Better Man

Robbie Williams in Better Man
Michael Gracey's Better Man displays that, after helming The Greatest Showman and Pink: All I Know So Far, he is the premier director of modern musicals. The "Rock DJ" number alone would make Better Man a must see for any lover of the musical genre. Unfortunately, it is contained within a musical biopic of Robbie Williams who plays himself with the aid of a motion capture monkey mask. Now maybe it is because I am a Yank, but I have had little regard for Mr. Williams' music and the soundtrack did nothing to change my mind. When an artist has to trot out "Land of 1000 Dances" as a showstopper, a sense of desperation and lack of a artistic vision are simultaneously evident. What do I know, though, the film soundtrack went to number 1 in both Ireland and the UK. 

Despite the monkey mask, Better Man is a fairly standard biopic chronicling the rise, fall, and recovery of a pop star who owes more to Sinatra than to Rock and Roll. Williams is portrayed as a young loser from Northern England who grabs the brass ring of fame when he is tabbed to be in the boy band Take That. However, fame goes to our boy's head and after various derelictions, he is ousted from the band. Improbably, his solo career takes off, but he mistreats his fiancee Nicole (a delightful Raechelle Banno) and descends into addiction before embracing recovery and making amends. All the while he is haunted by the traumas and insecurities of his past, particularly the desertion of his father when he was young. Unfortunately, this is symbolized by having various simian iterations of his past haunt that cheeky monkey Williams while he performs. One Williams is enough.

Williams knows he has ego issues, he even named one of his albums The Ego Has Landed, but a digital face cannot hide his self absorption. Better Man is two hours and fifteen minutes, at least twenty minutes too long. There are too many scenes of a sullen Williams twitching in the throes of a binge that bog down the film. I did enjoy the supporting cast, though, especially Steve Pemberton, Kate Mulvaney, Damon Herriman, and Alison Steadman. Despite the faux humility of his angry chimpanzee mask, Williams' self-regard is all too evident throughout. When the film ends with a tearful reunion, his pa tells him "you are one of the gods now." Only in the UK, mate.

   


Act of Violence

Van Heflin on the run near the long gone Los Angeles funicular
I'm usually bored stiff by the films of Fred Zinnemann, but Act of Violence, from 1949, is one of his better pictures. Zinnemann is at his best when he can devote his solid craftsmanship to the mechanics of a well articulated and dynamic plot, such as with The Day of the Jackal. When he directs adaptations of plays (as with A Man For All Seasons or A Hatful of Rain) or musicals (Oklahoma!), his lack of visual dynamism makes the film a slog. Act of Violence opens, without the usual credits, in slam bang fashion as we witness gimpy Robert Ryan rush into a tenement apartment and hurriedly pack a rod. Robert L. Richards screenplay, from a story by Collier Young, has Ryan's character bent on vengeance towards a former buddy he knows betrayed him during the war which left him with a bum leg and vengeance on his mind.

The trauma of wartime experience hangs heavily over Act of Violence. Ryan's former buddy is played by Van Heflin who is living happily in a Southern California town with his wife (Janet Leigh) and small child. Heflin's character was in a POW camp in Europe with Ryan during the war. Heflin finked on Ryan and some comrades to the camp commandant just before an escape attempt. Heflin says he had good intentions, he believed the attempt was foolhardy, but his actions were a betrayal of trust and had fatal results. As soon as Ryan shows up, Heflin knows he has murderous intent and goes on the run to Los Angeles in order to save his skin. Zinnemann and cinematographer Robert Surtees (Ben Hur, The Graduate) give us ominous shots of Heflin darting about the tawdrier sections of nighttime LA. Heflin falls in with a crowd of scofflaws whose assistance brings about tragic consequences.  

One of the main reasons this film works so well is that its main players are all adroitly cast. Even at this early stage of his career, Robert Ryan was playing as many steely eyed villains (as in Caught) as he was playing heroic leads. He is perfect for this angry Ahab of a character who is solely bent on revenge. Heflin tended to be cast as characters undermined by weakness or over sensitivity in contrast to traditionally stolid leading men. His roles in Tennessee Johnson and Shane and in this film are prime examples of this. Leigh's role as an anxious spouse is hardly taxing, but she makes it heartfelt and memorable. The film has an impressive gallery of rogues populating the underworld of Los Angeles: especially Berry Kroeger as a gunsel and Taylor Holmes as a crooked lawyer. Best of all is Mary Astor in an unlikely casting coup as a bedraggled and down at her heels hooker who befriends Heflin. I won't soon forget her bragging to all concerned and no one in particular, "I get my kicks."
Mary Astor and Van Heflin
For what its worth, Act of Violence has much the same climax and is a better film than the over praised High Noon. There is a final showdown and even a shot of a ticking clock in Act of Violence's finale. The tragic denouement attempts to wring some sense of poetic justice out of the material. I'm not sure it succeeds, but I prefer it to Carl Foreman's attempts at profundity in High Noon. 




Jane Austen in Manhattan

Anne Baxter, Michael Wager, Kurt Johnson, and Sean Young
James Ivory's Jane Austen in Manhattan, first released in Britain in 1980, has a rather dismal reputation. The recent documentary Merchant Ivory, an insightful effort by Stephen Soucy, does not address the film at all, though a brief clip from the movie is displayed: the skyline of New York with the World Trade Center towers embraced by the pink glow of a sunset. I do feel that Jane Austin in Manhattan is a failure albeit one mitigated by more than a few interesting moments. 

The Merchant Ivory menage and film company, including screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala and composer Richard Robbins, had settled in New York during the 1970s. Jane Austen in Manhattan was the eighth screenplay that Jhabvala had concocted for producer Ismail Merchant and director James Ivory and was something of a fluke. The duo had purchased the rights to a play based on Samuel Richardson's novel Sir Charles Grandison by a youthful Jane Austen. However, the manuscript turned out to be a fragment, not a complete work. What of it there is shows little of Austen's talent. It is a knockoff of Richardson's usual damsel in distress schtick. Ms. Jhabvala was left to make something out of this debacle. She wrote the screenplay as if the complete play existed and pictures two rival theatrical impresarios angling to get funding for a production. One is a theatrical veteran named Lilliana and played by Anne Baxter who represents a traditional and crowd pleasing approach. The other, named Pierre and played by Robert Powell, is an avant-garde guru who prefers an edgier aesthetic. 

Pierre closets his troupe from the outside world. They all live and rehearse together in a polyamorous commune. The members of the troupe all have outside jobs, but they give the money they earn to Pierre, as they would to a pimp. Pierre and Lilliana have a shared history which we glimpse in ineffective flashbacks. Baxter and Powell have zilch in the way of chemistry. Pierre is supposed to have a whiff of satanic decadence about him, one character refers to a cloven hoof, but Powell just seems distant and batty. The ideal actor for the role would have been Peter O' Toole who brought a lot of Lucifer to the role of a film director in 1980's The Stunt Man. Baxter fares a little better in this her last film, but I can't forgive the hideous outfits she has to wear and the indignity of her doing a scene in curlers. New York is accurately depicted as a pretty gritty place to live at the time, but the costumes are all at least five years out of date. The no wave New York of the time doesn't exist in this movie except for a Ramones sticker on a door.

The other primary relationship in the movie, besides Pierre and Lilliana, is between Victor (Kurt Johnson), a young song and dance man, and his wife, untested actress Ariadne (Sean Young). Ariadne is enmeshed in Pierre's cult, drawing the romantic attentions of both Pierre and a folk singer named Katya (Katrina Hodiak). Victor is having onstage success in a frothy musical, but is understandably miffed at Ariadne's estrangement from him. There is a little hint that the film is trying to link this strand of the plot with the rake's abduction of the heroine in the play, but it is half-assed and unconvincing. Mr. Johnson is great when shown rehearsing musical numbers, but is instant Sominex in the dramatic scenes. It is fun to Sean Young, in her first screen role, before she became a botoxed replicant. Her inexperience seems charming rather than awkward and true to the character. Ms. Hodiak, daughter of Ms. Baxter and John Hodiak, is cursed with an under-written character. However, she is solely responsible for the god awful folk songs she performs which tend to bring whatever momentum the movie is accumulating to a screeching halt.

The folk singer character also seems to emanate from a 1960s time warp that did not exist in 1980 New York except in Ruth Jhabvala's mind. I feel that the dichotomy she was drawing between mainstream and experimental theater was out of date by then. Come to think of it, when we do see Pierre's production it is very reminiscent of Peter Brook's late 1960s extravaganzas: particularly Marat/Sade and A Midsummer's Night Dream. Ms. Jhabvala's screenplay tries to gives us the feel of an ensemble in production, as in Jacques Rivette's masterpiece Out 1, but bites off more than she can chew. Another romantic duo of Nancy New (pleasant) and Tim Choate (outstanding) is one too many. What attempts to be a rich and multi-dimensional film ends up being over-stuffed. 

There are some interesting aspects to the film, though. Richard Robbins not only had to compose a traditional score, but a faux opera number or two for Lilliana's show. The result, which sounds like a mash-up of The Abduction from the Seraglio and The Beggar's Opera, is effective and piquant. Despite Jane Austen in Manhattan's threadbare and shambolic nature, Merchant Ivory productions were always on the verge of collapsing, James Ivory's direction shows signs of growth. When Pierre and Ariadne visit a Sufi service in their building, Ivory pulls his camera back to show the whole room reverberating with music and rhythmic dance. He is striving to capture the religious fervor and union of the group. When he uses this technique later in his career, usually in English manor house, it is often to show the gulf between characters in cavernous rooms.

Another moment I enjoyed was a monologue by Michael Wager playing George, a guileless fat cat whom Lilliana is hitting up for backing. In his luxe penthouse, George recounts a Sisyphean tales from his childhood about an older bully repeatedly smashing George's sand castles. A winning moment from Mr. Wager that Ivory helps along with his placement of the Empire State Building in the background. The message, like that of Shelley's Ozymandias, is billboarded for us: all our vain efforts will be washed away by the sands of time. A few more moments like these and I might have considered Jane Austen in Manhattan to be a good film.