Vertigo

Vertigo
Vertigo

Friday, March 26, 2021

Prolific Texan Passes

Prolific author/screenwriter and beloved Texan, Larry McMurtry passed at 84. I confess to never having the pleasure of reading his work, but I have seen his films. This Pulitzer Prize and Oscar winner was responsible in great measure for the source books or adaptive screenplays for Hud, The Last Picture Show, Terms of Endearment, Brokeback Mountain, and TV's Lonesome Dove. Maybe it's time to pick up one of his novels.








 

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Actor Played a Mean Banjo


Actor George Segal passed at 87. He was a movie star in the 1960s and 70s and made a splash and got an Oscar nomination in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Other films followed like The St Valentines Day Massacre, and he was one of the all star casts of The Longest  Day and Ship of Fools. He starred in some sleepers like Where's Poppa and The Hot Rock. He was paired with Barbra Streisand in the marvelous The Owl and the Pussycat and with Glenda Jackson in the romantic gem A Touch of Class. He transitioned from leading man to character actor and a recent role on TVs The Goldbergs with episodes to be aired. And the man could play a mean banjo too!



Sunday, March 21, 2021

A New Improved JUSTICE LEAGUE



 When DC Comics' film Justice League came out a few years ago having been started by Zack Snyder who bowed out for personal reasons and completed by Joss Whedon, the final result was a mildly entertaining film but a bit disjointed. The public clamor for Snyder's cut has resulted in an unprecedented concession by Warner Brothers with a remarkable, restored version adding a $70 million dollar budget, cut scenes and reshoots which premiered on HBO Max as a 4 hour (6 chapters and epilogue) special edition rated a soft R. 


Well, is it any good? Yes, this fascinating, grand presentation is a stronger film thanks to comparisons with its predecessor. Some scenes are new while others are vastly different than before whereas other scenes are only slightly altered. A number of main characters like Aquaman, The Flash, Superman, and especially Cyborg have longer moments and a better context. The scenes with the villain are better executed with more implications. The film has no credit scenes and ends with major loose threads, cameos, and an ominous nightmare. Whether these plot points will be carried forward remains to be seen. While general filmgoers will find this a long experience, those hard-core comic fans will have much to savor. It even comes close to rivaling the Marvel brand.


*** of **** stars (add * for comic fans)

Tuesday, March 16, 2021

Yaphet Kotto and His Dream




Actor Yaphet Kotto passed at 81. This veteran of stage and screen since the sixties had many memorable roles. He had bit parts in films that grew to larger roles like a groundbreaking black villain in the James Bond film, Live and Let Die, one of the crew of the scifi horror classic, Alien, and a tough lawman in Midnight Run.  He guest starred in many TV shows including an excellent original Hawaii Five 0 episode as a traumatized war vet and in a marvelous holiday episode of Night Gallery. But the TV role he owned was the leader of a group of Baltimore detectives in Homicide: Life on the Street.

I was lucky to be a Facebook friend with him.
Did you know he turned down the role of Lando Calrissian in Star Wars or Captain Picard in Star Trek: The Next Generation? And he was there at the Lincoln Memorial in DC in 1963 when Martin Luther King Jr. made his speech. Kotto realized his dream. 
 

Monday, March 15, 2021

Reassessing History with JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH

Inspired by true events and a reexamination of a controversial figure, Judas and the Black Messiah is a passionate study of friendship and betrayal with strong performances and sharp direction (Shaka King).

In Chicago in 1968, a young, charismatic leader of the Black Panthers, Fred Hampton (Daniel Kaluuya) is galvanizing support from the people first with blacks and then expanding to other demographics with the promise of services like a medical center and education. His crusade to form a powerful, rainbow coalition to fight oppressive, racist white power captures the attention and wrath of FBI boss J. Edgar Hoover. In the meantime, an informant, Bill O’Neal (LaKeith Stanfield), is recruited by an FBI agent (Jesse Plemons) to infiltrate Hampton’s gang and help bring him down.  As O’Neal struggles with his conscience and fear of discovery and Hampton fights to keep his cause alive, the FBI and law enforcement are targeting the Panthers, and the violence and brutality leads to an ultimate confrontation that will alter their lives forever.

The film’s revisionist point of view shows police as subversive law breakers, conspiring to murder Panther members. A number of scenes may resonate with current news headlines, and in fact, there are DNA threads that call back to Spike Lee and John Singleton. 

The cast is uniformly strong especially Kaluuya whose dynamic personification of Hampton rings true especially during the inspiring rally scenes. Stanfield is equally effective as the guilt ridden ‘follower’ with a hidden agenda.

The film ends with a somber, sobering postscript that punctuates a vivid, hard hitting story that is sure to provoke a strong response. King has a talent that promises greater films to come; this film is a giant step.

***1/2 of **** stars (on demand)

 

Friday, March 05, 2021

Family Is Forever in WANDAVISION

 



Wandavision concluded its 6 hours of programming spread over weekly mini episodes. This grand experiment served in expanding on the characters in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and setting up Phase 4 (and a new super hero) which will lead into the next Dr. Strange sequel, Captain Marvel 2, and Spiderman followup. 

By not releasing all the episodes at once like most streaming channels, this series steadily built buzz on a mystery involving our couple, Wanda and Vision, living in a succession of classic TV sitcoms but leading to something ominous and mystical. I won't give anything away but suffice it to say any Marvel fan will likely love this incredibly well produced and big budgeted adventure fantasy with its heartbreaking love story about the meaning of happiness and the trauma of loss. 

The cast is excellent from the wonderful Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany to a terrific supporting cast we could not get enough of. The final episode is spectacular and while it  does answer most questions, it also raises some new challenges.

Marvel has really knocked it put of the park with the quality of its writing and visual effects. The thing to keep in mind is this is about two Avengers, and it is their story.  In the end, I was moved. And there is hope. I won't say more. (There are two end credit scenes). I signed up for Disney Plus just for this show,  and I am so glad I did. "What is grief if not love persevering?"

**** of **** stars (for Wandavision fans)