Sunday, January 28, 2024

                                                                 Tom Wilkinson

                                                                Part 2

    Here’s another handful of really good flicks featuring the great professional, Tom Wilkinson.

In Rush Hour (1998) Tom Wilkinson is the very bad guy Griffin in a complicated plot involving the Hong Kong police and some stolen Chinese artifacts. Not his best part by far, but Wilkinson carries the water in this Jackie Chan potboiler

    Then comes the legendary Shakespeare In Love (1998) a multiple-award winning movie with Ralph Fiennes as William and Gwyneth Paltrow as his lover, Viola.. Tom Wilkinson portrays Hugh Fennyman- the money who finances the plays at the Globe. He lights a fire under Shakespeare’s rear to write a new play and the result is Romeo and Juliet. Fennyman plays his role as the apothecary to the hilt. Without this somewhat minor character we would not have Romeo and Juliet! Wilkinson never overplays, and that rings just the right bell in this extraordinary movie. 

    Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004) though adored by the critics, has had a somewhat checkered relation with movie fans. Jim Carrey and Kate Winslett portray a couple whose love affair ran sharply aground. They each agree to have their memories of their partner erased by Lacuna, a company specializing in this procedure. Tom Wilkinson is on board as Dr. Mierzwiak, an employ of the company trying to convince the principals that this is a good idea. Okay- but what if it works and they later meet up again?

Tom Wilkinson was nominated for the Best Actor Oscar for his performance in In The Bedroom (2001). He plays Matt Fowler the father of  young college grad Nick who gets tangled up with an older woman (Natalie Strout, played by Marisa Tomei). She is separated from her violent husband Frank. Answering Natalie’s frantic call for help, Nick goes to her home to find Frank breaking in. A fight ensues and Nick is shot dead. Frank is arrested but makes bond and the Fowlers have to endure seeing him walking freely around town. The Fowlers are told that Natalie won’t testify about the killing and that Frank will receive a minimal sentence. Matt decides to take justice into his own hands. Sissy Spacek plays Ruth Fowler. She and Wilkinson were both losers on Oscar night- Tom to Denzel Washington for Training Day and Spacek to Jennifer Connelly for A Beautiful Mind. Wilkinson is superb in a difficult role.

    Michael Clayton (2007) stars George Clooney as the a “fixer” of a somewhat shady law firm. Tom Wilkinson plays Arthur Edens, a firm partner going off the rails and threatening the firm’s reputation. It gets to the point that the firm hires hit men to take care of Arthur. Tom Wilkinson was nominated for Oscar but lost to Javier Bardem for No Country For Old Men. Playing a topnotch lawyer going slowly crazy is just grist for Tom Wilkinson’s mill. He’s the best thing in the picture.

    All of the movies in this article are for grown-ups. 


Sunday, January 21, 2024

                                                                     Glynis Johns

Her principal area of show business was the stage. .And she had a beautfiul voice, but unfortunately, her range was limited. So Stephen Sondheim wrote Send In The Clowns just for her to sing in A Little Night Music. Her movie resume’ is sterlling. 

Well, she lived to be 100 so you have to go back to 1938 to find her starting point as a movie actress. In South Riding the 15-year-old Glynis gets into a fight with another girl. Maybe not the beginning she would hope for, but from there it was straight up. 

Perhaps her best-known part was as Mrs. Banks in Mary Poppins (1964). She is the mother of children under the care of nanny Mary. Mrs. Banks is a suffragette and also perhaps a little scatter-brained. This film was nominated for 13 Oscars. It won five, including of course Julie Andrews as Mary. 

In the very underrated  and largely forgotten The Sundowners (1960) Ms. Johns was nominated for an Oscar for her part as Mrs. Firth, the owner of the pub featured prominently in the film. She lost her one shot at a statue to Shirley Jones for Elmer Gantry. Paddy Carmody (Robert Mitchum) is an itinerant sheep sheerer, always on the move. His wife (Deborah Kerr) wants to settle down. He does not. 

The Court Jester (1955) is pretty much owned by Danny Kaye (as Hubert Hawkins) but Glynis Johns has a nice turn as the captain of the rebels, Maid Jean.. She and Hawkins are ordered to deliver the imperilled royal child to safety. They encounter the king’s jester on the road. Jean knocks him out and convinces Hawkins to infiltrate the king’s court by impersonating the jester. There are several songs, all sung by Kaye, wasting Johns’ considerable talent.

Skip forward to 1994 for The Ref,  a somewhat complicated tale about a married couple who constantly quarrel and are taken hostage by Gus, a cat burglar. They continue to argue while with him and he has to tell them to shut up. Glynis Johns portrays Rose, the mother-in-law from Hell who browbeats and terrorizes everyone else in the movie. 

In While You Were Sleeping (1995) Sandra Bullock plays Lucy, a lonely toll taker. She rescues Peter Callahan (Peter Gallagher), who is pushed onto the tracks of an oncoming train. . He is taken to the hospital where Lucy tells the nurse she wishes she could marry Peter. The nurse misunderstands and tells everyone, including the entire Callahan family, that Lucy and Peter are engaged. Lucy then falls in love with Peter’s younger brother, Jack (Bill Pullman). Glynis Johns is on board as the slightly deluded grandmother.  When Peter wakes up from his coma and says he doesn’t know Lucy, it is assumed he has amnesia. It all ends well for everyone- hey, this is Hollywood!

All of the films in this article are fine for all ages. And, you can actually find some of these on streaming sites if you’ve a mind to. 


Sunday, January 14, 2024

                                                                      Tom Wilkinson

                                                                            Part One

    I have long admired the quiet, underplayed acting of Tom Wilkinson, who left us last year at 75. Rarely the top banana, he was the go-to guy when you needed a solid back-up character actor. And he had a marvelous string of good performances in good movies. 

Priest (1994) is about a youthful Catholic priest whose homosexuality gets him banished to a small rural congregation with Father Matthew Thomas (Tom Wilkinson) as the senior, conservative priest. And yet, Father Thomas steps up to aid the young priest in his troubles and does all he can to help him. A solid, low-key Wilkinson performance. The 2011 film with the same title is a loser.

    The Ghost and the Darkness (1996) is the somewhat questionable story of blood-thirsty lions attacking humans. Tom Wilkinson is Sir Robert Beaumont, trying to build a railroad across Africa. Val Kilmer is the chief engineer on the job. To stop the carnage caused by the marauding lions, Beaumont enlists storied white hunter Charles Remington (Michael Douglas). From there, things get more complicated and the mighty hunter winds up the prey. 

The Full Monty (1997) is about a group of unemployed steel workers in Britain who decide to earn money by putting on a male stripping show. They tell prospective customers they will be better than the famous Chippendale strippers because they will go The Full Monty (totally nude). In a very surprising role, Tom Wilkinson appears as Gerald Cooper, their former boss and a talented dancer, who the group hires to teach them some moves. Of course this works out, or it wouldn’t be much of a movie!

Smilla’s Sense of Snow (1997) features Tom Wilkinson as a consummate bad guy. He plays Professor Loyen, who performed the autopsy in the Inuit boy whose death is the centerpiece of the movie. Smilla (Julia Ormond) has a sense that something isn’t right about this death. Their ensues an incredibly complicated plot I will not attempt to resurrect here. Tom Wilkinson was just fine as the bad guy. Nuff said!

Wilde (1997) is a somewhat truncated biopic about the British author Oscar Wilde, played here with winning flamboyance by Stephen Fry. He falls into a flaming homosexual relationship with foppish nobleman Bosie Douglas, whose stern father The Marquess of Queensberry (Tom Wilkinson) violently objects to their liaison. This pushes Wilde to sue the Marquess for libel. Bad idea. Wilde’s homosexuality is revealed and he winds up going to prison. Wilkinson is winingly hateful in this film.

Nothing here for littlies. These are for adults. 


Sunday, January 7, 2024

                                                                 Norman Lear films


He had to live to 101 to get it all in! Norman Lear was a giant of show business, producing TV shows and movies galore. And he had five TV shows and one movie still in production when he died! It’s no exaggeration to say that he absolutely owned television in the 1970's. Just take a quick look at his shows:

Sanford and Son 135 episodes (1972-77)

Maude 142 episodes (1972-78)

All In The Family 207 episodes (1971-79)

Good Times 133 episodes (1974-79)

One Day At A Time 209 episodes (1975-84)

The Jeffersons 253 episodes (1975-85)

And yet, he also had lots of movies tied to his name, usually as the main producer. The first film of note is Come Blow Your Horn (1963) from an early comedy stage play by Neil Simon. But Lear wrote the screenplay. The film features some legendary actors: Frank Sinatra, Mollie Picon and Lee J. Cobb. Sinatra plays Allan Baker, a consummate Manhattan playboy, delighted to teach his younger brother Buddy (Tony Bill) lots of bachelor tricks. The laughs are plentiful. 

And there are plenty of world-class actors in the splendid The Princess Bride (1987). Directed and Produced by Rob Reiner, with Norma Lear as Executive Producer, this film is on the National Film Registry. And it should be. It is dubbed a “fantasy adventure comedy” film. It features Carey Elwes, Mandy Patinkin, Wallace Shawn and Robin Wright. It’s the story of a swashbuckling farm boy who sets out to rescue the lovely Princess Buttercup. Many dangerous adventures, mostly funny, are encountered on the way. 

Never Too Late (1965), produced by Lear, doesn’t sound funny but it is. Harry Lambert (Paul Ford)  and his wife Edith (Maureen O’Sullivan)  portray a married couple well into their 60's. They have grown children who are also married and have children. On a routine visit to the doctor, Edith finds out she is pregnant. A real surprise to the entire family! The tag line is good: “Last year there were twenty-two million accidents in the home. This is about one of them.” Coping with this situation makes for a bittersweet comedy. Interesting side note: No mention of the A world. This is the 1960's.

Norman Lear executive produced Start The Revolution Without Me (1967), a frantic comedy set in medieval France. Gene Wilder and Donald Sutherland portray two sets of identical twins. One set is elite and haughty, the other set is poor and stupid. They are somehow mixed up by the populace and high jinks follow. It’s hard to find a film that divided critics and audiences more- most either loved it or hated it. 

Lear took a chance and executive produced Rita Moreno: A Girl Who Decided To Go For It (2021) a documentary about the title lady’s incredible rise from Puerto Rican poverty to brilliant star. How she fought off racism, sexism and other isms is inspiring. In her fantastic career she was featured in both versions of West Side Story,   1961 and 2021!

All of the movies in this article are pretty much ok for all ages, factoring in some boredom for littlies.