Sun Aug 10 2025 11:20 July Film Roundup:
- Parade (1974): The scene: Jacques Tati is in movie jail
after Playtime cost one gazillion francs, so he turns to
sources of foreign funding. By this point—his final
film—he's reduced to doing his nightclub act for Swedish
television. There is some astonishing juggling in this movie, and some
more of Tati's philosophy that we are all little kids playing dress-up
and pretending through life. But as for the rest of it... "mime of
sporting events" isn't even a comedy category anymore, and for good
reason.
- The Phoenician Scheme (2025): Love the graphic design as
always. The madcap, sketchlike quest plot keeps things moving. But in
classic "Leonard goes in imagining the movie he wishes he'd made"
style, the trailer made me believe that the titular scheme was to
unite the greater Middle East into a recreation of the ancient
Phoenician civilization, a scheme that would naturally have
great-power geopolitical implications and lead to a lot of violent pushback. But actually this film takes
place in an alternate universe where the Middle East has already been
conveniently unified into a single* country as of the 1960s, allowing
Wes Anderson to make his usual goofy Wes Anderson film without it
getting all heavy and topical.
- Ocean's Eleven (2001): There is a Merry and Pippin in
this movie. In fact, this movie's almost beat-for-beat the same as
Logan Lucky (2017) which I saw first and like better. It's not
bad by any means, just not as good as Logan Lucky.
- Superman (2025): I've remained aggressively normcore about
superhero stuff even as it takes over more and more of pop culture. My
takes are the most middling ones you can imagine. I liked Iron
Man (2008) and then I thought the trend went out of control. I
think Batman is goofy and that Batman stories should lean into the
inherent goofiness. And when it comes to Superman, my tastes are
simple: I want to see a powerful, well-intentioned person wrestling
with the fact that enormous power and good intentions aren't enough to
solve every problem. Suffice to say that this movie delivered.
- Ruggles of Red Gap (1935): Definitely not a B
picture. Charles Laughton mixes a feel-good American immigrant story
with a helping of humorous British culture-clash snobbery. Ruggles is
a great character, someone who can deeply believe both "All men are
created equal" and "Blood will tell". The book is on Project
Gutenberg if you want more of that style of humor.
- Ragtag (2023): I have a fondness for films that are
supercuts of clips from other films. Though it's becoming really easy
to put such films together without doing any substantive creative
work, so as a viewer you gotta be careful. In The Afterlight
(2021) the idea was to show the same kind of scene from many
different movies. Here it's more like stretching video out, playing it
back and forth, turning cinema into something closer to an animated
GIF.
Also like The Afterlight, Ragtag was born of a
director deciding to watch a ton of movies during lockdown. And
presumably torrenting them all because how else are you going to get
all that footage into Final Cut Pro? Hey, I'm not judging.
- Born Yesterday (1950): Continuing our Holliday holiday with
this lighthearted tale of political corruption. I hypothesized this in
an earlier review, but Holliday's character in this one is a direct
antecedent to Elle in Legally Blonde: a smart person who's
never had to be smart before. Really enjoyable.
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