Re: Last movie you watched
Cloe and I have been catching up on old movies we missed. Here's some stuff from this week.
The Hustler
Great. Paul Newman is outstanding, Jackie Gleason is cool as hell, interesting portrayal of vicious cycles, addiction and hubris. Plus a handful of "how many attempts did that take?"-style trick shots.
Sunset Boulevard
A classic. Meh. Some interesting dynamics at work, but overall this was a good idea for a movie that was brought down by shit-ass plotting and some of the laziest character writing I'm aware of. It'd be a hell of a story if I could ever once find Norma Desmond plausible, but seeing as she's only slightly more realistic than Miss Piggy, it's a struggle.
To Kill A Mockingbird
A bit underwhelmed by this one also, but not for lack of craftsmanship— it's just precisely what it is, and not much more than that. An outdated moralizing polemic that's becoming harder and harder to be moved by as the modern world keeps setting new traps for it to fall into. Atticus Finch is one principled motherfucker, and Walter Peck manages to make it convincing, but standing among all of this story's hifalutin moral stances are a number of bigger "death of the director"-style cultural insights, like how the happy ending of this story about a white guy believing the story of a convicted black guy actually includes no justice to speak of, just some very moral white people telling each other life lessons. Slice of life, history, etc., fair rebuttals — but go back and actually watch Philadelphia sometime, that aggressively-tolerant "AIDS victims are people too" movie; see if you don't find yourself cringing all the same.
The Bridge on the River Kwai
*whistles tune*
Despite this movie's own ultimate message — and despite the preceding example of Walter Peck in To Kill A Mockingbird — Alec Guinness slowly-but-surely illuminates what at first seems like an absurd moral position (that captured officers in a POW camp, like Guinness himself, shouldn't have to work alongside their captured soldiers) until by the end of the movie the purpose and pragmatism of his position have become completely clear, and he's able to move mountains with the careful application of civilization. Not that it matters much.
Yeah, this movie ages better than To Kill A Mockingbird. Rather long, mostly due to '50s shoeleather and a couple repeated dramatic beats, but interesting and instructive all the same.
I have a tendency to fix your typos.