Yearly Archives: 1993

My Life

Bruce Joel Rubin, the writer of Jacob’s Ladder and Ghost, is both writer and director of another spiritual parablethis one about a prospective father (Michael Keaton) who discovers he has cancer and may not live to see the baby; he decides to make a video about his life to leave behind. Nicole Kidman plays the wife and mother, and she and Keaton both make the occasional longueurs of this sincere and sensible if fairly predictable story worth sitting through. Surprisingly, there’s a fair amount of comedy along the way, and far from being depressing the movie offers as sunny a prospect of coming to terms with death as one can imagine. Haing S. Ngor plays Keaton’s insightful Chinese doctor and spiritual guide, and the other costars include Bradley Whitford, Michael Constantine, and Rebecca Schull. (JR) Read more

Mutiny On The Bounty

By reputation, this three-hour 1962 remake of the Charles Laughton-Clark Gable MGM classic (1935) was the first production in which Marlon Brando really ran amok, with various delays causing the budget to skyrocket. Hardly anyone was pleased with the results. Charles Lederer adapted the Charles Nordhoff and James Hall novel about a mutiny on an 18th-century British naval vessal en route to South America; Lewis Milestone directed. With Trevor Howard, Richard Harris, Hugh Griffith, and Tarita. (JR) Read more

Mr. Jones

Another chapter in the ongoing struggle between the talented Mike Figgis (Stormy Monday, Internal Affairs, Liebestraum) and studio recutters and reshooters, this intriguing but unsatisfying love story between a manic-depressive (Richard Gere at his best) and his sympathetic therapist (Lena Olin) makes memorable uses of both its west-coast settings and its cast (which also includes Anne Bancroft), but, like Liebestraum, it seems to come to us with several parts missing. The screenplay is by Eric Roth and Michael Cristofer; with Tom Irwin, Delroy Lindo, Bruce Altman, and Lauren Tom. (JR) Read more

The General Line

This is the most neglected of Sergei Eisenstein’s features, his last completed silent picture (1929), also known as The Old and the New. It’s a bucolic epic about the Soviet struggle to collectivize agricultural production, and it’s far from his least interesting or exciting film, though some critics have made it sound that way by noting that the most famous sequence involves a cream separator. For the record, it is a thrilling sequencepart of Kenneth Anger’s Eaux d’artifice is modeled directly after itbut it’s far from the only thing this rich, poetic, and sometimes quite funny film has to offer. Recommended. (JR) Read more

Flesh And Bone

The second feature (1993) of Steve Kloves, writer and director of The Fabulous Baker Boys, doesn’t really work as story or drama, but the first half, with its beautifully captured images of west Texas by Philippe Rousselot, is a powerful, poetic evocation of southern sleaze. All four stars offer complex and finely tuned portraits with a pungent aftertaste. Dennis Quaid plays a vending-machine supplier in flight from his troubled past, Meg Ryan is the woman he becomes involved with, James Caan is his father, and talented newcomer Gwyneth Paltrow (Blythe Danner’s daughter) plays the father’s young girlfriend. Sydney Pollack served as executive producer. (JR) Read more

Fearless

Jeff Bridges and Rosie Perez star as plane-crash survivorsthe first made ecstatic by the experience, the second shattered by the loss of her baby sonwho try to make sense of their lives afterward, in a rather confused film adapted by Rafael Yglesias from his own novel and directed by the once interesting (Picnic at Hanging Rock, Witness) but increasingly fatuous (Dead Poets Society, Green Card) Peter Weir. Though Bridges and Perez both do fine work playing characters in a state of shock, their efforts are largely wasted on a story that has trouble keeping its priorities straight; because we never get a sense of what Bridges was like before the accident it’s impossible to interpret his behavior afterward in a meaningful way, and what begins as a provocative narrative teaser never adds up to anything coherent. Isabella Rossellini does what she can (very little) as Bridges’s wife, while Tom Hulce does a satiric turn as a wrongful-death lawyer and John Turturro plays an airline therapist specializing in posttraumatic stress who’s alternately dopey and competent. (JR) Read more

Fatal Instinct

Considering the degree to which Fatal Attraction and Basic Instinct are already self-parodies, writer David O’Malley and director Carl Reiner don’t have to do much to show how silly they are; in order to understand how silly this movie is, on the other hand, all you have to do is sit through it. Among other movies tweaked are Double Indemnity, Marnie, Body Heat, and Cape Fear, but the gags have little to say beyond the obvious, and before long the filmmakers are reduced to evoking the Three Stooges in order to fill space. (At least Mel Brooks, who’s just as shameless, gives you some personality to go with the clunkiness.) It’s a real pity, because Reiner has certainly been funnier and more inventive on other outings and Sherilyn Fenn makes a winsome gal Friday. With Armand Assante, Kate Nelligan, Sean Young, Chris McDonald, and Tony Randall. (JR) Read more

Farewell My Concubine

Like Gone With the Wind, Chen Kaige’s 1993 blockbusterhalf a century of contemporary Chinese history (1925-’77) seen through the lives of two Peking Opera actors and a former prostituteis worth seeing largely for its pizzazz: riveting performances, epic sweep and storytelling, bold and melodramatic use of color, and a capacity to generalize suggestively about large historical events. But this approach has limitations. The rather gingerly treatment of a lead character’s homosexuality, while somewhat taboo breaking for a big-budget Chinese production, tends toward inscrutability, and the emphasis on violence in the early opera-training sequences sometimes has the effect of inflated rhetoric. Nevertheless, this is entertaining filmmaking on a grand scale. With Leslie Cheung, Zhang Fengyi, and Gong Li; adapted by Lilian Lee and Lu Wei from Lee’s best-selling novel. Despite having protested the Chinese censor’s cuts, the distributor Miramax induced the director to cut 14 minutes from the U.S. prints, making this 155-minute version even shorter than the censored one. (JR) Read more

Demolition Man

In Los Angeles in the year 1996, a police sergeant (Sylvester Stallone) convicted of involuntary manslaughter and a psychopathic criminal (Wesley Snipes) are both frozen into cryogenic stasis for rehabilitation. They’re unfrozen in the year 2032, when society, lorded over by someone called Raymond Cocteau (Nigel Hawthorne), has become virtually nonviolent, and a police officer (Sandra Bullock) decides that a 90s cop is needed to defeat a 90s criminal. Would-be satirist Daniel Waters (Heathers, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, Hudson Hawk) scripted this 1993 picture, and nearly all the SF premises are accorded the status of Andrew Dice Clay one-linerswhich means that they, along with the characters, keep changing from one scene to the next. Lots of plate glass gets broken, and there’s a fine warehouse explosion in the openingif that’s what you’re looking for. TV commercial director Marco Brambilla is credited with putting the actors through their paces, and Peter M. Lenkov and Robert Reneau share the writing credit. (JR) Read more

China, My Sorrow

The Chinese title of Dai Sijie’s semiautobiographical 1989 feature means bull sheds, or rehabilitation centers. At the onset of the Cultural Revolution, a 13-year-old boy momentarily disrupts the local propaganda of his small town by playing a pop record (actually a love song from the classic 1937 Shanghai film Street Angels) as a way of flirting with a girl in the courtyard below; as a consequence he’s sent to a remote labor camp in the Mountains of Eternal Life. Dai Sijie, trained in France, filmed in the French Pyrenees with a nonprofessional cast of Chinese and Vietnamese emigres; he makes the most of his spectacular settings and extracts from this story not so much a grim survival tale as a nostalgic and poetic idyll about childhood freedoma sort of Chinese Huckleberry Finn with a monk on the mountainside taking the nurturing and sacrificial role of Jim. Hampered at times by awkward performances, this is still a worthy companion to The Blue Kite and Farewell My Concubine as a contemporary reassessment of the Cultural Revolution, with an evocative and haunting lyricism all its own. (JR) Read more

Bound And Gagged: A Love Story

Shot mainly in Minnesota over two and a half years, this independent first feature by Daniel Appleby, for all its failings (unfunny jokes about failed suicides, some strained flashbacks and daydreams, overplayed sex and violence for giggly John Waters effects), gets somewhat better as it proceeds. The main characters are a battered wife (Ginger Lynn Allen), her abusive husband (Chris Mulkey), the wife’s female lover (Elizabeth Saltarrelli), and a traumatized cuckold (Christopher Denton) obsessed with suicide whom the wife’s lover treats as a friend and sidekick. In a desperate effort to cure the battered wife of her dependency on her husband, the lover kidnaps her with the aid of her friend, and they drive her cross-country to a deprogrammer (Karen Black). If you buy all the strained efforts to be outrageous, this is a reasonably watchable, quirky road movie. (JR) Read more

The Beverly Hillbillies

I never saw the original TV sitcom, which ran from 1962 to ’71, but this godawful retooling with a new castJim Varney as Jed, Diedrich Bader as Jethro, Erika Eleniak as Elly May, and Cloris Leachman as Granny, not to mention Lily Tomlin, Rob Schneider, Lea Thompson, Dabney Coleman, and, in walk-ons, Dolly Parton and Zsa Zsa Gabordoesn’t make me feel the least bit culturally deprived. Director Penelope Spheeris brings the same dogged cheerfulness to the material that she brought to Wayne’s World, but since the comedy here is predicated on an audience’s feeling of superiority to everyone on-screen, it made me long for the wit and satire of Al Capp. Four writers worked on the script, and they all should hang their heads in shame. (JR) Read more

Balamos

Directed by and starring Stavros Tornes, this unconventional, mystical 1982 Greek feature transports its protagonist, who hopes to buy a special horse from Gypsies in northern Greece, on an odyssey through time and space; with Eleni Maniati. Read more

Avalanche Express

The last film of both director Mark Robson and actor Robert Shaw (1979), and not the best of either, though the distinctive, talented Abraham Polonsky is credited with the script, an adaptation of a Colin Forbes novel. A rather lackluster spy thriller set largely on a train running from Milan to Rotterdam, it also features Lee Marvin, Linda Evans, Maximilian Schell, Joe Namath, Mike Connors, and Horst Buchholz. Because Shaw died during shooting, most of his lines have apparently been dubbed. (JR) Read more

American Heart

The first feature of Martin Bell, director of the documentary Streetwise, about street kids in Seattle, which was nominated for an Oscar. Jeff Bridges is as impressive as usual, playing a convict fresh out of prison and determined to go straight who reluctantly agrees to take in his son (Edward Furlong) when the boy turns up on his doorstep in Seattle. The script, by Peter Silverman, generally does a good job depicting what living on the edge is like, moving along at a fairly lifelike and uneventful pace, so it’s a pity that the plot culminates in a slew of melodramatic contrivances that leave a lot of strands hanging. The interesting secondary cast includes Lucinda Jenney, Don Harvey, and Tracey Kapisky. (JR) Read more