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Hitchcock

26 Saturday Jan 2013

Posted by Jemima Bucknell in 2013, Film

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1960, 20th Century Fox, Affair, Alfred Hitchcock, Anthony Hopkins, Anthony Perkins, beach, Danny Huston, Ed Gein, Helen Mirren, Hitch, infamous, Janet Leigh, mark cousins, Norman Bates, Obsession, Paramount Pictures, Psycho, Scarlett Johansson, Shower scene, the girl, the story of film, tippi hedren, toby jones, Vertigo, Voyeurism, Wife

Hitchcock

Hitchcock‘s audience is that of people old enough to have seen Psycho in theatres. Our subject is old, fat and coming off the success of North By Northwest. At its premiere, a reporter asks, “you’re sixty-years-old, shouldn’t you just quit while you’re ahead?” This scene can be viewed in the theatrical trailer for the film, but it was still a surprise to see such blatant foreshadowing in the first 2 minutes. The question is silly considering that Hitchcock’s contemporaries, like Chaplin, DeMille and Keaton were still making films into their seventies regardless of their successes.

Hopkins’ transformation has made a creature of him, but the creature isn’t frightening. His chin, which is like a malfunctioned flapping dickey, is hypnotically distracting. It seems such a superfluous feature to constantly have attention drawn to it as though Hitchcock had swallowed his own brain. This soft, rotund, sad sack Hitchcock – with an eating disorder – isn’t remotely intimidating. How can the master of suspense and fear, played by the same vessel, who peeled off a dead man’s face in Silence Of The Lambs be such a… pussy cat?

We see past Hitch’s chin via a strange subplot involving Ed Gein (Michael Wincott), and his deceased mother. With this, and the fondling of his stars’ head shots, the profile of Hitchcock’s “voyeurism” is inconsistent and doesn’t match what was probably a truly perverted, bullying nature. The filming of the shower scene, with some good screaming by Scarlett Johansson, is ridiculous and makes another lazy comparison between Hitchcock and his male characters that protects viewers from him, by filling the mentally ill with his frustrations, like freezing them in fiction. He becomes impossible to connect with, and the romance, which is supposed to hold the film together, becomes secondary to confining Hitchcock’s fears and desires to the product of his craft.

The Psycho marketing campaign is Hollywood legend, and a realisation of this legend is always going to be problematic particularly in a domestic drama that never aspires to the affect or style of its subject. There is a second Hitchcock film The Girl, based on his relationship with Tippi Hedren, starring Toby Jones as Hitchcock, who also featured in Infamous, as Truman Capote, in competition with Phillip Seymour Hoffman a few years back (an irrelevant, though interesting, recurrence). A Hitchcock collection on blu-ray is now available featuring 12 of his later films, and Alfred Hitchcock Presents is playing on TV again. Melbourne’s Astor Theatre screened The Birds and Psycho back to back and Vertigo recently succeeded Citizen Kane as the greatest film of all time – a title Kane held for 50 years – in a critics poll conducted every 10 years by Sight & Sound magazine. Hitch is the flavour of the month, and the Hollywood system is unlikely to yield anything for his admirers to engage with. Thankfully, Mark Cousin’s The Story Of Film, which offers an awing, poetic chronology of film history, names Hitchcock as cinema’s great artist. Watch that instead.

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Savages

25 Sunday Nov 2012

Posted by Jemima Bucknell in 2012, Film

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Aaron Johnson, beach, Benicio Del Toro, Blake Lively, drug cartel, marijuana, mexico, Oliver Stone, Savages, Taylor Kirsch, torrence, weed

Ben (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Chon (Taylor Kitsch) have it made. Growing/selling large quantities of marijuana, they are supervised by a corrupt FBI agent (John Travolta), sharing a blonde-bombshell girlfriend and living in a beachfront home in Torrance, California. Their particularly potent genus of marijuana attracts the attention of a Mexican drug cartel that wants to produce this same genus, making the boys an offer they can’t refuse. They refuse anyway, and their girlfriend O (Gossip Girl’s Blake Lively) is kidnapped.

O, balancing the two contrary drug dealers (one hippy, one military), enables the safe, sexy and highly profitable business to run smoothly. She doesn’t actually do anything, aside from play the meat in the boys’ sandwich but it is up to her to narrate this crime story, suggesting, initially, that she may not be alive in its retelling – which is a superfluously enigmatic suggestion, much like everything she says. Having little to do with the business, O simply describes how her boyfriends make love to her differently and later spends much of the film blindfolded and scared.

The film offers a somewhat xenophobic depiction of Mexicans as scruffy-looking date-rapists. Lado, (Benicio Del Toro) leads an extensive, armed and angry Spanish-dribbling crew. He is sadistic, perverse and his glazed stare is pitiless and unsettling. Salma Hayek’s entitled and completely unimposing heiress – her husband ran things before her – dampens the cartel’s imposing affect but the film still seems happy to suggest that Californian drug-dealers are welcome to their safe success until those darn Mexican’s want a piece of the pipe.

The two partners are drawn into a very violent battle and allegiances begin to shift between the cartel crew, and that of the boys with their federal contact but little is made out their allegiance to each other as O clearly acts as a catalyst for the real love between the two of them. The matter of Ben’s humanitarianism (work with African children and cancer patients) and its conflict with the violence of a drug war is a more interesting and sadly overlooked component to his character. The marijuana issue is politicised by Ben’s influence, but director Oliver Stone doesn’t seem to resolve this, and the “unconventional” love-triangle that holds the film together is topical and nothing else. Ultimately, it is a pretty hollow experience – particularly its time-warped ending which is flimsy and unsatisfying.

* a version of this post originally appeared at filmblerg.com

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