironic that it will probably be up for a slew of Awards, but not for Ryan Gosling nor Damien Chazelle. 

2--I'm not sure of how much of a showing Crazy Rich Asians will have, if at all. Maybe Michelle Yeoh, maybe Picture. 

3--I hope If Beale Street Could Talk is up for more than Supporting Actress and Adapted Screenplay. I think it will. 

4--I also hope Paul Schrader is up for Screenplay as well. I can't believe he's never had a nomination; I had to look back to remember Taxi Driver wasn't up for Screenplay I think that changes tomorrow. 

5--Now that Roger Deakins finally won last year: Is Wes Anderson ever going to win a goddamned Oscar? Isle of Dogs is one of his best films, so...

6--Bohemian Rhapsody. What to make of it. Two noms for sure are for Rami Malek for Actor and his teeth for Makeup. It will be up for some technical categories as well. Picture? I think so, despite this being a film where the performance is the movie. And this one has been a controversy as well, but Malik is untouched by this. It's between him and Bale, but let's not get ahead of ourselves here. 

7--I'm not pulling the trigger, but my gut is telling me Sam Rockwell will get in over Richard E. Grant. I'm thinking neither Grant nor McCarthy will be up. I think the film peaked too early. Nothing against it, just my gut. 

8--My one hope for tomorrow is that Yalitza Aparicio is up for Actress. Roma will be up for a ton, happily, and I hope she's caught up in that sweep. 

9--My surprise nominee would be Viola Davis or Toni Collette for Actress. Watch it be Julia Roberts or Nicole Kidman. Jonathan Pryce for The Wife would be pretty goddamned sweet, but that ain't happening. 

Enough already. As usual, I don't do the music, docs, or shorts, but my nomination totals will account for these. Here's my predix, five noms I think with three alternates. No more guessing, away we go:

Picture
Roma
Green Book
A Star is Born
BlacKKKlansman
The Favourite
Black Panther
If Beale Street Could Talk
Vice
---
Crazy Rich Asians

Director
Alfonso Cuaron
Bradley Cooper
Spike Lee
Adam McKay
Barry Jenkins
---
Yorgos Lanthimos
Peter Farrelly
Ryan Coogler

Actor
Christian Bale
Rami Malek
Bradley Cooper
Viggo Mortensen
Ethan Hawke
---
John David Washington
Willem Dafoe
Ryan Gosling

Actress
Glenn Close 
Lady Gaga
Olivia Coleman
Yalitza Aparicio
Emily Blunt
---
Viola Davis
Toni Collette
Melissa McCarthy

Supporting Actor
Mahershala Ali
Adam Driver
Sam Elliott
Timothee Chalamet
Richard E. Grant
---
Sam Rockwell
Michael B. Jordan
Brian Tyree Henry

Supporting Actress
Regina King
Amy Adams
Claire Foy
Emma Stone
Rachel Weisz
---
Margot Robbie
Michelle Yeoh
Nicole Kidman

Original Screenplay
The Favourite
Roma
Eighth Grade 
First Reformed
Vice
---
Green Book
A Quiet Place
Isle of Dogs

Adapted Screenplay
If Beale Street Could Talk
BlacKKKLansman
A Star is Born
Black Panther
Can You Ever Forgive Me?
---
Crazy Rich Asians
The Death of Stalin
First Man

Cinematography
Roma
Cold War
A Star is Born
First Man
If Beale Street Could Talk

Editing
A Star is Born
First Man
Roma
Black Panther
Vice
---
The Favourite
Green Book
BlacKKKlansman

Production Design
The Favourite
Mary Poppins Returns
Roma
Black Panther
First Man
---
Crazy Rich Asians
Mary, Queen of Scots
Bohemian Rhapsody

Costume Design
The Favourite
Mary, Queen of Scots
Bohemian Rhapsody
Black Panther
Mary Poppins Returns
---
A Star is Born
Crazy Rich Asians
Fantastic Beasts 2

Sound Editing
Roma
A Quiet Place
Black Panther
First Man
A Star is Born
---
Bohemian Rhapsody
Mission Impossible: Fallout
Avengers: Infinity War

Sound Mixing
Bohemian Rhapsody
First Man
A Quiet Place
A Star is Born
Roma
---
Mary Poppins Returns
Black Panther
Avengers: Infinity War

Visual Effects
Avengers: Infinity War
Black Panther
Solo: A Star Wars Story
Ready Player One
First Man
---
Mary Poppins Returns
Welcome to Marwen
Christopher Robin

Makeup
Vice
Mary, Queen of Scots
Bohemian Rhapsody

Nominations

A Star is Born             10
Roma                           9
Black Panther              8
The Favourite              7
First Man                     7
Vice.                            6
Bohemian Rhapsody  6
Green Book                5
If Beale Street Could Talk 5

Them's my predix, and I'm sticking to them. As usual, there will be an omission or two and, hopefully, a happy surprise. We need something to jolt us awake come 8:20am in the morning (why do they keep moving the time, and at odd times at that? Fuzzy Oscar math...

The Maven's work is done until Oscar eve before February 24th, when the Great American Shitshow takes place (I'll reserve comment about the hosting controversy until I predict the winners). 

Happy Oscar Nominations Day! And, of course, shalom, y'all!