Showing posts with label Joanna Lumley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joanna Lumley. Show all posts

Movie Review The Cat's Meow

The Cat's Meow

Directed by Peter Bogdanovich

Written by Steven Peros 

Starring Kirsten Dunst, Cary Elwes, Edward Hermann, Eddie Izzard, Joanna Lumley

Release Date April 12th, 2002

Published April 15th, 2002 

An enduring Hollywood mystery surrounds the death of director Thomas Ince (Cary Elwes). Ince's death occurred during a major Hollywood party. Someone shot Ince and there were many suspects, none the least of which was the host of the party, legendary powerbroker and publishing magnate, William Randolph Hurst (Edward Hermann). The insecure Hearst was a maniacally jealous man who, it is believed, was searching for superstar Charlie Chaplin (Eddie Izzard) with the intent of killing the famed actor. Chaplin was rumored to be sleeping with Hearst's beloved mistress turned wife, Marion Davies (Kirsten Dunst). 

Hearst allegedly wanted to solve the problem of Chaplin permanently and when he saw Marion talking to a man that he thought could have been Chaplin, he raised his pistol and pulled the trigger. Essentially, the legend goes that Ince was the wrong man, in the wrong place, at the wrong time. But this is all rumor and conjecture. Hearst was never questioned about Ince's death in terms of him being the killer. The party was barely interrupted by Ince's death or any subsequent investigation of Ince's death. Though he'd been beloved and respected in the silent film era, Ince's death was swept under the rug. It became an urban legend, one of Hollywood's dirty little secrets. 



The movie The Cat's Meow dramatizes the murder of Thomas Ince with the aid of stellar production design, costuming, and witty dialogue. Director Peter Bogdanovich, working from a screenplay by Steven Peros, creates an elaborate old Hollywood party aboard an old yacht. Bogdanovich's camera sneaks about the boat, a perfect fly on the wall, capturing conversations, deceptions, rumors, and innuendos, it's all very catty and High School like but involving well-heeled millionaire adults, eager to watch each other tear themselves apart over relationships, sex, and perceived betrayals. 

The Cat's Meow is witty, stylish, and quite darkly funny, even as it is weaving its way to becoming a murder mystery. In reality, no one knows what happened to Thomas Ince. In reality, no one even knows if Ince was shot. What we know is that Thomas Ince died, he was quickly cremated, and there was no real investigation into what happened. Guests did report hearing a gunshot during the party but no one saw how Thomas Ince died and as his body was wheeled out of the party, speculation ran wild but it remained speculation  because no one was going to try and out William Randolph Hearst as a killer. Hearst also had the means, via his newspaper empire to cover the whole thing up and bury Ince's death under piles and piles of paper and ink. 

The Cat's Meow takes a catty, nasty, pleasure in exposing William Randolph Hearst as an insecure creep, a man who had everything except the ability to trust the one person he truly he loved. Edward Hermann's performance is pitch perfect, never going for anything sympathetic but finding something pathetic in Hearst that makes him both human and monstrous. Kirsten Dunst is also wonderful in The Cat's Meow, playing Marion as a woman who just wants to have a good time, she just wants to have fun and not worry about things. She chafes under Hearst's controlling nature and her flirtation with Chaplin, wittily played by Eddie Izzard, is part retaliation against Hearst and a genuine connection with Chaplin. 

As captured by Peter Bogdanovich it's all very charming, very witty and quite droll. The cinematography is gorgeous, elegant and a perfect vessel for these witty characters and the dreamy universe of memory that they now inhabit. Bogdanovich and Bruno Delbonnel, his cinematographer, use the boat setting ingeniously, creating a space they can widen and contract as needed for bringing characters together in small groups while creating plenty of thin hallways and alcoves for private conversations and potential betrayals. 

The Cat's Meow was Bogdanovich's first film in 9 years in 2002 and goes on to become his last great film. That's not a grand pronouncement, he only directed one more film after The Cat's Meow, but still. It had been a few decades since Bogdanovich was part of the vanguard of Hollywood's new wave of the late 60s and early 70s. Though he was always respected, his messy personal life derailed Bogdanovich for many years and the death of his beloved Dorothy Stratton, after they'd just made a movie together, They All Laughed, pushed Bogdanovich almost completely out of the mainstream. The Cat's Meow seemed to come out of nowhere. A complete, yet very brief, return to form for a former New Waver. That makes the movie a landmark even as it hasn't exactly lasted in our cultural memory. 


Movie Review Corpse Bride

Corpse Bride (2005) 

Directed by Mike Johnson, Tim Burton

Written by John August, Caroline Thompson, Pamela Pettler

Starring Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Emily Watson, Albert Finney, Joanna Lumley, Christopher Lee

Release Date September 23rd, 2005

Corpse Bride is, for my my money, Tim Burton's best movie. I know I should say Batman and I do love his Batman, but that should only communicate the esteem in which I hold Corpse Bride. I enjoy this dark yet playful animated feature even more than I enjoyed Michael Keaton as Batman. That speaks volumes of the quality of the work that is Corpse Bride, part of Tim Burton's rather exceptional forays into stop motion animation. 

The story of Corpse Bride is a highly unconventional love story. Johnny Depp provides the nervous, shy voice of Victor Van Dort who is set to marry Victoria Everglot (Emily Watson), the daughter of an old money family that has fallen on hard times. Victoria's parents, Finis and Maudeline Everglot (Albert Finney and Joanna Lumley), only reluctantly agreed to the marriage of Victor and Victoria because they are broke and Victor's parents are new immigrants with new money. They are voiced brilliantly by the wonderful Tracy Ullman and Paul Whitehouse.

Find my full length review at Geeks.Media, linked here. 



Movie Review: Ella Enchanted

Ella Enchanted (2004) 

Directed by Tommy O'Haver

Written by Laurie Craig, Karen McCullah Lutz, Kirsten Smith, Jennifer Heath, Michelle J. Wolf 

Starring Anne Hathaway, Hugh Dancy, Cary Elwes, Vivica A Fox, Minnie Driver, Joanna Lumley

Release Date April 9th, 2004

Published April 8th, 2004

You have to be a man very secure in his manhood to walk into a video store and rent a movie like Ella Enchanted. A lesser man would drag a child with them (niece, cousin, daughter, any girl under the age of 12). So on sheer manhood sacrificing, I deserve some respect. As a critic I say I have to watch it because it's there, but in all honesty I was kind of looking forward to the film. And no pervy insinuations about Anne Hathaway, I was intrigued by the film’s trailer and after seeing the film, I was right to get it.

Anne Hathaway, the rising star of The Princess Diaries (I haven't seen either PD films, this film was hard enough to rent), stars as Ella of Frell, a commoner who at birth is given a unique and horribly thought out gift by her fairy godmother Lucinda (Vivica A. Fox). The gift is obedience. Ella must do anything she is told to do by anyone.

The gift is obviously more of a curse, especially after Ella's mother passes away and commands her never to tell anyone about her "gift", she doesn't want anyone to use it against her. Years later, when Ella's father (Patrick Bergen) remarries to a harridan played by Joanna Lumley, a typecasting that Lumley may never escape, she brings along horrendous daughters who soon discover Ella's secret and begin using it against her.

Regardless of her curse/gift, Ella still grows up independently minded with a surprisingly political spirit. She leads protests on behalf of Ogres, Elves and Giants who have been enslaved by the evil King Edgar (Cary Elwes). Edgar is to give up the crown soon to his nephew Prince Char (Hugh Dancy). Think Prince Harry of England plus a rock star and you'll understand how much the girls of the kingdom love Prince Char. Ella however, as the plot dictates, isn't as impressed.

Ella and Prince Char are soon thrown together and it's dislike at first sight for Ella who believes the Prince is as evil as his uncle. The Prince is soon to win Ella over however and the two go on to fall in love. However there is still the problem of Ella's curse and the Prince's uncle who secretly plots to kill the Prince and remain king. The thrust of the plot is Ella's journey to find her fairy godmother and get her curse lifted and then save the Prince and get married, happily ever after, yada yada yada.

Simply take a little Cinderella with some cliffs notes Shakespeare and you can figure out where this plot is going. What works about Ella Enchanted, based on a popular book series by Gail Carson Levine, is the upbeat fairy tale style of the film. The film is bathed in a magical, pixie dust glow, saturated fantasy colors and modern touches for comic effect. There are malls, bicycles and modern politics. Don't worry it's all handled very lightly. All of it played for witty effect.

Director Tommy O' Haver crafts a wonderfully surreal fairy tale that evokes a live action Shrek in it's magic and whimsical fairy tale aesthete. O'Haver doesn't condescend to his young target audience, his musical choices, Elton John and Queen, are not known to younger viewers but are a treat to audiences who remember them. The songs are also weaved into the plot, the lyrics match the action onscreen, not an original concept but cleverly done.

Anne Hathaway has a terrific comic spirit that shows why those Princess Diaries movies have been so wildly popular. She is a tremendously likable presence onscreen. She is attractive with a mischievous glint in her eye. She has terrific comic chops and shows she's up for anything by singing two songs. Compared to contemporaries like Hillary Duff or the Olson Twins, she is a breath of fresh air.

The discovery here is Director Tommy O'Haver whose breakthrough feature Billy's Hollywood Screen Kiss was a minor gem from 1998 that most people missed. O'Haver has a wonderful comic touch. This is material that could collapse if overdone but O'Haver never let's it get away from him. From the first frame the GGI kingdom grabs your attention, little comic moments float by as the camera floats to Ella's cottage for the first scene.

The Director really helped himself by filling his cast with talented supporting actors like Cary Elwes, who lends the film a little of that Princess Bride karma, Minnie Driver, and Parminder K. Nagra who is a little underused but terrific when she's seen. Hugh Dancy, in his first major role, holds his own opposite Hathaway whose presence could have overwhelmed a lesser actor. Dancy was unrecognizable in his small role in King Arthur so this film is the highlight of his resume.

For what it is, a kid's movie, a movie meant for young girls, Ella Enchanted ranks with the Pixar films in the way it provides thrills for audiences. Ella is not as funny or as artistically accomplished as Pixar's films or Shrek but by the lowered bar for family films that appeal beyond demographic boundaries, you can throw this film in the conversation with Nemo and the rest.

Snow White and the Huntsman Review: Grim Fairy Tale, Gorgeous Visuals, Disappointing Execution

Film critic Sean Patrick reviews  Snow White and the Huntsman , praising its visuals and Chris Hemsworth’s performance, but finding Kristen ...