Posts Tagged ‘Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed’

Wilmington on DVD: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, The Tourist, The Twilight Zone Season Two, The Clowns, Exit Throught the Gift Shop, Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed.

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

CO-PICKS OF THE WEEK: NEW OR RECENT

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (Blu-ray) (Three Stars)
U. S.; David Yates, 2009 (Warner Brothers)

From the moment, right near the start of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, when we see three dark, murderous Death Eaters swooping across London, wreaking CGI havoc on the foggy city below, right up to this new movie‘s hellish climax, with teen wiz Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe) observing as his wizardly mentor Prof. Albus Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) fights in a lake of fire filled with deadly, squirmy creatures and monsters, the new Harry Potter movie drenches us in a mix of horrific fantasy and teen romance/sexuality that’s a world away from the sugary magical tone in the series’ 2001 kickoff, the Chris Columbus-directed Harry Potter and the Sorcerer‘s Stone.

Back then, Potter and Company stirred and slurped up a confectionary fantasy that, despite the picture’s high-prestige British adult supporting cast, wasn’t so far, in style and mood, from ‘60s post-Mary Poppins-era Walt Disney Studio — and closer in feeling, to the gung ho kids’ adventure of an early Star Wars.

Now the series has gone dark and arty. (More than a few people have compared it to Star Wars” somber sequel The Empire Strikes Back.) The supporting adults are juicier and more theatrical, the villains increasingly threatening and stylishly demonic. (Here, Alan Rickman, as the snobbish, over-lordly menace Prof. Severus Snape, surges to the fore).
And its still youthful heroes and heroine (the pensive Radcliffe as Harry, the increasingly photogenic Emma Watson as right hand lass Hermione Granger, and a brawnier Rupert Grint as sporty sidekick Ron Weasley) are taller, more filled-out, more teen-idolish and more preoccupied with affairs of the heart and glands, as well as with the dark side horrors and potential cataclysms that now rightly preoccupy Harry as a dutiful young Chosen One.

The story has grown and ripened, and so have the young protagonists, over the seven volumes of author J. K. Rowling‘s fabulously popular series — and they have in the movies as well. I still prefer the middle two films, directed by Alfonso Cuaron and Mike Newell, to the first two, by Home Alone‘s Chris Columbus, and the latest two by BBC helmer David Yates. In a way, “Half-Blood Prince” strikes me as a bit too dark, arty and creepy — while the Columbus opening episodes were too blithe and bouncy. (Yes, I know, the kids are growing up. Life gets darker, meaner. It’s all relative.)
 
The arcs of all the stories though, have stayed pretty much the same, with Harry and his chums again encountering British boarding school crises, while evil forces gather around Harry, and final battles must be waged. Here, in addition, Harry and friends must adjust to specifically teen romantic problems, while Harry and Dumbledore also investigate the dark past and hold off the increasingly awful and awesome assaults of the off-screen dark Lord Voldemort’s onscreen torpedoes — including Snape, Helena Bonham Carter as the devilishly sexy and ferocious Bellatrix Lestrange, and Tom Felton as sullen student baddie Draco Malfoy.

The Rowling series blends several British classic youth-reader literary staples, the school romance and the horror adventure fantasy, with unusual fullness and detail. The movies, mostly scripted by Steve Kloves — who once gave us, as writer-director, that memorable adult 1989 Bridges Brothers and Michelle Pfeiffer romantic drama The Fabulous Baker Boys — seem as faithful to the Rowley novels as David O. Selznick always tried to be to the books he filmed. The movies compress the novels’ large spans of events, and give us as many characters as they can — often played by the cream of Britain’s older British thespian talent, like Rickman, Carter and Maggie Smith.

Here, Michael Gambon pretty much steals the acting honors, along with a dithering new Professor of Potions, Horace Slughorn, played with his usual priceless distractedness and fumfery by Jim Broadbent. But there are also sharp turns for Rickman, Carter, Smith (as the magisterial Minerva McGonagall), and, very briefly, Robbie Coltrane as stout fella Hagrid. These older stars tend to have a field day in their parts, while the younger Potterites — including Harry, Hermione and Ron — are less flavorsome, even if, as here, they happen to be in the throes of youthful desire.

Gambon and Broadbent are the acting treasures here. About the younger actors, I’m not as enthusiastic. They’re good, never great, and perhaps it’s wrong to expect them to be. They are, after all, intended as conduits for the emotions and dreams of the huge youth audiences the movies intend to rally. At that, they’re still fine, if not always dandy.
The movie’s sheer darkness, and its refusal to talk down to its vast audience, are what make the Potter series increasingly interesting — one of the few franchise movie series, that has tended to get better and more ambitious and difficult as it has gone along. The later Potter movies, like this one, tend to be more literary and theatrical, and, though it still relies on heavy displays of special effects and CGI prowess, this one tends to flaunt them less.

Obviously, a huge franchise movie like one of these Harry Potters, is playing by different rules, and in a different arena, than the art films it may sometimes recall. Yet it’s nice to see that the producers of the movie versions of such titanic bestsellers, aimed initially at children, feel a compulsion, along with supplying the requisite catalogue of cinematic and hormonal wonders, to make their movies deeper, smarter, classier. Harry Potter movies are not at the top of my must-see list, but it’s good to be able to sit through them without wondering why adult needs and desires aren’t being serviced with as much lavishness. Here, they are. Extras: Featurettes.

 

PICK OF THE WEEK: CLASSIC

The Clowns (I Clowns) (Four Stars)
Italy/France/Germany: Federico Fellini, 1970 (Raro Video)

At the age of seven, little Federico Fellini, of Rimini, Italy, ran off with the circus.

Luckily for us, the circus returned him to this parents after a few days. And Fellini grew up to become a small town wastrel (with his Rimini friends, whom he later immortalized as I Vitelloni). Eventually, he went off to Rome, where he became a failed student, a successful cartoonist, part owner of the Funny Face Shop (which sold sketches and photos of American G.I.s for loved ones back home), a jack-of-all-trades for a troupe of traveling players (including a spunky young actress named Giulietta Masina), a scriptwriter for radio, plays and films (including Rome: Open City and Paisa for Roberto Rossellini), and finally, a world famous movie maker (La Strada, La Dolce Vita, 8 1/2). For decades, he was the biggest directorial star of Rome’s Cinecitta Studios — where, in 1970, at the age of 50, Federico ran away with the circus all over again.

The wondrous result is The Clowns (I Clowns): a sometimes neglected but truly delightful little film, bursting with glee, made originally for television in 1970. The Clowns, while not that well-known, is Fellini‘s fondest, funniest tribute to art, to show business, and, above all, to the companies of clowns who romp and screech and slug each other and pratfall their way around all the circus sawdust and tinsel of all the world, and whose white or raggedy faces, fixed smiles and wild uninhibited behavior terrified him when he was seven — but must have attracted him very deeply as well.

Fellini, as always, uses his somewhat fanciful autobiography as a frame. The Clowns is a documentary filmed in Rome and Paris among mobs of actual circus people (Joseph Bouglione, Jean Houcke), actual clowns (Charlie Rivel, Louis Maisse, Alexandre Brugny de Brailly, Ludo, Nino, the Fratellini family, and Charlie’s daughter, Victoria Chaplin), another circus-loving film director (Pierre Etaix) and even a circus historian (Tristan Remy).

But it’s also part (a big part) mockumentary (see Exit Through the Gift Shop), in which most of the scenes are staged and actors play the presumed technicians and members of Fellini‘s supposed film crew (and Fellini himself plays “Fellini“). It’s part dramatic/comic reminiscence of Rimini (the seeds of Amarcord are here, and we see such later Amarcord mainstays as the midget nun and the fascists, examples of “real life” clowns). And it’s part rumination on the eternal variance and tension between the two main types of circus clowns: the White Clown and the Augusto.

Remember this now, all you would-be clowns. The white clown is white-faced, graceful, aristocratic, a gentleman and dandy, often smiling. The Augusto is a tramp-clown, with shabby clothes and a sorrowful countenance, often frowning, a Gloomy Gus and the butt of innumerable jokes by the white clowns and everyone else. (Comedians and comic actors can be classified this way too. Cary Grant is a white clown. Laurel and Hardy are both Augustos. Chaplin is a strange mixture of both.) So, you see, class division and class warfare exist in the clown world as well. Maybe they even originated with clowns.

In the heyday of the circus, which had already passed in 1970, there were famous White clowns, famous Augustos. We see plenty of them here. (We and Fellini also watch a frustratingly short film clip of the man reputed to be the greatest of all Augustos, Enrico Sprocani a.k.a. Rhum). Most of all, we see hordes of Italian clowns running madly all around the circus rings, terrifying children like little Federico.

And me as well. When I was a tiny child, no single figure on TV or elsewhere scared me more than Clarabelle the Clown, on the Howdy Doody Show. Clarabelle was a madcap white clown with a seltzer bottle, who ran around smiling, never speaking, and often squirting people. He reduced Howdy and Buffalo Bob Smith’s kid audience in the Peanut Gallery, to frenzies of mirth and squeals of delight — and he was played, oddly enough, by Bob Keeshan, who later became a paragon of kinder, gentler children’s TV programming in his other famous incarnation as the benevolent Captain Kangaroo.Still, despite Keeshan’s reform, Clarabelle and his terrifying smile and his orgies of seltzer-squirting scared me silly.

The clowns of The Clowns don’t scare you though. They make you feel sympathetic, protective. You can love them, even if they sometimes don’t make you laugh. The Clowns was financed by Italian TV, and it played to a huge TV audience (in black and white), before starting its premiere theatrical run (in color). It’s a beautiful film, and never pompous or pushy. Many of the usual Fellini collaborators are with him here: co-screenwriter Bernardino Zapponi (of Roma and Satyricon), cinematographer Giuseppe Rotunno (for the first two Rimini weeks, before Dario Di Palma takes over), designer Danilo Donati and, of course, inevitably, maestro/composer Nino Rota, penning another grand carnivalesque score, and making loving, clownish use of Richard Wagner‘s Ride of the Valkyries, Georges Bizet’s Toreador Song from Carmen, and the great pop songs “Fascination” and — hauntingly, unforgettably — “Ebb Tide.”

So The Clowns looks and sounds great of course. I think it’s one of Fellini’s lesser-known masterpieces, like the even lesser-known short feature Toby Dammit from 1968‘s Spirits of the Dead. But it also has a lively, antic, almost slapdash/slapstick pace, a comic frenzy that emanates from the clowns themselves, but radiates out to include the world all around them as well. In one of the movie’s more memorable moments, the sober-looking Fellini is asked by a pompous interviewer about the symbolism of the clowns, and, before he can finish his reply, two empty buckets fall on the heads of both of them. (And Signore Fellini, the buckets symbolize…?)

So, which are you: a White Clown or an Augusto? After The Clowns opened in Madison, Wisconsin in the ‘70s, my University of Wisconsin friend Gerry Peary went around classifying members of the Madison film and university communities (a stellar bunch) as either one of the other. But it’s not a simple question. Nor is The Clowns a simple movie, even if it goes rowdy and slings buckets at us. The end of the show, like that Rimini beginning, is a comic orgy of rampaging Italian clowns (Enrico Fumigalli, Carlo Pisacane, the Four Colombaionis, the 3 Martani Brothers, Antonietta Beluzzi, Luigi Leoni), that turns sad, turns happy, turns happy-sad-happy and then ends with one of the loveliest scenes in all of Fellini: the clown duet to “Ebb Tide.”

My God, what a scene! If you don’t clench up a little when the last trumpet notes of “Ebb Tide” ring out — its exultation, climax and diminuendo — and if sometime while watching this movie, you don’t briefly want to run a way and join the circus, then maybe you need a squirt from Clarabelle or a bucket on your head.
Oh, and Anita Ekberg is in The Clowns too. And she’s funny, dammit!

What a wonderful, lovingly assembled  little package this is: Federico Fellini’s The Clowns (I Clowns), has been digitally restored and given new subtitles, and the set also includes the Fellini short A Matrimonial Agency (three stars), his episode in the multi-part 1953 anthology film Love in the City which also had writer-directorial contributions from Antonioni, Lattuada, Risi, Lizzani, and Zavattini; Adriano Apra’s visual essay Fellini’s Circus; and a beautiful 50-page booklet containing Fellini‘s own writings, his reminiscences on the film and plenty of Fellini drawings as well.

 
CO-PICK OF THE WEEK: CLASSIC

Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed (Three and a Half Stars)
Germany: Alexander Kluge, 1968 (Facets)

Alexander Kluge is a gigantic figure in the German cultural landscape. He exemplifies…what is most vigorous and original in the European idea of the artist as intellectual, the intellectual as artist.”
Susan Sontag

Appropriately bracketed as a classic pick this week with Fellini’s I Clowns Alexander Kluge’s Artists at the Top of the Big Top: Perplexed is also a European art film about circuses and circus people. But this is a film in black-and-white, where the filmmakers would have answered the question Fellini dodged in The Clowns about symbolism, and then done something symbolic to illustrate the answer, and had an illustrated lecture on symbolism and the history of art, and the politics of circuses.

Kluge, in other words, is as intellectual a radical filmmaker as you can find, and Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed – which is also known as “Artists Under the Big Top: Disoriented” or “The Artist in the Circus Dome: Clueless” (these are not jokes) — is an intellectual and radical a film as he ever made, a black and white dramatic treatise on art and politics and their hybrids that no one on earth could accuse of selling out to anybody, except maybe Roland Barthes.

The heroine of “Artists,” or “Perplexed,” is Leni Peickert (played by Hannelore Hoger of The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum), an intense but seemingly humorless circus-lover, whose circus-loving father died and left her with a passion to run a circus herself, and to somehow mix the acts with her other obsessive interest: radical anti-war and anti-capitalistic politics. Without ever cracking a smile (but occasionally stripping to the buff), Leni hires performers, talks with experts, plans acts, find tents and even hangs around with some very photogenic elephants — but somehow never gets it all together. She winds up instead at a TV station, where she and her comrades try to mix art and politics, or news and politics, once again, with disastrous results. The moral might be summed up thus: If you want to radicalize the circus, or TV news, watch out for the elephants.

If you’re going to watch “Artists: Perplexed“ though, this is the version to get. Facets has included, as an extra, the 1970 short The Indomitable Leni Peickert, which is described as a follow-up to “Perplexed.” (Imagine a full-blown sequel, the name emblazoned on a marquee: “Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed 2.”) But “Leni” is less a follow-up than the actual culmination and climax of the first movie, and they should be seen together, “Leni“ right after “Perplexed.“

Kluge was an ex-documentarian and he shoots “Perplexed” like a ‘60s documentary, full of wordy dialogues and cinema verite-looking scenes and monochrome montages. It’s not a cheerless movie — a couple of Beatles songs are on the soundtrack — but it is relentlessly serious, though not unlikably so. I actually watched it twice, and would happily watch it again, if anybody wanted to see it with me. They really don’t make them like this any more. (Part of a series of Alexander Kluge films being released by Facets as The Alexander Kluge Collection; I hope they eventually put them all into a box set.)
Extras: The Alexander Kluge shorts The Indomitable Leni Peickert (1970) (Three and a Stars) and Execution of an Elephant (Three Stars), which makes use of Edwin S. Porter’s and Thomas A. Edison‘s 1903 Electrocuting the Elephant.

 
PICK OF THE WEEK: BOX SET

The Twilight Zone: Season 2 (Blu-ray) (Four Stars)
U.S.: Various directors, 1960-61(CBS/Image)

“You’re traveling through another dimension: a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey through a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination. That’s the sign-post up ahead! Your next stop: The Twilight Zone.”

“A brief and frenetic introduction to Mr. Rod Serling, 37, a fabulously successful TV writer, a child of the 20th century, a product of the population explosion, one of the inheritors of the legacy of progress — and much to his surprise and occasional consternation, a fledgling TV star as the bitingly deep-voiced host and narrator of a prize-winning weekly science fiction anthology series that Mr. Serling calls The Twilight Zone.
“Let us watch Mr. Serling now, as he pauses at his typewriter, and lights another cigarette — an Oasis if you please — and as he ruminates on the ironies of life and show business. On his show, Mr. Serling and his fellow writers and directors regularly craft and present little half-hour dramas with moral and social messages — tales about the dangers of totalitarianism, about the bomb, about prejudice, ignorance, greed and the pitfalls of progress.

“They do this because, in addition to reaping the financial rewards of a hit TV program, Mr. Serling honestly wants to educate and elevate his audience, in line with the liberal idealism of America‘s youthful new president, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, and his New Frontier. They want to be taken seriously — or at least taken with a smile and a shiver, but understood seriously.

“Yet the huge TV audience which laps up Mr. Serling’s show seem instead to digest these stories as simple horror fantasies, good for a chill, but not really applicable to their own lives. For Mr. Serling, this has become like something in his stories: a recurring nightmare, or a message from the future, or a visit to the past, or a plane ride going wildly off course. Is anybody there? Is there anybody out there who can understand that The Twilight Zone, in a way, is no fantasy? That it’s about real things, real people, real events? Things that really happened, or may happen, to Mr. Serling, as he sits at the typewriter, an Oasis in his hand, in a room full of the kind of books that, as in one of his most recent scripts, may someday be declared obsolete, and taken away?

“Mr. Serling wonders. And as he does, something strange starts to happen before his eyes. Mr. Rod Serling, 37 and not prone to hallucinations, notices that his typewriter is beginning to type by itself, turning out a story he hasn’t yet imagined, about a world he doesn’t yet see. But soon he will see that world, and so will everyone else, because this is a tale that could only be written…in The Twilight Zone.”

The box set of the second season of one of my all-time favorite TV shows, Rod Serling‘s The Twilight Zone, with all 29 episodes now gathered in this excellent set, isn’t quite as good as the first, but it’s still good enough. There are signs of pressure: Some missed weeks toward the end of the run, and what seem slightly lower budgets and production values for a few of the shows. And there’s the awful sight of Serling pulling out a cigarette during his last few sign-offs and hawking a brand called Oasis, claiming that it’s “the softest.”

The writing is the same though: superb, and most of it by Serling. (There are some fine scripts by other hands, including Richard Matheson, George Clayton Johnson, and more and more impressively, Charles Beaumont.)

The subjects are still daring, the characters still memorable, the dialogue and narration still crisp, eloquent and smart. The eerie, nerve-jangling music is still by, among others, Bernard Herrmann and Jerry Goldsmith. And the voice is still Serling’s: authoritative, ironic, inviting us each week into his now well-established domain, the Twilight Zone.
A lot of the older vet Hollywood directors who helped helm the “Zone” for its first season (like Robert Parrish, Robert Florey, Mitchell Leisen) are gone this season, along with a few of the good newer TV specialists of 1959-60 (Ted Post, Ralph Nelson, Stuart Rosenberg). But the series’ very best director, John Brahm (Time Enough at Last) is back for two stellar outings, both with the series’ acting champ, “Time” librarian Burgess Meredith. And there are some fine young directors continuing from 1959-60 or newly recruited to the troupe, including Buzz Kulik, Elliot Silverstein, Douglas Heyes, and Jack Smight.

 
I’ve read that The Twilight Zone is Leonardo Di Caprio’s favorite TV series. Good taste. No wonder he makes so many good movies. He’s right, though. It’s still a great show, still with great casts (Meredith, Art Carney, Jack Carson, Agnes Moorehead, Luther Adler, Dennis and Fritz Weaver, and Cliff Robertson), and this is another great set.

Note: Almost all Twilight Zone episodes are good, rarely ever even mediocre. The asterisks below signify the following: * Of special interest. **Classic episode. *** Top of the Zone.

Includes: Disc One: *** ‘King Nine Will Not Return (Buzz Kulik, 1960) With Robert Cummings. A flight captain and a WW2 warplane, alone in the desert. Writer: Rod Serling. **”The Man in the Bottle” (Don Medford, 1960) With Luther Adler and Joseph Ruskin. In a dusty shop, those legendary genie’s wishes tease and trick again. Writer: RS. * Nervous Man in a Four Dollar Room (Douglas Heyes, 1960) With Joe Mantell. The big city underworld, a cheap room, a mirror and two personalities. A Thing About Machines (David Orrick McDearmon, 1960) With Richard Haydn. Household machines revolt against an insufferable snob (Haydn). Writer: RS.

** The Howling Man (Heyes, 1960) With H. M. Wynant and John Carradine. The Devil and holy men in a night-shrouded castle. Writer (from his short story): Charles Beaumont. ** Eye of the Beholder (Heyes, 1960) In another world, beauty and cosmetic surgery are relative. With Maxine Stuart and Donna Douglas. Writer: RS. *Nick of Time (Richard L. Bare, 1960) With William Shatner, Pat Breslin. In a small town diner, a cheap fortune telling machine starts predicting the future — correctly. Writer: Richard Matheson.

Disc Two: * The Lateness of the Hour (Jack Smight) With Inger Stevens and John Hoyt. To his daughter (Stevens), an inventor’s household humanoid robots are not a blessing, but a curse. Writer: RS. **The Trouble with Templeton (Kulik, 1960) With Brian Aherne, Pippa Scott and Sydney Pollack (as the stage director). A grand old theater actor (Aherne) dreams of the past, and suddenly rediscovers it. Writer: F. Jack Neuman. * A Most Unusual Camera (John Rich, 1960) With Fred Clark. Three grifters find a camera that shoots pictures of the future. Writer: RS. **Night of the Meek (Smight, 1960) With Art Carney and John Fiedler. A drunken department store Santa (Carney) finds a magical Christmas sack. Writer: RS.

**Dust (Heyes, 1961) With Thomas Gomez, Vladimir Sokoloff, John Larch, and Douglas Heyes, Jr. In a violent old West town, a young man is about to be hanged; a crooked peddler (Gomez) offers a way out. Writer: RS. Back There (McDearmon, 1961) With Russell Johnson and Paul Hartman. A man who thinks time travel can change history goes back himself to the night Lincoln was shot. Writer: RS. ** The Whole Truth (James Sheldon, 1961) With Jack Carson, Loring Smith and Arte Johnson. The world’s most dishonest used car salesman (Carson, natch) buys a Model A which makes him tell the truth — about everything. Writer: RS.
 
Disc Three: **The Invaders (Heyes, 1961) With Agnes Moorehead and Heyes. A lonely woman in an isolated house is besieged by a tiny UFO and its tiny spacemen. Writer: Matheson. A Penny for Your Thoughts (Sheldon, 1961) With Dick York. A young office worker discovers the perils of telepathy. Writer: George Clayton Johnson. ** Twenty-Two (Smight, 1961) With Barbara Nichols and Jonathan Harris. A star stripper (Nichols), while hospitalized, has a recurring nightmare about a menacing nurse and the morgue in the basement. Writer: RS. The Odyssey of Flight 33 (Addis, 1961) With John Anderson. A commercial plane suddenly goes wildly off-course, in space and time. Writer: RS.

***Mr. Dingle, the Strong (John Brahm, 1961) With Burgess Meredith, Don Rickles and James Westerfield. The best actor (Meredith) and best director (Brahm) of the first two Twilight Zone seasons return for a comic, light-fantastic take on weakness, strength, celebrity, two-headed extraterrestrials and bar-room bets. Writer: RS. Static (Kulik, 1961) With Dean Jagger, Carmen Mathews and Bob Crane (as the disc jockey). An old man (Jagger), who lost his love (Mathews) but loves the past, finds just the right radio station. Writer: Beaumont. * The Prime Mover (Bare, 1961) With Dane Clark and Buddy Ebsen. Two small-time gamblers (Clark and Ebsen), one with a wild talent, take a Las Vegas casino into the Twilight Zone. Writer: Beaumont. Long Distance Call (Sheldon, 1961) With Billy Mumy, Lili Darvas and Philip Abbot. A boy’s beloved but dead grandmother calls him on their private phone. Writers: Beaumont & William Idleson.

Disc Four: **A Hundred Yards Over the Rim (Kulik, 1961) With Cliff Robertson, John Crawford and John Astin. The determined leader (Robertson) of a lost, thirsty wagon train, finds more than sand over the rim. One of the series’ great titles adorns one of its best shows. Writer: RS. * The Rip Van Winkle Caper (Addis, 1961) With Simon Oakland, Oscar Beregi, and John Mitchum. Four robbers in a million dollar gold bar heist enlist G. Gordon Liddy to peddle their loot on TV…No, sorry, the four freeze themselves and awaken 100 years later, ready for a lesson in economics (not from Liddy). Writer: RS. *The Silence (Boris Sagal, 1961) With Franchot Tone, Liam Sullivan, Jonathan Harris and Cyril Delevanti. A club snob (Tone) bets a loudmouth he can’t keep silent for a year, with ominous consequences. Writer: RS.

***Shadow Play (Brahm, 1961) With Dennis Weaver, Harry Townes and Wright King. A seemingly deranged man convicted of murder (Weaver) claims the trial, sentence and impending execution are all part of his (recurring) nightmare, and that when he dies in the chair, everyone else in the world will die with him. Another great one, from noir master Brahm. Writer: Beaumont. ** The Mind and the Matter (Kulik, 1961) With Shelley Berman. A white collar fussbudget (“Inside” comedian Berman) would rather the world were empty of other people…and suddenly it is. Writer: RS. ** Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up? (Montgomery Pittman, 1961) With John Hoyt and Jack Elam. Two cops follow the footsteps from a snowstorm-crashed UFO to a diner with eight people. But which is the Martian? Prototypical “Zone” comedy: one imagines it complete with illustrations by Astounding Science Fiction’s Kelly Freas. Writer: RS.

*** The Obsolete Man (Elliot Silverstein, 1961) With Burgess Meredith and Fritz Weaver. In a dystopian future world, run by “1984” style statists, a soft-spoken librarian (Meredith) argues for his usefulness to society, while the brutal Chancellor (Weaver) of a new bookless world shouts him down. A brilliant companion piece to that other Meredith-and-books Serling fable Time Enough at Last — and, like “Time,” it’s Serling, and the “Zone,” at their absolute best. The direction, by Elliot (“Cat Ballou”) Silverstein, is positively Brahmian. Writer: Rod Serling.

Extras: Serling‘s complete ‘50s “Suspense” science-fiction TV play Nightmare at Ground Zero (*); 25 Audio Commentaries, featuring directors Kulik and Heyes, writers Johnson and Robert Serling (Rod‘s brother), actors Robertson, (Dennis) Weaver, Rickles, Mumy, Berman and Douglas, and Twilight Zone scholars, historians and writer/admirers; Interviews with regular “Zone” cinematographer George T. Clemens, and actors Joseph Ruskin and H. M. Wynant; 15 radio dramas of episodes in this set; 22 isolated music scores by Herrmann, Goldsmith and others; Serling promos.

OTHER CURRENT AND RECENT DVD RELEASES

The Tourist (Two and a Half Stars)
U.S.: Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, 2010 (Columbia)

There comes a time in life when you realize, sadly, that you‘ll probably never see Venice, except in dreams and movie-houses — never see the Piazza San Marco, the Grand Canal, never eat at Caffe Florian, never ride in a gondola, or watch the sun glinting down on the City of Water, the City of Bridges, the City of Masks, Serenissima — and that’s when movies like The Tourist become more important to you.

Important, but not necessarily better. The Tourist, a lushly photographed touristic Hitchcockian exercise in romantic-movie-thrillerism for Angelina Jolie and Johnny Depp, starts with impressive travelogue credentials. It’s filled with ravishing views of the legendary city where Casanova plied his trade and Antonio Vivaldi composed concerto after concerto for his girls’ school, and where Kate Hepburn tumbled so memorably into the canal: filled with the glorious sights of those canals, the gondolas, the old hotels — and of ravishing Angie smiling and sashaying through it all, stopping traffic and inspiring voyeurism as only Angelina can. This is a city we’d probably all like to visit, and it’s shot here by director-co-writer Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck and cinematographer John Seale, with all the color and the luster they can, uh, muster. (Without bluster or fluster). A huge advantage, that.

Which The Tourist then sort of squanders. Von Donnersmarck, the thriller-savvy writer director of the Oscar-winning German Cold War surveillance suspense movie The Lives of Others, has two witty co-scenarists here — Christopher McQuarrie of Bryan Singer‘s twisty, zappy The Usual Suspects (which has a twist ending) and Julian Fellowes of Robert Altman‘s Agatha Christie-ish, Jean Renoiresque Gosford Park (which does also). And one would have thought this talented threesome could easily acquit their assignment: restarting the agenda of Hitchcock‘s To Catch a Thief and North by Northwest.

I love that Lady Vanishes sort of movie. And initially, I had nothing but fond feelings and expectations for this film — and for Jolie as Elise Clifton-Ward, and for Depp‘s typically whimsical and lightly fey lead male character, Frank Tupelo. Elise is the babe of babes. Frank is a mousy-looking math teacher thrown into international intrigue when British spy and fugitive gang girlfriend Elise becomes his maybe-evil angel.

My tilt seemed especially apt when it developed that Frank hailed from my old home town, Madison, Wisconsin, the city where I lived and went to school, and to the movies, for a decade and a half. I can testify that Franks’ shaggy, wispy hairdo, which has caused consternation in some ultra-critical circles, is pretty much what some young male Madisonians used to wear, at least when I was there, and may still wear — and that in fact, I often avoided haircut expenses in just such a manner myself.

Wandering farther afield, I recall our fair city even had a few knockouts in the Angelina Jolie class (I remember them well) — and that we also often (at least in the ‘60s and ‘70s), sincerely believed we were as overrun with spies, undercover cops and murderous gangsters, as The Tourist’s Venice seems to be here.

Well, enough Remembrance of Things Past. Get thee behind me, Proust. And Ella’s. These days most of us, ex-Madisonians or not, don’t want a slice of life from a movie like The Tourist. We want what Hitchcock always promised from this kind of show (in the genre that he practically invented): slices of cake. Though the plot here might seem to promise (and even serves up) some Hitchcockian delectation, it begins to get soporific and stillborn and as wispy as Frank’s hair, almost as soon as the strangers-on-a-train flirtation starts. Robert Walker and Farley Granger had better flirty badinage, and so did Cary Grant and — take your pick — Grace Kelly (To Catch a Thief), Ingrid Bergman (Notorious), Eva Marie Saint (North by Northwest) or Audrey Hepburn (in Stanley Donen‘s sparkling Hitchcock pastiche Charade).

The plot? Elise, it seems, is the girlfriend of the mysterious Alexander Pearce, an international outlaw in flight from both Scotland Yard — which has her on camera, manned by the obsessive Dana Andrews-ish cop, Acheson (Paul Bettany) nearly everywhere she goes, from Paris to Venice — and from the killer-thugs of Russian mobster Ivan Demidov (played by Steven Berkoff, the rich scum of the first Beverly Hills Cop), from whom Pearce conned and stole billions of dollars, or enough to qualify him for a tax cut extension from the Republicans in the U.S. Congress.

In the very first scene, a pretty cool opener, Elise, at a Parisian sidewalk café, gets a note from Pearce (a note she quickly reads and burns, while being monitored by the Yard guys) telling her to head for Venice, find some schnook of Pearce’s own general size and build, latch on to him, and sucker Scotland Yard and Demidov into thinking the patsy is really Alex. (Well, we had a lot of schnooks in Madison too, myself included.)

So, she does, and, in this case, Depp, now the seeming Hitchcockian “wrong man” of your dreams, has Elise pitching what seems to be woo and dragging him up to her palatial apartments for what seems to be a roll in the sheets (but isn‘t), and he also has murderers and minions (aided by Christian de Sica, Vittorio de Sica’s boy, as a crooked cop) chasing him all over the rooftops and canals.

That’s the itinerary. They meet, they flirt, they fake us out, they almost smooch, they run from cops and killers. Depp fumbles and shambles and sometimes looks as if he can’t believe his good luck, and sometimes acts as if Brad Pitt were staring over his shoulder. Jolie looks more than ever like a European glamour star hottie out on a shoot, but has been dubiously encouraged to say little, and say it like Kristin Scott-Thomas.

Paul Bettany is quite good, and his part should have been pumped up with another scene or two. Steven Berkoff is just as snobby and sadistic as he was in Beverly Hills Cop. There’s even a Bond around — Timothy Dalton — to complain about tactics. Ah Venice, city of dreams, where Angelina Jolie may pick you up, while Russky goons manacle you to a gondola. Ah Madison, city of bad hair, Beatle albums and student riots. Ah Hollywood, which has a meet-cute for every occasion and a tale for every two cities.

The Tourist is based on French cineaste Jerome Salle’s 2005 French thriller Anthony Zimmer, which took place in Nice instead of Venice, and which is still unreleased in the U.S., despite having good notices, plus Sophie Marceau, Yvan Attal, Sami Frey and Daniel Olbrychski in the main parts. But Tourist is maybe too touristy. It often fails to crackle and delight in the Cary Grant ways it should.

In fact, if I were in the Court Jester-Danny Kaye sort of mood that my luster-muster-fluster-buster-cluster remarks above suggest, I’d say maybe that Tourist was a fizzle, not a sizzle, in the drizzle of Venezia. (or Venizzle?) I don’t object to the relative paucity of suspense scenes in this film, because most contemporary thrillers have too many, and this one has at least four passable ones. What irks me is the movie’s relative failure to build up the beguile factors of Jolie and Depp‘s roles, or to come up with some sexy shower scene or fancy teasing crosstalk for them. This film is like a would be dinner party that’s all canapés and dessert, and where the Russians drank all the wine and the Italians drank all the vodka.

Nevertheless, I would insist that, as failed movies go, The Tourist has stuff to compensate. The spirit of Hitch. Angelina sashaying. Depp yearning. Bettany on the prowl. And Venice. Ah, Venice. We may never get there, but we can still hear the lap of the waves in stereophonic sound, see Kate tumble, hear the gondolier‘s song. “O sole mio…” Isn’t that what movies are for? If only, if only…Ah, the hell with it. (In English, French and Italian, with English subtitles.) Extras: Commentary by von Donnersmarck; Featurettes; Out-takes.

Exit Through the Gift Shop (Three Stars)
U.S.: Banksy, 2010 (Oscilloscope)
For the record, this sardonic, cynical, whip-fast Oscar-nominated “documentary” from the secretive street artist Banksy — about an obsessed L. A. doc-maker named Thierry Guetta, who shoots a “documentary” about street artists like Shepherd Fairey and Space Invader (and Banksy), gets nowhere with it (because he has no talent), and then decides to become an artist himself, nicknames himself Mr. Brainwash, holds a huge L. A. art show, getting some L. A. Weekly people to (unknowingly) shill for him, and becomes the rage of the art world — strikes me as fake. Or mostly fake. (Certainly Mr. Brainwash and his “art” are fakes.)

And, as the son of a genuinely brilliant artist (Edna Wilmington) who got nowhere professionally or financially or critically her whole life — while phonies like Mr. Brainwash were conning critics into writing about them and suckers into buying their junk — I resented the hell out of it.

But Banksy is no fake. This movie made me laugh a lot. And, like all of us, I tend to forgive anyone who makes me laugh. Extras: “B Movie,” a film about the “art” of Banksy; Deleted scenes; “Life Remote Control” lawyer’s edit.

Yogi Bear (One Star)
U.S.; Eric Brevig, 2010

“It ain’t over till it’s over.“
Yogi Berra (from Wikipedia)

What can you say? A bunch of movie guys were determined to make a show out of the ’60s TV cartoon series Yogi Bear — starring Dan Aykroyd as the voice of Yogi and Justin Timberlake as the voice of Boo Boo — and there was nothing anybody could do to stop them.

Yogi, of course, was that brash, picnic-basket-obsessed cartoon bear from the studio-shop of erstwhile “Tom and Jerry” Oscar winners Hanna and Barbera, a bear whose signature was his cheap drawing, silly hat and goofy voice. In the era when limited animation became the vogue, Yogi was born to be cheap, made to be cheap. He was cheapness personified.

“90% of the game is half-mental.“
Now, defying all sense of proportion, and of true bearishness, millions and jelly-ilions of dollars have been lavished on a big-movie reprise of Yogi, Boo Boo and Hanna-Barbera’s cartoon ecological showcase, Jellystone Park. The ultimate in CGI 3D wizardry has been employed to fly Yogi up in the air, scoot him over Jellystone panoramas, and sail him past picnickers and picnic baskets as the Yoge chortles “I‘m smarted then the average bear!“ and “Give me that pic-a-nic basket, dammit!“ and other witty or archetypal lines.

Screenwriters Jeffrey Ventimilia and Joshua Stemin, fresh from their labors on The Rock’s show Tooth Fairy, have been hired to write or rewrite those lines and others as well, producing (with the help of Brad “Wild Hogs“ Copeland) a script that sometimes makes Tooth Fairy look like The Red Shoes.

“Always go to other people‘s funerals; otherwise they won’t go to yours.”

Ah, yes. There’s a romance between plucky Ranger Smith (Tom Cavanagh) and documentary filmmaker Rachel (Anna Faris), and there’s another, more gullible ranger, named Jones (T. L. Miller) and there’s an evil mayor (Andrew Daly), who wants to close Jellystone Park and turn it onto, I don’t know, Casino Jack condos or something. Couldn’t they just have advertised, “At this park, we have two talking bears who walk around in hats and shirts and crack jokes?” Wouldn’t that be a draw?

“I really didn’t say everything I said.”

Visual effects guy Eric Brevig (who directed the recent Journey to the Center of the Earth remake) tries to make sense of all this. He can’t. But Aykroyd, ignoring any effort to reproduce the voice of original Yogi, Daws Butler, blazes new trails in Yogi-dom. (What about giving Dan that classic lost album, “BluesBears: Daws Butler and June Foray sing B. B. King?“)

What can you say about Yogi Bear? That this movie is more profound than the original Huckleberry Hound, more moving than Snagglepuss, more shattering than Deputy Dawg, and just as good as the movies somebody will no doubt make out of all of them? Just kidding. It’s really just another big, bad, expensive movie that leaves you speechless. And kingless. And bearless. As a wise man once said: A movie as bad as this can’t possibly be this bad. Yogi, we hardly knew ye.

“When you come to a fork in the road, take it.“ — Yogi Berra

Extras: Featurettes; Looney Tune “Rabid Rider”; Game.

How Do You Know (Two Stars)
U.S.: James L. Brooks, 2010 (Sony)

I have nothing much to say about the a new James L. Brooks romantic comedy — from the highly gifted writer-director who made Terms of Endearment and Broadcast News, and helped Jack Nicholson win two Oscars (“Terms” and As Good as It Gets) but who here casts Jack below (and gives him less lines than) Reese Witherspoon, Owen Wilson and Paul Rudd, three younger stars playing a romantic triangle vaguely reminiscent (and I do mean vaguely) of Holly Hunter, William Hurt and Albert Brooks in Broadcast News. Nothing to say but just this:

“Hold the chicken!” (You want me to hold the chicken?) “I want you to hold it between your knees!”

No, let’s develop that thought a little more. Let’s imagine Owen Wilson, Reese Witherspoon and Paul Rudd, the three stars billed above Nicholson, each doing that Five Easy Pieces truck stop scene. (I have nothing against any of them, by the way.)

Wilson, I think, would play it a little confused and bemused, and even slightly disbelieving and semi-reasonable, all the way though, and then finally explode frantically on “You see this sign?“ and the ultimate table-sweeping. Then he’d try to gather himself together. Maybe even apologize. Mr. Goof.

Rudd would probably do the scene haggard and a little unkempt as if he‘d been up all night and wasn’t quite himself. Then he‘d begin to stare and stare at the waitress as she kept frustrating him. Then he‘d say, with utter calm, “I want you to hold it between your knees!“ Then he’d give a fakey smile on “You see this sign?” before he sweeps the table. Then another smile and some hand-waving. Mr. Charm.

Reese Witherspoon could do the whole scene cold, just like Jack, though maybe she’d remove her sun-glasses at some point, and give the waitress a long hard stare. And, after she swept the table, she’d give a little “I-don’t-believe-I-just-did-that” shriek. Ms. Attitude.

As good as it gets, which isn’t very good, “How Do You Know” is still never as entertaining nor as vibrant, memorable, and terrific as those few table-sweeping Bob Rafelson-concocted minutes in “Five Easy Pieces.” or Terms of Endearment. And James L. Brooks is a good writer, a good director. There’s no real excuse for this. Except the system, of course.

Look, it’s like this. Movie ageism to the contrary, I’d rather see Jack do the scene himself, looking just as he does now. No one builds a tantrum like the Man. And I’d rather see Owen, Paul and Reese supporting Jack instead of vice versa. You know something? I bet they all would too. Extras: Commentaries with Brooks, Wilson and others. Conversation with Brooks and composer Hans Zimmer; Blooper reel.

On the Double (Two and a Half Stars)
U.S.: Melville Shavelson, 1961 (Paramount/Olive)

Danny Kaye. I can’t waqit. A mediocre Danny Kaye movie is still usually funnier than, say, a mediocre Adam Sandler or Owen Wilson movie. This one has Mr. “Split Personality” Daniel Kaminski himself, in an okay but not scintillating script by co-writers Jack Rose and Melville Shavelson (who also directed), as a cowardly, neurotic U. S. soldier (Kaye) who, because of his amazing resemblance to a vain and sadistic British general (Kaye), is recruited to impersonate the general and fool the Nazis and maybe some movie critics too.

Now, this mean general has a beautiful wife (Dana Wynter), whom the war staff neglects to inform about the substitution, and for whom our kid from Brooklyn instantly falls. Though sick of her husband, she then falls for a guy who looks just like him and is trying to impersonate him, but is nicer. (If she likes rapid-patter songs and sentimental ballads, especially by Danny’s wife Sylvia Fine, she’s hit the jackpot.) There are also an unusual number of Nazi spies who have infiltrated the British Army officer class here, and are impersonating various twits, snobs and Nigel Bruce impersonators. They could have all been played (better) by Peter Sellers. (But he might have messed up the movie by chasing Dana.)

Not too sharp, this movie. A turkey may be lurkin‘ in the murk where Mel is workin‘. A spy tells a lie, as he tries not to die. This movie isn’t proving to be giggly or groovy. But, at the end, Rose and Shavelson come up with some stuff, better stuff than that, and it gets somewhat crazy and funny. More Kaye, I say. And more Sellers too. No extras.

The DVD Wrap: Flipped, Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore, The Six Million Dollar Man: The Complete Collection, Deadwood: The Complete Collection … and more

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

Flipped

Anyone who lost faith in Rob Reiner after blowing their hard-earned dough on such star-studded duds as The Story of Us, Alex & Emma and Rumor Has It …, might want to give the filmmaker another chance. In the pre-pubescent romance Flipped, we meet a boy and girl who could have lived down the block from the kids introduced a quarter-century ago in two of Reiner’s most enduring hits, The Sure Thing and Stand by Me.

The emotional climate feels authentic, as do the actions of the parents, grandparents and teachers on view. The setting is suburban American, circa 1957-63, and the protagonists are new neighbors, Bryce and Juli (Callan McAuliffe, Madeline Carroll). And, from Minute One, it’s fair to assume they’re destined to come together somewhere near the very end of the picture. In the meantime, though, they undergo most of the same turmoil that affects kids feeling the first unexpected pangs of puppy love. Juli confounds Bryce with her aggressive pursuit of friendship.

He’s strangely attracted to the geeky girl, but is frightened by feelings he doesn’t understand and can’t define. Instead, Bryce begins treating Juli as if she has cooties. His increasingly shallow behavior is fortified by his dad (Anthony Edwards), a suburban snob who measures the worth of his neighbors by the tidiness of their lawns, and Juli’s dad (Aidan Quinn) doesn’t measure up to his standards. When Juli begins raising chickens in their backyard as an extension of a science project, Bryce’s dad convinces his son of the unwholesomeness of the eggs, which she delivers to their house as a neighborly gesture.

Fortunately, the moms (Rebecca De Mornay, Penelope Ann Miller) are more charitable than their husbands, as his Bryce’s grandfather (John Mahoney), who sees in Juli something of his late wife. The only question that remains 85 minutes into the 90-minute movie is whether Bryce will get over himself long enough to see beyond his dad’s prejudices.

Reiner borrows a literary conceit from Wendelin Van Draanen’s source novel, by telling the story through the contrasting viewpoints of Bryce and Juli. Normally, that wouldn’t present much of problem. Here, however, the device results in most of the story being advanced through narratives, instead of dialogue. It grows tiresome very quickly. So, too, does Reiner’s insistence on cluttering the background of Flipped with a steady stream of hits from the late-1950s and early-’60s.

They don’t emerge organically from the storyline — as they did in American Graffiti, for example — and probably wouldn’t be on either of these kids’ playlists, in any case. The Blu-ray extras are dominated by the teen stars, who testify to the on-set camaraderie, Reiner’s easy relationship with child actors, the inability of the chickens to stay in character and the basics of volcano-making for school science fairs.

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Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed
The Big Mess

Facets Video’s essential series of movies by German filmmaker Alexander Kluge continues apace with circus-as-metaphor dramas, Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed (1968) and The Indomitable Leni Peickert (1970), and the zany parody of inter-galactic capitalism, The Big Mess (1971). Unlike the more accessible Yesterday Girl (1966), these titles will be of primary interest to foreign-film buffs and cultists. In addition to making grand statements about the relationship between art and commerce, and the predatory nature of capitalism, the films demand to be viewed in the context of a culture, which, by mid-century had nurtured more than its fair share of brilliant artists and demonic political leaders.

Among other interesting things about Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed is its title’s resistance to easy translation. Read one review and it’s, The Artist in the Circus Dome: Clueless, while in another, Artists at the Top of the Big Top: Disorientated. The bewitching Hannelore Hoger plays Leni Peickert, an artistically driven woman who inherits a circus after her father is killed during rehearsal of a perilous act. Knowing that the era of the family circus is quickly coming to an end, Peickert decides she’ll create an entertainment that isn’t reliant on traditional acts and has a humanitarian agenda.

In some ways, her ideas mirror those that would be popularized 20 years later with Cirque du Soleil. Finding the financial backing for such a concept would prove problematic, however, leaving Peickert at the mercy – or lack thereof – of bankers and other investors. The costs of feeding the animals, performers and crew, alone, would soon prove insurmountable for someone also attempting to re-invent the wheel. Two years later, in Indomitable Leni Peickert, Kluge would re-visit the would-be impresario as she attempts to find success in commercial television. Like other women protagonists in Kluge’s films, Peickert is headstrong, restless, ambitious and resistant to the word, “no.”

Typically, as well, Kluge finds places in Big Top to insert newsreel footage, pungent quotes, textual montages and incongruent musical choices (the Beatles’ “Yesterday” over Nazi footage). It’s entirely possible, as well, that Kluge was commenting on changes he’d seen in the relationship between art and commerce in cinema.

The Big Mess is just that. Kluge set his sci-fi fable in 2034, when an entire solar system – not necessarily our own – is controlled by a corporate entity known as the Suez Canal Company. A monopoly, it licenses sections of planets to various companies, which, then, can exploit raw materials and eliminate competitors. The film’s protagonists are a group of rogue salvagers, who leach revenues from the waste and excess of the various businesses.

Upon its release the movie was considered to be a Marxist answer to the first third of 2001: A Space Odyssey, during which the colonization of our moon, at least, would be financed by commercial entities (many of which no longer exist). Kluge extends the satire by creating spacecraft, moonscapes and visual effects worthy of an imaginative 10-year-old.

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12 Men of Christmas
A Nanny for Christmas

Among the various conceits working against Hollywood rom-coms is an insistence on inserting bright and extremely attractive characters into situations they wouldn’t encounter in a million years. In such movies, beautiful fiancés get cheated on with far too great a regularity and a woman’s long, flowing hair and shapely legs rarely are taken into consideration when layoffs begin. It’s a reverse form of sexism that simply doesn’t exist in the workplace. (Did anyone believe for a minute that Sandra Bullock’s high-powered executive in The Proposal actually would have been sent back to Canada, for the crime of overstaying her work visa?) In these holiday-themed romantic comedies, Kristin Chenoweth and Emmanuelle Vaugier are the bombshells excused from their jobs for misdemeanors almost too silly to mention.

In Lifetime’s 12 Men of Christmas, the dangerously cute and perky Chenoweth plays an otherwise successful New York publicist, E.J. Baxter, who relocates to Montana after finding her boyfriend and boss in flagrante delicto. It is a decision that smacks of paying penance for an act she didn’t initiate and couldn’t control. Either way, she probably could have found a comparable job overnight.

In any case, E.J, agrees to spend a year in Montana creating a marketing strategy for a town in desperate need of more convention and resort business. She isn’t there more than a day before she discovers a way to publicize the local search-and-rescue team, which is comprised of enough hunks to fill a racy calendar. At the same time, of course, E.J. is required to decide if the outdoorsman of her dreams (Josh Hopkins) is worth giving up a career in New York.

Likewise, in A Nanny for Christmas, the insanely attractive Ally (Emmanuelle Vaugier) is relieved of her job as an advertising executive after neglecting to discover that a potential client once was “left at the altar.” As penance for her blunder, she accepts a job as a nanny for a filthy-rich business woman who’s allowed career demands to cloud her relationship with her family.

It isn’t long before Ally endears herself with the overly regimented kids and falls for a handsome, if overly preppy guy (Richard Ruccolo) who works in her boss’ firm. She’s embarrassed to admit she’s a nanny, instead of the ad rep he thinks she is, and, anyway, such relationships are strictly forbidden by her employer. To protect both of them, she makes up the kind of white lie that almost certainly will come back to haunt her.

Even more coincidentally, the boyfriend is working to secure the account of the same chocolate maker (Dean Cain) who caused Ally to lose her previous job. It’s Christmas, though, so viewers can expect miracles. Only fans of the cast members and made-for-cable rom-coms will find something interesting here, I’m afraid.

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Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore
The Search for Santa Paws

Nine years in the making, Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore is a sequel to the hit comedy Cats & Dogs, in which anthropomorphic felines and canines battled for supremacy of the pet universe. That movie struck a chord, even though it overflowed with references to 1960s spy movies and other pop-cultural touchstones kids under 10 would be incapable of appreciating.

Fortunately for parents, the homage gave them something to chew on between scenes of animal antics. Any child old enough to understand the Bondian gag in the title of the sequel probably already is ready to take on the double-entendres in Austin Powers. I can’t attest to the visual quality of the Blu-ray 3D edition of the movie, but the blend of live action, puppetry and animation looks pretty good in standard hi-def.

Here, renegade M.E.O.W.S. agent Kitty Galore (voiced by Bette Midler) threatens not only the canine population, but humans and law-abiding cats, as well. Among the other voice actors are Neil Patrick Harris, James Marsden, Nick Nolte, Christina Applegate, Katt Williams, Roger Moore, Wallace Shawn, Chris O’Donnell, Sean Hayes, Joe Pantoliano, Michael Clark Duncan and Chris O’Donnell. That’s a lot of firepower for kiddie flick. The package includes a Looney Toons short, Coyote Falls; a sneak peek of the Yogi Bear theatrical film; “Dog Dishing: Tails From the Bark Side of Hollywood”; “Mash-Up: The Best of the Best Cat vs. Dog Animated Showdowns”; outtakes; and a gag reel.

Disney may be the studio behind The Search for Santa Paws, but no one should mistake it for previous collaborations with Pixar or any other of its animated theatrical features. This straight-to-video sequel to Santa Buddies and, by extension, Air Bud, Air Buddies, Space Buddies, Snow Buddies and Chestnut: Hero of Central Park comes with built-in brand recognition and is only as good as it has to be to attract kids amused by precocious puppies.

Here, Santa travels to New York to get the ball rolling on Christmas. Instead, he’s involved in an accident that leaves his memory impaired. His dog rounds up the canine crew to get a lead on Santa’s whereabouts and save Christmas. Among the bonus features are “Sing Along to Christmas Carols With the Buddies” and a “Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town” music video.

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The Six Million Dollar Man: The Complete Collection

The very good news for fans of the inventive mid-1970s’ TV show The Six Million Dollar Man is that Time Life has finally made the entire series available in a monumental 40-disc collector’s box, with a built-in audio chip and 3D lenticular image of Steve Austin. The not-so-good news is that, for the time being, it’s available exclusively at the Time Life website or via links to it.

People who follow ebbs and flows in the TV-to-DVD game once listed The Six Million Dollar Man as one of the top-five series yet to be preserved on DVD. The delay has been attributed primarily to issues pertaining to the American rights to the show, which are claimed by several people and have changed hands several times over the years. At one point, a theatrical adaptation was on the drawing boards, with Jim Carrey adding laughs to the original premise. When that project collapsed, plans for a comprehensive DVD package were abandoned, as well.

In addition to 100 digitally re-mastered and fully restored episodes of the sci-fi/action series, which ran from 1974 to 1979, the set includes three pilot movies (The Six Million Dollar Man, Wine, Women and War, Solid Gold Kidnapping), three reunion movies (The Return of the Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman, Bionic Showdown, Bionic Ever After?), all of the crossover episodes with The Bionic Woman, audio commentaries, interactive features, and new interviews with Lee Majors and Lindsay Wagner. It’s a tad on the expensive side, but collectors will find ways to afford such a bounty.

For those post-Baby Boomers unfamiliar with the show, Majors plays a test-pilot, who, after being seriously injured in a crash landing, literally is rebuilt with nuclear-powered prosthetic devices. Being a product of the American military, it was only natural that Austin would be given superhuman strength and hyper-speed in order to run down commies. Presumably, it would give us another edge in Cold War. As outlandish as that might have seemed in the mid-1970s, though, our ability to create bionic soldiers – originally put forward in Martin Caidin’s 1971 novel, Cyborg – is now a very real possibility.

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The Pillars of the Earth: Blu-ray
Deadwood: The Complete Series: Blu-ray

The common thread uniting these two otherwise disparate mini-series is the chilling presence of characters portrayed with trademark menace by Ian McShane. Of the two shows, the least familiar will be The Pillars of the Earth, which debuted here on cable’s Starz network. Set in 12th Century England, after the ship carrying the son of King Henry – the only direct heir to the crown – is destroyed in a fire.

His presumed death opens the gate for much intrigue at court, but McShane’s devious Bishop Waleran has plans of his own for the succession. Caught in the complex machinations are a poor stonemason, Tom Builder (Rufus Sewell), and the pious Prior Philip (Matthew Macfadyen), both of whom envision a magnificent cathedral for the town of Kingsbridge. Even though the cathedral is being built for the greater glory of God, the bishop fights its construction at every turn.

Historians labeled this period of civil war and political intrigue the Anarchy, and it is represented as such. Pillars of the Earth, though, is as much about sorting out the royal succession as it is building a cathedral that’s architecturally viable and can stand as a beacon of freedom for laborers and peasants. Like The Tudors, the eight-part Pillars of the Earth is enhanced by a strict attention to period detail and narrative thrust, in keeping with Ken Follett’s source material. The package also includes several making-of featurettes and BDLive connectivity.

In Deadwood, McShane played another amoral character, saloonkeeper Al Swearegen. Besides setting the land-speed record for creative cussing, Swearegen’s cynicism was the glue that held the whole series together. The other characters, interesting as they were, were either owned by him or fearful of being perceived as his enemy. Like any bully, though, when confronted with superior firepower, Swearegen wasn’t averse to hiding behind the shield of local law-enforcement officials or the skirts of his whores.

And, in a truly insane creative touch, victims of his wrath often would be fed to Mr. Wu’s pigs, which were fed to the populace. The mini-series’ arrival in Blu-ray is especially welcome, if only for the hi-def visuals and bonus features. They include 17 full-length commentary tracks, with creator David Milch, actors Keith Carradine, Molly Parker, Brad Dourif, Robin Weigert, McShane, Timothy Olyphant, Anna Gunn and assorted other cast members and producers. Among the featurettes are “Making Deadwood: The Show Behind the Show,” “The Real Deadwood,” “The New Language of the Old West” and “The Meaning of Endings.” There also are dozens of daguerreotype photos and marketing images; Q&As with cast and crew; a set tour; and “Al Swearengen Audition Reel,” in which Man in Black Titus Welliver stages a one-man audition reel by impersonating Milch, Al Pacino, Christopher Walken, Robert Duvall and Robert De Niro.

Neither of these Blu-ray packages are for the kiddies, who may not be able to deal with the violence, sex and language. Anyone on your list without cable will welcome them as gifts.

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Luther
Human Weapon: Complete Season 1: Blu-ray
Hannah Montana: Who Is Hannah Montana?

TV crime shows don’t get much more hard-edged than Luther, even on BBC America. Idris Elba (“The Wire”) plays the London police detective who always seems to be on the brink of being fired for torturing suspects, stalking his estranged wife or beating up her boyfriend. Of course, some of this can be blamed on the cases he’s assigned, which are among the city’s most heinous crimes. After establishing that a young woman likely will escape justice in the murder of her parents and house pet – she hides evidence in a soon-to-be-cremated dog – Luther suddenly finds himself at her mercy. The suspect, who’s brilliant, sees in the overbearing detective an intellectual match and challenge.

Luther is the show’s hero, to be sure, but there’s a very thin line between him and the criminals he hunts. The set includes a documentary with interviews with series creator Neil Cross, cast and crew members. In it, they explain how the series was constructed to be more “impressionistic” than “realistic.”

In the History Channel series, Human Weapon, a pair of American he-men travels the world in search of the real stories behind various martial-arts techniques. Jason Chambers, a former mixed-martial-arts champion, and Bill Duff, a former football player and wrestler, approach each new combat discipline with an appreciation for the aesthetics and culture from which it sprang. In this way, Human Weapon resembles Anthony Bourdain’s No Reservations. They’re also good listeners. In Season One, the men were introduced to 16 different combat styles, including Muay Thai, Eskrima stickfighting, karate, savate streetfighting, judo, pankration, krav maga, Marine Corps martial arts, MMA, kung fu, sambo, silat, ninjutsu and taekwondo. When the action gets too fast and furious, CGI artists slow it down for amateur viewers.

The latest entry in the Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus DVD catalog actually is an hour-long episode from the new season. In it, the Malibu teen, Miley Stewart, reveals to anyone who hasn’t already guessed it that her alter ego is the pop superstar, Hannah. The disc adds a sneak preview of Ashley Tisdale’s upcoming movie, Sharpay’s Fabulous Adventure! Just for the record, Miley Cyrus turns 23 this week, so look out, world.

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American Fetish

Beyond its natural appeal to bondage and nylon enthusiasts, this highly stylistic erotic thriller will be of special interest to admirers of fetish photographers Eric Kroll and Irving Klaw, models Bettie Page and Dita Von Teese, and readers of Leg Show magazine. (You know who you are.) In American Fetish, the son of an ex-con becomes obsessed with a 50-year-old unsolved murder.

His father was a nightclub owner and “blue movie” maker, who catered to the fetish crowd. The old man left behind a box full of movie tins, one of which possibly holds the key to unlocking the mystery. The case also demands that the son descends further into the demi-monde of sex clubs, exhibitionists and the cops who exploit them. Michael Simmons’ erotica is nicely lit and sensitively shot. The women who participate in the shows are extremely beautiful and empowered in the knowledge they control the circumstances under which customers satisfy their particular desires. American Fetish isn’t for everyone, but those who enjoyed The Notorious Bettie Page – or John Stagliano’s much harder Fashionistas— might want to extend the experience by checking out Simmons’ thriller.

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Bangkok Adrenaline: Blu-ray

One doesn’t usually come to Thai action films expecting logical storylines and character development. No relation to the original Thai version of Bangkok Dangerous, which almost made narrative sense, Bangkok Adrenaline was the brainstorm of a group of western stuntmen, who felt as if they could concoct as good a movie as the ones in which they performed stunts.

They didn’t have a lot of money, but, as the primary actors, writers and directors, they wouldn’t be spending much on salaries or travel. They knew the fight scenes would be of greater importance than any dialogue, so that’s where they invested most of their energy. In it, a group of English-speaking back-packers decides to conclude their visit to Thailand by getting as wasted as possible and partying until the sacred cows come home (or is that India?)

Feeling as if he were invincible, one of the lads gets suckered into entering a rigged poker game. After being allowed to win for a while, the dreadlocked doofus gets his pocket picked by the rest of the players. Down a fortune, the tourists are called before a mob boss and given a demonstration of what happens to deadbeats. They’re given a week to come up with the money, but are too irresponsible to hang on to even the meager sums they earn. Instead, they decide to kidnap the enchanting daughter of an American father (stepfather?) and Thai mother.

For some unfathomable reason, the father is less incensed by the kidnapping than the ability of the guys to invade his fortress-like home undetected. Rather than pay the ransom, he decides to kill the kidnappers and lose the wise-ass daughter (stepdaughter?) in the resulting chaos. He dispatches a small army of kung-fu fighters to trap them at the drop-off point, but the westerners more than hold their ground. Another wave of fighters is similarly repulsed.

By this time, though, the foreigners have gained a couple of local allies and the respect of cops monitoring the situation from afar. All one needs to know about the action is that it’s fast, furious and wall-to-wall. If the fighting isn’t particularly artistic, it sure is fun to watch. So is Priya Suandokemai, a newcomer who’s as charming as she is pretty. The Blu-ray adds a making-of featurette that appears to have been shot using a camera left on a table and left turned on by accident.

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Fire & Ice: Dragon Chronicles: Blu-ray

Made in Romania by a Romanian production company and starring lots of Romanian actors, Fire & Ice is a medieval fantasy in which flying dragons battle each other in the name of good and bad kings. (When did Romania become the new Canada?) Made on a budget that probably wouldn’t cover the drawing of a single CGI dragon’s wing, if it were made in Hollywood, Fire & Ice debuted here on the SyFy channel. It’s fairly cheesy, but could strike a chord among undemanding fans of monster and fantasy flicks.

In it, the peaceful kingdom of Carpia is besieged by a gigantic dragon that not only breathes fire, but is completely engulfed in flames, as well. Although her father refuses to engage the evil ruler of a neighboring kingdom, Princess Luisa leaves the castle to search for a famous dragon slayer. Instead, she finds the knight’s son, a Keanu Reeves look-alike (Tom Wisdom) who agrees to come to her rescue. Together, they summon the flying Ice Dragon to take on the fiery savior to slay the monster. Among the English-speaking cast are Amy Acker and John Rhys-Davies. The DVD arrives with a making-of featurette.

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The Disappearance of Alice Creed: Blu-ray

This very decent abduction thriller opened in a handful of U.S. theaters last August, but, despite the presence of rising star Gemma Arterton, came and went with barely a whisper of attention paid to it. Once again, it’s our loss. Arterton does a nice job as the feisty title character in this three-person British export. It’s the responsibility of the kidnappers (Eddie Marsan, Martin Compston) to snatch Alice off of a suburban street and hold her for ransom in a safehouse made only slightly less secure than the Tower of London. Everything goes as planned, until the scared-senseless victim realizes how fragile the bond is between her abductors.

Even though she’s cuffed to bedposts, blindfolded and relieved of her clothing, Alice still manages to convince the younger kidnapper that she’s no threat to escape. And, by all appearances, her prison is secure. I don’t want to spoil the fun, by revealing anything more. Suffice to say, however, that Alice is smarter than both of the men, combined. Writer/director J. Blakeson’s freshman feature is as taut, suspenseful and as enjoyable a thriller as any you’ll find among the new releases in your local video store. The DVD package adds commentary with Blakeson, a deleted and extended scene, outtakes and storyboard comparisons.

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Love Shack

Two big hurdles face filmmakers who set out to satirize the adult-film industry, especially considering that Boogie Nights was as much satire as cautionary tale. First, it’s difficult to mock an industry that takes itself seriously only on the way to the bank and AIDS-screening appointments.

Second, how can a satire, such as Love Shack, be taken seriously if its mainstream actors are too timid to show off their naughty bits? Certainly, it takes more than assigning such names as Teabag Nancy, Sebastian Bulge, Tush Bushman and Marty Sphincter to the characters. Actually, the angle taken by co-writers/directors Gregg Sacon and Michael B. Silver does hold promise: a group of former adult-film stars reunite to shoot a script left behind by a legendary producer after his death.

Even though most are at least 15 years past their prime, the actors accept the assignment with their oversized egos intact and private parts only slightly worse for the wear. Given the talent involved, it would have been difficult for the made-for-DVD Love Shack to arrive devoid of humor and clever gags. It’s just that when a filmmaker sets out to bag such big game, settling for an ear or tail isn’t sufficient reward for the cast or audience. Accept for Mark Feuerstein (Royal Pains) and porn icon Nina Hartley, it’s the faces of the actors that will be more familiar than their names. They’ve appeared as supporting characters in many TV popular TV shows, although mostly clothed.

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Deadland

Indie newcomers Damon O’Steen and Gary Weeks offer yet another vision of America’s post-apocalyptic future in the good-looking, if over-familiar Deadland. Filmed largely in rural Georgia and Alabama, the dystopian thriller suggests that a strong-willed survivor of a nuclear holocaust could, if he so desired, march through toxic forests, cross vast wastelands and outwit well-armed militias, if it meant finding his wife … who may or may not be dead.

Such romantic crusades have been a Hollywood staple for most of the last century, of course, whether the loved one is hijacked by Comanches, pirates or sheiks. This time around, a Los Angeles yuppie and his wife just so happen to be on the road to their mountain retreat when the vapor trails of nuclear warheads appear on the horizon. Flash ahead five years and male survivors are shown fighting for scraps of food, as well as power. Enslaved women have become sexual commodities.

Weeks, who also wrote the screenplay, plays survivor Sean Kalos. Five years of roughing it in the forest have left him buff, yet desperate. The only clue he has about his wife’s possible whereabouts is contained on a list of names, which are deciphered and interpreted by a wacko code-breaker, played by William Katt. The script reads like a hybrid of Mad Max and The Road, but the money to support such an ambitious project simply wasn’t there. Nevertheless, O’Steen and Weeks managed to squeeze every cent’s worth of action out of the bare-bones budget. Collectors of post-apocalyptic thrillers could do a lot worse than Deadland.

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Sacred Triangle: Bowie, Iggy & Lou, 1971- 1973
Brian Wilson: Songwriter, 1962-1969
John Scofield: New Morning: The Paris Concert

Unlike most MTV and VH1 rockumentaries, the biographies and career retrospectives distributed by MVD Visuals more closely resemble doctoral theses than Wikipedia clip jobs. No better examples exist than the newly released Sacred Triangle: Bowie, Iggy & Lou and Brian Wilson: Songwriter.

None of the subjects of these documentaries are unknown quantities, of course. Their stories have been told countless times in books, video profiles and liner notes. What differentiates these titles not only is an attention to detail, but also a willingness to dig for intellectual context. Today, David Bowie, Iggy Pop and Lou Reed appear to have been iconic figures from Day One. Sacred Triangle targets a period, 1971-73, when each of these artists was desperately trying to re-ignite the flame produced by early pop successes.

Their labels fretted about everything from decreasing album sales to outrageous lifestyles, fueled by drugs, sex and way too much available cash. Bowie, especially, was responsible for finding a common denominator between himself, the Detroit bad boy and heady New York singer-songwriter. Already friends, they co-produced each other’s records, exchanged songs and critiqued themselves and other musicians. At approximately the same time, young people were demanding something radically different than the output of hippy-dippy bands from San Francisco and the Hollywood Hills. It presented itself in the form of glam-rock, a genre that embraced androgyny, outlandish designer costumes and precisely coiffed hairdos.

The scene bore absolutely no resemblance to a three-day weekend with the Grateful Dead and critics were slow to embrace its eccentricities. By the time glam-rock wore out its luster, the artists had established the street cred that would allow them to be accepted by punk rockers, club kids and Goths, as well as fans not glued to a specific trend. The music created during this two-year period continues to be heard on both classic-rock and progressive radio stations. Any tour featuring Bowie, Iggy and Lou, today, would sell out stadiums around the world.

In addition to well-chosen newsreel, concert and video footage, the film is informed by contributions from Bowie’s ex-wife, Angie; Billy Name, a confidant of Andy Warhol during the heyday of the Factory; MainMan Management vice president, Leee Black Childers; New York scenester Jayne [née Wayne] County and other contemporaries.

The two-disc Brian Wilson: Songwriter is even more comprehensive, covering the period that spanned the dawn of surf music and Brian Wilson’s psychedelic experiments. No one in the history of rock music has experienced more personal and creative change than Brian Wilson, who, at one point, had ventured to a point so far out in the ozone that he was written off as a basket case. Songs, once as simple as they could possibly be, began to evolve into intricate rock symphonies and song cycles, fusing standard instrumental backgrounds with animal noises, wind chimes and electro-theremin.

The themes reflected the many ideas and sounds buzzing through and around Wilson’s brain while he relaxed in his living-room sandbox. As long as the Beach Boys produced hit singles, the label and Wilson’s fellow band members were content to follow his lead. When, however, his music began to challenge mainstream tastes, it began to look as if Brian would be thrown out with the bathwater, and some important projects actually were deep-sixed. Songwriter makes the case for Wilson’s enduring genius, while also pointing out his many idiosyncrasies and shortcomings. The set includes historical musical performances and rare and classic recordings, re-assessed by a panel of music scholars, critics, friends, fellow musicians and producers, and management figures. If this DVD doesn’t make you want to re-visit your Beach Boy collection, nothing will.

John Scofield’s guitar playing, compositions and arrangements have been admired by aficionados for more than three decades. Filmed earlier this year, New Morning: The Paris Concert provides a compelling retrospective of Scofield’s interpretations of jazz, funk and R&B, while also tipping his hat to his primary influences, including Miles Davis, with whom he recorded and toured. Here, he’s backed by drummer Bill Stewart, bassist Ben Street and pianist Michael Eckroth.