BAD LIEUTENANT: PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS 11/30/2009
BAD LIEUTENANT: PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS √ Bob Certified Director Werner Herzog’s latest film mixes some of the classic cinematic storytelling punch of “Chinatown” with the dark, street-level social disorder of HBO’s “The Wire” in this dark, but wildly funny and entertaining work. Nicolas Cage delivers an Oscar worthy performance as a rogue cop who has enough of a moral compass left to be outraged by the savagery of the drug kingpins even when he is so far along the path to his own drug-influenced breakdown that he thinks nothing of violating his own code. It’s even more fun the second time you see it. The Maid 11/19/2009
THE MAID √ Bob Certified Be careful not to read too much about this gem from (Untitled) and The Invention of Lying 11/13/2009
(UNTITLED) √ Bob Certified The story about the tension between radical avant-garde art and commercially accepted art (and other things) doesn’t really break new ground, but the script (by director Jonathan Parker and Catherine di Napoli) is witty and fast-paced, and the acting is exceptionally winning—especially Adam Goldberg as a self-absorbed musician, Marley Shelton as a gallery owner with such craving for the extreme that she refused to let her best-selling artist hang his paintings in the gallery and Ptolemy Slocum in a show-stopping turn as a neurotic conceptual artist who feeds Shelton’s lust for the for the novel. THE INVENTION OF LYING Woeful How can a movie that has three such reliable comedy figures as Ricky Gravais, Tina Fey and Jeffrey Tambor in the opening scenes end up so humorless? It’s just one of the mysteries of this disappointing clunker. Enough said. MICHAEL JACKSON’S THIS IS IT Has some warm, wonderful moments.
A SERIOUS MAN Hilarious at times. The latest from the Coen Brothers is presented (in previews and elsewhere) as so deeply buried in Jewish angst that I thought it required a Bar Mitzvah to appreciate it. But, as a first communion kid, I found it quite easy to enjoy—if that word can be applied to a tale so bleak. A physics professor at a Midwestern university can whiz write the most complicated physics formulas on the blackboard, but he has a difficult time trying to figure out God’s will—and the movie is the funniest when he turns to rabbis for help. They speak in what are, to him, riddles that underscore the difficulty of trying to substitute reason for faith. If you want a rock ‘n’ roll equivalent, check out Bruce Springsteen’s stirring “Reason to Believe,” the closing song on his stark, classic “ |