Posts Tagged ‘Jaws’

DP/30: Jaws Blu-ray, screenwriter Carl Gottlieb

Monday, August 13th, 2012

Pretty sure this is the windiest DP/30 in history… not the conversation, actual wind.

But Gottlieb is great and tells the story of coming to LA from San Francisco with The Committee and becoming part of Spielberg’s world… and we circle back to discuss The Jerk and other films as well.

Pulitzer Day

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

When the Chicago Sun-Times’ Roger Ebert was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for criticism in 1975, I was working at a small newspaper a few miles down the interstate, editing copy and reviewing the occasional movie. No other film critic had been so honored, and I suffered no delusions about following in Roger’s footsteps any time soon, if ever.

In 1973, Sun-Times critic Ron Powers had won a Pulitzer for his coverage of television. It wouldn’t be fair or accurate to say that Ebert and Powers were cut from the same cloth, but their appeal was similarly universal. From a distance of about 45 miles, I envied their ability to write intelligently about popular media without condescending to anyone in the S-T’s broad urban readership or wearing their IQs on their lapels.

Even today, that is a rare quality among winners of the prize. The vast majority have gone to pundits writing for right- and left-coast newspapers about dance, books, architecture, art, theater and classical music. While other television critics would be so honored in 1980, 1985 and 1988, another 28 years would go by before another film critic, Stephen Hunter, would take home the prize, with Joe Morgenstern to follow two years later. In between, writers about automobiles, fashion and food were included in the populist trend.

This year’s prize went Monday to Mark Feeney, an arts writer and photography reviewer for the Boston Globe. Washington Post movie critic Ann Hornaday was a finalist. It will take another millennium, probably, for a rock or hip-hop critic to impress the judges in the same way.

With movie critics being jettisoned from newspaper payrolls, like so many bangs of sand from a hot-air balloon, it’s an appropriate time to assess the state of the art in American newspapers. If cost-cutting continues apace, the next Pulitzer for film writing might necessarily go to a critic toiling for pennies on their own website, or one dedicated to cinematic endeavors. Only a handful of ink-stained critics are likely to be left standing when the blood dries.

Instead, the majority of movie lovers will be served by the AP’s crack corps of faceless reviewers, the minimalists at USA Today, syndicators of content and a newspaper chain’s critic du jour. If a reader in the hinterlands is fortunate enough to see Ebert’s reviews in their morning paper, it’s likely they’ve been sliced and diced to fit the odd hole in a space-deprived feature section.

So far, the critical purge hasn’t had the same impact on deep-thinkers about television. That’s likely due to the fact that newspaper editors want someone on hand to answer questions about a local anchorhotties’s new hairdo and wax indignant about reality shows. They dutifully run wire copy on the weekend’s top-10 movies and feign a freakish curiosity in the Oscar hysteria, but blindly assume their subscribers have little interest in indies, documentaries and subtitles.

MCN’s David Poland already has expressed his opinion on the implications of the purge, and the studios culpability in it. MCN also has provided a link to Roger Ebert’s visionary 1991 essay on the difficulties of writing serious criticism for a diverse readership base. Perhaps, I can offer another perspective.

In Ebert, not only did Pulitzer judges honor a still-blossoming journalist’s writing and commitment to the medium, it demanded that other newspaper editors take movies seriously, as well. The timing couldn’t be better for readers and critics, as this new mandate not only coincided with the rise of such directors as Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas, Steven Spielberg. Robert Altman and Martin Scorsese, but also the emergence of a generation of independent filmmakers inspired by John Cassavetes, the French New Wave and Britain’s “kitchen sink “ movement. The explosion of blaxploitation and martial-arts products also required analysis.

No longer were editors simply able to grab the youngest-looking guy or gal from the copy desk and assign them to the film beat. Suddenly, reviewers also were required to assume the role of critic, even if their backgrounds were limited to taking Film History 101 in college and an ability to pick Francois Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard out of a lineup. More enlightened editors went out and hired genuine students of the art, even if the only newsroom they’d ever seen was in The Front Page.

Ebert had already demonstrated his proficiency in awarding stars to movies and backing them up in prose. In 1975, the imagistic approach was extended to his and competitor Gene Siskel’s “Opening Soon at a Theater Near You,” with summations of “yes” and “no” and bark of Spot the Wonder Drug. The local hit would begat the nationally televised “Sneak Previews,” which would begat “At the Movies,” with Aroma the skunk, which begat trademarked thumb-ratings and “Siskel & Ebert & the Movies,” which begat “At the Movies With Ebert & Roeper.”

And, therein, was laid the seed that grew into Great Critical Purge of the Mid-‘00s.

Shortly after the Pulitzer judges awarded the first prize for film criticism to a 32-year-old movie nut (and occasional Russ Meyer collaborator) from the heart of the heartland, graduates of the Sarrisite and Kaelite schools began infiltrating the pages of newspapers, as well. Not having newsroom roots, as did Ebert and Siskel, these first-wavers naturally assumed that clearly reasoned criticism and bright prose would satisfy even those grumpy editors and mainstream readers who couldn’t pick Warren Beatty out of a lineup. Some even dreamed about having a show of their own someday.

The huge success of Jaws and Star Wars not only signaled a new way of doing business in Hollywood, it also revealed the stirrings of disconnect between critics and audiences. If it weren’t for Titanic – and Kenneth Turan’s sadly overhyped feud with director James Cameron — the gap might have gone unnoticed for a few more years. The debate would continue well into the next decade, as Oscar nominations and top-10 rankings failed to duplicate the list of top-grossing movies. If no one else was paying attention to the squabble, budget-strapped editors certainly were.

The most vigorous disagreements often were inspired by so-called “tentpole” pictures. Released primarily in late spring and summer, tentpoles gave youngish audiences all the action, pyrotechnics, CGI heroes and villains, and porous storylines, they could possibly handle … at least, until the next week’s new releases. Instead of being platformed out and be allowed to build on critical and popular buzz, potential blockbusters began to open on thousands of screens simultaneously. The impact of same-day newspaper reviews was thereby minimalized, and all that seemed to matter to studios were the first two weekends’ grosses.

From Jaws on, studio marketing campaigns would target opening-weekend audiences. Negotiations over premium space in Sunday and Friday features sections would grow fierce, and become highly influenced by publicists and a newspaper’s circulation department. By agreeing to participate in junkets, and running a puff interview ahead of a potentially negative review, an editor essentially would have sold the soul of his paper to the studio.

In the most competitive markets, personal and studio publicists now could barter exclusivity for access to their biggest stars, whose appearance, theoretically, would help sell papers on Sunday. The New York Times and Los Angeles Times trumped everyone else within a 100-mile radius of their printing presses. In Chicago, however, Siskel and Ebert’s newspaper and television (local and national) presence was deemed of equal importance to publicists, who learned to play a different game in Chicago.

Rather than alienate either of the fiercely competitive Bigfoots, the publicists for a prolific artist like Woody Allen or Martin Scorsese would make their clients available to the boys on alternate films. A bone would be thrown to the loser in the form of an interview with another high-profile client, a prominent co-star or some other quid pro quo. Even if Ebert and Siskel were among the few critic/writers who refused to let studios finance their junketeering, a newspaper might be able to save money by piggy-backing on a trip financed (or not) by a local TV outlet. In our under-budgeted shop, at least, it was wink-wink, nod-nod all the way.

The major flacks toyed with other media in the same way, and, by 1990, paramilitary firms like PMK dictated coverage from Times to Times. The writing already was on the wall for newspaper circulation, and, in a few short years, only the NYT, LAT, USA Today and Wall Street Journal really mattered to the studios. In addition to those outlets, publicists limited their browbeating to the morning and late-night talk shows, Newsweek and Time, ET andExtra, 60 Minutes and Barbara Walters. Everyone else could fight over the scraps.

The constant in this equation were the critics who had no desire to do anything but write about the movies themselves and pen the occasional Sunday “think piece” and obit. Their job was difficult enough, without also having to secure a Sunday pufferoo with a Robert Redford or Julia Roberts, knowing full well they might be required to lambast their movie the following Friday. Eventually, the actors and directors wised up and refused to agree to do interviews with critics who routinely trashed their work.

As an editor and writer for the Chicago Tribune, I spent a lot of time walking a tightrope between publicists and section editors, critics and readers, news side and business side, all of whom had a separate agenda when it came to movies. In a perfect journalistic world – The New York Times and Los Angeles Times, perhaps – there were enough reporters and freelance writers to maintain a separation of church and state. Critics could critique, while feature editors could budget a balanced mix of puff and think pieces … in turn, the publicists could brag about driving a hard bargain with the editors, and their studios would keep the Sunday sections fat with ads.

Even in the good ol’ days, this was a far from perfect world.

On the rare occasion a senior editor would actually deem to see a movie in a theater, there would be times when a divergence of opinion would result in a phone call and official questioning of our critic’s sanity. It’s difficult to ascertain whether a big shot’s willingness to criticize the content of a review ever clouded a critic’s opinion, but it’s true that David Kehr, who succeeded Siskel as lead reviewer, almost wasn’t awarded the job because he hadn’t treated ET as if it were Citizen Kane.

By now, thanks to Entertainment Weekly and People magazines, feature editors were putting ratings on everything that moved in their departments. Movie ratings assumed the form of tiny rosebuds, clapping hands, letter grades, popcorn boxes, reel canisters and thumbs. All provided excuses for readers – and editors – not to read the text, as did capsule reviews of the movies in weekend guides. Worse, a star’s value was based on hugely subjective criteria. At the Tribune, a single-star review meant a movie was bad, while a single-star restaurant grade meant a discerning dine might want to take a chance on it, at least.

One critic I know “over-starred” his commentaries, while another would “under-star” to camouflage suspicious critical tendencies. Only those readers who actually took the time to peruse a review from byline to bye-bye would know precisely how closely their opinions might jibe with those of the critic and the star grade. Newspapers were making it easy for readers to fall out of love with reading.

In Ebert’s 1991 essay, he addressed the question of how his ratings might not always reflect his true feelings about a film, and how he could encourage readers to attend a movie about which he had a strongly negative reaction. Minus the stars, the debate would have been moot.

Ebert also bemoaned the added competition – such as it was – of the Tribune’s “Teen Movie Panel,” which ran in the paper’s Friday section, but wasn’t under the supervision of the entertainment editor. It was a gimmick, pure and simple, intended to appeal to those hard-to-reach niche readers of a certain age. Turns out, other media were more interested in covering the panel than Chicagoans were in reading the reviews. While innocent, in an Archie & Veronica sort of way, the short reviews cut into space previously reserved for grown-up reviews. The timing was less than perfect.

Instead of being selective about the movies that warranted full reviews, every dopey genre and exploitation flick was being given the star treatment. No title was too obscure or cheesy to relegate to the capsule bin. If anything, critics were expected to give Hollywood fare more attention than it deserved, relegating significant indies to the corners and shadows.

Last week, while cruising through RottenTomatoes, I chanced upon an example of just such a discrepancy. It came in the form of Vincent Canby’s analysis of Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night 2, which, two decades later, has just been re- released into DVD. I have no idea what possessed Canby’s editor to pass along the assignment … if the critic harbored a secret passion for slasher movies, none was revealed in the text. Then, as now, it was a nothing horror movie, re-titled as sucker-bait for fans of the Leslie Nielsen and Jamie Lee Curtis original. If the Times felt it necessary to review such products, there was no hope left for any of us.

Nothing in the Tribune lent itself so easily to exploitation as movies. No space would be diverted to a Teen Editorial Board, Teen Baseball Writer or Teen Classical Music Critic. Movies were fair game, primarily because no one in a position of power took them as seriously as the Tribune’s critics, and, of course, a pretty decent number of readers.

After a year or so, people stopped paying much attention to the teen panel, one way or the other. Of the dozens of participants, only one young woman demonstrated any talent at criticism, and, at 17, she would have made a terrific lead critic for half of the dailies in the country. Despite this, similar panels began springing up in media outlets around the country.

Digital technology would further dilute the gene pool.

Websites and discussion boards that focused on movies were among the first to energize the Internet. Long before Hollywood publicists and newspaper editors recognized the web’s potential for exploitation, movie-crazy netizens were exchanging opinions, gossip, box-office analysis and files on the web. How else could a schlub like Harry Knowlesbecome a mover and shaker in a multibillion-dollar industry? Where else, besides www.imdb.com and www.mrskin.com, could fans, scholars, trivia geeks and perverts find a common ground?

Sadly, the Internet also would provide newspaper publishers with a convenient excuse for the precipitous drop in readership and advertising. It would be cited as the primary reason for necessity of eliminating the positions of hundreds of seasoned journalists, including many of the same critics who, editors assumed, were being ignored by readers and studios.

How to stem the erosion in advertising revenues? A few years ago, The New York Times and Los Angeles Times dropped to their institutional knees to fellate the major Hollywood players. It was an overtly desperate effort to woo them back to the print medium. Both of the august newspapers launched sections that promoted the Academy Awards and, God help us, the Golden Globes, as if they had meaning beyond the ritual announcement of nominations and presentation of awards. Even if Nielsen ratings demonstrated declining interest in such self-promotional vehicles, editors found new ways to slobber over the ceremonies and stars.

And, yet, circulation kept plummeting. With so many reviews available virtually for free, via the various wire services and syndicates, publishers began doing something once considered to be unthinkable: kill the messengers.

If anyone really wanted serious criticism, after all, he or she could subscribe to The New York Times, New Yorker or Film Comment. It wasn’t likely that fans of horror movies were turning to the morning newspaper for guidance when Fangoria was so readily available on the web and magazine racks. A perusal of Metacritic.com and RottenTomatoes.comoffers more reviews of movies than there are stars in the heavens, even if most were plagued by horrifying grammar, poor spelling and absence of any noticeable copy editing.

Until recently, alternative weeklies were the place discerning movie lovers would go to read about titles the dailies generally gave short shrift. Even if it was fair to argue that newspaper readers, with the exception of those in major markets, couldn’t care less who reviewed movies opening at the local megaplex, the same wasn’t true about the weeklies. The critics had identifiable personalities, traits, tics and passions. As with Siskel and Ebert, in their more argumentative days, one’s thumb-down almost would guarantee you’d enjoy the picture, and vice-versa.

The recent consolidation of the Voice’s critical staff will provide a test as to whether movie buffs speak the same language no matter where in American they live. I suspect the Tribune papers will follow in kind before too long, eliminating all but about three or four of the critics in the chain.

The consolidation and homogenizing of radio only made the medium worse, prompting listeners to flock to satellite and Internet services, or create digital playlists for their iPods. If the newspapers follow suit, what will drive readers to their websites? Canned reviews from some bozo in Orlando? Roger Ebert will remain a primary destination for the Sun-Times, but for how long?

Television networks invest many fewer advertising dollars in newspapers than their counterparts at movie studios, and, yet, movie critics are the ones paying the price for their publishers’ short-sightedness. Movie advertising pays the bills needed to keep sports sections and editorial pages virtually ad-free. Is it too much to ask of the studios that they use their considerable clout to promote criticism, in addition to slobbering profiles of Oscar nominees? That, or re-direct some of their dollars to websites that are dedicated to the medium all year round, not just during awards season. As it is, the studios appear willing to rely on hit-and-miss viral campaigns for their niche products.

Whenever the subject of print criticism raises its ugly little head, I’m reminded of a conversation I had nearly a decade ago with the top editor at my former employer. I was working out of SoCal at the time, and the subject was the paper’s stature in Hollywood.

After explaining the new pecking order among studios and publicists, and the growing hassle of gaining access to their top clients, my boss voiced his disappointment at not seeing his critic’s pull quotes in more ads for upcoming movies. While arguing that using such criteria to judge the value of a critic — or his thumb, as the case may be – was counterproductive, at best, I tried to explain how the game worked: Sunday double-truck ads invariably were filled with the quotes of junket whores, and therefore were meaningless, while an opening-day rave from a someone in Albany or Fargo only meant the picture stank. Our critic’s name could be found in ads for plenty of pictures, if not the ones he was likely to notice.

Not being an avid filmgoer, I’m pretty sure he didn’t grasp the fine points of my argument. He certainly couldn’t be convinced that readers could discern the difference between a pull quote from the Tribune and one from a deejay in the Upper Peninsula. Even my then-teenage kids saw through that ruse.

Soon enough, I fear, newspaper readers will be fed a steady diet of pre-sold pap from junketeers and the opinions of a few generic critics working for newspaper and magazine chains. If the studios are short-sighted enough to support publications that care so little about their products, they’ll deserve each other’s company. With or without advertising support, the Internet’s vibrant movie community will be there long after the lights are turned off at the local newspaper.

April 8, 2008
– Gary Dretzka

The Academy Awards: 2008

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

The intoxicant most widely trafficked in the lead-up to the Academy Awards is glamour. One night each year, the world’s most fabuloso personalities gather in a single location to sell pipedreams to the rubes in Hicksville who must content themselves with watching the fatuous coverage on TV.

Even as viewers are weaning themselves from the attendant hype, the media can’t kick the celebrity habit.

This year, apart from some suspicious choices in the Best Song and Foreign Language categories, the nominees are sound, and the length of the writers’ strike mercifully forced party planners to ratchet down their sickening displays of gluttony and self-love. Even so, by successfully turning December into the only month that matters, the studios have limited exposure to the worthy finalists to such a degree, only a small percentage of the television audience will have seen the movies in contention.

As ratings of recent ceremonies suggest, the only viewers willing to stay tuned after the three-hour mark are those with a vested interest in the outcomes of the more prestigious contests. Considering that Juno has grossed twice as much as the next most commercially successful Best Picture candidate – No Country for Old Men, at $59 million – the academy should strongly consider having Miley Cyrus (a.k.a. Hannah Montana) and Dwayne Johnson (“The Rock) open the night’s most important envelope. Even I might stay up to see that.

On the left coast, of course, viewers are allowed plenty of time to finish their naps and catch the party action, which the L.A. stations and cable infotainment channels cover with breathless intensity. It’s the one of night of the year when the paparazzi and celebrities are working towards a common goal – personal aggrandizement – and the magnetic appeal of free booze and fancy grub is on display for the world to witness. Because cameras aren’t allowed in the bathrooms or under the tables – and Cops doesn’t pay valets to give Breathalyzer tests to the stars, before handing over the keys to their SUVs – the glamorous Hollywood of old is paraded out as if it were Brigadoon (adapted by John Waters).

Among the winners, celebrities and panty-deprived ingénues who won’t be awarded much air time in the wee hours are those nominees whose fates were sealed in during the moments reserved for stars to grab a cigarette, take a pee or powder their noses. Those competing in the technical and shorts categories – and, absent an Almodovar or Moore, the foreign-language and documentary finalists — generally are seated closer to Highland Avenue than the stage … far enough removed as to eliminate the need for seat-holders.

And, for most of artists relegated to fringes of the Kodak Theater, that’s perfectly OK. If they can snap off a few photos of themselves on the Red Carpet — and their cellphone batteries hold out — they’ll die happy, knowing their names will be preceded by “Oscar-nominated in obituaries.

These are the folks I remember most fondly when I look back on the Academy Awards ceremonies I was paid to cover. You can always pick them out from the parade of studio executives and pals of academy weasels because they’re the ones who aren’t being interviewed by the entertainment press and their formal attire looks as if it were rented or was chosen off a rack. (The stars who most easily can afford designer gowns and fine jewelry are the ones least likely to have actually purchased them.) The first-timers are the ones who plant themselves on the Red Carpet and refuse to move when prodded by security goons. Why leave the best seat in the house? God bless ’em.

The nominees in the “minor categories remind me of the forgotten folks in flyover-land who are still waiting for Atonement to open in a theater within a hundred miles of home, and are so respectful of the movie-going experience that, once seated, they wouldn’t think of answering their cellphone. They may not be able to remember the last good movie they saw at the local multiplex, but will sit through the presentations of Oscars to engineers, designers and those filmmakers who work short, while thinking big.

Happily, these are the buffs served best by such innovative home-delivery services as Netflix, Facets and Movies Unlimited/TCM. While studio executives and other media concerns salivate over the possibility of selling movies intended for display in theaters to teenagers with teeny-weeny iPods, these companies have leveled the playing field by delivering a wonderfully diverse catalogue of movies, short subjects, documentaries, television programs and cultural events to underserved viewers in far-flung destinations.

When Mohammed couldn’t get to the arthouse, the arthouse came to Mohammed. The same principle also applies to the short and foreign-language films nominated each year for Oscars, but rarely, if ever were made available for public consumption.

Starting this weekend, anyone who’s ever wondered what’s so special about short films can find out by attending special screenings in dozens of theaters nationwide. If that isn’t a convenient option, the 10 nominated live-action and animated shorts can be downloaded onto iTunes and viewed on the video monitor of a home computer. Hosted by Magnolia Pictures and Shorts International, these programs have benefitted from their association with AMPAS’ Oscar brand, and have swiftly become an awards-season tradition.

Combine the efficiency of home-delivery services – and the reams of background material available to their customers — with the convenience of such Internet resource sites as imdb.com, Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic and Mr. Skin, and, voila, a door opens to a vast new world of cinematic opportunity.

For example:

Ever wonder what made two-time Oscar nominee Javier Bardem such a hot commodity, prior to his emergence in Before Night Falls and No Country for Old Men? Last week, via Netflix, I was able to travel back to the dawn of the hunky Spaniard’s career, and find several answers to the questio. In the early ’90s, Bardem delivered memorable performances in Bigas Lunas’ sexy dramedies, Huevos de Oro and La Teta i la lluna, neither of which was released in the U.S., and Jamón, jamón, which was. At the same time, I was able to study Penelope Cruz’ theatrical debut in Jamon, jamon and enjoy watching Benicio del Toro in Huevos de Oro, making love to Maribel Verdú, of Y tu mamá también.

The same sort of game can be played with Best Actress front-runner Marion Cotillard, who delivered such a remarkable portrayal of Edith Piaf, in La Vie en rose. A closer perusal of the DVD and its bonus features provides all the evidence one would need to understand why the biopic also was nominated in the Best Achievement in Makeup category. If I hadn’t already seen Cotillard in A Good Year and Big Fish, I might have been tempted to visit imdb.com and find out what she looked like without makeup. I might very well check out her performances in Luc Besson’s Taxi trilogy, though.

At once, another road to discovery opened up before me.

Even though La Vie en rose (a.k.a.,La Môme) was nominated for 3 Oscars, 11 Cesars and 7 Bafta awards, France caused a short-lived uproar by electing not to submit the film for consideration as in the Best Foreign Language category. Instead, the panel recommended Persepolis, Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi’s animated story of a precocious Persian girl, coming of age during the Iranian revolution. The picture found universal praise among American critics, but will have its work cut out for it againstRatatouille and Surf’s Up.

(It’s possible that France anticipated Cotillard’s Oscar nod, for Best Lead Actress, and passed over La Môme simply to piss off the Iranian officials who lobbied against its selection. Organizers of the 2007 Bangkok Film Festival buckled under the pressure from Tehran, dropping Persepolis from its lineup.)

Last year, in an attempt to avoid similar controversies, academy officials borrowed the winnowing process favored by judges in the documentary category. It would release a “short list of candidates, a week ahead of the official announcement of nominations. While the 2007 list was impeccable — After the Wedding (Denmark), The Lives of Others (Germany), Pan’s Labyrinth (Mexico) and Days of Glory (France) – the 2008 ballot baffled many observers by failing even to short-list Persepolis and the Romanian abortion drama, 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, which was a multiple winner at Cannes.

Just as France had two legitimate candidates, but could only submit one for Oscar consideration, Israel’s dilemma extended into the realms of politics and procedure. In the process of vetoing the submission of The Band’s Visit, the much-admired story of an Egyptian police band that mistakenly ends up stranded overnight in a small Israeli town, the committee found it necessary to put a stopwatch on the dialogue. Citing academy guidelines that stipulate more than 50 percent of a film’s dialogue be in a language other than English, the selection committee was given a legitimate excuse for its decision. Even as their calculations were disputed by the film’s American distributor, however, others argued that political motivations were behind the action. The war drama Beaufort was submitted, instead, and it successfully made the cut, along with films from Mongolia, Russia, Poland and Kazakhstan.

Beaufort debuted here at last month’s Palm Springs Film Festival, before opening on three screens in New York, while Austria’s Nazi-era thriller, The Counterfeiters, will get a limited release next week. With no big-name actors or directors involved, this year’s Foreign Language contest will be of interest only to buffs, nationalists and conspiracy theorists. Most of us will have to wait until the DVDs arrive, before adding our opinions.

Again, by way of comparison, big-city audiences can get an early handle on the level of competition, when Cao Hamburger’s bittersweet The Year My Parents Went on Vacation opens this weekend in select theaters. The Brazilian entry made the short list of nine films, but was denied a trip to the finals. If the other five movies turn out to be superior to Hamburger’s compelling period drama, there will be much to anticipate in the coming months.

Hamburger’s factually based story takes place in 1970, as World Cup fever and a brutal crackdown on dissenters play out simultaneously throughout Brazil. An educated Jewish couple abruptly informs their 10-year-old son they’re leaving Belo Horizonte, and going on “vacation” of indeterminate length. The boy, Mauro, is to be left with his grandfather, who lives in Sao Paulo’s teeming Bom Retiro neighborhood. It is an established conclave of lower-middle-class Jews, Italians and native Brazilians.

Unbeknownst to the couple, who hurriedly drop Mauro and his bags off on the curb, before speeding away, the old man has just suffered a fatal heart attack. It takes a while for an elderly neighbor to return home and open his door to the boy. Even though Mauro doesn’t understand Yiddish, and the bearded gentleman hasn’t a clue about the circumstances surrounding the boy’s arrival, shelter is offered and accepted.

Like almost everyone else in Brazil, Mauro is a rabid fan of the national team. It helps him make friends with an energetic young girl in the building, and she introduces him to the denizens of the lower-middle-class neighborhood. Soccer is the common language of the street, and, Pele is the Moses leading the team and its supporters to the Promised Land.

The old man, Schlomo, is deeply religious. Perplexed by the unexpected and unwanted arrival of the boy, who would rather kick a ball through the streets of Sao Paulo than attend schul, he seeks the advice of his rabbi. The rabbi convinces Schlomo that his unexpected guest is a gift from god, however challenging his presence might be.

Even as Pele and his compatriots climb the ladder to the championship match — to be contested in Mexico City – Hamburger and co-writer Claudio Galperin put the military in position to swoop in and crack down on dissidents. Apparently, Mauro’s parents are known to radicals at the local university, and they, in turn, keep a quiet watch for his safety.

Although Mauro doesn’t understand what his parents meant by going on “vacation,” viewers who can remember the turmoil that blanketed South America in the early ’70s will have guessed early on that they went underground to avoid being arrested, tortured and, perhaps, killed. Argentinean filmmakers have produced several dramas referencing the disappearance of dissidents, which extended to the abduction of their children for placement in the homes of childless couples.

(In 1982, Costa-Gravas referenced America’s involvement in the assassination of Chilean leader, Salvador Allende, and subsequent slaughter of leftists. Last year, his daughter, Julia, recalled the same period in Blame It on Fidel! In 2002, John Malkovich directed Javier Bardem in The Dancer Upstairs, a drama inspired by the war between Peruvian police and Shining Light guerrillas.)

It wasn’t until the military governments collapsed, years later, that filmmakers, writers and artists enjoyed the freedom to comment on the unreported murders of their friends, relatives and teachers. Instead of relying on polemics to deliver a message to audience, Hamburger accentuates the humanism at the core of Schlomo and Mauro’s ability to peacefully co-exist. The excitement generated by Brazil’s quest for another World Cup is evident in the multi-hued faces of the fans who gather in the neighborhood’s restaurants and bars, as is the general aura of dread. None of the parallel stories drains the entertainment value from the others.

It may not have made the Oscar cut, but The Year My Parents Went on Vacation is the best movie opening this weekend, and the only one adults are likely to enjoy.

Also, beginning Friday, buffs will be given an opportunity to survey the candidates for Oscars in both of the Best Short Film categories. Besides providing several hours’ worth fine entertainment, the screenings allow fans to interact — albeit subconsciously — with those academy members deciding which title will be announced at next weekend’s ceremony.

This year, for the first time in memory, all of the competing shorts are from countries other than the United States. Needless to say, most also are subtitled. Not surprisingly, all are terrifically entertaining.

Competition is as intense in the lesser-appreciated categories as it is in those whose winners are announced in the show’s final hour. In the 2007 Animation competition, The Danish Poet, a Norwegian-Canadian co-production, played David against the shorts submitted by Goliaths Disney, Pixar and 20th Century Fox. In the Live Action category, the winner was West Bank Story, a musical comedy made by Americans about rival falafel stands on Israel’s West Bank. Other candidates were from Senegal, Australia, Spain and Denmark. American products have been shut out of one or the other shorts category, but not both at the same time.

Considering how little the academy does to enhance our enjoyment of the overlong and increasingly self-important ceremony, the program developed by Magnolia Pictures and Shorts International beats hiring Regis Philbin to host the pre-show and calling it progress. The quality of the movies themselves warrant the attention of movie lovers.

Those so inclined can find a list of the participating theaters, in about 70 cities, by going to www.magpictures.com. The Live Action program lasts 137 minutes, while the animated program tops out at 90 minutes. Each one requires separate admission. (You can get information on the films and artists at www.britshorts.com.) Magnolia has also collected the 2007 candidates in DVD, and it can be found on the websites of the aforementioned home-delivery services.

Unless they live in New York or Los Angeles, viewers passionate about documentaries aren’t quite as fortunate. Information on pre-Oscar DocuDays in those cities is available at www.documentary.org.

2008 Live Action Shorts

AT NIGHT (Denmark): Three young women share their problems while spending the holidays in a hospital cancer ward.

THE SUBSTITUTE (Italy): The arrival of an unusual newcomer galvanizes the students in a high school classroom.

THE MOZART OF PICKPOCKETS (France): A pair of unlucky thieves find their fortunes have changed when they take in a deaf homeless boy.

TANGHI ARGENTINI (Belgium): A man who must learn to dance the tango in two weeks asks an office colleague for help.

THE TONTO WOMAN (United Kingdom):. Based on a story by Elmore Leonard, a cattle rustler meets a woman who is living in isolation after being held prisoner for 11 years by the Mojave Indians

2008 Animated Shorts

I MET THE WALRUS (Canada) In 1969, 14-year-old Jerry Levitan snuck into John Lennon’s hotel room with his tape recorder and persuaded him to do an interview.

MADAME TUTLI-PUTLI (Canada) A timid woman boards a mysterious night train and has a series of frightening experiences.

EVEN PIGEONS GO TO HEAVEN (France): A priest tries to sell an old man a machine that he promises will transport him to heaven.

MY LOVE (Russia): In 19th Century Russia, a teenage boy in search of love is drawn to two very different women.

PETER & THE WOLF (United Kingdom/Poland): A young boy and his animal friends face a hungry wolf in an updated version of Prokofiev’s classic musical piece.

February 16, 2008

– Gary Dretzka