Tuesday, June 25, 2019

ROCKETMAN (2019)

Written by Lee Hall



Directed by Dexter Fletcher



Where & When: Arclight Cinemas, Hollywood, CA. June 3, 2019 5:15 PM



Right in the middle of his final world tour and a juicy tell-all memoir due out this fall, it would seem like the perfect time to add a movie about the life of one of the biggest rock stars in music history, Elton John. Dexter Fletcher, who came on board as a last-minute replacement to help make "Bohemian Rhapsody", the biopic of Freddie Mercury and the band, Queen, a wildly successful hit last year, has taken on the story of John's meteoric rise to pop stardom and his subsequent crash back to Earth due to heavy substance abuse and the pressures of his incredible fame. Yet "Rocketman" (which is also the title of John's 1972 platinum single) is no predictable journey in to the singer's career. The film is a colorful, jukebox fantasia that features several inventive musical numbers and refreshingly honest depictions of his sexual history. There are plenty of flashy thrills, imaginative visuals and many of the celebrated songs but this production feels far better suited for the Broadway stage, comfortably right next to "The Cher Show", than for the big screen.

John and his husband of over twenty-five years, David Furnish have been trying to get a film based on his life off the ground for quite some time. Disney (?!) was initially involved in the production back in 2001 with Justin Timberlake and later, Tom Hardy (who definitely would have been miscast but very curious to have seen what the actor would have done with the role) attached to star before settling on Fletcher to direct and Taron Egerton to play John. The Welsh actor, best known for his role in the "Kingsman: The Secret Service" action movies, captures the spirit and energy of this flamboyant performer and even impressively sings John's popular hits while delivering his own musical flair.

"Rocketman" makes it clear we are not entering a traditional biopic right from the start. When we first see John, decked out in a bedazzled devil outfit (and one of the many perfectly extravagant costumes designed by Julian Day), he is strolling purposefully down a long hallway. While we expect him to enter a concert stage, he actually walks in to a rehab therapy session. As he sits down and begins to confess his own addictions to many vices, John sees himself in the room as a child when he was named Reginald Dwight. His younger self, with John watching not far behind, runs out in to a London neighborhood to lead a musical number of the singer's 1974 hit, "The Bitch Is Back".

This takes us to his childhood home where we meet Reggie's brittle mother, Sheila (played by Bryce Dallas Howard as our token American doing a passable British accent) and his far more caring grandmother (Gemma Jones). His father, Stanley (Steven Mackintosh) is away for long stretches as a member of the Royal Air Force yet even when he's home, he shows little interest in his son. After discovering that the young Reggie can play back on the piano whatever music he hears, his grandmother encourages him to be enrolled for proper lessons. With an impressive natural gift, Reggie is soon accepted in to the Royal Academy of Music yet his parents remain unimpressed and their strained marriage collapses due to infidelity.

Once Reggie becomes a young man, playing rock music becomes his focus. He joins a backing band who perform with touring American soul and jazz performers at local clubs. But he soon wants more. In quick order, Reggie is hired by Ray Williams (Charlie Rowe), the manager of the publishing company owned by the crass Dick James (Stephen Graham) to write music, paired with a talented lyricist named Bernie Taupin (Jamie Bell) to create some songs, convinced to become a singer and changes his name to Elton Hercules John.

With this new songwriting team having some buzz with their single, "Your Song", James thinks it's time to introduce them to America and books a run of shows at the Troubadour in Los Angeles. Nervous about making such a major make-or-break career move, John is not sure if he can actually go through with the concert. But he does with a frenetic performance that dazzles the star-studded crowd and earns him a rave review in Rolling Stone magazine.

The songs of Taupin and John do not appear chronologically in "Rocketman" with most used to drive home emotional or psychological moments in the story, much like "Mamma Mia". But unlike that lightweight ode to the music of ABBA, this film is covering the true-life experiences of a real person. The script by playwright Lee Hall (who is best known for writing the screenplay of the film and the book of the musical for "Billy Elliot") tends to gloss over the fine details and lacks depth to fully draw you in to the story. While Fletcher is able to deliver a few moving, heartfelt moments from John's complicated life, the film suffers from thin characterizations and a rushed, overly simplified timeline.

There were rumors that John's sexuality was going to be substantially toned down in the film. Yet it is presented with a bold candor which is a considerable accomplishment for a Hollywood movie. We see that while John was struggling with his identity in his youth, he did try to fit in by casually dating women. His close relationship with Taupin does stir feelings that he wanted to be more than just friends with him. And while his secure songwriting partner accepted him for who he is, Taupin only loves him like a brother.

John's first significant love was John Reid (Richard Madden), a handsome yet oily slick music manager. After meeting at an after-party at Mama Cass's Hollywood Hills home, they flirt and hook-up before Reid flies off for some work related matter. They reconnect some time later after John has achieved considerable pop success with Reid offering to manage his career and begin a romantic relationship. The mixing of business and pleasure usually doesn't work out well and it doesn't here. With Reid cruelly manipulating him along with the additional stress of his exceptional fame and closeted life, the depressed John tries to find comfort in a destructive haze of drugs and sex, leading to health issues and a suicide attempt.

John eventually does get sober and finds his love for music again. He mends his fractured partnership with Taupin which leads to them writing together again. The film is wrapped up listlessly with the actual music video of their rousing 1983 comeback hit, "I'm Still Standing" shown with Mr. Egerton awkwardly inserted in John's place.

There is no denying that "Rocketman" is extravagantly entertaining much like the brilliantly glitzy, iconic singer himself. But by committing to a musical-fantasy format, however, the telling of John's challenging and unstable life lacks nuance and complexity. "Rocketman" comes across more like an elaborate, lengthy yet innovative music video than a revealing examination into the enduring career of one of pop music's most vital and exciting artists.


Thursday, June 6, 2019

COMING SOON


When I heard that Renée Zellweger would be playing the legendary musical film star, Judy Garland, I have to admit I found the idea completely absurd. But the teaser trailer for "Judy" has been released and I now have to admit I might be wrong. This drama takes place in the final year of the life of Garland as she arrives in London for a five-week run of sold-out concerts at the Talk of The Town in 1969. She is exhausted and emotionally drained after years of performing since she was a child and unsure if she can go through with the shows. With her singing the classic, "Somewhere Over The Rainbow", Ms Zellweger seems to perfectly channel Garland's fragile spirit and professional dedication to the idea that the show must go on. I hope "Judy" lives up to the commitment that this actress has put in to recreating this Hollywood icon.

"Judy" is due in U.S. theaters on September 27, 2019

Sunday, June 2, 2019

BE NATURAL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ALICE GUY-BLACHE (2019)

Written by Pamela B. Green & Joan Simon



Directed by Pamela B. Green



Where & When: Los Feliz 3, Los Angeles, CA. May 7, 2019 1:30 PM



At the start of "Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché", Pamela B. Green's fascinating documentary, various people who work in the film industry are asked if they had ever heard of Alice Guy-Blaché. Almost none of them had (director Ava DuVernay was the exception) and after discovering her important contributions to early cinema, they were shocked and dismayed that they were not aware of Ms Guy-Blaché. With narration by Jodie Foster, Ms Green reveals all of the amazing accomplishments of this French film making pioneer and tries to unravel the mystery of exactly why her name had faded in to obscurity.

Following the death of her father in 1891, an eighteen-year old Alice Guy trained to become a typist and stenographer to help her widowed mother. She was hired as a secretary by Felix-Max Richard who owned a photography supply company. A few years later, Richard had to sell the company and it went to the team of Gustave Eiffel (yes, the man who designed the Eiffel Tower and the Statue of Liberty), Joseph Vallot, Alfred Besnier, and Léon Gaumont, which the company was renamed after. Moving pictures was just beginning and Gaumont and Co. would become a major player in the creation and distribution of film in France.

While Alice was still working as a secretary for the company, she would become familiar with production, marketing and camera lenses. The films being made at the time were largely for experimental purposes and promotion to sell camera equipment. After seeing Louis Lumière's forty-six second documentary, "Workers Leaving The Lumière Factory in Lyon" in 1895 (and is considered one of the first motion pictures ever made), Guy was convinced she could bring story-telling elements to film.

With Gaumont's permission, Alice made her first film, "La Fée aux Choux (The Fairy of the Cabbages)" in 1896 which was based on a classic French fairy tale in which baby boys are born in cabbages. She would become the studio's head of production and made hundreds of short films that included melodramas, dance, comedies and westerns. By 1906, Guy wrote and directed a big-budget feature, "The Life of Christ" which featured hundreds of extras and made use for the first time of special effects like double exposure and running the film backwards.

Alice would marry Herbert Blaché in 1907 and they headed to America where he would become the production manager for Gaumont's operations in New York. But three years later, the couple and their business partner, George A. Magie would form their own movie studio, The Solax Company. The studio became successful and invested in a large state-of-the-art new studio in Fort Lee, New Jersey. This is where Guy-Blaché placed a large sign that stated, "Be Natural" which was to serve as a reminder for her actors to keep their performances down to Earth.

You can see Ms Green's extensive background in creating movie main-title designs and motion graphics in her feature documentary debut with several clever animated charts and sequences in "Be Natural". She had first learned about Ms Guy-Blaché in a television documentary on trailblazing women in film back in 2000 and has worked ever since in bringing awareness to this early director's life and career. As one of the very few female filmmakers, Guy-Blaché took on some very uncommon subjects in cinema at the time involving race, gender politics, feminism, immigration and spousal abuse. She made a 1906 comedy short, "The Consequences of Feminism" which focuses on men and women swapping their societal roles and "A Fool and His Money", which was made in 1912 and is widely considered to be the first feature film with an entire African-American cast.

History has done a great disservice to Alice Guy-Blaché in regards to her rightful place in the invention of our modern cinema. Due to a changing movie-business and blatant sexism, her career was tragically cut short. Guy-Blaché, who died at the age of ninety-four in 1968, made her last feature in 1919 and was never able to make another film. With the exceptional "Be Natural", Ms Green tries to rectify this omission with her detailed documentary which showcases the extraordinary talent and inventive spirit of one of the most important female artists in cinema.