Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Working on New Short Film "Golden Foot" with the Florida Film Network.


The Florida Film Network has chosen the winner of the 2014 Operation Logline contest and I was chosen to direct the short film that will be made from this logline. The winning logline and script, written by Luke Sokolewicz, called "Selfie", is a 19 page comedy about people who get turned into mannequins if they take too many selfies. Since the title is so popular now, we changed it so that it's about the lead character who calls himself "Golden Foot"- a foot model who is self-absorbed and oblivious of his failings.


This should be a ton of fun to produce and direct and I am working with the team we have doing pre-production. Our budget is virtually non-existent so we will be asking favors if we want you involved in the production- we could still use a few people on our team as well as a location and a female mannequin. 


So far here is our team...
Luke Sokolewicz - Producer, Writer
John Borland - Producer, trying out for the part of "Andrei"
Joe Davison - Producer

Jon Croft - Director, Producer
Daryn Murphy - Director of Photography
Robert Hernaiz - Production Sound
Andrew Durliat - Production Assistant
Dana Wahlbeck - Production Assistant


Shooting is scheduled for the weekends of January. If you are part of the Florida Film Network or if you are interested in taking part we may need your help! Please send contact information to my email (libertynumber5@gmail.com).


You can find the Florida Film Network in these various places online.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/floridafilmnetwork/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/131839490350276/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/floridacastingcall/
http://www.floridafilmnetwork.com









"May the Foot Be With You"


"Golden Foot III" - by Stefan Laengler
Stefan Laengler Art

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

15 Most Anticipated Movies of 2015!

Here's the list of my top fifteen anticipated movies and approximately when they are coming out in 2015.

1. Star Wars Episode VII (Dec)
2. Mad Max: Fury Road (May)
3. Avengers: Age of Ultron (May)
4. Ant-Man (July)
5. Tomorrowland (May)
6. Bond 24 (Nov)
7. Slaughterhouse-Five
8. Midnight Special (Nov)
9. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2 (Nov)
10. Chappie (Mar)
11. Warcraft (Dec)
12. Jurassic World (Dec)
13. The Good Dinosaur (Nov)
14. The Fantastic Four (Aug)
15. The Man From UNCLE (Aug)

Here's more on each film and a little bit of why I am excited to see them!

1. Star Wars VII- The force is coming back and this time without good ole' saint George! I am excited to see what JJ and the original cast of Episodes 4-6 will do with the universe.








2. Mad Max: Fury Road- The only film (besides Star Wars 7) that has me more excited to see than Avengers: Age of Ultron is Mad Max: Fury Road. Since seeing their trailer this film has me all kinda freaked out and stuff.





3. The Avengers: Age of Ultron- Of course Age of Ultron is on this list. There is really no avoiding this film after the Marvel Universe has taken Hollywood by storm. All these characters are super hot potatoes now.









4. Ant-Man- Even after the Ant-Man debacle which left so many fans of Edgar Wright in the dumps- I will still be very excited to see what they will do with this Marvel property.





5. Tomorrowland- This film has been kind of a mystery to lots of people. What will this story look like? Who are the characters? What will the universe of the film look like? Now we finally have a teaser and the film looks very exciting indeed.





6. BOND 24- After Sam Mendes took the reigns of Skyfall a few years ago people were excited but we had no idea he would blow us all away with such effective story-telling and visuals. And since he is coming back again, I am very eagerly awaiting the next chapter of 007's epic spy tale.





7. Slaughterhouse-Five- I am a fan of the kinds of artsy unconventional story-telling that the seventies gave rise to and now, since we have entered a new violent world of war and conflict in this new century, we could use a reiteration of this tale, especially with Charlie Kaufman writing the script.

8. Midnight Special- Jeff Nichols has really impressed me with his films, "Take Shelter" and "Mud" and now he is working on a sci-fi film. Great! Think Rian Johnson with "Looper", but in this case, we have a lyrical, masterful, actor's director who really gets performances. How can you go wrong?

9. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2- I have really been enjoying the Hunger Games franchise. They stuck to the story in the books very effectively and they have done it with exceptional quality in the filmmaking as well. And Jennifer Lawrence was still the perfect choice for Katniss. I can't wait to see Panem get their just deserts.

10. Chappie- even though Blomkamp's "Elysium" was far from revolutionary I still enjoy seeing that guy Sharlto do his thing and I am looking forward to his version of a funny robot movie.

11. Warcraft- Remember Duncan Jones of "Moon" fame? You don't? Better get cracking watching those great DVD's from 2009 because that movie still doesn't disappoint. "Source Code" was not a "great DVDS from 2011" but it was still worth a watch, but this... this looks like it could be tons of fun!

12. Jurassic World- Were you around when they brought dinosaurs to life in 1993? I was. Now they're finally gonna do it again with Chris Pratt (lead actor from "Guardians of the Galaxy" and "The Lego Movie") this time!

13. The Good Dinosaur- This looks like a really sweet animated tale that answers the question, "What would it be like if dinosaurs and humans could be friends?" With comedy, et al.

14. The Fantastic Four- I am not especially curious about the Fantastic Four getting rebooted. Look what happened with the Spider Man reboot. Not good. The movies may actually be completely acceptable but fans seem to be uninterested, almost fatigued by it.

However, this film has Josh Trank involved. The young dude who directed "Chronicle" from 2012. Now you have my attention!

15. The Man from U.N.C.L.E.- What's that? You have Henry Cavill, Armie Hammer and Hugh Grant playing American and Russian spies who have to team together to fight a larger enemy? And it's directed by Guy Ritchie? Count me in!


I certainly have a larger list of movies I am looking forward to coming in 2015, but these are my top 15. If you have any movies you can't wait for or you want to tell me how awesome my list is, you can feel free to chime in!

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Update on the 2014 Summer Movie Wager

In about a weeks time the Summer Movie Wager will come to a close...
Here are the current standings including a projection that Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles will surpass the current number ten spot holder, which is held by Divergent with $150m in domestic box office. Guardians blows everything out of the water! Completely unexpected- especially for an August release!

Currently the Highest Grossing Summer Films Domestic (May-Aug):
(According to Box Office Mojo)

1. Guardians of the Galaxy - $255m = 3 points
2. Transformers: Age of Extinction - $243m = 10 points
3. Maleficent - $237m = 7 points
4. X-Men: Days of Future Past - $232m = 7 points
5. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes - $204m = 3 points
6. Amazing Spider Man 2 - $202m = 3 points
7. Godzilla - $200m = 7 points
8. 22 Jump Street - $190m = 10 points
9. How to Train Your Dragon 2 - $172m = 3 points 
10. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - $148m = 13 points
(Not currently in this position but will surpass current #10 spot holder within the week)

Total: 66 points!

Here is how I worked out those points...
And below that, my original predictions...

2014 Summer Movie Wager Scoring:
  • Getting number 1 or number 10 dead-on gets you 13 points (each).
The rest of the scoring goes like this:
  • 10 points for numbers 2-9 dead-on
  • 7 points if your pick was only one spot away from where it ended up
  • 5 points if it was two spots away
  • 3 points if your pick is anywhere in the Top 10
  • 1 point for each dark horse that makes it into the Top 10
The scoring is tabulated so that you get the SINGLE HIGHEST point value for each pick- that is, if you get number ten right, you don’t get 13+3, you only get 13.

So, here it is...
Jon’s 2014 Summer Movie Wager List

1. Amazing Spider Man 2
2. Transformers 4
3. How to Train Your Dragon 2
4. Maleficent
5. X-Men: Days of Future Past
6. Godzilla
7. Guardians of the Galaxy
8. 22 Jump Street
9. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
10. TMNT

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Jon's Top 14 Movies of 2014 (So Far) -or- "How I Judge Films"


Since watching Guardians of the Galaxy last week I HAD to make this list...

How I Judge Films:
I judge movies by the enjoyment I get out of a film. Therefore, the re-watch factor must be high, because the continued interest of the film's premise must have enduring value to me. So, the things that interest me, in particular are going to be very prominent here. But, admittedly, a lot of differed factors go into that- things which may not interest others.

So, what interests me and keeps me coming back to the water hole to drink?...
1. A deep moral premise that is powerful or that may continue to elude me. 
2. A plot that either, very effectively, drives me forward (engaging me emotionally) or a plot or story structure that completely puzzles me (engaging me intellectually). 
3. Stunning visuals.
4. Fun and stimulation. This may include jokes, gags, kinetic action or quippy dialogue.
5. Detailed world building- mostly as a result of artistic production design. Spatial awareness is important to me & as a result, I absolutely love effective world building (which can also be affected by everything from quality set building, to decoration, makeup, lighting, atmosphere, the framing of the camera, camera movements, artistic design of props and sets... to things like the acting, writing and directing). It is the visual and aural patchwork that succeed in ushering you further INTO the world of the film, as opposed to taking you OUT of the world of the film.
6. Great soundtrack and music selections. 
7. Characters I can relate to (which can be a VERY subjective thing). 
8. Complicated set pieces or kinetic camera shots. 
9. Great writing.

Why is acting or character development not mentioned here? I will tell you in a second...

But first, my CURRENT top 14 of 2014 as of August 2014.
Here they are...

1. The Guardians of the Galaxy
2. The Raid 2
3. Captain America: The Winter Soldier
4. The Grand Budapest Hotel
5. Under the Skin
6. Cheap Thrills
7. Edge of Tomorrow
8. Noah
9. How to Train Your Dragon 2
10. The Amazing Spider Man 2
11. Maleficent
12. Godzilla
13. X-Men: Days of Future Past
14. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes


Good but not Great Films...

The Lego Movie
Enemy
Robocop
A Fantastic Fear of Everything


Acting and Character Development:
One thing you may notice is that I don't seem to include character development here or great acting. This is probably because, to me, these factors are such fundamental principles (like getting acceptable audio quality) that a film won't even place in the standing if it doesn't do this with competence. 

Acting Quality:
As it comes to acting quality- it becomes glaringly obvious that the casting and directing is bad very quickly for me. I may even be able to tell this in the trailer- right away. There is a distinct disconnect that happens when pairing image with the characters in the room. The tone is off (a product more of bad editing) or the acting fails to impress me (as it comes to it's appropriateness as taken from within story context or genre). Much of this is simply the result of bad casting or bad direction (or as stated, bad editing), so it is not the actor that I blame whatsoever- but the director. Still, it doesn't allow me to be impressed by an actor's acting. It distracts terribly from the story and the world that the film is trying to create. 

The Fault of the Actor:
To get a little off subject- there are those RARE cases that I believe the acting is sub-par. But this is strictly based upon a continuing experience of an actor doing one scene with appropriateness and then flubbing the next scene (as it comes to character interpretation or emotional shift). Since, during casting a director or casting director may cast an actor based on his or her performance in a few scenes- it is only the actor's fault when tonal or emotional shifts occur between scenes. This can only be because the actor has failed to capture the character and fully integrate the truth of that character into their body, or because they have failed to interpret the character's development (based on comprehension of the story and its premise or purpose). 

But, of course, this may actually, still be the fault of the director or casting director, except when the actor continues to do this in multiple roles. The only conclusion is that they are a chameleon when it comes to execution- that is, they fail to consistently use their instrument in a contextually predictable way. They become, simply, a bad actor because they continue to be validated for bad work (so, they never change) or they are losing their grip on their instrument (that is, they forgot how to use their own body to serve the needs of the director or the story). 

Ego or health problems may be the cause. But I find this, actually, extremely rare. Possibly because I don't watch a lot of B-films or student films. I try to watch professional work, exclusively. That said, there are these rare actors who keep being given a pass, because there is something likable about them that makes the industry continue to return to them- validating their bad acting. Sometimes this is the fault of a money-hungry or fame-crazed industry that doesn't care to understand the craft or purpose of film- to enlighten and beautify mankind. Instead, it becomes a monster of self-interest that threatens to consume itself.

A bit off-subject. But there you have it.



As It Comes To Character Development:
I disagree with many story theorists out there that claim that characters MUST have arcs because I disagree with some literary theorists about flat vs round characters. In my view even protagonists can be 'flat characters' because the primary thing about flat characters is that they do not change very much- as opposed to how much we know about them. This has become increasingly rare, as a consequence, but it is still very possible to get away with and still have an engaging, powerful story. Sometimes, the actual "point of the story" is that a person "not changing" can have a powerful effect on the world around us. Usually that is a bad effect- but, sometimes, rarely, there is a net positive effect, when that character represents unchanging moral values.

For example, superheroes don't typically change much, so they are mostly flat characters since they traditionally 'stand' for these moral values or 'represent' a moral concept or idea. Ideals that do not change for a reason. If they change they will no longer be "that" superhero. Other times, the villains may be very 'round' as is increasingly becoming the case- that is they may change throughout the story. This humanizes them and makes them more interesting to an audience with greater demands due to more sophisticated tastes.

So, it is more popular for our heroes to change. These days we want our heroes to grow as a person throughout the story. And it is the antagonists that have generally remained the same- because they have been cemented into a role that simply seeks to conquer and manipulate others in the story. And defeating these villains becomes necessary in order to return continual change to the world they exist within. This is because being open to change is generally seen as a positive thing for everyone.

But the essential thing to know about round characters is that they change throughout the story and flat characters don't change much throughout the story. But this doesn't mean a flat character can't be the hero or that villains cant be round characters. But why have these things changed recently?

Like a Rolling Stone:
"A rolling stone gathers no moss." This phrase can be interpreted as a positive or negative thing- but increasingly it has become more positive. A hero is not hard-headed, but learns from the world around him/her. But, mossy stones (that have not moved) are the ones that get thrown at others to "stone" and condemn them. This is generally the purpose of the villain- to judge and condemn others... to bring conflict into the story instead of peaceful acceptance of ourselves and others. 

Evil is notoriously uncreative and unintellectual- striving only to subdue everything under it's own control- that is, to reduce everything to terms and values that the villain can understand and limit. They get to pretend they are God and are given more and more power to bring pain to the hero, until the villain is seen for what he is- no better than a limited, powerless wretch. And their greatest weakness is their refusal to change.

A Slave to Story:
So, in my view, character development is a product of the greater, more important, plot or purpose of the story. Some may argue that character IS the purpose of the story. They are not wrong- but only in the sense that character IS PLOT... 

In this case, everything that the story is about revolves around who the character is and has become. Again, an effective plot is essential. Character may serve plot. Plot may serve character, but this plot must be engaging. If this plot is watered down, ineffective and stagnant- it will simply die on the vine. The story will not achieve its intended purpose. 

So, character may remain stagnant- because if the story engages and has meaning and value- it doesn't matter. It becomes PART of the essential meaning of the film that characters do not change. This becomes the story you are trying to tell.

This is why I mention a driving plot or a puzzling story structure. These character arcs and acting nuances don't matter as much because these other things are subject to my greater priorities in my list. This means, I try not to notice character arcs or acting. Because it should be something you DON'T notice in my view. It is supposed to serve the story and your world building and usher you farther into the suspension of disbelief. 

Conclusion (Don't Forget to Enjoy Yourself):
So, remember. If the acting and characters are thin... maybe it is for a reason. It may be the purpose of the story. Like a big, dumb action flick. You can accept that the acting is less than competent because it doesn't need to be. If the kinetic pacing and tone to the film overpowers the subtle nuance of deep thoughts and personal character growth, you may actually have a great film. You shouldn't even notice these factors if you are properly engaged. You are supposed to learn to enjoy it.

All these things serve the greater purpose of the story and film. And sometimes it is an integral part of the film's structure to have bad acting and non-existent character arcs.

Again, this is just my own opinion as a filmmaker and story-teller. There may be things I have neglected and there may be things here that are simply a product of my own style and preferences. I do not wish to be a "mossy stone" after all.

Do you have any opinions or feelings about story, character arcs and acting? Let me know how you feel about it!

Friday, August 8, 2014

Keep It Alien - A Great Interview with Jonathan Glazer - Director of "Under the Skin"

Here is a great interview with Jonathan Glazer, Director of Under the Skin. This film is one of my inspirations for a recent script I am working on, "Mirum Lux."

I really enjoy his balance of style and substance. "Simplicity is something you end with," he says. "You don't start with it- you get to it. If you're lucky you get to it." I couldn't agree more. I refer to it as, "elegant simplicity," which is what I think all good art films strive for. At least the art films I enjoy.

"Under the Skin" is one of my favorite films of this year and if you haven't seen it yet, you definitely ought to- and not to see Scarlett Johansson in the buff. The tone and rhythm of the film is mesmerizing due in no small part to the wonderful soundtrack. The sense of place is somewhat disorienting and "alien," as Glazer would refer to it. Some might find the film uncomfortable, but I think this adds to the plot of the film. This disorientation drives you forward to seek some sort of solid ground- to get your bearings as it comes to the deep meanings of this disturbing tale. And that's a great mental space for this kind of film to fill.

Making a film like this must be difficult if you can't get a producer to help you get the kind of funding that knows what to expect from this sort of art flick. But as you can see, it is possible.

The film truly succeeds at making the viewer wonder what it is about- even after watching it in it's entirety. It is inspiring to see films like this.

So, see the film and tell me what you think it is about.





Friday, May 30, 2014

A Snow-Ball In Florida: How to Improve Florida's Film Industry One Filmmaker at a Time


I heard someone say this once. I don't remember when, but it effected me greatly. -


“If filmmaking is about quality than we have an uphill battle here in Florida.”



Regardless of whether this is a fair assessment of the Film Industry in Florida, we DO have an uphill battle ahead of us with the recent striking down of the attempt to re-institute incentives in Florida. But, maybe there is a "Way Around" traditional incentives in Florida. If there was, would you be interested in doing something to make it happen? If the answer is "yes", than please, hear me out. 


We Must Be Indispensable:
To build the Film Industry in Florida we need to make Florida an indispensable part of the Industry itself. We need to showcase the state, but, also, the people here and the resources available here to shoot. This is not easy without incentives, but there are some things we can do. 

Here’s some priorities we can focus on until we get incentives (noting that state incentives are STILL on the list to get at some point & that this is unavoidable if we wish to compete effectively). 




In order to do this we need to let the industry know that…


1. There are good crews & good locations here (we are working on this)
2. There are good projects being originated here 
3. There are ways for us to get the attention of producers 
4. There are competitive incentives, or other funding available
5. There are good film festivals (we are working on this)


Crews, Locations and their Origination:
Films start with scripts. Scripts that get imagined in specific locations, with specific characters, doing specific things. The only one of these things that can help Hollywood know that we have good crews and locations… is if we are getting great projects to be IMAGINED in our LOCATION, Florida, then filmed here. 

Don't bet that another Burn Notice, a show originally
'imagined' in New Jersey will show up here again,
without some sort of competitive edge in place.

But, this isn't as easy as it looks. There are a few films that have a specific “Florida Look” to them, films which can be striking, but there are not many. Films that are memorable in how they portray Florida are… 


“The Creature from the Black Lagoon” - “Cocoon” - “The Yearling” - “Key Largo” - “Miami Vice” - “Palmetto” - “Spring Breakers” - “Pain & Gain” - “Burn Notice”


The idea is that we need filmmakers and screenwriter to 'imagine' stories taking place in Florida. The easiest way to do this is to actually engage Florida filmmakers and writers in making films with Florida as the indispensable backdrop for a good set of characters doing interesting things within a compelling story. 

Back to the list… this means #2 has to happen on the list- in order for #1 to happen.



Attracting Producers:
Getting the attention of producers will happen as more projects are filmed here, but for producers nothing talks louder than money. If there were competitive incentives or other funding available that setup Florida as a competitive player in the incentives battle, we might have something to talk about here. As it is… silence is what we hear. So we need #4 to happen before #3 can happen in any substantial way. 

Although, one caveat is that these good Florida films that we get made end up making bountiful profits- but this is not something filmmakers can plan for. All one can do is make the best film you can and hope that it strikes a nerve in the audience effectively enough that it becomes financially successful. And one film here and there is not enough. We've seen that play out here and it doesn't seem to lead to more films getting made here.


Film Festivals:
Good festivals take care of themselves, until they don’t. These sorts of non-profits or community organizations center on the success of their event(s), which is really due to certain individuals in the organization possessing particular talents which has, really, nothing to do with film or filmmaking. Then, regardless of the event’s success, it ultimately doesn’t prove that we have what it takes, as a state, to be a filmmaking state. It’s just a stop on the tour, but no one seems to actually ever consider staying there to film.

Until we prove our local industry to be worthy of investment, we ought not prop up any festivals with state subsidies. But, if we can, that support may prove productive, as those who DO become attracted will find much more than promotional buzz. There will be something special here that people will be able to sense. Something of true substance. Something worth investing in.



The Snow-Ball Effect:
Once producers get wind of this “something special” they will attract more stars. Stars will attract even better projects and funds. A snowball effect can then happen. But, in my view, until a few high quality films or show gets made here WITH Florida as its indispensable backdrop, infrastructure and crews won’t grow more, locations won’t get utilized more, competitive incentives won’t help to attract more producers and thereby, more stars. And festivals will attract many to stop by, but never to stay, until we have something of substance to offer them as an example of the kinds of projects they can shoot here too.

This all means we need to encourage, invite and attract directors and screenwriters to write with Florida in mind in such an indispensable way that these directors will shoot great micro-budget films here because they are inspired by other great work to take part. An even more effective ‘snow-ball effect’ may take place with directors and screenwriters and the ‘originators’ of projects in my opinion. 


A Different Kind of Incentives… Incentivizing Originators:
How do we accomplish this? If a program, contest or special fund can get approved to do just that- we might be off to a start, incentivizing project origination in a different way than traditional film incentives can. 

A contest to invite screenwriters to write features, shorts and series’ with Florida as a primary “character” in the script could be a start. Give an award for the best one- a ‘Grand Prize’ to source a director to direct it, and possibly a star to champion the project, etc. Do one every year and we will have a good start. 

We can also award funds for Florida directors to write and shoot films from the very beginning of development with Florida as a primary “character” in their films. But I prefer the contest idea, unless the director has a proven track record of doing high quality work before, these funds may never accomplish their task. 

This would definitely be true for features, in my opinion- but I do think that if we provide funding for Florida directors to make shorts, it may prove productive for them, with very little risk of public funds. Capping that amount to a reasonable amount, say a few hundred thousand (available funds per year), would be a substantial benefit to these filmmakers.


Do What Works:
Hedge your bets. Focus on what will truly work. Real Work attracts people in the Film Industry. Actors, Producers, Executives, Directors. That means films or TV shows that are of exceptional quality, that compete with Hollywood on their level and that show Florida as an indispensable backdrop or “character” in the story, will help to make Florida an essential player in the Industry. 

If we can accomplish that, I believe that real money will come into play for more productions here, and we can attract even more of the industry here to make a lasting legacy for Florida.


...A snow-ball in Florida. I think I’d like to see that!




Do you think this would work? Why or why not? Present this concept to Producers and Directors and ask them what they think. Is this a viable option for the Florida Film Industry to find “Another Way Around” traditional incentives in the state.




Friday, May 23, 2014

Blood Covenant is Completed!!... The First Draft, that is.

It took me about 9 and a half months. The same time (give or take a few weeks) to fully gestate an infant human being. I am now resting peacefully. Eating well and am recovering from traumatic wounds caused from birthing a new baby script. A gift to the world. You're welcome.


Now we spend the rest of the scripts life constantly telling it what to do, correcting it, treating it unfairly... or do we nurture it, mold it, protect it and help it to grow into a beautiful fully formed script? I will decide that now- as a first time parent of a script.

I absolutely love the story- the characters (though some still seem unfinished or incomplete)- the plot twists, the locations, the action, the beats, the tone. I can't wait to see it as a movie, but I have very large concerns that if I sell the script, people would absolutely relish changing the ending.

I would hope that, whoever reads the script or thinks about working on it, that they will fully experience the meaning of the film, as it was meant to be experienced. If that experience is given a fair chance, I am confident that the primary elements of the script will remain as it was written.

Sometimes, you just have to not care what kind of criticism you get and keep trudging on... FOR the script. Keep doing the script justice by, yes, doing multiple passes of it and editing it, but also, in believing that there was a reason that you set out on this journey, and it wasn't just to make a script. It was to make a damn good script!




If Wendy says it... I know I can be happy with it!



Saturday, May 3, 2014

The 2014 Summer Movie Wager


I have decided to participate in what some film blogs call “The Summer Movie Wager” started by Time Travel Review’s Summer Movie Pool. The rules come from their site: TimeTravelReview’s Summer Movie Pool.

A summation, quoting them…

The object is to pick the films that you think will be the top-ten grossing films of the summer, in order of box-office performance. As I’ve said, that means only films released from May 1st 2012 to the Labor Day weekend, counting only the money those films make domestically (US and Canada) in that period. In other words films from March or April might still be making money after May 1st, but they don’t count; films released from May on could start racking up foreign B.O., but that doesn’t count; films released from May on could still be making money into September, but that doesn’t count either. Box Office numbers are generally available late Monday or Tuesday after the weekend closes. For the last seven or so years, I have been using box office numbers from Yahoo Box Office which gets their numbers in turn from Box Office Mojo. So what you will be doing is figuring out what 10 films will make the most money, and putting them in order of what you think they will gross at the box office. BUT, in addition to your top 10, you get to pick 3 “Dark Horses”- films you think *might* make it, but that you are not confident enough about to put into the top 10 proper.

2014 Summer Movie Wager Scoring:
  • Getting number 1 or number 10 dead-on gets you 13 points (each).
The rest of the scoring goes like this:
  • 10 points for numbers 2-9 dead-on
  • 7 points if your pick was only one spot away from where it ended up
  • 5 points if it was two spots away
  • 3 points if your pick is anywhere in the Top 10
  • 1 point for each dark horse that makes it into the Top 10
The scoring is tabulated so that you get the SINGLE HIGHEST point value for each pick- that is, if you get number ten right, you don’t get 13+3, you only get 13.

So, here it is...
Jon’s 2014 Summer Movie Wager List

1. Amazing Spider Man 2
2. Transformers 4
3. How to Train Your Dragon 2
4. Maleficent
5. X-Men: Days of Future Past
6. Godzilla
7. Guardians of the Galaxy
8. 22 Jump Street
9. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
10. TMNT

Dark Horses:
Jupiter Ascending
Hercules
Neighbors



We shall see how accurate my predictions are. I don’t predict I’ll be as good as some of these other guys participating… but it’s gonna be fun to find out how close I will be.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Vertigo: The Modern Woman vs. the Classical Woman


Introduction:
In 2012, the British Film Institute named Vertigo the greatest film ever made, finally topping Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" which had held its title for nearly 50 years. This prompted me to revisit the film and the discoveries I made about what makes this film stand apart were amazing to me.

Kim Novak played duel roles, "Madeleine" & "Judy"

The Vertigo We All Know:
See if this sounds like the classic Alfred Hitchcock masterpiece "Vertigo" that you know...

Scottie is a man who has failed to reach the heights that his work demands. He wanders through life now, a ghost of a man. As does Madeleine, since she longs for a time past, obsessed with the trappings of a different life and yet sickened by the results of such a life, dominated by the men who abuse them. They are both, born out of time. A tragic existence, doomed to failure, misery and death.

That's the "Vertigo" that I saw recently, but not the one I saw fifteen years ago as a young man...

What is Vertigo REALLY About?
Vertigo is a film obsessed with death, past lives, and a promise of idyllic romance that can never be. It is Hitchcock's Romeo & Juliet. His tragedy of tragedies. But instead of the "Capulets and Montagues", the plot seems to make this about "the Modern Woman vs. the Modern Man". Two lives, so disenfranchised by their current state that they roam aimlessly around San Francisco, not even knowing why. But, let's go a step further... 

To me, the subtext makes the true story "the Modern Woman vs the Classical Woman". After all, the real mystery to solve is Madeleine and Judy. Who is who? And why is their presence in the movie so disorienting and yet powerfully symbolic? Let me explain. To do this we must explore the effects of the emotional undercurrent of the film "Vertigo" and the iconic symbols that underpin it. But first- some history.

Some History:
The late fifties. This was the time of the beginning of modern man and of modern woman. The beginning of the feminist movement and the youth movement. We were on the precipice culturally of all things past and all things modern. WWII and Korea had changed us all in America. Not to mention the "Red Scare"- making us question everything, and what it was all for? The Beatniks and their counter-culture movement made us question everything about American life. 

The American home and culture were in full swing now, at it's prime. What were our true roles in the American home as men and women? Were we equal? Could a woman be free of man's dominion? Wasn't the failure of modern man something to face and possibly to try and repair? And what of the modern woman?

Creating the Modern Woman:
The story of Carlotta Veracruz explains to us this tale of a long lost woman in the film. So, Vertigo tells us, Carlotta was a girl in the mid-eighteen hundreds who was taken in by a rich man, who gave her a child, took the child and soon after, discarded her. "Men could do that in those days..." the storyteller in the film tells us. She roamed, seemingly... half mad, around the small town south of San Francisco, vacantly asking where her child was, similarly to how Madeleine roamed around, seemingly possessed with the past-life of her matriarchal ancestor. She even throws herself into the San Francisco Bay emulating her great great grand mother's untimely end (the story doesn't tell us how far removed).

Madeleine sees herself in Carlotta.

"But, What About The Switcheroo Near The End?"
But, the question is, is this the result of pain from Madeleine or from the existential role of women at this time? Some people may simply chock it up to a simple switcheroo. That the plot and the actions of the characters are quite conveniently "disregarded" due to the murder plot, revealed after Scottie meets Judy. 

But, I am not convinced by this simple "right off" of the major part of the dramatic action of the first half of the story. I am compelled to believe there is more to this first half of the story than a fraud perpetrated on Scottie alone, but that it is perpetrated on the Modern Man, as well as the unsuspecting "Woman of old", who have fallen into the trap and end up left behind, betrayed and murdered. This story and its universality are in question and it resonates with me on this level.

Seeing the fractured personalities.
The Symbology:
So, let me define the symbols: 
1) Madeleine is a rich lady who represents the "Classical Woman"- the woman that Hitchcock is constantly idealizing in his movies. Graceful, mysterious, powerful. 

2) Scottie is the modern man who has realized his failure and is broken. He cannot reach the heights that his work and that normal life demand of him. 

3) Heights are a symbol as well. It symbolizes the great expectation and demands on the modern man to be great. This perfection can only eventually lead to failure and the disenfranchisement that so many felt at this time in history. 

The dizzying heights that Scottie faced on the job, breaking him.
4) Judy represents the New Woman. The femme fatale who is a fraud, a trickster. And yet naive and foolish. She is "the Modern Woman", who is working together with... 

5) The "Old Man." Judy conspires with him to end his wife, the Old Woman or the "Classical Woman", who cannot live with herself, knowing what has occurred in the past. Why does he do this? Freedom? Is he tired of her obsessions with the injustice of the past? We are never told this, except we do know he is a man who seems very comfortable with the heights Scottie realizes he cannot reach. He may be the one who creates or perpetuates these expectations that "heights" represent in the film.

And...

6) Midge is a second incarnation of the "New Woman" which now has a duel personality. The New Woman cannot contain both parts of the Old Woman, so she has fractured into two. The sexually liberated Judy & the rational Midge, who represents the part of the New Woman who never grows up. She has the trappings of womanhood and the desires, but she has forfeited her sexual knowledge for a rational one, as she completely fails to attract her man of choice, Scottie, and perpetuates the fraud of true womanhood as personified in the pairing of "Midge as the Old Woman".

The second example of the fraud revealed.


The Plot Thickens:
So the "New" must get rid of the "Old". This "out with the old- in with the new" from a social and cultural perspective, may seem simply as nature taking it's course. But, it is not that simple in THIS story. Instead, it is taking place as a fraudulent act. 

This is represented by the New Woman, Judy. For what some might mistake as girlish charm in Judy becomes a foolish and absent-minded naivete. She believes her duty is to please and placate the new man in the interest of maintaining the facade. Instead of claiming her equality, she becomes beguiled by Scottie's seemingly innocent desire for her, and in doing so falls into the same sort of trap she laid for Scottie. 

The Old Man, the Man of the World.

My Interpretation:
This is the revealing of the lie of the woman's sexual power over man. As she believes she is using him, she is really being used. I have, as a man, always known that the woman's sexual power over man was always a lie, just as man's sexual power over women is not a real thing. It is like a class struggle, in this case, a war of the sexes perpetuated by those who would use this struggle, this war, to an advantage for those political powers that propagate it.

Vertigo is a Criticism of the Sexual Revolution? 
And therein lies the crux. Alfred Hitchcock's "Vertigo" is an analysis and criticism of the modern ideas of Women's Liberation. The idea that the New Woman can eliminate the Old through fraud, that the New Man can transcend the Old when he realizes that he cannot fulfill the great expectations and chains placed on him. 

Is she the New Woman, or The Old?

But, are we truly given alternatives to these sexual archetypes in the film? Not exactly. But we are given something equivalent. Scottie, after all, "can" reach the heights of the bell tower. But only when he knows the truth about the New Woman. The Classical Woman doesn't actually show herself in this film, for what is shown is only a representation of it. Does this mean, Hitchcock believed the Old Woman was extinct? Possibly. But it does reveal that the New Woman is a fraud. 

That is, regrettably, something Hitchcock does not reveal to us... maybe this is to his credit. But, he does not reveal how a woman might become the Classical Woman he reveres... because he CANNOT know how the Classical Woman becomes the idyllic creature she is. But, we do know he might believe that she, possibly, cannot exist ever again. Like the unicorns of old and like the romantic tragedies like, Romeo and Juliet. They are two souls trapped by fate. Doomed to live an impossible life in their minds, but never in body.

Realizing the fraud and murder that she perpetuated, Judy crumbles. 

The Conclusion (A Challenge):
I don't know about you, but this is not the Vertigo I was taught about. This is not the Vertigo that I saw when I first saw the film about fifteen years ago. But, it is what results after repeat viewings of great films years later with the benefit of life experience to aid in interpretation. 

And, it is a challenge to you viewers out there who watch movies as strictly entertainment- somewhat absently. Believing what others tell you about films and not thinking about them yourself may allow you to watch the commercially popular films- and to enjoy them as entertainment. But, you will see a whole new world of film open to you if you are open to it. If done with knowledge and experience as your guide it will open you to an even richer understanding of what makes films like these great.







Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Jon's 20 Most Anticipated Films of 2014

From the most anticipated to the least, but at least they are anticipated to some degree. 



1. Interstellar
2. Guardians of the Galaxy
3. The Grand Budapest Hotel
4. The Hobbit: There and Back Again
5. Noah
6. Captain America: Winter Soldier
7. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 1
8. X-Men: Days of Future Past
9. Transcendence
10. Edge of Tomorrow
11. The Maze Runner
12. Exodus
13. Midnight Special
14. Gone Girl
15. Inherent Vice
16. Young Ones
17. Jupiter Ascending
18. Boyhood
19. Fury
20. Under the Skin