ON SWIFT HORSES – Review

One of this weekend’s big film releases is yet another cinematic ride in Doc Brown’s DeLorean to what many believe to be a simpler, more “fun” era. Of course, last week, SINNERS dispelled such notions about the oh-so segregated 1930s (and then tossed vampires into the mix). It’s appropriate that I referenced that 1985 classic, since this new film is also set in the 1950s, those “Happy Days” referred to in the classic TV show (shessh, it’s over forty years old now). Sure, it was the birthplace of great rock and roll, but for certain minorities, it was a time to be very careful to the point of hiding in the shadows. While this film also briefly touches on race, its main focus is on sexual orientation, which could also lead to harsh punishments from all sides (including the courts). Perhaps that’s why one of the characters in this tale wants to escape the repressive era by any means available, including cars, trains, and ON SWIFT HORSES.

This story begins in 1954, not long after the end of the Korean War. Muriel (Daisy Edgar-Jones) shares her family’s home in Kansas with her long-time boyfriend (he keeps proposing), soldier-on-leave Lee (Will Poulter). He’s got big plans to move West as soon as his brother joins them. Finally, his sibling, Julius (Jacob Elordi) arrives, informing them that he has been discharged from the service, offering a vague explanation. Still, Lee is stoked that he will join the couple in California. Ah, but Julius has the “wanderlust” and, after giving Muriel some “card shark” tips, he leaves before dawn. In the following months, Lee finishes his stint in the service, and the two move West where he toils in a factory where Muriel is a waitress in a diner frequented by some fellows who “play the ponies” (she listens and makes some profitable wagers without telling her now husband). Meanwhile, Julius earns a “bankroll” from midnight poker games and as a gigolo, which soon lands him in Vegas. He gets a job in an off-strip casino watching the tables from the “rafters” and alerting the pit bosses to cheating gamblers. Soon, Julius is joined in the steamy “attic” by the dark and brooding Henry (Diego Calva). Eventually, the co-workers share an apartment and become much more than roommates, having to keep their passion very, very private. Back in San Diego, Lee and Muriel finally have enough saved (she’s still hiding most of her “winnings”) to get one of the “tract” houses in a new suburban development neighborhood. But Muriel is more interested in one of the locals, a woman with a chicken business (mainly eggs), an aspiring musician named Sandra (Sasha Calle). And soon, these two become much more than neighbors. Can Muriel keep her gambling and her Lesbian affair a secret from Lee? And what will happen when Julius and Henry try to take down the other Vegas casinos? Will the old “Kansas trio” ever reunite?


This tale of forbidden secret love is almost equally split between Muriel and Julius, though she may have the more complex conflicts. As Muriel, Edgar-Jones expertly embodies the typical steadfast supportive housewife of that time, though we can catch her eyes darting about as she formulates a way to go after her compulsion (the gambling) and desires (Sandra, mainly). We feel Muriel’s yearning to break out of her destined societial role, while wanting to shield Lee. And yet, there’s that connection with Julius, played with a dark, brooding charm by Elordi. He’s a restless spirit who never wants to be tethered down, sneaking away quickly (perhaps the ‘swiftest horse”). And then he finds his own liberation by his devotion to Henry, perhaps wanting to ‘settle down” like Muriel, but having to keep his true self hidden from the world. As his brother Lee, Poulter brings great empathy to a role that could easily be a stereotypical “clueless cuckold”, but instead is a good, loyal man trying to understand the change in the two people he adores. Calva makes Henry a fiery, spirited rebel. who wants nothing more than to be alongside Julius in their romantic “bubble”. Calle, as Sandra, has much of that same smouldering persona, coupled with a snarky line delivery, and a determination not to be the fun “side fling” for Muriel. Also of note is Don Swayze as the sneering surly casino pit boss and Kat Cumming as the bombshell blonde who fans the flames of Muriel’s liberated libido.

In just his second feature film, after decades helming “prestige” TV programs, director Daniel Minahan superbly recreates the postwar West while shattering the often “rose-colored” tint of nostalgia, reminding us that the “good ole’ days” didn’t extend to everyone. Minahan gives us the bright diners and casinos, while also giving us the clandestine gay meeting spots an aura of real danger and doom, with those secret revelers always keeping an eye out for the “morality enforcers”. The dialogue is sharp and very witty in Bryce Kass’ screenplay adaptation of the novel by Shannon Pufahl, though the romance of Muriel and Sandra feels more rushed as compared to the evolving relationship of Julius and Henry. In some ways, this feels like a companion piece to BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN, with the era’s repressions and hidden affairs, though the story never quite hits the heights of that ground-breaking classic. Still, the performances are solid, and the period fashions and locales are splendid (including the “yechh” chain-smoking). ON SWIFT HORSES is a very well-crafted look at a time when expressing your true self to love was the biggest gamble.

3 Out of 4

ON SWIFT HORSES is now playing in select theatres

BABYLON – Review

Spike Jonze plays Otto Von Strassberger, Lukas Haas plays George Munn and Robert Clendenin (back) plays Otto’s Assistant Director in Babylon from Paramount Pictures.

LA LA LAND director Damien Chazelle gives a different take on the movie industry with ‘s BABYLON, focused on Hollywood pre- and post- the transition from silent films to sound, but as if that took place in an alternate reality partly in the 1920s and partly in the late 1970s, eras that share reputations for excess, partying and drugs, although the 1920s had much better clothes.

This tale of a wild silent-era Hollywood opens in 1926, according a title card, at the height of the Hollywood’s Babylon of partying excess and creative freedom and shortly before the debut of talking films brought the party to a halt. The opening sequence features an elephant as studio employee Manny Torres (Diego Calva) negotiating with someone hired to transport the animal to a hill-top mansion for a wild party, a sequence that includes an impressive quantity of elephant dung dumped on one poor soul. It is a harbinger of things to come.

The film moves on from that mess to the party itself, where reigning silent star Jack Conrad (Brad Pitt) arrives in flashy style, sporting a fake Italian accent and arguing with his wife. He breezes into the mansion, but things go less smoothly for beautiful party-crasher Nellie LaRoy (Margo Robbie), a wannabe star who literally crashes her car shortly after she arrives. Inside, the grand mansion is decked out in gorgeous Great Gatsby splendor but, oddly, the party-goers are dressed like the late 1970s, looking more sleazy than dazzling. Champagne flows in this Prohibition era setting but the big focus is on mountains of cocaine, matching the drug to the outfits’ era.

So why not use the beautiful costumes of the period? Chazelle deliberately chooses to mirror a later period also known for excess but of a more-widespread type, before the reality of AIDS and recession brought that debauchery to a screeching halt. This isn’t the only bit of deliberate anachronism Chazelle indulges in; in fact the film is full of them, along with some repeating of old myths, mixed with misplaced historical details and some actual facts. The more you know about the history of early film-making, the more maddening it is.

This over-3-hour-long opus stars Brad Pitt, in an excellent performance as a character based on silent movie star John Gilbert, a handsome leading man known for his excesses off-screen and fame on-screen, who struggled at the transition to sound, along with Margot Robbie, in a less-strong performance as a crazy, hard-drinking, gambling over-night sensation star who may be based on Clara Bow. But neither of these A-listers are the central character. That role is played by Diego Calva, who plays Manny Torres, a Mexican immigrant who goes from go-fer to producer to studio head. Manny is a fan of Pitt’s famous big star character and in love with Robbie’s rising star one.

BABYLON’s extravaganza has some entertainment value but also exhausts audiences with its underdeveloped subplots and mixed time periods without the Roaring Twenties’ dazzle. Film historians will be irritated by how Chazelle clearly, deliberately mixes of facts and inaccuracies and references to actual people largely without giving their names. We do get characters named Bill (Pat Skipper) and Marion (Chloe Fineman), clearly based on William Randolph Hearst and Marion Davies, and studio wonder-boy Irving Thalberg (Max Mighella). Other characters you can surmise are based on various real people but some are less clear.

While the film itself is a mess, albeit an entertainingly colorful, big-budget one, the cast is the brightest spot. However, a better-known star, or a more charismatic actor, in the lead role might have given BABYLON a bit more focus. However, at this length and with Chazelle’s determination to both celebrate the silent era and insult Hollywood as much as possible, there probably was not much any cast member could do to save this mess.

The cast are the best part of the film overall, and Brad Pitt is perfect in his role as Jack Conrad. But Chazelle’s failure to develop the stories of some of the more intriguing side characters is frustrating, such as Tobey Maguire’s scary gangster James McKay, who is featured in one of the most memorable sequences in the film, Jean Smart’s Hollywood reporter Elinor St. John, who may be based on Hedda Hopper, Li Jun Li in a gender-bending role as Lady Fay Zhu, an apparent version of Anna May Wong, and Jovan Adepo as Sidney Palmer, a Black musician the studio is trying to transform into a film star but putting him in a number of demeaning racist films, are frustrating, as they are often both underdeveloped and sometimes nonsensical. In a three-hour-plus movie, surely there was time to do more with these intriguing characters.

Despite the irksome inaccuracies, the silent era craziness is the most fun part of the movie, and not just the party scenes. A sequence with Pitt’s Jack starring in a sweeping epic is wild and crazy and violent. with a dark humor undercurrent, is a highlight. When talking pictures hit, it is an earthquake to the silent stars’ landscape. Robbie’s sexy beautiful rising star is now revealed to have a grating New Jersey accent and struggles to hit her mark for the finicky early-technology microphone or to speak clearly or loudly enough. There is a nicely-done gallows humor sequence where Robbie’s character struggles to deliver a single line over and over, while the camera man, trapped in a cramped booth to muffle the sound of the rattling camera, struggles to just breathe in the overheating box.

There is not much historical accuracy in BABYLON because it is so muddled (details are often true but misplaced in time, and viewers should take what they see with a whole shaker of salt), but it does provide some wild fun, at least in the earlier silent-era portions. Things turn darker after talking pictures arrive. The film tries to recapture some of that earlier magic in a final scene, when years later, Diego Calva’s character Manny watches a “Singing in the Rain”-like movie, a musical that offers a light-hearted re-telling of the change from silent to sound films, which transforms into a charming kind of kaleidoscope of early films.

The final moments give BABYLON a wonderful scene to send audiences out of the theater with a warm feeling, but it does not quite make up for the marathon of mess and self-indulgent mayhem that went before. It is an ambitious film but Chazelle’s reach exceeds his grasp.

BABYLON opens Friday, Dec. 23, in theaters.

RATING: 2 out of 4 stars

Check Out The New Trailers For Damien Chazelle’s BABYLON – Naughty Or Nice? Take Your Pick

Paramount Pictures are letting fans decide if they are naughty or nice in these two new trailer for BABYLON.

The A-list cast include Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie, Diego Calva, Jean Smart, Jovan Adepo, Li Jun Li, P.J. Byrne, Lukas Haas, Olivia Hamilton, Tobey Maguire, Max Minghella, Rory Scovel, Katherine Waterston, Flea, Jeff Garlin, Eric Roberts, Ethan Suplee, Samara Weaving, Olivia Wilde.

From Damien Chazelle, BABYLON is an original epic set in 1920s Los Angeles led by Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie and Diego Calva, with an ensemble cast including Jovan Adepo, Li Jun Li and Jean Smart. A tale of outsized ambition and outrageous excess, it traces the rise and fall of multiple characters during an era of unbridled decadence and depravity in early Hollywood.

See BABYLON in theaters this Friday, December 23rd.

https://www.babylonmovie.com/

Diego Calva plays Manny Torres and Brad Pitt plays Jack Conrad in Babylon from Paramount Pictures.
Brad Pitt plays Jack Conrad and Li Jun Li plays Lady Fay Zhu in Babylon from Paramount Pictures.

Win A Fandango Code to See Damien Chazelle’s BABYLON Starring Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie

From Damien Chazelle, Babylon is an original epic set in 1920s Los Angeles led by Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie and Diego Calva, with an ensemble cast including Jovan Adepo, Li Jun Li and Jean Smart. A tale of outsized ambition and outrageous excess, it traces the rise and fall of multiple characters during an era of unbridled decadence and depravity in early Hollywood. The bigger the dream, the greater the fight.

https://www.babylonmovie.com/

Damien Chazelle’s BABYLON starring Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie, and Diego Calva opens in theatres everywhere December 23 and WAMG is giving away to five of our lucky readers Fandango codes to see the film.

  1. EMAIL michelle@wearemoviegeeks.com to enter.
  2. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES. NO P.O. BOXES. NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.
  3. WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
Lukas Haas plays George Munn, Brad Pitt plays Jack Conrad and Spike Jonze plays Otto Von Strassberger in Babylon from Paramount Pictures.
Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy in Babylon from Paramount Pictures.