Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Movie Review: "The Quiet One"

Would you let your daughter marry a Rolling Stone?
- Anonymous (1964)

"The Quiet One": B.  When the Rolling Stones first came to the U.S. in 1964, and for many years thereafter, Bill Wyman was their bass player. One of the band's founders, Wyman preferred to avoid the limelight, standing off to the side or in the back while Mick Jagger was shaking and baking in front. The Beatles and the Stones each had a member dubbed "The Quiet One." For the Beatles it was George Harrison; for the Stones it was Wyman.

The Stones first appeared on the Ed Sullivan show on October 25, 1964, eight and a-half months after the Beatles' first appearance on that all-important Sunday evening variety show.  We teenagers had been listening to Stones' music on the radio for months, but never got to see them until their national television debut.  When the time finally arrived, most fans were devoting their collective attention to lead singer Jagger and lead guitarist Keith Richards.  But I was more intrigued by rhythm guitarist Brian Jones, probably because he had the greatest hair in the rock world, and by bass player Wyman.  There was something about the latter's stoicism which set him apart.  He held the neck of his instrument cocked upward at an 80 degree angle instead of parallel to the floor like other guitarists.  He appeared aloof, even while performing in front of hundreds of screaming girls.  Was he being cool, or was he disinterested?

The Stones seemed darker with more of an edge than their fellow countrymen like the Beatles, the Dave Clark Five, Herman's Hermits or Gerry & The Pacemakers.  Their first top ten hit in the States, peaking at number 6 on the Billboard charts, was Time Is On My Side, of which the band actually recorded two versions.  The version which got less airplay was my favorite because of its spooky falsetto fadeout.  Contributing to the eeriness was Wyman's Prince Valiant hair style, an accurate description for which I must credit Star Tribune critic Jon Bream.  Ed Sullivan made room for just two Stones' songs that memorable October night, a cover of Chuck Berry's Around And Around, a strange choice given the fact that the Stones never released that tune as a single, and Time Is On My Side to close the show.

The Quiet One is a documentary which relies almost exclusively on Wyman's comprehensive, invaluable and historic stockpile of Rolling Stones memorabilia which he has painstakingly curated over the last six decades.  Wyman explains that he felt an obligation to make a written record of events which transpired during his days with the Stones.  We are the beneficiaries of Wyman's sense of duty.  It ironically turns out that this quiet, almost reclusive performer has a lot to say, and a personality belied by his on-stage persona.  Some of his ideas are expressed through his photography.  Additionally, Wyman has amassed a huge collection of tape recordings and videos, complete with a variety of compatible devices on which to play them, plus posters, buttons, costumes, instruments, charts, set lists, and all things apropos to Rolling Stones.  This bounty is securely stored in a home library, with complete inventory lists on file.  It is a safe bet that an accounting of anything Stones-related since the band's 1963 formation is contained in Wyman's archives.  Undoubtedly referring to his days of heavy drug usage, Richards has said, "If I want to know what went on in those years, I have to ask Bill Wyman."

The documentary could use a little more -- in fact a lot more -- concert footage.  In spots it suffers from too many slow horizontal pans, reminiscent of most of Ken Burns' offerings.  One clever production gimmick is the use of shots from a camera positioned at a distance directly behind a man with a full head of gray hair.  The silent subject is sitting at a desk.  Sometimes the camera gets closer, but it isn't until the end of the movie that we see his face.  Is it Bill?

It is likely that The Quiet One will be appealing only to rock music fans and historians.  Still, for those of us who fall into one of those broad categories, it does furnish insight and behind-the-scenes snippets of the band which is in its seventh decade of existence.  What was once unofficially a sextet and officially a quintet is now a quartet.  From the original lineup, Jagger, Richards and drummer Charlie Watts are still touring.  Wyman, who is almost seven years older than Jagger and had a brief career in the British air force as a teenager, retired from the band in 1993.  Some of the documentary takes us up to the present day, as Wyman has kept busy with his own band, Bill Wyman's Rhythm Kings.  But as one would expect, the main focus is on his days as a Stone.

Wyman tells filmmaker Oliver Murray that in his view, the job of the bassist is to complement the music without drawing attention to himself.  Wyman is the personification of this approach.  Wyman and drummer Watts, another understated musician, will go down in history as one of rock's best rhythm section duos.           

Friday, July 26, 2019

Quarterly Cinema Scan - Volume XXXVI

SPOILER ALERT!  This post contains spoilers relating to The Godfather.

I recently watched The Godfather for what was probably the fifth or sixth time since its release in 1972.  It is one of the best films I have ever seen -- hence, the A rating you'll see below -- and is one of only two movies which I feel was clearly superior to the related book.  (If you must know, the other was 1964's Fail Safe, graded A- here on April 1, 2012.)  My count of five or six viewings is nothing compared to that of my mother, the Pook. For sure, she was comfortably in double digits.  If there's a cinema in heaven the Pook is there right now, attending a Godfather triple feature.

I smile every time I recount the story Jill told about watching The Godfather with "Grandma Marie."  The concept of spoiler alert was foreign to the Pook.  So, every time the movie switched to a different scene, my mom could not resist telling her granddaughter what was about to happen.  "Now this is where the guy wakes up with the horse's head in his bed." "Now this is where a bomb explodes in the girl's car."  My mom could not help herself.  She had dialogues memorized verbatim throughout the three hour film.

Each time I see The Godfather I pick up on something I hadn't noticed before.  Without question, the story itself and the acting are pure brilliance.  But there are other flourishes and nuances which combine to complement the obvious attributes.  Here are several positive aspects which have kept The Godfather at or near the top of the list of the public's all time favorites.

* Famous quotes: How many times have you heard someone say, "Make him an offer he can't refuse"?  Other noteworthy pieces of the film's dialogue include "Leave the gun, take the cannoli"; "It means Luca Brasi sleeps with the fishes"; "It's not personal, it's strictly business."

* One memorable scene follows another:  Two of my favorites are (i) the Louie's Restaurant conference among Michael Corleone (Al Pacino), gangster Sollozzo (Al Lettiere) and crooked cop McCluskey (Sterling Hayden), and (ii) the hospital scene featuring Michael and an extremely nervous Enzo the baker (Gabriele Torrei).

* Casting: Almost every character, major or minor, is perfectly cast, from Marlon Brando as the title character and Pacino as his youngest son Michael, to the other two brothers, Sonny (James Caan) and Fredo (John Cazale), plus the family's two main henchmen, Clemenza (Richard Castellano) and Tessio (Abe Vigota).

* Creepy killings: Moe Greene (Alex Rocco) gets plugged with a bullet through his glasses; Carlo is strangled from behind within seconds after getting in the front seat of a car; a mobster is shot after being trapped inside a store's revolving front door; Sonny is assassinated at a toll booth by a flurry of machine gun fire.

* Authentic Italian culture: The sprawling outdoor family wedding of the Godfather's only daughter, Connie (Talia Shire); Clemenza showing Michael how to prepare a huge pasta dinner for the family's associates; characters choosing to speak Italian to each other so people around them can't eavesdrop; Sonny sitting around in his "wife beater" undershirt.

* Putting intended victims at ease before they are killed:  Sonny asks driver Pauli (Johnny Martino), who is suspected of betrayal, if he wants food or a drink, then orders Clemenza to rub Pauli out; Connie's husband Carlo (Gianni Russo) is handed an airplane ticket to Vegas moments before he gets in the car for his last ride; Luca Brasi (Lenny Montana) is poured a drink in a bar by a rival of the Corleones, then is bumped off while he stands at the rail.

* The evolution of Tom and Kay into acceptance of family business:  Tom Hagen (Robert Duvall) is the family consigliere who functions as a legal adviser and is considered a son of the Godfather.  Kay Adams (Diane Keaton) is Michael's girlfriend and eventual wife.  At first they seem removed from the shady, corrupt operations of the Corleones, but as the story evolves it becomes impossible for them to distance themselves from the mafia world.

* Distinct traits and personalities of the brothers. Each of the three brothers plus Hagen has distinct personalities which hold true throughout the movie.  Their words and actions realistically stay within the parameters attributable to those personalities.  None of the men acts out of character for the convenience of the script writers, Mario Puzo and Francis Ford Coppola.

One scene in particular stokes personal, fond memories for me, Momma Cuandito and our friends Sue and Bob Cipolle.  In 2017 the four of us embarked on a road trip around Sicily, where we visited the mountain village of Savoca.  There we sat outside Bar Vitelli to enjoy beers and a snack.  That small outdoor seating area is also the location in The Godfather where Michael Corleone meets the father of Apollonia (Simonetta Stefanelli), the girl of Michael's dreams.

****

Here are the films I watched at home during the second quarter of 2019:

1. Bottled With Love (2019 romance; Bethany Joy Lenz and Andrew W. Walker are flirtatiously chatting on-line, not realizing they are co-workers in his father's family-owned business.)  C+

2. The Godfather (1972 drama; Marlon Brando is the head of the Corleones, a powerful New York mafia family.)  A

3. Gunfight At The O.K. Corral (1956 western; Burt Lancaster as U.S. Marshal Wyatt Earp is joined by alcoholic gambler and gunslinger Doc Holiday, played by Kirk Douglas, as they head to Tombstone to help keep the bad guys out of town.)  A-

4. The Mule (2018 drama; Clint Eastwood owns a failing floral business but strikes it rich when he, at first unwittingly, agrees to transport illegal drugs for the Mexican cartel from Texas to Illinois, an enterprise which DEA agent Bradley Cooper is determined to end.)  B+

5. One Is A Lonely Number (1972 drama; while she's going through a divorce, twenty-seven year old Trish Van Devere turns to elderly shop keeper Melvyn Douglas for counsel, and to handsome contemporary Monte Markham for a serious fling.)  B-

6. Ring Of Fire (2005 music biopic; Joaquin Phoenix plays the Man In Black, Johnny Cash, who falls in love with Reese Witherspoon's June Carter from the moment they meet.)  A

7. The Tattooed Stranger (1950 detective noir; New York City detective John Miles, assisted by botanist Patricia Barry, follows clues, including unusual blades of grass found at the crime scene, to figure out who murdered a woman bearing a tattoo on her arm.)  B-

8. 3:10 To Yuma (1957 western; financially desperate rancher Van Heflin agrees to guard and transport captured outlaw Glenn Ford, knowing Ford's gang stands in the way.) B+

9.  Woman On The Run (1950 crime noir; with the help of tabloid journalist Dennis O'Keefe, Ann Sheridan looks all over San Francisco for husband Ross Elliott who witnessed a gangland murder.)  B