Todd Alcott
26 September 2007 @ 12:52 am
Movie Night With Urbaniak: Zodiac  






In the late 1980s, I became interested in serial killers as I was working on my play One Neck. I read dozens of books on the subject, trying to tie them all together, trying to find a grand, unifying theory that would explain the actions of serial killers. Worst of all, I would need to approximate the mindset of a serial killer in order to write the antagonist of my play. This led me, as you can imagine, to some very dark places, places I found I do not like. My fascination with serial murder turned to revulsion and disgust. The more I learned about these guys (and they are almost all guys), the more I wished I could make it back to some plateau where I could un-learn all the things I had learned. Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, John Wayne Gacy, Ed Gein, Edmund Kemper, there was nothing "cool" or even very interesting about these individuals -- they were monstrously sick, pathetically horrible men undeserving of the media space our culture, me included, have heaped upon their actions.

Of course, that didn't stop me from writing my play, which later became a screenplay, which is now, twenty years later, becoming a graphic novel.


 
 
Todd Alcott
12 April 2006 @ 03:22 am
The Game, Panic Room  
A Fincher double feature!

David Fincher brings weight, substance and excitement to outlandish concepts and genre exercises through superb photography and astonishing production values. Both of these films are so well shot and appointed they take the breath away.

I wish David Fincher would make more movies. I wish David Fincher would shoot something I wrote. Hint hint.

Fincher has done so well with his smooth, polished, glossy entertainments, I can't wait to see what he does with a "real drama" someday.

When I was a young man, I hated Michael Douglas. I didn't like his hair, I didn't like his chin, I didn't like his young, self-righteous, more-liberal-than-thou attitude. Then, in 1987, he delivered back-to-back amazing performances as conflicted, guilty, deplorable jerks in Fatal Attraction and Wall Street, and suddenly I was a huge fan. I've seen everything he's done since. I enjoyed some, like A Perfect Murder, and didn't enjoy others, like Disclosure, but he's never been less than interesting and enjoyable ever since. Come to think of it, I can't think of another actor that does what Michael Douglas does these days, playing multifaceted, sometimes unpleasant middle-aged men, and somehow finding decent scripts that feature lead roles for him.

The Game is so absurdly far-fetched in concept and outlandish in its execution that it's flatly ridiculous, and yet I've seen the movie three times and will probably watch it again before my time here on earth is up, partly to watch the performances, partly to study Fincher's seamless direction, partly to luxuriate in the sumptuous production design.

Panic Room is as contained as The Game is expansive, both in concept and in physicality. Almost a filmed play, it would make a kickass double feature with Woody Allen's September, but it shares more in common with an old chestnut like Wait Until Dark. And for once, one can mention an Audrey Hepburn movie without apology, for in Panic Room we have an actress more than able to stand up in comparison.

Check out the special effects in Panic Room. It's not just the flashy shots of the camera floating through the floorboards and zooming through the keyholes. All through the picture, in shot after shot, special effects are used to emphasize and delineate, to clarify and set in relief. A door opens, a phone slides under a bed, a flashlight turns on, the most common of shots, shots that might even be shot by a second unit on most pictures, are here given full CGI treatment, weaving the effects into so many shots that you don't see them after a while. It's a whole new approach to effects, using them to heighten and deepen what might otherwise be a claustrophobic chamber-piece.

Jodie Foster, I know, I've applauded before. But she's completely convincing in this part and quite staggeringly well-photographed. Whoever did her hair and makeup in this picture should have been nominated for an Oscar. Seeing her with her teenage daughter, it made me wish that she had done the remake of Freaky Friday instead of Jamie Lee Curtis. It's not too late!

Most of the acting in the movie is done on a completely believable, naturalistic plane, but then there are a handful of performances that are broader and seem somehow stagebound, as if this really was a filmed play. Both Ann Magnuson and Ian Buchannan as a pair of realtors come off as arch and stylized, and Jared Leto's performance occasionally makes it seem like he's doing a very good impression of John C. McGinley. There are plenty of scenes where Forest Whitaker stands there with his great, sad face and stares at Leto as he shouts and waves his arms, and I found myself thinking "I know, I know, I'm with you."

The direction is done with much grace, elegance and poise, but the script sets a very high bar for itself and occasionally misses the jump.

The bar the script sets is: let's make a movie, a suspense thriller, a "woman in jeopardy" picture (or "womjep") about a woman trapped in a tiny room, and see if we can pull that off.

The problem is, you get the woman and her daughter into the room on page 20, and then what happens? The woman and the daughter are in the room and the bad men want very badly to get into the room. The bad men try something and the woman foils them. Then the woman tries something and the bad men foil her. Then the woman goes out of the room to fetch her phone. Then one of the men gets killed by another one of the men. And after each of these events, the central conceit returns to the status quo; the woman is in the room and the bad men want to get in. The situation doesn't allow for an escalation of tension.

The individual sections of the movie are well written and executed and the film had no trouble sustaining my interest on a second viewing, but the writer (David Koepp) has literally written himself into a box. He has to pull out the old "diabetic kid" routine to get the movie out of its second act and into its third, where the situation is reversed and the bad men are in the room and the woman wants very badly to get in.

Anyway, small complaint for a movie as inventive and elegant as this.

David Koepp, I should probably mention, is something of a touchstone in my household. I use his name all the time, usually in the sentence "I wonder if David Koepp has to do this?" when a studio wants me to pay my own hotel bill, or submit multiple free treatments, or perform multiple pitches over a period of months before telling me that they don't actually own the rights to a project.
hit counter html code


 
 
Todd Alcott
10 March 2006 @ 03:12 am
Seven  
Sorry, I just can't call it Se7en, even though that is apparently its actual title.

I worked long and hard to put the '90s behind me, I'm not going back there now.

First, let me say that this has one of the greatest title sequences of all time (by R/Greenberg, I believe). I think you have to go back to Return of the Pink Panther to find a better one.

The script, by Andrew Kevin Walker, could have been shot in a flashy, superficial manner to match its sensational subject matter, but David Fincher (and his great DP, Darius Khonji) shoot the hell out of this thing, giving grace, subtlety and gravitas to what might have otherwise been a standard-issue thriller.

The conceit of the plot, which imagines a killer of superhuman cruelty and deviousness, sometimes distracts one from the wonderful character work by all the cast. These stock characters (the world-weary detective on the verge of retirement, his hothead new partner, their blustering superior, the guy guy scraping the name off the office door, so forth) are re-imagined and given new life by Morgan Freeman, Brad Pitt, R. Lee Ermey and the rest. Their interplay is terrific, they make these guys seem real somehow.

As an added bonus, this is, to my knowledge, the only movie to feature Gwyneth Paltrow's head in a box.

Another excellent transfer of a most handsomely shot movie. And a triumph of production design by Arthur Max.

And, for those playing along at the "Voucher Ankles" site, there is, of course, a "Merchant of Venice" tie-in in Seven. A lawyer is forced to cut off, yes, a pound of flesh. He (of course) dies from his self-inflicted wounds, and the killer leaves a (completely bogus) quote from "Merchant" at the crime scene. Imagine my dismay when, in 1995, having written and directed my own adaptation of Merchant, hearing Morgan Freeman (himself a great Shakespearean actor) recite this bit of invented poesy and then intone "Merchant of Venice."

Come to think of it, I'd love to see Freeman play Antonio some time. Now there's some subtext.
hit counter html code