“We used
to go to the movies. Now we want the movies to come to us, on our
televisions, tablets and phones, as streams running into an increasingly
unnavigable ocean of media. The dispersal of movie watching across
technologies and contexts follows the multiplexing of movie theaters, itself a
fragmenting of the single screen theater where movie love was first
concentrated and consecrated. (But even in the “good old days,” movies
were often only part of an evening’s entertainment that came complete with
vaudeville acts and bank nights). For all this, moviegoing still means
what it always meant, joining a community, forming an audience and
participating in a collective dream.”
–From the
UCLA Film and Television Archive’s programming notes for its current series,
“Marquee Movies: Movies on Moviegoing”
Currently
under way at the Billy Wilder Theater inside the Armand Hammer Museum in
Westwood, the UCLA Film and Television Archive’s far-reaching and fascinating
series “Marquee Movies: Movies on Moviegoing” takes sharp aim at an overview of
how the movies themselves have portrayed the act of going out to see movies
during these years of seismic change in the way we see them. What’s best about
the collection of films curated for the series is its scope, which sweeps along
from the anything-goes exhibition of the silent era, on through an examination
of the opulent era of grandiose movie palaces and post-war audience predilection
for exploitation pictures, and straight into an era—ours—of a certain nostalgia
for the ways we used to exclusively gather in dark places to watch visions jump
out at us from the big screen. (That nostalgia, as it turns out, is often
colored by a rear-view perspective on the times which contextualizes it and
sometimes gives it a bitter tinge.) As the program notes for the Marquee Movies
series puts it, whether you’re an American moviegoer or one from France, Italy,
Argentina or Taiwan, “the current sense of loss at the passing of an exhibition
era takes its place in the ongoing history of cultural and industrial
transformation reflected in these films.”
The series
took its inaugural bow last Friday night with a rare 35mm screening of Matinee
(1993), director Joe Dante and
screenwriter Charlie Haas’s vividly imagined tribute to movie love during a
time in US history which lazy writers frequently like to describe as “the point
when America lost its innocence” or some other such silliness. For Americans, and
for a whole lot of other people the world over, those days in 1962 during what
would come to be known as the Cuban Missile Crisis felt more like days when
something a whole lot more tangible than “innocence” was about to be lost, what
with the US and Russia being on the brink of nuclear confrontation and all. The
movie lays down this undercurrent of fear and uncertainty as the foundation
which tints its main action, that of the arrival of exploitation movie
impresario Laurence Woolsey (John Goodman, channeling producer and gimmick
maestro William Castle) to Key West, Florida, to promote his latest shock show,
Mant!, on the very weekend that
American troops set to sea, ready to fire on Russian missile installments a
mere 90 miles away in Cuba.
Woolsey’s
hardly worried that his potential audience will be distracted the specter of
annihilation; in fact, he’s energized by it, convinced that the free-floating
anxiety will translate into box office dollars contributed by nervous kids and
adults looking for a safe and scary good time, a disposal cinematic depository
for all their worst fears. And it certainly doesn’t matter that Woolsey’s movie
is a corny sci-fi absurdity-- all the better for his particular brand of
enhancements. Mant!, a lovingly sculpted
mash-up of 1950s hits like The Fly
and Them!, benefits from “Atomo-vision,”
which incorporates variants of Castle innovations like Emergo and Percepto, as
well as “Rumble-rama,” a very crude
precursor to Universal’s Oscar-winning Sensurround system. The movie’s Saturday
afternoon screening is where Dante and Haas really let loose their tickled and
twisted imaginations, with the help of Woolsey’s theatrical enhancements.
Leading up
to the fearful and farcical unleashing of Mant!,
Dante stages a beautifully understated sequence that moved me to tears when I
saw it with my daughters last Friday night at the Billy Wilder Theater. Matinee is seen primarily through the
eyes of young Gene Loomis (Simon Fenton), a military kid whose dad is among
those waiting it out on nuclear-armed boats pointed in the direction of Cuba.
Gene is a monster-movie nerd (and a clear stand-in for Dante, Haas and just
about anybody—like me—whose primary biblical text was provided not by that
fella in the burning bush but instead by Forrest J. Ackerman within the pages
of Famous Monsters of Filmland), and
he manages to worm his way into Woolsey’s good graces as the producer prepares
the local theater to show his picture. At one point he walks down the street in
the company of the larger-than-life producer, who starts talking about his
inspirations and why he makes the sort of movies he does:
“A zillion
years ago, a guy’s living in a cave,” Woolsey expounds. “He goes out one
day—Bam! He gets chased by a mammoth. Now, he’s scared to death, but he gets
away. And when it’s all over with, he feels great.”
Gene,
eager to believe but also to understand, responds quizzically-- “Well, yeah,
‘cause he’s still living.”
“Yeah, but
he knows he is, and he feels it,” Woolsey counters. “So he goes home, back to the
cave. First thing he does, he does a drawing of a mammoth.” (At this point the
brick wall which the two of them are passing becomes a blank screen onto which
Woolsey conjures an animated behemoth that entrances Gene and us.) Woolsey
continues:
“He thinks,
‘People are coming to see this. Let’s make it good. Let’s make the teeth real
long and the eyes real mean.’ Boom! The first monster movie. That’s probably
why I still do it. You make the teeth as big as you want, then you kill it off,
everything’s okay, the lights come up,” Woolsey concludes, ending his
illustrative fantasy with a sigh.
But that’s
not all, folks. At this point, Dante cuts to a Steadicam shot as it moves into
the lobby hall of that Key West theater, past posters of Hatari!, Lonely are the Brave, Six Black Horses and Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?. The
tracking shot continues up the stairs, letting us get a really close look at
the worn, perhaps pungent carpet, most likely the same rug that was laid down
when the theater opened 30 or so years earlier, into the snack bar area, then glides
over to the closed swinging doors leading into the auditorium, while Woolsey
continues:
“You see,
the people come into your cave with the 200-year-old carpet, the guy tears your
ticket in half—it’s too late to turn back now. The water fountain’s all
booby-trapped and ready, the stuff laid out on the candy counter. Then you come
over here to where it’s dark-- there could be anything in there—and you say,
‘Here I am. What have you got for me?’”
Forget
nostalgia for a style of moviegoing. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a more
compact, evocative and heartfelt tribute to the space in which we used to see movies than those couple of minutes
in Matinee. The shot and the
narration work so vividly together that I swear I could whiff the must
underlying that carpet, papered over lovingly with the smell of popcorn wafting
through the confined space of that tiny snack bar, just as if I was a kid again
myself, wandering into the friendly confines of the Alger Theater in Lakeview,
Oregon (More on that place next week.)
Dante’s
movie is a romp, no doubt, but its nostalgia is a heartier variety than what we
usually get, and it leaves us with an undercurrent of uneasiness that is
unusual for a genre most often content enough to look back through amber. Woolsey’s
words resonate for every youngster who has searched for reasons to explain
their attraction to the scary side of cinema and memories of the places where
those images were first encountered, but in Matinee
there’s another terror with which to contend, one not so easily held at bay.
Of course the
real world monster of the movie— the bomb— was also, during that weekend in
1962 and in Matinee’s representation
of the missile crisis, “killed off,” making “everything okay.” But Dante makes
us understand that while calm has been momentarily restored, something deeper has
been forever disturbed. The movie acknowledges the societal disarray which was
already under way in Vietnam, and the American South, and only months away from
spilling out from Dallas and onto the greater American landscape in a way so
much less containable than even the radiative effects of a single cataclysmic
event. That awareness leaves Matinee
with a sorrowful aftertaste that is hard to shake. The movie’s last images, of our
two main characters gathered on the beach, greeting helicopters that are flying
home from having hovered at the precipice of nuclear destruction, is one of
relief for familial unity restored—Gene is, after all, getting his dad back. But
it’s also one of foreboding. Dante leaves us with an extreme close-up of a copter
looming into frame, absent even the context of the sky, bearing down on us like
a real-life mutant creature, an eerie bellwether of political and societal
chaos yet to come as a stout companion to the movie’s general air of
celebratory remembrance.
***************************************
The
“Marquee Movies” series has already seen Matinee
(last Friday night), Woody Allen’s The
Purple Rose of Cairo (1985) paired with Polish director Wojciech
Marczewski’s 1990 Escape from Liberty
Island (last Saturday night), and Ettore Scola’s masterful Splendor (1989), which screened last
Sunday night.
But
there’s plenty more to come. Sunday, June 12, the archive series unveils a
double bill of Lloyd Bacon’s Footlight Parade (1933) with the less well-known This Way, Please (1937), a terrific tale of a star-struck movie
theater usherette with dreams of singing and dancing just like the stars she
idolizes, starring Charles ‘Buddy’ Rogers, Betty Grable, Jim Jordan, Marian
Jordan and the brilliantly grizzled Ned Sparks.
One of my favorites, Tsai Ming-liang’s haunting Goodbye, Dragon Inn (2003) gets a rare projection at the Wilder on Sunday, June 19, along with Lisandsro Alonzo’s Fantasma (2006), described by the archive as “a hypnotic commentary on cinematic rituals and presence.”
Friday, June 24, you can see, if you dare, Lamberto Bava’s gory meta-horror film Demons (1985) and then stay for Bigas Luna’s similarly twisted treatise on the movies and voyeurism, 1987’s Anguish.
Saturday afternoon, June 25, “Marquee Movies” presents a rare screening of Gregory La Cava’s hilarious slapstick spoof of rural moviegoing, His Nibs (1921), paired up with what I consider, alongside Matinee and Goodbye, Dragon Inn, one of the real jewels of the series, Basil Dearden’s marvelously funny The Smallest Show on Earth (1957), all about what happens when a newlywed couple inherits a rundown cinema populated by a staff of eccentrics that include Margaret Rutherford and Peter Sellers. (More on that one next week.)
And the series concludes on Sunday, June 26, with a screening of the original 174-minute director’s cut of Giuseppe Tornatore’s Cinema Paradiso (1988).
(Each program also features a variety of moviegoing-oriented shorts, trailers and other surprises. Click the individual links for details and show times.)
******************************************
Friday, June 24, you can see, if you dare, Lamberto Bava’s gory meta-horror film Demons (1985) and then stay for Bigas Luna’s similarly twisted treatise on the movies and voyeurism, 1987’s Anguish.
Saturday afternoon, June 25, “Marquee Movies” presents a rare screening of Gregory La Cava’s hilarious slapstick spoof of rural moviegoing, His Nibs (1921), paired up with what I consider, alongside Matinee and Goodbye, Dragon Inn, one of the real jewels of the series, Basil Dearden’s marvelously funny The Smallest Show on Earth (1957), all about what happens when a newlywed couple inherits a rundown cinema populated by a staff of eccentrics that include Margaret Rutherford and Peter Sellers. (More on that one next week.)
And the series concludes on Sunday, June 26, with a screening of the original 174-minute director’s cut of Giuseppe Tornatore’s Cinema Paradiso (1988).
(Each program also features a variety of moviegoing-oriented shorts, trailers and other surprises. Click the individual links for details and show times.)
******************************************
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