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A House of Dynamite

This is a really important film, and one of the ten or so best this year. I am slightly enjoying how it is making some audience members angry, but I will come back to that. I watched it twice, with not much time in between viewings, to clarify my impressions. Kathyrn Bigelow has made two what I'd call thriller-procedural films -- The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty, both of which display superb directorial skills in creating tension from multiple step operations, and false ideas about the military and recent military history. This film, given what I've read, such as the book on this topic by Daniel Ellsberg, is much more accurate, and that makes it frightening in the extreme.

The story is told in the form of Kurosawa's Roshomon and Kubrick's The Killing, re-tracing in time from sets of different perspectives. Like The Killing, the reason is procedural insight the audience is sequentially given that each set of characters does not fully have, and to show mistakes and lack of knowledge of each. It's a great idea for this narrative.

The core of the story is very like that of Dr Strangelove, and though this is not remotely black comedy, the threat of world nuclear annihilation likewise comes from a totally unpredictable source. There are many references to that film; the biggest, Kubrick had fictionalized the lunatic Curtis LeMay into two Generals, Turgidson and Jack D. Ripper, and these are made into a smooth talking, less overtly crazy General in Bigelow's film, which also clicks off an increasingly tense countdown. People who have not seen Dr. Strangelove in a big theater may not realize it had a very tense countdown sensibility as well, but in its infinite level black comic twist, you actually were tricked into rooting for the bomber to get through Russian defenses and end the human race. You got what you wanted, and people in the theater would applaud Slim Pickens riding the bomb as they laughed.

This film works opposite in theme to Kubrick's film. Here fiction (a trillion miles from our present reality) offers moderate, competent people in the White House and other positions, except that General, I would say. The point here is about an insane system, and not the insane, stupid humans Kubrick (and our 2025 reality) add to the mix. This makes the film more frightening, if possible.

This film has zero "pay off", dare I put it, Zero Dark Payoff. I loved that, while many hate it. You are asked to think, is any outcome good?

HOWEVER... {{spoiler hysterical warning}}

Like Bobby's "You wouldn't even hear it," was one of dozens of tips about the factual end of The Sopranos, that lots of angry viewers never thought about, Bigelow offers the facts with distant subtlety: the second to last shot has twin straight vapor trails in the background sky, close together, suggesting other missiles coming in or going out.
 
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Saw that on Friday in 35mm. Looked great and was a ton of fun if you know the era and the players.

If not, I could see it being less compelling, but would still be a good intro to the French New Wave scene.

Coming to Netflix pretty soon I think.
 
Frankenstein - Wow, another gargantuan budget re-make, re-think or whatever you call it when a story has been made into 5 million films already. Like the recent Nosferatu, which I enjoyed but did not find memorable, this is exquisitely beautiful with surreal and dreamlike settings. There are new ways it's more like the novel, and also new ways it's quite different. Well worth it, and this seems a more skillful adaptation than previously ones, but one thing that hangs on with me from the two early 30's James Whale films is that Karloff portrayed the monster better than anyone (still), though this version has a more complex presentation much more aligned with the novel. With Karloff's monster in the same instant you were horrified and felt sorry for him.

Bugonia - Well, this is certainly the strangest film of the year. Great performances in a bizarre story of kidnapping and tense, freaky funny madness. Just a weird one time only kind of experience, with an ending... the less said the better.
 
Frankenstein - Wow, another gargantuan budget re-make, re-think or whatever you call it when a story has been made into 5 million films already. Like the recent Nosferatu, which I enjoyed but did not find memorable, this is exquisitely beautiful with surreal and dreamlike settings. There are new ways it's more like the novel, and also new ways it's quite different. Well worth it, and this seems a more skillful adaptation than previously ones, but one thing that hangs on with me from the two early 30's James Whale films is that Karloff portrayed the monster better than anyone (still), though this version has a more complex presentation much more aligned with the novel. With Karloff's monster in the same instant you were horrified and felt sorry for him.

Bugonia - Well, this is certainly the strangest film of the year. Great performances in a bizarre story of kidnapping and tense, freaky funny madness. Just a weird one time only kind of experience, with an ending... the less said the better.
Hard not to compare Nosferatu and Frankenstein, and while I thought the former was entertaining enough, I thought the latter was a much better movie all around. The Count Orlock character was such a departure visually from the Murnau original that it was too distracting for me (and even comical with the mustache, no matter how historically accurate). Plus the sound sucked, and gave mumbly Batman/Christian Bale vibes. My main gripe with Frankenstein is that it needed to trim about 20 mins. It didn’t justify its run time, especially since GDT wasn’t being 100% faithful to the book anyway.

Not really looking forward to seeing Bugonia, but I’ll get to it. It feels like Sacred Deer, which is the creepiest Yorgos movie and the one I’ve enjoyed the least.
 
Hard not to compare Nosferatu and Frankenstein, and while I thought the former was entertaining enough, I thought the latter was a much better movie all around. The Count Orlock character was such a departure visually from the Murnau original that it was too distracting for me (and even comical with the mustache, no matter how historically accurate). Plus the sound sucked, and gave mumbly Batman/Christian Bale vibes. My main gripe with Frankenstein is that it needed to trim about 20 mins. It didn’t justify its run time, especially since GDT wasn’t being 100% faithful to the book anyway.

Not really looking forward to seeing Bugonia, but I’ll get to it. It feels like Sacred Deer, which is the creepiest Yorgos movie and the one I’ve enjoyed the least.
Yes, I agree with your observations on the first two films. On Sacred Deer, loved it until it stepped and stumbled right off the reality curb at the end. On Bugonia, the purest reason not to miss it is a tour de force performance by Jesse Plemons. He might not get the recognition he deserves just because the film is so freaky.
 
Watched Weapons tonight. Trying to be spoiler free in my comments.

Very interesting, well made, well acted. It is a creepy mystery that takes a sharp turn in the third act when it comes clean about what is going on. And after that, several moments are gruesome (think 28 DAYS/Weeks Later for reference on the intensity of graphic violence).

Best horror movie about this type of villain that I’ve seen. I mean, it’s a short list with only a handful of “classics” in the first place but very well done. There is some dark humor sprinkled into the film in a way more reminiscent of Asian horror.
 
I don't know if this is a movie or what, but if you're of a certain age and grew up watching the late night Creature Features with all the classics, and all the rabbit holes that then therefor took you down, then by godgiddldley, watch the latest iteration of Frankenstein on Netflix.. It's exactly what you dreamed of when you were 6 years old and knew you were scared and liked it and were(wolf) also laughing but thought it could be funnier and scarier and smarter and more spine/braintingley. This is it...
 
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Solid political thriller. It gave some Fail Safe vibes, the old Sydney Lumet/Henry Fonda movie about Cold War MAD.

Ensemble piece with mostly good acting but nobody really stood out. Overall, I can’t see it being in the Oscars hunt.
 
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Mountainhead - Wow, everyone needs to see this. Jesse Armstrong, the genius behind the best writing in television history (and perhaps film as well), Succession, now has made a film. It's about tech bro billionaires getting together to take charge of the world through their social media monstrosities. With a Zuckerberg, a Musk (so hilarious in this), and other stand-ins for the human God-kings our world cowers under, this film blazes with righteous hatred for these people, using the fire of satire to napalm them. I say satire, and yet the real world people are just as lunatic as in this film, as we have seen and suffered through. The writing is steeped in their billionaire superior language, insanely great as Succession was, but crazier in egotism and more insulated still.

The two problems I have with this are that there is no clear, genuine story, though a good one lights a fuse then eventually fizzles, and that the horror these people create is only shown in news bits briefly seen on cell phones. Had the film cross-cut between the real world destruction and bloody suffering their media creates, it could have been far more than just satirical fun. Still, no film yet made sums up the catastrophe of social media and human black holes of personal morality (with some intelligence, admittedly) that are doing such damage to us, and our future.

Do not miss this one.
 
^ I've seen a couple of trailers for that and was somewhat intrigued but I'm definitely going to watch it now after that review..

I just randomly flipped onto a 4 part miniseries about.... James Garfield. Well, Garfield and his assassin, Charles J. Guiteau. The epigraph states: This is the true story about two men the world forgot. One was the 20th President of the United States. The other shot him. Just started it, looks promising. The almost complete lack of any knowledge (by me, anyway) about Garfield is the hook, and it worked. Michael Shannon as Garfield and Nick Offerman as Chester Arthur, his VP. Death By Lightning. I'll keep you posted...
 
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^ I've seen a couple of trailers for that and was somewhat intrigued but I'm definitely going to watch it now after that review..

I just randomly flipped onto a 4 part miniseries about.... James Garfield. Well, Garfield and his assassin, Charles J. Guiteau. The epigraph states: This is the true story about two men the world forgot. One was the 20th President of the United States. The other shot him. Just started it, looks promising. The almost complete lack of any knowledge (by me, anyway) about Garfield is the hook, and it worked. Michael Shannon as Garfield and Nick Offerman as Chester Arthur, his VP. Death By Lightning. I'll keep you posted...
I read the book that went around about a decade ago. Was pretty interesting. I forget the name. I'll dig it up.

EDIT:

Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine and the Murder of a President​

 
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