Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Emily the Criminal

Just Two Paychecks Away
or
"No...But, Yeah."
 
Emily Benetto (Aubrey Plaza) is applying for a job, office work. Pleasantries. Resume Glance-Over. Good, so far. Smile, smile.
 
Then, the interviewer brings out her background check. There's that DUI a few years ago. Then, there was the aggravated assault charge just a couple years back. Then, a nerve twitches in her right cheek and the eyes start to blink and come back narrowed. The smile turns into a sneer and Emily goes on the attack.
 
How did he get her background info? He must have known about it the whole time! Why the charade of even having an interview if he had that information? Why, if she can't trust him about that, how can she trust him about anything? How could he be so deceitful? Well, the interview is over and she goes stalking out. Oh, and, by the way, she takes her background information file with her, even though it's probably available to anyone who asks.
Fuming, Emily goes back to work. Gig work. She's a delivery-driver for buffet meals for events, with lots of heavy-lifting and stairs if there are no elevators. It's mechanical and she doesn't have to interact with the public, as they wait like cattle for the toughs to be filled. She has $70,000 worth of school debt (art major), which she'll never be able to pay off at this rate and that record keeps her from getting steady employment. There's no statute of limitations and she's stuck. A couple mistakes and her life is hosed and she has to content herself with work anybody can do (if they don't ask questions) and rooming with strangers just to have a roof over her head. The system is against her and there's no way of getting out of it. Welcome to America in the 21st Century.
Emily bumps into a co-worker in a jam—he's promised to go to his kid's baseball game and can't make a delivery, so Emily takes it. As thanks, he gives her a phone number for a job that pays $200 for one hour's work. She calls the number and the phone-call is rather sketchy: she's given an address and a time to be there. Just in case, she checks her bear-spray. At least, that's working.
It's a run-down warehouse space, and she's told to hand over her I.D. She does so, reassured that she'll get it back. She then goes into the backroom where another 25 people are waiting, and when things start, the guy has one question: he says that they'll be making $200 in cash, but what they're going to be doing is illegal. If you have a problem with that, get out.
The job is dummy-purchasing. They are going to be handed credit cards and the job is to go in and buy a big-ticket item, like a wide-screen TV. Pay for it with the credit card and leave, and meet at a secure location. "Are the credit cards stolen?" "No, but the information on them is." "What if they check my I.D.?" They hand her a driver's license with her picture on it." "Is that you?" She pulls off the job and is immediately handed $200 in cash. "We have another job and it pays $2,000." She tentatively agrees.
 
Emily the Criminal is a lean and mean crime drama about the black market that sits just under the skin of everyday life. You know it exists. You might even be taking advantage of it. It might even be taking advantage of you if your information has been hacked or your credit cards stolen. It uses the cracks in our system for the sake of convenience and using it against entities who will be writing off the losses anyway. The losses are societal, absorbed in rising insurance costs and anonymous fraud charges. Out of sight, out of the ledgers. The companies and the banks and the credit companies know all about it, but there is nothing they intend to do about it, as accepting the loss is cheaper than what it'll cost to get used product back.
For Emily, it's a chance to get her head above water and maybe, eventually, get out of the grind. But every gig has its own grind that sand-papers the nerves down, and pretty soon, she has to contend with bad actors, theft, threats, and even murder, but she takes it in stride. She's built up so much bitterness for "The System" that's kept her down, that, at least now, she's in a fair fight, and it's survival of the fittest.
One can't say enough about Plaza in this movie. She's always been freakishly good, like an adult version of Wednesday Addams, on a track by herself, that very few other actors could pull off. But, here, there's something dead behind the eyes that convinces you that she could do the things she does and be the person who will do what it takes to survive. It's her movie and she's in almost every frame, leading the camera along as she descends into the underworld. The film, in its spareness, has an old Warner Bros. gangster quality to it and it packs an ironic punch along the lines of I Was a Fugitive From a Chain-Gang.
It's visceral. You'll come out more direct, more brittle, and more arrogant, and amazed that this little film with the limited budget and cast can affect you, piercing the complacency and making you more raw. And just a little meaner.
 
This is writer-director John Patton Ford's first feature film. It will not be his last.


Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Beginners

Written at the time of the film's release...

Is "For Real" "The Opposite of Free?"

Nobody "knows" anything. We stumble through life, individually, doing the best we can or will. Millions have preceded us. Millions (hopefully) will follow us, but we're all blazing a trail, learning as we go. We are all Beginners, and only cable news pundits and politicians act like they have the answers. Liars.

The life of Oliver (Ewan McGregor, lightly scruffy) is much like that of director Mike Mills*—graphic designer, cartoonist, sweetly depressed, mother dead, father (Christopher Plummer) comes out of the closet afterwards at the age of 75, and remains gay in both senses of the term, until his death of cancer a few years later. It takes awhile for Oliver to process—the movie takes place mostly in flashback so the movie does make him live a bit in the past. And self-analysis is very much a priority for him, perhaps too much. He can inventory what things were like at the time of all the events of his life. Take him to a costume party, naturally, he goes as Freud. Walk into his home, you get the Grand Tour...even the Jack Russell terrier, Arthur, that he inherits from his Dad gets one. It's all part of the dialog he has with the dog (who looks at him and thinks—via sub-titles—"I only have a vocabulary of 150 words.  I can't talk."), and becomes a constantly needy companion. He now looks at his present through a prism of the past, but, as with driving a car, you can't go forward very well if you're only looking through the rear-view mirror.
At that previously mentioned costume party (Freud, remember...with dog in tow), he meets
Anna, played by dark-eyed blond
Mélanie Laurent (who also can't talk—laryngitis). meets her cute, and they develop a relationship that's friendly, warm...and quiet. But, his melancholy keeps getting in the way, and they go through stages of happy/sad/happy/sad, all of which is confusing to the dog (who keeps asking "Are we married yet?")
It's nice. It's sweet. It's puzzling.
Beginners is about growing up and learning, and taking chances despite all that. It's about coming out of grief and the shadow of your parents (and your own origins) and moving forward. Personally, I found myself identifying with the dog. Beginners is a fine little wallow, but I really wanted to go for a walk.

* Director of Thumbsucker and C'mon, C'mon, married partner of Miranda July, whose film Me and You and Everyone We Know some hail as a masterpiece and I find frustratingly precious, although I'm looking forward to seeing her new one.

Sunday, August 28, 2022

Don't Make a Scene: Two Rode Together

The Story:
One take.

Let me amend that. One take between two great actors.

Two Rode Together was the first film James Stewart had made with the legendary director John Ford. But, he'd been warned by pals John Wayne and Henry Fonda that Ford could be...let's say "irascible." "Irascible" is a good word for it. 
 
It was Widmark's first film with Ford, as well...although Widmark had worked with Wayne on The Alamo and Ford had shown up on-set—to make his presence known. Unbeknownst to both actors, Ford had taken each one aside and warned them that the other was well-known for trying to "steal" the picture. As a result, both of them were at the top of their respective games, stepping on each other's lines, making it move fast, making it sound like real conversation, taking advantage of every drop of humor they could. It's one of the most natural of scenes of conversation ever done.

The video of the scene below shows just how good these guys were here: Stewart, with his distinctive ability to...pause...and control the rhythm of the conversation and to "snap" the laugh-lines; Widmark with his quick-witted reactions and mis-directions. And it's all in one unbroken five minute "take" without flaw and all with business about cigars and freshening up, all the while the river burbles in the background. Ford set up the crew standing in the cold, powerful current of the water—the crew might have rebelled if there was another take.

Ford was not happy with this movie. It's theme of the duplicity of civilized people in regards to the Nation's native race had been done by Ford...and done better...in The Searchers. He did this one as an I.O.U. to the late Columbia chief Harry Cohn, but this one didn't take his recent ruminations on the cost of "taming the West"—as a counter-argument to his earlier Cavalry pictures—as far as he wanted to go. He'd do that with Cheyenne Autumn, still three years away.
 
The Set-Up: Sheriff of Tascosa, Texas, Marshall Guthrie McCabe (James Stewart) is persuaded by Cavalry Officer Jim Gary (Richard Widmark) to accompany him on a mission to ransom Comanche captives for the bereft families. The task is easier than first thought, given the shiftless nature of the Marshall.
 
Action (such as it is).
 
MARSHALL GUTHRIE McCABE: It's harder than my saddle. 
FIRST LT. JIM GARY:
You're in great shape, sitting on that porch. 
GARY:
You know, 
GARY:
I still can't figure it out. 
McCABE:
  Huh?
GARY:
 
I can't figure it out. No fuss. No argument. 
GARY:
What made you decide to come along? 
McCABE:
Yeah, yeah...Ride all night on some wild goose chase. I'll tell you this, you didn't decide me to come along. I'll tell you that.
GARY: I didn't figure I did. 
GARY: Those things come one in a box? - 
McCABE:
Don't you ever buy your own cigars? - 
GARY:
Sure. I bought two last payday. That was three months ago.
McCABE:
Here. 
GARY: Thanks a lot. 
GARY:
Here, I got a match. 
McCABE:
Gee, I'm surprised you can afford matches. 
GARY:
I can handle that, all right. 
GARY:
Why did you come? 
McCABE:
Hm? 
McCABE:
Well...If you must know, it was mostly to get away from Belle. 
GARY:
Belle? Why? - I thought you two were kind of: - 
McCABE:
I know, I know, I know. I know, I know...I know.
McCABE:
Well, to be completely ungentlemanly about it...I... 
McCABE:
Not that I ever pretended to be otherwise. - 
McCABE:
We were, we were...
GARY: That's what I heard. 
McCABE:
And... 
McCABE:
...just lately she started calling me "Guth." 
GARY:
I noticed that. 
McCABE:
"
Guth." "Guth." The first time I heard it I thought she'd got something stuck in her teeth. Guth, Guth, Guth. 
McCABE:
But she didn't have anything stuck in her teeth. 
McCABE:
It was in her craw...and a
GARY:
Yeah.
McCABE:
and a few nights ago she got it out. 
GARY:
Yeah, go ahead. What happened? 
McCABE:
Well, that's not a subject you can discuss in mixed company...especially when one of the parties is... 
McCABE:
Matrimony!
GARY:
No!
McCABE:
Matrimony. 
GARY: Holy smoke. 
GARY:
Matrimony. 
McCABE: And, of course, in this case, when one of the parties is sort of... 
McCABE: You...you know, 
McCABE:
she carries a stiletto... 
McCABE:
...right there in her garter. 
GARY:
I know. 
McCABE: And...we were sitting around the place talking... 
McCABE:
How do you know? 
GARY:
Well, you just told me. 
GARY: Say, she actually proposed, huh? - 
McCABE: You didn't know about that before? - 
GARY:
About what? 
McCABE: About the...the stiletto? 
GARY:
How would I know about that before? Come on. 
McCABE:
What do you mean? Did she propose? No. 
McCABE:
She didn't, if you mean getting down on one knee. 

McCABE:
She didn't do that. 
McCABE: You have to give her credit for... 
McCABE:
more animal cunning than that. No, no. 
McCABE:
As I... As I remember the approach...
McCABE:
...it was that she didn't see why I was satisfied with just 10 percent of her take when she was willing to go for fifty-fifty. 
GARY:
You mean to tell me you're getting 10 percent... 
GARY:
...of Madam Aragon's place? - 
McCABE:
Don't tell me you didn't know that, Jim. - 
GARY: I didn't know about that. 
McCABE:
I get 10 percent of everything in Tascosa. 
GARY:
Holy crimanetta. 
McCABE:
What? This goes along with the job of marshal. - 
GARY:
You're a dirt... - 
McCABE: It's no secret about it. - 
GARY: You're a dirty thief, McCabe. - 
McCABE: Everybody knows it. 
McCABE:
Now, wait! Wait a minute. 
McCABE: You don't think I could live on the marshal's salary, do you?
McCABE:
A measly $100 a month, Jim?
GARY:
Well, that's 20 more than I get. 
McCABE:
I know, but look... 
McCABE: Look at you.
McCABE:
Look at you. Jim, 
GARY: What?
McCABE:
Jim. You're...you're a man of simple wants.
GARY:
Oh-
McCABE: I just require a little more, that's all. - 
GARY:
Oh, come on, that's a lot of ho-. - 
POSEY: Horses are watered, sir! 
GRAY:
All right, Posey.
 
 
 
 
Two Rode Together is available on Blu-Ray from Twilight Time.