Diane Arbus at the movies

Carroll Baker on screen in Baby Doll with passing silhouette, N.Y.C. (1956; Diane Arbus)

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Kwik Stop (2001) finally streaming

If you’ve hung around here a while (as in, the last 15, 20 years) then you will know about Kwik Stop and my friend Michael Gilio. Michael and I go way back, and our brief romance somehow miraculously morphed into a lifelong friendship. It doesn’t always happen that way. Our relationship was so entertaining to me, and it was entertaining as it was happening. And it was captured on a local cable access show. How often can you say THAT? So. Many years ago, Michael wrote, directed, and starred in a movie called Kwik Stop, which he actually had been kinda sorta writing, or at least thinking about, when I first met him. I remember him talking to me about it. It was so cool, 5 or so years later or whatever, to see him actually DO it. The film won a couple of awards, but never got distribution, despite powerful critical acclaim, including Roger Ebert. I wrote about all of this in my piece in the “My Favorite Roger” series over on Ebert, where each writer writes about their favorite Roger review. I wrote about Roger’s review of Kwik Stop.

This is NOT all about me but how weird is it that back in 2002, Roger Ebert reached his hand out to Michael to support his film, writing a review of it, and then screening it at the second annual Ebertfest (then called the Overlooked Film Festival) – and then … 15 years later – Roger Ebert would reach out to ME, about MY writing and then a couple years after that MY short film would screen at Ebertfest? Like … isn’t that a little bit wild? The coincidence of it? Michael and I were two KIDS together, full of dreams and plans and then … there we are. Oh, and Michael just wrote the Dungeons and Dragons movie, a real passion project for him, and it was so cool to see him get so many flowers for that. He’s awesome.

Kwik Stop was out on DVD back in the day (i.e. 15 years ago), and of course I had a copy, but it has not been available for streaming in … ever? I’m not sure. Whatever the timeline, it’s enough to say this beautiful haunting film has been “unavailable” for years. And it’s back now. Streaming wherever you get your movies. Streaming on AppleTV, Amazon, GooglePlay, Vudu, Microsoft/Xbox, FreeVee, coming soon on Roku, Xumo, and other AVOD channels! Please see it! It’s so good!

Michael put together a trailer. It’s beautiful.

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On All I’ve Got & Then Some (2024)

I’ve been meaning to write about All I’ve Got & Then Some, the winner of the best Narrative Feature at the Florida Film Festival, but I haven’t had a second to do so until now. We really loved this first feature, co-directed by Tehben Dean and Rasheed Stephens, and it was a pleasure to write about why I think it worked so damn well.

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Review: Force of Nature: The Dry 2 (2024)

I dug The Dry (reviewed for Ebert), and this – despite the tagged-on The Dry 2 – is not really a sequel. It’s more an unrelated next chapter. It doesn’t work as well as The Dry: too complicated in structure! I reviewed for Ebert.

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R.I.P. Steve Albini

It’s strange to be at the age where someone dies at 61 and … it doesn’t sound that old. 61 would have sounded really old to me in the 90s, when Steve Albini and the music he produced was such a massive part of my life. Hell, it was THE soundtrack for my life. Albini is (was) a legend, known for his anti-establishment attitudes – which weren’t just “attitudes”. He lived it. His work was powered by it, a rarity in music producers. He was known in real time for the tireless dogged support of the artists he produced, shielding them from “the suits” and their stupid “commercial” bullshit. He was known for this. You wonder why Gen X is … cranky sometimes? lol It’s because we spent our youth trying to avoid “selling out”. It was basically a fetish for us. See: Reality Bites which … not only does not age well but it’s super depressing because … the Ben Stiller character has really won. We live in his world now. But that’s maybe just the Gen X in me talking. There was beauty in this belief in “purity” – and I am grateful for the accident of time and circumstances – but suspicion of success to the degree we experienced it can also be dangerous or at least counter-productive. Kurt Cobain was tormented by it. A lot of us were. But Steve Albini insisted artists knew more about their art than marketing teams and record labels. The stories are legendary. Just Google around. People are sharing all of these clips, letters to the editor he dashed off, interviews … he had so much integrity. A Gen X role model.

If you were a Nirvana fan, then you will remember 2013, when In Utero was re-released in a deluxe edition to celebrate the 20th anniversary of that incendiary follow-up to the band’s cataclysmic Nevermind. (If you were of a certain age you will also remember the disconnect of being like “…. it’s been 20 years? wtf”). I came across this 2013 article on Spin about the event and the special features included in the deluxe edition.

The most attention-getting was Albini’s now-famous 4 page typewritten letter to the three band members of Nirvana, proposing a plan for the upcoming recording sessions. The pressure was on them big-time. If you were there, you remember. The world is different now, the music industry is completely different. Hell, the public is different, because they of course respond to reality in their expectations. But back in 1992, the mono-culture was a real thing – for better or worse – and it’s impossible to over-state Nevermind‘s place in that culture – the passion of the fans – what Nirvana unleashed – and how their follow-up was already greeted with a mixture of suspicion and fear. They were global superstars but still there was a fear they would “sell out”, that their album would somehow be swallowed up by a marketing team trying to capitalize on the success. Like, these were real discussions we had on the ground. So Albini wrote this letter. He would be producing the album but he positioned himself as an employee, pitching himself and his plan to them. He stated he would refuse to take any “points” for the sessions:

I would like to be paid like a plumber. The record company will expect me to ask for a point or a point and a half. If we assume three million sales, that works out to 400,000 dollars or so. There’s no fucking way I would ever take that much money. I wouldn’t be able to sleep… I consider the band the most important thing. I think the very best thing you could do at this point is exactly what you are talking about doing: bang out a record in a couple of days, with high quality but minimal ‘production’ and no interference from the front office bulletheads. If that is indeed what you want to do, I would love to be involved.

Again, Albini was notorious for this kind of thing and beloved for it. Came across this great tribute piece about the albums he was involved in – it’s an insane list.

In a 2013 interview, as the furor over In Utero was swirling, Albini was asked about this typewritten letter. He answered, describing the whole vibe around the band at that time:

All of the people that were carping at the band from the outside about what a mistake they’d made with this record, that pretty accurately represented what they wanted to do with their music… all of those people [are] parasites. They weren’t involved in making the record. They want, somehow or another, to claim authorship of the creative output of these other people who are actually doing the heavy lifting for their career. I can’t have any respect for somebody like that, who’s not involved in the creative process but then decides that they wanna snipe at it from the outside and manipulate people into doing things to suit them. Fuck every one of those people.

They don’t make ‘em like that anymore. Or, not even “anymore”. They don’t make ‘em like that period.

Rest in peace, and thank you. You embodied what we cared about as kids and young adults. Puritanical in its own way – not sexually, but morally/ethically – rigid in its value system, not only what it embraced, but what it rejected. And you were an example, someone we could point to and say, “Look. It can be done. Resist the system. The system sucks. You can say No to it. Say No.” To quote Albini: Fuck every one of those people.

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News about Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof

Deja vu horrible news out of Iran. (Another story I’ve been following is the persecution of Iranian rapper Toomaj Salehi, which has been going on for two years now. Last year he was arrested and tortured for supporting the Women Life Freedom movement. He was released and made a video describing how he was tortured, uploading it to his Instagram. He was arrested again, violently. Toomaj has now been sentenced to death.)

Just as with Jafar Panahi, the regime has been after Rasoulof for years. He is outspoken, nervy, brave. His films criticism the regime without euphemism. He has been arrested, jailed numerous times, his passport was confiscated in 2011. He has now been given an 8-year prison sentence and a flogging. (Barbaric.)

Rasoulof’s 2013 film Manuscripts Don’t Burn (2013) is one of the bravest and riskiest films to come out of Iran since the pro-democracy revolution was hijacked by mullahs in 1979. Manuscripts Don’t Burn is so risky that none of the cast members OR crew are listed by name in the credits, for their own protection.

(Jafar Panahi did the same thing in his great – and illegally made – This Is Not a Film.)

Manuscripts Don’t Burn is based on real events: the regime’s henchmen track down, torture, and kill, dissident writers. The film’s title universalizes the message. This is not just an Iran story. “Manuscripts don’t burn” is a famous line from perhaps one of the most famous dissident works of all time, Mikhail Bulgakov’s Master and Margarita. Bulgakov considered the manuscript too dangerous to even have around in the Terror of Stalin’s 1930s – so Bulgakov burned his 20th century masterpiece. And remember: HE was “spared” by Stalin! Stalin “let him live”. But still: even having the manuscript hidden in a drawer was too dangerous. Years later, Bulgakov rewrote the book from memory, but it was, of course, still un-publishable. They had private readings of it in his apartment. Everyone knew about it. Manuscripts don’t burn. Even when they do. Bulgakov did not live to see his book published. It would be another 20 years before it was published in Russia.

Rasoulof’s nod to Bulgakov’s persecuted yet un-killable book is pointed and perfect.

Rasoulof has been “in trouble” for years for this kind of thing. The timing is deliberate: The sentence comes just before his new film, The Seed of the Sacred Fig, premieres at the Cannes Film Festival, end of May.

Haven’t these bullies learned their lesson from their Jafar Panahi persecution, who always seemed to be arrested before big festivals, which then put even more of a spotlight on the disgraceful situation, creating international outcries?

Everyone should care about what happens to the artists in Iran. And be able to separate the Iranian people from their regime. The Iranian people themselves have been trying – desperately – and literally dying – in the attempt to get rid of that regime.

Manuscripts don’t burn. Even if you burn them yourself. The regime wins battles but will never ever win the war. You can kill all the writers you want – although I wish you wouldn’t. You can also kill the ability of people to practice freedom of speech. But you cannot kill freedom of thought. And this drives them CRAZY.

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Review: Jeanne du Barry (2024)

A sweeping historical drama about the controversial mistress of King Louis XV, Madame du Barry. I reviewed for Ebert.

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April 2024 Viewing Diary

To Be or Not to Be (1942; d. Ernst Lubitsch)
It’s 82 years later. 82 years. And it’s still a little bit shocking this film even exists. The film lampoons Nazis, and Hitler, and tyranny, which – in 1942 – was a clear-and-present danger. I’ve watched it so many times and I still can’t believe what Lubitsch and his amazing cast – Jack Benny, Carole Lombard, a young gorgeous Robert Stack, and everyone else – get away with here. Dazzling.

The Breaking Point (1950; d. Michael Curtiz)
Another film adaptation of Hemingway’s To Have and Have Not, the most famous adaptation of course being the one with Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Becall. (“You know how to whistle, don’t you, Steve? You just put your lips together and blow.”) John Garfield, a brittle and somewhat miscast Patricia Neal, and the wonderful Juano Hernandez (an improvement on Wallace Beery) star. Seeing Garfield here, sturdy and sexy and healthy … it’s just shocking to know he would be dead in 2 years. Fuck you, Joe McCarthy. Seriously. Burn in hell.

Made for Each Other (1939; d. John Cromwell)
It’s nice to see James Stewart and Lombard together. And Charles Coburn! There’s a sweet romance, with Lombard and Stewart totally charming, and it’s a pretty realistic portrayal of marriage and financial realities and struggles, exacerbated by a baby. They love the baby! But it’s hard! Things get even harder, and the final third of the film tilts into cliff-hanger territory, with a daredevil pilot, a blizzard, a life-saving vial of serum … so that’s a little weird but I enjoyed this.

White Woman (1933; d. Stuart Walker)
This is not only a sweaty drenched CROCK, it’s very racist! But Charles Laughton is deliciously corrupt as the sex trafficker, holed up on his boat in the jungle, with all these trapped people, women and men. It’s terrible, though!

No More Orchids (1932; d. Walter Lang)
A pre-Code, with Lombard as a wild spoiled heiress, who falls in love with a dude (Lyle Talbot), even though he has no money, and she’s already engaged. But her engagement was arranged by her grandfather, I think, for purely financial reasons, or maybe status reasons. So it is a pickle! Lombard’s clothes are absolutely RAVISHING in this.

Ripley (2024; d. Steven Zaillian)
What a fascinating experience. I know these books so well, and I have deep affection for all of the film adaptations, and the different approaches. I’ve seen a lot of commentary like “Delon is the definitive Ripley and that’s final.” People can be so boring. It’s not a competition. These books are rich source material, fantastically evocative, and of course filmmakers will want to take a crack at it. There are so many different ways in, and the narratives themselves are gripping, tense, suspenseful, and the characters are excellent. Highsmith also doesn’t over-describe the interiority of anybody. Ripley HAS no interior. And this is really good for adaptation because you can project all kinds of things onto him. My favorite Ripley is still Delon, but I love Dennis Hopper too, I love John Malkovich, I love Andrew Scott, I love Matt Damon: they’re all so different. Each actor brings a different shading, based on their own essences or tendencies. This, to me, seems good and right. Like, really good material shouldn’t be untouchable, or done only once, and that’s IT. We nailed it for all time! No. That would mean Hamlet would never have been done after Richard Burton. Or whatever. So. Delon has the eerie blankness I adore so much in cinema, and what I consider to be closest to Ripley, although I wonder if Delon’s outrageous beauty is actually NOT Ripley-ish, a man who lives under cover, basically. Delon couldn’t be undercover if he tried. Malkovich was also an excellent Ripley, cold and warm simultaneously, watchful, brutal, calm calm calm. So this mini-series was just a TREAT. There are a few caveats: Scott and Johnny Flynn, as much as I love them both as actors, are really just too old for these roles. Maybe if it was one of the later books it could work, but this first one they’re supposed to be 20somethings bumming around Europe. This was made even stranger by the casting of Freddie with the much MUCH younger Eliot Sumner. You could justify it, I suppose, and it was interesting, but … because Scott and Flynn are in their 40s, with Scott pushing 50 … it didn’t really fit. Sumner, though, in the dead scenes: wow. Freddie is dead for so long, as Ripley tries to deal with it, and there’s Sumner, being dragged around, propped up, etc. Really good physical work. The whole thing was very Weekend at Bernie’s, which is really what it was like in the book. Gruesome! But funny!) I thought Dakota Fanning was great, very real. The cinematography and use of real life locations was world-class. What a gorgeous-looking piece of work. A feast. I want to watch it again for the visuals alone. I loved the cat. lol The cat stole the show. I loved seeing Scott do something other than the sort of devastatingly handsome boyish thing. It was still present, but it had that sinister nothingness underneath it, making it even more compelling. Also, you’re notice his eyes were dead. Black holes. Chilling. You did believe he was capable of anything. Lots of great mirror moments too, continuing the tradition of Ripley-movies-with-mirror-moments. I was really into it. Many people I respect didn’t care for it, many people I respect loved it. I had some issues, a few of which I mentioned here, but overall I really dug it. Ripley is such a horrible clumsy killer. The rocks in the boat. What were you THINKING, guy?

It’s Only Life After All (2024; d. Alexandria Bombach)
I reviewed for Ebert. I thought it was pretty shoddily done, and I learned (after writing the review) that the director didn’t do her due diligence to secure the rights to all of the Indigo Girls’ music. Some is included, but they weren’t able to use all because of this, sorry, incompetence. There were other issues though, and most of it is directorial. So. It’s a bummer because I love the Indigo Girls so much. I was very pleased however to see what Amy’s office looks like. I’m sure you can clock what pleased me.

Mr. and Mrs. Smith (1941; d. Alfred Hitchcock)
Robert Montgomery and Carole Lombard in a kind of limp marriage comedy. With its charming moments, and great visuals: her skirt busting out the sides. All the OBJECTS: the notes, the bottle of gin, the skis, the name label at the door. Hitchcock’s meticulous telling of the story through the objects. It’s amazing how many times he does that. The story isn’t in the dialogue, he just follows the objects.

The Tourist. Season 1 (2022; d. Chris Sweeney)
Allison made me watch this, and it was a blast. We tore through Season 1 in one day. We never got out of bed. Or, we meandered to the kitchen to make sandwiches, and then crawled back into bed, as the rain poured down on the pavement outside. My favorite kind of day. Great to see Jamie Dornan, out from under the shadow of 50 Shades, where he was, frankly, terrible. He burst out of prison with Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar – HILARIOUS. The Tourist is such a cool concept! Waiting to watch Season 2 with Allison, where apparently the action moves to Ireland.

Ripley’s Game (2002; d. Liliana Cavani)
Inspired by watching Ripley … I saw this years ago and really loved it. Liliana Cavani is an incredible filmmaker – The Night Porter! – she’s very comfortable with dark dark shit. The settings, again, are brilliant: that manor, the tapestries, the vistas. Dougray Scott was heart-wrenching. This particular “entry” in the series is very upsetting, because Jonathan did not deserve – at all – what was done to him, what was taken from him. Ripley just does it to fuck around, really. He’s a little bored. The guy insulted him. Let’s have a little fun.

Ramona at Midlife (2024; d. Brooke Berman)
I was a juror in the Florida Film Festival this month. I was in the Narrative Feature category. We saw 10 films in 4 days, 2 on 2 days, 3 on 2 days. It was intense and fabulous! The slate was really strong. We were impressed. First-timer narrative features can often be iffy but there wasn’t a clunker in the bunch. I do want to do a write-up of the festival, but … I just can’t this week. But I’ll hold off on commentary – except for brief exclamations – until I can find the time to write up all these fine films

Booger (2023; d. Mary Dauterman)
Florida Film Festival. Wild. Great visuals and excellent central performance by Grace Glowicki.

Virtue (1932; d. Edward Buzzell)
Carole Lombard in a very bleak and frank Pre-Code, where she plays a prostitute, working out of a brothel, arrested and told to leave New York and never return. Do you think she obeys? Of course not. Pat O’Brien plays a virulent woman-hating cab driver, he thinks they’re all whores and liars and more trouble than they’re worth. But then his heart softens. Look out though. Once a misogynist always a misogynist. Very honest film about prostitution, very human performances of the Madame, the other sex workers in the house – there is shame attached to the profession here, nobody WANTS to be doing this, but they aren’t treated narratively like victims or horrible people. What’s unfair and horrible is not being given a chance by so-called “upright’ citizens who insist on JUDGING.

Riley (2023; d. Benjamin Howard)
Another Florida Film Festival entry. We really liked this one about a very competitive high school football player, being recruited by multiple Division 1 schools, struggling with his sexuality, and the impossibility of “coming out” (or, he thinks it’s impossible). Clearly a very personal story. Howard, who is gay, spoke afterwards about his own experience being a very good high school football player. I liked how the film was really from the inside of high school football: it’s not the cliche, with mean homophobic football coaches, and asshole jocks. Yes, they are jocks. And yes, it’s a very macho environment. But they all feel like real people. There was a football coach in the audience who commented that he very much appreciated the portrayal of football, and the coaches, who ran the kids hard, yes, but cared about them. “Yeah,” said Howard, “I mean, I never had a football coach make me cry.”

Lady Parts (2023; d. Nancy Boyd)
We gave the Lady Parts screenplay a special jury award. I interviewed the screenwriter, Bonnie Gross, on my Substack. I really hope this finds distribution so more people can see it.

New Life (2024; d. John Rosman)
A young woman is on the run, being chased by a clearly well-organized group, with walkie-talkies and a control room. What has she done? She lives in the woods, trying to get to Canada. There is one HELL of a twist. The twist was awesome. I totally did not see it coming. Artfully done.

Hellbent on Boogie (2023; d. Vito Trupiano)
The story of an autistic teenager (played effectively by Alyx Ruibal, who also has autism. She was in attendance, along with the director) . Shiloh Fernandez was very good as the troubled homeless older brother, who comes home because he needs a place to stay, and is a little dismayed at the social isolation of his kid sister. Very moving.

The Way We Speak (2024; d. Ian Ebright)
Patrick Fabian was really good in this story about an ambitious man, who basically yearns to be “important” in his field, and just can’t quite get there. It’s about a man who’s missing his whole life, being jealous and impotent and angry. Things come to a head when he and his dying wife attend a conference where he will be speaking, engaging in a debate with a real big-wig. Things don’t go according to plan. Very good performances. They were all there!

Paradise (2023; d. Max Isaacson)
Florida Film Festival film. A story about a bunch of gun-crazy people, and a daughter wanting to avenge her dad’s death. Tia Carrere cameo, which was a hoot. She wears a jeweled eyepatch.

All I’ve Got and Then Some (2024; d. Tehben Dean, Rasheed Stephens)
We gave this film Best Narrative Feature. So well deserved. Like I said, this was a really strong group of films, and this was the second to last film we saw, and it was instantly apparent – to all of us, thankfully – that something really special was going on with this one. We were just blown away by it, and what they accomplished – in just 7 days, with basically no money. Wow.

Peak Season (2023; d. Steven Kanter, Henry Loevner)
The final film we saw at Florida Film Festival. We really loved this one too. Gorgeous Tetons scenery, interesting characters in an interesting Jackson-Hole sub-culture. A romance, sort of, but … there’s more going on than just that. I was really impressed with these two male writers writing such a well-rounded woman character. She wasn’t perfect, or a manic pixie dream girl. She was a woman dealing with her life. Really good.

CTRL+ALT+DESIRE (2024; d. Colin Archdeacon)
Grant Amato has a dark weird pull on me. What a weirdo. What a depressing story. I’ve watched all the YouTube footage, but this is a documentary, and the director has been in contact with Amato in prison. Amato somehow smuggled in a phone. What a shock. He has learned nothing. He is a creep. The director even travels to Bulgaria, trying to find the famous cam girl who didn’t CAUSE this, but she was the unwitting catalyst. Poor woman.

Masques (1987; d. Claude Chabrol)
I love Claude Chabrol but I’ve never seen this one.

Baby Reindeer (2024; created by Richard Gadd)
Tore through this. It’s very effective, horrifying, really. The stalking is extreme. Gadd has had real trouble since the launching of the series (based on his autobiographical one-man show), with so-called “fans” harassing people whom they deduce are the real-life counterparts. He’s had to come out and say, “Please. Stop.” What is wrong with people? I need to think about this one more.

Primrose Path (1940; d. Gregory La Cava)
Joel McCrea and Ginger Rogers competing in under-playing. Rogers underplays so much at first you can barely hear her. Not “actressy” at all. Very evocative atmosphere, this little seaside town, the shanty town on the outskirts, some location shoots on a real beach. McCrea is to die for. My God.

Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn (2021; d. Radu Jude)
God, this film. It makes you look at almost all other films and think, “Can’t you see there are more possibilities, more ways to tell a story?” It makes other films look uptight, and not just because of the porn.

Jeanne du Barry (2024; d. Maïwenn)
The film opens this week. I reviewed.

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Substack: An interview with screenwriter Bonnie Gross about her script Lady Parts

One of the stand-out features I saw at last week’s Florida Film Festival (where I was a juror in the Narrative Features category), was Lady Parts, written by Bonnie Gross, directed by Nancy Boyd. It’s a fictionalized version of the writer’s experience with vulvodynia and vaginismus, the surgery she endured “down there”, and the hilarity/trauma of the recovery process. We were so impressed with this film, particularly its script, so much so we gave it a special jury award. I chatted with Bonnie over Zoom about her script and the process getting it made. I am hoping Lady Parts will soon arrive to a streaming platform near you.

A conversation with Lady Parts screenwriter Bonnie Gross

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On Radu Jude’s latest, Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World

For my Substack: on Radu Jude’s new film, Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World, the film I’ve been most eager to see this year. I love his work so much.

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