Month: May 2008

The Chronicles Of Narnia: Prince Caspian (2008)

The Chronicles Of Narnia: Prince Caspian (2008)

(In theaters, May 2008) So, is that it? Barely more than five years after the first Lord Of The Rings, has media fantasy become so commonplace that utterly generic products like Prince Caspian are crowding the screens like the middle-volumes-of-trilogies than infest the fantasy shelves in bookstore? I haven’t read the book and that may be just as well, because this adaptation tries its damnedest to hammer everything distinctive into the 21st-century template for fantasy films, down to the inevitable climactic battle-between-armies. There’s little that’s specifically wrong about Prince Caspian (well, maybe the half-hearted romance, the deus ex leo ending and the homicidal mice), but there’s a lot that feels so familiar as to be barely worth attention. Just tough it out and look at the pretty CGI until the lion comes along to save the day.

The Greatest Movie Car Chases of All Time, Jesse Crosse

The Greatest Movie Car Chases of All Time, Jesse Crosse

Motorbooks, 2006, 176 pages, C$33.95 hc, ISBN 978-0-7603-2410-4

I know, I know: A whole book about car chases? You’re either wondering what’s the point, pleased at the infinite diversity of subjects available to book buyers, of frustrated that you haven’t been able to sell that pitch to a publisher.

One thing’s for sure: there couldn’t be a more appropriate publisher for this title than Motorbooks, which specializes in exactly what you think they do. The Greatest Movie Car Chases of All Time is a book for car enthusiasts who happen to like movies more than the other way around: the focus, we quickly find out, is as much on the nuts and bolts of the chase than on cinematic techniques.

It’s also more than the titular list, which takes up only the last of the book’s eight chapters. Before we get to it, there is a lot of material about the special cars required to film high-speed mayhem.

This focus on the behind-the-scenes automotive knowledge is apparent from the first chapter, which traces the history of the car chase through the lineage of the people responsible for making them. It’s an unusual choice for a historical overview, and while it may offer an incomplete portrait of a grander canvas, the insider knowledge is interesting enough to distinguish the chapter from more superficial histories of the form that you can probably find on-line.

The second chapter, one of the book’s longest, is ostensibly about cinematography, but really becomes an excuse to look at the making of several of the car chases that will pop up again in the book’s final list. Chases from DIE ANOTHER DAY, BULLIT, RONIN and C’ÉTAIT UN RENDEZVOUS (featuring exclusive information from director Claude Lelouch) are extensively discussed.

The next chapter keeps up the technical focus with a look on the specially modified cars used in film chases. The two BULLIT hero cars get a lot of attention, as do the Mini Coopers in the first ITALIAN JOB. Chapter four is a bit of an oddball, focusing exclusively on the past few James Bond movies; the narrative flow of the book changes, and the result feels like a magazine article sandwiched between other things. The fifth chapter feels similar, looking at the works of a specialized British company called Bickers Action, with an emphasis on production techniques that segues well into the next “Lights, Camera, Action” chapter which tackles the technical challenges of shooting a car chase with special cameras and techniques. Chapter Seven offers a return to the human element as it takes a look at the lives of the stuntsmen and precision drivers so essential to the chases.

Chapter 8 is the long-awaited “Top Twenty”, and it’s an expected mix of big sequences (TERMINATOR 2), acknowledged classics (FRENCH CONNECTION), foreign imports (TAXI), car-centric films (GONE IN 60 SECONDS) and lesser-known films (THE SEVEN-UPS, ranking third right under RONIN).

You will not be surprised that BULLIT (1968) earns the pole position on the list: not when images from the film adorn the cover and the book’s first page. Not when the foreword is from the film’s director Peter Yates. It’s a safe, classic and historically uncontroversial choice, even though younger viewers may look at the movie nowadays and not be as impressed by the chase than audiences back then. But since some of the more extravagant chases since then are elsewhere on the list (including my own favorites from THE ROCK and THE MATRIX RELOADED), there’s something for everyone.

While I may not be as much of a car enthusiast as the usual readership of Motorbooks publications, There’s a lot to like in The Greatest Movie Car Chases of All Time, especially now that it’s hit the discount shelves. Abundantly illustrated, it can even find a way on your coffee table as a discussion piece. There’s solid information here in addition of the titular list, and even a few discoveries in the mix. Heck, C’ÉTAIT UN RENDEZVOUS is just a Google search away, and it’s almost as good as the book suggests.

C’était un rendez-vous (1976)

C’était un rendez-vous (1976)

(Downloaded, May 2008) This isn’t a film as much as it’s a showcase for Claude Lelouch’s cinematic concept: It’s a single-take nine-minutes race through Paris streets early in the morning. There’s no dialog and no story, the barest plot being provided with the reunion of the driver with a woman at the end of the reel. The footage is reportedly untouched and not sped-up in any way, but the audio has been sweetened by overdubbing F1 engine sounds. It doesn’t sound like much, but the impact of the film is cumulative: the first minute is “meh, okay, he’s driving fast without stopping”, but as the film keeps going on, the impact of the race through Paris and its landmarks get more and more impressive and the suspense of seeing it all happen without a hitch just grows until the end. The clip is sometimes mentioned in lists of “best car chases”, which is really stretching the point. But since it’s widely available on YouTube and other sources, check it out and fill a tiny gap in your knowledge of automobile film history.

Be Kind Rewind (2008)

Be Kind Rewind (2008)

(In theaters, May 2008) Michael Gondry is an bizarrely inventive director, and Be Kind Rewind is never as good as when it runs with that streak of lunacy, imagining how a few desperate filmmakers come to recreate home-made “sweded” versions of some of cinema’s greatest hits. It’s funny, it’s original and it’s affectionate toward cinema. But there’s only a few minutes of that in the entire film: the rest is taken up by the increasingly annoying Jack Black shtick and a forced conclusion in which we’re supposed to believe in the old clap-trap of communities pulling together. A barely-interesting plot holds everything together loosely, forcing us to wait between the film’s most compelling scenes. The dialog is trite and the characters act as if they’re brain-damaged (though Danny Glover’s finger-written warning is amusing): even for movie buffs, Be Kind Rewind barely gets started before lapsing back in a far-too-conventional third act. Almost a failure, but certainly not a triumph.

Across The Universe (2007)

Across The Universe (2007)

(On DVD, May 2008) “Unusual” starts to describe this picture but doesn’t do justice. Take the conceit of structuring a 1960s romance around Beatles songs, and then add Julie Taymor’s visual intensity and you’ll get a better idea of this film. Oh, it’s not entirely successful: the film is high on stunts and low on sustained interest, most of the time being spent waiting for the next flash of interest. The ending takes far too long, and the portrait of the period ends up skewed toward its most exciting fringe elements. But as a heightened portrait of reality, it definitely has its moments, though those moments may end up being farther apart than one would expect. It’s a curiosity, though I expect that Beatles fan with an excellent knowledge of the group’s musical catalog will be far more entertained than casual second-generation fans. The DVD features a pretty good commentary track by director Julie Taymor.

The Overlook, Michael Connelly

The Overlook, Michael Connelly

Little Brown, 2007, 225 pages, C$27.50 hc, ISBN 978-0-316-01895-1

And so my Michael Connelly Reading Project ends, after slightly more than a year of monthly Connelly novels, reaching back from Connelly’s first novel in 1992 to this latest offering. While I’m sure that there will be more Connelly novels in my future, this particular binge ends with a bang of a different sort —with Connelly’s leanest crime thriller yet.

Merely half as long as the author’s other novels, The Overlook was initially serialized in the New York Times Magazine. In many ways, it’s a typical Connelly novel: It’s a Harry Bosch police procedural, firmly set in Los Angeles, involving a dead body and a tangled mystery. When the victim is discovered to have access to radioactive material, the case spirals out of the LAPD’s control and forces Harry to collaborate once again with FBI agent (and ex-lover) Rachel Walling. Homeland Security has been a part of the Connellyverse since Lost Light, but the stakes here feel more urgent and considerably more direct. The added clash between Harry, who considers this a police investigation, and Rachel, who sees it as a matter of national security, brings the usual jurisdictional conflict we’ve come to expect from the Bosch series.

But the serial origins of the novel give it an urgency that’s been missing from many recent Connelly novels: it’s crisp, takes place within a single day and doesn’t necessarily sacrifice the qualities we’ve come to expect from the author’s work. Its short length is even structurally ironic when it show what happens when Harry’s street-cop instincts are right and the case isn’t as complicated as everyone else thinks it is.

In short, it’s a refreshing return to the basics of police procedurals for Connelly, who looks positively sprightly compared to some of his contemporaries. The story moves, and considering how seldom Connelly’s regular novels waste time, you can imagine the impact of this one.

The flip-side of this short and efficient entry is that it features very little development in the Bosch series. Harry’s got a bit of trouble with his newest partner, and poor Rachel Walling once again finds herself handled as a plot device to allow Harry some contact with a case that otherwise would be yanked out of his hands. That’s pretty much it: it’s a minor entry in Harry’s adventures, giving us a glimpse into what would happen if Connelly went the laconic Robert B. Parker route of giving his readers the strict minimum of what’s expected from him.

It goes without saying that collectors and library patrons will be the ones least dissatisfied by the price/page ratio of this entry: The hardcover edition is grossly overpriced for cost-sensitive readers, and even the paperback look awfully thin when placed alongside its other Connelly siblings.

On the other other hand, The Overlook (true to its serial origins) is the best entry point in the Bosch series in a long time: it doesn’t require any deep knowledge of Harry’s adventures so far, does a good job at teasing new fans with the strengths of Connelly’s writing, and is short enough to hook readers without much of a time investment.

So it’s ironic that this public-friendly entry would mark the end of my formal Michael Connelly Reading Project. The best thing I can say about my experience over the past year-and-a-bit is that it’s been just as good as I’ve hoped for: Connelly is among the best crime writers out there, and even his weaker novels (Chasing the Dime, City of Bones) are still a head above most other thrillers out there. He’s done interesting things to keeping Bosch’s character evolving while guarding his series’ strength against radical changes. If you call yourself a fan of criminal thrillers and haven’t read Connelly yet, well, there are still a few good books in your future.