- Details
-
Parent Category: Film and the Arts
-
Category: Reviews
-
Published on Sunday, 01 August 2010 05:00
-
Written by Kevin Filipski
Blu-rays of the Week
Black Narcissus
(Criterion)
The Red Shoes
(Criterion)
Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger — who teamed up for several of the most memorable movies of the 1940s (I Know Where I'm Going, A Matter of Life and Death, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp) — reached their career peaks with 1947's Black Narcissus and 1948's The Red Shoes, two of the most ravishing color films ever made, thanks to the incomparable Jack Cardiff's cinematography. Black Narcissus, which takes place in a Himalayan convent, is the subtlest of horror films, while the ballet-set The Red Shoes is a glorious portrait of artists working together.
Criterion's new Blu-ray releases come from a recent restoration, and the results are so spectacular that you may find yourself freeze-framing constantly during each film to savor the results. That's fine; works of art like these two films deserve to be studied over and over. Of the new extras (the rest come from the original Criterion releases), the best is
French director
Bertrand Tavernier's insightful comments about Powell's style on the
Black Narcissus disc and an interview with Powell's widow,
Thelma Schoonmaker, on the
Red Shoes disc.
DVDs of the WeekThe Art of the Steal(IFC)
Director
Don Argott’s documentary about how the
Barnes Foundation—which owns arguably the world’s greatest collection of post-Impressionist and modern-art paintings—has been torn down systematically since the death of its founder,
Albert Barnes, in 1951, is an impressive cultural detective yarn with heroes and villains galore. What could have been a dry, academic exercise about art experts and politicians fighting over a collection worth billions becomes in Argott’s sensitive hands an intelligent exploration of the complex clashes between art and commerce, politicians and their constituents, foundations and trusts, and the law and what’s right.
Argott crams a wealth of information, insight and analysis into 105 minutes—it’s obvious that he sides with those trying to preserve Barnes’ wishes and legacy, but allows the other side its story, however selfishly (but profitably) motivated. While it’s unfortunate that IFC didn’t include any supplements—additional interviews, u
pdates, director commentary—Argott’s film is persuasively argued enough to stand on its own.
The Most Dangerous Man in America(First Run)
For their study of how
Daniel Ellsberg became Nixon’s Public Enemy No. 1 after leaking the
Pentagon Papers to
The New York Times, directors
Judith Erlich and
Rick Goldsmith have made a standard talking-heads documentary dressed up by canny use of archival material such as photographs, video footage and priceless snippets from the Nixon tapes, particularly when the president laments (in his view) Ellsberg’s treason and the press aiding and abetting it. (And we thought that this kind of White House paranoia and name-calling began after September 11!) The filmmakers’ ace in the hole is Ellsberg himself, who narrates the film. The filmmakers also interview his wife Patricia, former Rand colleagues and journalists; even Nixon administration honcho
John Dean chimes in.
Why so many documentaries now show re-enactments of pivotal events (i.e., when Ellsberg and his children are nearly busted by L.A. police while copying classified materials) is mystifying; shoehorned in here, they threaten to drag the film down to the level of a melodramatic History Channel program. However,
The Most Dangerous Man in America is a movie that all Americans should see: its hero is the real definition of patriotism. Extras include interviews with
Woody Harrelson and
Naomi Klein, and audio highlights from the Nixon rapes.
CDs of the Week Billy Squier: Don’t Say No — 30th Anniversary Edition (Shout Factory)
Rocker
Squier may have made better albums —
Emotions in Motion, Signs of Life — but
Don't Say No was both his breakout record and his biggest-seller, so it's a no-brainer that this 1981 recording gets the “special” treatment ahead of his later albums. (Actually, it's only the 29th anniversary, but why quibble?) Any record that opens with the 1-2-3 punch of “In the Dark,” “The Stroke” and “My Kinda Lover” is destined for cock-rock greatness; throw in “Lonely Is the Night,” “Too Daze Gone,” and “Whaddya Want from Me,” and you've got a guitar record for the ages.
Squier has since been unfairly lumped into the “crappy 80s music” bin, but at his best, he combined energy, irresistible hooks and a versatile verbal facility into a hard-rocking package that has unfortunately gone completely out of fashion. Shout Factory's re-issue amps up
Mack & Billy's original spacious production, and tacks on live cuts of “My Kinda Lover” and “The Stroke” from two 2009 concerts.
Leoncavallo: I Medici(Deutsche Grammophon)
That he's only known for his tragic first opera,
I Pagliacci, makes Italian composer
Ruggero Leoncavallo a one-hit wonder. But this splendid, first-ever recording of Leoncavallo's second opera,
I Medici, gives us a chance to hear a more obscure work in the signature
verismo style which he helped make famous, this time attached to the gruesome true story of the
Pazzi Conspiracy, an assassination plot against the
Medicis, rulers of
Tuscany in the 15th century, which claimed the life of
Giuliano, brother of co-ruler
Lorenzo (who was merely wounded).
Leoncavallo's libretto is filled with melodramatic excess, particularly in the tragically romantic subplots that include adultery and an illegitimate child. But his music is sufficiently dramatic to keep us interested until the bloody end, in which the legacy of the Medicis is cemented with a promise from Lorenzo to his dying brother.
Alberto Veronesi conducts the Orchestra and Chorus of
Florence's
Maggio Musicale in an authoritative reading, along with an arresting cast of singers led by
Placido Domingo (Giuliano),
Carlos Alvarez (Lorenzo),
Eric Owens (conspirator
Monteseco) and
Daniela Dessi (Giuliano's beloved,
Simonetta).