The film marks not only Chaplin’s first film with Essanay
but also his first with fellow comic actor Ben Turpin. The two share a couple
of great scenes together, the first of which involves a fight to get through a
door and is excellent. It’s such a shame that the two actors couldn’t find a
way to work together because on screen at least, they made a great partnership.
Unfortunately a mixture of Turpin’s impatience with Chaplin’s methodical
methods and Chaplin’s jealousy of Turpin’s ability to get laughs, their
partnership went no further.
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
His New Job
Chaplin’s first Essanay Picture was released in February
1915. Chaplin is at a film studio looking for a job. After several bits of
humorous business he is hired as an extra but after being a nuisance on set is
instead demoted to Carpenter’s Assistant. Through a mixture of wit and luck,
Chaplin regains his position in front of the camera and ends up accidentally
wearing the lead actor’s costume. All hell breaks loose when he arrives on set
to find Chaplin in his clothes and Chaplin again uses a mixture of wit, luck
and this time also violence to continue in his job and get revenge on several
characters who had wronged him.
Charlie Chaplin - The Essanay Films
Just a year after his screen debut and after he had earned his chops with Keystone, Charlie Chaplin had become one of the biggest stars in the new medium of film. After appearing in 36 films for Keystone, Chaplin moved on to the Essanay Film Company having received an offer of $1,250 a week and a promise that he could write and direct all of his own films.
Essanay had been formed in Chicago in 1907 by George K Spoor
and Gilbert M Anderson who took their surname initials of S and A to form the
name Essanay. Anderson was himself an actor and director
and became famous under the pseudonym Broncho Billy. He also had a role in the
first ever Western, the now highly regarded The Great Train Robbery. In search of better shooting locations for his
Westerns, Anderson travelled with a small crew
to California where he eventually set up a
studio in Niles , CA. Chaplin shot his first
Essanay picture at the Chicago studio but being unimpressed with the conditions
subsequently produced the rest of his films at the Niles studio.
In total Chaplin made 14 films for Essanay between February
1915 and May 1916. Although today these films are not generally considered to
be amongst his best, they were produced at a time when Chaplin went from being
a star to the world’s first movie super star and show the development of his
craft. They also introduced Chaplin to Edna Purviance who over a span of eight
years appeared in more than thirty of his films. Chaplin’s Essanay films were
more coherent and less frenetic than his Keystone pictures and featured greater
character development. Not everything was well inside Essanay though. Chaplin
had a fraught relationship with fellow Essanay star Ben Turpin and despite
working well together on screen; Turpin appeared in only a couple of Chaplin’s
films. When Chaplin left the company in 1916 it caused a rift between the two
founders and the company eventually collapsed in 1920.
I will be watching each of Chaplin’s Essanay films in order
and writing a brief summary and critique which I’ll link to below. Also, The Charlie Chaplin Film Club have also very kindly compiled my reviews here.
1. His New Job 3/5
2. A Night Out 2/5
3. The Champion 4/5
4. In the Park 3/5
5. A Jitney Elopement 4/5
6. The Tramp 4/5
7. By the Sea 2/5
8. Work 2/5
9. A Woman 2/5
10. The Bank 5/5
11. Shanghaied 2/5
12. His Regeneration 2/5
13. A Night in the Show 4/5
14. Burlesque on Carmen 4/5
15. Police 3/5
16. Triple Trouble 1/5
1. His New Job 3/5
2. A Night Out 2/5
3. The Champion 4/5
4. In the Park 3/5
5. A Jitney Elopement 4/5
6. The Tramp 4/5
7. By the Sea 2/5
8. Work 2/5
9. A Woman 2/5
10. The Bank 5/5
11. Shanghaied 2/5
12. His Regeneration 2/5
13. A Night in the Show 4/5
14. Burlesque on Carmen 4/5
15. Police 3/5
16. Triple Trouble 1/5
Friday, 18 May 2012
The Expendables
"First of all, I don't feel comfortable talking business with a giant carrying a shotgun"
The Expendables are a group of mercenaries led by Barney
Ross (Sylvester Stallone) who are sent by CIA Operative ‘Church’ (Bruce Willis)
to overthrow a Latin American Dictator, General Garza (David Zayas) who is in
reality a puppet of ex-CIA man James Munroe (Eric Roberts). Joining Ross on the
mission is ex SAS man Lee Christmas (Jason Statham), Martial Art expert Yin
Yang (Jet Li), sniper Jensen (Dolph Lundgren), weapons specialist Caesar (Terry
Crews) and demolitions expert Toll Road (Randy Couture). The team may be a
little long in the tooth but they still pack a punch and the fate of a country
is in their hands.
I’ve been watching a lot of 80s films recently so it’s quite
apt that I’ve watched this which although made in 2010, is well and truly
grounded in the 1980s. Most of its stars made their names in the action movies
of the period and they are joined by the action heroes of today. It’s an
impressive action movie cast, a bit like a corny version of The Avengers only with fewer superpowers
and more muscle.
The Raid
"Pulling a trigger is like ordering a takeout"
The Raid/ The Raid: Redemption/ Serbuan maut - Deep inside one of Jakarta ’s
slums lays an apartment block that is the base of one of Indonesia ’s most wanted gangsters, Tama Riyadi (Donny Alamsyah). After
being a no go area for the Police for years, they plan a raid to take the
gangsters out. Early one morning a 20 man SWAT team descend on the building
with the aim of clearing it out once and for all. Amongst the team is rookie
cop Rama (Iko Uwais) who has left his heavily pregnant wife at home that
morning, possibly for the last time. The SWAT team slowly make their way
through the building, taking prisoners as they go before they get to the 6th
floor where they are discovered. Soon an army of drug dealers, criminals and
gangsters is on top of the small team of Police and what began as a mission to
clear the building turns into a battle for survival and escape.
Id’ been looking forward to this film for months, having
heard great things from the countries in which it has already been released.
I’d heard rumours that it was the best Action film in a long time and having
now seen it I have to agree that it probably is. The action is frenetic and
features five or six scenes which are equal to the Oldboy corridor scene. That is enough on its own to make a great
film but there is also a fairly engaging story of deceit, courage and duty. The
story takes a back seat for a lot of the film but there are some nice twists in
there. What this film is really about is hitting people, repeatedly and in ever
differing ways. Director Gareth Evans cleverly balances the action with several
short rest bites in which the audience can regain their breath before throwing
another superb fight scene at them.
Labels:
2012,
8/10,
Action,
Donny Alamsyah,
Gareth Evans,
Iko Uwais,
Indonesian,
Joe Taslim,
Martial Arts,
Pierre Gruno,
Ray Sahetapy,
The Raid,
Yayan Ruhian
Aliens
"Get away from her, you bitch!"
After surviving the onslaught of Alien, Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) has spent 57 years in stasis,
floating aimlessly through space. By chance she is picked up by a salvaging
vessel and woken up from her deep sleep. Upon telling her story to the Weyland-Yutani
Corporation she is met with scepticism and is reduced to working in a loading
dock. Later she is visited by Burke (Paul Reiser) who informs her that Weyland
Co has lost contact with colonists on LV-426 and he requests that she returns
to the planet with a group of Colonial Marines to discover the fate of the
colonists. Ripley reluctantly agrees and joins the expedition only to discover
that the aliens have struck again, only this time on a much greater scale.
Unlike Alien which
was a sci-fi/horror, Aliens is more
of an action-adventure in the mould of director James Cameron’s recent super
hit Terminator and reminded me a little of Predator. In the end the slight
genre change had little effect on the final product as the film is in my view
very close to as good as the original. The sets look incredible and realistic.
I’m a big fan of a well designed and dressed set and those in Aliens are superb. The sets of 80s
science fiction movies always look more impressive to me than those of today
because you get the feeling that the actors are really there, interacting with
their environment as supposed to being stood in front of a green screen and
stepping over green boxes. The ships, vehicles, planet and colonist’s HQ all
look great. The design of the guns is also very good. They remain grounded in
reality but with a slight futuristic edge to them. The effects are a mixed bag
with some looking as good as anything today but others looking noticeably aged.
Thursday, 17 May 2012
The Ides of March
"All the reporters love you. Even the reporters that hate you still love you"
The Ides of March is
a political thriller set during the Democratic Primary in Ohio in which Governor Mike Morris (George
Clooney) is running for the Party’s nomination for President. His team includes
Campaign Manager Paul Zara (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and young up and comer
Stephen Myers (Ryan Gosling). Myers is convinced that Morris is the man to lead
the country but receives a tempting job offer from rival Campaign Manager Tom
Duffy (Paul Giamatti) which opens up a torrent of problems for all involved.
The film is full of twists, turns and surprises and kept me
glued throughout its fairly short 101 minutes. Clooney’s Morris felt like a
Candidate too good to be true to me, being pro choice, atheist, pro alternative
energy and with plans for free college education. He was a candidate with the
sort of policies that appealed to me. To be honest, knowing what I do of
American Politics, his platform felt a little unrealistic but I’d vote for him.
As well as a candidate I was on board with, the film kept my interest up as I
never knew which direction it would turn next. It felt like a good episode of The West Wing crossed with a crime
mystery.
The Dictator
Admiral General Aladeen (Sasha Baron Cohen) is the dictator
of the fictitious North African Republic of Wadiya. After his attempts to build
nuclear weapons are announced he is summoned to the UN to explain his and his
country’s plans. While in New York
he is betrayed and an attempt is made on his life. After escaping he discovers
that he has been replaced with a double and finds himself working in a vegan, shared
earth coop where he becomes friends with Zoey (Anna Farris). Aladeen uses the coop
to try to regain his identity and his grip on power in Wadiya.
For his 4th feature, Baron Cohen has moved away
from the mocumentary style for which he has become synonymous and The Dictator is mostly played as a
straight forward comedy feature. The character of Aladeen is based on a hodgepodge
of various real life dictators and draws from the West’s perceptions of them
and their countries. The result is that Aladeen is a racist, sexist, cartoon
who while being occasionally funny, generally fails to impress. The humour of
the film on the whole failed to resonate with me and the majority of the
audience I saw it with, indeed a man on the row in front of me walked out about
an hour in having not laughed once.
Labels:
2012,
4/10,
Anna Farris,
Ben Kingsley,
Comedy,
Film,
Larry Charles,
Movie,
Review,
Romantic Comedy,
Sasha Baron Cohen,
Sayed Badreya,
The Dictator
Tuesday, 15 May 2012
Jeff, Who Lives at Home
Jeff (Jason Segel) is a thirty year old man with a puncheon
for the film Signs and lives in his
mother Sharon’s (Susan Sarandon) basement. His older brother Pat (Ed Helms)
still lives close by with his wife Linda (Judy Greer). He and Linda are in the
midst of serious marital problems. One day while she is at work, Sharon asks Jeff to go to
the shop to pick up some wood glue. Convinced that the name Kevin is some sort
of sign he ill advisedly follows various Kevins’ around the city bumping into
his brother along the way.
To me the film was like a cross between a Wes Anderson film
and The Office. It has the odd,
quirky indie charm of an Anderson
picture but the awkward humour and filming style of The Office. Unfortunately it was neither as good as any Wes
Anderson film I’ve seen nor The Office.
At times it was quite funny but these moments were usually fleeting and there
weren’t many of them. The story was reasonably interesting and the film had a
sweet ending but it just didn’t mesh together. The whole ‘the Universe will
show me the way’ nonsense was really annoying and although the ending was very
sweet, it was obvious and annoyed me.
Labels:
2012,
4/10,
Comedy,
Drama,
Ed Helms,
Film,
Jason Segel,
Jay Duplass,
Jeff Who Lives at Home,
Judy Greer,
Mark Duplass,
Movie,
Rae Dawn Chong,
Review,
Susan Sarandon
Monday, 14 May 2012
Silent House
Sarah (Elizabeth Olsen) is helping her father (Adam Trese)
and uncle (Eric Sheffer Stevens) to renovate the family’s old lakeside house
before selling it. It’s a place they have rarely visited in years. Local kids
have smashed all the windows and blown the electrics meaning that the boarded
up windows let in no light. The only light available is that which comes from a
torch or handheld lamp. While in the semi darkness and after her uncle has left
for the day, Sarah hears a noise which her father goes to check out. He never
returns. Sarah is left alone in the house with someone or something out to get
her and her family and no way out.
The whole film was shot in such a way as that it looks like
one continuous shot. I noticed the odd cut here and there but overall the idea
is very successful. It genuinely feels as though Elizabeth Olsen is in the
house for 85 minutes, running, hiding from and fighting whatever is after her.
Using just one camera, Olsen is on screen for about 84 of the 85 minutes and
has to carry the entire film. She does so with great aplomb. The one shot idea isn’t
original and indeed the film itself is a remake of a 2010 Uruguayan film but it’s
a nice gimmick that is well used.
Labels:
2012,
5/10,
Adam Trese,
Chris Kentis,
Elizabeth Olsen,
Eric Sheffer Stevens,
Film,
Horror,
Laura Lau,
Movie,
Review,
Silent House
Norwegian Wood
"What if I can't get wet ever again?"
Set in 1960s Japan ,
Norwegian Wood (Noruwei no mori) is a film about
depression, loss and sexuality. After his best friend Kizuki commits suicide
aged 17, Watanabe (Ken-ichi Matsuyama ) moves to Tokyo and enrols at
University in an attempt to escape the depressing nature of his home town. By
chance one day he meets his dead friend’s ex-girlfriend Naoko (Rinko Kikuchi)
and the two begin a loving but strained relationship. Naoko has never truly got
over the death of Kizuki and one day disappears, eventually turning up in a sanatorium
deep in the forest. Watanabe tries to maintain both a friendly and sexual
relationship with the depressed Naoko but this is made difficult by her mental
state and the introduction of the outgoing and self confident Midori (Kiko Mizuhara)
who vies for Watanabe’s affections.
Labels:
2010,
5/10,
Anh Dung Tran,
Drama,
Film,
Japanese,
Ken-ichi Matsuyama,
Kiko Mizuhara,
Movie,
Norwegian Wood,
Review,
Rink Kikuchi,
Romance
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