Sunday, 7 February 2016

FCCA Awards Night Bonus - Starting at 6.00 pm sharp - A Conversation with Oscar-winner Adam Elliott

Here's a unique opportunity to hear the thoughts of the Oscar-winning Australian animator Adam Elliot

Oscar Winner Adam, is also a great raconteur, After his academy award win, he spent some considerable time travelling and giving talks to much acclaim.

The FCCA has invited its Patron to start the awards event this year with  "A conversation with Adam Elliott", Adam will talk about his adventures at the Oscars and other film festivals,  his creation of his unique characters',.....And he'll answer any questions!!




Tuesday 23rd February 2016 - 6.00pm sharp
Paddington/Woollahra RSL Oxford Street, Paddington
Opposite Paddington Town Hall
Tickets only $25 per head (Including Light Supper)
Members of Guilds $20.00
Table bookings at discount price contact FCCA
Dress: Casual/Smart/Comfortable
Please RSVP to Book: FilmCriticsAust@bigpond.com
Note FCCA does not have Credit Card facilities. Cash only
The FCCA is grateful to our sponsors
FOXTEL/ UNIVERSAL PICTURES/ ACS/FILMINK, AGSC,

MB FILMS KARMEE COFFEE/ AUST VOICES IN PRINT/ 

FCCA Awards - Official Invitation, Contact details, costs, time & date

INVITATION
The FCCA takes pleasure in inviting you to
The Annual Critics Awards for Australian Films OF 2015
Tuesday 23rd February 2016 - 6.00pm sharp
Paddington/Woollahra RSL Oxford Street, Paddington
Opposite Paddington Town Hall
Tickets only $25 per head (Including Light Supper)
Members of Guilds $20.00
Table bookings at discount price contact FCCA
Dress: Casual/Smart/Comfortable
Please RSVP to Book: FilmCriticsAust@bigpond.com
Note FCCA does not have Credit Card facilities. Cash only
The FCCA is grateful to our sponsors
FOXTEL/ UNIVERSAL PICTURES/ ACS/FILMINK, AGSC,

MB FILMS KARMEE COFFEE/ AUST VOICES IN PRINT/ 

Saturday, 6 February 2016

The Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards Night - Tuesday 23 February

Always an evening of great humour, especially from MC Rod Quinn. And there is occasional seriousness, like last year when Rolf De Heer gave a speech filled with incandescent rage about TonyAbbott's indigenous affairs thoughts when the then PM suggested that living in remote communities was a 'lifestyle choice'. A chance to get a different take on what constituted the best in Australian film-making as seen through the eyes of those who have to see and write about them all. Here's the brochure. Click on it to enlarge and then go to fcca.com.au for all details

Friday, 5 February 2016

Paul Harris posits an alternate cinephiliac history of David Bowie and the movies - Number 3

A DAVID BOWIE PHANTOM FILMOGRAPHY  (3)                             
The projects that never saw the light of day 

Number 17 Octobriana
I had never heard of Octobriana until I read about it in a Bowie biography. But he knew all about it. A Russian comic strip heroine with a Red Star adorning her head,named after the October Revolution and based upon a comic strip by a Czech defector Petr Sadecky. He attempted to set up a movie version in 1974 which would have starred fashion model, nightclub fixture and future Eurodisco queen Amanda Lear. Lear fancied herself as part of the jet set of the time (Lear Jet ???), encouraged gossip that close pal Salvador Dali had financed a sex change operation, hung out with Bryan Ferry, etc. etc. before gliding into Bowie's glam rock phase orbit .

Bowie was to have produced this project in a hands-off manner through his management company MainMan. But his enthusiasm was not shared by anyone else in his retinue and the project was abandoned before it really happened, so typical of the Bowie modus operandi at the time (remember the Stranger In A Strange Land experience) After all there were tour schedules that had to adhered to, adoring fans in need of the excitement only he could generate, new territories to conquer. The constant touring acted as a constant excuse or sometime an easy way out if you felt you were getting in over your head.But I,for one,would love to have seen this Ruski Barbarella in action. For a sneak look at the source material go to  Octobriana

Number 18 Brimstone and Treacle
Brimstone And Treacle caused considerable controversy when first broadcast by the BBC in 1976 as an episode of the long running flagship drama series Play For Today. The Beeb's Director General was personally affronted by Dennis Potter's dark parable in which a demonic character, Martin Taylor, turns up on the doorstep of the Bates family. Think Pasolini's Teorema and Terence Stamp to get some idea. The content, which included the rape of the family's disabled daughter, was banned from screening. By the time it did finally screen in 1987 plans were underway for a movie version
Bowie was the first in line to be offered the part of the Satanic Martin Taylor in a projected movie which took a long time to get off the ground. I think Malcolm McDowell was also approached at some point.

At this point in his career, after the Just A Gigolo misfire, he was in a conflicted state of mind, wanting to further his acting career on left-of-centre projects but reticent to sign on the dotted line.Pity that he let this role slip from his fingers - it's embarrassing to watch Sting who lacks the charisma and camp bitchiness that Bowie would have brought to the role. Strangely enough Bowie did end up in the film in an oblique way. Patricia's bedroom in the TV original sported a poster of Mick Jagger on the wall. In the 1982 movie, directed by Richard Loncraine, it's the man that got way, Bowie! (see at left
Sting poncing about and at right Bowie).


Distributor Hoyts gave the film to the independent  Brighton Bay cinema as a throwaway for a short season. That's where I saw it.

Number 19
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988)
After the sudden commercial success of the Disney comedy Ruthless People (David Zucker, Jim Abrahams, Jerry Zucker, USA, 1986) screenwriter Dale Launer thought he might have the germ of a great idea which could team Bowie with Mick Jagger. He called up Gail Davis, a former talent manager at A and M Records, who was at the time the creative head of Isolar, Bowie's umbrella company which handled his projects and explained the set-up. The company was named after the Isolar tour of 1976 in which Bowie toured globally to cross-promote his Station To Station album.(Apparently the concerts opened with projected images from Bunuels's Un Chien Andalou) .The film would be a remake of a so-so 1964 Universal comedy called Bedtime Story (Ralph Levy, USA) with David Niven and Marlon Brando as a pair of con artists. Jagger agreed to meet with Launer but the project stalled. Conceptual problems bugged it. With these two rock icons would it be a musical, a musical comedy, comedy ???  Later it was rewritten as an Eddie Murphy vehicle ,went through numerous rewrites for different studios and directors before ultimately winding up at Orion with the then unbeatable box-office combination of Steve Martin and Michael Caine.

Number 20
Ridley Scott According to Nicholas Pegg's book The Complete David Bowie, out of all the Hollywood projects offered to him his one regret was not accepting an offer from director Ridley Scott. But which film could it have been ? I have no idea . Maybe a project that Scott developed but never got to realise ? Gladiator,maybe ?? But Bowie did manage to work with Scott much,much earlier, in January 1969 on an ice cream commercial at a time when he was hungry for any kind of work opportunity and the release of the ground-breaking Space Oddity was still half a year into the future. He can be glimpsed twice, first running up the stairs of the bus and later as a member of the pop band vocally extolling the virtues of Luv Ice Cream.

Number 21 GEORGE ROMERO : THE RETURN OF THE JIVING DEAD
The concept behind the black comedy Diamond Dead involves a garage band killed in a freak accident ,except the lead singer who returns as a zombie,achieving undreamed of success and adulation. Richard Hartley (Rocky Horror Picture Show) wrote a score and in 2004 director George Romero sent out pitch letters to his dream cast including Johnny Depp, Ozzy Osborne, Marilyn Manson and Bowie. It all seemed to be going well. The Scott Brothers (Ridley and Tony) came on board as producers for their Scott Free company, and in a blast from the past, veteran Australian expatriate and co-producer Andrew Gaty (The Return Of Captain Invincible, Phillipe Mora, Australia, 1983), set up a website with Romero to whip the fans into a frenzy and create awareness. Gaty was very much the driving force, having previously attempted to set up the film as in 2002 German-based project under the direction of Sean Travis.

Here's the missive,actually a form letter and part of the promotional hype, intended to secure Bowie's services .
Dear Mr. Bowie,
I am enclosing a copy of the script, DIAMOND DEAD by Brian Cooper. I am a huge admirer of your work. I will be directing and have just completed a rewrite, which I feel is very close to what we want the film to be. It lampoons everything from the music business to organized religion, the federal government and the blind adoration of crazed and insatiable fandom. It is a black comedy with songs and music by Richard Hartley (who composed the music for THE ROCKY HORROR SHOW). It is not a rock opera, but is a unique story of a Rock Band who returns from the dead to appear in one more rousing rock concert. We are beginning to generate a lot of interest because ROCKY HORROR (Richard) meets NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (me). Richard has recorded a demo of nine songs. The producer, Andrew Gaty and I are very excited about the possibility of making this an extraordinary movie because we love the material and think there is a vast audience who will get it. We would be thrilled if you would consider appearing in the film as the character of Death. Alison Lohman (White Oleander, Matchstick Men) is reading the script for the character of Aria. We are also sending the script to Johnny Depp. We expect to shoot around March next year, possibly in England. We have also finished some preliminary designs of the costumes and makeup as they are all very important 'characters' in this genre of horror musical. I am hoping that you might be attracted as we are to DIAMOND DEAD and I would be happy to send you the music demo and the sketches. And, at your convenience I would be delighted to talk to you about your ideas on the project. 
Kindest regards, George Romero

Number 22 Bowie as Johnny Ray
One of America's most famous and influential gossip columnists and socialites of her time Dorothy Kilgallen (1913-1965) achieved national celebrity and died under mysterious circumstances. She was also an early sceptic in print on the JFK assassination, questioning the Warrren Commission's findings .She also formed a close friendship with pop crooner Johnnie Ray, a closeted gay performer. In the 80's a Hollywood biopic was planned with Shirley Maclaine in the title role and David Bowie as Ray. Another intriguing role that Bowie would have been a perfect physical fit for.

















Number 23 DIAMOND DOGS (1974)
Bowie's 8th album came about after an abortive attempt to buy the licensing rights to George Orwell's novel 1984 from his widow Sonia Orwell. For some time he had been interested in the idea of a post-apocalyptic musical. Some of the songs that ended up on the album had originally been intended for this project. I have read that Warners Brothers offered a huge sum for a movie version of Diamond Dogs but have not been able to verify this. But I do know that in 1975 Bowie, who had toyed with the idea of a stage musical version, shot test footage for a possible movie.
Bowie was quoted as saying of Sonia Orwell "For someone who married a socialist with communist leanings, she was the biggest upper-class snob I've ever met in my life".

Number 24 BOWIE : PLAYWRIGHT
In 1967 Bowie wrote “The Champion Flower Grower”, a play for the BBC drama department but it was rejected by the head of the drama department who curtly dismissed the project thus : " Mr. Bowie has really not yet begun to consider what a play is and this total lack of dramatic devopment just rules the script out ". In the year prior to his death he collaborated with Irish playwright Edna Walsh on the stage version of Lazarus which reworked stylistic elements from The Man Who Fell To Earth. The off-Broadway world premiere starred Michael C. Hall (Six Feet Under, Dexter, left),  as the humanoid alien and was an instant sellout despite mixed reviews.

Number 25 The Delinquents
Just in finishing as I previously mentioned, Bowie was supposed to be music director on The Delinquents,based upon a book he was immensely fond of. It turns out that he was actually signed up for a major role (but what part ???) which was grandly announced to the press. But he was so annoyed at the dumbing down of the screenplay, supposedly to appeal to a mythical American audience that yet again, as so many times in his career, he walked. Maybe Bowie's screen presence is a continuation of his unique stage persona as a solo performer. Surely it's no coincidence that Nicolas Roeg , who gave him his breakthrough role in The Man Who Fell To Earth had previously directed another rock icon without any formal training but charisma to boot, namely Mick Jagger in Performance (1969) . TMWFTE was a great role to showcase his alien character, projecting an other-worldly aura which characterised nearly all of his screen work .


It's time to lay Bowie to rest ....

Wednesday, 3 February 2016

The Current Cinema & More - Serious young cinephile Shaun Heenan goes out, stays in and records his diary

It’s been a while since I updated this film diary, and I’ve been watching more films than usual, so this is  going to be a long one. Let’s jump straight in.

I’m a long-time fan of Quentin Tarantino’s, so I’m always excited to see him back in cinemas. His new film is a western, The Hateful Eight (Quentin Tarantino, USA, 2015), and he’s made some very interesting decisions about its presentation. The film is intended to be displayed on 70mm film, and that  version includes a few extra scenes, an overture and an intermission. Nobody near me is playing it in 70mm, so I saw the standard DCP version, which is perfectly fine, though the voiceover reintroducing the film post-intermission makes less sense when there isn’t one.

Despite the gigantic frame, much of the film takes place inside a log cabin, where various miscreants are trapped together during a snowstorm. They talk and argue at great length, and once people start dying, a mystery presents itself as to the real identity of those present. It’s an enjoyable movie, despite its great length and verbosity, with Samuel L. Jackson and Kurt Russell offering some of the strongest performances. For my money, this is a better film than Tarantino’s last mildly-disappointing effort, Django Unchained (2012), but is not nearly as good as my favourite, Inglourious Basterds (2009).Middling Tarantino still makes for an above-average film.

I saw The Hateful Eight back to back with The Danish Girl (Tom Hooper, UK, 2015), but the discussion around that film has proved to be such a minefield of political correctness that I’m inclined to avoid discussing it at all. Alicia Vikander’s performance is quite good, and Eddie Redmayne’s performance is quite bad. The script is awful. I do not recommend the film.
Back at home I watched Sleeping With Other People (Leslye Headland, USA, 2015), which is yet another disappointing romantic comedy. The formula for these things is etched in stone, and this film does almost nothing to deviate from it. The specifics are that Jake (Jason Sudeikis) and Lainey (Alison Brie)took each other’s virginity in college, and have both since become serial cheaters, unwilling to stay with the same partners. They meet again, and choose to become friends instead of romantic partners. Guess how that turns out.The film has reviewed decently elsewhere, but I didn’t find it very funny or very creative. It’s not actively unpleasant, just uninspired. Some of the quieter scenes between the two leads are touching, but they’re wasted in a film which then has the same characters teaching dance at a kid’s birthday party while high on drugs.

Next , by way of a copy from the local library’s DVD shelf, though I later realised I already owned it. Murder! (Alfred Hitchcock, UK, 1930) was one of Hitchcock’s earliest non-silent films. The film opens with a lengthy shot rolling down a quiet street. We hear a clamour, and are taken into the scene of a crime, where a woman lies dead, and another woman sits stunned, looking at her. A poker lies on the floor between them. Hitchcock lets this image sit still as the camera pans around, showing us the clues in various parts of the scene. The sitting woman is convicted, but one of the jurors is troubled by the case, and sets out to solve the crime himself. Murder! is missing most of the sure-handedness of Hitchcock’s later work, and some of the plot elements are less than convincing, but we see some hints here of what was to come. The real issue is the dialogue, which is flatly written and performed. Scenes seem overlong and lifeless. Hitchcock made worse films than this during his early sound years, but this is far from the highlights of even that early period.

I spent the next day watching three streaming rentals from Vudu , beginning with the fairly enjoyable western Bone Tomahawk (S. Craig Zahler, USA, 2015), which will eventually become notorious for a single scene of  extreme violence, though it has much more to offer along the way. Zahler’s film begins troublingly, with badly-paced expository scenes and cheap-looking sets. In these scenes, we meet Arthur (Patrick Wilson), who must set off on a dangerous mission to rescue his wife from her vicious captors, despite his broken leg. He’s joined on this journey by the town Sheriff (Kurt Russell again), a doddering deputy (Richard Jenkins) and a well-educated, condescending gunman (Matthew Fox). Their clashes and conversations are the real meat of this piece, and they harken back to the westerns of the 1950s.I mentioned some ‘vicious captors’. This is a Native American tribe shown to be so brutal and savage as to approach inhumanity. It would be very, very easy for this concept to be wildly offensive, and the film walks a very fine line here. One Native American appears in an early scene to calmly and clearly distance the captors from all other tribes. This reeks of tokenism, but to be honest, the movie more-or-less gets away with it. This is the sort of thing that bothers me when handled poorly and, in this case, it didn’t.  While I recommend this film, it comes with a big caveat. That one scene I mentioned earlier is one of the single most violent things I have ever seen done to a human being in a film, and I have seen all of the Saw movies. If you’re sensitive to violence, give this one a wide berth.

Melanie Laurent
The second of the streaming films was one I’ve been looking forward to for a long time. Breathe (aka Respire, Mélanie Laurent, France, 2014), is the story of high-school girl Charlie (Joséphine Japy). She quickly becomes best friends with Sarah (Lou de Laâge), a new arrival at the school. Charlie is impressed with Sarah’s intelligence and sense of style, and she begins to ignore all of her old friends as the pair become inseparable. During a trip together, jealousies begin to come between them, and Sarah uses Charlie’s attachment to her as a weapon, toying with her emotions for the rest of the film. This relationship is shown tenderly, and the pain caused is ruinous. I was wrapped up in this film, completely invested emotionally, and was left shaken by the perfectly-staged conclusion. French actress Mélanie Laurent was the best thing about Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds, and here she proves she’s just as good behind the camera as she is in front of it. Her direction here feels like that of a much more experienced director. One long take in particular really stands out, as we learn a great deal about one character and then, after a small pan, a great deal about another. This is an excellent film.

The Visit
The final film I streamed this week was The Visit (M. Night Shyamalan, USA, 2015), which serves as another cruel reminder of how far its director has fallen since earning a Best Picture nomination for The Sixth Sense (1999). As hard as it might be to believe after some of his recent output, I think The Visit might actually be Shyamalan’s worst film. It takes the ugly form of a found footage horror movie, filmed by a pair of young siblings played by Australians Olivia DeJonge and Ed Oxenbould. As with almost every example of this genre, we have to sit through endless idle chatter and explanations of why somebody is always walking around with a camera before anything remotely interesting happens. The children are being sent to stay with a set of grandparents they’ve never met before, and once they arrive, they learn that their grandparents get a little creepy after the sun goes down. When the film is not simply dull, or cheating with jump scares (at one point, someone literally hides below the camera, jumps up and screams), it is baffling. Ed Oxenbould’s character likes to think he’s a great freestyle rapper, and he spouts verses of idiocy towards the camera not once, not twice, but three times. These are the worst three scenes of the year. I felt embarrassed to be sitting in the same room as this movie. Imagine how embarrassed Shyamalan must feel to have directed it.

I headed back to the cinema for an infinitely better film. Spotlight (Tom McCarthy, USA, 2015) is an expertly-crafted film based on the true story of a group of journalists at the Boston Globe carefully researching reports of Catholic priests molesting children. The systematic protection of these many, many offenders, and the way they were relocated each time instead of being prosecuted, is one of the great injustices of our age. This film powerfully uses plain facts to remind us that we should still be angry about this. The Boston Globe team is portrayed by Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Brian d’Arcy James and Rachel McAdams, and this is just a small portion of the large and uniformly excellent cast. This film made me weep, and it made me furious. All the while, it gripped my attention firmly as the investigation uncovered threads and hit roadblocks. This is one of the year’s best films, and it’s rightfully being considered one of the favourites to win the Oscar for Best Picture later this month.


In a small community theatre in Coffs Harbor, I watched the exciting closing night film of a festival I discovered too late to otherwise attend. Louder Than Bombs (Joachim Trier, Norway, 2015) played in competition at the Cannes Film Festival last May, and is the first English-language film from the director. The film examines what remains of a family left devastated by the suicide of a mother (Isabelle Huppert). Gabriel Byrne plays the grieving father, and Jesse Eisenberg plays the older of two sons, who has moved on to have a family of his own, though the pain of the loss still affects his behaviour. The most impressive performance in the film comes from Devin Druid, as the younger brother who was emotionally crippled by the loss, and by the information his family has been hiding from him about the circumstances of his mother’s death. This is one of the most realistic depictions of a damaged introvert I can remember seeing in a film. The film flows freely through time, filled with flashbacks and revelations, and it uses a number of different cinematic styles as the perspective changes between characters. The most striking scene in the movie is a deep dive into the thoughts of the younger brother, shown as a series of rapidly cut images. Many scenes impress on their own, but the movie struggles somewhat to tie these fascinating fragments into a cohesive whole, leading to a conclusion which felt false to me, though I appreciated the restraint it showed. I struggled to embrace the film too fully, thanks to the frequent outbursts of the two dumbest, loudest young men on the Mid-North coast, who somehow ended up next to me at an expensive festival screening of an obscure art film. I’ll need to watch this one again when I get the chance.


The final film I’ll cover today is another Palme d’Or contender from Cannes 2015, seen at a cinema in general release. Youth (Paolo Sorrentino, Italy, 2015) is another examination of aging in the art world  from the director of The Great Beauty (2013). It serves as further confirmation that Paolo Sorrentino’s  interests and my own overlap upon a general appreciation of film, and otherwise differ entirely. The film  takes place at a secluded resort in the Swiss Alps, where retired composer Fred Ballinger (Michael Caine) and still-working director Mick Boyle (Harvey Keitel) are temporarily escaping from the world. Cue endless discussion between the two about the importance of art and the fear and acceptance of aging. Rachel Weisz is mildly more interesting as Ballinger’s daughter, though her storyline devolves into a ludicrous, out-of-character romance with a mountain climber. Paul Dano also offers a small amount of interest as a young actor who is best known for a special-effects action film he has come to hate, despite his earnest efforts in more meaningful fare (in the vein of Shia LaBeouf or Robert Pattinson). Many of the scenes which aren’t dreary just feel misguided. There’s one moment in a spa where the two old men are joined by the (unnamed) nude Miss Universe which I’m sure Sorrentino envisioned as a reminder of the fleeting beauty of youth, but in practise feels more like two over-aged frat boys leering. Some people like this film very much, but I couldn’t wait for it to be over.

The Rotterdam Film Festival Supports the Busan International Film Festival

International support for the beleaguered Busan International Film Festival is flowing ever stronger. The Rotterdam Film Festival has now published a call in its daily blog for internationalconcern to be expressed over BIFF’s difficulties.  You can go to the page and read the report here and check out the photo of supporters, old and young, industry veterans and newcomers. Rotterdam Blog.

Monday, 1 February 2016

On Blu-ray - David Hare looks at new discs of Confidential Report, The Wrong Man, I Confess & Fat City

Confidential Report/Dossier Secret (Mr Arkadin) (Orson Welles, France/Spain/Switzerland, 1955)
The terrific Carnival scene from Welles' Mr Arkadin. This is the French Carlotta Blu-ray from last year of the European 97m; 42s cut, Confidential Report/Dossier Secret. It's only regrettable Carlotta could not have packaged something comparable to Criterion's now 10 year old Mr Arkadin three disc-three cuts version with massive scholarship and extras by Rosenbaum, Naremore et al. But rights issues always limit these things. This delivers the originally Warner released Euro cut version from 1956 with a whopping 39Mbps bitrate and the flawless HD rendering which is only limited by the condition of the original master, presumably the same 35mm fine grain used by Criterion for their boxset in 2005. The movie itself is a hoot, Welles at his trashiest, one could say in his Ed Wood mode. But with super high quality (for Welles) production values, like relatively perfect dubbing, and frame perfect shot matching and timing. There are a number of frame jumps, probably attributable to timing notches which are probably inherent in the source 35mm but these are hardly noticeable except to a trained eye. Even such never-to-be stars as Robert Arden, always a poor man's Ralph Meeker, and Miss Mori, a poor man's Gina Lollobrigida, deliver such goods as are required for the narrative core, considering the whole picture really breathes through the bit players - Paxinou, Redrave, Tamiroff, Mischa Auer, and the rest. Extras include Simon Callow's piece from the Criterion disc, and the same ten minute reel of dailies with Welles fluffing dialogue. French subs are removable throughout the disc.

The Wrong Man (Alfred Hitchcock, USA, 1956)


The master, the Son and a miracle from The Wrong Man. The new Warner Archive Blu-ray is a perfect, film-like rendition and Robert Burks in B&W with all the grain intact is a treat. Watching Vera Miles in this I am always reminded to go back to the very first episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, "Revenge" originally screened on 2nd October 1955 in which Vera and hubby Ralph Meeker play a couple on the road who are compelled to eternally seek revenge for a crime that may or may not have been committed. It's simply impossible to separate some of the ideas in this terrific opening for the series, directed by Hitch from the themes of Wrong Man. The greatest thing in the picture - among so many - is that Hitchcock shows us explicitly the redemption of one person, viz. the caps above, but ends the film on a note of total despair for another. So perhaps "god", or even a "state of grace" IS present, but only for some? Complex and mysterious, for both believer and non believer....

I remain a resolute non theist to this day. But the men at Marist (AKA Marx) Bros Darlinghurst in Sydney who were my completely wonderful and inspiring teachers during mid/late teens did so much to support my thirst for knowledge and by definition non belief. And two of them quietly supported me as an out (if not flaming) gay kid, with nudges and winks which they too understood was a reality for them. (In response to David Ehrenstein, it was a really privileged time and such a refuge from my idiotic parents.) There is a very decent and human side to some Catholics which I admire to this day, a real sense of social justice which is how you get so many "good" Catholics back in Oz these days leading the opposition to the hideous neo fascist Tory government there with its concentration camps for "illegal" refugees and its religion of minority hatred. This and I Confess are his most brilliant "Catholic " movies and I still feel he remains with some doubts of his own, although he doesn't seem to end in as complete atheism as Bresson clearly does in L'Argent. Or even Rossellini did when he made his two great films about saints, Francesco Guillare di DIo, and Europe 51. So many people seriously misjudge Rossellini as a religious director, when nothing could be further from the truth. His Il Messia (1975) is the greatest realist film about "Christ", wildly superior to the Pasolini which I find confused and frankly sentimental.

...... I still have some very slight unease about the framing on Wrong Man, even though I realize 1955/56 was well and truly full blast Widescreen era, and the picture was definitely a major studio production with two big stars, so it wasn't something that would end up as Academy Ratio by default for a minor outfit like Allied Artists or whoever. But the narrower 1.66 was really never used in Hollywood after 1954, and was only sparsely used in the UK.until the 60s. Warner has masked this to exactly 1.77 which is not too wide for composition and matting of that cinephilically ambiguous AR problem scene with Fonda and Miles at Anthony Quayle's office, with Vera in the foreground tugging and scratching at her arm while the two men in the background fail to even notice she's losing her mind. The 1.77 only just crops out her fidgeting hand movements in the main wide three shot, but the 1.77 does look completely right otherwise for the entire film. Burks and Hitch made this right after To Catch a Thief in VIstavision which was by then (late1954) firmly set to 1.85 so they must have made the adaptation to widescreen. But there's always just that bit of that one brief shot. You can see more of the masked footroom in the accompanying Documentary (ported from the DVD) which quotes shots from an open matte print. I should add the print source for this is a little "coarser" than I Confess, more grain, and indeed a number of shots are visibly - thanks to the high rez - done with lab optical zooms for the odd close shot increasing the grain and "thickness". This is of course precisely how the 35mm should look.

I Confess (Alfred Hitchcock. USA, 1952)
I Confess and Tiomkin's haunting, distant sweet credits music with the words:
"While the town is sleeping tight
Comes the music of the night.
One can hear its lonely beat
On each dark deserted street."

A gorgeous, flawless transfer, this is too beautiful for words.

Fat City (John Huston, USA, 1972)

Stacy Keach with a very young and very pretty Jeff Bridges in 1972, from the new WildSide Blu-ray of Fat City, This is certainly one of Huston's best pictures, blessed as it is with solid meaty material, from the Leonard Gardner boxing milieu novel, and a cast from the gods, down to every last extra and bit. Conrad Hall's incandescent photography keeps donating shading, moody lighting and subtle color moods to every shot, layering the film with a kind of just recalled nostalgia while Hustons' normally stodgy and uninventive mise en scene, so often an undoing in his more badgering films, here actually benefits the actors and their playing of long scenes, with the camera remaining classically at arms length, and the POV never taking on either an immersive nor a cold blooded angle. The disc is as always with WildSide, source dependent and in this case that's very good indeed. Some of the night time exteriors have a lustre and soft focus I had never noticed before but I am basing this on the memory of a forty years ago plus cinema screening. It looks great. The packaging as always with WildSide is keepsake gorgeous including a 204 page booklet (in French only) by Samuel Blumenfield. French subs are removable on my Oppo as are all my other Wildside BDs, but may not be for all players. Region B hardcoded.