Saturday, October 7, 2023

1971 Alternate Oscars

I know some of you are big fans of A Clockwork Orange. I wish I shared your enthusiasm.

It's not that the film expects me to root for an empty-headed sociopath like Alex (Malcolm McDowell) or that I object to the film's muddled message — that in a free society, individual liberty should trump collective responsibility even when the individual in question is cheerfully guilty of rape and murder — it's the film's slack narrative pace. Somehow Stanley Kubrick has stuffed three hours of boredom into a two hour package. I never fail to check my watch, something you should never feel the need to do when watching a movie.

And this from a guy who thinks 2001: A Space Odyssey — a virtually silent film that moves so slowly, it practically runs in reverse — is one of the most exciting movies ever made.

As Roger Ebert wrote in panning A Clockwork Orange during its original run, the film commits an "unforgivable, artistic sin. It is just plain talky and boring. You know there's something wrong with a movie when the last third feels like the last half."

But maybe that's just him and me.

Instead, I voted for The Last Picture Show, a modern Western based on Larry McMurty's novel about teenagers coming of age in a small Texas town on the raggedy edge of nowhere. Nothing muddled about its message: You can either waste your life trying to live up to a myth that wasn't worth living in the first place or you can learn how to be a human being — but you can't do both so make up your mind before it's too late.

Far and away director Peter Bogdanovich's best work. Stars Jeff Bridges, Ellen Burstyn, Eileen Brennan, Cybill Shepherd, Timothy Bottoms. Features Oscar-winning turns by Ben Johnson and Cloris Leachman. Great movie, highly recommended.

Finally, I also want to mention the Academy's choice for best picture, The French Connection. It's the story of Popeye Doyle (Gene Hackman), a deeply-flawed cop obsessed with nailing a dapper French importer of high-grade heroin (played, thanks to a famous casting blunder, by Fernando Rey, a Spanish actor who spoke no French).

It's a good movie and boasts Hackman's most iconic performance, but if you haven't seen it (or haven't seen it lately), I strongly urge you to skip the version of it currently streaming within U.S. borders. The film's owner, Disney, is only showing a censored copy (even on the Criterion Channel!) excising a scene establishing Popeye's undeniable racism.

I don't know whether Disney's decision was driven by left-wing censors who want past works of art to reflect modern sensibilities; or by right-wing censors who want to stamp out any hint that Black Lives Matter might just have a point. Either way, they remind me of those (no doubt, apocryphal) Victorian prigs who put pantaloons on piano legs for fear that the instrument's shapely curves might inspire lustful habits.

I suggest you get thee hither to your local library and check out an old-school Blu-ray or even older school DVD. If your town still has a library, that is. The Puritans are everywhere — and they're coming for you!








My choices are noted with a ★. A tie is indicated with a ✪. Historical Oscar winners are noted with a ✔. Best foreign-language picture winners are noted with an ƒ. A historical winner who won in a different category is noted with a ✱.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Best part of this was the mythical monkeys rant about boring movies.

Anonymous said...

The best part is *always* a Mythical Monkey’s rant!

Anonymous said...

Hmmmm. I’m now worrying, at least a little, on emerging groupthink. Because my thinking is matching up closely with the Monkey’s — and by the charts, with others’ too. That might be the first time that I’ve matched the monkey on all six of the big six. And there are some string competitors in each. No runaways.
One odd [minor] divergence: the theme from Shaft appears prominently in my favourite playlist [“Dubster’s Funks”]. It never fails to deliver me delights untold. And it is, in the modern use of the word, iconic. But I didn’t think that I could overlook the car chase in the French Connection by voting for Isaac Hayes’s piece.
Yet the peanut gallery went with 🎶 “ the black private dick that's a sex machine to all the chicks”🎵. Good.
Except
while Bullitt foreshadowed the French Connection’s chase, the visceral thrill of FC’s chase — the verisimilitude (the psychosis!), the speed, the cinematography, the danger—weren’t seen before and haven’t been since. If film is art, it’s moviemaking daVinchelangiVanGasso.

Anonymous said...

In addition to “string competititors,” there are “strong” as well . . . .

Anonymous said...

I agree with you regarding A Clockwork Orange. I did not actually get around to watching the film start to end for some 20 years (clips of scenes filled the online video-verse & were enough to get the jist & the basis for the hype). At the end of the full viewing my feeling was “what a waste of time” & “”what a poor presentation of rationalizing a disturbing moral choice.” I’ve seen better treatments of the moral dilemma explored in Clockwork from 8 minute DUST videos on YouTube.