Ithaca Film Journal: 2/15/24

What I’m Seeing This Week: I’m planning to attend two screenings this week. First, I’m going to catch the Oscar-nominated animated shorts at Cornell Cinema on Saturday since none of them are available online. Then, I’m finally going to see The Zone of Interest at Cinemapolis on Wednesday.

Also in Theaters: I’m waiting a week to watch The Taste of Things, which opens at Cinemapolis today, but only because I’m behind on new releases–an arthouse film about food starring Juliette Binoche and Benoît Magimel sounds right up my alley! Of the new movies in town which I’ve already seen, my top recommendation is Poor Things, which continues its run at Cinemapolis, but Priscilla, which is at Cornell Cinema on Friday and Saturday, isn’t far behind. The Oscar-nominated animated shorts are at Cinemapolis all week, too, as are the documentary and live action shorts. I’m currently planning on giving the latter two programs a miss because I’ve already seen 8/10 of the films up for awards, but would consider checking out the latter if Invincible and Red, White and Blue are worth it, so leave a comment if they are! The live action shorts are also at Cornell Cinema tomorrow. On the repertory front, Dune and Turning Red continue their runs at the Regal Ithaca Mall this week. You can also see Amélie there starting tomorrow, which: a friend of mine once told me she’d sleep with anyone who took her to see that film on a first date, so maybe they messed up by not making it their Valentine’s Day selection! The Wizard of Oz is playing Cinemapolis on Sunday as part of their “Family Classics Picture Show” series for just $2 per ticket or $10 for a “family group” of five or more. Last but not least, the Regal is also screening the David Lynch-directed version of Dune starring Kyle MacLachlan on Sunday and Monday in honor of its 40th anniversary.

Home Video: There’s a new season of the MUBI Podcast out called “Tailor Made” which is devoted to film and fashion. The first episode reminded me that it has been a minute since I last watched Breathless, so I revisited it on The Criterion Channel the other day. Unlike Rico Gagliano, I never had the experience of having my mind blown by this one because I encountered it as undergraduate film studies major when I was still forming notions about what a masterpiece looks like. As such what jumps out at me now is what a great job it does of capturing the feeling of being young and in love and invincible. The best example of this might be the scene in which Jean-Paul Belmondo’s Michel Poiccard runs up behind some poor young lady and lifts up her dress just because he can. Recommended, of course, no matter when the last time you saw it was!

Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here.

Ithaca Film Journal: 2/8/24

What I’m Seeing This Week: I only made it to one movie (Four Daughters) last week, which means I still haven’t seen The Zone of Interest. I’m going to gamble that it will still stick around for awhile longer, though, and go with Best International Feature Film Oscar nominee The Teachers’ Lounge since it’s playing Cinemapolis for one week only.

Also in Theaters: My favorite new movie now playing in Ithaca is Poor Things, which continues its run at both Cinemapolis and the Regal Ithaca Mall. Other 2024 Oscar nominees you can see this week which I haven’t already mentioned include American Fiction, which is also at both Cinemapolis and the Regal, and Oppenheimer, which is just at the Regal. There’s a lot of kid-friendly repertory fare to choose from right now, including The Sound of Music at Cornell Cinema on Saturday and Sunday, Pixar’s Turning Red at the Regal all week, and one of my family’s favorites How To Train Your Dragon (which features an excellent score by John Powell) at the Regal on Saturday. I don’t know why you’d want to revisit Dune: Part One *this* far ahead of its sequel’s opening on February 29, but it is now playing at the Regal and will presumably stay there until then. Finally, you could do far worse for a Valentine’s Day date night than When Harry Met Sally…, which has a 35th anniversary screening at the Regal on Wednesday.

Home Video: Four Daughters just ended a one-week run at Cinemapolis and Bobi Wine: The People’s President is now streaming on Disney+. Did you know that current Cornell University faculty, staff, and students have access to the remaining three 2024 Oscar nominees for Best Documentary Feature Film via licenses and subscriptions paid for by the Library? To Kill a Tiger, a pointedly didactic dispatch from the front lines of the battle against systemic misogyny in rural India that counts Mindy Kaling and Dev Patel among its executive producers and which I suspect will be many people’s rooting interest in this category if enough of them see it, is available via Docuseek. Less immediate in its goals is The Eternal Memory, which chronicles married couple Augusto Góngora and Paulina Urrutia’s private and public rearguard actions against forgetting as victims of Alzheimer’s Disease and key media figures during and after Chile’s Pinochet era. It’s also a great movie about the COVID-19 pandemic in that it is strongly influenced artistically by the limitations it imposed and depicts what must have been one of the most challenging lockdown situations to contend with. I would not be disappointed if this film, which is available via Projectr, wins. My favorite, though, has got to be 20 Days in Mariupol, although that really isn’t the right word for a devastatingly unflinching depiction of life during wartime for civilians with the misfortune to live in the combat zone. Anyway, it will be on the top ten list for Movie Year 2023 I publish next month and is available via both Academic Video Online and Kanopy. Best Documentary Short Film nominee The ABCs of Book Banning is available from Projectr (which the New York Public Library subscribes to as well, by the way, if you’re a cardholder there) too, but I can’t recommend it for any reason other than completism.

Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here.

Bonus Drink & a Movie Post #3: Americano + Groundhog Day

Most days I’m lucky if 5-10 people visit this blog, but not on February 2 when every year hundreds of people Google “sweet vermouth on the rocks with a twist” and find their way to this 2019 post with the same name. Welcome, folks! Despite the fact that Groundhog Day is one of my all-time favorite movies, I wasn’t necessarily ever planning to include it in my Drink & a Movie series since I’ve already written so much about it and because I featured it in a shot-lived Twitter series called “Pairings” in 2018. Here’s the thing, though: while there’s absolutely nothing wrong with drinking good sweet vermouth on its own with a bit of ice, that’s probably the last time I did so myself! I’ve also been hoarding an observation for years thinking it would make good fodder for a video essay, but I haven’t made one of those since 2008 when Kevin B. Lee kindly did all the hard work. So in honor of the day and without further ado:

Bill Murray’s Phil Connors, Groundhog Day‘s protagonist, unconvincingly claims that sweet vermouth makes him “think of Rome, the way the sun hits the buildings in the afternoon.” This reminds me of the explanation James Bond (who you might also know from the movies) gives for ordering an Americano in Ian Fleming’s short story “From a View to Kill,” which is part of the 2008 anthology Quantum of Solace:

One cannot drink seriously in French cafés. Out of doors on a pavement in the sun is no place for vodka or whiskey or gin. A fine à l’eau is fairly serious, but it intoxicates without tasting very good. A quart de champagne or a champagne à l’orange is all right before luncheon, but in the evening one quart leads to another quart and a bottle of indifferent champagne is a bad foundation for the night. Pernod is possible, but it should be drunk in company, and anyway Bond had never liked the stuff because its liquorice taste reminded him of his childhood. No, in cafés you have to drink the least offensive of the musical comedy drinks that go with them, and Bond always had the same thing–an Americano–Bitter Campari, Cinzano, a large slice of lemon peel and soda.

Although this isn’t actually the strongest endorsement, I far prefer an Americano to plain vermouth. Here’s how you make this “fine speci-mine” of a drink:

1 1/2 ozs. Campari
1 1/2 ozs. Sweet vermouth (Method Spirits)
3 ozs. Club soda

Stir the Campari and sweet vermouth with ice in a chilled glass. Add the club soda and a garnish with an oversized lemon twist.

Americano in a stemmed highball glass in front of a mirror

Carpano Antica, the vermouth I tweeted about in 2018, is still my favorite, but it’s way expensive these days compared to other quality options like Method, which is made a mere 30 miles away from where I live. The Campari adds bitterness and the soda effervescence and resulting cocktail is far more interesting than any of its three ingredients is on their own–no disrespect, Rita. On to the movie! Here’s a picture of the Columbia Pictures DVD release which I think I’ve owned since college:

Groundhog Day DVD case

You can also rent the film from Apple TV+ or Prime Video. Groundhog Day is the rare movie that has entered the vernacular: even if you haven’t seen it, you probably know that Phil Connors finds himself living the same day, the titular holiday celebrated on February 2, again and again. We see pieces of about 40 repetitions onscreen, but there are references to many more (e.g. “I’ve killed myself so many times, I don’t even exist anymore”) and in his BFI Modern Classics monograph on the film, Ryan Gilbey claims that director Harold Ramis maintains that the original script specified that this goes on for 10,000 years. The scene I want to write about takes place on the last such day. It begins with Connors, a TV weatherman, giving far and away the best version of a report on Punxsutawney Phil we’ve already seen him deliver a number of times, complete with a Chekhov reference:

Medium shot of Phil Connors reporting living from Punxsutawney

A reaction shot shows that his producer Rita (Andie MacDowell) is delighted with his work:

Close-up of Rita smiling

“That was . . . surprising!” she says to him afterward. “I didn’t know you were so versatile.” To which he replies, “I surprise myself sometimes.”

Medium shot of Phil talking to Rita

She invites him out for a cup of coffee, but he declines on the grounds that he has errands to run. “Errands? What errands? I thought we were going back,” she says. Which: of course she does! After all, this is their first interaction since cameraman Larry (Chris Elliott) dropped her off at her hotel the previous day after a car ride Phil spent peevishly complaining about their assignment. But by now he’s off. Although Rita doesn’t see where to, we do. First he catches a child who he knows is about to fall out of a tree:

Phil and the child he has saved from injury, who fails to thank him

Then he shows up with a tire and a jack to help these ladies with a flat tire:

The "flat tire ladies" from Groundhog Day

He appears in the nick of time to administer the Heimlich maneuver to Punxsutawney’s Mayor Buster Green (Brian Doyle-Murray):

Phil give the Heimlich maneuver to Buster

And stops on the way out to light a cigarette for a woman at the neighboring table:

Phil is Johnny on the Spot with a lighter

Cut to the Pennsylvanian Hotel that evening where Larry’s attempts to hit on Nancy (Marita Geraghty), who Phil spent a portion of eternity seducing, elicit a priceless look from the bartender played by John Watson Sr., who contrary to Jude Davies’s belief is not the only non-white character in the entire film:

Medium shot of John Watson Sr.'s bartender smirking

On their way to the party next door they run into Rita, who suggests that they call Phil. “Phil Connors?” I think he’s already in there,” Nancy replies, leaving Rita puzzled:

Medium shot of Rita looking puzzled

Inside she is astonished to find Phil playing the piano, and when he sees her he launches into a jazz riff on Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, Variation No. 18:

Phil sees Rita

After he finishes, the woman standing next to Rita identifies herself as Phil’s teacher:

"I'm his teacher," the woman standing next to Rita tells her

Her pride in him used to feel like a borderline plot hole to me (remember: from her perspective they met each other for the first time earlier that day) until I realized she must be looking ahead to instructing him in the future, not backwards to anything she’s already shown him. Anyway, Phil and Rita begin to slow dance:

But keep getting interrupted by people wanting to thank Phil for things he did for them that day, including an incredibly young (he was seventeen during filming) Michael Shannon in his first film role as Fred Kleiser:

Phil and Rita with newlyweds Fred and Debbie Kleiser

“There is something going on with you,” Rita says.

Rita looking skeptically at Phil

“Would you like the long version or the short version?” Phil asks. “Let’s start with the short and go from there,” Rita replies. The shots I want to write about are the ones that come next. Everyone applauds as the song that’s playing ends and there’s a cut to a long shot in which we can see Phil telling Rita something, although we can’t hear him:

Phil talks to Rita in long shot

There’s another cut to a long shot of Buster telling everyone that a bachelor auction is about to begin:

Buster announces that a bachelor auction is about to begin

But then we’re back to Phil and Rita, still talking.

Phil and Rita continue to talk

At one point you can see her nod, but once more we aren’t privy to what they’re saying. Amusingly, the next shot after this is one of Buster holding his hands in front of his ears and saying, “I don’t want to know about it!”

Buster doesn't want to know what Phil is saying

Robin Duke’s Doris, who we met earlier at the town’s diner, then interrupts Phil (who appear to still be talking) and drags him to the front of the room:

These shots account for just 30 seconds of screentime, but I consider them to be some of the film’s most important. I don’t think it’s strange that Rita would spend the entire $339.88 in her pocketbook to abruptly end the bidding war for Phil that subsequently erupts between Doris and (to Larry’s chagrin) Nancy:

Rita bids everything she has to win Phil

It’s for charity, after all, and she’s obviously very curious about how Phil came to be so popular. But although she doesn’t remember, this isn’t the first time they have spent part or all of this day together and on every previous occasion she recoiled when he expressed too much interest in her. Consider, for instance, the first time he made the mistake of saying “I love you” to her. “You don’t even know me,” she replied:

Rita reacts poorly to Phil telling her he loves her

And then, presumably in a rush of recognition that it’s awfully coincidental that they like ALL of the same things, “oh no, I can’t believe I fell for this, this whole day has been one long setup.” To be sure, that’s a much different situation than suddenly being confronted with evidence that the coworker you thought was a jerk is actually the hero of an entire small town, but it’s still pretty crazy when that person presents you with this:

Snow sculpture of Rita

And says, “I know your face so well, I could have done it with my eyes closed.” Followed by: “no matter what happens tomorrow or for the rest of my life, I’m happy now because I love you.” But what does Rita say in reply? “I think I’m happy too.” And then they kiss:

Rita kisses Phil

By this point in the film, Phil has long since stopped trying to escape February 2. He is, instead, constructing a day that he would be content to inhabit for the rest of time. There is absolutely no reason to believe he hasn’t already lived minor variants on this chain of events over and over and over. In fact, I contend that the long shots above provide concrete evidence that he has. Rita asks him for the short version of his story. Just as he apparently spent six months spending four to five hours a day perfecting the art of throwing playing cards into a hat:

Phil teaching Rita how to throw playing cards into a hat

What we see here is the culmination of Phil’s efforts to perfect the art of explaining to Rita what has happened to him in only a few seconds!

Groundhog Day is not about a bad guy who learns to be a saint. One of the best things about it is that Phil retains (or, more accurately, loses but recovers) his wry sense of humor. He calls the boy he saves from the tree a “little brat” and shouts “I’ll see you tomorrow–maybe” after him as he runs away because he never says thank you, and the movie’s final line isn’t “let’s live here,” but rather, a beat later, “we’ll rent to start.” Much earlier on, Phil sits at a bar with two local drunks and asks, “what would you do if you were stuck in one place and every day was exactly the same and nothing that you did mattered?”

Gus and Ralph at the bar

“That about sums it up for me,” Rick Overton’s Ralph replies as Rick Ducommun’s Gus takes a shot. Groundhog Day is the story of a man who discovers through the hard work of introspection how he really wants to live his life and does it without expecting any other kind of reward. We may not be stuck in a time loop, but there’s nothing stopping Ralph or us from doing the same. So: to the groundhog! Or world peace, if you must.

All original photographs in this post are by Marion Penning, aka My Loving Wife. Links to all of the entries in this series can be found here.

Ithaca Film Journal: 2/1/24

What I’m Seeing This Week: It’s another double movie week for me since 2024 Oscar nominee for Best Documentary Feature Film Four Daughters will close at Cinemapolis next Thursday and I don’t want to wait on Best Picture (among other categories) nominee The Zone of Interest, which opens there today as well, and risk a hard choice down the line.

Also in Theaters: I saw a preview for Mami Wata at Cornell Cinema last weekend and it looks interesting! Unfortunately, neither of the two screenings there tomorrow and on Saturday works with my schedule. Director Davy Chou will be at Cornell Cinema with his film Return to Seoul on Wednesday, but I can’t make it to that either. All of Us Strangers, which continues its run at Cinemapolis, is my favorite new film now playing locally. Additional 2024 Oscar nominees that you can see in Ithaca this week include the “Minus Color” version of Godzilla Minus One at Cinemapolis and the Regal Ithaca Mall today only; American Fiction and Poor Things at the same two theaters all week; the dubbed version of The Boy and the Heron just at Cinemapolis all week; and Anatomy of a Fall, Barbie, The Holdovers, Killers of the Flower Moon, Oppenheimer, Past Lives, and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse at just the Regal all week. Last but definitely not least, A Thousand and One, which is at Cornell Cinema tomorrow, features the best film music I heard all year.

Home Video: I created a playlist of the four shorts up for Oscars on YouTube to make it easier to access them! All three Best Documentary Short Film nominees are good. Island in Between is a first-person essay film about a fascinating place I didn’t even know existed: the Taiwanese islands of Kinmen, which are located within sight of mainland China. It contains some terrific imagery like a rusted-out tank aiming at the setting sun. The Barber of Little Rock is an inspiring profile of a real-life George Bailey named Arlo Washington. Finally, The Last Repair Shop is an ambitious story about the interesting lives of the dedicated people who repair maintain the musical instruments freely given to students in the Los Angeles Unified School District. That one, which is co-directed by 2022’s winner in this category Ben Proudfoot (for The Queen of Basketball) and Kris Bowers, is probably my favorite so far (I haven’t seen Nai Nai & Wài Pó yet). Meanwhile, Knight of Fortune is thematically similar to fellow Best Live Action Short Film nominee The After, which is now available on Netflix, in that they’re both about grief, but the two films couldn’t be more different in tone. This one’s more my speed: director Lasse Lyskjær Noer has cited one of my favorite filmmakers Alexander Payne as an influence and I can totally see it.

Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here.

Ithaca Film Journal: 1/25/24

What I’m Seeing This Week: Normally I restrict myself to just one movie in theaters per week so that I don’t miss out on too many bath and dinner times, but I occasionally make exceptions. The lead-up to the Oscars is one such time, and I’m planning to see both the “minus color” version of Best Visual Effects nominee Godzilla Minus One at either Cinemapolis or the Regal Ithaca Mall and Best Picture nominee American Fiction at Cinemapolis, plus we’re taking the girls to see the dubbed version of Best Animated Feature The Boy and the Heron at Cornell Cinema on Sunday.

Also in Theaters: A whopping seven additional Oscar nominees are playing the Regal this week in “reissue” engagements, which doesn’t even include Poor Things since that one never closed there. Meanwhile, you can also see the dubbed version of The Boy and the Heron at Cinemapolis all week and the subtitled version at Cornell Cinema on Saturday. My top pick isn’t any of these films, though, but rather All of Us Strangers, which is at Cinemapolis. Like Petite Maman, one of my favorite movies from last year, it suggests that the path to truly understanding our parents runs not through Reality or Fantasy but a different realm that we maybe don’t still have a name for in 2024. It also features four magnificent lead performances, one of the year’s best opening shots, and a brilliant Christmas scene starring the song “Always on My Mind” by the Pet Shop Boys (which you’ll never hear the same way again) among manifold other virtues. With Cornell Cinema back for the spring semester, there are great repertory options again, including a 35mm print of Rashomon tonight and on Sunday and Berlin: Symphony of a Great City on Monday. The Wizard of Oz is at the Regal on Sunday, Monday, and Wednesday, too. Finally, I’m intrigued by Origin, which opens at Cinemapols today, although I suspect it will close before it works its way up to the top of my list.

Home Video: In addition to all the movies listed above, there are a ton of other Oscar nominees available on streaming video and if you’re anything like me, they will dominate your viewing for the next six weeks. Before you get started, though, allow me to recommend setting aside one night to revisit City Lights like I did the other day. It has been on my mind ever since I saw Fallen Leaves, which pays tribute to it, so I put it on immediately when I noticed that it’s currently in Turner Classic Movies’ On Demand lineup and available via their Watch TCM app (as well as on Max and The Criterion Channel). The opening sequence is an all-time great; the boxing scenes are every bit as much a delightful travesty as the football scenes in Horse Feathers that I wrote about in August, 2022; and the final cut may be the most perfectly-timed one in the history of cinema. If that still isn’t enough to convince you, it also would pair beautifully with Best Live-Action Short Film nominee The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar, which is of course now streaming on Netflix.

Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here.

2023: The Mixtape, Vol. 2 + “Drink & a Movie” at the Halfway Mark

As longtime readers of this blog know, I stubbornly insist on waiting until Oscar night to write about my favorite films of the Movie Year (as I call it) since I haven’t had an opportunity to see critically-acclaimed titles like The Zone of Interest and The Taste of Things that haven’t opened in Ithaca yet, but will before March 10. I am, however, happy to announce the track listing for my 2023: The Mixtape, Vol. 2 Spotify playlist:

  1. Wilco – Pittsburgh
  2. Arooj Aftab, Vijay Iyer, and Shahzad Ismaily – To Remain/To Return
  3. Aesop Rock – Mindful Solutionism
  4. Park Doing – You Know What to Do
  5. The Armed – Everything’s Glitter
  6. Homeboy Sandman – Crazy
  7. Diners – Your Eyes Look Like Christmas
  8. Soccer Mommy – Losing My Religion
  9. Jaimie Branch – borealis dancing
  10. Jeff Rosenstock – LIKED U BETTER
  11. Tyler Childers – Rustin’ In The Rain
  12. Ryan Gosling – Push
  13. Jess Williamson – God in Everything
  14. Lankum – Lord Abore and Mary Flynn
  15. The Beatles – Now and Then
  16. Sofia Kourtesis – Madres
  17. Robbie Robertson – Still Standing

You know it has been a good six months in music when a new Mountain Goats album comes out and nothing from it makes the cut! I’m not sure I have a ton else to say about this batch of songs, though, except that I like them. I attended college in Pittsburgh from 2000-2004 and have memories of listening to Yourself or Someone Like You on overnight bus trips over the holidays, so it’s maybe a bit more backwards-looking than usual? The “Losing My Religion” cover and presence of a Beatles song would support this reading as well, but there’s also plenty pushing against it–Lankum and Sofia Kourtesis are both new discoveries for me from this past year, for instance, and Park Doing is an Ithaca-based musician. Anyway, I hope you enjoy this mix as much as I do! Links to previous bi-annual mixes can be found here.

* * *

In other news, the publication of my January Drink & a Movie post saw that series reach its halfway point. As I have mentioned previously, I’m thinking of this project as gradually constructing a year-long weekly film series: my idea is that once I’ve written about 53 movies, I can self-publish a book with an introduction that people can use to make themselves a seasonally-appropriate cocktail and settle in with a good film every Friday night. At the risk of sounding immodest (and maybe delusional if you disagree), I’m pretty happy with how they’ve been turning out lately! More importantly, I’m learning a lot about what exactly I value in movies and enjoying collaborating with My Loving Wife (who has been killing it on the photography front all year) on a creative endeavor. A full list of the 27 entries we’ve completed so far can be found here. I’m still behind schedule because of the holidays, so it might be awhile before things start going up on the first of the month again, but I’ve got a “bonus” post planned for February 2.

Cheers!

Ithaca Film Journal: 1/18/24

What I’m Seeing This Week: It’s basically a coin flip for me between American Fiction and All of Us Strangers, both of which open at Cinemapolis today. At the moment I’m leaning toward the former because the showtimes are slightly more compatible with my schedule, but I definitely reserve the right to change my mind and I’m almost certainly going to see the other one next week, so it doesn’t really matter anyway.

Also in Theaters: For the third week in a row, The Boy and the Heron and Poor Things rule the roost as the best new films I’ve seen currently screening in Ithaca. You can see the former at Cinemapolis in both its dubbed and subtitled versions and at the Regal Ithaca Mall with subtitles only; the latter is also now playing at both locations. I haven’t mentioned Wonka, which continues its run at the Regal this week, in this space previously because I almost certainly won’t end up seeing it in theaters, but it’s probably the next-best-reviewed option after these two and American Fiction/All of Us Strangers. Unless, that is, you count Pixar’s Soul, which is also now playing at the Regal once a day. You can see Cowboy Bebop: The Movie there as well with subtitles on Sunday and Tuesday and dubbed on Monday.

Home Video: I’m extremely late to this party, but the four shorts directed by Wes Anderson based on Roald Dahal stories that Netflix released a few months ago are pretty great! However, while I liked The Swan, The Rat Catcher, and most especially The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar, my favorite is definitely Poison. Not necessarily because it represents the purest expression of Anderson’s style or a spur track into previously uncharted territory (which it may or may not), but simply because it’s a nearly flawless adaptation and one of the best films I’ve seen in Movie Year 2023, full stop. One fine moment is when Ben Kingsley’s Dr. Ganderbai administers serum to Benedict Cumberbatch’s Harry Pope, who supposedly has a highly venomous krait sleeping on his stomach. He holds up to the camera in turn a piece of rubber tubing, a bottle of alcohol, and a syringe as Dev Patel’s Timber Woods narrates in rapid-fire staccato on from the other half of a split-screen composition. The effect is neither specifically theatrical or cinematic, but something else. In a play we probably wouldn’t be able to see these objects, and in a more traditional filmic presentation they’d be expected to speak for themselves, but in this movie they function to draw attention to Dahl’s choice of words. Ditto Benoît Herlin’s stagehand spritzing water on Dr. Ganderbai’s forehead to simulate sweat. There are also a number of places where Poison departs from its source material to salutary effect, such as by giving Woods an implied backstory involving a hospital stay as a child, his memories of which are triggered by the smell of chloroform, or by manipulating the beats of everything from the moment he and Ganderbai begin the pull down the sheet covering Pope to the original final line: “you can’t be.” Another highlight is the lighting in the scene in which Pope bares his fangs. Outstanding across the board.

Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here.

January, 2024 Drink & a Movie: Jeffrey Morgenthaler’s Amaretto Sour + Scarlet Street

We tend to have a lot of egg whites on hand during the months of December and January as a result of nog making and my absolute favorite way to use them up is in Jeffrey Morgenthaler’s amaretto sour, which Imbibe notes has effectively become the standard way of making it. And for good reason! He boasts that it’s “the best Amaretto Sour you’ve ever had in your life,” and although I can’t claim to have verified this claim through extensive testing, that’s mostly because I haven’t felt the need to try another recipe since discovering this one. Here’s how you make it:

1 1/2 ozs. Amaretto (Disaronno)
3/4 oz. Cask-proof bourbon (1792)
1 oz. Lemon juice
1 tsp. 2:1 Simple syrup
1/2 oz. Egg white, lightly beaten

Dry shake all ingredients, then add ice and shake again. Strain into a chilled rocks glass with one big ice cube, making sure to get as much froth out of the shaker as you can, and garish with a cherry and a lemon twist.

Amaretto sour in a rocks glass

My go-to bourbon for this drink is Maker’s Mark Cask Strength, but they make the spirit I featured in last month’s aged eggnog and I wanted to mix things up a bit. I’m glad I did: 1792 is just about as good of a value and contributes an even higher ABV, which is essential for cutting the sweetness of the amaretto and creating the “warm glowing warming glow” I’m looking for in the dead of winter. It results in a richer texture as well, and you definitely want to use 2:1 simple syrup for the same reason. Disaronno is delicious and easy to find and also has a great origin story: according to the company’s website, the woman the artist Bernardino Luini (a pupil of Leonardo di Vinci) chose as a model for the Madonna in one of his frescoes created it as a thank you gift. And so it was that this month’s pairing suggested itself, because when I think about painting and the winter holidays, one movie immediately springs to mind: Scarlet Street, which ends with perhaps the most cynical use of Christmas music in the history of cinema. Here’s a picture of my Kino Video DVD release:

Scarlet Street DVD case

It can also be streamed on Prime Video with a subscription or on Apple TV+ for a rental fee, and some people may have access to it via Kanopy through a license paid for by their local academic or public library as well.

Scarlet Street begins with a flurry of symbolism. An expensive-looking car pulls up to a building. As an organ grinder entertains its glamorous passenger:

A woman holds out her hand to an organ grinder's monkey from the back seat of an expensive car

The chauffeur ascends a set of stairs, walks past a woman knitting, and knocks on a door marked “private”:

A woman knitting in the foreground watches a man knock on a door marked "Private."

Inside the men of J.J. Hogarth & Company celebrate Christopher Cross’s (Edward G. Robinson) 25 years with the firm as (hat tip: Joseph Gibson) cigar smoke rises unmotivated from the bottom of the frame:

A group of men in tuxedos sit around a table smoking cigars and drinking champagne

The boss (Russell Hicks) quiets them and stands to make a speech:

Well boys, I hate to break up a good party, but you can’t keep a woman waiting, can you? You know how it is, boys. I can see you all understand, alright! Well, believe you me boys, I’ve had the time of my life tonight. And speaking of time, I have here a 14-karat, 17-jewel timepiece. And that’s only right because the man I’m giving it to is a 14-karat, 17-jewel cashier.

Cross reads the engraving and stammers out a brief speech of gratitude. Everyone belts the refrain of “For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow,” then J.J. treats Chris and his co-worker Charlie (Samuel S. Hinds) to fancy (“it’s made special for me, a dollar apiece”) cigar before excusing himself. As the others rush to the window to ogle the “dame” he can’t keep waiting:

J.J. approaches the woman in the car

Chris and Charlie quietly make their own exit. Charlie doesn’t have an umbrella, so Chris sees him to his bus. As they stand waiting for it, Chris tells Charlie that he wonders what it’s like to be loved by a young girl like the one their boss is seeing and that he dreamt of being an artist and still paints every Sunday. “Well, that’s one way to kill time,” Charlie replies. Chris invites Charlie to come see him the next day when the bus arrives, then goes looking for the East Side subway. Lost among the “mixed up” streets of Greenwich Village, he witnesses what he believes to be a mugging:

Long shot of a man hitting a woman

Emboldened by drink, Chris charges forward to defend the damsel in distress, then braces for an answering blow that never comes:

Chris pummels a "mugger" with his umbrella
Chris now uses the umbrella as a shield

The woman (Joan Bennett) he has “saved,” who is wrapped in a cellophane raincoat, first tests her jaw:

Then checks on her assailant. Chris runs off to find a policeman. When they return, the man is gone. The woman, whose name we will soon learn is Kitty March, tells the cop he went thataway, then says to Chris, “let’s get out of here.” He consents to take her home, and with that his fate is sealed. We are barely ten minutes into a film with a runtime of 102.

A major topic of debate among film scholars and critics is whether or not Chris is too pathetic to be someone audiences can identify with. And to be sure, if you’re going to put an apron like this on, it really should be to make a statement, not just to prevent your clothes from getting dirty!

Chris dons a floral apron

But I agree with Kino’s DVD commentator David Kalat that Edward G. Robinson’s performance is “extraordinarily warm and humane” and recognize a great many things in the character he brings to life, especially his struggle to find a sustainable balance between the hobby that brings him happiness and the career that pays his bills. In a book-length interview with Peter Bogdanovich, director Fritz Lang claims that “Robinson’s fate in the picture is the fate of an artist who cares much more for his paintings than for gaining money.” He then specifically references the scene in which Chris discovers that Kitty has been signing her name to his paintings so that she can sell them and instead of getting mad at her, acquiesces to the scheme: “it’s just like we were married, only I take your name,” he says.

Medium shot of Chris and Kitty

In a chapter for Joe McElhaney’s A Companion to Fritz Lang, Vinzenz Hediger argues that for Chris, “the realization of his dream to be recognized as an artist, even though it only happens through the intermediary of the woman he loves, in combination with that woman’s attention, appears to be the only moment of genuine happiness he has experienced in life.” This is consonant with Jeanne Hall’s observation in a Film Criticism article called “‘A Little Trouble With Perspective’: Art and Authorship in Fritz Lang’s Scarlet Street that far from painting being his escape from a loveless marriage like many scholars claim, Chris’s hobby was what brought him to his wife Adele (Rosalind Ivan) in the first place when he rented a room from her in order to save money for paint. Chris describes what happened next to Charlie thusly: “oh she was sweet–butter wouldn’t melt in her mouth. And, uh, well, you know how these things go.” To translate this into (somewhat) contemporary terms, yada yada yada, now he has to paint in the bathroom:

Chris painting in his bathroom "studio"

In Kitty he thinks he has found not just a young girl who loves him, but a young girl who loves him and his work. Per Hediger, “[t]he recognition may be false but it can be lived vicariously so long as it is grounded in true devotion,” and for the length of time Chris believes it to be true, he blossoms. Dan Duryea’s Johnny Prince (more on him in a second) notes that Damon Janeway (Jess Barker), the art critic who has “discovered” Kitty, thinks that the work he produces during this time are the “best things [he’s] done,” and I agree with scholar Tom Gunning when he argues in The Films of Fritz Lang: Allegories of Vision and Modernity that “Chris’s identification with the image of a woman could also be seen as an essential step in his development as an artist, keeping him alive to his polymorphic childlike perversity, but gaining authority rather than regressing through it.” After all, as Gunning goes on to point out, “Chris’s lack of interest in signing his own name to his works and his feminine alter-ego, both recall the fundamental avant-gardist gestures of Marcel Duchamp: signing several works with the name of his feminine alter-ego (whom he had himself photographed as, in drag) Rose Selavy (glossed as Eros, c’est la vie).”

Chris loves to paint, but he’s also lonely. His marriage to Adele is a bitter disappointment because it not only failed to solve the latter problem, but jeopardizes his freedom to engage in the former activity when she threatens to give all his paintings and supplies to the junkman in retaliation for him not buying her a radio. Kitty gives him sustenance until, abruptly, she doesn’t. Although Mark Osteen is technically correct when in his Journal of Film and Video article “Framed: Forging Identities in Film Noir” he pinpoints Chris’s disavowal of his identity as an artist as the moment “Chris’s painter self dies along with the lover and the cashier,” but that self likely would have starved to death anyway even if Chris had responded to Kitty laughing in his face and saying “you’re old and ugly and I’m sick of you” by calmly placing the fateful ice pick back on the table he knocked it off of and walking away instead of, well, you know:

Chris the murderer

One of my favorite things about Scarlet Street is its treatment of Chris’s paintings, which were modeled after the work of Henri Rousseau and created by a friend of Fritz Lang named John Decker (who I assume was also responsible for the illustrations by “Tony Rivera” which adorn the walls of the apartment Chris rents for Kitty). Hall is right that the movie is unusual in the way it “encourages viewers to reflect on the socially-constructed and class-based nature of art and aesthetics by insistently raising questions about the quality of Chris’s work and persistently refusing to answer them.” Like Kitty, I personally think this one is pretty excellent:

Painting of a flower

And although “Self-Portrait” is a title he will later bestow upon a painting of Kitty, one of the film’s many dissolves suggests that maybe it would have been better applied here:

Dissolve from a shot of Chris to a shot of the flower he will paint

Meanwhile, the other painting which inspired this month’s photograph certainly is interesting:

Painting of a woman standing beneath a streetlight underneath the El, threatened by a snake

Some of the other dissolves are absolutely brilliant, including these two involving of Johnny which Gunning discusses at length:

Dissolve from a shot of a knife to a shot of Johnny
Dissolve from a shot of Johnny to a snake in one of Chris's paintings

In the process of doing so, Gunning describes Johnny as being “[a]s nasty, slimy, sadistic, cowardly, lazy, ignorant and venial a character as one could find in a Hollywood film,” which is accurate. Dan Duryea is so effective in this role that I wonder if it was detrimental to his career–I recently saw Thunder Bay for the first time, and although his Johnny Gambi turns out to be a perfectly decent person, I kept waiting for him to do something horrible, which was incredibly distracting! The distinctively out-of-style hat he dons in Scarlet Street is practically a character in its own right, as evinced by these two different close-ups:

First close-up of Johnny's hat
Second close-up of Johnny's hat

And as documented by Mike Grost, the rest of Johnny’s wardrobe is interesting, too. Other things to love or hate include the masterful use of practical effects to make studio lot exterior scenes look like they were shot on location:

Shot of an art gallery window display which utilizes rear projection to good effect

And the dirty dishes in Kitty’s kitchen sink, aka my worst nightmare:

Close-up of a sink full of dirty dishes

What makes this one of the most unforgettable movies ever made, though, is the way it ends. In a shocking plot twist, Johnny is sent to the electric chair for the murder committed by Chris.

Johnny as dead man walking

Unable to shake the vision of Johnny and Kitty happily together in the afterlife, Chris tries to commit suicide, but is unsuccessful.

Close-up of Chris after his suicide attempt

Years pass in an instant and now he is a derelict shuffling down the street to the tune of the Christmas carol “O Come All Ye Faithful,” which as Robert B. Pippin notes in Fatalism in American Film Noir “is a hymn to the baby Jesus”:

The soundtrack then shifts to “Melancholy Baby,” which is utilized throughout the film in a variety of versions for a wide range of purposes. One way to look at this is as simply a logical accompaniment to the painting which two men are carrying out of the gallery he’s passing by, which is of course his/Kitty March’s aforementioned “Self-Portrait.”

Two men carrying Chris's "Self-Portrait" out of a gallery

But Pippin has another interpretation:

The Christian notion of eschatological time suggests both that there is this radical revolutionary possibility in historical time, such that everything is different, full of new possibilities, after the Incarnation, and that an individual can be born again, decisively become almost literally a different person, free of the burden of the past, forgiven, after having been saved. Lang’s irony about this assumption is absolutely withering. The ‘baby’ of real relevance is not the baby Jesus, but, the music reveals, our melancholy baby. The aspiration for such revolutionary change is paired musically with the reality of the stuck-in-time, repetitive melancholy baby. And that means not only ‘melancholy’ because this tempting Christian way of thinking about time is naïve, but because melancholy is melancholy, not mourning in Freud’s famous sense. It is the impossibility of ‘moving on’ from a traumatic event, a compulsive need to suffer it all again and again, a refusal of the liberating work of mourning (a fate, in other words).

Wow! The soundtrack then shifts back to a Christmas carol, this time “Jingle Bells.” There is, again, an obvious explanation: the gallery owner Dellarowe (Arthur Loft) is saying to his customer (Constance Purdy), “well, there goes her masterpiece. I really hate to part with it.” To which she replies, “for ten thousand dollars, I shouldn’t think you’d mind!” So the jingling bells are those of the cash register.

Chris shuffles past a long shot of Dellarowe and a customer

But Pippin’s reading does this one better: “[t]he fate that Christianity naïvely believes can be mastered is not cosmic or divine fate but a socioeconomic, drastic restriction of possibilities, and it appears here as all powerful.” Whichever view you subscribe to, Scarlet Street‘s final images are independently shattering. Chris beholds the painting, but his expression barely changes. He puts his head down and resumes his slow walk:

Long shot of Chris walking down a crowded street

Suddenly, all the people disappear:

Chris all alone

It is, as Gunning describes it, “[a]s if a neutron bomb had exploded.” We hear Kitty’s voice whisper “jeepers I love you Johnny” one final time, and with that it’s all over.

Brrr. Typically I recommend mixing up the drinks in these posts before the movie I’m pairing them with starts, but it in this case you might want to save it for the end because you’re going to need something to warm you up afterward!

Cheers!

All original photographs in this post are by Marion Penning, aka My Loving Wife. Links to all of the entries in this series can be found here.

Ithaca Film Journal: 1/11/24

What I’m Seeing This Week: I haven’t seen many films by Finnish auteur Aki Kaurismäki, so I’m going with Fallen Leaves since you’ve got to start somewhere. It’s at Cinemapolis for one week only starting today.

Also in Theaters: The Boy and the Heron, which continues its run at Cinemapolis this week in both dubbed and subtitled versions and at the Regal Ithaca Mall with subtitles only, is one of my favorite films of Movie Year 2023. Poor Things, which remains at Cinemapolis, is another. If Fallen Leaves wasn’t here for such a limited time, I’d probably be seeing Napoleon this week since I missed it during it’s first Ithaca run last year. It’s back at the Regal for one show a day. Speaking of the Regal, one of the reasons it will be a tragedy if it ever does close for real is because they do a great job of programming new films from India. Two Telugu-language films, Guntur Kaaram and Hanu Man, open there today. Finally, I’m banking on The Color Purple, which is at Cinemapolis, picking up Oscar nominations in a couple of week and sticking around in or returning to local theaters, but you might prefer not to take the risk.

Home Video: Over winter break I watched as many documentaries directed by the talented Belgian-Cameroonian filmmaker Rosine Mbakam as I could get my hands on in preparation for my EMRO review of her stellar first narrative feature Mambar Pierrete. My favorite was Chez Jolie Coiffure, which is about a Brussels hair salon. The most audacious is Delphine’s Prayers, which invites us into a room with one of the director’s fellow Cameroonian transplants and keeps us there until she’s said everything she has to say. Last but by no means least, Mbakam’s feature-length debut The Two Faces of a Bamiléké Woman and the collaborative (with An van Dienderen and Éléonore Yaméogo) essay film Prism are the ones most essential for understanding what she’s doing in Mambar Pierrette. Current Cornell University faculty, staff, and students have access to all of them through a great platform called Docuseek that the library subscribes to. Even if you aren’t so fortunate, they’re all available on DVD or a variety of commercial streaming video platforms from Icarus Films.

Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here.

Ithaca Film Journal: 1/4/24

What I’m Seeing This Week: I pivoted to The Iron Claw last week for scheduling reasons, so Ferrari remains next up on my list. It is now playing at the Regal Ithaca Mall.

Also in Theaters: The Boy and the Heron, a dazzling inventive grown-up fairy tale which rates among director Hayao Miyazaki’s finest work, is back at Cinemapolis in both dubbed and subtitled versions and remains at the Regal with subtitles only. Poor Things, which continues its run at Cinemapolis, is a raunchy, steampunk-inflected ode to “practical love” which includes some of the years best images, sounds, and performances. The Iron Claw is a first-rate sports movie which will be at Cinemapolis for at least one more week. You can’t go wrong with any of them, so pick whichever one sounds the most like your jam! Among movies I haven’t yet seen, the one with the best buzz in the circles I run in after Ferrari is probably Godzilla Minus One, which is at the Regal.

Home Video: There are still two months to go before I write about my favorite films of the year on Oscar night since so many significant releases haven’t yet reached Ithaca, but the list is already starting to take shape. One title that will definitely appear on it is A Thousand and One, which is now streaming on Prime Video with a subscription and available for purchase on Blu-ray and DVD. “Well-executed period piece with a terrific female lead” describes a gratifyingly large number of recent films, but director A.V. Rockwell’s debut feature can stand toe to toe with any of them. Teyana Taylor is a force of nature and Spotify informs me that the opening theme by Gary Gunn was one of my most-listened-to songs of 2023, but maybe the most impressive thing about it is the way an empty apartment first gradually turns into a home, then suddenly becomes a haunted ruin.

Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here.