We Are Movie Geeks All things movies… as noted by geeks.

November 26, 2015

Mae and Raquel! MYRA BRECKINRIDGE Wednesday Night at Schlafly Bottleworks

Filed under: Movies — Tags: , , , , , — Tom Stockman @ 9:46 am

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“Well, the end of another busy day. I can’t wait till I get back to bed. If that don’t work I’ll try to sleep!”

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MYRA BRECKINRIDGE screens Wednesday night December 2nd at Schlafly Bottleworks at 8pm

You never know what’s brewing at Webster University’s Strange Brew Film series, and there’s nothing stranger than this month’s entry, MYRA BRECKINRIDGE. Gore Vidal’s 1968 satirical novel Myra Breckinridge was considered un-filmable to begin with. That’s probably true. There’s no way that this story about a sex change operation could have ever become a classic mainstream movie. But the 1970 film version is not all that bad, In fact, thanks mostly to some really clever casting (bringing Mae West into the film was a stroke of genius and a young Farrah Fawcett is quite a sight) and a wonderful, bitingly funny and dead-on performance by a young Raquel Welch, MYRA BRECKINRIDGE is something of a counter-culture classic.
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The basic story is a bizarre dark comedy involving a guy, Myron Breckinridge (Rex Reed – who claims Eddie Redmayne in THE DANISH GIRL gives “the performance of the year”…hmmmm), who has sex-change surgery to become his alter-ego Myra (Raquel Welch). As a female, Myra tries to shake down her uncle Buck Loner (John Huston) into giving her at least half of his popular acting school. There are a few side stories along the way, involving Mae West as a sex-mad Hollywood agent, Farrah Fawcett as a sunny-smiling dumb blonde, and Roger Herron as handsome young Rusty-the-Stud, who ends up being nothing much more than a boy-toy (both in the film and in real life – the actor was never heard from again after appearing in this movie)
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The theme of this movie is Hollywood in great big letters. A fascination with the movie industry runs through it. It’s about everything we imagine Hollywood to be: actors, agents, Southern California, limousines, wild sex, drugs, nudity, the whole bit. There are references to, film clips of, and appearances by, classic Hollywood movies and stars. If you aren’t interested in Hollywood and what it represents— or used to represent— forget this movie. You won’t like it. That’s what it’s about.
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Plopped directly into the middle of various scenes, often with no purpose whatsoever but to add “mood”, are dozens of film clips from old 20th-Century-Fox movies. The inclusion of these off-the-wall clips give the whole movie a slightly off-center, psychedelic feel that must have felt self-knowingly hip in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
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Two big highlights in this movie: the performances of Raquel Welch and Mae West. West got top billing, but is actually seen in a very small role; maybe 10 minutes of total screen time. Her scenes are completely self-contained; they don’t have much to do with the rest of the movie, but they are great fun to watch. Though this (and 1978’s SEXTETTE) were considered the nadir of her career, West was hilarious at the age of 77 when she made MYRA BRECKINRIDGE.
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Raquel Welch was also at the very top of her form here. An absolute knockout to look at, Welch was drop-dead gorgeous, and she gives a biting, sarcastic, and also hilariously funny performance as Myra. MYRA BRECKINRIDGE tried, maybe a little too hard, to be hip and “adult” at the time, and so it’s got some needlessly raunchy language and situations in it (including a jaw-dropping female-on-male rape scene) It was awfully hard to even put a story like this on film in the first place, but director Michael Sarne did try 45 years ago, and he succeeded more than failed. MYRA BRECKINRIDGE used to play in ST. Louis double-feature with Russ Meyer’s BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS a lot at the old Varsity Theater. Now you’ll have a chance to see it on the big screen when it plays Wednesday, December 2nd at Schlafly Bottleworks Restaurant and Bar in Maplewood (7260 Southwest Ave.- at Manchester – Maplewood, MO 63143) as part of their Strange Brew film series . The movie starts at 8pm and admission is $5. A yummy variety of food from Schlafly’s kitchen is available as are plenty of pints of their famous home-brewed beer.

The Facebook invite for the event can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/1732984233597551/

August 20, 2015

BEST OF ENEMIES – The Review

Filed under: Review — Tags: , , , , — Movie Geeks @ 3:34 pm

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By Cate Marquis

Once upon a time, there was a news media covered that politics in a calm, pointedly-neutrally way. Then the televised debate between conservative William F. Buckley Jr. and liberal Gore Vidal happened. Nielsen numbers went through the roof and TV political coverage was never the same. Television news discovered political coverage as blood sport and traded dispassionate reporting for the entertaining fireworks of shouted confrontation and punditry.

In the highly entertaining, engrossing documentary BEST OF ENEMIES, directors Morgan Neville and Robert Gordon make a credible case for the Buckley-Vidal debates, a political face-off between, intellectual giants with opposing  views, as a turning point in how the American media covers politics. The film takes us back to 1968 and the TV broadcasts of the Republican and Democratic political conventions, when these two prominent cultural and intellectual figures debated the direction of the nation.

In 1968, before cable and the internet, television was king. There were only three national networks, NBC, CBS and ABC. While news leaders NBC and CBS presented gavel-to-gavel coverage of the conventions, third-place (and much poorer) ABC hit on the idea of only presenting a nightly recap of the events at the conventions, and then supplementing that with a debate between pubic figures on opposite sides of the political spectrum.

Choosing these two men for a broadcast political debate was akin to a debate between, say, Rush Limbaugh and Jon Stewart – with no rules and nothing off the table. Who wouldn’t want to see that? Yet Rush and Stewart are entertainers while Buckley and Vidal were widely acknowledged brilliant minds. It seems very foreign now but at that time these two intellectuals were famous cultural figures, appearing on TV talk shows and other popular programs. Audiences of the time found them entertaining, with their sharp-witted verbal barbs and exaggerated upper-class mannerisms.

As BEST OF ENEMIES points out, the Buckley-Vidal debates were both a high point and low point for media coverage of politics. On the one hand, Buckley and Vidal were true intellectual heavyweights with the brains and verbal skills to demolish to each other’s arguments. On the other hand, they harbored a mutual hatred, which meant a fair amount of time went to pointed, clever, funny but personal attacks. As Neville writes the film’s notes, “This is not a film about who wins the argument. It’s a film about how we argue.”

Directors Neville and Gordon present the debates a bit like rounds of a boxing match, a good metaphor given the go-for-blood verbal sparring. The directors do a good job of putting these matches in a historical context and painting a brief picture of each man. Then there was the backdrop of the conventions. The Republican convention in Miami, with the Reagan forces revving in the wings, was relatively peaceful, in stark comparison to the later and famously disastrous Democratic convention in Chicago, where Mayor Richard Daley’s police brutalized anti-war protesters who were outside in the streets and clamoring to participate in the convention.

On the surface, Buckley and Vidal seemed to have much in common – both intellectuals and writers with elite upbringing and education, speaking with an upper-class East Coast accent and with an effete, aristocratic manner. Both were men had sharp wits and even sharper tongues, and used words as weapons.

As similar as they seemed, Vidal and Buckley stood on either side of the evolving cultural divide. Buckley was a Republican organizer and advocate of Ronald Reagan-Barry Goldwater’s “new conservative” movement, a staunch Catholic who rejected modernization, founder/editor of the conservative “National Review” magazine, and the host of the “Firing Line” TV talk show. Vidal was a liberal who was considered a literary giant, ranked with figures such as Truman Capote and Norman Mailer. He was a playwright and author whose works included the acclaimed “Burr” and other bestselling historical novels, as well as the scandal-sparking gender-bending satire “Myra Breckenridge.” Vidal, who had links to cultural figures ranging from Oscar Wilde, Jack Kerouac and Amelia Earhart, advocated sexual freedom and rejected conventional labels. He was a political outsider who favored the Democratic Party and had family ties to Jackie Kennedy.

Each believed the other’s ideas would destroy the country. What’s more – they hated each other personally.

BEST OF ENEMIES present the Buckley-Vidal debates in the context of their times, and follow-up on the aftermath of the debates and their lingering impact on both men. Besides the archival footage of the debates, the film has interviews with an array of journalists and academics including Todd Gitlin, Eric Alterman, and the late Christopher Hitchens. Speakers include people who knew them, like former talk show host Dick Cavett, Vidal biographer Fred Caplan and Buckley’s brother Reid. The film also features readings of both men’s writings, with Buckley’s words read by Kelsey Grammar and Vidal’s by John Lithgow, and archival interviews with the late Buckley and Vidal.

Setting the stage for the culture wars that still dog us, Buckley and Vidal debated the direction of the country from opposite ends of the political spectrum, discussing race, gender and class, war and American imperialism, civil unrest and personal freedom. While there were plenty of thoughtful discussions, the archival clips chosen for the film often focus on the zingers – the funny, pithy jabs and sparkling, venomous barbs. Watching these brainy people needle each other is entertaining but for a fuller, meatier view of the scope of their discussions, one would have to view the debates footage itself.

In the years following theses debates, Buckley’s “new conservatism” came to dominate the American political landscape since Reagan, yet Vidal’s call for gender, racial and personal freedoms seems to have won the social debate, with gay marriage and progress on gender and racial equality.

Both men are gone now although the debate still lingers. Since then, Buckley remains well-known, thanks to the way the Republicans made him an icon after Reagan’s election. Vidal’s public fame has faded, sadly, although writers and academics still hail him as the last literary giant of his era. Maybe this fascinating, entertaining film will spark renewed interest in his writings.

4 out of 5 stars

BEST OF ENEMIES opens Friday, August 21, at the Plaza Frontenac Cinema.

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