CONCLAVE – Review

Ralph Fiennes stars as Cardinal Lawrence in director Edward Berger’s CONCLAVE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features. © 2024 All Rights Reserved.

The Pope is dead, and the red-clad Cardinals gather to choose the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church, in a conclave led by the Dean of Cardinals, Thomas Lawrence (Ralph Fiennes). That might not sound too exciting as a film but CONCLAVE is highly entertaining, turning that premise into a tense political thriller, with personal ambitions, clashing factions, twists and secrets, as competing visions for the church’s future and ambitious men vie one of the most powerful positions on Earth.

Part of why this film works as a entertaining thriller is the outstanding cast, which includes Ralph Fiennes, in one of his best performances, plus stars like Stanley Tucci, John Lithgow, and Isabella Rossellini, all in fine form.

Another reason it works so well as nature of the Roman Catholic Church. The cardinals are tasked with a holy mission, to choose the next pope, but the Catholic Church, whose roots reach back through the Middle Ages to Rome, has long had a political aspect when you reach the level of cardinals and the Pope in the Vatican. Extending that into a thriller where ambitions and visions for the future clash, with echoes of any other struggle, whether for leadership of any great organization or even a country, is not a great stretch. There are the parallels with any organization needing to fill a powerful position of leadership, whether religious or secular, even political, with competing factions, ambitious personalities, and a struggle over the direction it will take.

On the other hand, these are men of faith, and the focus is the leadership of a major worldwide religion, which makes religious beliefs a balancing thread. In the film, there are factions in the Church, and they are vying to move it forward or backward in the modern world. The cardinals are deeply divided on that. Then there are personal ambitions too, as rising within the ranks to level of cardinal is no small feat, and aiming to become pope is not an unreasonable dream.

All that gives this drama both deep material to explore and powerful contrasting feelings to drive it forward, along with strong personalities and hidden secrets to help the tensions along.

The excellent Ralph Fiennes is top of his game in CONCLAVE, playing the reluctant Cardinal Lawrence, Dean of Cardinals, who had tried to resign from his position and its responsibilities shortly before the pope’s death, hoping to retreat to a quiet life of contemplation. The pope had refused to accept his resignation, and Lawrence suspected he knew this task was in the offing, and that it would be a battle for the soul of the Church.

Ralph Fiennes’ Cardinal Lawrence, as the Dean of Cardinals, is the reluctant leader of the conclave to pick the new pope. The church at this moment is split deeply into factions, some wanting to modernize and others wanting to return to the past. Some of the cardinals are openly ambitious on a personal level, while others are pressed into it by their vision for the Church’s future.

Stanley Tucci plays a cardinal who fits that latter category, Cardinal Bellini, pressed into service by his friend Lawrence. The pope (Bruno Novelli) who just died was from the church’s more liberal faction and his supporters and friends like Fiennes would like to see his modernizing policies continue. But they face strong opposition from Cardinal Tedesco (Sergio Castellitto) who would like to reinstate the Latin Mass and restore the dominance of Italians in the church leadership, among other things, and is pushing back against the more international approach of the last pope.

Another candidate for pope is Cardinal Adeyemi (Lucian Msamati), who would be the first African pope, but the liberals are troubled by his strong anti-gay stance. There is a fourth candidate, an ambitious man who would be pope, Cardinal Tremblay (John Lithgow). Tremblay is a competing candidate from the liberal wing but one about whom Lawrence has suspicions and who may be concealing something that may disqualify him. Tremblay was the last to see the pope alive and another priest who was present nearby, Wozniak (Jacek Koman) overhead parts of a confrontation with late pope and Lithgow’s Tremblay. Tremblay denies there was even an argument and Wozniak is so upset it is hard to tell what he really heard. There are rumors of a missing document reflecting badly on Tremblay, and Tremblay’s delay in notifying Lawrence, who should have been told immediately about the pope’s death, casts more suspicion.

So the stage is set for intrigue and tension. The cardinals gather to be sequestered to they choose the next pope but rumors and secrets still circulate from inside and out. There is a surprise arrival, of a secret cardinal stationed in Afghanistan, Cardinal Benitez (Carlos Diehz), that no one had known about. except the late pope. Meanwhile, there is unrest in the streets as the cardinals are gathered to do their holy work.

There are nuns present too, led by Isabella Rossellini’s Sister Agnes, who are there to take care of practical matters like cooking and serving food. The nuns stay silent – well, until Rossellini’s Sister Agnes finally does speak up.

The cardinals speak a mix of Italian and English, with surprisingly little Latin. Ralph Fiennes is at the center of this story, trying to uncover the truth about every candidate for pope to determine who is most worthy, and often going down a rabbit hole as he uncovers what has been hidden, but it is very much an ensemble effort and each actor gets to shine. In the end, it is the cardinals themselves who will pick the pope, in round after round of voting during the day. After hours, candidates campaign and jockey for position in quiet conversations in hallways, as Fiennes’ Lawrence investigates.

Rich color and pageantry fill the screen while all this intrigue and clash of ideas and personalities takes place. The Vatican setting has always provided plenty of pomp and gorgeous theatrical visuals for films, which CONCLAVE uses to great dramatic effect to frame it’s taut, twisty plot. Seas of cardinals, in red and white trimmed in gold, move through stately halls of gleaming white or black marble, while nuns in blue move silently among them, and cinematography Stéphane Fontaine gives us one beautiful, striking scene after another, adding a visual delight to the film’s many admirable qualities.

Director Edward Berger, who also helmed last year’s excellent German war drama adaptation of ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT, brings that same skill in storytelling and drawing fine performances from actors to this film as well. The screenplay is by Peter Straughan, adapted from the book by Robert Harris. From the acting to the cinematography by Stéphane Fontaine and art direction by Suzie Davies and Lisy Christi, CONCLAVE is first-rate at every level, and seems a sure thing for Oscar nominations, as it deserves..

CONCLAVE builds tension as secrets come out and positions shift, with Ralph Fiennes character acting almost as a detective to uncover the truth of every candidate for Pope. The film ends with a shocker but no spoilers from here. You will have to go see it to find out, and you will not be sorry you did, as CONCLAVE is one of the year’s best, with Oscar potential on multiple levels.

CONCLAVE opens Friday, Oct. 25, in theaters.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of CONCLAVE

CONCLAVE follows one of the world’s most secretive and ancient events – selecting the new Pope. Cardinal Lawrence (Ralph Fiennes) is tasked with running this covert process after the unexpected death of the beloved Pope. Once the Catholic Church’s most powerful leaders have gathered from around the world and are locked together in the Vatican halls, Lawrence uncovered a trail of deep secrets left in the dead Pope’s wake, secrets which could shake the foundations of the Church.

The film stars Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci, John Lithgow, Carlos Diehz, Lucian Msamati, Brian F. O’Byrne, Merab Ninidze, Sergio Castellitto, and Isabella Rossellini.

Directed by Edward Berger, Focus Features will release CONCLAVE In Theaters Nationwide on Friday, October 25th

The St. Louis screening is on Monday, October 21st at 7pm at The Alamo Drafthouse St. Louis.

LINK: http://focusfeaturesscreenings.com/kjNUq95263

Rated PG.

Please arrive early as seating is not guaranteed.

(L to R) Brían F. O’Byrne as Cardinal O’Malley and Ralph Fiennes as Cardinal Lawrence in director Edward Berger’s CONCLAVE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features. © 2024 All Rights Reserved.

(L to R) Ralph Fiennes as Cardinal Lawrence and Stanley Tucci as Cardinal Bellini in director Edward Berger’s CONCLAVE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features. © 2024 All Rights Reserved.

Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci, John Lithgow And Isabella Rossellini Star In CONCLAVE Trailer – From The Director Of All QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT Edward Berger

(L to R) Ralph Fiennes as Cardinal Lawrence and Stanley Tucci as Cardinal Bellini in director Edward Berger’s CONCLAVE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features. © 2024 All Rights Reserved.

“The throne is vacant.”

Focus Features has debuted the first trailer for the upcoming drama CONCLAVE.

From director Edward Berger (All Quiet on the Western Front) CONCLAVE follows one of the world’s most secretive and ancient events – selecting a new Pope. Cardinal Lawrence (Ralph Fiennes) is tasked with running this covert process after the unexpected death of the beloved Pope. Once the Catholic Church’s most powerful leaders have gathered from around the world and are locked together in the Vatican halls, Lawrence finds himself at the center of a conspiracy and discovers a secret that could shake the very foundation of The Church. Written for the screen by Peter Straughan, CONCLAVE is based on the 2016 book by Robert Harris.

The cast also includes Stanley Tucci, John Lithgow, and Isabella Rossellini.

Berger’s All QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT was a critical success, receiving nominations for Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay at the Academy Awards, and ultimately winning the award for Best International Feature Film. Straughn has written screenplays for movies and TV including Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011) (co-written with Bridget O’Connor), Frank (2014) (co-written with Jon Ronson), The Men Who Stare at Goats (2009) and adapted Wolf Hall for television. According to Variety, his next project “Folio will recount how a collection of Shakespeare’s works were assembled seven years after his death and preserved for future generations.”

(L to R) Brían F. O’Byrne as Cardinal O’Malley and Ralph Fiennes as Cardinal Lawrence in director Edward Berger’s CONCLAVE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features. © 2024 All Rights Reserved.

Focus Features will release CONCLAVE in Select Theaters on November 1st, expanding Nationwide on November 8th. The film will be in cinemas across UK and Ireland November 29.

https://www.focusfeatures.com/conclave

Isabella Rossellini stars as Sister Agnes in director Edward Berger’s CONCLAVE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features. © 2024 All Rights Reserved.

John Lithgow stars as Cardinal Tremblay in director Edward Berger’s CONCLAVE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Philippe Antonello/Focus Features ©2024 All Rights Reserved.

Sergio Castellitto stars as Cardinal Tedesco in director Edward Berger’s CONCLAVE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features. © 2024 All Rights Reserved.

Ralph Fiennes stars as Cardinal Lawrence in director Edward Berger’s CONCLAVE, a Focus Features release. Credit: Philippe Antonello/Focus Features ©2024 All Rights Reserved.

WHITNEY HOUSTON: I WANNA DANCE WITH SOMEBODY – Review

Naomi Ackie in TRISTAR pictures I WANNA DANCE WITH SOMEBODY

With a little over a week left in 2022, it looks like the cinematic musical “biopic” of the year will be ELVIS, so who’s next…oh, wait, we’ve got another one sneaking in just under the wire. And it turns out that this singer (according to many music charts and lists) had more hits than the King or the “Fab Four”. And all after “E” had “left the building”, er…planet. Aside from success, she certainly had enough drama in her short life for a feature film (actually she was the focus of a cable TV flick and a supporting player in three others). So after the gifts are unwrapped you may want to head to the multiplex for an eye and ear-full of WHITNEY HOUSTON: I WANNA DANCE WITH SOMEBODY.


Naturally, the story begins on the concert stage, as the musicians and backup singers await the “main attraction”. Ah, but then we’re taken back almost thirty years to a Newark church where the congregation is wowed by the singing teen dynamo, Whitney Houston (Naomi Acki). Everyone’s stunned, except her mom, professional songbird Cissy (Tamara Tunie). After the church empties she tries to get her daughter to learn the music before doing all the “flourishes”. Oh, but little “Nippy” (the family nickname) has her own inner tutor. It seems that performing is a release from the heated arguments between mom and daddy John (Clarke Peters) at home. Another distraction is her friendship with college basketball star Robyn Armstrong (Nafessa Williams), which develops into a secret romance. Word of the young singer gets out, and when Arista Records mogul Clive Davis (Stanley Tucci) drops by the club where Cissy performs, she feigns laryngitis, so that Whitney (who was her backup singer) takes the stage and “blows the roof off the joint” with “The Greatest Love”. He signs her to his label, with John acting as her manager, who squelches the romance between Nippy and Robyn (“You will be seen dating boys!”), though Robyn stays on as an “assistant”. The hits keep coming, along with awards, sold-out concerts, and some controversy over whether she’s not “black enough”. As fame takes its toil, the booze and drugs enter into Whitney’s life, as does R&B “bad boy” singer Bobby Brown (Ashton Sanders). Financial problems coming from John’s indulgencies also take their toll on Whitney coupled with Bobby’s infidelities put the “pop princess” on a dark path, yet somehow “the voice of her generation” struggles to survive.

Although she bears little resemblance to the title role, Acki does a terrific job of capturing the spirit of the superstar. Her bright beaming smile conveys the joy of performance, along with the giddy delight in going for “the brass ring”. But Ackie goes beyond the gold records to show us Whitney’s “rough edges”. She’s prickly and confrontational as a reporter harps on the “blackness” question which is reflected later as friends try to curb her new appetites, while she insists that her addiction is under control and needs the boost to get through her hectic days. And Ackie not only can “lipsync” superbly but her gestures and movement really “sell” her transformation. The warm rapport with Tucci as the mellow Yiddish “fairy godfather” Davis really works, giving us a look into the nurturing mentor/student friendship that goes beyond show biz. Plus Tucci is very funny, with his casual asides and observations which makes his pleas to her to “get clean” even more heartbreaking. Sanders is all sinister swagger as the aloof, controlling Bobby. Williams is powerful as the ex-lover pushed aside for fame, yet still watching from the sidelines. Peters is brittle and domineering as the tight-fisted papa John, while Tunie is also tough, but still tender as the concerned coach who will step aside to let her talented offspring shine for the world to see, and hear.

Director Kasi Lemmons delivers a more honest look at Houston’s turbulent life than the adoring marketing campaign is selling to moviegoers. The tabloid “gay” stories from Whitney’s early days are addressed early in the first act, with a look into the rumored affair with Armstrong that may surprise and shock some fans, though it is tastefully handled. Yes, there are too many scenes of people, from Clive to a hotel bartender, lavishing praise on Whitney, but the film’s not a gushing “fan letter”. There are just as many sequences of her making questionable choices, from putting dad in charge, pursuing Bobby, and retreating into denial over her health. So, it’s the often repeated show-biz bio of a sweet talent becoming hardened as she goes from “rags to riches” then back to rags (this is brought home as Whitney preps for her first film role by watching LOVE ME OR LEAVE ME). And Lemmons finds a clever way to use real folks by only showing them in monitors, from Merv Griffin to Kevin Costner to Oprah *with lookalikes whose faces are blocked in long shots). Also, she ends the film with Whitney’s last big stage triumph, much as was done with ELVIS, BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY, and further back to THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY. Still, it seems to shortchange the “rough times” and doesn’t go into Whitney’s mindset, opting for several quick montages of magazine covers and tabloid headlines. But these will be a minor quibble for her still growing legion of followers that will gladly dive into the nostalgic tributr that is WHITNEY HOUSTON: I WANNA DANCE WITH SOMEBODY.

2.5 Out of 4

WHITNEY HOUSTON: I WANNA DANCE WITH SOMEBODY is now playing in theatres everywhere

JOLT – Review

Kate Beckinsale in JOLT. Photo credit: Simon Varsano. Courtesy of Amazon Studios.

Beautiful Brit Kate Beckinsale is no stranger to fantasy action flicks after starring in VON HELSING and about five UNDERWORLD outings, fighting vampires and werewolves and bears (? – oh my). She looks every bit the part of an ass-kicker, and her stunt doubles work hard to maintain the illusion effectively. JOLT is more science-y and less supernatural than the aforementioned in this new fast-paced, high-octane rush for adrenaline junkies.

Beckinsale stars as a woman with such extreme anger issues, and abilities to act upon them, that she can only function in society while rigged with a device that lets her self-administer an industrial-strength electric shock when triggered. Which occurs often and easily. Her therapist (Stanley Tucci) oversees her attempts at forging a life. When she falls for a guy (Jai Courtney) during a one-night stand, she starts believing for the first time ever that she might have a shot at true, lasting love. But he’s killed the next day, squashing that dream, and setting her on a course to identify the perp, or perps, and even the score.

That’s a good, if not novel, premise for the mayhem to follow, as the reasons behind her loss unfold and spiral into Big Conspiracy territory. The ensuing events include more twists and surprises than average for such fare, and set up a whole lotta well-executed action sequences. Beckinsale is variably in league or at odds with the local cops in their respective pursuits. Bobby Cannavale is the supportive, sensitive detective, while his partner (superbly played by Laverne Cox) is the skeptic who’d like nothing better than putting Beckinsale down for the count.

Director Tanya Wexler runs a taut ship admirably well for one with only a handful of features on her resume, not exactly concentrated in this sort of production. I don’t know what the final release’s running time will be but the version made available to reviewers for screening maintained a pace, balanced between action and exposition, that kept me from thinking about that. That’s a big compliment, Ms. Wexler, since failure to trim the footage fat has been, unfortunately, a frequent component of my reviews. (Are you seeing this, Mr. Apatow?)

In a summer relatively light on escapist releases, this one’s a solid bet for entertainment value. They dangle the possibility of a sequel (without the Marvel-induced post-credits scene), which is a prospect I welcome. Now that they’ve established such a worthy protagonist, let’s keep her going with those clicks on Prime Video, folks.

JOLT opens on-demand Friday, July 23, on Amazon Prime.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

Warner Bros. Pictures Will Premiere “Roald Dahl’s The Witches,” Exclusively on HBO Max In U.S. October 22

Audiences across the world can celebrate Halloween starting October 22 with the release of Warner Bros. Pictures and Robert Zemeckis’s reimagined “Roald Dahl’s The Witches,” premiering exclusively on HBO Max in the U.S.  Zemeckis, the Oscar-winning director and master storyteller who gave us “Forrest Gump,” the Christmas classic “The Polar Express,” and the “Back to the Future” trilogy, brings a fresh sense of humor along with warmth and the unexpected to what is sure to be a Halloween favorite: Roald Dahl’s beloved story The Witches.

In addition to the film’s U.S. debut on HBO Max, the film will fly into theatres internationally beginning October 28.

Zemeckis is joined by a world-class team of filmmakers, including Alfonso Cuarón, Guillermo del Toro and Kenya Barris, for this fantasy adventure about a young boy who stumbles upon a secret coven of witches and, with the help of his loving grandmother, tries to stop their evil plan to turn the world’s children into mice. The cast includes powerhouse performances from Anne Hathaway, Octavia Spencer, Stanley Tucci, Kristin Chenoweth and Chris Rock, with newcomer Jahzir Kadeen Bruno as the brave young hero. 

“‘The Witches’ is a wonderful reimagining of Roald Dahl’s timeless tale that combines world-class filmmaking with fantastic performances. It’s fun for the whole family and ideal for this time of year,” said Toby Emmerich, Chairman, Warner Bros. Pictures Group.

“This film, with its stellar cast, is outstanding,” said Casey Bloys, Chief Content Officer for HBO and HBO Max. “We are thrilled to be able to use our platform to deliver timely, relevant and engaging new content during this time when the theatrical experience is not available to everyone.”

The film will also be featured in HBO Max’s “Halloween is Here” spotlight page, alongside a curated roster of more than 140 movies, series and Halloween-themed TV episodes, hand-picked by HBO Max’s dedicated editorial team. https://play.hbomax.com/page/urn:hbo:page:Halloween-is-here


Reimagining Dahl’s beloved story for a modern audience, Robert Zemeckis’s visually innovative film tells the darkly humorous and heartwarming tale of a young orphaned boy who, in late 1967, goes to live with his loving Grandma in the rural Alabama town of Demopolis.  As the boy and his grandmother encounter some deceptively glamorous but thoroughly diabolical witches, she wisely whisks our young hero away to an opulent seaside resort.  Regrettably, they arrive at precisely the same time that the world’s Grand High Witch has gathered her fellow cronies from around the globe—undercover—to carry out her nefarious plans.

The film stars Oscar winners Anne Hathaway (“Les Misérable,” “Ocean’s 8”) and Octavia Spencer (“The Help,” “The Shape of Water”), Oscar nominee Stanley Tucci (“The Hunger Games” films, “The Lovely Bones”), with Kristin Chenoweth (TV’s “Glee” and “BoJack Horseman”) and award-winning comedy legend Chris Rock.  Newcomer Jahzir Kadeem Bruno (TV’s “Atlanta”) also stars, alongside Codie-Lei Eastick (“Holmes & Watson”).

Based on the book by Roald Dahl, the screenplay is by Robert Zemeckis & Kenya Barris (TV’s “black-ish,” “Shaft”) and Oscar winner Guillermo del Toro (“The Shape of Water”).  Zemeckis is also producing, alongside Jack Rapke, del Toro, Alfonso Cuarón and Luke Kelly.  Serving as executive producers are Jacqueline Levine, Marianne Jenkins, Michael Siegel, Gideon Simeloff and Cate Adams.

Zemeckis’s behind-the-scenes team includes his frequent collaborators, including Oscar-nominated director of photography Don Burgess (“Forrest Gump”), production designer Gary Freeman, editors Jeremiah O’Driscoll and Ryan Chan, Oscar-nominated costume designer Joanna Johnston (“Allied,” “Lincoln”), and Oscar-nominated composer Alan Silvestri (“Polar Express,” “Forrest Gump”).

Premiering on HBO Max on October 22, Warner Bros. Pictures Presents, an Image Movers/Necropia/Experanto Filmoj Production, a Robert Zemeckis Film, “Roald Dahl’s The Witches.” Rated PG for scary images/moments, language and thematic elements. The film will also release in theatres internationally beginning October 28.

hbomax.com/the-witches TheWitchesMovie.net

Instagram: @WitchesMovie
Twitter: @HBOMax, @WBPictures
Facebook: @HBOMax, @WarnerBrosPictures

Check Out The Trailer For NIGHT HUNTER Starring Henry Cavill, Alexandra Daddario, Stanley Tucci And Nathan Fillion

Henry Cavill stars in this action-packed thrill ride that will shock you at every turn. When police detective Marshall (Cavill) and local vigilante Cooper (Ben Kingsley) arrest a serial killer targeting women, they discover his game has just begun. The hunt is on as the murderer masterminds a series of deadly attacks from behind bars. Now in a desperate race against time, Marshall and Cooper fight to stay one step ahead of their suspect’s deadly plan.

Also starring Alexandra Daddario, Stanley Tucci, Nathan Fillion, and Minka Kelly, NIGHT HUNTER is a pulse-pounding thriller where the only way out is through the mind of a killer. Tick-tock.

Check out the trailer below for NIGHT HUNTER.

The film debuts exclusively on DIRECTV on August 8, 2019 and in Theaters & On Demand September 6, 2019.

Win Four Passes To The Advance Screening Of SHOW DOGS In St. Louis


Max, a macho, solitary Rottweiler police dog is ordered to go undercover as a primped show dog in a prestigious Dog Show, along with his human partner, to avert a disaster from happening in the dog-gone funny new film SHOW DOGS. Alan CummingStanley TucciNatasha Lyonne, and Will Arnett all star in SHOW DOGS which opens everywhere May 18th.


You can see SHOW DOGS before it opens!


Enter for the chance to win FOUR (4) seats to the advance screening of SHOW DOGS on Saturday May 12th at 10am in the St. Louis area.

Answer the Following:

What’s your favorite movie with the word “Dogs” in the title? (Mine is ISLE OF DOGS!)

ENTER YOUR NAME, ANSWER AND EMAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2. No purchase necessary. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house.

FINAL PORTRAIT-Review

Time for a hefty dose of culture down at the ole’ multiplex (really, the joint needs some classing up). The cinema arts have often used iconic figures in the other arts for inspiration and drama. Films have been based on the lives of writers, composers, musicians, and performers. Since the movies are such a visual medium, it’s only natural that they would veer into the worlds of illustration and fine art. Over the last few years, a cinematic art museum has featured lauded film biographies like MR. TURNER, POLLOCK, and last year’s Oscar-nominated wonder LOVING VINCENT. Really, Van Gough has been the focus or supporting character in several films, as have DaVinci, Michelangelo, Picasso, even Warhol. Now add another to that roster with this film about the 20th century sculptor Alberto Giacometti. But in this docudrama he’s not working his magic with clay and plaster. This story is told by the subject of his work with paint brushes on canvas. We go from blank slate to the FINAL PORTRAIT.

Writer and art historian James Lord (Armie Hammer) narrates the story of this collaboration in early sixties Paris. At a gallery, Lord accosts an older, chain-smoking, disheveled gentleman. It is the renown Alberto Giacometti (Geoffrey Rush), who has asked him to pose for a portrait. They head back to his studio, on an out-of-the-way side street. Across from that workshop is the flat he shares with often neglected wife Annette (Sylvie Testud). And above the studio is the workspace of Alberto’s younger brother Diego (Tony Shalhoub), who crafts the armatures for his brother’s sculptures along with pedestals and frames. As Lord sits across from Alberto for his new masterpiece, the calm is disrupted by the arrival of the great artist’s obsession, the prostitute known as Caroline (Clemence Poesy). The promise of “only a two or three-hour posing session” has its first postponement. But Lord has a few days to spare and gladly agrees to return, for a Giacometti is more than worth a bit of inconvenience. But soon those “few hours” stretch into days and eventually weeks as Lord befriends the master’s brother and long-suffering wife. As Alberto hems, haws, procrastinates, and restarts over and over, Lord wonders if the piece will ever be completed.

 

 

Though he’s not the teller of the tale, Rush has the real showcase role as the enigmatic, eccentric artist. Alberto shuffles about in a dead-eyed stare, only exuding his passion when around his much-younger muse. or when he curses at a brush stroke (explosive F-bombs shake the studio with great frequency). At the start of any session, Rush makes us think that there will be a flurry of creativity, only to shift gears to hit the pub or take a stroll. Then later, he exhibits child-like delight as he tosses huge wads of cash about the over-stuffed studio, for though he is half Swiss he doesn’t believe in banks. For much of the film, Hammer is the endlessly patient “straight man”, a blank sounding board for Rush’s rants and outbursts. His Lord may be too cool and aloof, only mildly annoyed that he must call the airline to postpone flights home. Despite a pleading phone conversation trying to calm a rattled acquaintance (friend or lover perhaps), the extended stay is a slight inconvenience. When Lord is agitated it’s merely a contrast to Alberto’s passivity. Shalhoub, with his close-cropped silver hair, is nearly unrecognizable as the great artist’s social buffer, the one who can tame the “talent demons”. But he can only do so much, and becomes Lord’s guide to his brother’s quirks and wild mood swings. As Diego, Shalhoub portrays a man completely content to hover in the shadows, allowing his sibling to bathe in the spotlight of adoration. Poesy as Alberto’s street-walking inspiration is a careening ball of energy knocking the cobwebs and dust off of the artist’s studio and the man himself. Her true motivations remain a mystery. Is he just a “sugar daddy’ or does she really care about him? What is clear is that her “drop-ins” plunge a dagger into the heart of Testud’s Annette, who generates a great deal of empathy as the betrayed spouse.

This marks the first directing effort from acclaimed actor Stanley Tucci , who also wrote the script, that doesn’t include his work in front of the camera. Perhaps this was to concentrate on the interplay between the two leads, or to present the toil and strain in creating art. Unfortunately the scenes in the studio are just not that compelling and quickly become repetitive: Lord arrives, Albert’s crankiness reaches a boiling point, a few brush strokes, then the day’s done. Albert’s inspiration is elusive. An early scene in which he compare Lord’s face to a “thug” or a “degenerate’ doesn’t ring true, particularly with an actor who looks as though he just stepped down from Mount Olympus. A few “outsiders” enter the art space, like gallery dealers and Caroline’s..umm…managers, but the scenes end with little dramatic result. Paris of that era is well recreated, but the constant drinking and chain-smoking seems forced. This true story may have made an engaging two act play, but there’s not enough going on in FINAL PORTRAIT to merit a feature-length flick. Perhaps another museum trek is time better spent on Giacometti.

 

2 Out of 5

 

FINAL PORTRAIT opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas

 

SUBMISSION – Review

Stanley Tucci and Addison Timlin, in SUBMISSION. Photo courtesy of Great Point Media/Paladin (c)

Writer/director Richard Levine’s film SUBMISSION is being promoted as a modern updating of the novel “The Blue Angel.” The book was famously adapted into a 1930 film THE BLUE ANGEL by director Josef von Sternberg, a film which made Marlene Dietrich an international star.

In the Dietrich film, a straight-laced, aging professor becomes enamored with a beautiful young singer (Dietrich) in a local nightclub called the Blue Angel. The professor’s obsession with the singer has disastrous results, particularly for  him. This forbidden passion is particularly risky for a man expected to set a moral example for his pupils, so he tries to keep it hidden lest he lose his livelihood and reputation, but he is under a compulsion he can’t resist.

In this updated version, the man is still a professor but instead of falling for a nightclub singer, his forbidden sexual obsession is for a student. In both cases, what the professor is doing driven by sexual obsession and is unethical and forbidden by the standards of his times. However,  the premise sounds more like an update of “Lolita” than “Blue Angel” but actually, SUBMISSION has only tenuous ties to either and instead is a more timely tale of temptation and sexual harassment.

Stanley Tucci plays the professor, Ted Swenson, a well-respected author teaching at a small college in Vermont. He is a happily married man, whose wife Sherrie (Kyra Sedgwick) is a doctor and they live in a lovely, large house. It is just that Ted is frustrated with his new novel, which is not coming together, and he is kind of bored with quiet academic life too. When the middle-aged professor is approached by  one of the students in his creative writing classes, Angela (Addison Timlin), who professes to be a great fan of the professor’s one published novel, he is flattered. She asks him to read and critique the first chapter of a novel she is writing. Swenson is surprised to find the student’s writing is strikingly good although it is also racy, sexual, bordering on pornographic. There is clearly a little envy, as he remains stuck with his own novel, but he soon becomes enamored of both the writing and the writer. Angela suddenly seems to turn up everywhere he goes on campus, proffering compliments or confiding personal tragedies, and also offering more pages to read. The professor starts to lose his professional perspective.

Tucci gives a fine performance as Swenson. The same can be said of the rest of the strong cast, which includes Janeane Garofalo as a friend and co-worker in the English department of the college. The problem with this film is not the actors or the direction but the idea behind the script.

There are plenty of warning signs that Swenson should heed, with scenes where his fellow professors talk about avoiding even the appearance of sexual harassment but Swenson plays little attention. The audience senses early on there is something not entirely honest about this student, but the professor does not see it until he is well mired in the situation. Every time he steps too far over a line, one can sense he knows he knows he is on thin ice. Yet he proceeds anyway.

To be honest, I have not read the novel “The Blue Angel” but I have seen the Dietrich film, and I suspect far more readers are familiar with THE BLUE ANGEL movie than the book. The von Sternberg’s film revolved around sexual obsession but also the social divides and restraints of that era, in which the professor belonged to “respectable society” that was supposed to keep apart from the “morally questionable” underclass world to which the nightclub singer belonged. The divide one should not cross was social as much as anything, in that tale of an inappropriate relationship. In THE BLUE ANGEL, the professor and the singer exist in different worlds. SUBMISSION poses a different morality tale, one of uneven power. The professor in THE BLUE ANGEL may have a respectable position in society, but he does not have the same kind of power over the singer that this professor potentially has over a young student at his college.

This tale of seduction, stupidity and self-destruction purports to be based on THE BLUE ANGEL but viewers are more likely to think of Harvey Weinstein and other recent news stories of sexual harassment and abuse. But instead of “believe women,” the message is this film is the opposite, with the young woman as plotting temptress, the one with an agenda. Making the student in this film such a plotting deceiver gives one a creepy feeling about this film, since it is the common claim of offender that they were enticed. True, the young woman in this story is not innocent but hiding Swensen’s guilt behind THE BLUE ANGEL and its old morality tale about “bad women” does not change that fact that this middle-aged professor, unlike the sheltered soul in the book, should have been worldly and aware enough not to cross that ethical line. When power is uneven, claiming it was consensual does not matter.

SUBMISSION does have one thing in common with THE BLUE ANGEL, in that both are cautionary tales for their time. In the case of SUBMISSION, that message may be that no matter how tempting, men in positions of power should not cross that ethical line with those they have power over – lest they lose all. Unlike that earlier story’s sense of tragedy, this character deserves what he gets.

RATING: 3 out of 5 stars