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To Live - (1994)
This is the fifth film in the Zhang Yimou boxed set I have - it walks a fine line between glorifying China's communist odyssey and criticizing the disasters it visited upon the nation, but when summed up it's not really a political film. It's a film about life, and family. In that, spanning the decades as it does, the film really is triumph of epic proportions on a really small scale. Xu Fugui (Ge You) is a gambling addict who has lost his entire fortune, and Jiazhen (Gong Li), pregnant with a small daughter to look after, leaves him - meaning Fugui must start from scratch. During his adventures alone he takes up puppetry as a form of work and becomes embroiled in the bloody civil war from which the communist revolutionaries come out victorious. Once home again, after the birth of his son, the family must endure the hardships and tragedy life often brings to those downtrodden, but also appreciate the joy of living, of being loved and of loving. Shot in a very straightforward manner, it's the characters and performances which carry the film and they ended up getting under my skin - in a good way. Ge You and Gong Li are very much on song, and the movie often seems epic in the way it recreates Chinese history as this family bears witness to the good times, bad times and madness. Zhang Yimou still seems to love the colour red - or perhaps he uses that to appease his political masters. Either way, it's hard not to fall in love with the characters in this film, even if Xu Fugui gets off to the shakiest of starts. Are they really zealous in their love of Mao, or is it just the way they must behave in this kind of society? It's not a question
To Live really sets out to answer, and I'm happy with that.
8/10
By The poster art can or could be obtained from Twentieth Century Fox., Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6219688
All the Right Moves - (1983)
Kids bullied by all the jocks in high school will absolutely
hate this movie - and Stefen Djordjevic (Tom Cruise) really doesn't do all that much to endear himself to the audience for most of
All the Right Moves' running time. He's a B-student and a talented football player in this kind of ordinary coming of age tale. Chris Penn is in this - I enjoyed seeing the very young version of this actor, and Craig T. Nelson looks like he's in it for the paycheck as Coach Vern Nickerson - a tough-as-nails drill sergeant of a coach. Dummies are spat, girls get pregnant too soon, kids are told they're "off the team!" and immature pranks abound. Stefen has to prove his character to earn forgiveness and just when I thought the movie was about to get going the credits were rolling.
5/10
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Stakeout - (1987)
Men who leer at women while they think they're safely having a shower - after watching a young Tom Cruise try to force Lea Thompson to have sex with him, that's just what I needed. Without such scenes,
Stakeout would be a sweet love movie wrapped up in a buddy cop thriller/drama/comedy. Richard Dreyfuss and Emilio Estevez do have some chemistry here (the two really project the sense that they've been partners for a while) but overall this is a well made albeit basic mainstream movie that just happened to have been a big hit in '87. Love interest Madeleine Stowe would go on to play a great part in Terry Gilliam's
12 Monkeys. Watching this, it's
fine - slick and entertaining. Another stepping stone for Forest Whitaker, who has a small role. I didn't think it was all that funny, but it moves at a brisk pace as our cops watch the house of an escaped convict's ex-girlfriend. Detective Chris Lecce (Dreyfuss) needs an ethics refresher course, as he falls in love with and manipulates the woman they're watching while at the same time endangering just about every character in the film. Oh, the things we do for love...
6/10
By May be found at the following website: http://www.sinepil.org/imaj/queennothing/12278.jpg, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=30622445
The Seventh Continent - (1989)
This was Michael Haneke's feature debut. Chilling. It gives us a definite clue as to what we might expect from him in the future, and that hard-hitting edge continued to keep audiences aghast and riveted as his career continued. Full review
here, in my watchlist thread.
8/10