Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts

Friday, September 24, 2021

Salvador

 

Salvador (1986)

Dir. Oliver Stone

Written by Oliver Stone, Richard Boyle

Starring James Woods, Jim Belushi, Michael Murphy, John Savage, Elpidia Carillo

 

Holy moly, how in the fuck did Oliver Stone make this and PLATOON in the same fucking year? If there was ever enough cocaine in the world, there certainly isn't anymore.

Even more astonishingly, how did he make PLATOON after SALVADOR? Because even though we started our little retrospective with PLATOON, SALVADOR was finished first and beat it to theaters by a whole nine months. And SALVADOR is not just some kind of gentle warm-up that one might use as a step towards something more ambitious. It’s a war movie, a buddy comedy, an adventure film, a biography of a living person – co-screenwriter Richard Boyle, in fact—and a searing indictment of US  cold war meddling in Latin American governance, clocking in at a meaty and dense 123 minutes, and was nominated for two Academy Awards. Just watching it is an exhausting experience – imagine making it! Supposedly, James Woods was offered a role in PLATOON too, but turned it down because he "couldn't face going into another jungle with [Oliver Stone]." The fact that Stone himself had the stamina to pack up his camera and move on to the next project after something so massive is hard to wrap one’s head around. 



Anyway, there’s a reason to start with PLATOON: SALVADOR is unmistakably the weaker of the two films. But it packs quite a punch on its own. It documents the exploits of one Richard Boyle (James Woods, COP), a real-life veteran photojournalist (who also co-wrote the script with Stone) with a penchant for gravitating to the world’s most dangerous conflicts – Vietnam during the war, Cambodia during the revolution, “The Troubles” in Ireland—and a personal life so chaotic and irresponsible that his wife has just left him and taken their baby with her. Broke, drunk, and without any immediate prospects, he recruits his ne’er-do-well buddy Doctor Rock –his real legal name, as far as I can tell-- (Jim Belushi, acting somewhat conspicuously as the Dr. Gonzo to Boyle’s Hunter Thompson) and simply drives South, hypothesizing that he can scrounge up some freelance work in Latin America. When he reaches El Salvador, however, it quickly becomes clear that the country is reaching the boiling point, and that the US is secretly propping up ultra-right-wing nationalists who are on the precipice of a violent purge. Which is bad news for them, but great news for the masochistic Boyle, who quickly falls back in with his other wife and child –not the one who just left him, his alternate backup family back in El Salvador who he did not come here specifically to see but is happy enough to hang out with since he’s in town—and the equally insane but somewhat more functional war photographer John Cassady (John Savage, THE DEER HUNTER). At first, this is sort of a freewheeling ugly American travelogue, but gradually things take a darker turn as Boyle starts to get a little more personally invested in the situation and begins to realize just how dark things are about to get. And they do get quite dark. Especially as the stakes ratchet up and chaos descends in the second half of the picture, there's no mistaking the brain-melting intensity which Stone also captures so well in PLATOON and will only build on for next decade or so.


The difference comes down to focus; while PLATOON quickly finds its natural rhythm as a kind of heightened, operatic slice-of-life, SALVADOR is a little more all over the place, fiddling about for a while with some lead-footed buddy comedy thing that Stone has no aptitude for, sluggishly postponing any decision as to where its dramatic focus lies for far too long, and saddled with a much greater need for exposition as it shoots to define the entire local and geopolitical situation in El Salvador in 1979. Credit where it's due, the last of these three is pulled off with more deftness than you'd have any right to expect, as Stone communicates a great deal about the situation and how it got this way without a lot of clunky didacticism, but it still requires quite a bit of effort and screen time (SALVADOR is only three minutes longer than PLATOON, but it feels like a full mini-series worth of material has been covered).

And in the middle of it all, you've got James Woods doing perhaps his James-Woodsiest performance ever, which is, on one hand, a lot of sleazy, weasely, dirty fun to watch, but on the other hand, a lot to add on top of a movie which is already somewhat uncomfortably overstuffed. Thank God Jim Belushi is playing it pretty low-key (and disappears for long enough stretches to make one wonder why he's here at all). 



In an Oliver Stone movie, the way-too-muchness is usually more of a feature than a bug, but between the loud performances, larger-than-life central character, meandering narrative, large cast and angry politics, SALVADOR find his tendency towards overkill at its most ungainly. But ungainly is not the same as ineffective; inefficient, perhaps, but it packs enough raw power that a lack of focus doesn't doom it. It's the kind of film which is incapable of not having a ridiculously unnecessary three codas... but also the kind of film where they're all really great, even if it makes the pacing a little herky-jerky. And the fact that this huge, operatic, overstuffed epic was somehow produced on a dinky four million dollar budget is absolutely fucking mindblowing. Even if it has been Stone's only movie in 1986, it would still have been an obvious announcement of a real powerhouse auteur in the making.


Appendix A: Oliver Stone Studies
+PLATOON (1986)
+SALVADOR (1986)
+8 MILLION WAYS TO DIE (1986)
+WALL STREET (1987)
+TALK RADIO (1988)
+BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY(1989)
+THE DOORS(1991)
+JFK (1991)
HEAVEN & EARTH (1993)

Friday, August 13, 2021

Platoon

 

Platoon (1986)

Dir. Oliver Stone

Written by Oliver Stone

Starring Charlie Sheen, Tom Berenger, Willem Dafoe

 


This year, for no reason at all, I thought it would be interesting to revisit the filmography of Oliver Stone, a –shall we say controversial?—artist who throughout a lengthy and extremely productive career (he averaged two films a year for almost a decade in the late 80’s and early 90s! Albert Pyun could barely keep up with him!) has been alternately (and sometimes  simultaneously) glorified and reviled, hailed as the savior of cinema and the destroyer of it, called a shameless liar and a bold truth-teller, achieved spectacular commercial success and resounding box-office failure, been a humorless didact, a shameless provocateur, and a feckless showman, tackled subjects which range from ripped-from-the-headlines topicalism to classical antiquity to, um, football. And, most importantly, cast John C. McGinley is a whole shitload of movies. In recent decades he seems to have drifted into the wilderness a little, making a series of films which didn’t really seem to connect with audiences, becoming something of a dubious pro-Kremlin propagandist, and obsessively re-editing and re-releasing his 2004 epic ALEXANDER. But man, for a full decade between 1986 and 1996, the guy was absolutely untouchable, cranking out cinema which, whatever else you can say about it, is as fiery and passionate and ambitious as any mainstream filmmaker has ever attempted.

 

I reviewed his 2012 film SAVAGES when it came out, and took a look at his first studio film, THE HAND the next year (his directorial debut was 1981’s SEIZURE; after that he spent several years as a screenwriter, notching MIDNIGHT EXPRESS, CONAN THE BARBAIRAN, SCARFACE, and YEAR OF THE DRAGON before SALVADOR hit the screen in March 1986). But even though it marked his fourth film as a director and ninth film as a writer, I think it would be folly to begin anywhere but with his second movie which came out in 1986 (actually his third as a writer, since he’s credited as a co-writer on EIGHT MILLION WAYS TO DIE). While SALVADOR beat it to theaters, it was PLATOON that shot to the top of the box office (its $136 million domestic gross made it the third-biggest film that year, trailing TOP GUN and, um, CROCODILE DUNDEE, and all that on a miniscule $6 million budget) and made Oliver Stone not just a household name, but a inarguable American auteur.


 

PLATOON was an incomparably perfect vehicle for Stone's strengths primarily because of its simplicity; unlike SALVADOR, which gets bogged down a bit in explaining the shifty mechanics of Latin American politics and US intelligence, PLATOON correctly assumes we already have all the context we need to understand the Vietnam war and be against it, and consequently focuses all its attention on communicating the subjective experience of being there, in it. Since Stone was “in it,” (just like the film’s protagonist, he dropped out of an ivy-league college in 1967 and enlisted in the US Army, specifically requesting combat duty in Vietnam, where he was wounded in action twice) he is enormously effective at cultivating a mountain of tiny details that feel authentic and meaningful and help make for an immersive, textured film about an experience which feels deeply truthful even when it's absolutely wild and histrionic a lot of the time.*

 

He is helped enormously by his cast, a veritable who's-who list of guys** who would become beloved character actors (Forrest Whitaker, Keith David, John C. McGinley, Tony Todd, Johnny Depp) and especially by Willem Dafoe and Tom Berenger, both of whom bring a tremendous amount of specificity and personality to their two opposing characters who on the page probably read more like symbols (and opposing father-figures) than humans; Dafoe brings a touch of sardonic, mischievous danger to a character who might otherwise seem like a bland white knight, and Berenger brings a hint of existential pain to his sadistic villain, as though he genuinely regrets that the world has made him what he is. This allows us to believe and invest in the characters enough to make even the most outlandish, operatic drama hit hard rather than feel overblown and silly like it maybe ought to (see: the film's poster).


 

The movie also benefits in a way it would be difficult to overstate from the superb editing by Claire Simpson (who rightly won the Oscar for it) which is so astoundingly ahead-of-its time that the movie feels startlingly modern even in 2021. Well, except that today's version of this type of chaotic editing would miss entirely the storytelling precision Simpson displays here, and would be shot like shaky dogshit as opposed to the careful, unshowy mastery we get from Robert Richardson (he didn't get his Oscar for this one, but would end up snagging it for JFK, which is even more honorable). Simpson (who, like Richardson, had already worked with Stone on SALVADOR***) would go on to only one more film with Stone (the next year’s WALL STREET), but she would mentor her replacements (Pietro Scalia, David Brenner, Joe Hutshing and Julie Monroe, all of whom would enjoy multi-film tenures as editors on Stone’s films) and contribute immeasurably to the aggressive, borderline avant-garde editing style which would later come to define Stone’s work. But Richardson would stick with Stone for more than a decade, becoming the cinematographer on every one of his films up to 1997’s U-TURN. Between the three of them, Vietnam turns into something overstimulating and overwhelming, perfectly capturing the characters’ subjective reality through their simultaneously exhaustion-stunted and adrenaline-amped consciousness. And the genius is, this is all done without the movie feeling it necessary to make explicit that this is subjective on some meta-level: it just presents this as reality, because the movie is how we enter the world of these characters, so of course it's subjective. Proof that right from the start, Stone and his collaborators understood that in art, emotional truth is the only kind of reality that matters.

 

Still, there are perceptible traces of a filmmaker still finding his feet. Despite across-the-board excellent performances from the rest of the cast, Charlie Sheen (MAJOR LEAGUE) is fine as a blank audience surrogate, but brings very little to the role in a movie which is otherwise packed to the brim with personality. You could argue that it's important for this particular film to have a steadier performance holding the center while the craziness revolves around it, but you can be steady without being bland, and Sheen definitely tends towards the latter rather than the former. He also really struggles with the admittedly ludicrously overwritten voice-over narration, which is the one element of the film which is overblown in a way which feels cheesy, rather than heightened. Stone’s strength as a conjuror of intense subjective experience (and his dream-team of cinematic collaborators) is already present and accounted for here – unmissable, even. But perhaps he didn’t quite have the confidence yet to simply show, rather than tell, and his inability to get more out of Sheen (and his -perhaps consequent-- reliance on voice-over narration) are the one obvious sign that he still had room to grow.

 

Even so, the overall film is so focused and potent that few other war movies have ever been able to touch it. If the world had missed SALVADOR, they couldn’t ignore this kind of powerhouse. This was indisputably the work of a genuine capital-v Voice. You can quibble about the corny narration or its somewhat myopic foregrounding of Stone’s own perspective, but you can’t argue about its raw potency. It's a masterpiece by one of cinema's most ferocious auteurs, and whatever little caveats I have about this or that pale in the face of its righteous fury.

 




* Near the end, there's literally a shot where Tom Berenger has devil eyes, similar to the amazing deleted scene from NIXON which I just watched again to be sure and holy goddam, if that scene had played in theaters I am convinced it would have caused the movie DEMONS to happen for real. That shit melts steel beams.

** And it's all guys; I don't think there's a single English-language speaking part for a woman, which is just as well considering female characterization is not generally Stone's strong suit.

*** Which was only her second theatrical film after her debut as editor in… holy cow, C.H.U.D.!

Appendix A: Oliver Stone Studies
+PLATOON (1986)
+SALVADOR (1986)
+8 MILLION WAYS TO DIE (1986)
+WALL STREET (1987)
+TALK RADIO (1988)
+BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY(1989)
+THE DOORS(1991)
+JFK (1991)
HEAVEN & EARTH (1993)

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Batman (1989)

 

Batman (1989)

Dir. Tim Burton

Written by Sam Hamm and Warren Skaaren

Starring Jack Nicholson, Kim Basinger, Michael Keaton


 A lot of guys I know associate action movies with their dads, have fond memories of paternal male bonding through the storied medium of tough guy movies from the 1980s and early 90s. There are men who have a sentimental fondness for Steven Seagal or Bruce Willis to this very day, because they associate them so strongly with their own fathers, many of whom are now gone. Well, my old man was (and remains!) a great guy, but he wasn’t really into movies; the only thing I ever distinctly remember him showing me was RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK, and that only because he tried it when I was way too young, completely traumatizing me pretty much from the get-go. I have only myself to blame for the cinephilia which has so thoroughly crippled me socially and emotionally during my adult life. Nobody pushed me. I just fell into it.

And yet, I do have one other youthful memory of an adult showing me a movie: Sometime around 1990 or 1991, my Uncle Richard showed me BATMAN.

I was, in fact, meeting Richard for the first time. He was a recent addition to my family, having married my Aunt Anne a few years earlier, and my immediate impression upon meeting him –the same impression he made on nearly everyone, I later learned—was one of tremendous energy and intense focus. He was a smallish man in statue, with a thick, dark beard and lively dark eyes that felt like they could melt steel when they alighted on something. The only child of Jewish parents, he was used to being the center of attention, and seemed to revel in holding court with a genial grace that sprang not from ego, but from a love of life so confident and overwhelming that it simply had to be shared. He juggled –what little kid could resist such a man?--, and vigorously attempted, without success, to teach me the skill; he waxed philosophic on politics. And he asked me if I had seen BATMAN.

            I had not. I had something of a solitary childhood, with few friends and even fewer sources of access to pop culture; the TV in our house only got a few channels, and was seldom on. The Batmania that had swept America upon the film’s theatrical released had entirely passed me by, unnoticed. I knew who Batman was, of course, but in the same way that I knew who Shakespeare or Robinson Crusoe was, as a mythic culture figure with whom I personally had almost no direct experience. So that stark gold-on-black logo on the VHS box (it was the first-ever Hollywood movie to premiere “priced-to-own” on VHS a mere six months after the film’s release!) was as mysterious and portentous to me as the Sphinx. Richard was incensed; “it’s really cool!” he said, casting a reproachful look at my parents for neglecting his nephew in this shockingly negligent manner, and I believed him utterly and without reservation. Richard was into technology; his television seemed huge and futuristic, and he approached setting it up properly for this showing the same way he approached everything in his life: with a direct, all-consuming gusto that said louder than any words ever could that if we’re going to do this, we’re going to do it right.

            Revisiting the movie now, many years later –my sister wasn’t born when I first saw it, and she’s a married adult with a doctorate today—I was impressed by how much I remembered, which is all the evidence I could ever require that there’s something special here. But it’s a much stranger artistic object to experience with several more decades of American culture under my belt, a curious time capsule from a distant history where it was by no means clear that audiences would accept, or perhaps even understand, a superhero film.


            It is a movie which more or less takes for granted that audiences recognize the character of Batman and know what his deal is –and if even I knew in 1990, I think that was a reasonably safe assumption—but doesn’t preoccupy itself by trying to anticipate what the audience is expecting from a Batman film. Because, after all, people weren’t really expecting anything specific. Other than the 1978 SUPERMAN a decade earlier, nobody had ever tried making a serious comic book film; even SUPERMAN’s sequels had quickly devolved into campy, kiddie matinees, ending with the ignominy of SUPERMAN IV: THE QUEST FOR PEACE just two years before a young, unusual filmmaker (boasting just two finished films on his resume, one a TV adaptation and the other a weird, grotesque comedy) showed up with a very different approach to comic-book cinema in mind. If there was any template to work from, it was only the even-campier 1966 Batman TV series starring Adam West (or, I guess, the Batman serials from the 1940s, if you want to get real technical about it) and everyone seemed to be in agreement up front that it should definitely be not-that.

This was to be a serious movie, then; not exactly a movie for adults, but certainly not a kid’s film. Something dignified, something crafted with a certain amount of ambition and maturity, though also not with so much dignity, ambition and maturity that there couldn’t be a Burger King merchandising tie-in. A movie for the masses, something with board demographic appeal, real bread and circuses stuff. Crucially, a movie for the people, not for the fans; nobody involved in the production seems to have fretted too much over appeasing diehard devotees of the character. Comic books nerds were still considered a fringe demographic of stunted adolescents, barely worthy of attention and certainly not in their wildest dreams worth pandering to. The inmates were not yet in charge of the asylum; the internet had not yet allowed them to organize and form a powerful economic block, although it must be said, they themselves were still as virulently invested in controlling the process as they have subsequently shown themselves – even without the internet to assist in organizing, over 50,000 letters from Batman fans poured into the studio to protest the casting of Michal Keaton (MR. MOM), who was generally considered too much of a comic actor for the role. The difference between then and now, however, was that the studio felt perfectly comfortable ignoring them and not pandering to their outraged fury, despite the fact that it was the shifting preferences of these very fans which in some ways made a Tim Burton BATMAN film possible.

After all, comic books had abandoned their campy origins for more self-conscious grown-up fare fairly recently; Frank Miller’s over-the-top THE DARK KNIGHT RETURNS had pushed Batman to edgier new places in 1986, and Alan Moore’s nihilistic THE KILLING JOKE had hit stands just a month before Burton’s film was officially greenlit. Combine that atmosphere with a then-edgy young director with a reputation for the macabre, and it’s tempting --particularly when viewed in retrospect through the lens of Nolan’s ultra-serious trilogy-- to consider BATMAN a film defined by its boundary-pushing darkness. And it would indeed be foolhardy to ignore it, because that’s definitely what struck people at the time (sensitive ol’ Roger Ebert, even while praising the movie’s design, called it a “hostile, mean-spirited movie about ugly, evil people”). Still, watching it today, the thing that stands out is not so much the gothic darkness (which is expected, and perhaps even a bit of a bore after almost 30 years of increasingly insipid “adult” posturing in comic books) but how little removed from the camp of 1966 it actually is. The “darkness” is primarily the effect of the portentously gloomy production design and the ominous, magnificent score by Danny Elfman (which, to be fair, are probably the two most impactful and defining factors of the whole film), but when you get down to the plot and structure, we find something not really so very different from its pulpy roots.


Indeed, if we look at the script in the abstract, it’s not like we find some kind of moody psychological exploration of Nietzschean modes of identity. We find quintessential comic book stuff: colorful villains, silly convoluted plots, stock characters, and childish fantasies about fast cars and caped crusaders. You could have used this script, almost completely unaltered, for an episode of the Batman serial from 1943 and nobody would have batted (ha!) an eye. There’s really very little “adult” material in here. Bruce Wayne is definitely DTF, but it’s not a horny movie (like virtually every Burton film, with the very notable exception of BATMAN’s immediate sequel, sex is something abstract, a genre trope more than a compulsion of flesh). Likewise, there’s certainly some deaths, but it’s not a violent movie; death, like sex, happens bloodlessly and safely off-screen, obliquely implied but tastefully glossed over. When Batman murders what must be dozens of henchmen by blowing up the building they’re in, the movie does not encourage us to consider the subject of their charred remains or, even worse, wonder about possible mutilated survivors dragging their mangled bodies from the wreckage. Batman vanquishes his opponents and they simply vanish from his mind and ours. The hero has prevailed, the villains have been routed, good has triumphed over evil, and the movie sees absolutely no reason to consider the matter even a little bit further. There is little evidence that Bruce Wayne is traumatized or mentally unwell, or that his behavior is aberrant or antisocial; there is little evidence he considers his dual identity to be a burden or a turn-on or anything else. Indeed, there is little Bruce Wayne of any kind. The movie is almost aggressively uninterested in who he is. He is simply Batman. Who would ever bother asking what that means? Batman is Batman is Batman. You know what his deal is. It’s being Batman. Batman is nothing so vulgar as a character. Batman is an icon.

Of course, narrative film tends to be about characters, not icons, and the result of Burton’s obvious disinterest in the former is something rather weird: a movie called BATMAN which is only intermittently and reluctantly about Batman, and then only to the extent it functionally has to be. Burton loves the image of Batman; loves to see him in contour, to have him drop down from above with his wings cutting a gorgeous geometric silhouette against the backlit street, loves to watch his eyes gleam out of the darkness of his exaggerated tombstone profile. But beyond that he has manifestly little interest in the macho, repressed power fantasy which is arguably at the heart of what Batman is. In his own words: “I was never a giant comic book fan, but I've always loved the image of Batman and the Joker. The reason I've never been a comic book fan … is because I could never tell which box I was supposed to read. I don't know if it was dyslexia or whatever, but that's why I loved The Killing Joke, because for the first time I could tell which one to read” (Tim Burton, Burton on Burton: Revised Edition (London: Faber and Faber, 2006) 71.) In other words, the first Batman comic Burton ever loved came out literally one month before he was greenlit to start shooting this movie… and the thing he liked about it was the intuitive layout. Not a word about the content, even with that books’ shocking, provocative storyline. He loved the “image of Batman and the Joker,” but their story is clearly not something that resonated with him. Burton was never a kid who fantasized about punching gangsters or driving fast cars; if he had any connection to the characters at all, it’s in their shared love of an eccentric black aesthetic and swishing around dramatically in capes. But that leaves the inevitability of Batman being an action hero something which openly bores the director, and something he engages with only when he’s given absolutely no choice (and even when he’s forced to, he does a pretty middling job of it… the big climax is mainly defined by Batman furtively running up a seemingly endless flight of stairs. Probably didn’t even need a stuntman).

Instead, he refocuses the movie by skirting around Batman, centering the narrative on two other characters. One is The Joker (Jack Nicholson, THE TERROR) whose theatrical style and delight in anarchic rule-breaking is clearly more fun and appealing to Burton, and who dominates the movie to a far greater extent than Batman. The other is Vicky Vale (--you know, from the Prince song!—Kim Basinger, COOL WORLD) a plucky photographer whose determination to photograph Batman allows Burton to frame the movie in a way that bests suits his interests: with its ostensible central character as a figure of mystery, compelling and unknowable. It puts us outside Batman, looking in, all the better to perceive him as a larger-than-life figure. An image, not a character.



Putting it in black and white like that, it sounds like an insane approach to a movie like this. A comic book movie with almost no action, that tries as hard as it can to keep its title character removed from the audience? Lunacy! And yet, watching it all those years ago as a little kid with his cool new uncle, that never occurred to me. Maybe it’s because, like Burton, I wasn’t a fan of the comics, didn’t have any attachment to the formula. Maybe it’s because unlike many comics fans, the basic premise of Batman as a fascist power fantasy doesn’t have a tremendous amount of appeal to me, and I don’t miss it when it’s shifted to the deep background. But I’m most inclined to think that Burton is just essentially correct: none of that stuff is really important. Comic books are only superficially an action genre, and their staying power and broad appeal suggest there’s something more powerful here than just macho wish-fulfillment. The content itself is barely even important; it’s the aesthetic that matters. The medium is the message. Batman is bigger than content. It’s about a vibe. As my reviewing hero Vern put it, “Tim Burton’s BATMAN is a movie about a feeling – a feeling called Batman.” Not about acting like Batman, not about being Batman, or watching him, or learning about him. About feeling Batman.

That feeling isn’t about a person, it’s not about a specific goal, it’s not about politics or even spirit-crushing, overcompensating male insecurity. It’s about the towering, tombstone art deco skyscrapers with their severe, unearthly statuary. It’s about the lurking, low rumble of the score, which feels like it scrambles up from some unfathomable depth and claws its way to the sky with just enough strength left to resolve into that lonesome, mournful theme. Like Burton’s evocation of Gotham city itself –with its ragged modernity squatting atop the sepulchral ruins of an alien vision of savagely inhuman modernist majesty—it feels not just ancient, but out of time, a half-remembered vision from a dream of the elder gods. That is the Batman feeling, that is the elusive core that has allowed a very stupid concept for children to somehow twist and evolve itself over the course of what is now 82 years. That is what could make someone’s cool uncle confidently assert that BATMAN is really cool, an appraisement that to this day I certainly couldn’t dispute. And it’s the thing that stuck with me all these years. It is not, truth be told, a movie with a tremendous amount of incident, especially by modern comic book standards. But that cool sticks with you.

Batman has stuck around too, of course; Burton would push even further into aestheticized dreamland with BATMAN RETURNS, and Joel Schumacher would exaggerate it into feverish camp with a soft underbelly of crass corporate commercialism with his two sequels, finally crushing the series under its own weight and allowing Christopher Nolan to start fresh with his gritty, self-serious trilogy in the ‘aughts. And then of course there was the steroid-sweaty, abortive Synderverse run, with Affleck playing the character, and now there’s a new reboot on the horizon as well. But while all of those have their merits, there’s something to be said for Burton’s ability to –or maybe just inability to do anything else but—strip the character down to the pure mythical core and let that Batman Feeling speak for itself. Other directors have had varying success doing other things with him, but in some ways, there’s a pureness of vision right here, at the very beginning of things, which has somehow been lost along the way. The Nolan films, for instance, are fun, but almost in spite of starring Batman; you get the sense that the director might have been just as happy making films about a rich playboy detective who didn’t have the embarrassingly pulpy habit of dressing like a bat. BATMAN (1989) could never be about anything but a caped crusader – it wouldn’t be anything, would have no reason to exist at all without that distinct silhouette with the bat ears, without the sleek lines of the rocket car, the grotesque Conrad-Veidt-inspired Joker’s visage. It’s not always a real exciting watch, but there’s always something magnetically compelling about it. I felt it back then as a kid, full of wonder and amazement at this strange thing unlike anything else I’d ever seen before. And I feel it even now, all these years later, though maybe with an adult’s sense of amused distance from it.

That’s no small feat, because those two viewings are separated by a lot of years. I’m an adult now – not even a young adult, but sinking ever closer to middle age. Uncle Richard is gone, died a year ago of complications from a stroke. When I was briefly in his house after the funeral, I made a point to look for a BATMAN Blu-Ray by the TV, but I didn’t see one. I never got to watch another Batman movie with him, never even got to ask him what he thought of RETURNS, or the Schumacher movies, or anything that came after. I wondered what he would have thought if I had told him what an impression that night made on me. Would he even remember? I wish I had asked, but it never came up, and now it’s too late. Here’s some advice, kid: when people mean something to you, tell them so. Don’t wait. If you miss your chance, you’ll never get another one.

Sometimes people are gone before you’re ready. Life can seem so static sometimes, as one day drifts into another and everything seems the same. But nothing is permanent, and suddenly your youth is gone, your loved ones are gone, and you find yourself grasping to try to hold onto something. Even memories fade, quietly rearrange themselves. I ask myself – wait, did Richard show us the juggling tricks the same night that we watched BATMAN? Or am I confusing two different visits? I can’t be sure. The past recedes like a heavy fog, shaping the world we imagine but retreating as we try to approach it. But life moves on. There’s always a new Batman on the horizon. Maybe that’s why we can’t bring ourselves to let him go – maybe by holding onto Batman, we’re trying to hold onto our cool uncle, or our older brother, or long-gone childhood friend, or just our childhood selves, back when we were earnest enough to simply bask in that Batman Feeling without all the emotional clutter of complicated adulthood dulling its potency. As always, we take the wrong message from things, end up thinking it’s Batman himself that we care about, let some goofball like Christopher Nolan try and tell us it’s a psychologically rich concept, let some stunted fascist like Frank Miller tell us it’s gritty and dangerous. But Burton knows –or at least, knew then—that’s it’s both simpler and deeper than that. Batman is about being a kid, swooshing around in a cape and feeling mysterious and elemental, about allowing yourself to be swept up in that feeling, and maybe even sharing it with someone else who really needs it. In that sense, although Burton would best capture the Batman Feeling on the screen, it would be Schumacher who had the final word: Batman is, indeed, forever.



For Uncle Richard and Uncle David, my cool uncles.

APPENDIX A: Various Batmans or Batmen
BATMAN (1989)
BATMAN BEGINS (2005)
THE DARK KNIGHT (2008)
BATMAN VS SUPERMAN (2016)
JUSTICE LEAGUE (2017 / 2021)
THE BATMAN (2022)


Friday, August 14, 2020

The Wind In The Willows (1987)

 Movies Till Dawn: TV Party III – Holiday Programming ...

 

The Wind In The Willows (1987)

Dir. Arthur Rankin Jr, Jules Bass

Written by Romeo Muller, based on the book by Kenneth Grahame

Starring (voices): Charles Nelson Reilly, Roddy McDowall, José Ferrer, Eddie Bracken

When I was growing up, Rankin/Bass productions were most known for their stop-motion Christmas specials, most notably RUDOLPH THE RED NOSED REINDEER in 1964. I can’t claim I really have my finger on the pulse of the youth today, but I’d guess that’s still what they’re most remembered for today, if they’re remembered at all. I never saw any of those, though, so to me, the name Rankin/Bass conjures a different sort of movie: their series of traditionally animated fantasy adaptations-- specifically, 1977's THE HOBBIT, its semi-sequel, 1980's THE RETURN OF THE KING* and 1982's THE LAST UNICORN, along with our subject today, 1987’s THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS (in researching this review, I discovered, to my profound astonishment, that there was another film in their series of which I was completely unaware: an adaptation of Gordon Dickson's A FLIGHT OF DRAGONS from 1982. Considering the impact these films had on me as a child, this is roughly equivalent to a 60-year-old discovering that the Beatles put out two albums in 1968, one of which they somehow never heard about).

While THE HOBBIT and THE LAST UNICORN seem to have increased in stature over the years (in part, no doubt, due to the contributions of TopCraft, the animation studio which would go on to birth Studio Ghibli), I'm sorry to say that Rankin/Bass's final animated project, 1987's adaptation of Kenneth Grahame's 1908 children's novel The Wind In The Willows, has remained comparatively rather obscure. I'm not sure why, exactly; true, it looks noticeably cheaper than their earlier films (more recycled animation, simpler character design), and yeah, I guess it probably doesn't help that there are about 40,000 different adaptations of The Wind In The Willows, making it difficult to stand out. And to those woes we can add that the studio was in its death throes during production; the film was actually finished in 1985, but by July 5, 1987, when it finally made its premier on the ABC network, the studio had ceased to exist: they had shut down in May of the same year. Still, despite all that, it’s a shame this has been so widely ignored; it’s is a startlingly mature and ambitious work by a venerable studio with a great voice cast, and you'd think it deserved more than a produced-on-demand DVD dumping with a washed-out video print (courtesy of Warner Brothers, who acquired Rankin/Bass’s post-1975 catalogue after the company officially dissolved in the early 2000’s). But what films deserve and what they get are not often the same thing.

This film is, of course, primarily the story of out-of-control automobile enthusiast Toad (Charles Nelson Reilly, at the time probably most known for his many game show appearances, though he would soon embark on a decade-long voice-acting career under the direction of Don Bluth), with the story built around the series of wild troubles he gets into in the relentless pursuit of his passion. So much you know; so much are all Wind In The Willows adaptations about. This was not the first adaptation of The Wind In The Willows, nor even the first animated adaptation (Disney put out a version in 1949, when Bass was a mere lad of 14). But this adaptation, closely following the original book (much more closely, I should say, than any of the other three or four versions I've seen, particularly the massively abbreviated Disney version) is about much more than that. It's a poetic, meditative and melancholy rumination on the things that give life meaning, with a deeply British sense of the foundational, grounding value of home, but also a note of restless wanderlust which imparts upon the whole thing a surprisingly bittersweet tone.

Still, let us not mince words: the movie is very much motivated by Toad and his antics, and it's easy to understand why. The appeal of Toad was always obvious, especially to a child: he is a character entirely of Id, unchecked and unconcerned with moderation or logic, a joyous slave to his pleasures, ricocheting between giddy highs and miserable lows. He's a selfish character, as all children must be, but also too ebullient and generous with his joy and his energy for us to ever even consider disliking.

 

 

So much was obvious to me even as a child, and so much remains a giddy joy today. But revisiting this film after all these years as an adult, I was struck by something else, something that never occurred to me in my youth: Toad is also a vivid, and rather direct, portrait of addiction. The wild highs, the crushing lows, the rampant, defiant irresponsibility, the obsessive, self-destructive fixation; hell, there’s even an intervention scene, from which Toad emerges initially cowed, only to immediately begin plotting his course back off the wagon. A quick peek at Kenneth Grahame’s biography makes it obvious that this is more than mere coincidence: when Grahame was only five, his own father had to give up custody of his children due to his incessant drinking. At least once, he tried to get his children back, but apparently couldn’t stay sober enough to be a secure guardian. Grahame, in other words, had a front-row seat to an out-of-control addiction which very neatly maps to the other characters in the novel, Toad’s friends Ratty, Moley, and Badger, who can only watch in horror as their friend recklessly endangers himself and everyone around him.

Knowing all that, it makes sense that Toad’s anarchic spirit is so intrinsically mixed into a tale with a lingering sense of melancholy. Toad strikes me very much as a child’s-eye-view of a parent spiraling out of control. Which is, I can attest from experience, a more complicated experience than most people might guess; a father who comes home drunk and full of energy, gathers the children up and races them into the woods to catch fireflies far past their bedtime certainly inspires a feeling of wild elation. But those feelings are mingled with a crawling horror that the adult upon whom you are wholly dependent is not behaving responsibly, in ways that even a child can clearly discern. What better metaphor for the mix of love and pain than Toad’s wild motorcar rides? The book –and the film—vividly feel his unfettered rapture, but are also not entirely unaware of the stark danger he is ignoring, and his blissful obliviousness to how much he is embarrassing his friends. 

 


At any rate, Toad’s odyssey gives the movie its animating energy, but it’s not the whole story; in fact, for significant lengths of time Toad is entirely out of the picture. And in the meantime, you have the curious, dovetailing stories of Moley (Eddie Bracken) and Ratty (Roddy McDowell, at peak Englishness), two characters whose relationship with Toad is almost tangential, but whose parallel conflicted desire to explore the world beyond their comfortable homes grounds the film emotionally. Moley –forced from his underground quarters for the first time by Toad’s mayhem—has a shy, earnest excitement about the huge new world he’s stumbled into, and turns to the more worldly Ratty for guidance. But Ratty, it seems, also has romantic dreams of expanding his horizons, dreams that tug at his soul, but also can’t be realized without abandoning his beloved riverside community. There’s a deep, powerful longing under the surface here, neatly embodied in the lovely, haunting theme song sung by Judy Collins (with lyrics –and rather enchanting ones—by Jules Bass), and bolstered by a foundation of quiet, sweet-natured decency that helps make the whimsy feel grounded and substantial. 

As for the animation itself, it is, admittedly, cheaper and somewhat less distinct than THE HOBBIT and THE LAST UNICORN, but there’s still a painterly sensibility here which does a fine job of creating a recognizably and distinctly English countryside while still adding a light sense of whimsical fantasy. The animal designs are cute and, --refreshingly-- not overly anthropomorphized, though the human characters tend towards the grotesque. The cheap animation limits their movement somewhat, resulting in some recycled animation which can look disturbing mechanical, but the posture and design conveys enough character to get by. And that character is bolstered immeasurably by a terrific cast, with Bracken, McDowell, Reilly, and José Ferrer (as wise old Mr. Badger) each instilling their character with a tremendous amount of personality and charm. 

 

 

All this is marvelously tied together by the music, a consistent strength for the studio; in fact, each of the movies in this loose series is guided by distinct musical choices, from the warm-hearted folk tunes sung by Glenn Yarbrough in THE HOBBIT and RETURN OF THE KINGS to the swoony melancholy of the band America’s  soundtrack for THE LAST UNICORN (apparently A FLIGHT OF DRAGONS features a Don McLean theme song?). The songs here are written by Rankin/Bass house composer Maury Laws (who also wrote songs, often with some lyrical input from Jules Bass, for THE HOBBIT, RETURN OF THE KING, and A FLIGHT OF DRAGONS, among many other Rankin/Bass productions), who never became a household name, but really had a knack for using songwriting to craft a distinct and specific emotional space for the films to occupy. Considering the short runtime and large number of songs, their importance in defining these films can hardly be overstated, so it’s a good thing Laws was such a consistently good writer. True to form, the songs here are uniformly delightful –ranging from the haunting theme song to Toad’s exuberant panegyric to unsafe driving to a real toe-tapper about his bad behavior at trial.

All things considered, THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS is certainly less epic and fantastical than its Rankin/Bass predecessors; it is by its very nature a smaller film, a gentle, dreamy bedtime story for children rather than a mythic adventure. But in its own unassuming way, it’s hardly less ambitious. Like Grahame’s book, it has at its heart an elusive, kind-hearted lyricism which bolsters its more rollicking inclinations and gives the whole meandering story a quiet kind of power, simultaneously sweet, rambunctious, and a little sad. That puts it, to my mind, in the top tier of American animated films, and strongly argues that it deserves to escape the relative obscurity it has languished in for the past three decades. Gentle whimsy is a somewhat harder sell than adventure-fantasy, but it is, in its own quiet way, just as powerful, and perhaps rather harder to conjure. For all of its unassuming simplicity, there are complicated, rich veins of emotions running beneath the surface, which moved me even as a child, and remain rewarding and mysterious today. It’s not the sort of thing which commonly gets a movie noticed, especially not an obscure made-for-TV adaptation from three decades ago. But it does make it worth remembering.   

 

*Since you asked: the rights to Fellowship Of The Ring and The Two Towers were held by Saul Zaentz, who had produced Ralph Bakshi's bold but ill-fated THE LORD OF THE RINGS in 1978. The idea to just dodge working with Zaentz and adapt only the last book of the trilogy sounds insane, but on closer examination… nope, uh, I guess it still makes no sense at all. It’s best viewed as a conclusion to the Bakshi version, but the spectacularly different visual style, completely different voice cast, and a range of continuity issues makes that impossible, so I don’t know what they were thinking here. On the other hand, I totally dig the pounding, quasi-disco number "Where There's A Whip There's A Way", so, I dunno, worth it?