Showing posts with label 1979. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1979. Show all posts

Monday, January 7, 2013

All That Jazz




All That Jazz
1979
Director: Bob Fosse
Starring: Roy Scheider, Jessica Lange, Leland Palmer, Ann Reinking

I love musicals.  I really do.  They are so wonderful, such fantastic entertainment.  I love the classic MGM musicals (but I’m not a fan of Rodgers and Hammerstein – more on that later), I love the early black and white musicals, I think the recent dabble into musicals again is great, but when you talk about Bob Fosse, then we’re talking an entirely different level of musicals altogether.  When I was in college, I took a one-off theater studies course, and in it, we spent a bit of time discussing Fosse.  Since then, I’ve been utterly fascinated by him.  Having this set up for this film, this autobiography of Fosse, his incredibly cruel portrayal of himself, with plenty of that sublime choreography thrown in for good measure, and, um, yeah, I’m a fan.

The story follows Joe Gideon (Scheider), a hard-working theater director/choreographer/ filmmaker, as he gets his new Broadway show started in rehearsals during the day and edits his latest film at night.  His ex-wife Audrey (Palmer) loves and respects him but can’t stand him, his young daughter Michelle worships him, and his live-in girlfriend Kate (Reinking) adores him despite the fact that he continually cheats on her.  Surrounded as he is by people who support him, Gideon cannot help but drive his health into the ground, not getting enough sleep, hooked on painkillers, and continually smoking and drinking.  He carries on a fantasy dialogue with Angelique (Lange), the Angel of Death (or Life, based on your interpretation), which intensifies when Joe is hospitalized.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Manhattan



Manhattan
1979
Director: Woody Allen
Starring: Woody Allen, Mariel Hemingway, Diane Keaton, Meryl Streep

Despite the fact that I’ve now written about a hundred reviews for films from 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die, I have not yet reviewed a Woody Allen movie. Oh, Woody Allen. You give me so many problems. He and I have a very love-hate relationship. Occasionally, I really love one of his movies. Most of the time, I rather hate them. So consider this review to be Part One of my Standard Woody Allen Rant, which shall no doubt repeat itself for nearly every one of his films in the book.

The plot of Manhattan is very typical Allen neurotic comedy. Isaac (Allen) is a forty-two year old television writer who is dating Tracy (Hemingway), a seventeen year old high school student. His ex-wife (Streep) left him for another woman and is now writing a book about the breakup. He falls in love with his married best friend’s mistress Mary (Keaton), which of course means that there is a great deal of hemming and hawing and complaining about relationships. Whiny neuroticism ensues.