Film Review: Frances (dir by Graeme Clifford)


Frances Farmer is one of the more tragic figures to come out of Hollywood’s Golden Age.

A talented and beautiful actress, Frances Farmer came out to Hollywood in the 30s and quickly developed a reputation for being difficult.  She was politically outspoken at a time when stars were expected to either be apolitical or unquestioningly patriotic.  She criticized scripts.  She argued with directors and studio heads.  She had a well-publicized affair with communist playwright Clifford Odets and she also had numerous run-ins with the police.  Some say that she was alcoholic.  Some say that she was bipolar.  Some say that she had a mental collapse as the result of the pressure that her mother put on her to succeed.  Frances Farmer ended up in mental institution, where she was subjected to shock therapy.  After she was released, her film career was basically over, though she did end up hosting a local television program.  She died in 1970, reportedly alone and struggling to make ends meet.  In a posthumously published autobiography called Will There Ever Be A Morning?, she wrote that she was beaten, sexually abused, and eventually given a lobotomy while she was institutionalized.  Over the years, there’s been a lot of doubt about whether or not Farmer was actually lobotomized but there is no doubt that Farmer was a woman who was ultimately punished for being ahead of her time.  Frances Farmer refused to conform to the safe manufactured image that Hollywood prepared for her and, for that, she was nearly destroyed.

The 1983 film, Frances, is a biopic of Frances Farmer, starring Jessica Lange as Frances and Kim Stanley as her domineering mother.  It opens with Frances writing a school essay about why she’s an atheist and it ends with her smiling blankly at a television camera, her independent spirit broken by a lobotomy.  In between, we watch as Frances goes to Hollywood and has a self-destructive affair with Clifford Odets (played by Jeffrey DeMunn).  The infamous moment when Frances was dragged out of a courtroom while screaming at the judge is recreated and Frances’s time in the institution is depicted in Hellish detail.

We also learn about Frances’s relationship with a communist writer named Alvin York (Sam Shepard).  It seems like whenever Frances needs to be rescued or just needs someone to talk to, Alvin York pops up.  In fact, you could almost argue that York pops up too often.  Alvin York was a fictional character, one who was apparently created in order for audiences to have someone to relate to.  It’s unfortunate that the film felt that the audience would only be able to relate to Frances if it viewed her life through the eyes of a fictional character because York’s character is a bit of a distraction.  Sam Shepard does a good job of playing him and I certainly wasn’t shocked to learn that Sam Shepard and Jessica Lange were romantically involved during the filming of Frances (and for a long time afterwards) because Lange and Shepard do have a very real chemistry.  However, from a narrative point of view, Alvin York only works as a character if one accepts that he’s a figment of Frances’s imagination.  The film’s insistence that York is an actual person who just happens to show up at every important moment of Frances’s life just doesn’t work.

What does work is Jessica Lange’s performance.  Lange is amazing in the role of Frances, whether she’s playing Frances as a hopeful idealist, an out-of-control rebel, or, tragically, as a glass-eyed zombie who has been reduced to appearing on television and assuring audiences that her rebellious days are over.  Lange was nominated for Best Actress for Frances.  She lost to Meryl Streep for Sophie’s Choice.  I’ve seen Sophie’s Choice and Meryl was good but Jessica was better.

Frances was originally offered to David Lynch.  He turned the film down so he could work on Dune and instead, the film was directed by Graeme Clifford, who takes a far more straight-forward approach to the material than Lynch would have.  Still, Lynch’s interest in Frances Farmer would later lead to him working on stories that centered around a “woman in trouble.”  One of those stories became Twin Peaks.  Another would become Mulholland Drive.

Film Review: Slacker (dir by Richard Linklater)


“Wow,” I thought as I recently rewatched Richard Linklater’s first film, Slacker, “Austin hasn’t changed at all!”

That, of course, isn’t true.  Slacker was filmed in 1990 and first released in 1991.  It’s 20 years old and the entire world — including Texas in general and Austin in specific — has changed quite a bit since then.  Slacker is a film about the people of Austin, following one person and then another as they walk down the streets of Austin and, in classic Linklater fashion, have conversations about everything from sex to pop culture to conspiracy theories.  It’s a film that was made before social media and no one carries a phone with them.  The majority of the people the we meet in Slacker would, today, probably be too busy posting 100-tweet threads to actually get outside and walk around the city.  (And, in the age of social distancing, the idea of walking up to a stranger on the street and having a conversation is not only unthinkable to a lot of people but illegal in some places up north.)  Slacker was also made long before SXSW turned Austin in a national hipster hotspot.  There are definitely hipsters in Slacker but they’re all of the Texas variety, as opposed to the Silicon Valley-on-vacation variety.

That said, Slacker does contain an essential truth about Austin that has never changed.  Austin has always been a town that has welcome the eccentrics, nonconformists, and self-styled intellectuals.  As both the capitol of the greatest state in the union and a college town, Austin has a unique style all of its own.  It’s a place where all of the contradictions of Texas — the fierce independence mixed with a strong belief in tradition — meet.  Some people refer to it as being “The People’s Republic of Austin” and the town is considerably more liberal than the rest of the state.  In general, though, Texas liberalism has never been quite as annoying or authoritarian-minded as the rest of America’s liberalism.  There’s a strong Libertarian streak that runs through even the most liberal parts of Texas and it seems somewhat appropriate that Ron Paul makes a cameo appearance of sorts in Slacker:

Slacker is one of those films that’s beloved by film students because it’s very easy to watch it and to think, “Wow, anyone could do that!”  Of course, the truth of the mater is that there is a very definite structure to Slacker.  Despite the way it may occasionally seem, the film is not just a bunch of random footage of people wandering by each other while discussing the Moon landing, the Kennedy assassination, and Madonna’s pap smear.  Instead, each conversation builds on the other until, eventually, Slacker presents a portrait of a community and a generation that has created a culture based on television, movies, and obscure historical references.  Slacker is a film that has been very carefully constructed to appear to be random but there’s a definite structure to it.  The film may look like it was made by someone who just turned on a camera and wandered around for day but Linklater definitely knew what he was doing and I’ve seen enough bad attempts to duplicate Slacker that I can definitely appreciate what Linkler accomplished.

The film, which had a largely nonprofessional cast, is full of interesting and, if you live in Texas, familiar characters.  The bitter hitchhiker, for instance, will be familiar to anyone who has ever had a conversation with an older inhabitant of a college town.  The conspiracy theorist who is writing his own book about the Kennedy assassination can be found in just about every independent bookstore in Texas.  I know people who actually took a class taught by the old man who (foolishly, in my opinion) idolized Leon Czolgosz.  As I said, the film is 20 years old but it captures the essence of Austin so perfectly that it remains timeless.

Slacker was Richard Linklater’s first film.  Appropriately, he’s also the first person to appear in the film and the first one to speak.  (He had a dream while on a bus.)  Linklater has gone on to become one of Texas’s greatest filmmakers.  At a time when cinematic and political conformity is too often celebrated, Linklater remains a unique and authentic voice.

And it all started with a film about Austin, a film called Slacker.

Music Video of the Day: Living In A Ghost Town by The Rolling Stones (2020, directed by Joe Connor)


This may be the first music video of the COVID-19 era.

This song was recorded about a year ago, for the Rolling Stones’s next album.  That’s a project that the Stones are still working on but, over the past month, Living In A Ghost Town has suddenly become very relevant.  This video was shot around the ghost towns in which we are all currently living.

Just think, all of the new and edgy bands haven’t had anything to say about the coronavirus.  The Rolling Stones had a lot to say and that’s why they’re still the world’s greatest rock and roll band.

Enjoy!

Lisa’s Week in Review: 4/20/20 — 04/26/20


It was another slow week as we wait out the lockdown.  On the plus side, I watched a lot of movies.

“But, Lisa, where are the reviews?”  Oh, don’t you worry.  The reviews are coming….

Films I Watched:

  1. Alexander (2004)
  2. The American Friend (1976)
  3. Angel, Angel, Down We Go (1969)
  4. The Boy With Green Hair (1948)
  5. The Cool Ones (1967)
  6. Cover Me, Babe (1970)
  7. Day of Anger (1967)
  8. The Enigma of Kaspar Hasuer (1974)
  9. Esther and the King (1960)
  10. Executive Action (1973)
  11. Fingers (1978)
  12. The Giant Spider Invasion (1975)
  13. God’s Gun (1975)
  14. Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)
  15. Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst (2004)
  16. His Name Was King (1971)
  17. Klute (1971)
  18. Palo Alto (2013)
  19. The Panic in Needle Park (1971)
  20. The Passenger (1975)
  21. Peter: The Redemption (2016)
  22. Point Blank (1967)
  23. Police Academy (1984)
  24. Police Academy 2: Their First Assignment (1985)
  25. Report to the Commissioner (1975)
  26. Three (1969)
  27. The Vanishing (1988)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. 60 Days In
  2. America Says
  3. American Idol
  4. Bar Rescue
  5. Bewitched
  6. The Bold and the Beautiful
  7. Brooklyn 9-9
  8. Community
  9. Days of Our Lives
  10. Degrassi
  11. General Hospital
  12. Ghost Whisperer
  13. I Dream of Jeannie
  14. It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia
  15. King of the Hill
  16. Lotsa Luck
  17. Medium
  18. Monk
  19. The Office
  20. The Paul Lynde Show
  21. Seinfeld
  22. Survivor 40
  23. Veep
  24. Wings
  25. The Young and the Restless

Books I Read:

  1. Cthulhurotica (2011) by Carrie Cuinn
  2. Zodiac (1986) by Robert Graysmith
  3. Zodiac Unmasked (2002) by Robert Graysmith

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Above and Beyond
  2. Adi Ulmansky
  3. Armin van Buuren
  4. Avicii
  5. Big Data
  6. Blanck Mass
  7. Cedric Gervais
  8. Charli XCX
  9. Chromatics
  10. Coldplay
  11. Crud
  12. The Crystal Method
  13. Daft Punk
  14. David Bowie
  15. Deadmau5
  16. Dillon Francis
  17. DJ Snake
  18. EDEN
  19. Emerson Lake Palmer
  20. Fakear
  21. Goblin
  22. Icona Pop
  23. INXS
  24. Jakalope
  25. Jane’s Addiction
  26. Joel Plaskett
  27. Judy Talk
  28. Junkie XL
  29. Kedr Livanskiy
  30. Kelly Clarkson
  31. Muse
  32. Nine Inch Nails
  33. Nouveau Lounge
  34. Phantogram
  35. PVRIS
  36. The Robber Who Robbed The Town
  37. Saint Motel
  38. Selena Gomez
  39. Steve Aoki
  40. Talking Heads
  41. Tears for Fears
  42. Tiesto
  43. Universal Honey
  44. UPSAHL

News From Last Week:

  1. The Batman,’ ‘Sopranos’ Movie Get New Release Dates
  2. California Law Limiting Independent Contractors is Hindering Coronavirus Response, Experts Say
  3. CBS Soaps to Air Vintage ‘Theme Weeks’ After New Episodes Run Out Thursday
  4. ‘Venom’ Sequel Gets Official Title; Delayed until Summer 2021
  5. ‘In The Heights’ Dances Into Summer 2021
  6. De Blasio’s social distancing tip line flooded with penis photos, Hitler memes
  7. Cheers Virtual Cinema! Minnesota Film Festivals go online
  8. Alleged Katie Hill lover speaks out: ‘I’m innocent, broken and suicidal’
  9. Sony’s ‘Spider-Man’ Sequels and ‘Doctor Strange 2’ Delayed Again

Links From Last Week:

  1. Celebrities and the Media Shouldn’t Sneer at Coronavirus Lockdown Protesters
  2. COUNTERPOINT: There’s No Crying In Journalism
  3. I Lost My Tour, My Income & My Friend To Coronavirus. I Don’t Know What’s Next.
  4. Protests show ‘two Americas’ — those who lost their jobs and those still getting paid
  5. Chris Cuomo’s Coronavirus Performance Shows That He’s An Insecure Blowhard
  6. Do we really need a Hunger Games prequel movie?

Links From The Site:

  1. Erin shared The Phantom Detective Covers of Robert Bonfils and Leg Artist, A Door In Texas, Tobacco Road, A World I Never Made, A Swell-Looking Girl, Confessions of Dime Hall Dance Queen, and Shameless Playgirl!
  2. Jeff shared a music video from Talking Heads and reviewed Now They Call Him Sacramento, Day of Anger, God’s Gun, His Name Was King, Dangerous Indiscretion, Police Academy, and Police Academy 2!
  3. I shared music videos from The Chemical Brothers, Joel Plaskett, Chromatics, Chromatics again, Fakear, and EDEN!  I also wished happy birthdays to Edie Sedgwick, Jack Nicholson, Sheryl Lee, and Al Pacino!
  4. Ryan reviewed Tears of the Leather-Bound Saints, Explosive Comic, Flop Sweat, and Mud Thief!

More From Us:

  1. I reviewed the latest episode of Survivor for Reality TV Chat Blog!
  2. At Days Without Incident, Leonard shared songs from The Cure and Prince!
  3. Ryan has a Patreon!  Please consider subscribing!
  4. At her photography site, Erin shared: Talk, Chair and Ladder, Spiraling, Diamond Dyes, Backyard Flowers, Bricks, and Table in the Distance!
  5. At Pop Politics, Jeff shared: Mike Bloomberg Spent How Much?, Today’s Lesson: Never Tweet, and Lockdown Journal 4-20-20 and 4-22-20!
  6. At my music site, I shared songs from David Bowie, Charli XCX, Judy Talk, Chromatics, Coldplay, PVRIS, and Joel Plaskett!

Want to see what I did last week?  Click here!

Police Academy 2: Their First Assignment (1985, directed by Jerry Paris)


In an unnamed city that is probably meant to be Los Angeles but which looks like Toronto, a criminal gang known as the Scullions have taken over the 16th precinct.  Led by the loud, marble-mouthed Zed (Bobcat Goldthwait), the Scullions are terrorizing the citizens and harassing one shop owner, Carl Sweetchuck (Tim Kazurinsky), in particular.  The captain of the 16th precinct, Pete Lassard (Howard Hesseman), calls his brother, Eric Lassard (George Gaynes), and asks for the best cadets to have recently graduated from the police academy.

Carey Mahoney (Steve Guttenberg) and a few other of the cadets from the first Police Academy movie end up in the 16th.  Tackleberry (David Graf) is there and so is accident-prone Douglas Fackler (Bruce Mahler).  Bubba Smith is back as Hightower and so is Michael Winslow, the human sound effects machine.  They’re determined to help Lassard’s brother but it’s not going to be easy because they have to work with Lt. Mauser (Art Metrano) who is basically a dick who wants to be captain.  Mauser is exactly like Harris from the first film, except his name is Mauser and, instead of getting his head stuck up a horse’s ass, he gets his hands super-glued to his head.

Police Academy 2 is less raunchy than the first film but still not quite as family friendly as the films that would follow.  There’s still one f-bomb dropped and a few adult jokes, as if the film wasn’t fully ready to admit that it was destined to become associated with juvenile viewers who would laugh at almost anything involving a bodily function.  There is one funny moment where Steve Guttenberg goes undercover to join Zed’s gang, mostly because he’s Steve Guttenberg and he’s even less believable as a gang member than he was as a cop.  The closest thing that movie has to a highlight is Bobcat Goldthwait’s manic turn as Zed and Tim Kazurinsky’s desperation as he watches his store get repeatedly destroyed.  Tackleberry also gets an amusing romantic subplot, where he meets a police woman (Colleen Camp) who loves guns almost as much he does.  Unfortunately, Tackleberry’s romance gets pushed to the side by all of the gang activity.

Police Academy 2 is stupid but, depending on how much tolerance you have for Bobcat Goldthwait, sometimes funny.  It’s not as “good” as the first film but it’s still better than most of what would follow.  Speaking of which, tomorrow, I will be reviewing the first Police Academy film to get a PG-rating, Police Academy 3: Back in Training.

Music Video Of The Day: Sax and Violins by Talking Heads (1991, directed by ????)


“I wrote the words later for the opening scene of Wim Wenders’Until the End of the World. The movie is supposed to take place in the year 2000, so I spent a lot of time trying to image music of the near future: post-rock sludge with lyrics sponsored by Coke and Pepsi? Music created by machines with human shouts of agony and betrayal thrown in? Faux Appalachian ballads, the anti-tech wave? The same sounds and licks from the 60s and 70s regurgitated yet again by a new generation of samplers? The Milli Vanilli revival? Rappin’ politicos… sell your soul to the beat, y’all? Well, it was daunting… so I figured, hell with it, I’d imagine Talking Heads doing a reunion LP in the year 2000, and them sounding just like they used to.”

— David Byrne on Sax and Violins

Sax and Violins was one of Talking Heads’s final hits before the band broke up in 1991.  It was also one of their final videos and it seems appropriate that the song sounds like both a warning and a celebration.  Whenever I hear “Mom and Pop, they will fuck you up,” I wonder if that was a description of the band’s inner dynamic, which had become Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz vs David Byrne by the time of the time of the band’s break-up.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the video is all David Byne, with the band’s lead singer singing the song with his trademark look of detachment on his face.

Enjoy!

Police Academy (1984, directed by Hugh Wilson)


God help us, it has come to this.  After a month and a half being locked down, Lisa and I watched the first two Police Academy movies last night.

The first Police Academy takes place in an unnamed city that appears to be in California.  Due to a shortage of officers, the mayor has announced that the police academy will now accept anyone who wants to apply, regardless of their physical or mental condition.  Naturally, this leads to a collection of misfits applying.  Martinet Lt. Harris (G.W. Bailey) is determined to force all of them to drop out of the academy and he has a point because I wouldn’t trust Michael Winslow’s human sound effects guy to investigate any crimes that were committed in my neighborhood.  What’s he going to do?  Make silly noises while I’m trying to figure out who stole my car?

The leader of the recruits is Carey Mahoney (Steve Guttenberg).  Mahoney is being forced to attend the academy because otherwise, he’ll have to go to jail for disturbing the peace.  Police Academy is a film that asks you to believe that a character played by Steve Guttenberg has not only frequently been in trouble with the law but would also make a good cop. Guttenberg doesn’t really do a bad job as Mahoney.  He’s a likable actor, even if his filmography has more duds than hits.  But he’s still miscast in a role that demands someone like Bill Murray, who could be both tough and funny.

The other recruits include Bubba Smith as Hightower and David Graf as the insane gun nut, Tackleberry.  Kim Cattrall is the rich girl who wants to be a cop and who falls in love with Mahoney.  George Gaynes is Commandant Lassard, who is out-of-it but not as out-of-it as he would be in the sequels.

You have to wonder how many parents, in the late 80s and early 90s, allowed their children to rent the R-rated Police Academy from the local video store without realizing the the first Police Academy is considerably more raunchy than the later sequels.  How did mom and dad react when they walked into the room and discovered their children watching Georgina Spelvin giving George Gaynes a blow job from underneath a podium?  Or how about the scene where recruit George Martin (Andrew Rubin) is spied having a threesome in the girl’s dorm?  The first Police Academy film is definitely made from the same mold as Animal House, Caddyshack, and Stripes.  It’s just not as funny as any of those films.

However, it is funnier than every Police Academy film that followed it.  There’s enough solid laughs to make the first Police Academy fun in a stupid way.  For instance, just about every scene involving accident-prone Cadet Fackler (Bruce Mahler) was funny.  Bubba Smith gets a lot of laughs just by being Bubba Smith in a stupid movie.  It’s also hard not to love it when Cadet Hooks (Marion Ramsey) yelled, “Don’t move, Dirtbag!”  Hell, I even laughed at the sound effects guy once or twice.

All of the Police Academy films are now on Netflix.  Tomorrow, we’ll take a look at Police Academy 2: Their First Assignment.

Scenes That I Love: Michael Gets Revenge on Sollozzo in The Godfather (Happy birthday, Al Pacino!)


Since today is Al Pacino’s birthday, it only seems right to share a classic scene from The Godfather.

In the scene below, which is perfectly directed by Francis Ford Coppola, Michael proves that he truly is a Corleone.  Am I the only one who yelled, “Don’t forget to drop the gun!,” the first time that I saw this scene?

Amazingly enough, Coppola had to fight to cast Al Pacino as Michael.  The studio wanted him to go with a big star and Pacino had only made two previous films.  (Pacino was also felt to be too short and, oddly, too “Italian-looking” to play the role.)  The studio wanted Coppola to cast Robert Redford, Ryan O’Neal, Jack Nicholson, James Caan, or maybe even Warren Beatty in the role.  Fortunately, both Coppola and Marlon Brando fought for Pacino.  As Brando explained it, any son of his was going to be a brooder and that description fit Pacino perfectly.

Happy birthday, Al Pacino!  Here’s to many happy returns!