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Wednesday Double Feature – The Mossad

by wpmorse on January 9, 2019 at 9:00 am
Posted In: Test

Now that the holiday is over, I thought I’d try and get as far away from that sort of thing as possible. In this case, I thought I’d try spy thrillers featuring the Mossad. 

For better or for worse, whether it’s because they are perceived as the first line of defense in the “War on Terrorism”, or as hunters of Nazi war criminals, I think our media has a tendency to romanticize the Mossad. So I thought it would be informative to see what Isreal’s film industry thought of them. 

The first film on my list, Eytan Fox’s Walk on Water (original Hebrew title: ???? ?? ????; English transliteration: Lalekhet Al HaMayim)  tells the story Eyal, a Mossad agent (Lior Ashkenazi) After a successful hit on an alleged terrorist in Istanbul, he comes home to discover his wife had committed suicide. Still recovering from this he is assigned to investigate a German tourist named Axel Himmelman, (Knut Berger) who has traveled to Israel to visit his sister, Pia who is now (Caroline Peters) living in a kibbutz. The siblings are the grandchildren of a war criminal who had fled to Argentina after the war but has now disappeared. Eyal’s superior’s suspect that the siblings may have a lead on where he has gone to. 

As the weeks of Axel’s visit continues, Eyal finds himself annoyed by Axel’s idealism. But gradually finds himself drawn to him.

While well done, I’m afraid I was mostly not the target audience, so my main reaction was meh. Still, it was an interesting perspective on the wonderfully complicated mess that is the state of modern Israel. While there were several arguments for and against, since our main point of view character who is extremely biased and extremely bitter we are given a very skewed view. 

The next film on my list, Assaf Bernstein ’s Ha-Hov, aka HaChov, The Debt tells of Rachel (Gila Almago) a former Mossad agent who, thirty years ago was part of a team responsible for hunting down and killing Nazi war criminal Dieter Vogel (a.k.a. the Surgeon of Birkenau) and is now is resting on her laurels with a successful signing tour of her memoirs. However, when one of her associates form the mission reappears with newly acquired data of  a man in a nursing home in Kiev claiming to be the surgeon. Now they have to go to Kiev, before anyone else finds out about this, investigate and, if he turns out to be who he says he is, finish the job. 

Thus we follow on her mission while also viewing the original mission and through flashbacks find out what went wrong in the first place. 

I’m not sure what I thought of this film. It was tense and well paced and very depressing, but like the other film I’m afraid I really wasn’t it’s target audience. Still, I liked how the flashbacks worked with two sets of casts to play our principal characters for both the past and pressent, and how our heroes, in their present, question their deeds and if anything they did was the right thing.

└ Tags: Mossad, Movie Reviews, Thrillers
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Holiday Double Feature: New Year’s and The End of The Holiday Season?

by wpmorse on January 3, 2019 at 9:41 am
Posted In: Rhapsodies

One of the many things I find funny about all of the culture warriors and their precious war on Christmas is that they do the most brutal attack of all by ending Christmas on the 25th… It’s twelve days, people! This has become increasingly obvious to me while doing these holiday marathons for a couple of years is that in a lot of these classics the story may start in Christmas Eve, they go through the entire twelve days with the climax of the story on New Year’s. 

Because of this, I decided to continue my Christmas marathon just a little longer, focussing on the end of the holiday season ending on New Years… And to keep things interesting stick to musicals.

Holiday Double Feature: New Year's and The End of The Holiday Season? - Holiday Inn

The first film on my list was the classic Irving Berlin film, Mark Sandrich’s Holiday Inn.

Holiday Inn tells the story of Jim Hardy (Bing Crosby), Ted Hanover (Fred Astaire), and Lila Dixon (Virginia Dale) a popular song and dance team working the broadway circuit. Jim is planning to retire from show business and go with his fiancé, Lila to start a farm in Connecticut. Unfortunately, Lila has no interest in the plan and also loves Ted, and ends the engagement. 

Tim moves to the farm anyway and discovers that he’s terrible at it. As a way to recoup his losss he turns the failing farm into “the Holiday Inn” a venue that is only open on holidays, with a new dance partner, Linda Mason (Marjorie Reynolds) 

I can’t say I really liked this film. Make no mistake the music’s great and the talent of our performers are top notch, and the songs are great. For example, the original version of White Christmas is in this film and it’s a lot better than the version in the movie that bears its name.  However, that’s pretty much all there is to it. Holiday Inn is pretty much just a jukebox musical of Irving Berlin holiday-centric songs. 

It doesn’t help that it has aged extremely badly. The worst example being the minstrel number “Abraham” for Abraham Lincoln’s birthday. I’m embarrassed to say, since I still have at least one foot still stuck in my white bubble, I caught myself rationalizing with myself saying things like; “It’s a product of its time”, “It’s a good song and it shows off Crosby’s Bass range”, (in story excuse) maybe Jim couldn’t find enough black performers’… and then Linda comes on stage dressed like the most offensive rag doll you ever saw. 

The next film on my list, Norman Taurog’s Bundle of Joy, is a remake of the screwball comedy Bachelor Mother (1939) done as a musical. 

Holiday Double Feature: New Year's and The End of The Holiday Season? - Bundle of Joy

Debbie Reynolds plays Polly Parrish a flighty and overenthusiastic clerk working in the Millinery Department at J.B. Merlin & Son’s department store. She’s fired in the middle of the Christmas rush. On the way home, she sees someone leave a baby at the door of an orphanage. The Baby is about to fall off the steps, so she rushes to save it. It’s at this point the door of the orphanage opens where everyone sees the baby in Polly’s arms. 

Now everybody believes Polly is the mother no matter what she says. She essentially gets blackmailed into keeping the child when the orphanage guilt trips Dan Miller (Eddie Fisher), the Son in J.B. Merlin & Son’s, into giving her her job back with a raise attached, and soon hilarity ensues. 

I wish I’d known about Bachelor Mother when I was picking out this film because I suspect I would have liked it a lot better. Once again, the songs are good even though the way they’re squeezed into the narrative are pretty forced. Otherwise, it mostly didn’t impress me. 

Like Holiday Inn, this film dates itself badly. In this case, it drags down the entire plot most notably how no one ever believes Polly, no one even bothers to corroborate her story one way or other, just assuming this is something all “young mothers” say to escape their responsibility. Heck even the people who’ve known her for over a year and might notice things like… you know… the absence of a pregnancy, don’t believe her. 

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What The “Real” Ariane Has Been Up To Lately

by wpmorse on December 28, 2018 at 8:00 am
Posted In: Rhapsodies

For anyone who is wondering what the “real” Ariane has been unto since the extremely interesting party in October. She’s been biding her time and planning to make her move on her Brian. There’s no way it could go wrong… She has inside help.

And in answer to her question… Yes, Tara is having her on.

Behind the Scenes, Tara gives the real Ariane a hand.
Tara may be enjoying herself a little bit too much.

Ariane Elder is a local actress/personality who’s productions include Steampunk Gorgon, Bad Moon and Theater of the Bloody Tongue.

└ Tags: Ariane Elder, Fanart
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Wednesday Double Feature: Criminal Christmas

by wpmorse on December 26, 2018 at 11:05 am
Posted In: Rhapsodies

Sometimes it’s really hard to think of new ideas during the holidays, and because of that I ended up doing the exact theme that I did last week with criminals on christmas. Though in my defense, this time we’re not talking about the lovable rougues. We’re talking about actual amoral criminals. These people are not even remotely funny… at least not on purpose… which makes it even funnier.

Wednescay? Double Feature: Criminal Christmas - Reindeer Games

The first film on my list, John Frankenheimer’s Reindeer Games tells the story of Rudy Duncan (Ben Affleck), a convict doing five years for grand theft auto. Along with his best friend Nick Cassedy (James Frain), he is on his way out, just in time for Christmas. Three days before, though Nick is murdered in a cafeteria brawl. Still grieving, Rudy passes himself as Nick to Nick’s mail girlfriend, Ashley (Charlize Theron) 

For a barely twenty four hours things are great, until he is ambushed by Ashley’s psychotic brother, Gabriel (Gary Sinese) and his band of thugs, you see they think Rudy is Nick as well. They want inside information on the casino Nick used to work at. Nothing Rudy can say can convince them that they’ve got the wrong guy. 

 I don’t think this film is as bad as the Rotton Tomatoes consensus thinks it is. However,  I think when one of the modern masters, like John Frankenheimer directs something that is subpar it gets graded on a reverse curve. Having said that I think this film is very subpar for Frankenheimer. It has all of his craft, which is reason alone to watch it, but none of his art. Which is a shame because there are some great performances. Though, sadly, most of the plot, especially several of the reveals, in the end, don’t make any sense when you stop to think about it.

The second film on my list, Ted Demme’s The Ref, tells the story of Gus (Dennis Leary), a cat burglar who is working his way through a quaint upperclass suburban Connecticut town on his way to finish off what he thinks is his last score. However the safe is boobytrapped and soon he finds himself on the run and in desperate need to find someplace to lay low until his accomplice arranges a getaway. 

He finds this by hijacking a couple at the town market. Regrettably, the couple he picked were Lloyd and Caroline Chasseur (Kevin Spacey and Judy Davis) a couple who have been at each other’s throats and driving their marriage counselor to distractions. Now Gus finds himself the reluctant referee between the two who are so distracted by each other they almost oblivious to the fact they’re tied up with a gun pointed at them… and to make matters worse along with the cops looking for Gus the rest of the family is on their way for Christmas dinner. 

This was an okay film with lots of good comedy, dripping with cynicism, and Leary, Davis, and Spacey play off each other very well. However since it was trying to be one of those great scripts where everything comes together in the end, they dropped several of the threads. Also, I had a problem with the general level. It’s not that I have a problem with swearing. I’m fine with it being part of the language like in films like Good Fellahs. It’s when the script sounds like it has a quota to prove to everybody it’s a grown-up movie. 

└ Tags: Crime, Movie Reviews
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Wednesday Double Feature – Christmas Comical Crooks

by wpmorse on December 20, 2018 at 9:07 am
Posted In: Rhapsodies

In my continued search for Christmas movies I’ve never heard of the next obscure genre that I tried was crime comedies taking place in Christmas. 

The first of the year this was We’re No Angels starring Humphrey Bogart Peter Ustinov and Aldo Ray.   

Wednesday Double Feature - Christmas Comical Crooks - We're no Angels

We’re No Angels tells the story of three escaped convicts on Devils Island they’re trying to sneak onto a boat heading back to Paris and to do it they have targeted a store owner (Leo G Carrol) to rip off in order to get everything they need. In the process, they find the poor man is fighting bankruptcy and is dominated by his cousin (Basil Rathbone) who owns the company and has a beautiful and sensitive daughter (Gloria Talbott) who wants to be married. 

The convicts take a liking to the family and decide to help them in the only  way they no how.

When I first heard about this film, the first thing I said was “you had me at Bogart and Ustinov together”. And it was… okay. It reminded me something I read about comparing Disney’s shorts featuring Mickey, Donald and Goofy with Chuck Jones “Hunting” trilogy. In the Disney shorts it’s mostly Mickey, Donald and Goofy doing their own thing, while in the “Hunting” trilogy all of the humor is in the way Bugs, Daffy and Elmer interact with each other. Generally most people like the “Hunting” trilogy better. 

This is definitely the case with our three lovable anti-heroes. All three of them are very funny indeed. But they only seem to truly function as a team occasionally, and not enough to make it work. 

Still there’s enough good bits (it is Bogart and Ustinov after all) to make it worth my time. 

Next on my list was Delbert Mann, Fitzwilly. Dick Van Dyke plays Claude “Fitzwilly” Fitzwilliams, the butler of Miss Victoria Woodworth (Edith Evans). Miss Vicki inherited next to nothing from her father and would be destitute if it weren’t for the fact that Fitzwilly and the rest of the staff are secretly supporting her by carrying out a series of scams and thefts. All of this is challenged when Miss Vicki hires a new secretary (Barbara Feldon) to help her with a book she is working on. Can the staff continue their crooked ways with the new level of scrutiny?

Once again this film was… Okay with Dick Van Dyke playing things with his usual charm. The chemistry with him and Feldon is pretty good as well, as is the rest of the cast.

└ Tags: Comedy, Movie Reviews
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Wednesday Double Feature: War in Christmas

by wpmorse on December 12, 2018 at 9:13 am
Posted In: Rhapsodies

Tis the season so here I am again watching Christmas films for the rest of the month. Of course, the problem with having favorite genres is that you quickly go through all the films you want to see. After a while, you have to get creative.  So as the title, that is cynically designed to manipulate search engines ,may suggest, today’s movie selection is about Christmas stories that take place during wartime.

Wednesday Double Feature, War in Christmas, Joyeux Noël (Merry Christmas)

The first film on my list Christian Carion’s Joyeux Noël (Merry Christmas) is a multilingual dramatization of the Christmas truce of December 1914 from the point of view of French, German and Scottish troops. 

I’d been hearing people waxing poetically about the miracle of the Christmas truce for years. (Though I have to say, it becomes  slightly less impressive when I learned that it only happened once) 

When I first heard about this film, I honestly expected this to be another one of those very special stories created by Hallmark. I was pleasantly surprised to see that there was much more than that. We are introduced to multiple points of view, all of whom are horrified by the horrors of war and are desperately trying to stay alive. 

When the truce actually happens it’s a wonderful thing, including two opera singers accompanied by Scottish bagpipes. However, it still has a feeling of tragedy about it that it’s just a respite and even if you made friends in the past 24 hours you will be back to killing each other as soon as the sun rises. To make matters worse all of commanding officers are punished for their humanity in the end of the film. 

The next film on my list, Keith Gordon’s A Midnight Clear, moves us to World War II into the lives of a battered intelligence and reconnaissance troop led by Sgt. Will Knott (Ethan Hawke, and yes he’s heard all of the jokes) They’ve slowly been reduced to just six soldiers and if the PTSD doesn’t get them the Germans certainly will. 

a Midnight Clear

They’re ordered by their self-important and incompetent commander, Maj. Griffin (John C. McGinley) to set up a monitoring station in an abandoned chateau. After a couple of days they become aware of a squad of Germans in their general vicinity. After a game of cat and mouse, it turns out that the Germans want to surrender under their very own Christmas truce! What could possibly go wrong?

While this film wasn’t bad, I’m afraid It didn’t really push my buttons. It’s almost a parody of all of the Christmas miracle films. Where instead of the happy ending you think is going to happen as soon as someone shows a Christmas tree and sings carols.  Instead, you have a bunch of kids way out of their depth trying to stay alive and sane and failing miserably. 

└ Tags: Christmas, Movie Reviews
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