Daily Archives: Saturday, July 9, 2016

  • Tucker: The Man and His Dream

    Francis Ford Coppola (1988)

    It’s not a surprise to find that it’s weightless and enervated but Tucker – The Man and His Dream is still a distressing experience.  Coppola is such a naturally expressive director that he manages to put himself, and reflect his state of mind, in his films – even when that state of mind means that he can’t give the material any emotional or dramatic force.   Preston Tucker was a car designer and entrepreneur.  In the late 1940s, he tried to produce and market the variously innovative ‘1948 Tucker Sedan’, challenging the supremacy of the ‘Big Three’ of the American automobile industry (General Motors, Ford and Chrysler).  Establishment forces conspired against Tucker:  he was accused of stock fraud by the US Securities and Exchange Commission, and stood trial.  He was acquitted but the financial consequences of the legal proceedings were ruinous for his company, which folded.   He continued to work on designing new types of car but died, aged only fifty-three, in 1956.  His influence on car design, however, has been considerable and enduring.   It isn’t difficult to see parallels, from Coppola’s point of view, between Tucker’s treatment by vested interests within the car industry and his own in the American film industry of the 1980s, and the financial problems of Zoetrope.  Coppola’s other bête noire of the time was the press.  The newspapers of forty years earlier were out to destroy Tucker too.

    Most of the time, Tucker seems to be happening inside Coppola’s head rather than on the screen.  In The Godfather and The Godfather: Part II, different periods are recreated and brought to life vividly and, it seems, effortlessly.  The same production and set designer, Dean Tavoularis, worked on Tucker yet all the scrupulous period detail here seems merely displayed, not integrated – because there’s next to nothing for it to be integrated with.  It’s understandable that the cars are the stars of the show but they have shockingly little human competition.  (There might have been some animal competition if the Tucker family dalmatians had stayed around longer but they disappear without explanation – as if they were nothing more than a design idea Coppola tired of.)  Nearly all the characters are one-dimensional – they’re goodies or baddies and they demonstrate that repeatedly and unvaryingly, never developing into anything richer.  Tucker has a good cast but the monotonous, sketchy performances are painful to watch in comparison to what you’re used to from Coppola’s earlier work – not just the first two Godfather pictures, which feature arguably the finest ensemble acting ever filmed, but The Conversation and Apocalypse Now too.

    Coppola’s conception of Tucker as a wronged creative genius is so blinkered that it doesn’t allow Jeff Bridges in the lead any opportunities to get at something more complex.  Martin Landau’s portrait of Tucker’s loyal, worrywart financier is meticulously thought out and delivered yet you feel that the 1970s Coppola would have helped the actor to conceal his ingenuity more.  As members of Tucker’s engineering team, Frederic Forrest is OK and Elias Koteas more than OK.  But Joan Allen is blah as Tucker’s ever-loving wife and Christian Slater dull as his son.  The guest (uncredited) appearances – by Lloyd Bridges (as a corrupt politician) and Dean Stockwell (as Howard Hughes) – aren’t as incisive as you’d hope.

    The start of the film suggests that Tucker’s story is going to be told as a promotional film made by his own company but this isn’t sustained.  (The screenplay is by Arnold Schulman and David Seidler, who this year has entered the limelight thanks to his overrated script for The King’s Speech.)   All the way through, scenes dribble on and fizzle out.  There are only two significant exceptions – because I kept hoping that Coppola would snap out of it, I was grateful for these sequences, even though it didn’t require a director of his quality to make them succeed.  The first is the public unveiling of the 1948 Tucker Sedan, which its inventor stages like the performer that he is and where a good deal of frenetic behind-the-curtains activity is needed to get the show, as it were, on the road.  The second is Tucker’s trial:  in a way, it’s dispiriting in itself that something as conventionally climactic as a courtroom scene brings the film to life but there’s one moment here that recalls vintage Coppola.   After the industrial-political interests in the witness box have tried to sink Tucker, he asks to make the closing address himself.   The trial judge (Joseph Miksak) is outrageously biased against him and, with the prosecuting attorney, keeps trying to shut Tucker up.   In the mayhem of angry words, the foreman of the jury, an elderly, unconfident looking man, suddenly shouts in exasperation:  ‘Let the man speak!’  There’s real force and surprise in this moment – and the intervention is tethered to the character which Al Nalbandian, the actor playing the foreman, has established with marvellous speed and economy.  It’s a genuine reminder that, in the 1970s, there was no role too small for Coppola to give attention and full life to.

    The outcome of Tucker’s subsequent plea to the court – railing against the crushing effects of corporate power on the individual entrepreneurial spirit, appealing to the jury’s decent ordinary American impulses – may be predictable but I was relieved, because Tucker is otherwise such unhappy viewing, by the relatively upbeat ending.   According to Wikipedia, a biography of Tucker (who, like Coppola, was originally from Michigan) was planned as early as 1973, when the director had the world at his feet.  It might have been an interesting film then.  By the time it got made, too much water had flowed under the bridge and iron entered Coppola’s soul.

    3 July 2011

  • True Grit (2010)

    Joel and Ethan Coen (2010)

    I don’t like Westerns or the Coen brothers but this is a pretty good film.  After watching the 1969 version the previous evening, I was naturally comparing the two versions as I watched this one.  For a while, the Coens’ smooth craftsmanship seemed to make for a less remarkable movie than Henry Hathaway’s, even though – if you compare the films in terms of their individual components – the new one is superior on nearly every count.   Yet the Coens’ True Grit builds, gradually but strongly, and the interactions among the three principals Rooster Cogburn (Jeff Bridges), Mattie Ford (Hailee Steinfeld) and LaBoeuf (Matt Damon) are increasingly convincing.   By the end, the Coens have created a grimly coherent portrait of time and place.  Their previous attempt at a remake, The Ladykillers (2004) (which I’ve not seen), was among their least well-received movies; so were what might be classed as genre remakes – the noir The Man Who Wasn’t There (2001), the romantic comedy Intolerable Cruelty (2003).  Here their choice is much shrewder.  The first True Grit could be termed a ‘classic’ only in the sense that it’s well known and much loved: it’s not widely regarded as anything approaching a great picture.  The Coens evidently saw an opportunity to make the film of the Charles Portis novel that had been foregone – or would have been too controversial – in the late sixties (although large chunks of identical dialogue feature in both versions).  They’ve also found a means of revisiting, but a hundred years earlier, the spiritual, if not the precise geographical, territory of No Country for Old Men (2007).

    The earlier movie was the work of relatively conservative and conventional temperaments.  The Coens, notorious for their jocose absurdism, have made a film in which, beside the original True Grit, religion is more powerful; violent death – at the hands of the law or of the lawless – is more affecting; and the relationships between the main characters, thanks to the quality of the acting, are more meaningful.  There’s more scolding encouragement to abide by the good book from the Coens’ Mattie Ross and the film’s virtual theme song is an arrangement, by Carter Burwell (who also did the original music), of ‘Leaning on the Everlasting Arms’.  (For viewers familiar with The Night of the Hunter that choice of song supplies a strongly subversive undertone.)  Mattie is shocked by the deaths of Quincy and Moon; and there’s a fine sequence when she and Rooster come upon a man hanging high on the branch of a tree, and he gets her to climb up and cut the body down so they can be sure it’s not Mattie’s father’s killer, Tom Chaney.  This body, when it comes to earth, is a gruesomely convincing corpse.  So is the still clothed skeleton at the bottom of the cave Mattie falls down into, and where she gets bitten by a venomous snake.  As Rooster carries her away on horseback, they pass through a trail of dead things, men and horses, soon to be augmented by Mattie’s mount, Little Blackie, whose end is more extended, realistic and upsetting than in the original film.  It’s right that it’s the death of an animal that causes the precociously, determinedly self-disciplined Mattie to break down emotionally.  When Rooster Cogburn is struggling desperately to get the poisoned girl to some kind of medical help, his heavy breathing is not just because he’s ‘old and fat’ but shows how much she’s come to matter to him.

    None of this means that the Coens have forsaken their absurdist principles – the relentless, meaningless passage of life into death dwarfs the people’s attempts to impose moral order on their world as much as the landscape overpowers them physically.  But True Grit, though I admit it reluctantly, gives the Coens’ nihilism a streak of poignancy.   Some of what we see – like the approach of a bear in human clothes on horseback – is startling.  It’s a man (Ed Lee Corbin) wearing a bear’s head and I could have done without his humorous prattle from under it but the effect of this Coenism hardly detracts from the surreal power of the initial image.  The fluency of the film-making is in a different class from that of the first True Grit; the barren, dusty landscape and the people in it are made to look both real and metaphorical.  The repeated falls of light snow increase both the beauty and the hopelessness of the terrain.  As usual in a Coens film, Roger Deakins is the DoP, Jess Gonchor the production designer, Mary Zophres the costumer and Roderick Jaynes (alias Joel and Ethan Coen) the editor.

    Jeff Bridges is cavalier about audibility nowadays – at least he seems to regard speaking lines that you can hear as only a subsidiary part of characterisation – although I think I picked up more of them here than I did in Crazy Heart.  But, as a piece of physical acting, his performance is masterly, and comically inventive too.  Bridges conveys an immensely strong sense of Rooster’s having done many times before jobs like the one he’s contracted by Mattie to do:  his Rooster is both in his element and wearily antipathetic towards his way of life and place of work.   (This jadedness also comes across in the early courtroom sequence – longer here than in the Hathaway film, which also gives us a sense of how Rooster Cogburn, though he’s an agent of the law, is mistrusted and despised by the authorities.)   Matt Damon creates a wittily lucid portrait of LaBoeuf, capturing the Texas Ranger’s combination of prissiness and decency.  Whenever LaBoeuf tries to assert his superiority, he always ends up looking embarrassed (but, unlike in the earlier film, he at least escapes with his life).  I was disappointed by Josh Brolin’s Chaney, although he does get over some sense of a personality that’s lethally volatile.  The minor criminals are perhaps the only department in which the actors here aren’t as strong as their precursors in the roles – particularly in the case of ‘Lucky’ Ned Pepper (Barry Pepper vs Robert Duvall).  Domhnall Gleeson (Moon) loses on points, but decisively so, to Dennis Hopper.  On the other hand, Paul Rae as Quincy is better than Jeremy Slate in the Hathaway film.    Hailee Steinfeld, as Mattie, is a much more emotionally protean presence than Kim Darby:  fourteen-year-old Steinfeld doesn’t only look the right age – her face suggests different ages in different situations.  She’s not afraid to make Mattie’s bossy articulacy irritating.  She’s credible in how she gradually, subtly comes to defer to Rooster once they’ve left town and are, for Mattie, in terra incognita.

    One of the best things about Kim Darby’s portrait of Mattie was that she suggested a spinster-in-the-making; and the Coens reintroduce the narrative of the novel, which is being told by the elderly, unmarried woman Mattie turned into.  Elizabeth Marvel’s voiceover is nothing special but she makes a powerful impression (not least because this Mattie loses an arm as a result of the snake bite) when she appears in the closing stages.   And when she disappears:  instead of John Wayne galloping vigorously away, childless Mattie recedes into the distance after visiting the family plot where, thanks to her, Rooster Cogburn is also now buried.  Mattie’s observation that time catches up with us all wins no prizes for originality and it’s predictable that the Coens, rather than have a protagonist ride off into the sunset, present a dark-clad, maimed figure walking firmly in the direction of a bleak horizon and dying light.  But it looks very good.

    12 February 2011

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