' ' Cinema Romantico

Monday, August 18, 2025

The Shrouds

If you thought “Drop” had dibs on most horrifying meet cute at the movies in 2025, think again, because here comes David Cronenberg. His silver-haired stand-in Karsh (Vincent Cassel) has founded a company called Grave Tech which is introduced during his blind date with Myrna (Jennifer Dale) at a restaurant he owns which is attached to a cemetery he also owns where each body in each coffin, including his late wife Becca’s, is wrapped in a techno-burial shroud providing a view via encrypted apps and screens on the tombstone of the decomposition of your loved one. “Would you like to see her grave?” Karsh asks his date, cuing up a live look-in of his wife’s remains. “That’s an image of your wife’s decaying body,” Myrna says, understandably asking if she might excuse herself for a cigarette. As she lights one up, she remains in the background of the frame as Karsh deliberately takes a step into the foreground, closer to the camera, closer to his wife’s grave, seeming to forget his blind date is even there. It’s a blackly comic image setting up the movie to come: acknowledging the reality of loss in the most subversive way possible while also seeming to entirely evade acknowledging that reality at all. 


Cronenberg has always had a gift for seamlessly incorporating futuristic technology into mundane worlds that feel very much like the present, but rarely has it felt so acute as “The Shrouds.” We live in a world where it can feel as if anything is accessible via our phones so why shouldn’t the deceased be too? It’s striking how plausible this all feels. And though the dead might be happier dead, as the philosopher Harry Lime once observed, what about the living processing the dead? That’s the question, or at least the primary one, driving “The Shrouds.” Yet, even if Cronenberg is famed for his oft-grisly body horror, it’s important to note this premise seemed to stem at least in part from processing his own wife’s death in 2017, and when Karsh views Becca’s remains, it is presented lovingly, and wistfully. The minimalist design of Karsh’s home might be Japanese inspired, but his stated beliefs on the afterlife are less Buddhist or Shinto than Jewish, the gradual separation of the soul from the body, as if providing a window this otherwise ineffable process.

Through this window, however, Karsh also notices strange nodules that have appeared on his wife’s skull since being buried, like post-death tumors, which are impossible, a doctor explains. Where did they come from? And who is responsible for vandalizing his wife’s grave, as well as other graves in the cemetery? Karsh is on the verge of taking Grave Tech global, as any avaricious entrepreneur would, and the list of potential suspects who might want to spoil these plans, or steal the technology for themselves, is endless. Karsh summons his tech-savvy brother-in-law (Guy Pearce) to help, or former brother-in-law, separated from Becca’s sister, twin sister, that is, Terri, played by Diane Krueger in a dual role, a little Doppelganger dynamic cribbed from “Vertigo” but mixed with a splash of necrophilia. 

In fact, is it a spoiler to tell you that Karsh and Terri consummate this twisted attraction? Even if it is, nothing could prepare you for the conflicting feelings that will flood your body when this scene transpires, a fitting, frightening, riveting evocation of the pervasive confusion that grief can bring. The scene is also evocative of the hysterically morbid style of humor coursing through “The Shrouds,” like Terri’s fetish for conspiracy theories, a macabre manifestation of the kink know-nothings seem to get from the fake news industrial complex. But not every joke has deeper meaning. Cronenberg's patented flat dialogue, for instance, creates the most bizarre laughs in the most delightfully odd ways. “I knew I was in trouble when I coughed up my entire esophagus,” will undoubtedly prove the grim gut-buster of the year. 


“The Shrouds” was originally envisioned as a Netflix series and you can sense it, not just in the procession of twists that no doubt would have concluded one episode to set up the next but in the considerable dialogue spent explaining the twists. Unlike a television series, however, “The Shrouds” is not moving toward any kind of ultimate resolution. The conspiracy theories themselves become one more method for prolonging grief, and as its two-hour runtime wraps up, I thought of another Guy Pearce joint, “Memento,” though rather than a circular puzzle snapping into place, “The Shrouds” seems to suggest that sorrow stretches out into forever. 

Friday, August 15, 2025

Friday's Old Fashioned: Green Ice (1981)


“Green Ice” begins with a gruesome massacre and segues directly into a jaunty meet cute between some sort of vaguely defined idea American man, Joe Wiley (Ryan O’Neal), who ironically has wound up in Mexico for a lack of a better idea and a wealthy American heiress, Lillian Holbrook (Anne Archer), who has also wound up south of the border. It’s evocative of the oddball blend of this 1981 adventure-thriller, one that has a score composed by Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman, meaning that at one point we hear “Green Ice’s” attempt at a “Greatest American Hero”-like theme song composed by the man who played bass on “Let It Bleed,” and one in which Joe and Lillian get involved with Colombian revolutionaries while also plotting to steal the emerald diamonds of Lillian’s would-be fiancé Meno Argenti (Omar Sharif) from his ostensibly impenetrable vault. “Green Ice” was directed by Ernest Day, who came to prominence as a cinematographer, which is ironic given how the four-person screenplay based on a novel is overflowing with exposition. Not that I entirely minded. When Argenti explains his security protocols to Joe on a tour of his emerald-holding skyscraper stronghold, Sharif does so with real relish in his words and a gleam in his eye, like he’s daring Joe to try and break in.

Joe does break in, of course, intending to use the loot to help fund the Colombian rebels, and does so via hot air balloon, like “The Wizard of Oz” in reverse, which strangely, no one mentions. If the revolutionary subplot never feels like it has real weight, the heist sequence does via strictly diegetic sound, practical effects, and deliberate shot length. It’s gripping, and even more so when you grade it on a curve in comparison to our over-stimulated modern standards. On the other hand, the central relationship between Joe and Lillian is not just devoid of romance and tension but ultimately comes across a little too much like John Cleese and Jamie Lee Curtis in “A Fish Called Wanda” without noticing. The biggest laugh in the whole movie is when Archer is forced to say her character is falling in love with Joe which merely reminded me of Roger Ebert’s classic line describing Cleese and Curtis’ relationship: “This illustrates a universal law of human nature, which is that every man, no matter how resistible, believes that when a woman in a low-cut dress tells him such things she must certainly be saying the truth.”

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Where We Are


In casting Kenneth Colley (1937 - 2025) as Captain cum Admiral Piett in “The Empire Strikes Back,” director Irvin Kershner apparently indicated he wanted someone who could have terrified the F*hrer of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party for the part. But the role didn’t really appear to be written that way and it was not how Colley played it. Colley played him first as an underling eager to make an impression and then as a superior who realizes only too late that he’s stepped in it. It’s in the third movie (Original Trilogy Division), “Return of the Jedi,” however, where Colley really left a mark, playing his first scene as an Imperial middle manager who has become experienced in having to suck it up whenever Lord Vader gets one of his inklings. It’s quite a feat, essentially turning Piett into the Galactic Empire version of the nameless subservient nodding dude in the scene in Mike Judge’s white collar comedy classic “Office Space” where the arrival of the dreaded consultants is announced, and for a moment, effectively turning the baddest man in the galaxy into an imbecilic CEO. The way Colley says “As you wish, my Lord” translates to “This fuckin’ guy.”


This occurred to me on Monday while watching clips of the White House press conference at which King Big Brain I announced the federal government would be taking control of the District of Columbia police in addition to deploying National Guard troops to regulate the nation’s capital which, at least in the pudding of his brain, may as well be the subway car in “Adventures in Babysitting”  24-7. The whole thing was insulting, made up under phony pretenses (like Chicago, where I live, and which was also threatened during this press conference, whatever genuine crime problem DC may or may not have and how to best address it is of no actual interest to the President), echoing his un-American strongman ethos and potentially laying the groundwork for even greater federal abuse, making me want to say to the people who still, even now, a decade into this, spin some version of the “Even I don’t agree with everything the President says or does but...,” in the manner of Jerry on “Seinfeld” consulting with Kramer after the latter has been accused of being The Smog Strangler and doesn’t seem all that bent out of shape: “Do you realize what’s going on here?” But maybe the one moment of the whole grotesque carnival that stood out most was when His Imbecility mentioned all the “bloodthirsty criminals” and “drugged-out maniacs” and “how we’re not going to let it happen anymore.” And then he half-turned to Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel, whose eyes as always made it look like he was watching “The Parallax View” recruitment test, standing directly behind him and rhetorically asked “Right?” Bondi and Patel sort of snapped to attention as if they had not even been paying attention to Dear Leader’s typical mealy mouthed mumbling and as the shit-fed bootlickers they are, nodded right on cue, improbably manifesting in real life Admiral Piett as Nodding Guy in “Office Space.” 

Ain’t that (present-day) America?

Monday, August 11, 2025

Eddington

“Eddington” begins with a homeless person (Clifton Collins Jr.) wandering down a desolate road at night in New Mexico, shouting into the void. You know, the void, the place where all meaning seemed to go during the COVID-19 pandemic. And that’s the time in which writer/director Ari Aster’s film takes place, the COVID-19 pandemic, late May 2020 when masks and social distancing were foremost topics of concern, and so was defunding the police in the wake of George Floyd’s murder by a Minneapolis cop, all of which are injected into a sprawling two-hour plus movie that isn’t so much interested in examining the novel coronavirus, per se, as it in evoking it as a manifestation of the great American divide. If it might be described as a western/noir hybrid, I kept thinking of it more like a Twilight Zone episode written and directed by an edge lord. Do I recommend it? Well, what does that matter? Go see for yourself; do your own research.


When we first meet Sheriff Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix), he is admonished for not wearing a mask, not just immediately transporting us back in time but immediately seeking to instill in the viewer a sense of drawing a line in the sand: who’s side are you on? It’s obvious whose side Aster is on. The mask is presented as a symbol, one worn by Mayor Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal) as much to signal dreaded virtue as a safety precaution, and one eschewed by Joe to signal individual freedom, betraying the filmmaker’s thumb on the scale from the get-go. The ensuing plot is not even so much a series of events as it is a series of buttons being pushed. If everything in the last 10 years of American life has become politics, then Aster runs with that idea, creating a gallery of characters that are virtually inextricable from their political ideology, whether they realize it or not. 

Joe is at loggerheads with Ted not just over a mask mandate but the possible construction of a data center on the outskirts of town. Eschewing his role to keep the peace, Joe becomes the match that lights the fuse when he all of a sudden decides to run for Mayor against Ted in the upcoming election. As he transforms the two-man police department into a campaign committee, his wife Louise (Emma Stone) disappears down the conspiracy rabbit hole, prodded by Joe’s own mother (Dierdre O’Connell), meeting with and becoming close to some right-wing cult leader, Vernon Jefferson Peak (Austin Butler). Peak does not turn out to be much of a character, mostly existing in opposition to Joe, but Butler’s performance is still a delight of malevolent unctuousness. When Peak invites himself to dinner, watching Phoenix as Joe is watching a man in real-time lose a loved one to unreality.  

Ted’s son Eric (Matt Gomez Hidaka) becomes a BLM activist along with his best friend Brian (Cameron Mann) for no other reason than they both like Sarah (Amélie Hoeferle), a social media influencer cosplaying as a social justice warrior, or so Aster would say. This is a deeply cynical view of the world. Just as the ostensible secret that Louise is harboring becomes campaign fuel for her husband, activism is merely the means to some selfish end. Sarah’s belief in racial justice is dismissed by Joe as something she learned in social studies class, an allegedly trenchant observation peddled by social media reactionaries the world over, equating public education with indoctrination, if not a waste of time altogether. Aster underlines his belief that the kids lack any real beliefs themselves with scenes of them ignoring the vagrant when he is right in their midst. Of course, Aster pays the homeless man as much attention as the kids do, demonstrating how his button-pushing tends to tie itself in knots.

Aster does not really cast about looking for who or what to blame for this state of rampant division and ignorance but rather makes it clear: it’s the phones. On its face, that’s a glib diagnosis, but Aster compellingly renders it, nevertheless. If modern movies often seem hesitant to over-include phones in their narratives, as if it might be cheating, “Eddington” shares no such equivocation. The cooling tower accompanying the potential data center on a hilltop outside town stands like an anti-monolith of “2001.” Characters faces are buried in their handheld screens throughout, a potent juxtaposition to the wide-open southwestern landscapes. It put me in mind of another New Mexico-set movie, “The Vast of Night” (2019), where the wonder was in looking up at the sky. In “Eddington,” on other hand, everyone is forever looking down.  


Joe is as addicted to his phone as anyone else, curling up with it in bed when Louise turns her back to him, though he is also oldfangled, imploring for community and fellowship. The way Phoenix has him say this, though, I don’t think he could explain what he means by community and fellowship if he tried, and subsequent events suggest Joe’s belief in these ideas might be dubious. The character sports a white hat, yet just as frequently doesn’t, revealing a severe case of hat-hair below, deploying nothing less than hair and makeup (Anji Bemben: hair department dead) to evoke the mess Joe eventually makes of just about everything. When he says COVID is not even present in Eddington, you know it will have arrived by movie’s end, and it does, triggering an over-the-top fever dream climax that comes across like a western-styled showdown between good and evil reconfigured as the fever dream of an aggrieved white man. And even if “Eddington” struggles figuring out how to conclude, the open ending also underlines America’s lack of reckoning with that time, so many sins lying unatoned. 

Friday, August 08, 2025

Friday's Old Fashioned: So Long at the Fair (1950)


“Anything can happen in Paris.” So says Vicky Barton (Jean Simmons) who is arriving in the City of Lights for the first time on the eve of the 1889 World’s Fair in the company of her brother Johnny (David Tomlinson), a bit of a wet blanket, if you ask me, but nice enough, at least, to give her the hotel room with a view of the Eiffel Tower. He winds up in Room 19, a room which vanishes the next morning along with Johnny. Anything, indeed. And when everyone in the hotel claims not to have ever seen Johnny at all, Vicky is forced to find a way to prove his existence, eventually aided by a kindly artist, George Hathaway (Dirk Bogarde), the only person who seems to believe her. “So Long at the Fair” makes great use of the Paris Exposition setting, including a hot air balloon blown to bits over the fairgrounds that is recounted in a long shot underlining Vicky’s stricken helplessness. Simmons is riveting, making the emotional turn from naïve to enraged to steely self-possession look like nothing, frequently holding the camera in the palm of her hand, so to speak, with powerful close-ups that communicate emotion directly to us. She’s so powerful, in fact, that she doesn’t quite match up with Bogarde who plays the whole thing too much like a drawing room mystery lark rather than something grave, diminishing the tension, not to mention their ostensible romance. The concluding twist is definitely grave. It’s grave but it also recalibrates everything in a way that does not make quite as much sense as it thinks, transforming a would-be bombshell into a senseless head-scratcher, a brewing tragedy into a limp whodunit. 

Wednesday, August 06, 2025

Neighborhood Watch


The “Neighborhood Watch” of director Duncan Skiles’s crime-thriller is comprised of just two men, ostensibly mismatched next-door neighbors Simon McNally (Jack Quaid) and Ed Deerman (Jeffrey Dean Morgan). Suffering from what appears to be schizophrenia, plagued by voices in his head, Simon has been institutionalized for a decade to no real medical or mental breakthrough, and since released. That 10-year gap in his resume means he can’t get a job, like one at a diner, where he bombs an interview as the movie begins, desperate to re-enter a society that won’t have him. His past also means the police brush him off when he comes to them claiming to have seen a woman abducted in van. Ed is ready to brush him off too when Simon seeks his help, having heard that Ed used to be a cop, or something. That something was a campus security guard, a position from which he has reluctantly retired, though in his introductory scene, he is still prowling the university cafeteria for would-be offenders. This is played for broad comedy, though it belies Morgan effecting both an indignant and melancholy air of someone who wanted to be a cop and never was. And though Ed hardly believes Simon any more than the real police, he agrees to help, seemingly as determined to playact his own man in blue fantasy as find this missing mystery woman.

The script for “Neighborhood Watch” is Sean Farley’s first, but it does not always feel that way, fitting exposition into believable exchanges and situations, and crucially never treating Simon’s mental illness with anything other than respect. Oh, Ed makes plenty of cruel jokes at Simon’s expense, but coming from the character as written and played, these jokes make sense, and work to underline the hard time Simon has navigating a society that’s quick to make him a punchline. Farley also utilizes innumerable set-ups and payoffs, some obvious but some unexpectedly enlightening, none more than Ed’s punch card at a diner working his way toward a free dinner. Skiles tends to favor long shots, letting us see the characters inhabit their different spaces, and presenting a world that feels very lower middle class, people struggling to fit in and hang on. And when Ed offers that punch card to a bus driver (Maggie Ballard) when they can’t afford the fare, her eager acceptance feels less like a joke than a quiet evocation of that struggle.

In fact, “Neighborhood Watch” does a better job of this innate world building than it does in conveying the seedy underworld where Simon and Ed’s investigation ultimately leads them. That lack of detail holds the movie back to some degree but also puts into perspective how the real throughline is Ed and Simon unwittingly developing a support system. Crucially, Farley’s script does not overdo that idea, the resolution of the case not magically yielding a resolution of their emotional, mental, and physical problems. Those will still have to be dealt with long after the credits roll. Instead, the final moments movingly suggest nothing more than the thrill of being able to matter.

Monday, August 04, 2025

Deep Cover


In “Deep Cover,” three improvisational comedians are recruited by Detective Sergeant Billings (Sean Bean) of London’s Metropolitan Police to run a sting operation by utilizing the number one rule of improv – “Always say yes” – to improbably penetrate the deepest reaches of the criminal underworld. Sort of suggesting an inverted version of Bill Murray’s “The Man Who Knew Too Little,” director Tom Kingsley’s straight-to-Amazon-Prime action-comedy sounds like such a can’t miss idea that I’m surprised it hasn’t already been done. But even if in blending occasionally gruesome black comedy with a true heart of gold, “Deep Cover” is often fun and funny, it also skims along in one gear, never quite blooming into something that feels truly outrageous and alive to its own enticing possibilities.

The unlikely undercover team is commanded by Kat (Bryce Dallas Howard), a struggling stand-up comic rendered insecure by her more successful friends, and improv teacher, a living manifestation of a version of that Liz Lemon line from “30 Rock” about where she sees herself in five years: “Teaching improv on cruise ships.” She is joined by Marlon (Orlando Bloom), a commercial actor yearning to go Method, and IT worker Hugh (Nick Mohammed) who signs up for the class in effort to gain some confidence. And though the four-person screenplay affords them little dimension beyond these set-ups, their distinct comic traits work well together, as do the actors, impeccably harmonizing with their roles. Bloom is over the top; Mohammed is deadpan; Howard is the glue melding them together. In the end, though, no one, perhaps, is more important than Bean. If the plot strains credulity, he credibly effects the air of someone who would send three amateurs into harm’s way.

Less successful is Kingsley’s decision to recount the action scenes in that familiar Hollywood house style of shaky camerawork and herky jerky editing. I suspect the intention was to underline the characters’ out of place sensation by plunking them down in a real action movie, which I kind of admire, even if only winds up undercutting the comedy and creating a tonal imbalance. It’s bolder, at least, then a script filled with quasi-outrageous reversals tracking to a predictable conclusion. Predictability is not inherently a bad thing, but in the case of “Deep Cover,” it counteracts the whole notion of these improv comedians responding to one another in the moment. Rather than seeming to make it all up as they go, they follow the outline to the end.