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I watched Bookie about a year or two ago for the first time and loved it. Ben Gazzara, man. A couple great bit roles of his in Buffalo 66, and Happiness.I'll just toss this into the thread: I had reason to watch The Killing of a Chinese Bookie and Opening Night recently, and I finally feel like I have a handle on how Cassavetes approaches filmmaking.
I recently watched:
The Substance: Get the hell out of here with that crap. I felt like the movie treated the audience with disdain. That is an effective choice in some circumstances but I felt like the director was doing some real try hard nonsense and completely crashed the plane on landing.
I watched Bookie about a year or two ago for the first time and loved it. Ben Gazzara, man. A couple great bit roles of his in Buffalo 66, and Happiness.
Still haven’t seen Opening Night, but Woman Under the Influence is an all-timer for me, and Shadows, Faces, Gloria, and recently saw Minnie and Moskowitz on a big screen in 35mm. Very big Cassavetes guy.
Ooh. Happiness. I’ll never forget going to see that in the theater. About midway through the movie, a woman sitting behind me stood up, yelled, “This movie is disgusting!,” and stormed out of the theater. When she yelled, “This movie is disgusting!,” she did it in a tone and manner as if she was chastising the rest of the audience for its depravity in continuing to watch the movie.I watched Bookie about a year or two ago for the first time and loved it. Ben Gazzara, man. A couple great bit roles of his in Buffalo 66, and Happiness.
Still haven’t seen Opening Night, but Woman Under the Influence is an all-timer for me, and Shadows, Faces, Gloria, and recently saw Minnie and Moskowitz on a big screen in 35mm. Very big Cassavetes guy.
Insane movie. Very *very* unsettling. Talk about the absolute underbelly of suburban decay. Philip Seymour Hoffman was as incredible as ever.Ooh. Happiness. I’ll never forget going to see that in the theater. About midway through the movie, a woman sitting behind me stood up, yelled, “This movie is disgusting!,” and stormed out of the theater. When she yelled, “This movie is disgusting!,” she did it in a tone and manner as if she was chastising the rest of the audience for its depravity in continuing to watch the movie.
I watched the movie again several years later, and regardless of how well-done it might have been, it’s a movie I have no interest in ever seeing again, nor would I recommend it to anyone unless they are in search of a disturbing movie.

It had its moments, but mostly I just thought it was fine. The acting was also fine by everyone, not award-worthy by anyone. I gave it a B-.#8 of 10: "Marty Supreme". Grade: C+
This review will be short. For a 2 1/2 hour movie, "Marty Supreme" kept me mildly engaged. That's a plus. The acting was adequate. That's another plus.
Now, for the biggest minus: the script was a disaster. It meandered aimlessly, with many scenes that dragged down the film's momentum. Thirty minutes could have been lopped off the runtime and the movie would have been tighter and better. Character development was horrible. Maybe the director/screenwriter intended the viewer not care about any of the characters. If that's true, he succeeded spectacularly. Both my wife and I were left with a feeling of "meh" towards every character in the movie.
I wouldn't be surprised if "Marty Supreme" got completely shut out after nine nominations. It was watchable but it left almost no lasting impression.
The last scene struck a somewhat discordant note of calm and domestic tranquility. Unless we're looking at a sequel, it was incongruous with the danger that preceded the moment and likely would follow it. So, take a couple of points off its screenplay score if you wish, but the movie's still a solid A.
I hope to watch "The Secret Agent" tomorrow. Afterwards, I'll post my list.Among noms, my preference:
1. “One Battle After Another” / “Sentimental Value”
3. “Hamnet”
4. “Frankenstein”
5. “Train Dreams”
6. “The Secret Agent”
7. “Bugonia”
8. “Marty Supreme”
9. “Sinners”
NR. “F1” (did not care to watch cars speed around for 2.5 hours, maybe on a plane sometime when killing time is handy)
A lot of what I liked didn’t make it but that’s my list for what did.
Sentimental Value has no chance of winning, but I still can’t choose my favorite between that and One Battle, with Blue Moon a distant 3rd.
I don't disagree with anything here. In fact, it's likely what the screenwriter/director intended the viewer to take from the ending. I guess I've just seen too many domestic terrorists/violent protestors/bank robbers/murderers/etc. chased for decades until arrested. In real life, neither father nor daughter would likely be allowed to slip back into a peaceful, worry-free life unless they were pardoned by a certain president. Since it's unlikely MAGA, or any rational politician for that matter, would ever embrace the politics and methods of The French 75, it's unlikely that peace & freedom await Bob and Willa. They would be perpetually on the run. But that's another movie, isn't it?*ONE BATTLE SPOILERS*
I took that to be partly the fact that Lockjaw was dead, and word would’ve no doubt gotten to them one way or another that he’d vanished (dead). So it’s like there was a tiny bit of respite, evidenced by him learning to use his phone, and the happier tone of the scene.
But he knows that she is her mother’s daughter, and she’s got that “runner” instinct just like her, and there’s no hope of keeping her down. Hence the title, One Battle After Another — the cause marches on.
With “American Girl” blaring, I thought it was pitch-perfect.