Category Archives: Movies

Frances Ha – Hah!

Well, I never. I mean, I never expected this many people to come to our screening of Noah Baumbach’s beautifully realized Frances Ha. I figured that everyone in New York had already seen it, or that most would rather stream it on fucking Netflix*, in the relative safety of their homes, than venture out to MovieNight. I also thought all the macho guys who come here would probably think it a “chick flick”.

Whatever the reason(s), it was frustrating that so few (what I meant by “this many”) of you came this week. Is it something I said/did/didn’t say/didn’t do? I considered taking drastic measures; cutting people off the list, showing martial arts films, giving away free drinks**, even shaving. In the end, I decided that I love MovieNight the way it is. After all, the nine of us who were here for Frances Ha clapped at the end. Enough said.

*I say “fucking Netflix” because even though I love them dearly, I had cleared my entire DVD queue in order to get this Blu-ray on its release date, only to find that they started streaming it right away too. Welcome to the future, Richard.
**Wait a minute… doing that quite a bit already!

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Repo Man. Repo Can. Repo Could. Repo Would.

OK. Notwithstanding this ostentatious post title… what a pleasure it was to see Alex Cox’s quirky masterpiece, Repo Man projected from a Blu-ray disc this week! I remembered its brilliance from umpteen enthralled viewings in London, back in the day, when there was often very little else to do after a night’s pubbing/clubbing than retire to whomever’s gaff and watch a VHS, with some vinegary fish and chips in hand. Ah… the olden days.

After the closing credits finished this week, some crazy dancing ensued, just like in the slightly less olden days. Then, a bit of red wine along and the now-famous combo of  ‘teen Acres Curried Apple Chutney and blue cheese… and then, goodnight. Perfect.

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Knife in the Water. Stays sharp for over fifty years!

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Roman Polanski’s first feature pulled in a sizable crowd this week… including a bunch of newbies who couldn’t believe their luck in discovering MovieNight. I love that, but frankly, I was a bit surprised. Why? Because often the mere mention that a film is Polish can turn people off. Even Poles react this way, perhaps out of a tormented self-loathing. Poles are strange and lovely. Yet, I digress…

Knife in the Water turned out to be a great MovieNight choice. On its surface (pun intended), the movie is very economical; two men (one older and wealthy, the other a young drifter, living rough) competing for the attention of a young woman on a sailboat. The dialogue is somewhat sparse (indeed, there are many lines that pass without subtitles), but the camera work and shot blocking are nothing short of genius. As the balance of power shifts back and forth between the two men, changes in the wind direction cause the boat’s boom to swing from side to side. Lots of symbolism here, and lots that I’ve managed to miss during past viewings. Also, some pretty innuendo-laced dialog: “Get down there. Get in the fo’c’s’le. You’ll find a box there. There’s a rag in the box.” A rag in the box? Pullease!

Our slightly smaller space is actually nicer as a screening room; more intimate, quieter. And howz about them apples [home-made ‘teen Acres apple chutney with Stilton cheese. Yumski!]?

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In the Mood for Love… and Noodles.

MovieNight was back in full swing after fears of a financial meltdown were, at least temporarily, assuaged. In the Mood for Love was only our second Wong Kar-Wai screening. We showed the beautiful and mysterious 2046 many years ago – obviously, the number 2046 is significant to Mr. Wong, as evidenced by the just-more-than-fleeting moment during In the Mood for Love (made four years previous to 2046) that the camera alights on the door number 2046. Anyway, I digress…

We had a great heckling moment this week, when the humble noodle (Ms. Chueng was always popping out late at night to get some!) became a euphemism for the sex act (going for noodles), and ultimately, Mr. Lueng’s member. Some of our guests were delighted to just yell out “Noodles!”, to hilarious effect. Narunas, mainly.

Noodle that ; )

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Seconds. How many of us have them?

This MovieNight season is all about second chances, or perhaps more accurately, unexpected opportunities. A few months ago, we were really thinking we might have to throw in the proverbial towel and end these magical Thursday evenings, but circumstances changed, and we’re still here. We’d like to celebrate that continued presence this season by showing a few movies that we always wanted to show, but somehow didn’t get around to, perhaps a sort of atonement… John Frankenheim’s Seconds is one of those and it was great to finally show it here… even more great to see the crispy-clean new blu-ray transfer. Maybe it was a stroke of genius to wait? Na… just good luck.

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Mud. Muddier. Muddest.

It’s funny. We had a bunch of grateful folk – grateful that MovieNight had so far survived the economic pressure of keeping Richard Lohr Studio open – attending the first two features of our new season. Relieved, we rolled up our sleeves and got back to the  “job” of showing what we feel must be shown. Perhaps you cinema buffs are not quite ready to forgive Mr. McConaughey for his early thespian frivolity but, perhaps because my recollection of those fluffy roles is quite vague, I had no problem loving his turn as Mud. Hell, I was telling people that they could “Call me Mud’ a lot last week, in my (surely) inferior version of that delicious accent. The rest of the cast was great (the boys were wonderful), there was plenty to laugh at, and guess what? Our relatively small group of MovieNighters felt compelled to applaud when the credits rolled. Yessir.

We don’t normally leave the review in the after-post, but you should really check this movie out. Of course, you won’t have the combination of 140” screen, free popcorn, and the best (if somewhat opinionated) barman in Stuyvesant Park to add to your viewing pleasure… 😉

The central image in “Mud,” Jeff Nichols’s deft and absorbing third feature, is of a boat in a tree. It’s the kind of phenomenon — a caprice of nature that is absurd but also wondrous — designed to enchant adventurous children like Ellis (Tye Sheridan) and Neckbone (Jacob Lofland), two Arkansas boys who discover the boat on an overgrown island in the Mississippi River. They also discover the fellow who claims to own, or at least inhabit, the vessel, a leathery loner whose name is Mud.

Mud is played by Matthew McConaughey in the latest in a series of surprising, intense and often very funny performances following his escape from the commercial romantic-comedy penal colony. “Magic Mike,” “The Paperboy,” “The Lincoln Lawyer” and “Bernie” are all very different (and differently imperfect) movies, but in all of them, and in “Mud,” Mr. McConaughey commands attention with a variation on a certain kind of Southern character: handsome but battered, charming but also sinister, his self-confidence masking a history of bad luck and trouble.

Ellis and Neckbone are a little afraid of Mud, but Ellis in particular is immediately drawn to him, taking his wild stories (“stretchers,” Tom Sawyer might have called them) at face value and adopting the man as a cause and a surrogate father. (Ellis’s actual dad, played by Ray McKinnon, is a stern and moody fisherman struggling with hard times and a failing marriage).

Mud, with only a pistol and a lucky shirt for protection, is hiding out on the island because some bad guys are looking for him, and because he is waiting to run away with the love of his life, a lady named Juniper (Reese Witherspoon). He needs some help acquiring food and getting messages to Juniper, and his new young friends are happy to oblige — Ellis because he has found a kindred romantic soul, Neckbone because he can make a deal for that pistol and have a little fun in the bargain.

Part of the wonder and some of the letdown of “Mud” is that a lot of what Mud says turns out to be true. Juniper shows up at a nearby town, and so does a fleet of black Cadillacs full of dangerous-looking dudes commanded by the great Joe Don Baker. Even without this intrigue, Ellis has the usual coming-of-age business to contend with: the tension between his father and mother (Sarah Paulson); his crush on a girl named May Pearl (Bonnie Sturdivant); and potential problems with his sidekick, Neckbone, who lives in a trailer with his wayward uncle, Galen (Michael Shannon).

Mr. Nichols’s screenplay is perhaps a little too heavily plotted, especially toward the end, when everything comes together neatly and noisily, but he more than compensates with graceful rhythm, an unfussy eye for natural beauty and a sure sense of character and place. What might have been an earnest, oversensitive, stereotypically Sundance-y piece of regionalist misery is leavened by suspense and jolts of laughter.

Some of this comes from Neckbone, who serves as Ellis’s comic sidekick, a cynical and pragmatic foil for his dreamy buddy. The two boys, whose faces register their contrasting temperaments — Mr. Lofland with his brush cut and Dennis the Menace features; Mr. Sheridan with his hooded eyes and downturned mouth — have been guided into exceptionally subtle feats of acting. The grown-ups (and I should add Sam Shepard, as an enigmatic neighbor of Ellis’s, to the names mentioned above) are mighty good too.

Mr. Nichols, an Arkansas native whose previous features are “Shotgun Stories” and “Take Shelter,” is very much aware that life on the Mississippi, now as in Mark Twain’s day, is characterized by boisterous humor as well as hardship and stoicism. (He reportedly asked his cast to read “Huckleberry Finn” during production.)

Though Mud’s desperation eventually begins to show, his wit never deserts him. Nor does the movie, even as it tilts toward a busy climax, lose its confidence that a good story is not just about some crazy stuff that happens but also about the voice that does the telling. And Mr. Nichols’s voice is a distinctive and welcome presence in American film.

Review by A.O. Scott for The New York Times

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