Archive for June, 2010

The Reflection of Narcissus

Posted in FILM with tags , , , , , , , , on June 25, 2010 by dcairns

The Film Festival has shown two newly restored British classics directed by the supreme Alberto Cavalcanti — WENT THE DAY WELL? and THEY MADE ME A FUGITIVE. While the former is a well-known classic in the UK which is only now slowly gathering a reputation elsewhere, the latter is probably better known abroad, thanks to Kino’s DVD release, which treats it as a noir.

The description seems accurate, yet I suspect the filmmakers’ influences go farther back, to the pre-war American gangster film and the pre-war French poetic realism. Anyhoo, Trevor Howard plays a drunken ex-serviceman bored by postwar London who decides to carry on fighting to pass the time, hooking up with gangster Narcy (short for Narcissus), plays by Griffith Jones. But when he realizes how rotten his new boss is, he rebels, is framed for the murder of a copper, escapes from prison (it’s a convoluted structure) and tries to clear his name. The whole thing ends with a terrific brawl in an undertakers, which deserves it’s own post.

“They don’t want sincere actors nowadays,” Jones would grumble when drinking with my friend Lawrie. Looking at him here, his sincerity is not in doubt, and for a Welshman he essays a passable cockney accent, but his face is curiously unmemorable. Cavalcanti comes to the rescue with an amazing sequence where Narcy batters his ex-girlfriend, showgirl Sally (Sally Gray, at her most beautiful). Here’s Narcy before he strikes the first blow ~

And here he is, immediately after ~

Cavalcanti’s use of a warped mirror finally gives Narcy the face he deserves. Seconds later, Cav is spinning the camera around as if in a washing machine, as Narcy lays into the stunned Sally. And so it goes — unlike an American filmmaker like Hawks, for who violence is usually a mere break in the patter, to be dispensed with as soon as possible (Hawks on Peckinpah: “I can kill three men and have ‘em buried in the ground in the time it takes him to kill one”), or Walsh, who can imbue everything with a sense of impending or actual violence, Cav treats the conversations straightforwardly and gets positively delirious whenever blows are exchanged. There’s a sadomasochistic flavour to a lot of it. See also the tender scene where Gray picks buckshot out of Howard’s shoulder with her eyebrow tweezers. “She loves me… she loves me not…” he mutters as each fragment of lead is dropped into the waiting bowl…

Taking the Mickey

Posted in FILM with tags , , , on June 24, 2010 by dcairns

In this week’s edition of The Forgotten, over at the Daily Notebook as usual, we find a conglomeration of Michaels — writer-director Mike Hodges, star Michael Caine, his character Mickey King, producer Michael Klinger,  co-star Mickey Rooney and guiding influence Mickey Spillane. Which means the subject under discussion must be PULP, celebrated earlier this week at the Edinburgh International Film Festival.

L’Enfant Sauvage

Posted in Painting with tags , , , , , , on June 24, 2010 by dcairns

The season of neglected 70s British cinema continued with SAVAGE MESSIAH — a rarely screened, emotionally devastating masterpiece from Ken Russell, who attended the screening, chortling loudly at his own dirty jokes throughout.

The Great Ken has been in frail health lately, and was only able to answer a few questions after the showing, but did so with aplomb. And I think he was happy to see an often-overlooked film from arguably his best period receive a rare cinema outing. “It’s about the creative process… and it’s a masterpiece,” he informed us.

Standing ovation, naturally.

Afterwards, I asked about Scott Antony, the film’s star, who gives a zestful, honest and endearing performance as the bohemian artist Andre Gaudier-Brzeska — he has apparently vanished. If anybody knows where he is, Ken wants to know!

Seeing as this is a movie about a creative partnership, it hit me where I live and I was very emotional. And seeing the artist behind the film, maybe for the last time, made it all the more so. This movie really ought to have a DVD release with all the trimmings, with a national search to find the missing star.

Viewed the film with Mike McCarthy, writer-producer-director of the satiric sci-fi burlesque superhero movie CIGARETTE GIRL, who was suitably awed by finding himself in the presence of Greatness (Ken’s, not mine) and at seeing Lindsay Kemp in a movie (doing the worst Scottish accent since James Doohan).

All Hail Ken Russell!

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 91 other followers