Showing posts with label Martin Scorsese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martin Scorsese. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Auteurs (The Great Directors of Cinema History): Part 2 – Movies Spotlight – April 2015

List is in alphabetical order.


Part II – The Rise of the Auteur and Experimentation



Woody Allen
Style/system: American; worked in American independent film; known for his dialog and contribution to the romantic comedy genre
Active: 1966-Present
Key films to see: Annie Hall, Manhattan, Hannah and Her Sisters, Crimes and Misdemeanors, and Midnight in Paris


Robert Altman
Style/system: American; worked in Hollywood and American independent film; large ensemble casts, naturalistic style, a leading filmmaker in the New Hollywood era
Active: 1951-2006
Key films to see: MASH, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, The Long Goodbye, Nashville, and The Player


Ingmar Bergman
Style/system: Swedish; worked in Sweden; a director’s director, very influential and beloved by those who came after him, his work often focused on the human condition
Active: 1946-2007
Key films to see: The Seventh Seal, Wild Strawberries, Persona, Cries and Whispers, and Fanny and Alexander


Bernardo Bertolucci
Style/system: Italian; worked in Italy and America; strikingly beautiful and poetic films, often dealing with character facing moments of monumental change in their lives
Active: 1962-Present
Key films to see: The Conformist, Last Tango in Paris, 1900, and The Last Emperor


Robert Bresson
Style/system: French; worked in France; influenced the filmmakers who birthed the French New Wave, a director’s director (influential and beloved), Jean-Luc Godard wrote: “Robert Bresson is French cinema, as Dostoevsky is the Russian novel and Mozart is German music.”
Active: 1934-1983
Key films to see: Diary of a Country Priest, A Man Escaped, Pickpocket, Au Hasard Balthazar, and Mouchette


John Cassavetes
Style/system: American; worked in American independent film; an actor’s director, known for garnering some of cinema’s greatest performances from his troupe of actors, often made films about normal life and the great strain that exists within it
Active: 1959-1986
Key films to see: Faces, A Woman Under the Influence, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, Opening Night, and Gloria


Francis Ford Coppola
Style/system: American; worked in Hollywood and American independent film; a prominent member of the New Hollywood wave of filmmakers, the filmmaker of the 1970s (only to seemingly never again make a truly great film)
Active: 1959-Present
Key films to see: The Godfather, The Conversation, The Godfather: Part II, Apocalypse Now, The Outsiders, and Dracula


Stanley Donen
Style/system: American; worked in Hollywood; marvelous musicals (with Gene Kelly) and masterful Hollywood genre films (with Audrey Hepburn), bright and colorful, pure Hollywood
Active: 1949-1999
Key films to see: On the Town, Singin’ in the Rain, Funny Face, Charade, and Two for the Road


Federico Fellini
Style/system: Italian; worked in Italy; blends fantasy and baroque imagery with realism, yet another of the most influential filmmakers of those to follow him
Active: 1950-1990
Key films to see: La Strada, The Nights of Cabiria, La Dolce Vita, 8 ½, and Amarcord


Milos Forman
Style/system: Czech; worked in Czechoslovakia and Hollywood; a leader of the Czechoslovak New Wave moment, bringing his biting satire and rebellion against authority to Hollywood
Active: 1960-Presnet
Key films to see: The Loves of a Blonde, The Fireman’s Ball, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Hair, and Amadeus


Jean-Luc Godard
Style/system: French; worked in France; a leader of the French New Wave, an artist often working with experiment cinema techniques
Active: 1955-Present
Key films to see: Breathless, Vivre Sa Vie, Contempt, Band of Outsiders, and Pierrot le Fou


Stanley Kubrick
Style/system: American; worked in Hollywood and England; evocative films, strikingly beautiful films, incredibly influential, a prominent leader of the New Hollywood wave
Active: 1951-1999
Key films to see: Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, 2001: A Space Odyssey, A Clockwork Orange, Barry Lyndon, and The Shining


Sergio Leone
Style/system: Italian; worked in Italy and America; known for his grand Spaghetti Westerns (modernizing and stylistically changing the western forever)
Active: 1954-1984
Key films to see: A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, The Good , the Bad and the Ugly, Once Upon a Time in the West, and Once Upon a Time in America


Sidney Lumet
Style/system: American; worked in Hollywood; an actor’s director with expert craftsmanship, prolific, his films often address social realism
Active: 1952-2007
Key films to see: 12 Angry Men, Fail Safe, The Hill, Dog Day Afternoon, and Network


Style/system: American; worked in American independent film; ethereal filmmaking almost more montage than narrative, more poetic than structured, stunning visuals, deeply philosophical
Active: 1969-Presnet


Jean-Pierre Melville
Style/system: French; worked in France; a minimalist, French film noir and gangster films, his style is the epitome of cool, influenced the French New Wave
Active: 1946-1972
Key films to see: Bob le Flambeur, Le Doulos, Le Samourai, The Army of Shadows, and Le Cercle Rouge


Mike Nichols
Style/system: German; worked in Hollywood and Broadway; an actor’s director, experimental and aggressively progressive stylistically completely changing the narrative language on American cinema with one film (The Graduate)
Active: 1966-2007


Sam Peckinpah
Style/system: American; worked in Hollywood; innovative and explicit use of violence, reworked the western to be much grittier and moral ambiguous (replacing white hats and black hats with versions of gray)
Active: 1958-1983
Key films to see: The Wild Bunch, Straw Dogs, The Getaway, and Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia


Roman Polanski
Style/system: Polish; worked in Poland, England, France and Hollywood; a master of the thriller, an expressive style utilizing camera movement, framing and mise en scene to their greatest effect
Active: 1955-Present
Key films to see: Repulsion, Rosemary’s Baby, Chinatown, The Tenant, and The Pianist


Nicolas Roeg
Style/system: English; worked in England; disjunctive editing, cryptic plots that are fascinating even so (to be revealed in full in the end), films that draw the view in, often terrifying due to a foreboding sense of atmosphere
Active: 1970-2007
Key films to see: Performance, Walkabout, Don’t Look Now, The Man Who Fell to Earth, and Bad Timing


Style/system: American; worked in Hollywood; a leader of the New Hollywood wave, revitalizing the American gangster film (along with Francis Ford Coppola), highly stylized use of music, camera moves and editing, cinema’s greatest student, fan and protector
Active: 1959-Present
Key films to see: Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, Goodfellas, and Casino


Style/system: English; worked in England and Hollywood; a grandiose scene of scope and scale, atmospheric visuals, modernization of sci-fi crossing it over with other genres (like the horror/thriller and noir/hard boiled detective)
Active: 1965-Present
Key films to see: Alien, Blade Runner, Thelma & Louise, Gladiator, and Black Hawk Down


Steve Spielberg
Style/system: American; worked in Hollywood; created the modern blockbuster (along with George Lucas) and blockbuster filmmaking, a leader of the New Hollywood wave, maybe the world’s most famous director
Active: 1959-Present
Key films to see: Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Raiders of the Lost Ark, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, and Schindler’s List


Andrei Tarkovsky
Style/system: Russian; worked in Russia, Italy and Sweden; a director’s director, changed film language for many to follow him with his style and storytelling, life as a reflection, as a dream
Active: 1956-1986
Key films to see: Ivan’s Childhood, Andrei Rublev, Solaris, The Mirror, and Stalker


François Truffaut
Style/system: French; worked in France; a principal filmmaker of the French New Wave, a student and critic of cinema, as well-versed as any
Active: 1955-1983
Key films to see: The 400 Blows, Shoot the Pianist, Jules and Jim, Stolen Kisses, and Day for Night


Friday, July 25, 2014

Top 100 Films of the 20th Century – Part 19: 15-11


Rank: 15
Release Year: 1954
Genre: Samurai
Director: Akira Kurosawa
Plot Summary: A poor village is under constant attack by bandits, so they hire seven unemployed samurai to defend the community.
What Makes It Special: It is easy to call Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai the greatest samurai film of all-time or the director’s most impressive masterpiece. The film is on one hand an epic action film that slowly builds to its brilliant and entertaining climax and on the other hand it is a beautiful piece about humanity. Kurosawa always played with richly textured characters, even when making what could be called a grand action film rather than a character drama; but Kurosawa balances it so well that it plays as both (when appropriate).
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Rank: 14
Title: Persona
Release Year: 1966
Genre: Thriller
Director: Ingmar Bergman
Plot Summary: Alma is a nurse put in charge of famous movie star Elisabet Vogler who is on the verge of a complete mental breakdown. At present, Vogler cannot even speak (this condition befalling her in the middle of her latest movie role). As Alma cares for her, she finds that her persona and Volger’s begin to blend, making it difficult to tell them apart.
What Makes It Special: Persona is a visually striking film – one that is also very unnerving and creepy. It is maybe the scariest film that was not made to be scary in the classical sense. Ingmar Bergman uses surreal and dreamlike imagery to both seduce and unhinge the viewer. Reality and illusion become indistinguishable. The film is raw, intimate, and unforgettable.
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Rank: 13
Title: Tokyo Story
Release Year: 1953
Genre: Drama
Director: Yasujiro Ozu
Plot Summary: An elderly couple decides to take a trip to the city to visit their children and grandchildren but find that the children are all too wrapped up in their own lives to take the time to be with them.
What Makes It Special: With Tokyo Story Yasujiro Ozu makes a film examines the post-WWII middle-class Japanese family dynamic. It is wholly compelling, as generational and personal barriers are put up and excuses made to limit true interaction between people, even those most beloved, all in the name of self-importance above all else (our own lives always feel more important than anything else to us). Ozu’s rigid directional style only exaggerates the space between characters. 1950s Japan was culturally very reserved, but Ozu is able to create a film that is still very powerful dramatically by really getting at the heart of what his characters feel and experience. Tokyo Story should feel foreign and yet its emotions, characters, and family dynamic resonate just as strongly today. Ozu addresses universal human truths that cross generations and cultures.
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Rank: 12
Release Year: 1974
Genre: Gangster
Plot Summary: Michael Corleone takes tighter control of his family (crime syndicate); while back in the 1920s New York Michael’s father Vito gets his start as a gangster.
What Makes It Special: The Godfather: Part II is generally the film that comes to mind when critics discuss the best sequel of all-time – many even putting it ahead of The Godfather (although, I might retort that The Godfather: Part II’s narrative is dependent on The Godfather’s and thus is subservient to it). It is an astonishing character drama, as the audience seeing Michael transformation juxtaposed to his father’s. The film is also a stellar gangster genre piece, Francis Ford Coppola creating many iconic sequences and moments. It is magnificent aesthetically as well.
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Rank: 11
Title: Taxi Driver
Release Year: 1976
Genre: Crime Drama
Director: Martin Scorsese
Plot Summary: Travis Bickle is a mentally unstable Vietnam War veteran who finds himself in New York working the night-shift as a taxi driver. The decaying city that Bickle perceives weighs heavily upon his subconscious driving him to violence. He also becomes infatuated with a young prostitute named Iris; thinking of himself as the hero, he wants to save her from her life on the streets.
What Makes It Special: Taxi Driver is a hypnotic film that plays in the darkness. The cinematography, score, writing, Martin Scorsese’s directing, and Robert De Niro’s performance are all stunning. Scorsese presents New York City as a cesspool (a common perception of the time period), creating feelings of extreme loneliness, anger, and paranoia in Travis Bickle’s mind. His isolation has a duality – it both makes him a sympathetic character for the audience to follow and maybe even root for and it drives Bickle mad and to violence as a means of push back against the oppressiveness of the city that seems to bleakly strangle him with its perceived corrupting filth. Bickle is sympathetic but also volatile and dangerous. Scorsese has created a hero who is also the villain with Bickle. Taxi Driver is a grim, unsettling look at humanity stripped of basic compassion, and it is electric.  
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Top 100 Films of the 20th Century – Part 16: 30-26


Rank: 30
Title: Rashomon
Release Year: 1950
Genre: Samurai
Director: Akira Kurosawa
Plot Summary: A terrible crime and its direct aftermath are recalled from differing points of view.
What Makes It Special: Rashomon works beautifully thanks to Akira Kurosawa’s innovation narrative structure. The rape and murder of a couple in the woods is presented by multiple witnesses, each giving a slightly altered version of the event (the truth existing somewhere amongst all their stories of what happened). The film reveals something interesting about humanity – that truth is often relative, depending on the interpretation of the beholder. One’s own humanity and experiences shape how they perceive the world; and thus, truth is not a universal concept. The film also features a brilliant performance from Japan’s biggest star Toshiro Mifune.
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Rank: 29
Title: Raging Bull
Release Year: 1980
Genre: Sports Drama/Biography
Director: Martin Scorsese
Plot Summary: The life and career of boxer Jake LaMotta: a self-destructive, bad-tempered and violent man – he became a champion boxer, but his personal life was left in shambles.
What Makes It Special: Martin Scorsese revolutionized the way sports dramas are made with Raging Bull. Each fight shot and styled in a different manner to elicit unique reactions and feelings from the audience. Scorsese also directs two astounding performances in the film: one from Joe Pesci (making his career) and one from Robert De Niro (adding to his growing legend, following sensational work in Taxi Driver). The film is emotional dense and at times difficult to watch, but Scorsese and his actors create something that is ultimately highly compelling. Raging Bull remains one of cinema’s marquee character dramas.
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Rank: 28
Title: Breathless
Release Year: 1960
Genre: Romance
Director: Jean-Luc Godard
Plot Summary:  A young Frenchman and known car thief, Michel Poiccard, kills a policeman and must go into hiding; but before he leaves for Italy, he tries to convince a beautiful young girl, Patricia Franchini, to come with him.
What Makes It Special: Breathless is maybe the most famous film of the French New Wave movement, director Jean-Luc Godard teaming with the other creative champion of the style Francois Truffaut (whose The 400 Blows is also a staple of French New Wave Cinema). The film is incredibly fresh, vital and seductive. It exudes the feeling of youth (something extremely hard to capture). It is also very stylish, cool and cinematically revolutionary. Really with one film, Godard has influenced generations of filmmakers (he does have many other films, but Breathless is the one people continually come back to time and time again).
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Rank: 27
Title: Rear Window
Release Year: 1954
Genre: Mystery Thriller
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Plot Summary: L.B. Jefferies is a renowned action photographer, but he has been injured on his latest job. With two broken legs, he is stuck in a wheelchair in his apartment, growing very bored and turning to spying on his neighbors for entertainment. It is all in good fun until Jefferies becomes convinced that one of his neighbors has murdered his wife. Pulling his girlfriend Lisa into his obsession, he is determined to investigate further.
What Makes It Special: Rear Window is one of Alfred Hitchcock’s greatest thrillers, but it is much more. It is a film about voyeurism – something that is very powerful and seductive. We as a society love films because they entertain us and take us places we have maybe never been, but there is something much more intimate about them. They allow us to peer into the lives of others (fictional or not) and watch them without being seen (the illusion of voyeurism) – we see into their secret lives. Hitchcock taps into this dark human truth and fetish. Rear Window is also directed and acted to perfection. It is the film that first piqued my interest in cinema as something more than a casual entertaining pastime.
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Rank: 26
Release Year: 1925
Genre: Montage
Director: S.M. Eisenstein
Cast: Various Russian actors
Plot Summary: When the sailors of the battleship Potemkin are given rotten meat, they turn mutinous starting a riot to protest their treatment. Their actions ignite the beginnings of a revolution in Odessa, one that the police quickly try to put out by massacring many of the demonstrators that join the protest. The film is based on the historical event.
What Makes It Special: Montage filmmaking strived to take two images and create meaning by juxtaposing them against each other. Battleship Potemkin (and Dziga Vertov’s Man with a Movie Camera) epitomizes this style, creating a work that is astonishingly compelling. It continues to influence filmmaking today (creating many of the rules of dramatic film editing – like how to properly edit to maximize suspense). It is not as accessible as many silent films that adhere more to the narrative language we are more accustomed to (shot reverse shot; long, medium, close), but that does not diminish its emotional power.
Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand

Friday, January 24, 2014

LeapBackBlog 2013 Film Awards – Part 3: Directors

Film in 2013 was fantastic. We saw tons of wonderful performances, powerfully emotional dramas, hysterical comedies, gripping thrillers, big and entertaining blockbusters, and grand technical achievements. This year was particularly difficult in narrowing down my choices for my favorite films, performances, directors, and technical accomplishments. For example, I loved Amy Acker in Much Ado About Nothing and Oscar Isaac in Inside Llewyn Davis, but neither quite made the list, and the same can be said for David O. Russell’s wonderful directing in American Hustle or Hoyte Van Hoytema’s sublime cinematography in Her (both just missing out on the list, when they would have made it in most other years). And, there are a number of good films that did not make the list either (and a few I have not yet seen). As it stands, the LeapBackBlog Film Awards are made up, through difficult deliberation, of the films that entertained me and grabbed me as something special, the performances that engaged me, and the craftsmanship that delighted me. These are my favorites of 2013.



The Coen Brothers have essentially been making films for three decades, amassing a fervent cult following and a firm place among the top American (if not among all filmmakers in cinema history) auteurs. With Inside Llewyn Davis they again show off their talent for making films that center around antiheroes, as Llewyn Davis is not a nice person and probably not a good man. Yet, the audience is asked to and does feel sympathy for him. They are drawn in by his art, excusing the man. This simple exercise speaks profoundly to how art is treated by people across time and culture. Man is deeply flawed and often very ugly (not physically, but morally or spiritually or whatever you want to call it – people often seem to deviate to the darkside when left to their own devices or put in a position of power or control); and yet art is strikingly beautiful and moving. It is humanity’s light in the darkness, our legacy of achievement amidst the devastation and cruelty. The Brothers take this theme and weave it into a circular story about a man who is just trying to make a career out of his music, but is having a real tough time. Plus, as is typical of all their films, the Coen Brothers again showcase their impeccable skill and eye for genuinely stunning aesthetics.


Gravity is in many ways 2013’s most impressive film – certainly from a cinematic spectacle perspective. It is a momentously thrilling and involving experience that grabs the audience and never lets them go until its conclusion. It is riveting. However, the film turning out as fantastically brilliant as it has was completely dependent on the work of auteur Alfonso Cuaron, who worked for three-plus years to get everything right. Famously, Cuaron is not a fan of 3D (similarly to most top directors); and thus for him to make a film to be primarily seen in 3D, it had to look perfect. Cuaron creates the best 3D audiences have ever seen, in terms of both the overall cinematic experience and technical quality. And that is just the 3D! Cuaron also needed to create a realistic feeling zero-g environment, which he achieved working with master puppeteers (along with a fabulous performance from Sandra Bullock). Gravity is in some ways an even bigger technical achievement than it is a piece of great narrative cinema (though, it is that too). This was unquestionably the most difficult film to make for a director, and the result of all Cuaron’s work is so very satisfying. There was no better cinema-going experience in 2013 than Gravity.


Based on the premise of Her alone, the film could have turned out many ways, seemingly all of which end up in a film that is laughable, silly, and probably cheesy. This could have been a generic horror film in which Samantha, jilted by Theodore, becomes like Skynet and tries to destroy him, realizing humans are inferior beings. Or, this could have been a kooky romantic comedy that somehow ends with Samantha’s consciousness transported into a cyborg or even a brain-dead human woman, thereby giving Theodore the complete package. But in Spike Jonze’s hands, Her is a narrative about love and relationships in the modern world. It is a film about connection or lack of connection. It is a film about how in a way technology has created a culture of self-inflicted isolation and loneliness. But chiefly, Jonze makes a film that is almost universally relatable, as it hits on all the emotional moments of new relationships – how they are amazing and beautiful in the beginning and how they can fall apart simply through the organic growth of the people in them. The film resonates deeply because it is very honest in its approach to its handling of emotions. There is no manipulation or falling back on clichés to convey information. Jonze has simply created a beautiful, funny, and kind of sad film about modern love (and in this way, the film is a bit like the Before Sunrise series, which culminated in this year’s Before Midnight).


It is safe to call Steve McQueen an auteur filmmaker. Starting with the brilliant films Hunger and Shame, McQueen has promoted himself as one of cinema’s great new talents through his work, whose style is specific and powerful. 12 Years a Slave is his most commercially accessible film, even though it is emotional intense and draining. It is a work that gets right at the heart of slavery when so many other films and TV miniseries have merely nipped around it. It is immense and cathartic. It is deeply sad and yet uplifting. McQueen is a director who is unafraid in his approach, lingering when many others would flinch and cut away – there is a haunting shot in the film of Solomon Northrup hung from a tree by the neck, his feet barely touching the ground allowing him to just grasp to life. McQueen holds on this shot for a long time, as life carries on around Solomon as if this is nothing out of the ordinary, all the while Solomon struggles to stay alive. This one, long uncomfortable shot in a way is a summary of slavery – an entire people subjected to inhumane torture while the world goes about its business unconcerned and unhelping, and even worse accustom to this sort of treatment of a supposed ‘lessor’ people. McQueen has made a film transcends slavery to become about not just one person’s struggle or one people’s struggle, but about all peoples’ struggle in a world that is still dominated by those that would oppress. It is an important and meaningful work, and a masterfully made piece of cinema.


With The Wolf of Wall Street, Martin Scorsese has made a film that works in a very interesting manner. Primarily, it is an insanely fun and wild exposé, detailing the sheer and unbridled greed and moral ambiguity of the typical high-powered Wall Street broker. Scorsese invites his viewers to both feel distain for these characters and secretly (or not so secretly) a jealous admiration. This is a film that asks the viewers to look at their own morals. Do we as viewers find these people deplorable or are we envious – probably somewhere in-between. Scorsese shows us the American Dream fully realized, only warped and corrupted from what we hold as the ideal. The Wolf of Wall Street is a wondrous achievement, and in my opinion Scorsese’s best since Goodfellas. It is also worth noting that Scorsese shows his flair for getting fantastic performances from his actors (something we all knew) and his surprising talent for comedy (something we did not know).

Monday, January 6, 2014

Movie of the Week – Goodfellas

This week’s movie: Goodfellas (1990).

The film is based on the true story of Henry Hill, a gangster who made his way through the mob hierarchy. Henry started as a young boy infatuated with local mobsters that he saw in his neighborhood. To him, they seemed better than the average man grinding it out for little pay and little respect. He just wanted to be a part of it. As Henry got older, he started pulling jobs with James Conway and Tommy DeVito having the time of his life. But like all gangster stories, eventually the music stopped.

Goodfellas is written and directed by Martin Scorsese and is considered to be among his best films (if not his best), which is saying something – the man being among film’s most accomplished filmmakers. Scorsese worked with frequent collaborators cinematographer Michael Ballhaus (whose work on the film is top notch) and production designer Kristi Zea.

The film stars Ray Liotta, and co-stars Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci (whose performance won the film’s only Oscar), and Lorraine Bracco. Paul Sorvino features in support (along with a bunch of other familiar faces to gangster films and TV series).

Goodfellas is one of the most critically heralded films of all-time (even though it lost Best Picture to Dances with Wolves at the 1991 Oscars); many even consider it the best film of the 1990s. Likewise, it is among the most exalted in the gangster genre (a genre Scorsese does incredibly well with films like Mean Streets, Casino, The Departed, and now with The Wolf of Wall Street – though it is a much different kind of gangster film, if you even want to call it that). It is a must-see for fans of the genre (as well as cinephiles in general), along with The Godfather, The Godfather: Part II, The Sopranos, Once Upon a Time in America, and City of God.


Trailer: Here
Available on: Blu-ray and Video On-Demand