{"id":5764,"date":"2015-02-12T16:25:48","date_gmt":"2015-02-13T00:25:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/?p=5764"},"modified":"2015-02-12T16:41:52","modified_gmt":"2015-02-13T00:41:52","slug":"lee-poagues-list-20-classic-films","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/2015\/02\/12\/lee-poagues-list-20-classic-films\/","title":{"rendered":"Lee Poague&#8217;s List: 20 Classic Films to View"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Today\u2019s long post is a guest shot from my old friend Lee Poague.  Lee is a consummate movie buff, author of numerous books on Frank Capra, Alfred Hitchcock, Susan Sontag and others&#8230;you can see a <a  href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/s?ie=UTF8&#038;page=1&#038;rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_27%3ALeland%20Poague\">list here<\/a>. <\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/images5\/leepoague.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<em>Lee Poague on Four Mile Beach north of Santa Cruz, June, 2014.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Lee was a professor for many years at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, teaching courses on film.  A few months ago, I asked him for a list of films he might recommend.  And here we have his thorough, fascinating, and useful response, written on February 9, 2015, and entitled: \u201cFilm Talk and Friendship.\u201d\u009d  I\u2019ve taken the liberty of giving titles to his essay&#8217;s three sections, and you can jump to the sections with the links below.<\/p>\n<p><strong><a  href=\"#part1\">Part I: A Prolegomena To Any Future Film Recommendations.<\/a><br \/>\n<a  href=\"#part2\">Part II: Lee\u2019s List.<\/a><br \/>\n<a  href=\"#part3\">Part III: Let Us Now Praise Kenneth Turan.<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n<h3><a id=\"part1\">Part I:Prolegomena To Any Future Film Recommendations.<\/a><\/h3>\n<p>(by Leland Poague)<\/p>\n<p>So one night Rudy asks me how to surf the streaming video movie  wave, how to decide which films to watch out of the seemingly endless many on  offer. Not the easiest problem to resolve or reduce. I\u2019ll begin my reply with a  story. <\/p>\n<p>Our firstborn\u2019s first social outing involved an April Sunday  perambulator ride across North Street to attend a backyard picnic at Rudy and  Sylvia Rucker\u2019s home\u2014in Geneseo, New York, 1976. Afterwards, I hauled a 16mm  projector across the street and the Rucker front parlor became an impromptu  screening room. We watched Billy Wilder\u2019s <em>Love in<\/em> <em>the Afternoon,<\/em> one of the last films in my spring term film class. <\/p>\n<p>Here\u2019s another story. Toward the end of my university career I  regularly taught a survey of film history course. To get started, I often asked  students to give me a list of their five most favorite films. The results were  striking. Rarely did any film receive a total of more than five or six votes, out  of some 175 votes cast. And usually the top vote getter was a recent hit, <em>Forest  Gump,<\/em> say, or <em>Avatar.<\/em> Few classic (aka black and white) films  appeared on these lists, the most notable exceptions being <em>Dr.<\/em> <em>Strangelove<\/em> and <em>Raging Bull,<\/em> neither of them from Hollywood\u2019s 1930s-40s silver  screen heyday. Foreign-language films were rare; silent-era films were almost  entirely absent. Some auteurs were relatively well represented\u2014Coppola,  Kubrick, Scorsese, Spielberg\u2014which usually meant two or three titles per  director. Otherwise, the dominant impression was of a happy cinephile anarchy. <\/p>\n<p>The first story evokes an era when systematic knowledge of film  history was hard to come by because few people had neighbors whose employment  enabled them to order from 16mm film catalogues at the rate of two films a  week. Apart from those with access to big-city revival houses or museums, most  people circa the mid 1970s got their film history haphazardly from commercial  television broadcasts. The second story also evinces an era of unsystematic  knowledge of film history, to the extent that little consensus was evident in  my class surveys, even for a generation raised on cable and VHS and DVD; their  problem was less access than excess. So Rudy\u2019s question is deeply pertinent,  and is likely to become ever more complicated going forward. <\/p>\n<p>The digital revolution that has helped to create the problem of  too many movies and too little time also offers some remedies. Amazon.com makes  suggestions based on a customer\u2019s history of purchases; Netflix offers viewer  ratings and allows friends to share title lists. The imdb website allows nearly  instant access to director and actor and writer (etc.) filmographies; if you  liked Ridley Scott\u2019s <em>Blade Runner<\/em>, maybe you\u2019ll enjoy his <em>Prometheus<\/em>.  The catch here is that multiple lists, and lists of lists, can exacerbate the  problem of finding films that really matter to you, assuming that film viewing  is something other than a simple pastime. (I would not deny that randomness has  its own rewards, and would allow as well that the impulse to shy away from  purported classics, so as to avoid the imperatives of snobbery, is sometimes  justified.) <\/p>\n<p>Cut to the chase. I think the best way to find films that matter  to you is to listen to those who have taken the trouble to understand and  elaborate why particular movies have mattered to them, people whose memories  and words can be checked against your own at crucial points in ways that make  their assessments of film you have not seen yet both credible and suggestive.<\/p>\n<p>Such recommendations carry the authority of thoughtful experience  rather than that of academic or historical expertise alone, and they positively  invite a thoughtful rejoinder, which may take the form of offering recommendations  in return. With this guest post on Rudy\u2019s blog, I\u2019ll throw out some suggestions  of my own to exemplify the process.<br \/>\n<a id=\"part2\"><\/p>\n<h3>Part II: Lee&#8217;s List<\/h3>\n<p><\/a><br \/>\n(by Leland Poague)<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/images5\/egyptteple.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Here are twenty movies I would recommend you see. Whether well  known or obscure, all are films I would gladly see again, especially with  companions whose varieties of engagement and response would test and renew my  own.<\/p>\n<p><em>Workers Leaving the  Factory<\/em> (1895).  Usually described  as the first film shot by the Lumi\u00c3\u00a8re brothers with their cin\u00c3\u00a9matographe camera\/projector  device, this actually exists in three different versions, filmed in the spring  and summer. The liveliness of these single-take, 50-some-second images is still  astounding and reminds us of the degree to which animation, of human beings and  technologies, is at the heart of cinema. To judge by the grins and gaits of the  employees\u2014most of them women\u2014the Lumi\u00c3\u00a8re factory in Lyon must have been a great  place to work. (Though you can see these on You Tube, my favorite source is  Kino Video\u2019s <em>The Lumi\u00c3\u00a8re Brothers\u2019 First  Films<\/em> DVD, as much for Bertrand Tavernier\u2019s voice-over narration as for the  quality of the images.)<\/p>\n<p><em>The Kid <\/em>(1921). This was Chaplin\u2019s  first self-directed feature-length film. Chaplin\u2019s gift for Dickensian  sentimentality is nowhere more evident than in the pathos of Charlie\u2019s improvisatory  relationship with Jackie Coogan\u2019s foundling; Chaplin\u2019s comical, sometimes  surreal depictions of the brutalities of working-class urban life evoke many of  D.W. Griffith\u2019s early Biograph shorts and also the \u201cmodern\u201d\u009d story of his 1916  epic, <em>Intolerance. <\/em>Though Chaplin\u2019s  extraordinary international celebrity made him fabulously wealthy, he never  lost his sympathy for the dispossessed and disadvantaged.<\/p>\n<p><em>Metropolis<\/em> (1927). Purportedly  the most expensive film ever made at the time of its initial 1927 release, Fritz  Lang\u2019s sci-fi masterpiece was subsequently and severely recut and exists in  multiple versions, most recently a nearly complete restoration incorporating  footage from a 16 mm print discovered in an Argentine film archive in 2008.  Written by Lang\u2019s then wife, Thea von Harbou, <em>Metropolis <\/em>combines gothic and futuristic elements in a dystopian  fable of technology run socially and sexually amuck. Though the political  allegory leaves the master\/slave class structure ominously intact, the  psychological extravagance of the Oedipal plot, and of Lang\u2019s architectural  treatment of its flows and surges, verges on hysteria if not ecstasy.  Astonishingly, the almost complete 148 minute version of the film sustains this  all-out momentum far better than its variously abbreviated avatars, even Giorgio  Morodor\u2019s 1984 rock-and-roll treatment.<\/p>\n<p><em>The Crime of Monsieur  Lange<\/em> (1936). Few moments in the history of film are more resonant both of hope and  despair than the scene towards the end of Jean Renoir\u2019s <em>Grand Illusion<\/em> when Jean Gabin holds Little Peters in his arms and  tells her widowed German mother (Dita Parlo) that \u201cLotte hat blaue Augen\u201d\u009d just  before Gabin and his fellow P.O.W. escapee (Marcel Dalio) depart Frau Elsa\u2019s  farmstead refuge and make their way to Switzerland and freedom. A similar moment  marks the close of Renoir\u2019s \u201cPopular Front\u201d\u009d comedy <em>The Crime of Monsieur Lange.<\/em> Headed down a windy beach toward the  Franco-Belgian border, Am\u00c3\u00a9d\u00c3\u00a9e Lange (Ren\u00c3\u00a9 Lef\u00c3\u00a8vre) and Valentine Card\u00c3\u00a8s  (Florelle) stop in mid flight, turn, and wave to the camera, as if waving to  us. (Gabin\u2019s character dares not look back in <em>Grand Illusion.<\/em>) The implication that we are thereby members of the  informal, working-class cafe jury that has effectively acquitted M. Lange of  murder is confirmed in the reverse shot, in which two of their number  acknowledge the gesture and return the salute. Justice here is ad hoc, as it  will be three years later at the end of John Ford\u2019s <em>Stagecoach<\/em>, when John Wayne\u2019s escaped convict and Claire Trevor\u2019s  exiled saloon girl depart from Lordsburg for Mexico to start a new life beyond  the reach of American law. That the self-effacing M. Lange is best known to his  mid-thirties Parisian contemporaries as the author of the idealistic,  anti-fascist \u201cArizona Jim\u201d\u009d western stories confirms the uncanny Renoir\/Ford  affinity, as does the raucous good humor of the publishing cooperative that  flourishes in the absence of the film\u2019s villain-cum-publisher, whose return  from presumed death leaves M. Lange little option but homicide and flight.<\/p>\n<p><em>The Philadelphia  Story<\/em> (1940). Romantic comedy in \u201d\u02dc30s and \u201d\u02dc40s Hollywood attracted some of the industry\u2019s  most accomplished (and attractive) talents, both on screen (Carole Lombard,  Clark Gable, Irene Dunne, Cary Grant) and behind it (Frank Capra, Howard Hawks,  Preston Sturges, Billy Wilder). Director George Cukor\u2019s smartly mounted  production of the Philip Barry stage play features Grant along with Katharine  Hepburn and James Stewart, all in top form; luminous, witty, surprisingly  vulnerable. Many of the era\u2019s screwball comedies featured cross-class romances,  often a down-on-his-middle-class-luck male matched with a head-strong if  erotically-befuddled heiress. <em>The  Philadelphia<\/em> <em>Story<\/em> multiplies the  possible pairings (Hepburn has three suitors, among them her alcoholic  ex-husband) and takes any number of Freudian and Shakespearean chances in  ruminating on what it means to be a \u201cfirst class human being.\u201d\u009d The importance  of casting can be seen in the relative slackness of the film\u2019s mostly agreeable  musical 1950s remake, <em>High Society,<\/em> where Grace Kelly nearly manages to out sing Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra both.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/images5\/stairstoheaven.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p><em>Notorious<\/em> (1946). Alfred  Hitchcock\u2019s preeminence among studio-era directors is typically seen to follow  from his preternaturally skillful manipulations of \u201csuspense.\u201d\u009d <em>Psycho<\/em> can be seen as Hitchcock\u2019s  definitive effort both to capitalize upon and to erase this expectation via the  infamous lead-killing shower murder, which occurs strikingly early in the  story. Like Janet Leigh\u2019s Marion Crane in <em>Psycho<\/em>,  Ingrid Bergman\u2019s \u201cnotorious\u201d\u009d Alicia Huberman is victimized by a desperately  vengeful \u201cMother\u201d\u009d figure, and also by variously neglectful if not callous  patriarchs, both expatriate Nazis and US intelligence agents who use Alicia\u2019s  status as the reputedly dissolute daughter of a convicted German spy as a means  of penetrating a Brazil-based Nazi sleeper cell engaged in the development of  nuclear (implicitly weapons grade) materials. Casting Cary Grant as Bergman\u2019s  US contact turns the espionage plot into a love story pitched incongruously  between romantic comedy and the Brothers Grimm, especially when Alicia\u2019s cover  is blown and her newly-espoused German husband (Claude Rains) and her manipulative  live-in mother-in-law start dosing her coffee. That love is the antidote only  confirms the extent to which love is always already a drug, and Hitchcock\u2019s  skill in balancing our desire that Alicia be rescued with our sympathy for her  husband\u2019s sad dignity in defeat yields a conclusion both poignant and disturbing. <\/p>\n<p><em>My Darling Clementine <\/em>(1946).  John Ford\u2019s <em>The Searchers<\/em> and <em>The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance<\/em> are  more typically adduced in top-ten or top-twenty lists, not least because of the  way Ford rubs John Wayne\u2019s maverick (even psychotic) individualism against the  grain of the community he ostensibly represents. There\u2019s also a Henry Fonda  strain in Ford, running from <em>Young Mr.  Lincoln <\/em>to <em>Mister Roberts,<\/em> where  Fonda\u2019s visionary capacity for astonished thoughtfulness is typically underscored. <em>My Darling Clementine <\/em>slots Fonda  into the Wayne role as an enforcer of (questionable) community standards, though  the arrival of Clementine Carter (Cathy Downs) promises something like hopeful  social change. Though Ford is a hard sell among undergrads these days, I still  esteem him as the Shakespeare of cinema, not least for his career-long  obsession with America\u2019s history and mythology. The saloon scene where Fonda\u2019s  Wyatt Earp witnesses Victor Mature\u2019s Doc Holliday completing Hamlet\u2019s \u201cTo be or  not to be\u201d\u009d soliloquy when a woozy tragedian cannot go on is deeply evocative in  its multiple pertinences and perspectives.<\/p>\n<p><em>Tokyo Story<\/em> (1953). The films of  Yasujiro Ozu are nearly always parables of domestic discord, shifting  delicately yet tellingly between the comic and the bittersweet. <em>Tokyo Story<\/em> is arguably as bitter as any  film Ozu ever made. Aging parents venture from Onomichi to Tokyo \u201cwhile [they]  still can\u201d\u009d to visit their Tokyo-resident children and grandchildren and the widow  of their eldest son, who died in the Pacific War. The children, with the  notable exception of the daughter-in-law, are too busy to entertain them, and  every effort to remedy the resulting awkwardness only yields further embarrassment.  Whether the grandmother\u2019s death upon their (premature) return to Onomichi is  attributable to the stress of the Tokyo visit is uncertain, though it requires  the children to gather together in Onomichi for her funeral. Yet if bitter,  also hauntingly sweet, in the loving precision of Ozu\u2019s images and the curt  (almost Beckett-like) irony of the script Ozu co-wrote with Kogo Noda. Though  Ozu frequently alluded to American and European films in his own movies, his  concerted attention to the specifics of Japanese social life\u2014its settings and  gestures and rhythms\u2014discovers a world quietly replete with significance and  love, even something like hope.<\/p>\n<p><em>Pather Panchali.<\/em>(1955). Though the  productivity of Bollywood has long rivaled or exceeded that of Hollywood, Satyajit  Ray\u2019s <em>Pather Panchali<\/em> (like his  career more generally) stands apart from the melodramatic glitz of the  mainstream Indian film industry, and this despite the fact that Ray openly  acknowledged being inspired by European and American auteurs with wide popular  appeal: Jean Renoir, Vittorio De Sica, Frank Capra, John Ford. I have not yet seen  the other two films in <em>The Apu Trilogy,<\/em> of which <em>Pather Panchali<\/em> is the first  installment, but my one encounter with <em>Pather  Panchali <\/em>haunts me still: for its leisurely, lilting pace; for its detailed  depiction of a rural Indian village; for the poignancy and lyricism of key  sequences, where the forces of urbanization (in the form of a railroad)  uncannily intersect with the cycles and spaces of rural life. Where De Sica\u2019s <em>Bicycle Thieves<\/em> follows a father and son  through Rome in search of the bike upon which their family\u2019s livelihood  depends, <em>Pather Panchali <\/em>stays at  home with the family while the father seeks to recoup their sagging fortunes in  a too-distant city. Ray\u2019s depiction of the resulting hardships, especially  those affecting the family\u2019s women, is quietly heartbreaking.<\/p>\n<p><em>Wild Strawberries<\/em> (1957). I came of  cinematic age one weekend afternoon in the late 1950s when my widower father  deposited myself and my younger brother at a neighborhood San Francisco movie  house; while Dad went pub crawling with his younger brother, Dennis and I  watched a double bill of Ingmar Bergman\u2019s <em>The  Seventh Seal<\/em> and <em>The Virgin Spring.<\/em> (Bergman as baby-sitter!) Though the only film I recall my father ever enthusing  over was Hitchcock\u2019s <em>Vertigo,<\/em> I wish  I could have shown him <em>Wild Strawberries,<\/em> for its caustic if finally sympathetic portrait of an aging doctor whose  coldness to those closest to him is softened by a series of psycho-expressionistic  encounters with his past and the influence of a trio of youthful hitchhikers he  picks up as he and his mournfully severe daughter-in-law drive to Lund, where  he is to receive an academic honor. Though Bergman\u2019s view of adult life is  generally brutal in its depicted refusals and betrayals, as in <em>Persona <\/em>or <em>Shame,<\/em> <em>Wild Strawberries<\/em> contains  that skepticism within a Proustian framework where memory allows some room for insight  and reconciliation.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/images5\/ganeshmadonn.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p><em>Rio Bravo <\/em>(1959). Though it  lacks the classical-Hollywood snap of <em>Only  Angels Have Wings<\/em> and <em>To Have and  Have Not\u2014<\/em>films often described as its prototypical predecessors in an  informal \u201cexistential\u201d\u009d trilogy\u2014<em>Rio Bravo<\/em> remains the definitive Howard Hawks film, evoking a world of teamwork both  professional and sexual, in front of the camera and behind it as well. Angie  Dickinson\u2019s poker-playing widow is the Hawksian Woman par excellence, prizing  her freedom but open to attachment, while John Wayne is the laconic lawman  whose emotional reticence is increasingly called into question while he  endeavors to hold a murder suspect in custody despite extra-legal efforts by  the latter\u2019s cattle-baron brother to spring him. The casting of Walter Brennan,  Ricky Nelson, and Dean Martin lent the film a weird, television sit-com vibe at  the time of its initial release, but its self-consciously reflexive qualities,  at least in retrospect, evoke both Brecht and Beckett as Wayne\u2019s besieged sheriff  and his crew of cast-off deputies await a Federal Marshall who never arrives.<\/p>\n<p><em>La Jet\u00c3\u00a9e<\/em> (1963). Chris Marker  is chiefly remembered as a documentarian, though his left-political leanings  and essayistic procedures extend the documentary form far beyond journalistic \u201crealism.\u201d\u009d <em>La Jet\u00c3\u00a9e<\/em> is a speculative fiction  composed largely of still images accompanied (in signature Marker style) by  voice-over commentary. The rebus-like story we encounter\u2014of a prisoner haunted  by childhood memories of an airport, a woman, and a shooting\u2014recalls Renoir\u2019s <em>Charleston Parade<\/em> (in depicting Paris as  a post-apocalyptic wasteland) and directly evokes Hitchcock\u2019s <em>Vertigo<\/em> (in using a sequoia cross section  as a temporal map). The prisoner\u2019s memory-encouraged capacity for time travel, tested  in repeated experimental journeys to pre-WWIII Paris, is employed by his  jailors to solicit emergency assistance from the distant future. At risk of  execution after the successful completion of his mission, he eschews the invitation  of the world to come and chooses, instead, to return to pre-war Paris, where  death is imminent but life beckons in a woman\u2019s glance. Terry Gilliam\u2019s <em>Twelve Monkeys <\/em>is only one of several  films inspired by Marker\u2019s 27-minute masterpiece. <\/p>\n<p><em>Alphaville<\/em> (1965). This film\u2019s sub-literary  subtitle, \u201ca strange adventure of Lemmy Caution,\u201d\u009d confirms Jean-Luc Godard\u2019s  abiding <em>agent provocateur<\/em> interest in  the intersections of popular and canonical cultures. <em>Alphaville<\/em> (actually Paris and environs) is a futuristic city where  life is lived according to the dictates of an omnipresent (and strangely  poetic) super computer, \u201cAlpha 60.\u201d\u009d Lemmy Caution (Eddie Constantine, an  American actor who\u2019d played the same gumshoe character in numerous European  genre films) is a James Bond style intergalactic secret agent tasked to kidnap  Professor von Braun (aka Leonard Nosferatu), the father of Alpha 60; in the  event, Lemmy plugs the professor with his film noir automatic, disables Alpha  60 with a riddle (effectively, the film itself), and rescues the professor\u2019s beautiful  daughter while Alphaville descends into entropic chaos around them. References  to the holocaust (several female characters sport tattooed ID numbers) effectively  conflate WWII and the Cold War, but the delirious modernist poetry of Godard\u2019s  dialogue and images\u2014especially via the rapturous voice and face of Anna  Karina\u2014invokes the can-do romantic courage of Bogart and Bacall (\u201cJe\u2026 vous\u2026 aime\u201d\u009d)  on a mythic, interstellar scale.<\/p>\n<p><em>The Chase<\/em> (1966). It is hard  not to read this flawed Arthur Penn masterpiece as a post-Camelot retort to the  optimistic existentialism of <em>Rio Bravo,<\/em> given that Angie Dickinson plays the wife of a latter-day Texas sheriff whose  efforts to contain the violence unleashed by a local cattle-country corporate  grandee (E.G. Marshall) in his anxious efforts to determine the fate of a (sexually)  reckless relative (a son here, a brother in <em>Rio  Bravo<\/em>) literally and spectacularly blow up, with tragic effects in <em>The <\/em>Chase evocative of the Kennedy  assassination\u2019s aftermath. With Marlon Brando as the put-upon sheriff, Robert  Redford as an escaped convict suspected of murder, Jane Fonda as the latter\u2019s wife  and paramour of the grandee\u2019s son\u2014other noteworthy cast members include Miriam  Hopkins and Robert Duvall\u2014<em>The Chase<\/em> provides an extraordinary anthology of late-Hollywood acting styles, while the  sheriff\u2019s \u201cinnocent until proven guilty\u201d\u009d efforts to place the Redford character  in protective custody before local vigilantes discover his whereabouts evoke an  out-of-place idealism that will migrate to the far side of the law in Penn\u2019s  next film about young runaway Texans, <em>Bonnie  and Clyde.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Last Tango in Paris<\/em> (1972). A ghostly  antagonist in many of Bernardo Bertolucci\u2019s distinguished films (<em>1900, The Last Emperor<\/em>) is History, in a  Marxian sense, evoking the operatic if not apocalyptic legacy of Luchino  Visconti, as in <em>Senso, <\/em>say, or <em>The Damned. <\/em>A second obvious influence,  especially in <em>Last Tango,<\/em> is Jean-Luc  Godard, here personified in the film director played by New Wave stalwart  Jean-Pierre L\u00c3\u00a9aud whose willingness to live the clich\u00c3\u00a9s of bourgeois romance (\u201cla  marriage pop\u201d\u009d) while simultaneously filming them (\u201cIf I kiss you, it might be  cinema\u201d\u009d) stands in sharp (if progressively muted) contrast to the psycho-social  agonies of the Marlon Brando character, who seeks to temper the emotional impact  of his French wife\u2019s recent suicide by engaging in compulsive, no-names sex  with the flower-child stranger played by Maria Schneider. The Brando character  revolts against a patriarchal\/theological status quo (the \u201cHoly Family, Church  of good citizens\u201d\u009d) by openly enacting a brutality at its heart, only to  discover its libidinal appeal. Like the Belmondo character in Godard\u2019s <em>Breathless,<\/em> Brando\u2019s character pays for  his romantic idealism with his life; in both cases, it\u2019s a young proto-feminist  woman who\u2019s tasked to confront (or not) the last-minute consequences. Vittorio  Storaro\u2019s slab-of-color lighting schemes evoke the Francis Bacon paintings seen  in the film\u2019s credits, while the film\u2019s mise-en-sc\u00c3\u00a8ne of empty rooms and  shadowy hallways intimates the void in which Bertolucci\u2019s characters play out  their scenarios of egotistic indulgence and social alienation. <\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/images5\/twinfalls.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p><em>Small Change<\/em> (1976). The  inevitable comparison of Fran\u00c3\u00a7ois Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard nowadays favors  the latter, though Truffaut\u2019s first three feature films\u2014<em>The 400 Blows, Shoot the Piano Player, Jules and Jim\u2014<\/em>represent a  debut with scant precedent in terms of cinematic quality and film-historical  impact. <em>Small Change<\/em> is \u201clate\u201d\u009d  Truffaut (alas!) but it expresses great tenderness with cinephile wit and  precision in depicting the last few weeks of the school year in the city of  Thiers mostly from the vantage point of adolescent (or nearly adolescent)  children. The communalist influence of Jean Renoir is evident in the way the  stories of numerous children and their (sometimes single) parents interlock,  especially those of Julien Leclou (whose tattered clothes and petty thievery  evince his troubled family circumstances) and Patrick Desmouceaux (whose  motherless existence renders his path toward sexual maturity serially awkward).  Though Truffaut is sometimes assailed as apolitical (or worse), <em>Small Change<\/em> repeatedly depicts cinema  as treating political issues (a newsreel account of the still-fraught relations  between France and Algeria) and as showing how such issues intersect with  familial\/aesthetic concerns (in a later newsreel account of Oscar the whistler  and his mixed linguistic heritage). A teacher\u2019s idealistic end-of-term address  on generational injustice and the logic of love, nearly Shakespearean in its  folkloric compression and wisdom, is touchingly earnest.<\/p>\n<p><em>Rhapsody in August<\/em> (1991). Given Akira  Kurosawa\u2019s influence on Sergio Leone, George Lucas, and Martin Scorsese\u2014not to  mention <em>Rashomon<\/em> or his various  Toshiro Mifune film noirs<em>\u2014<\/em>he is  arguably the most influential director since D.W. Griffith or Sergei  Eisenstein. <em>Rhapsody in August<\/em> is  late Kurosawa, reminiscent of <em>Tokyo Story<\/em> in its study of a family stressed by generational tensions and the legacy of  the Pacific War, though here the family lives both in Nagasaki and Hawaii  rather than Tokyo and Onomichi. Richard Gere plays a nisei American cousin who  travels to Japan after the death of his Japanese-born father to visit his  elderly aunt and her teenage grandchildren. Family reconciliation entails  confronting the legacy of the atomic bomb that killed the grandmother\u2019s husband  in 1945. Though often light and comic in its treatment, key moments evoke the manic  energies of <em>The Seven Samurai<\/em> and the  lyric expressionism of <em>Akira Kurosawa\u2019s  Dreams.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The Piano <\/em>(1993). One of the  few women ever nominated for an Academy Award for Best Director, Jane Campion  is widely respected for her exceptionally intelligent depictions of heroically exceptional  women. Holly Hunter\u2019s Ada McGrath is willfully mute, as if her passion for the  expressiveness of piano playing betrayed her aversive disappointment with  social discourse under 19<sup>th<\/sup>-century patriarchal circumstances. Campion\u2019s  depiction of white settlers in New Zealand contrasts their puritanism with more  relaxed Maori attitudes; Ada\u2019s audacious sexual reawakening\u2014she already has an  out-of-wedlock daughter (Anna Paquin) when her Scottish father ships her off to  New Zealand to marry\u2014is prompted by Harvey Keitel\u2019s American ex-whaler gone native,  who rescues her piano from its shoreline exile. Campion\u2019s romantic portrait of  New Zealand\u2019s island geography contrasts with the cozy squalor of the inland  settlement and the overpowering constrictions of the New Zealand bush. The  film\u2019s surprisingly happy ending\u2014which finds McGrath and Baines (Keitel) resettled  together in Nelson, where she teaches piano and has resumed speaking\u2014actually  reinforces our deep identification with Ada\u2019s interiority, however grateful we  may be that she\u2019ll have appreciative listeners, by contrast with her earnest  but hopelessly conventional husband.<\/p>\n<p><em>Ride with the Devil <\/em>(1999). Born in  Taiwan, with advanced degrees from Illinois and NYU, Ang Lee is the  international director par excellence whose films take place in a variety of  global and temporal settings: Taiwan, Manhattan, Regency-era England, Qing-era  China, Shanghai\/Hong Kong, Wyoming, etc. <em>Ride  with the Devil<\/em> is perhaps Lee\u2019s most wonderfully <em>American<\/em> movie, though its America is the Kansas\/Missouri border in  the midst of the Civil War; its central character is a German immigrant  fighting with Southern irregulars whose main activities, before they join in  Quantrill\u2019s infamous raid on Lawrence, Kansas, amount to dodging Union patrols  and reading aloud from captured family letters. Despite its epic canvas, <em>Ride with the Devil<\/em> is an affectingly  intimate movie, depicting the intricacies of friendship, loyalty, and love in  the midst of national carnage. Though Toby Maguire\u2019s Jake Roedel breaks with  his Unionist father to ride with his barely-of-age Confederate brothers, his  deepest loyalty is eventually to ex-slave Daniel Holt (Jeffrey Wright), whose  presence among the secessionist cohort provides an eloquently ironic gloss on  the rampant tribalisms on view, both then and now. The inevitable comparison of  Roedel and Holt to Huck and Jim in <em>Huckleberry  Finn<\/em> is not all to Twain\u2019s favor.<\/p>\n<p><em>Bamboozled<\/em> (2000). Spike Lee\u2019s  penchant for controversy is more than matched by his passion for film and film  history; even in so Brooklyn-centric a film as <em>Do the Right Thing<\/em> he pays emphatic homage to Godard\u2019s <em>Breathless.<\/em> (Where Jean-Paul Belmondo\u2019s  character only names his lover\u2019s various body parts, Lee\u2019s Mookie names those  of Rosie Perez while literally caressing them with an ice cube!) <em>Bamboozled\u2019<\/em>s take on media history is even  more emphatically, even crudely, Brechtian, in that Lee\u2019s central character (Damon  Wayans) proposes a minstrel show television series in the hope of getting fired  by his boorish network superior; the show, against expectations, becomes a hit,  to the point where its studio audiences mime the cast by sporting blackface.  Radical hip-hoppers kidnap and assassinate the show\u2019s star; Wayon\u2019s character  is killed in turn, as much by the montage of racially-canted film and cartoon  clips he watches while dying as by his production assistant\u2019s revolver. Lee  slathers the irony on generously, but with an energy and inspiration that  bespeaks an almost missionary vocation for cinema. (Though music figures  prominently in nearly every film on my list, I am surprised that this is as  close as I come to recommending a musical, of the \u201cputting on a show\u201d\u009d sub-genre.)<\/p>\n<p><em>Land of Plenty<\/em> (2004). Well known  for his use of avant-garde rock in his soundtracks, German director Wim Wenders  here draws his title and (one guesses) considerable inspiration from a Leonard  Cohen\/Sharon Robinson song. Like a number of independent films of its era (<em>Bamboozled,<\/em> among them), <em>Land of Plenty <\/em>was shot digitally, and  its main characters\u2014Michelle Williams as the twenty-something child of  Christian missionaries who returns from Tel-Aviv to Los Angeles to serve at a  homeless shelter while searching for her deceased mother\u2019s brother and John  Diehl as her \u201cscrewed up in \u201d\u02dcnam\u201d\u009d uncle who lives as a freelance, post-9\/11  anti-terror operative\u2014are linked to life as much by technology as by their  fragile family connection. Their shared journey to deliver the body of a  murdered Pakistani immigrant to his Death Valley trailer-park brother sparks a  longer cross-country pilgrimage and yields multiple epiphanies, rendered all  the more moving by the interplay of genuine reverence and Keystone Kops  surrealism.<br \/>\n<a id=\"part3\"><\/p>\n<h3>Part III: Let Us Now Praise Kenneth Turan<\/h3>\n<p><\/a><br \/>\n(by Leland Poague)<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/images5\/rudykenny.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<em>Kenneth Turan with Rudy Rucker in Santa Cruz, 2004. Photo by Patty Williams.<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>To wrap this up, I\u2019ll mention a nice set of movie recommendations  that\u2019s between hard covers. The book is <em>Not to Be Missed<\/em> (Public  Affairs, 2014); its author is Kenneth Turan, a much-honored journalist and  regular NPR film critic whose cultural accomplishments include a mid-1960s  stint as Rudy\u2019s Swarthmore College roommate. <\/p>\n<p>Though Turan\u2019s title evokes the imperative, its subtitle (<em>Fifty-Four  Favorites from a Lifetime of Film<\/em>) and conceptual apparatus appeal to the  inevitable contingency of the exercise. He summarizes the twin purposes of the  volume and of his career in his Introduction: <\/p>\n<p>I write to be a guide for the perplexed (to borrow Maimonides\u2019  wonderful title), to help viewers find films they will love. But writing  reviews soon became more than that. Through focusing intently on what I liked  and disliked, it gradually became a process of finding out what was important  to me on a broader scale. A way to find out, in short, who I am. <\/p>\n<p>My willingness to recommend Turan\u2019s book follows the pattern of  advice mentioned above. Where the film in question is one I know, I have nearly  always found Turan\u2019s analysis engaging and illuminating. Listen to what he has  to say about Buster Keaton\u2019s <em>Sherlock Jr.<\/em>, for example. <\/p>\n<p>No matter what happened to Buster\u2019s character, and extreme  scenarios were his specialty, he never got overly emotional or pleaded for an  audience\u2019s sympathy. Rather, like a comic philosopher of despair, he accepted  the world and his lot in it and tried to make the best of an increasingly  preposterous situation. <\/p>\n<p>That Turan is obviously deeply sympathetic to Keaton and his  character only underscores the poignant sincerity and accuracy of his  description. <\/p>\n<p>Likewise, where the film in question is unfamiliar to me, even  previously unheard of, I have typically found Turan\u2019s thoroughness and  earnestness hopefully encouraging. Not being a big fan of British costume or  heritage films, I have never seen the Merchant-Ivory production of E.M  Forester\u2019s <em>Howards End.<\/em> But Turan has a great line about Emma Thompson\u2019s  performance. \u201cAn actress who can break your heart just by widening her eyes,  Thompson takes over this part totally, and\u2026 manages the extremely difficult  feat of making decency and caring into heroic qualities\u201d\u009d <\/p>\n<p>To the extent that the world on view in the 54 films (or 55 or 56  or 110 films; Turan happily fudges these parameters) under study is a modern  world, busy being born and busy dying too, Turan himself can be described as  heroic in his efforts to cope with, to confront the implications of, the worlds  that we share on film. <\/p>\n<p>Turan aims high, in hoping to encourage others to love the films  he has loved. He describes those films as friends who\u2019ve enriched his life.  There is a risk worth observing here, one that the internet has dangerously  amplified: if you only listen to your friends, only seek out others whose views  agree with yours, those views may become more narrow rather than less so <\/p>\n<p>Turan takes note of a cognate risk, in remarking upon the paradox  whereby his personalizing of the films he writes about is necessary if his  emotions and understanding are to be enlarged. Part of my initial response to <em>Not  to Be Missed<\/em>\u2014or at least to its table of contents\u2014was astonishment at  Turan\u2019s neglect of Alfred Hitchcock and Howard Hawks; without his discussion of  Hitchcock\u2019s <em>Vertigo,<\/em> it would have been a shutout for two directors I  continue to swear by. And whatever happened to Frank Capra? But upon reflection  this difference is as crucial as the fact that we sometimes agree, especially  if the point in question is the value to me of Turan\u2019s recommendations. (Only  one of the films I\u2019ve recommended above\u2014<em>The  Crime of Monsieur Lange<\/em>\u2014appears among Turan\u2019s 110.)<\/p>\n<p>I have seen many of the films Turan writes about in <em>Not to Be  Missed<\/em>. &nbsp;Nonetheless, I found his book exciting and illuminating for  the depths of his insights and the quality of his writing, always thoughtful,  always friendly\u2014and never condescending, either to his readers or his subjects.  He helps make old films new again, as if there were more to be seen than I\u2019d  ever imagined; and he offers approaches to films I haven\u2019t seen that make me  eager to engage them. If you need additional recommendations, I recommend you  start with Ken Turan\u2019s. <\/p>\n<p>In the Preface to his <em>Transreal Trilogy<\/em> (Transreal Books,  2014), Rudy Rucker defines transrealism as \u201cTransmuting your ordinary life into  science fiction.\u201d\u009d&nbsp;As a writer of transreal science fiction, Rudy has few  peers. Among Kenneth Turan\u2019s few peers among critics, I would count Pauline  Kael, Roger Ebert, David Bordwell, Kristin Thompson, and Amy Taubin. <\/p>\n<p>What Rucker and Turan have in common, I want to say, is a knack  for transmuting something ordinary (living a life, going to the movies) into  something wonderful and wonderfully sharable\u2014by finding words that show how  extraordinary the world can be when approached in a spirit of adventure and  receptiveness and love. Thanks, guys. <\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/images5\/izvasebirdofpar.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>And many thanks to Lee for his lovely post! &#8212; RR.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Today\u2019s long post is a guest shot from my old friend Lee Poague. Lee is a consummate movie buff, author of numerous books on Frank Capra, Alfred Hitchcock, Susan Sontag and others&#8230;you can see a list here. Lee Poague on Four Mile Beach north of Santa Cruz, June, 2014. Lee was a professor for many [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5764","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5764","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5764"}],"version-history":[{"count":15,"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5764\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":5779,"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5764\/revisions\/5779"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5764"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5764"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rudyrucker.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5764"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}