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Youth

About three-quarters of the way through Italian writer/director Paolo Sorrentino’s Youth, Fred Ballinger (Michael Caine) and his best friend Mick Boyle (Harvey Keitel) watch a totally nude Miss Universe (Madalina Diana Ghenea) slowly enter a hot tub. “Who is THAT?” Fred says.

“God,” Mick says.

Waiting to meet God is the primary theme of Youth, which recently took home Best Film, Best Director, and Best Actor for Caine at the European Film Awards. When we meet Fred, the retired composer is meeting with a representative of Queen Elizabeth, who is offering him knighthood if he will only agree to come out of retirement and conduct his composition “Simple Songs” in a command performance. He refuses, citing “personal reasons.” He and Mick are staying at an ultra posh resort in the Swiss Alps that cinematographer Luca Bigazzi has a grand old time filming. But the constantly excellent food, happy-ending massages, and mediocre entertainment somehow only add to the funereal atmosphere. The name of the sculpture in the hotel lobby says it all: Alpine Prison. Fred has lost his hunger for creation, and thus his will to live.

Harvey Keitel, and Michael Caine in Youth

Mick, on the other hand, is at the hotel with a staff of writers creating his next film, which he calls “my testament.” His love of creation is intact, and that keeps his mind young, even if he can’t get it up for the fetching young prostitute who haunts the lobby.

Beside the ace cinematography, Caine and Keitel’s buddy routine is the best thing about Youth. Mick tries to puncture Fred’s growing cynicism and apathy, while Fred works hard at doing absolutely nothing. Sorrentino’s screenplay bounces the pair off of an unlikely group of well-heeled hotel guests, none of whom seem to be having any fun whatsoever. Fred’s daughter, Lena (Rachel Weisz), endures the dissolution of her marriage. Actor Jimmy Tree (Paul Dano) is sullenly preparing for a role in a historical drama that, when revealed, gets the film’s biggest laugh. The once-youthful superstar footballer Maradona (Roly Serrano) is now morbidly obese, but still mobbed by fans. Veteran actress Brenda Morel (Jane Fonda) arrives late in the action to drop some plot bombshells and throw the most epic fit of the 2015 film season.

Caine glides through the loose collection of vignettes like some kind of ghost who hasn’t gotten around to dying yet. The slow revelation of the source of his pain is masterful and depends almost entirely on Caine’s facial control. Some of Sorrentino’s digressions work, and some of them don’t. The dialogue is occasionally clunky in an English-as-a-second-language kind of way. But as long as Caine and Keitel are around, ogling the young women and antagonizing the bored rich, Youth remains compelling.

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Time Warp Drive-In: Shocktober

October is prime time for the Time Warp Drive-In. The four films curators Mike McCarthy and Matt Martin have chosen represent the best of the self-aware, gonzo horror films of the past 30 years.

Sam Raimi’s classic Army of Darkness, the third installment in the Evil Dead trilogy, is something of a career high even for the guy who made Spider-Man. Bruce Campbell’s buffoonish hero Ash picks up where he was left at the end of Evil Dead 2: transported back in time to the Dark Ages. After fast talking his way out of execution by the locals (whom he calls “primitive screwheads”), the everyman is enlisted to retrieve the fabled Necronomicon and end the demon scourge. Naturally, he screws up and unleashes the titular army of undead warriors, which he must then defeat with cheeky one liners and a chainsaw hand.

Bruce Campbell in Army of Darkness

Speaking of chainsaws, Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 will also be featured in the Shocktober lineup. Tobe Hopper returned to the film that made him famous in 1986 with the Golan/Globus-produced Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. Leatherface and his mutant redneck family return, but this time instead of viscreal hick horror, there are dashes of slapstick and gallons of blood. Hopper pioneered not only the verite horror movie, but also the kind of self-aware comic horror that has become an integral part of the genre.

The third Shocktober film is House of 1,000 Corpses, rock-star-turned-horror-director Rob Zombie’s directoral debut. The now legendary 2003 gore fest is not the greatest movie ever made, but it’s proof that stylish violence will always keep the seats filled.

Finally, From Dusk Til Dawn rolls at midnight. For my money, this is Robert Rodriguez’s masterpiece. Written by Quentin Tarantino, the characters (one of whom is played by Tarantino, in his best acting role) are unusually well developed for a vampire blood fest. The acting firepower rivals the onscreen gunplay, with George Clooney, Harvey Keitel, Juliette Lewis, Salma Hayek, Tom Savini, and Cheech Marin mixing it up in a Mexican vampire nest. Stay late for this minor classic of the 1990s.