MovieMaker The Art and Business of Making Movies » Login | Register  

July 24, 2008

ABOUT | CONTACT | NEWSLETTER | Search

editing

Email
Print

Bitter is Better

Polanski rips off himself but the Coen brothers rip off everyone else.

The Hudsucker Proxy

The Hudsucker Proxy is a weird mixture of old film cliches thrown together in the hope of recapturing the romantic comedies of times forgotten. But by stealing bits from Capra and Hawks and Hecht and Welles, Joel and Ethan Coen have a lot to live up to. The plot is straight from Preston Sturges: simple, small town boy (Tim Robbins) is promoted to president of a huge, 50's-style company by the evil board chairman (Paul Newman) who wants to devalue the stock and buy it doesn’t work because she's not saying anything half the time, she's just filling in the gaps with nonsense. Which is really the problem with the whole film. They use a little Capra here and some Sturges there, but in between, it's a film hanging on nothing, waiting for the next stolen plot twist to save it from utter boredom. The twists they find, some from the 30's, some from the 40's and some from the 50's, have a hard time finding relevance today partly because they are from disparate times themselves and partly because the time we live in now has yet to find a single ideology to sum it up.   The sets and the rather than allow it to get into the hands of the unwashed masses." Jennifer Jason Leigh plays a hardworking reporter who wants to get the story. Her character is, basically, Rosalind Russell from The Front Page, and while she does a great job keeping up with Russell's pace, it shots are incredibly rich, and of course there's a happy ending, but, like fat-free food and the rest of the 90's, it leaves us empty and unsatisfied.

Bitter Moon

It took a few years for Polanski's latest film to make its way to America and it's easy to see why. Both excellent and awful, it is a hard film to pin down. Hugh Grant plays a callow, unemotional British man on a cruise with his wife. The cruise is supposed to be helping them bring some warmth into their stale marriage. Unfortunately, they find the pleasant company of Oscar (Peter Coyote) and Mimi (Emmanuelle Seigner), a couple weathered by their intense love experiences. Peter tells Hugh their story, and most of the film takes place in the flashback that is that story. It's hard to take a lot of this story seriously and at times it's hard to figure out if you're supposed to. Polanski himself grabs a laugh at the S&M sex in the film every time he can. Polanski has always had a weird sense of humor about sex; in many ways it's what makes 1~ other films so great. His films that aren't about sex are usually driven by sexual tension. The sex in Bitter Moon is completely direct, something new for Polanski, which is also what makes the experience so awkward. It is never boring, though, and sometimes great. Besides, we don't get to see new Polanski films very often. MM

SHARE THIS STORY

Del.icio.us this itemDel.icio.us

Reddit this itemReddit

Yahoo this item Yahoo

TAGS

COMMENTS | POST A COMMENT

POST A COMMENT

OUR PRIVACY POLICY | We will not publish or sell or share your email address or other personal information. Read more.

Name:  
Email:  
URL:  

Type the word you see below:

Comment:

MovieMaker Magazine

Magazine cover: April 1994This story was published in the April 1994 MovieMaker Magazine. The headline was:

Bitter is Better / Polanski rips off himself but the Coen brothers rip off everyone else.

View this issue

Order this issue | Subscribe to MM

 

Blog/Forum/Poll navigation

Blog Forums Polls

Latest from the blog:

Doorpost Awards $300,000 to “Undiscovered” Moviemakers

The Doorpost Film Project, a “contest aimed at discovering and developing moviemakers capable of producing films that inspire and influence rather than simply entertain,” just finished round one and is now left with 15 finalists who are described by Nathan Elliott, the Project's director, as “a globally, ethnically and racially diverse group of filmmakers that have one important thing in common: They're enormously talented."

Posted 07.23.08 | News/Commentary | No comments yet...

Other recent posts:

Posts people are talking about:

Blog

SITE DELIVERY OPTIONS

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

  1. Are Women Psycho or is it Just Hollywood?
    Women are psycho. A billion movie viewers can't be wrong. Can ... read on
  2. How I Made a 1 Mil. Feature Virtually for Free
    A Seattle man tells how he made a million dollars movie without ... read on
  3. Marty and Me
    Dan Algrant tells Martin Scorsese gave him his big ... read on
  4. Letters
    ... read on
  5. Bitter is Better
    Hudsucker gets mooned, but Bitter does ... read on
  6. Bullets as a Gimmick
    A moviemaker "bites the bullet" to get his film in the ... read on
  7. Intravenous Video
    Movies affect you like a drug. And reading this column could put you in ... read on
  8. Bit Men and Hitmen
    Corman's Carnosaur is a poor man's Jurassic Park. Now that's ... read on
  9. The Movies are Shrinking
    A new generation of movie producers are looking to TV for ... read on
  10. Cut to: The Quick
    Are the new down-and-dirty, nuts-and-bolts flim seminars a viable alternative to traditional film ... read on
  11. Grant’s a Hugh Success
    With three features out this month, coming to America is a lucrative proposition for Hugh Grant. ... read on
  12. Peter Coyote is Not P.C. 
    The favored son of the cult film circuit tells it like it is. ... read on
  13. Roman Keeps on Rolling
    With his devilish new movie, Bitter Moon, Polanski is back. An overview of the influential director's career. ... read on

RELATED ARTICLES FROM THE ARCHIVES

  1. 7/22/2008: That’s Quite a Cast of Characters
  2. 7/18/2008: Shakespeare on Film: The Animated Tales
  3. 7/11/2008: Shakespeare on Film: Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead
  4. 7/8/2008: Recalled: Kimberly Peirce Shows the Depths of War in STOP-LOSS
  5. 7/8/2008: Warren Beatty Honored with AFI Life Achievement Award