• Th-Th-That's All Folks! The Best & Worst Endings Of All Time (Part Two)

    PINK FLAMINGOS (1972)



    Okay, first of all...how cool is it that John Waters was the officiant at David “The Wire” Simon’s wedding? But, of course, a certain brotherhood between the seemingly unlikely pair makes perfect sense, given their shared warts-and-all love of Charm City, a.k.a. Bodymore, Murderland. And before he became pop culture’s deviant bon vivant uncle, Waters also shared the hustler rebel aesthetic of Simon characters like Omar and Bubbles, conceiving Divine’s infamous shit-eating grin at the end of Pink Flamingos as more of a calculated publicity stunt than an attempt to pervert the fabric of decent society. As the director says in his book, Shock Value, “I knew I only had $10,000 to work with, so I figured I had to give the audiences something no other studio could dare give them even with multimillion-dollar budgets. Something to leave them gagging in the aisles. Something they could never forget.” Mission accomplished. (AO)

    Read More...


  • Tim Roth's Good Old Days

    "I can't believe I even did shit like this back then." That's Tim Roth, talking to John Patterson of The Guardian about how he got his breaktrhough role as Trevor the skinhead in Alan Clarke's Made in Britain. "For the final audition - which I think was in front of the producer, the writer David Leland, and Alan - I turned up early on purpose. I came in and I told 'em, 'When you need me I'll be in the park across the way,' knowing full well they'd be watching me through the window. And I did some, you know, character work in the park. And luckily a friend of mine turned up who was in a band called King Kurt. And he has this fucking huge mohawk and I'm bald and we started mock-fighting and he's making a peacock noise - and then the police turned up and got involved - and Alan and his lot are all watching me out the window. And then I went in and did a reading; but by then it was more of a formality than anything else."

    Read More...


  • Ken Ogata, 1937-2008

    Japanese actor Ken Ogata has died at the age of 71. A veteran performer who made the leap to movies after achieving stardom in the 1965 TV drama Taikoko, Ogata was best known to Western filmgoers as a major collaborator of the great director Shohei Imamura. In 1979, Ogata gave a brave, powerful performance as a wandering sociopath in Imamura's Vengeance Is Mine, based on the true story of an actual serial killer. Almost thirty years and many serial-murderer movies later, Ogata's work in that film retains its special fascination as perfectly contained depiction of a suffering man who has no way to connect to the world except to lash out at it. Four years later, they re-teamed for The Ballad of Narayama, starring Ogata as a man required by village tradition to carry his aged mother up a mountainside and leave her there to die. The film won the Palm d'or at Cannes and Ogata received the Japanese Academy Award for his performance. He also appeared in Imamura's Eijanaika (1981) and Zegen (1987).

    Read More...


  • OST: "Drowning By Numbers"

    The collaboration between filmmaker Peter Greenaway and composer Michael Nyman has always been a productive one.  Nyman's playful formalism perfectly matches Greenaway's, and where they diverge -- with Greenaway's visually explosive artistic sensibilities balanced out by Nyman's simple, minimalist tendencies -- they are complementary rather than contradictory.  For many people, the peak of their collaboration came with the celebrated soundtrack to Greenaway's most successful film, The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover; and there's no denying that the relentless, operatic score to that film, with its nearly ten-minute main title sung with compelling gusto by a castrati, is a winner.  But for our money, the best example of Michael Nyman and Peter Greenaway putting their heads together was the soundtrack to 1988's clever, inventive formalist masterpiece, Drowning By Numbers.  It was the first full album where Nyman assembled the Michael Nyman Band -- a chamber orchestra put together specifically to perform film music, and it shows -- the performance is as tight as hell, and perfectly suited to the short form of the score.  At no point do Nyman's musical style and Greenaway's cinematic tendencies blend so perfectly together, and that's why this is a soundtrack worth owning on its own or in conjunction with the movie.

    Driven by members of the prestigious Balanescu Quartet, and led by the outstanding saxophone player John Harle, the vibrant, energetic score had its genesis when Peter Greenaway suggested the use of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's "Sinfonia Concertante for Violin, Viola and Orchestra".  Using some of the Mozart piece's main figures as a jumping off point, Michael Nyman composed a score both evocative of the classics and wholly original.  The plot of Greenaway's bizarrely perfect little murder-comedy -- a trio of identically named women plot the murder by drowing of their respective husbands/boyfriends -- contains a number of his typically quirky but effective formalist touches (the numbers 1 through 100 appear on screen, in order, from the beginning of the movie to the end) and a fascination with game-playing.  These elements are reflected in the score, both in the playful tone and in the repetitive structure of the pieces.  In the film, the county coroner, Mudgett, is a compulsive game-player, and Nyman names his compositions for the bizarre little games he's always inventing -- and which ultimately lead to his downfall.  The music is a charming combination of romanticism and minimalism, and Nyman's piano-playing and conducting on everything from the string quartet to full-orchestra tracks is strong and enjoyable.

    Read More...



in