Sight
and Sound’s recent list of the greatest movies of
all time was basically a re-jigging of the same old classics which critics and
audiences always cite as ‘the greatest’. There’s nothing wrong with those
lists. Just how many times do we need to hear that Vertigo, Citizen Kane and
The Godfather are pretty great and
you should check them out? Here is a list – in no particular order – of my
favourite movies that don’t get all the attention – some that a lot of people
have never even heard of.
Hopefully you will hear and see these ‘10
Great Movies That You’ve Probably Never Heard Of’.
- Shattered Glass (Dir.: Billy Ray, 2003)
Billy Ray’s astonishing true-story drama
centred on a journalist writing fictitious stories may not seem like seem like
a particularly riveting experience but terrific performances and Ray’s assured
direction make this a compelling film.
Stephen Glass (Hayden Christensen) is a
young twenty-something reporter for prestigious American magazine The New Republic. Glass is affable,
funny and beloved by his co-workers. When Glass writes a too-good-to-be-true
article about a teenage hacker, online reporters (Steve Zahn and Rosario
Dawson) reveal that it really is.
Hayden Christensen gives the performance of
his career in this film. Those who wrote the young Canadian Darth Vader off on
the basis of his performances in the Star
Wars prequels and in Jumper, need
to simply watch this performance to be convinced of his talent. Christensen’s
Glass is a manipulative Machiavelli – the movie nearly goes as far as
portraying Glass as a sociopath. Glass is conniving, dedicated and fascinating.
His crimes are essentially victimless but the fascination lies with a character
who convincingly manipulates everyone around him. Peter Sarsgaard gives a
wonderful counter-performance as the young editor who exposes the truth despite
his vilification from his staff, particularly Caitlin (Chloë Sevigny).
Ray’s real achievement is his refusal to
sensationalise the real-life events or delve into Glass’s background. His
actions are presented and the consequences are dealt with. This is effectively
a two character piece between Christensen and Sarsgaard where the latter must
see past Glass’s manipulations to uncover the truth and maintain the integrity
of his magazine.
Shattered
Glass may not seem like particularly thrilling
stuff but Ray delivers a fascinating look into the world of journalism and into
the machinations of a manipulative sociopath.
- Your Friends & Neighbours (Dir. Neil LaBute, 1998)
The plot is essentially revolved around
three friends: Barry (Aaron Eckhart), Jerry (Ben Stiller) and Cary (Jason
Patric). They meet for drinks and workout together and share their warped
experiences and expectations of sexual politics. Barry and Jerry are in
relationships where the spark has been long extinguished and Cary drifts
between vapid one night stand after the other. The trio’s friendship (more
acquaintance as the men are completely emotionally bankrupt) comes under strain
when Jerry begins an affair with Barry’s wife Mary (Amy Brenneman) while
Jerry’s girlfriend Terri (Catherine Keener) starts a relationship with an
attractive art gallery worker (Nastassja Kinski).
Your
Friends & Neighbors has six actors who are all
giving sterling work. From the female angle, Keener and Brenneman give emotive
intelligent performances as women who cannot find satisfaction or depth with
the men in their lives. Brenneman gives a melancholy performance where she repeatedly
asks “to be held” and not to be seen as a “giant vagina” to Eckhart’s “giant
penis”. Keener quite literally gives up on men and embarks a lesbian
relationship with Kinski. But the film is all about the men and their
nefariousness. Eckhart is almost unrecognisable as the affable but
self-involved and dim-witted Barry. Ben Stiller, in an unusually straight
dramatic role, also gives a great turn. The film however, belongs to Jason
Patric - in one of his finest roles – plays one of cinema’s greatest assholes.
He is an extremely shallow misogynist who admits, amongst other things, to
having “revenge” sex with a co-worker who undermined him at work and concocting
a fictitious HIV report for a former lover. He is slimy, narcissistic and
completely engrossing. It’s a performance of fearlessness particularly in a
scene where Cary recounts his best sexual encounter – a jaw dropper that is
worth the price of admission alone.
LaBute is less interested in the soap opera
relationship squabbles and more interested in the motivations and behaviours of
the six morally questionable characters. Cary’s and Jerry’s actions and
behaviour is entirely depraved and morally bankrupt but they are not snarling
villains. These are very real people doing nasty things that happen every day.
LaBute reminds us these warped characters are among us in everyday life. They
are indeed our friends and neighbours.
- The Trigger Effect (Dir.: David Koepp, 1993)
David Koepp, the screenwriter of Jurassic
Park and War of the Worlds, has made a handful of features as a director
(including this month’s Premium Rush).
In 1993, Koepp wrote and directed a fascinating take on the disaster/apocalypse
genre with The Trigger Effect.
Starring Kyle MacLachlan, Elizabeth Shue,
Dermot Mulroney and Michael Rooker, the plot is centred on a massive blackout
that causes havoc, paranoia and isolation in Los Angeles. Matthew and Annie are
a married couple with many problems. Annie sees her husband as weak and
cowardly – established at the beginning of the movie when Annie is verbally
berated by a rude cinema patron while her husband watches on. Mulroney’s Joe is
a friend of the couple and former lover of Annie’s who comes to stay after a
massive blackout leaves the city (and possibly the entire country – it is never
fully revealed) in darkness and without any electricity.
Koepp later explores the same themes and highlights
the dangers of a society thrown into uncertainty and chaos in Steven
Spielberg’s War of the Worlds but
this is not invading hostile Martians – this is thrusting an over dependent
society into the primitive ages.
The film has outstanding performances
particularly from MacLachlan and Mulroney. In the case of the former, the Blue Velvet star is presented as an
effeminate passive husband to Elizabeth Shue – who has little or no respect for
her spouse. His slow progression as a rational thoughtful man applying logic
and calm to a pandemic situation is a strong anchor for the film. MacLachlan’s
Matthew doesn’t display traditional leading man characteristics in this type of
movie. There are no sweeping gestures of violence or heroics – he is simply
keeping his nerve and his guile in an impossible time. Mulroney’s Joe too is
presented as a counterpoint to Matthew – he is Stanley Kowalski-like in his
masculinity. He has brawn and potent sexuality that creates a love triangle
between the three lead actors.
Like War of the Worlds, Koepp harrowingly
demonstrates the real fears of society is not invading Martians or in this
case, a massive blackout, but how people can turn into Darwinian primitives
when the layers of civilisation begin to unravel. A terrific thriller!
- Rodger Dodger (Dir.: Dylan Kidd, 2002)
Campbell Scott plays an acerbic
misogynistic yuppie ad man (before it was cool). He has a reputation as a
ladies man but the only action we see him get is with his boss who is dumping
him for the next, younger office toy boy. Roger spends his time attempting to
seduce women by pithy analysis and draconian observation.
Roger is caught off guard when his 15 year
old nephew Nick (Jesse Eisenberg) arrives in Manhattan to learn how to pick up
women. Roger leads his unsuspecting nephew on an odyssey of predatorily
chauvinism which includes: an attempt to seduce the sophisticated Andrea and
Sophie (Jennifer Beals and Elizabeth Berkley), taking advantage of Roger’s drunken
co-worker, and using the “fail-safe” – reserved for when Nick is desperate to
lose his virginity.
Writer-Director Dylan Kidd presents an
attractive New York with a seedy and tawdry underbelly. The dialogue is acidic
and punchy and is delivered with charm and gusto by its impressively talented
cast. Jesse Eisenberg in his first leading role, shows the awkward charm and
engaging presence that has led him to Oscar nominated success (for his role as
Mark Zuckerberg in The Social Network).
Rossellini, Berkley, and Beals all deliver fine supporting performances and
give their characters weight and depth. The real standout performance is
Campbell Scott. The son of legendary Oscar winner George C. Scott, Campbell’s
Roger is a man facing extinction as his chain smoking, hard-drinking chauvinism
is confronted with a world of women in charge. His electrifying monologues
tutoring Nick about the world of sex are wonderfully reigned in by his slow
realisation that he is completely alone in the world.
Roger Dodger is a fine example of small
American independent cinema that deserved a wide audience. It has laughs, charm
and a real emotional core beneath its tough, cool and calm surface – much like
its title character.
- Buffalo Soldiers (Dir.: Gregor Jordan, 2003)
Nietzsche: “Where there is peace, the
war-like man attacks himself.”
Ray Elwood (Joaquin Phoenix): “War is hell.
But peace is fucking boring”
Gregor Jordan’s scintillating black comedy
shows how a war movie without a war can be just as nihilist and exhilarating
than the storming of Normandy beaches. Buffalo
Soldiers is a rapid fire roller coaster ride of a movie with action,
thrills, romance and black comedy.
Ray Elwood is a constant grafter. Much like
Morgan Freeman’s character in The
Shawshank Redemption, Ray runs his military camp in Germany in everything
but title. He rip’s off his own military’s weapons to sell on the black market
and engineers a massive drug deal to nefarious locals. His ease to swindle and
conduct his business is mainly appropriated to the ineptitude of commanding
officer Colonel Berman (a loveable but incompetent Ed Harris). However,
Elwood’s illegitimate dealings come under threat when a new commander Robert E.
Lee (a fierce Scott Glenn) is put in charge determined to clear up the camp.
Phoenix, who has always been the
under-appreciated actor of his generation, is simply wonderful in the film. His
moral bankruptcy is countered by his wonderful charm and rebellious streak.
When he embarks upon courting Lee’s daughter (an enchanting Anna Paquin) – the
audience is complicit in a romantic relationship founded upon getting back at
your boss. Paquin too has an axe to grind with her father and doesn’t care
about being used. The romantic subplot is wonderfully balanced against Elwood’s
dodgy dealings.
Despite this being peacetime, Jordan
relishes in showing the futility of war. The soldiers with the camp turn on
each other over the control of the heroin trade. One scene has two soldiers
repeatedly stabbing each other over and over – cementing Jordan’s Nietzschean
view of the “war-like man”. A hilarious movie from start to finish, Buffalo Soldiers shows how war (or lack
thereof) can be an awful lot of fun.
- Thief (Dir.: Michael Mann, 1981)
Michael Mann’s directorial debut is a
stylish engrossing crime thriller. James Caan gives a wonderful performance as
a career criminal who tries to turn straight but is inevitably drawn back into
the underworld. The premise is nothing new but Mann delivers an ultra-violent
neo-noir that has certainly influenced Mann’s own Miami Vice and most recently, Drive.
Frank (Caan) and his partner (James
Belushi) agree to do a heist for the Chicago mafia which is head up by Leo
(Robert Prosky). Frank is eager to do one last score and settle down with his
girlfriend (Tuesday Weld) and start a family. The caper is a $4 million diamond
heist which Frank wishes to be his last and walk away from the underworld for
good. However Leo and the Outfit have other ideas.
The cast of Thief is excellent – a blend of movie stars giving career best work
and wonderful character actors. Robert Prosky, for instance is a character
actor known mainly for his mentor roles plays the sadistic villain who at first
is a father figure to Frank. Prosky’s warmth and charm is plausibly magnetic
which makes his metamorphosis into malevolence all the more electrifying. Speaking
of “against type”, Willie Nelson (yes that Willie Nelson) gives a scintillating
cameo as an old friend of Frank’s languishing in prison who gives a moving
performance in his limited screen time. Caan too gives one of the performances
of his career. Frank is a not an invincible tough guy or a character that
relishes violence (like Caan’s most famous role in The Godfather) but a man grown weary of crime. He wants to reject
his illegitimate skills and make it as an honest citizen. Mann propagates the
idea that the violent world is impossible to escape and that the American Dream
is not open to everyone.
Mann along with his producer Jerry Bruckheimer
(also an earlier film for the mega mogul) creates a stylish neon lit world
where the American Dream is flashed on every corner. Frank’s eagerness to
settle into a normal crime-free life is ultimately what draws him deeper into
the world of violence. The violence is swift and shocking particularly in an
exhilarating climactic showdown that is among Mann’s finest action scenes.
- You Can Count on Me
(Dir.: Kenneth Lonergan, 2000)
You
Can Count on Me is a simple movie with a simple
story but is acted beautifully and has such charm and warmth that normalcy is
welcomed with embracing arms.
Samantha (Laura Linney in an Oscar
nominated role) is a single mother to her ten year old son Rudy (Rory Culkin).
Her life becomes complicated when she gets a new boss at her bank (played with
slimy glee by Matthew Broderick) and her wayward drifter brother Terry (Mark
Ruffalo) arrives in town. Sammy has a boyfriend who is a decent man but she
refuses to marry him just because he’s there. She also ends up having a dysfunctional
affair with her married boss Brian (Broderick) despite the obvious
self-destruction involved.
Terry is drifting aimlessly through life.
He’s a handy man and an odd-jobber who has no plans or no dreams. The dichotomy
set up between the siblings is wonderful. Sammy chastises terry for his
aimlessness and for his lack of faith when her behaviour is far from rebuke.
The Oscar nominated script is full of such
wonderful and realistic dialogue that simply hanging out with the characters is
a joy. When Terry takes Rudy to a bar to play a high stakes pool game, you’ll
find yourself jumping for joy which is indicative of Lonergan’s writing which
has made you completely fall in love with the characters.
The title of the film is actually never
spoken. It is hinted as “something [they] used to say to each other as kids”
but this is the overall message of the movie. Having loved ones – family and
friends – in one’s life is of paramount importance. The bonds that are shared
are unbreakable and no matter how much Terry and Sammy squabble with each other
their love and trust in each other carries them through. It almost seems like
an insult labelling this movie a “feel-good” movie but in essence that’s
exactly what it does. The message is so pure and positive it will simply leave
the audience feeling just that.
- The Crossing Guard (Dir.: Sean Penn, 1995)
Written and directed by Sean Penn, this
emotional gut-wrencher explores the notions of grief and vengeance which
features superb performances.
After spending five years in jail for the
drunk hit and run of a young girl John Booth (David Morse) is released from
prison. He is still racked and tormented with guilt and tries to get on with
his life. He meets JoJo (Robin Wright, Penn’s wife at the time) and begins a
romance with her but is still haunted by the girl’s death. Freddy (Jack
Nicholson), the girl’s father hears Booth is released and vows to murder him in
revenge.
Morse a wonderful character actor who has
appeared in the likes of The Rock and
The Negotiator gets a rare lead role
where he demonstrates what an undervalued actor he is. Morse’s Booth is a man
so broken with guilt and remorse he waits patiently and acceptingly for Freddy
to kill him. His scenes with Robin Wright are heartfelt and pure. The
relationship between Nicholson’s and Angelica Huston’s characters is so intense
and their shared history is palpable (helped no doubt by their real-life
relationship of nearly 15 years). A scene where the estranged couple attempt to
reconcile is an acting master class that perfectly encapsulates their
relationship – tenderness and love that shattered by rage and tragedy.
The film is really shepherded by an acting
tour de force from Nicholson. Like, The
King of Marvin Gardens, or The Pledge
(another under-appreciated collaboration with Sean Penn), or About Schmidt, Nicholson is most
effective when he is not playing Jack
Nicholson. The arched eyebrows, cheeky grin and maniacal laugh are nowhere to
be found. Nicholson’s Freddy is on a path of self destruction caused by the
grief of his daughter’s death. Nicholson is tragic, volatile, repugnant and
heart-breaking. It is repeatedly over-looked in the legendary actor’s body of
work which is near criminal.
Penn alludes to capital punishment (as does
his performance in Dead Man Walking which
was released the same year). Freddy’s vengeful quest is almost as destructive
as the grief he feels. He knows the killing of Booth will give him no release
or peace – yet it is consumed by it. However The Crossing Guard is not a message movie. The film is about very
real human beings dealing with very real emotions and tragedies that exist in
everyday life. Penn’s willingness to let the actors tell the story with truth
and heart is what ultimately makes this film utterly gripping.
- American Movie (Dir.: Chris Smith, 1998)
As seen with Lost in La Mancha and Heart
of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse, the making of movies is as
engrossing and enthralling as the finished product. In this case, this
documentary is the making of a movie that is never realised and a desperately
amateur horror short that makes The Evil
Dead look like Avatar. Instead,
we are given a touching portrait of a film fanatic who refuses to relinquish
his dreams which is completely charming.
Mark Borchardt is a struggling film maker.
The documentary begins with Borchardt desperately trying to get through
pre-production of his debut feature film Northwestern.
Interestingly, the film is a supposed look at Middle America and the
inhabitants who are excluded from the American Dream and left in a decadent,
indigent post-industrial wasteland. The film shows how the movie never progresses
past a second pre-production meeting (where no one shows up) and Borchardt,
undeterred decides to finish his three year in the making horror short entitled
Coven.
The film could easily be a study of
self-destructive hubris, yet director Chris Smith presents Borchardt as a
down-on-his-luck dreamer who has never gotten a break. The would-be director
and his cast and crew have delusions of grandeur and a lack of common sense
which is awkwardly humorous. However we are given time to spend with the
characters and effectively drink the ‘Kool-Aid’ and desperately root for them
to finish the movie and accomplish their dreams.
Borchardt is by no means an infallible
protagonist. He drinks too much, he takes advantage of his ailing uncle to
procure funds for the film and constantly fights with his mother and the mother
of his children. The documentary could easily verge into social realist drama
territory but Borchardt really comes alive when he is plunged head first into
making his warped masterpiece. In many ways American
Movie embodies the ethos of Hollywood and America. Borchardt is a dreamer
and despite his alack of experience, skill, funding and support he is
relentless in the ‘pursuit of happiness’.
- The Wanderers (Dir.: Philip Kaufman, 1979)
Unfairly beaten to theatres by Walter
Hill’s cult classic The Warriors,
this second “gangs of New York” drama is more of a coming of age drama than an
action thriller. Director Philip Kaufman (The
Right Stuff) and writer Richard Price (adapted from his novel) assemble an
impressive young cast, a terrific rock ‘n’ roll soundtrack and stylish flare to
make The Wanderers a bittersweet
masterpiece.
‘The Wanderers’ are a gang among many in
New York’s Bronx there’s also: ‘the Baldies’ (a bunch of violent skin heads), ‘the
Wongs’ (Chinese martial-artists who all have the surname Wong), ‘the del Bombers’ (the Italian hating black group who are the Wanderers football rivals)
and the psychotic ‘Ducky boys’. Led by Richie, the Wanderers are all about
singing doo-wop music (their anthem and name is inspired by Dion’s song The Wanderer), combing their greasy
pompadours and chasing ‘dames’. Richie however has his problems – he’s knocked
up his girlfriend who is the daughter of local mob boss, he’s involved with
snobby society girl (Raiders of the Lost
Ark’s Karen Allen), he’s the captain of the football who are up against the
Del Bombers in a championship match, and he faces brutality from any one of his
gang rivals.
Kaufman has a wonderful blend of realist
drama with surrealistic farce. The Wanderers are teenage boys on the verge of
manhood with very traditional adolescent problems in an almost cartoonish world
of gangs.
The toe-curling-ly 60’s soundtrack features
The Shirelles, Frankie Valli & the
Four Seasons, Ben E. King and Dion
who all add to the sense of abandon and joy of youth. The film is less about
plot and more about sequences and spending time with the characters. There is
certainly plenty of style on display but that does not detract away from the
substance. The Wanderers is a
charming and frank tale about the end of innocence which will have you reaching
for the hair gel and change for the local juke box.
Have I missed a little known classic or
your favourite under-appreciated gem? Please feel free to add comments and
share.
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