Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Now I've Seen Everything Dept.: Robert Redford

Robert Redford died today at the age of 89. I'm re-running this directing-career retrospective.

"Golden Boy"

Throughout his career, as actor, producer and director, Charles Robert Redford, Jr. has seemed to choose projects that were personal and conflicted. You look at movies he starred in like Downhill Racer and The Way We Were and The Candidate, with their gilded, privileged (we use the word "entitled" these days), clueless protagonists, and you see the man playing the parts rebelling against the "easy" "golden boy" persona, trashing it, criticizing it, while also, to be truthful, personifying it. Redford was just too much the California golden boy, smart and handsome, to have it rough getting parts in movies or on stage—so he picked carefully.* He chose anti-heroes in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Jeremiah Johnson, and Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here. And although his acting range was limited, his determination to challenge himself, and his boyish good-looks-image early in his career is also reflected in his choices as a director. Carefully, precisely, he picked material that wasn't easy...and true to form scored gold with his very first effort. He must have been very pleased, then probably questioned why he won it and became very determined to do something completely different. 

Redford has never been complacent, even when he's made very complacent movies. One gets the idea that he goes into each movie, sparkly-eyed, wondering how much damage he can do with the project, upsetting the status quo.


Ordinary People (1980) Intimate family drama of coping with tragedy in the hopes of trying to stave off another one. Strong cast with Donald Sutherland (whose amazing work in this is too-often neglected), Judd Hirsch, Elizabeth McGovern, and Academy Award winners Timothy Hutton and Mary Tyler MooreEverybody's great, but Moore got the most attention for her fine work as a wound-too-tight grieving mother, whose grief over losing one son in a boating accident, threatens to destroy the life of the surviving son. Casting "America's sweetheart" as a control-freak exposed the vibrating neurosis at the heart of Moore's comedic acting that could turn hysterical in dramatic turns. Redford also won Best Director that year, and the film—his first—took home top honors as Best Picture, too.

It proved both a blessing and a curse, it took Redford eight years of careful choosing to find a second effort that might top the first.

The Milagro Beanfield War (1988) Milagro, New Mexico is about to die and only the residents of it object.  A farming community, it depends on water for irrigation, but Big Business and their glad-handing lackey politicians agree to divert water only for development.  That means the water in a ditch running by the beanfield of Joe Mondragon (Chick Vennera) can't be used for it.  Coming across a valve that diverts water from his father's property, Joe kicks it, breaking it, and flooding the field. Hilarity, irony, and civil disobedience ensue.  Redford probably wasn't the right guy to make this one, an adaptation of John Nichols' best-selling novel, as, at this point in his career, his attempts at fanciful film-making come across as deadly earnestness. And so, though it wants to be a kind of cautionary folk-tale, it comes across as heavy-handed preachiness. Plus, for all the attempts at ethnically correct casting, it's a little top-heavy with Anglo stars (Christopher Walken, Daniel Stern, John Heard...Melanie Griffith???) in an attempt to generate income, which, in its way, is Hollywood's version of swamping a town under. Redford would become surer with a lighter hand, but still manage to be heavy-handed later in his career.

A River Runs Through It (1992) Redford directs—and narrates—this superb adapatation of Norman Maclean's late-in-life debut novella. The story of two Montana brothers (Craig Sheffer,** Brad Pitt), sons of a Presbyterian minister (Tom Skerritt, never better) who, despite ever separating fortunes, are united in their love of the land...and fly-fishing. Sheffer plays the good, dutiful son living a correct life as a teacher and courting a proper girl (Emily Lloyd), while Pitt (looking eerily like a young Redford) takes his chances on a roustabout's life in sensationalistic journalism. It's a story of conflicts that disappear on the river, as the brothers and their father compete, learn and share secrets for "the perfect cast" that will simulate Nature enough to lure a fish. It's life-lessons in miniature, writ large but humbly, but the interpretations by the two brothers of finding their bliss could not be more different.

Simple story simply told. With McLean's way with words managing to make a successful transition to the projected image and a shimmering soundtrack.

Quiz Show (1994) Redford started his acting career right at the end of "The Golden Age of Television," so he knew the milieu of this fact-based story about the "21" game show scandalWasp-ish golden boy Charles van Doren became a TV sensation across the country with his winning streak on a popular prime-time game show during the 1950's. What the public didn't know was that the game was rigged in Van Doren's favor in order to generate drama and higher rating numbers, so he was getting the answers and being coached on how to act as if he was struggling to remember them. Ralph Fiennes plays van Doren, John Turturro the contestant not attractive enough to compete (according to the producers), Rob Morrow as the investigator looking into the chicanery, but the best scene is between Fiennes and Paul Scofield as the elder Mark van Doren, a poet laureate who is incensed by all the easy fame his son has achieved. Redford's direction is more self-assured in this, taking on more of a jazzy editing rhythm than the simple, careful presentations his earlier films had.


The Horse Whisperer (1998) The first novel of Nicholas Evans starts with an intriguing idea, resolves it, then splashes down into turgid soap-opera material that completely negates the earlier tense story of healing the wounds, psychological and physical, of a girl and horse, received in a horrific riding accident involving a 18-wheeler. The girl loses a leg and becomes problematically depressed, the horse is scarred and hysterical, and the girl's mother—a preoccupied fashion magazine editor (Kristin Scott Thomas, probably based—again—on Vogue's Anna Wintour) can't cope. She hires a "horse whisperer" (Redford) to deal with both, frustratingly, because he insists on his rules, his terms, dragging the family to a remote Montana location (the film is beautifully filmed by the eclectic Robert Richardson), where conflicting emotions get churned up. Evans has the characters act on them. Redford, knowing that all parties in the story, are disciplined and have histories, just ends the story before the romance novel aspects start. Smart choice, that. It was Redford's first time directing himself in a movie, and the first major role of a young actress named Scarlett Johansson.

The Legend of Bagger Vance (2000) Imagine that. Redford abandons reality for a moment to dabble in Myth and Folklore, sort of the Golf Whisperer. It's a Tall Tale twice removed: an old duffer (Jack Lemmon) has a heart attack on the golf course, and recalls the story from his childhood of Savannah's favorite son golfer (Matt Damon) who goes to WWI and loses his way, then is coerced into a celebrity golf-match to help publicize a course owned by an old flame (Charlize Theron). Already the narrator may be unreliable due to health and the distance of time, but it's a good variation of the Western tale of the war vet who comes home and regains a family after losing himself.  Sure, Bagger Vance (Will Smithmay be a little bit Obi-Wan, (a Golf Whisperer, actually) and the kid (J. Michael Moncrief) a little "Say it Ain't So, Joe," but Redford's take is funny, sad and sublime, a far better film about golf and the struggle with self than, say, Tin Cup. Redford's direction is sure, not staid, taking chances and occasionally doing something amusing with it. And for a golf movie, there's a haunting after-image of the purely artificial golf course as a living entity that affects play, and that the director emphasizes with a persistent sound-design that accentuates Nature. Really much better than its reputation.

Lions for Lambs (2007) Redford's first film post-"9/11" is a polemic mis-fire that feels like a sociology lecture.  As it is, directed carefully by Redford, with Big Stars Tom Cruise (who produced), Meryl Streep, and himself, it feels talky, staged and stacked in the favor of one side over another—negating any persuasion the movie might actually create. All the anti-Bush sentiment Redford built up over the Iraq/Afghanistan War and it's "selling" to the American public must have boiled over in the deadly earnestness (that phrase again!) in which this film is presented. It could have used a bit more humor—even gallows humor would have sufficed. One leaves with the Daniel Dennett quote (that Jim Emerson had prominently displayed on his Scanners movie blog): "There's nothing I like less than bad arguments for a view that I hold dear." 

The Conspirator (2011) A production of The American Film Company, which strives to present accurate portrayals of American History.*** In this case, History feels a lot like the Present.  

Redford's next film is a true-life historical drama based on one of the great miscarriages of justice done in the name of national tragedy and patriotic fervor: the trial and hanging (the first of a woman by the U.S. Government) of Mary Surrat after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln 
(her crime was that she owned the boarding house where the would-be assassins met) It's clearly meant to be addressing the knee-jerk trash-canning of basic principles of jurisprudence in the face of the 9/11 attacks ("Military tribunals" and indefinite incarcerations without charges), but, doing so while taking a lesson from the failure of Lions for Lambs, cushioning it with an example from the past. Whatever the reason, it is one of those stories you wonder why it had never been made before.

The Company You Keep (2013) A combination of The Fugitive and Absence of Malice makes for a film that might be a little too complicated for its good—but it at least allows the casting of Shia LaBoeuf (as a mercilessly ambitious cub reporter) to offset the age of most of the actors in the cast (including Redford) who are playing 1960's radicals hiding from the law. Hmm. Throw Sneakers in there, too. The more radical members of the Weather Underground go Undercover after a bank robbery thirty years previous that included the murder of a guard. One of the group, Sharon Solarz (Susan Sarandon) is arrested and the FBI begins to crack down on other members of the group, particularly Redford's Jim Grant who, under the name Nick Sloane, had not participated in the robbery. The FBI's not particularly concerned with the details as members of the task force (Terrence Howard, Anna Kendrick) are concerned with being left flat-footed with no progress on the case for thirty years.

There is a definite lack of suspense here and one finds the LaBoeuf character a bit superfluous (and annoying—as do most of the characters), but legendary scenarist Lem Dobbs manages to keep the radicals' portion of the script taut and weighted with irony and melancholy, if one does get confused one in a while with all the aliases flying by. But, what a cast: Redford, Sarandon, Nick Nolte, Stephen Root, Sam Elliott, Richard Jenkins, Brendan Gleeson, Chris Cooper, Stanley Tucci, and Julie Christie. It may not mean anything to younger viewers—but, then, neither do the events about something called a "Vietnam War" and "student radicals"—as the rebels find themselves having to deal with the consequences of adapting those very values they were fighting against in the first place. Not a bad little conceit.



* Mike Nichols, who directed Redford in the Broadway production of Neil Simon's "Barefoot in the Park," wanted Redford to play Benjamin Braddock in The Graduate, as Ben is described in the book as a golden-haired California boy.  But Redford balked, saying that a privileged handsome kid wouldn't be so sexually awkward.  So, Nichols hired schlumpy Dustin Hoffman instead...away from playing Nazi playwright Franz Liebkin in Mel Brooks' The Producers.  Brooks was only too happy to help.  Mrs. Brooks, Anne Bancroft, was also starring in The Graduate.

** The young child actor who plays Craig Sheffer's character as a boy is one Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

*** A noble goal but maybe not a profitable one—come to think of it we haven't heard anything from them lately (Parkland is one of theirs).

Thursday, September 11, 2025

United 93

United 93 (Paul Greengrass, 2006) "The War on Terror" turned the tide before it was even declared. The efforts of the crew and passengers of United flight 93 insured that, as they assessed the situation quickly, made decisive plans and executed them unselfishly, in the process saving an unimaginable number of lives. Who knows, besides the dishonored dead, what the target was? We don't know. We can't know. But, after that, every airline passenger became more vigilant, and everybody who didn't put their seats in an upright position (or try to light their shoes) was seen with suspicion. Anyone who attempted anything—short of hogging the overhead compartments, blocking the aisles in conversation, stealing somebody else's honey-nuts, or (god forbid) talking incessantly about themselves THE ENTIRE FLIGHT—against the common good, would be taken down and taken down hard, if not by security officers, then by the passengers themselves (and you had better luck with the security officers). Flight 93 was when the terrorists started losing 55 minutes after the battles had begun.
Greengrass' ingenious attempt to recreate the events on 9-11 leading up to and during that horrific flight (in real time, one might add) crackles and pops with a cinema verité energy that makes the most mundane of the circumstances take on an ironic heft. We all know how the story went—only if merely how it ends—and it makes all the participants victims and their every action and utterance weighted with irony, their moments, being finite, that much more important. The dawning realization that their rudimentary transport had become part of an organized plot to turn their flight into a weapon of targeted destruction is both horrific and inspiring, moving fast through the stages of grief, they decide to make the best of the situation in which they suspected they would not survive, and acted unselfishly to at least stop any further loss of life wherever they were heading, and, maybe, doubtfully, save their own. In an unfolding world of uncertainty, they acted for the greater good.  

It's an amazing story—civilians becoming warriors, victims not settling for that role. And Greengrass' version is done without stars, no grand-standing, just the director's insistence on verisimilitude and energy, not amping the story with false heroics, but only the genuine ones, and enhanced by its own choice not to editorialize.

Sunday, August 31, 2025

Don't Make a Scene (Redux): Passion Fish

A word of explanation. The critical phrase has been coming up a lot in conversation at the house lately. Not for anything literal, mind you, but for the various vagaries life can throw your way. It's become a catch-all phrase for the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. And...from time to time...this vivid little scene springs to mind.
  
The Set-Up:  "I didn't ask for the anal probe."  

Back when I worked for a recording studio, I heard a lot of stories. A lot of stories from actors, who were complaining about conditions they were working under—the usual reaction from people is "So what, you're an actor!"

But my reply was always "I didn't ask for the anal probe," which usually got me quizzical looks. It was always said in sympathy and solidarity, but I usually had to explain that it came from John Sayles' little seen but lovely movie Passion Fish. A lot may be forgotten about this film, but this scene has never left me. It is a gold nugget in a fine film, that shows up, plants itself in your memory and leaves (as does the character) never to be seen again.

The actress doing the monologue is Nancy Mette, who had worked with Sayles before, and she is given this little gem of a scene, all for herself, the camera by and large on her, her moment in the sun. This scene is immortal. And Mette's playing of it is brilliant, combining a full range of emotions, but ultimately melancholy and comic.

I hope somewhere actors are using this scene for auditions (although it would be a real acting challenge to try to top Mette), if only as a little defiant education to directors and casting agents about the casual crushing that is done on a daily basis.

The Set-Up: Successful soap opera actress May-Alice Culhane (Mary McDonnell) is paralyzed in an automobile accident and becomes wheelchair-bound. No longer able to act, she moves back to her Louisiana family home to get away from her previous life and the reminders of what she has lost. After a series of failed caregivers, she is able to move past her grief with Chantelle (Alfre Woodard) and the two women develop a friendship beyond their roles as patient and nurse. One day, May-Alice is visited by some actress-colleagues from her soap days.

Action (gimme a series of three). 
KIM: One more year of daytime. Save my money. I am going to quit. 
KIM: I'm going to go back to class, and I'm going to do theater.
RHONDA: Ah-hah!  I think I've heard this one before.
MAY-ALICE: I've said that one before.
NINA: "I didn't ask for the anal probe." 
NINA: Hm. 
NINA: Four years starving in New York, doing showcases I had to pay for myself.
NINA: That was my first big break.
(Nina shakes her head ruefully and laughs)
NINA: My first feature -- this, like, zero-budget movie about people who were taken up into alien spaceships and given physicals against their will -- 
NINA: I go in for the audition and the director is really intense and mysterious, and he has me sit with my eyes closed and free associate, right? We do these improv's about the aliens representing our most primal fears and...it's great!
NINA: Finally, some real acting! And they tell me before I leave that I've got the part! 
NINA: Only I don't know what it is yet, but I'm so thrilled because it's this feature, you know? It's not a student film or anything. So the agent gives me my script and I go through it looking for Margaret, the part that they say I have, and I've got my yellow underliner marker in my hand, only it's drying out, and finally I find only one page with the corner folded over, 
NINA: ...and I'm in this therapy group of these people who have had these alien physicals, and I've got only one line: 
NINA: "I didn't ask for the anal probe."
MAY-ALICE: Not much to build a character on...
NINA: But I'm a professional, right? 
NINA: I prepared! I had backstory on this woman! I knew that she had been to the hairdresser before she came to the therapy group. 
NINA: I knew that she didn't trust that guy who sat next to the fuchsia. I knew that she turned the TV set on the minute she got back to her apartment, just for the sound of it. 
NINA: And I even had my boyfriend, my boyfriend at the time...with a thermometer, you know, um, for the sense memory, right? 
NINA: I was loaded for fucking bear! 
NINA: So finally it comes time to shoot the scene. And they do one take of the wide shot and they stop before my line!
NINA: I was terrified that they were gonna cut it. They move in for reaction shots, close-ups, mostly things that mean that I have to go and sit outside because the camera is set up where my chair is. Well, by the time they get to me,... 
NINA: ...the crew is grumpy because it's late...
NINA: ...and they're non-union and they don't get paid extra for overtime.
NINA: The lead actor is gone. He's got his shrink appointment and...
NINA: I'm alone! 
NINA: And I'm staring at this piece of tape stuck to a stand next to the camera and... 
NINA: ...the director says, "Okay. Uh. Let's try it a few times without cutting and, uh, show me a few different colors."
(Nina pauses dramatically) 
NINA: "I didn't ask for the anal probe." 
(pauses again) 
NINA: "I didn't ask for the anal probe!" 
NINA: (Pauses again, makes an angry face) "I didn't ask for the anal probe!"
(Pauses, looks sad)
NINA: "I didn't ask for the anal probe." 
(She breaks character.) 
NINA: That was it.
(smiles)


Passion Fish

Words by John Sayles


Pictures by Roger Deakins and John Sayles


Passion Fish is available on DVD from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.