Saturday, September 22, 2007

Tout va Bien (1972)

 

In this film Jean-Luc Godard sets out his plan with a voice over from the very beginning.  He wants to make a movie, to do so he needs money and actors, preferably one American movie star so he can get more money.  This film begins as a naked exploration of what it really takes to make a film, more than ideals or dreams: money.

As we move through the film we meet Jacques (Yves Montand), a former art film director who finds himself directing commercials rather than commercial films beacause he thinks they are more honest, and his wife Suzanne (Jane Fonda), an American radio host with a strong interest in telling the stories of social revolution in the wake of the student protests of May 1968.

Fonda’s French is actually not bad, she certainly has a strong American accent, but what other actor of the era would have the guts to make an art film in another language.  This is simply more proof that Fonda was always an individual.

The film follows a group of factory workers fighting for their rights, but also for the way to win and fight for their rights. 

It is an interesting film that gives no easy answers and plays with the preconceptions of how a movie should be designed and for whom.  It is an honest film that certainly has its pretentious moments, but above all it is a film about people as flawed and passionate as they can sometimes be.

Grade: A-

Posted by Film_Junkie at 22:18:11 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

DVD Review: Play It Again, Sam (1972)

 

This brilliant romantic comedy tells the story of Allan (Woody Allen), a movie geek and film review writer, who is left by his wife and forced to re-enter the world of dating.  However Allan has a terribly skewed perception of what love should be due to his obsession with old movies.  He is counseled by Humphrey Bogart who follows him around and tells him just what to say.

Allen and Diane Keaton, as his best friend’s wife, are a great team once again.  They instinctively understand one another and play off each other perfectly.

The references are completely fitting and for some reason I totally identify with this man for whom cinema is the only reality…don’t know why…

This movie is funny, sweet, romantic, harsh and really well made.  See it.

Grade: A

Posted by Film_Junkie at 20:24:22 | Permalink | Comments (1) »