Award-winning writer and film historian Steve Evans celebrates current, classic, cult, and forgotten film in these freewheeling essays on the cultural significance of the cinema. Special features include reviews of foreign films, noteworthy Blu-rays, 4Ks and concert discs.
If you love movies, then come experience the wild enthusiasm of film writer Steve Evans, still raising a ruckus after all these years.
Remembering F. W. Murnau, German expressionist director born on this day in 1888. He is perhaps most famous for directing Nosferatu (1922), the original Dracula film. For my money, Faust (1926), pictured here, is his masterpiece. It is an adaptation of Goethe’s famous tale of a kindly man who
sells his soul to the devil in exchange for curing his village of plague. Except nothing ever works out the way it’s supposed to. Stunning chiaroscuro cinematography, wild set designs and innovative special effects combine to create an eerie and irresistible film experience. Walt Disney shamelessly lifted several sequences for the Night on Bald Mountain climax of Fantasia (1940).
Murnau later immigrated to America and made three films before dying in Los Angeles in a car accident. His driver, a 14-year-old servant, crashed into a utility pole. Murnau was 42. More than a third of his cinematic output is lost to the ravages of time, but you can still see Nosferatu and Faust. And you should.
When I met one of my idols about four years ago, documentary
filmmaker D. A. Pennebaker, we talked for a bit about his film Monterey Pop,
which chronicles the legendary rock music festival in the summer of 1967. It’s
my favorite concert film, the template by which all others are judged. The vibe
really resonates in my spirit. And the music is fantastic. Woodstock has
flashier editing and offers marginally better sound. Gimme Shelter climaxes
with an on-camera murder while the Stones crank out Under My Thumb. Zeppelin’s
Song Remains the Same, while wall-to-wall with great performances, will clear
out your sinus cavities and possibly pluck on your nerves due to the amateurish
filmmaking and sloppy editing. Scorsese’s The Last Waltz is beautiful, but
elegiac and at times melancholy. Demme’s Stop Making Sense has the coked-up
freneticism and weirdness that were hallmarks of The Talking Heads in the
mid-1980s. All are good, each in their own way, but….
Only Monterey Pop really nails the scene with its cinéma
vérité style (sometimes referred to as “fly on the wall” – observing subjects
as unobtrusively as possible). There are absolutely amazing moments peppered
throughout this picture. We see that rock stars are as human as everyone else,
with all their flaws and foibles, until they hit the stage and become
transcendent. I find that fascinating.
The Mamas and Papas were unraveling as the event was
happening, even as band leader John Phillips was producing the entire festival
with famed rock impresario Lou Adler. The tension shows. John’s wife and fellow
band member Michelle had been fired and rehired less than a year earlier after
she was caught screwing Gene Clark, lead singer for The Byrds. Mama Cass was in
unrequited love with fellow band member Denny Doherty, who also had a fling
with Michelle before Monterrey Pop, which would be their penultimate appearance
in concert as a group. Improbably, their performance is still a knockout. David
Crosby makes political statements while onstage with The Byrds (Gene Clark had quit
the band by then), dares censors to censor him, then later appears onstage with
Stephen Stills in a set by Buffalo Springfield, a move that got Crosby fired
from the Byrds soon after. Cutaway shots to the audience clearly show most of
them are tripping balls & titties, and eating a lot of corn on the cob on a
stick. In one of the outtakes, comedian Tom Smothers introduces Paul Simon by
making a joke about his height. Simon is not amused. Janis Joplin and Ravi
Shankar bring down the house with their respective sets. The Who and Jimi
Hendrix aren't too shabby, either. Country Joe and the Fish act like they've
just arrived from another planet. For background texture, you’ll see a parade
of rock royalty roaming through the crowds and backstage. It's bittersweet. At
least 7 of the musicians glimpsed in the picture would be dead in less than a
decade. Otis Redding was the first to depart. Monterrey Pop made him famous.
Six months later, he was dead in a plane crash. Many, many more have left us in
the half century since.
I'm babbling about all this to express my love of
documentary film, which to me is the best time capsule of all.
D.A. was generous with his time while we were hanging out at
the University of Virginia’s Culbreth Theater. At the end of our conversation
he declared me “family,” which was an honor only a true cinephile can fully
appreciate. I was touched.
One of things we talked about was the challenge of
condensing a three-day music festival into a fleeting 79 minutes and 22 seconds
of documentary film. D.A. said the editing decisions were among the toughest of
his career. Technical problems in the
wild, like film jamming in a camera or the sudden death of batteries in a tape
recorder, rendered the footage of some of the bands’ sets unusable. Several of
the groups were so stoned that they later objected to being included in the
film. So they landed on the cutting room floor. D.A. sculpted miles of footage
into a finished film, plus nearly two hours of outtakes left over, and he
edited, but did not use, the complete performances of Jimi Hendrix and Otis
Redding, running about 45 and 20 minutes, respectively.
D.A. explained that because the project was originally
planned for television on the ABC network and consequently the film had to run
under 90 minutes to allow for commercial breaks, he had to make some difficult
choices on what to include. ABC executives apparently were not prepared for
what they would get. Jaws reportedly dropped when the finished film was
screened. By the time they saw Hendrix humping his amplifier and setting his
guitar on fire, the TV people decided to pass on broadcasting the picture. So
Monterey Pop ended up getting the theatrical release it always deserved. It was
heralded as an instant classic of the documentary form. But by the time the TV
executives walked away from the project, it was finished and in the can. So
much material had to be left out.
D. A. Pennebaker died last year in August. He was 94.
I was mulling these thoughts last night when I pulled my
boxed set of the documentary off the shelf. Like a monkey playing with a bone
in Kubrick’s 2001, it dawned on me that I have nearly 6 hours of material on
discs, plus access to additional clips here and there online that could be
downloaded.
I found the original Monterrey Pop set list for the entire
3-day festival posted on Wikipedia, song by song.
And then it hit me.
By Gawd, my weekend entertainment will be spent in my
editing suite. I am going to disassemble the outtakes into individual clips,
organize them into the proper sequence as originally performed and cut them
together with optical transitions to smooth out the finished product. I have
wondered for decades what it must have been like to attend that ungodly music
festival. This is as close as I am ever likely to get.
I don’t expect many or even a few to understand these
obsessions of mine, but I believe D.A. would. We are, after all, family.
Never thought I’d live to see the demise of movie theaters, though now that it’s on the horizon the prospect bothers me much less than I would have imagined. This observation comes on the news yesterday that Warner Bros., the second-largest movie studio in the world (behind Disney), will simultaneously release all its films next year both in theaters and on the streaming service of sister company HBOMax. This is said to be a temporary maneuver related to the COVID pandemic, but get real: there’s no putting this genie back in the bottle.
When people realize they can see new movies at home for no additional cost beyond their monthly streaming subscription, it’s game over for movie theaters. Consumers want choices and, increasingly, instant gratification. Nobody wants to wait the customary 90 days from a theatrical release to the availability of a film for home viewing. Streaming on demand has spoiled us all.
The economics of movie going have also changed drastically since I was a kid, when $5 would get you into a matinee with money left over for popcorn and soda. Tickets were $1.75 when I was 10 years old. Today you’re looking at a nationwide average of $9 and it’s more like $11 where I live.
Charging $10 for 50 cents’ worth of popcorn also does not endear the theater experience to consumers. And $7 for a splash of Coke in an ice cup is borderline criminal.
Even these silly prices might not matter if going to the movies was actually still a pleasant experience. Last time I was inside a cinema, two giggling teenagers a couple rows in front of me were seated side by side – and texting each other, with little beeps and boops signaling the arrival of each new message. I wanted to knock their skulls together like coconuts, but I couldn’t move because my shoes were stuck to the floor, sticky with spilled soda.
I thought, why the hell should film lovers put up with this bullshit? The simple truth is that anyone with about $2,000 can set up a perfectly respectable home theater system with a 4K television and surround sound powerful enough to knock monkeys out of trees. If you’re accustomed to going out to the movies twice a month with a companion, pour the money into home theater; it pays for itself in under two years.
The only justification I can make for going out to the movies anymore is to see a genuine blockbuster. The latest James Bond movie can only be appreciated to the fullest when it’s exploding across a 50-foot screen. An Ingmar Bergman revival? Not so much.
I wouldn’t mind if drive-in theaters made a comeback. Not because movies look or sound good at an outdoor venue (they don't), but because scandalous things happen at a drive-in. It’s fun fogging up the car windows. But with home theater you can watch movies buck-nekkid with your date. That's fun, too.
So the Warner Bros. experiment, I predict, will prompt other studios to follow this new pattern. It's good business for the studios, which typically split ticket revenues 50-50 with theaters. Showing your own film on your own streaming service means you get to keep all the money.
Movie theaters, if they continue to exist, will likely become venues for “event” experiences. Blockbuster movies. Concerts piped in via satellite. Possibly specialty programming, like a week of classic films noir – especially rare titles that can’t be had online for streaming. This presupposes an audience exists for this type of fare. On reflection, I would probably be the only one in the auditorium. That suits me just fine. And th-th-th-that’s all, folks.
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Steve has devoted much of his life to viewing and studying films. At last estimate, he had seen more than 15,000 motion pictures during a lifelong love affair with the cinema.
An award-winning writer, film historian and movie critic, Steve's work has appeared in more than 50 newspapers and magazines, as well as online film sites including IMDb.com, Rotten Tomatoes.com and DVD Verdict.com.
He received a master's degree in communication from the University of Virginia and a bachelor's degree with honors in journalism from Virginia Commonwealth University.
He has a dangerous and evidently incurable addiction to B-movies, films noir and The Criterion Collection.
Steve can also connect himself to Citizen Kane in three steps.