Film Review: In The Line of Fire (dir by Wolfgang Petersen)


Earlier today, it was announced that director Wolfgang Petersen had passed away.  He was 81 years old and had been suffering from pancreatic cancer.  Though Petersen started his career making films in his native Germany (and his 1981 film, Das Boot, remains the most Oscar-nominated German film of all time), Petersen eventually relocated to Los Angeles and established himself as a very successful director of thrillers and star-filled action films.

Last month, I watched one of Petersen’s films.  First released in 1993, In The Line of Fire stars Clint Eastwood as Frank Horrigan.  Frank is a veteran member of the Secret Service, still serving at a time when almost all of his colleagues have either retired or died.  When we first meet Frank, he and his new partner, Al (Dylan McDermott), are arresting a gang of counterfeiters and Frank (and the then 63 year-old Eastwood) is proving that he can still take down the bad guys.

But is Frank still up to protecting the President?  Of the agents that were with President Kennedy when he was assassinated in 1963, Frank Horrigan is the last one standing.  He’s the only active secret service agent to have lost a president and he’s haunted by what he sees as being his failure to do his job and the feeling that America has never recovered from Kennedy’s death.  Also obsessed with Frank’s history is a mysterious man who calls himself Booth.  Booth (played by John Malkovich, who received an Oscar nomination for his performance) starts to call Frank.  He informs Frank that he’s planning on assassinating the president, who is currently traveling the country as a part of his reelection bid.  Booth views Frank as being a worthy adversary and Frank, looking for redemption, requests to be returned to the Presidential Protective Division.

While Frank struggles to keep up with both the President and the younger agents, Booth slowly and methodically puts his plan in motion.  He builds his own wooden gun and tries it out on two hunters who are unfortunate enough to stumble across him.  Making a heart-breaking impression in a small role, Patrika Darbo plays the bank teller who, unfortunately, comes a bit too close to uncovering Booth’s secret identity.  Booth is friendly and sometimes apologetic and he quickly shows that he’s willing to kill anyone.  It’s a testament to both the skill of Malkovich’s performance and Petersen’s direction that the audience comes to believe that there’s a better than average chance that Booth will succeed.  He just seems to have such a strong belief in himself that the audience knows that he’s either going to kill the President or that he’s going to willingly die trying.

Meanwhile, no one believes in Frank.  The White House Chief of Staff (Fred Dalton Thompson, later to serve in the Senate and run for President himself) views Frank as being a nuisance.  The head of the detail (Gary Cole) thinks that Frank should be put out to pasture.  Only Lilly Raines (Rene Russo), another agent, seems to have much faith in Frank.  While Frank is hunting Booth, he falls in love with Lilly and she with him.  (Fortunately, even at the age of 63, Eastwood still had enough of his old Dirty Harry charisma that the film’s love story is credible, despite the age difference between him and Russo.)  The hunt for Booth reawakens something in Frank.  Just as Booth has a psychological need to be pursued and challenged, Frank needs an enemy to which he can re-direct all of his guilt and self-loathing.  Frank becomes a stand-in for everyone who fears that, because of one particular incident or tragedy, America will never regain the strength and promise that it once had.  (In Frank’s case, that strength is symbolized by his idealized memories of JFK.)  Defeating Booth is about more than just saving America.  It’s about redeeming history.

It all makes for an very exciting thriller, one in which Eastwood’s taciturn style of acting is perfectly matched with Malkovich’s more cerebral approach.  Just as the two characters are challenging each other, Eastwood and Malkovich also seem to challenge each other as actors and it leads to both men giving wonderful performances.  Wolfgang Petersen not only does a good job with the action scenes but also with generating some very real suspense.  The scene in which Malkovich attempts to assemble his gun under a table is a masterclass in directing and evidence that Petersen had not only watched Hitchcock’s films but learned from them as well.

As directed by Petersen and performed by Malkovich and Eastwood, In The Line of Fire emerges as a film that was more than just an exciting thriller.  It was also a mediation on aging, guilt, love, redemption, and the national traumas of the past.  It’s a film that stands up to multiple rewatches and as a testament to the talent of the man who directed it.

AMV of the Day: Want To Be My Soldier? (Hakuouki)


It’s the third week of the month, which sounds like just the right time to share an AMV of the Day!

Anime: Hakuouki

Song: Soldier (by Samantha Jade)

Creator: Panta Na Xamogelas (please subscribe to this creator’s channel)

Past AMVs of the Day

 

Music Video of the Day: Nothin’ But A Good Time by Poison (1988, directed by Marc Reshovsky)


“You’re getting paid to wash dishes … not listen to that … rock and roll music!”

This video could properly be called Washing Dishes With Poison.  When you wash dishes with KISS, the dishes don’t get done and your boss yells at you.  When you wash dishes with Poison, the dishes not only get one but the boss doesn’t even know what to say when he sees how quickly you did them.  What’s going on in this video?  Did Poison wash the dishes for him?  Is that Poison’s idea of a good time?

This video was directed by Marc Reshovsky, who is also credited as being the director of photography on videos by Seal, kd lang, Billy Joel, and Ice Cube.  Those are all talented artist but none of them will wash your dishes.

Enjoy!

In The Line of Duty: Blaze Of Glory (1997, directed by Dick Lowry)


In 1997, NBC’s series of In The Line of Duty movie went out in a blaze of glory with Lori Loughlin and Bruce Campbell!

Lori and Bruce play Jill and Jeff Erickson, an attractive couple who finance their perfect life by robbing banks.  Jeff wears an obvious fake beard and, because he’s played by Bruce Campbell, it is easy to initially treat his crime spree as being a big joke.  Jeff and Jill use their money to buy a big house and to open up their own used bookstore.  Their robberies start to get bigger and more elaborate and Jill goes from being a passive observer to an active participant.  Jill gets such a rush from the robberies that she can’t stop.  While the press treats the two of them like a modern day Bonnie and Clyde, FBI agent Tom LaSalle (Bradley Whitford) tries to bring them to justice before someone gets killed.

Blaze of Glory is based on a true story.  The crime spree of Jill and Jeff Erickson also inspired another film, John McNaughton’s Normal Life, which starred Luke Perry as Jeff and Ashley Judd as Jill.  Normal Life is told almost entirely from the point of view of the bank robbers while Blaze of Glory, like all of the In The Line of Duty movies, is firmly on the side of law enforcement.  Both films tell the same story and stay fairly close to the facts of the case but it’s interesting to see how behavior that was presented as being romantic and tragic in Normal Life is portrayed as being dangerous and arrogant in Blaze of Glory.

Bruce Campbell and Lori Loughlin are the two main reasons to watch Blaze of Glory.  Campbell plays Jeff Erickson as being a slightly smarter version of Ash.  Jeff may enjoy running his used bookstore and talking to people about literature but he simply cannot stay out of trouble.  He has the confidence necessary to rob a bank but he’s also so reckless that he doesn’t think much about what he’s going to do after he puts on his fake beard and fires his gun at the ceiling.  Lori Loughlin, having finally escaped from Full House, gives an uninhibited and sexy performance as Jill, who is never happier than when she’s helping her husband to rob a bank.  Eventually, she turns out to be just as reckless as her husband and even more willing to fight her way out of a police chase.  Campbell and Louglin are so good that it’s too bad that half of the movie is Bradley Whitford as the lead FBI agent and Brad Sullivan as his father.

After sitting out Kidnapped, Dick Lowry returns to the director’s chair for the final In The Line of Duty and it’s one of the best of the series.  The action scenes are exciting and Campbell and Loughlin burn up the screen.  Blaze of Glory was the finale of In The Line of Duty but what a way to go!

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special Nicolas Roeg Edition


4 Or More Shots From 4 Or More Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!

Today would have been the 94th birthday of the great and enigmatic director, Nicolas Roeg.  As both a cinematographer and a director, Roeg was responsible for some of the most visually striking films ever made.  Today, we honor his legacy with….

4 Shots From 4 Nicolas Roeg Films

Walkabout (1971, dir by Nicolas Roeg, DP: Nicolas Roeg)

Don’t Look Now (1973, dir by Nicolas Roeg, DP: Anthony Richmond)

The Man Who Fell To Earth (1976, dir by Nicholas Roeg, DP: Anthony Richmond)

Insignificance (1985, dir by Nicolas Roeg, DP: Peter Hannan)

Live Tweet Alert: Come Watch Steele Justice With #MondayActionMovie


As some of our regular readers undoubtedly know, I am involved in a few weekly live tweets on twitter.  I host #FridayNightFlix every Friday, I co-host #ScarySocial on Saturday, and I am one of the five hosts of #MondayActionMovie!  Every week, we get together.  We watch a movie.  We tweet our way through it.

Tonight, for #MondayActionMovie, we are watching Steele Justice!  Selected and hosted by @Bunnyhero, Steele Justice features the one and only Martin Kove as John Steele!  According to the film’s poster, “you don’t recruit him, you unleash him!”  Also according to the poster, John Steele has been unleashed to take on the Vietnamese mafia.  The film co-stars Sela Ward and Ronny Cox.  That means that the film features at least three actors who have appeared in films nominated for Best Picture!  So, it has to be good, right?  

That’s really all I know about Steele Justice.  I plan to find out more tonight and I invite you to join me.  If you want to join us, just hop onto twitter, start the film at 8 pm et, and use the #MondayActionMovie hashtag!  I’ll be there tweeting and I imagine some other members of the TSL Crew will be there as well.  It’s a friendly group and welcoming of newcomers so don’t be shy.  And a review of this film will probably end up on this site at some point this week.

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Wake Up Dead by Megadeth (1987, directed by Penelope Spheeris)


In this video, Megadeth performs behind a wire fence while their fans attempt to get to the band.  It doesn’t have much to do about the song, which is about a man sneaking back into his house after cheating on his girlfriend.  But it probably is a fair representation of what it was like to be in a popular thrash metal band in the 80s.

Directing this video was Penelope Spheeris, who has previously celebrated metal in the documentary, The Decline of Wester Civilization Part II.  Spheeris would later direct the film for which she is best remembered, Wayne’s World.

Enjoy!

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 8/8/22 — 8/14/22


Never underestimate the importance of getting away from everything, even if just for a few days.

(I imagine that may seem a strange thing to say in a post that’s illustrated with the poster for the Evil Dead remake but the mistake in Evil Dead was not going to the cabin.  The mistake was reading the obviously demonic book.)

Here’s what I watched, read, and listened to this week:

Films I Watched:

  1. Capricorn One (1977)
  2. Evil Dead (2013)
  3. Eye For An Eye (1996)
  4. The Immortal (1969)
  5. Operation Mincemeat (2022)
  6. Running Red (1999)

Televisions Shows I Watched:

  1. The Bachelorette
  2. Better Call Saul
  3. Big Brother
  4. The Challenge
  5. Inspector Lewis
  6. Mike Judge’s Beavis and Butt-Head

Books I Read:

  1. Welcome to Dunder Mifflin (2022) by Brian Baumgartner and Ben Silverman

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Avril Lavigne
  2. Bob Dylan
  3. Britney Spears
  4. Christina Aguilera
  5. Coldplay
  6. Crud
  7. David Bowie
  8. Hilary Duff
  9. Kelly Clarkson
  10. Kid Rock
  11. Lynard Skynard
  12. Moby
  13. Muse
  14. Olivia Newton-John
  15. The Prodigy

News From Last Week:

  1. Olivia Newton-John, singer and actress, dies at 73
  2. Actress Anne Heche dies at 53
  3. Actress Denise Dowse Dies at 64
  4. Actress Robyn Griggs Dies at 49
  5. Actor Manuel Ojeda Dies at 81
  6. Author Salman Rushdie stabbed on lecture stage in New York
  7. Police investigate threat to JK Rowling over Salman Rushdie tweet
  8. Salman Rushdie, Badly Wounded, Is Off Ventilator and Starting to Recover
  9. Oberlin College’s ‘Professor of Peace’ endorsed fatwa to murder Salman Rushdie
  10. FBI Forensics Report Determines That Alec Baldwin Pulled The Trigger On Rust Set

Links From Last Week:

  1. Touring Burgundy’s Legendary J. Drouhin Wine Cave! Wild Mold Storage!
  2. The World’s Common Tater’s Week in Books, Movies, and TV 8/12/22
  3. There’s A “Mole” In the Comics Scene

Links From The Site:

  1. Erin shared Panama Threat, Rocket to the Morgue, Sports Action, Excitement, Mistress of the Wynds, Ziegfeld Follies, and Argosy!
  2. Erin profiled John A. Coughlin!
  3. Erin reviewed Girls of Summer!
  4. Case shared My Dolphin!
  5. Jeff shared music videos from Europe, Cinderella, Ratt, Metallica, Iron Maiden, and Slayer!
  6. Jeff reviewed Crafty’s Escape Room, Kidnapped, Hunt For Justice, The Price of Vengeance, Street War, Mob Justice, Manhunt in the Dakotas, and A Cop for the Killing!
  7. Jeff shared a great moment in television history and a great moment in comic book history!
  8. I shared a music from Olivia Newton-John!
  9. I paid tribute to Wim Wenders, Alfred Hitchcock, and Sam Fuller!
  10. I shared scenes from Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Sunset Boulevard, Billy Jack, and Grease!
  11. I reviewed Stud Service, The Fallout, Mike Nichols: A Life, Operation Mincemeat, Lucy, Death’s Running Mate, The Stranger, two books about The Office, Running Red, Born to Kill, Fortress: Sniper’s Eye, My Ox is Broken!, and Minamata!
  12. I shared my week in television and an AMV of the Day!

More From Us:

  1. At Days Without Incident, Leonard shared Storybook Love!
  2. At her photography site, Erin shared Statue, Statue 2, Statue 3, Statue 4, Statue 5, Statue 6, and Statue 7!  (I’m picking up on a theme here.)
  3. I reviewed Big Brother for the Big Brother Blog!
  4. At my music site, I shared songs from: Avril Lavigne, Coldplay, Britney Spears, Hilary Duff, Christina Aguilera, Kelly Clarkson, and Muse!
  5. At SyFy Designs, I shared: Just A Day And A Half To Go, Kindness All Around, and At The Lake!

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