This week – a thoughtful swords-and-sorcery fantasy and a spectacular misfire of an art movie. Plus my favorite film noir femme fatale.
IN THEATERS
The Green Knight: Dev Patel plays Sir Gawain of Arthurian legend in a movie more about a test of character than it is about a heroic quest. Thoughtful and character-driven – and great special effects, too.
Annette: This passionate and inventive art house musical is doomed by a flawed screenplay, bad pacing and a creepy puppet baby.
Also in theaters:
- Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain: Bad ass romantic. Best Movies of 2021 – So Far.
- Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised): concert with context. In theaters and streaming on Hulu. Best Movies of 2021 – So Far. Still in theaters, but getting harder to find.
- Casanova, Last Love: The seducer, seduced.
- Zola: the road trip is not what it seems, (and neither is this movie).
- In the Heights: Vibrant, earnest and perfect for this moment. Also streaming on HBO Max. Still in theaters, but getting harder to find.
ON VIDEO
The most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE:
- Riders of Justice: Thriller, comedy and much, much more. It’s the year’s best movie so far. Amazon, AppleTV, Vudu and YouTube. #1 on my Best Movies of 2021 – So Far
- Dirt Music: a gorgeous bodice-ripper with a WTF ending. Amazon, AppleTV, YouTube.
- No Sudden Move: Steven Soderbergh’s neo-noir thriller has even more double-crosses than movie stars – and it has plenty of movie stars. HBO Max.
- Neutral Ground: the supremacist legacy of old statues. PBS.
- Mama Weed: it’s always fun when Huppert gets outrageous. Laemmle.
- The Boys in Red Hats: Rorschach America. Laemmle.
- Summertime: no longer invisible and unheard, giving voice through verse. Roxie and Laemmle.
- Truman and Tennessee: An Intimate Conversation: Two gay Southern geniuses, revealing themselves. Roxie and Laemmle.
- The Dry: a mystery as psychological as it is procedural. Amazon, AppleTV, Vudu, YouTube.
- Louder Than Bombs: An intricately constructed family drama. Amazon (included with Prime), Vudu and YouTube.
ON TV
On August 17, Turner Classic Movies celebrates my favorite film noir actress, Gloria Grahame, with several Grahame films, including Human Desire, The Big Heat and In a Lonely Place. Grahame projected an uncanny mixture of sexiness, vulnerability and unpredictability. The fact that Gloria was a Bad Girl in real life doesn’t hurt.
The best of these films is In a Lonely Place, where Grahame falls for the troubled screenwriter Humphrey Bogart, a guy with a MAJOR anger management issue; once she’s hooked, she realizes that he might be a murderer after all… The flashiest Grahame role is in The Big Heat, where she is involved in an act of shocking cruelty and fitting retribution.
But I’m pitching her less well-known turn in Human Desire, where she plays Vicki, married to a brutish wife-beater (Broderick Crawford). Vicki is no saint, and accompanies hubby on a murder and helps him cover his tracks by coming on to a hunky railroad engineer (Glenn Ford). Vicki then suggests to her lover that if only her husband were dead…
Human Desire was directed by the great Fritz Lang, and is a remake of Jean Renoir’s classic La Bête Humaine (The Human Beast) with Jean Gabin and Simone Simon.
I have the Australian version of the Human Desire poster in my living room. The tag line is “She was born to be bad…to be kissed..to make trouble“, and the Aussie authorities have labeled it “NOT SUITABLE FOR CHILDREN“.