sovay: (Default)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2009-06-21 12:48 am

We're going to sail through the night sky like a pair of bottle rockets

I wish the Brattle Theatre did not feel the need to deafen its clientele. It's a small theater; it doesn't screen big dumb action movies; it doesn't need to go all the way up to eleven. I had tissues stuffed into both my ears and they still ache sharply. Maybe everyone else in the audience is losing their hearing, but I don't need to be made to fit the profile. Otherwise, Mrs. Lincoln . . . Actually, I loved White Heat. Right now I'm having trouble thinking of another actor who uses himself as physically as Cagney—he hurls himself into the role literally and it's like watching lit magnesium, it's mesmerizing. He was a dancer. He could sculpt matter out of motion. But the result is not at all stylized, and neither is the film; one of the aspects that struck me most was its modernity, carphones, fast food, electronic tracking, the increasing difficulty of vanishing off the grid even in 1949. The edges of the map are closing in. Cody Jarrett goes up in a sheet of flame: he looks like apocalyptic science fiction, the end of the gangster era in a mushroom cloud. I don't know what the hell the movie should be classified as, but I'm very glad I saw it. I think my ears are still out on their verdict, though.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2009-06-21 03:57 am (UTC)(link)
That is a pity. I hate it when the sound gets turned up too loud--it happens at concerts as well, sometimes even for bands whom I'd not expect to be that loud. (Celtic rock bands, okay--there are some I'll not go to see except at an outdoor festival, but for trad? Shouldn't be that way.)

The movie sounds splendid--I love your descriptions, as always.

I hope your ears are stopped ringing soon.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2009-06-22 02:32 am (UTC)(link)
If you can find it on a big screen, so much the better.

I'll hold that in mind. Classic movies on big screens aren't a commonplace round here, but anything's possible, I suppose.

I hope you're feeling better soon.

[identity profile] handful-ofdust.livejournal.com 2009-06-21 04:44 am (UTC)(link)
It's true, all of it. And I noticed the grid-will-get-you-ness of it the last time I saw it, too, which is one of the primary reasons I think it's such a very strong candidate for being turned into one of the increasingly rare good remakes. As I recall, my fantasy cast had Keifer Sutherland as Cody, Helen Mirren as Ma (for the incestuous win), and I wanted to cast Verna with a POC (of hopefully the same stripe as whoever played Cody's undercover nemesis--Vic? I can never remember that rat's name); I also really wanted to ramp up the omnisexual subtext into text, 'cause...um...you can DO that, nowadays. If you're brave enough.

[identity profile] teenybuffalo.livejournal.com 2009-06-22 06:18 am (UTC)(link)
ramp up the omnisexual subtext into text

Now, there's a concept I love. But it's also endless fun to play the game of "How much can we get past the censors?" Your comments make me remember the guys in "Little Caesar", speaking of gangster movies; there's a nice bit where the hero, Rico, is lying around with a gunshot wound, and his henchman crawls into bed with him. In a purely platonic way. Really, Your Honor.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2009-06-21 09:15 am (UTC)(link)
it's like watching lit magnesium... Cody Jarrett goes up in a sheet of flame

--okay, I'm intrigued. I wonder if it's the sort of thing one can rent via Netflix.

Your poor ears!

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2009-06-21 07:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Netflix is spotty on classics--or maybe classics are only spottily (?adverbfail) made available on DVD. For example, Rebecca is not available.

However, I've just checked, and it is available, so I've added it to my queue.

Next movie up, for us, though is Man on Wire, which I'm really looking forward to. Have you seen the trailer (or, for that matter, the film)?

"There is no 'why.' ... Death is very close ... Life should be lived on the edge ... see every day as a true challenge, and then you live your life on a tightrope."

[identity profile] thistleingrey.livejournal.com 2009-06-21 04:58 pm (UTC)(link)
the increasing difficulty of vanishing off the grid even in 1949

Oh, interesting! It makes sense rationally, at least for dwellers in large cities, but still, interesting.

*sends virtual cousin of little earplugs* I use them for any non-classical-music concerts and some cineplex films; they're nicer than holding one's fingers to one's ears for two hours or whatever.

[identity profile] thistleingrey.livejournal.com 2009-06-22 12:31 am (UTC)(link)
Eep--sad about the wrong jacket.

I have a list of films to see sometime, and though I suspect I haven't rented anything in three years, I'll get to it sometime! Thanks for the rec.

[identity profile] teenybuffalo.livejournal.com 2009-06-22 06:21 am (UTC)(link)
You're making me think I need to watch this soon. Jimmy Cagney: dying in jaw-dropping ways since 1930-something. He must have been older than I usually picture him, at this point. I have a mental image of him as a tough youth, despite seeing him in "The Roaring Twenties" playing a guy who winds up old and beaten.