Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Crosstown Arts Talks, Don Quixote, and Babylon This Week At The Movies

Adam Driver and José Luis Ferrar in The Man Who Killed Don Quixote

Tonight at 5 PM, Crosstown Arts presents a viewing party for three artists currently in residence. Jia Wang, Chen Wang, and Matteo Servante will deliver artist’s talks on the projects they’ve been working on at the Midtown arts institution.

Then, on Wednesday, April 10, Servante and fellow filmmaker and Crosstown resident Pierre Primetens will screen their work at Crosstown Theater.
courtesy Crosstown Arts

Jia Wang and Chen Wang

It’s the busiest film Wednesday in recent memory, which means some hard choices for Memphis cinephiles. Indie Memphis is presenting Babylon, a legendary “lost” film from 1980. Reggae musician Brinsley Ford stars as a struggling DJ on the mean streets of London at the dawn of the Thatcher era. This was the musical melting pot where reggae and punk met for the first time, where dub made inroads with the mainstream and left an indelible mark on electronic music, and where the inclusiveness of the anti-racist skins and Twin-Tone, second wave ska met the racist National Front. Often, those meetings were in the street, with violence. Rated X in England, and never before released in the United States, despite being hailed at Cannes as one of the greatest English films ever made, Babylon is more relevant than ever. Babylon bows at 7 PM at Studio on the Square, and you can get tickets here, on the Indie Memphis website.

Crosstown Arts Talks, Don Quixote, and Babylon This Week At The Movies (2)

Meanwhile at the Paradiso, another “lost” film. When people tell me they want to be a filmmaker, I often tell them to watch two movies: Raiders Of The Lost Ark: The Adaptation, a fan remake of the Spielberg classic made over the course of a decade in Mississippi by a group of teenagers. That film proves what determination and grit can accomplish. Then, watch Lost In La Mancha, the documentary about director Terry Gilliam’s failed attempt to push through with his film The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, while being beset on all sides by failure, bad luck, and bad faith.

Well, twenty years after Lost In La Mancha, Gilliam, now in his 70s, finally finished The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, with Adam Driver in the lead role. The bits of the completed film in Lost in La Mancha are tantalizing, and now we can see if it’s actually any good. I personally have faith in Gilliam, the former Monty Python animator turn visionary auteur. But we’ll see. Hey, the trailer looks good!

Crosstown Arts Talks, Don Quixote, and Babylon This Week At The Movies

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

This Week At The Cinema: Movie Trivia, Jookin, and White Christmas.

Memphis Majic

Tuesday night at Malco Ridgeway, a Memphis Hometowner documentary gets an encore performance. Memphis Majic, directed by Eddie Bailey, tells the story of jookin, the Memphis street dance that took over the world. If you missed it at Indie Memphis, now is your chance to rectify that situation! Tickets are available now at the indie Memphis website.

This Week At The Cinema: Movie Trivia, Jookin, and White Christmas.

Across town at Crosstown Arts is Indie Memphis’ Annual Holiday Film Trivia Contest. For the first time, I will be co-hosting with the event’s longtime master of questions, Commercial Appeal film critic John Beifuss. There will be prizes for the winning teams, complimentary food and beverages, and other surprises. So, come out and test your knowledge of film past and present! Doors open at 6:30 p.m., with trivia smackdown commencing at 7 p.m.

Here’s a little hint for all you trivia heads out there:

This Week At The Cinema: Movie Trivia, Jookin, and White Christmas. (4)

On Wednesday, December 5th, the Memphis premiere of an acclaimed Japanese anime feature. Mirai is a family story about a boy who is jealous of his new baby sister, until a little time travel intervenes. Director Mamoru Hosoda’s seventh film has been wildly successful in Japan, and will probably be on the short list for animation Oscars in America this year. The film premieres at the Paradiso and Malco Collierville at 7 p.m. on Wednesday.

This Week At The Cinema: Movie Trivia, Jookin, and White Christmas. (2)

Then on Sunday, Dec. 9th, Turner Classic Movies presents the holiday classic White Christmas. The 1954 film was directed by Casablanca helmer Michael Curtiz, and stars Bing Crosby revisiting his Irving Berlin-penned Christmas song from Holiday Inn, which won the Best Song Oscar in 1942. Rosemary Clooney, Danny Kaye, and Vera Ellen round out the cast. The Crosby version of the title song is the best-selling single of all time, with an estimated 50 million units moved worldwide. Here’s a little taste from YouTube, which does not do justice to Paramount’s 70 mm VistaVision image.

This Week At The Cinema: Movie Trivia, Jookin, and White Christmas. (3)

See you at the movies! 

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Jupiter Ascending

Andy and Lana Wachowski’s work represents the epitome of the contemporary blockbuster. In 1999, The Matrix seemed to announce that, in the new century, outer space had been replaced by cyberspace. The aesthetic, like the kids who flocked to see it, embraced anime and gaming influences. Audiences showed up for the two sequels, but many were disappointed. The Matrix was a lean, effective action movie wrapped inside a cyberpunk shell, but Reloaded and Revolutions burrowed into world-building and arcane symbolism. Other blockbusters reacted to the Wachowskis by becoming denser and longer, but no one else could quite match The Matrix‘s power. In a landscape increasingly dominated by remakes and adaptations of pre-existing intellectual properties, it was one of Hollywood’s last original ideas.

Since then, the Wachowskis have had a hand in the creation of one more bona fide classic: 2005’s V for Vendetta. Maybe they haven’t always succeeded, but they have always tried to do something different. Which brings us to 2015, and the Wachowskis’ first attempt at the hoary old genre of space opera.

Jupiter Ascending does not start by introducing us to Jupiter Jones (Mila Kunis), the housecleaner who will turn out to be the most important person on planet Earth. Instead, it begins with world-building. Or in this case, world-destroying. Titus (Douglas Booth) and Kalique (Tuppence Middleton) Abrasax are galactic royalty touring a dead alien world whose empty cities and disused technology are covered with a blue powder, which we learn is all that is left of the planet’s inhabitants, who have been “harvested.” They are interrupted by a holographic message from their older brother Balem (Eddie Redmayne), and from the conversation, it’s clear that potentially murderous sibling rivalry is not just a problem among Earth royals.

Family life is no more harmonious for Jupiter Jones, who, in flashbacks, we see was born to a Russian couple who fled the post-Soviet chaos for America. She’s currently living in a cramped apartment with her aunties and uncles, making a meager living and hating her life. But when her cousin convinces to her to make a quick buck by selling her eggs to a fertility clinic, her planet’s perilous condition is exposed. The Earth is essentially a giant human farm, seeded by the Abrasax clan millions of years ago to provide raw genetic material for the elixir of immortality that gives the royal family their power. Jupiter’s DNA sequence is a “recurrance” of the clan’s recently deceased matriarch, which means that, in the eyes of galactic law, she holds the deed to Earth. Once the powerful siblings Titus, Kalique, and Balem see their valuable livestock holdings are in peril, they send bounty hunters to Earth to find Jupiter. Titus sends Caine Wise (Channing Tatum), a genetically engineered super soldier, to bring her back alive and install her as family matriarch, dethroning his cruel brother Balem in the process.

Like all of the Wachowskis’ work, there are moments of great inventiveness and visual bravado, such as Balem’s spectacular base floating in Jupiter’s Great Red Spot. The film’s pastiche of influences range from Harry Potter to Neon Genesis Evangelion. The set pieces, such as a running dogfight through the towers of Chicago, are the equal of any contemporary blockbuster.

And yet, the whole thing fails to gel on some level. The screenplay is overstuffed with detail, but it holds together better than The Fifth Element, which was clearly an influence. The acting is not bad, with the glaring exception of Best Actor Oscar nominee Redmayne, whose hissing portrayal of Balem is downright laughable. It might sound strange to say, but Jupiter Ascending lacks Keanu Reeves. He might not be the best actor in the world, but he does “movie star” really well, and his chilly aspect was essential to creating the tone of The Matrix. Kunis can hold the screen, but her character is a space princess who serves mostly as a McGuffin. Tatum does yeoman’s work, but he lacks the charisma to carry the movie.

Comparing Jupiter Ascending with Guardians of the Galaxy exposes the Wachowskis’ fatal flaw: They’re just not funny. The Matrix inspired a wave of somber sci fi and fantasy that dominated the 2000s. Guardians‘ lighter tone was a response to a decade of grimdark overkill. There’s evidence that the Wachowskis are aware of the problem in a sequence where Jupiter and a robotic lawyer try to navigate the galactic bureaucracy, which nods to Terry Gilliam’s absurdist Brazil. But it falls flat, and so Jupiter Ascending putters along, spreading its handsome wings but never quite taking off.