Tag Archive: Gene Hackman


THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS directed by Wes Anderson (USA, 2001)

royal-tenenbaums

“She knows there’s no success like failure. And that failure’s no success at all” – Less Than Zero

Bob Dylan’s lines are apt for this movie even though this particular song is not on the  soundtrack. There are plenty of other cool tunes, though, including another by Dylan (Wigwam).

I always like directors who use contemporary music to establish moods and characters rather than as some fancy sonic wallpaper.

Mark ‘Devo’ Mothersbaugh wrote the original score and Wes Anderson is ,like Jim Jarmusch. David Lynch, Martin Scorsese, Darren Aronofsky, a filmmaker with an ear for songs which create just the right atmosphere.

In The Royal Tenenbaums, for instance, the morbidly secretive Margot is defined by Nico’s sublime covers of Jackson Browne’s These Days and The Fairest Of The Seasons. The first of these begins with the lines “I’ve been out walking, I don’t do that much talking these days”.

For the scene of Ritchie’s suicide attempt you hear Elliot Smith’s Needle In The Hay a spooky choice given that Smith died of knife wounds, probably self-inflicted, less than two years after the film was made.

Best of all, a private detective’s report into the love life of Margot is presented in a series of tableaux from her past life and loves to the tune of The Ramones’ Judy Is A Punk.

John Lennon, The Clash, The Rolling Stones, Paul Simon, Nick Drake and Van Morrison are among the other artists used.

The story, written by Anderson and Owen Wilson. affects to be an adaptation of a novel by the use of chapter headings but is actually an original screenplay.

Chas (Ben Stiller), Richie (Luke Wilson) and the adopted daughter Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow) are child prodigies in the fields of finance, tennis and theatre respectively. By the time they hit their teens, much of this early promise has stalled and they each have their own reasons to feel depressed.

The break up of their parents’ marriage is one of the sources of their pain. The part of the errant father, Royal, was written especially for Gene Hackman.

“I think we’re just gonna have to be secretly in love with each other and leave it at that, Ritchie.”

This is a film in which the plot is driven by the characters rather than vice versa. Royal is a lawyer and , as so often is the case with this profession, he is also an habitual liar. When he finds himself broke he blags his way back into the family fold by pretending to be dying of cancer. When the scam is exposed, he offers “I do have high blood pressure” as if this might garner the same level of sympathy.

His wife Etheline (Anjelica Huston) , an archaeologist who finds love with her accountant Henry Sherman (Danny Glover). is the rock that ensures the family doesn’t entirely implode.

Notable non-Tenenbaums in this stellar cast include Margot’s neurologist husband Raleigh St. Clair (Bill Murray) and Eli Cash (Owen Wilson) an adventurer and writer of westerns.

I enjoyed seeing Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson in roles that require them to act rather than to react to a succession of sight gags. Gwyneth Paltrow, not one of my favourite actresses, is also impressive in her downbeat role.

It’s never laugh out loud funny but is the kind of absurdist comedy you could imagine Robert Altman making. Anderson just about manages to keep a lot of plates spinning to avoid the whole thing descending to the level of trite farce.

I guess if there’s a message to draw from the movie it is that even the most dysfunctional family can be made to function if the spirit is willing and the flesh is not too weak.

Gif courtesy of If We Don’t, Remember Me Tumblr

POPEYE vs FROG ONE

The French Connection – parts I + II (directed by William Friedkin and John Frankenheimer respectively).

 

I couldn’t resist borrowing the box set of these two movies from my local Mediateca.

I’ve seen both before but only really remembered the car chase from I and the cold turkey sequence in II.

Both movies are dominated by loose cannon cop ‘Popeye’ Doyle played brilliantly by Gene Hackman, His role in both is as the relentless pursuer of  drug baron Alain Charnier (Fernando Rey) who he calls Frog One .

In the first Doyle is in his native New York, in the second he is a fish out of water in Marseille.

The movie poster calls Doyle “bad news but a good cop”; the character is based on real life detective (Eddie Egan) with an impressive arrest record who, by all accounts, used equally uncompromising and unconventional methods.

Doyle relies heavily on gut instincts and to call him reckless would be an understatement. Subtlety is not his strong point – he acts first and thinks after. Part I has its implausible moments but stands up well as a tight thriller. The fact that Frog One escapes at the end makes a sequel inevitable.

Frankenheimer takes on this task and clearly is not interested in following the formula of the first movie. He says he wanted to get inside the character of Doyle to show what makes him tick. Without the familiar mean streets of New York, Doyle flails around aimlessly – his banter being lost on the natives, most of whom don’t speak English.

The ruthless drug gang capture him but instead of killing him (which would spoil the movie) they get him hooked on heroine to make him reveal that he is only in France as bait to flush out Frog One.

A good part of the movie is devoted to his addiction and recovery, so much so that you forget you’re watching an thriller. The final burst of activity tries to compensate with Doyle proving he is back to full fitness by outrunning first a bus, then a boat to get into position for the final shot (in both senses) of the movie with Frog One finally getting his just desserts.

The first is rightly regarded as a classic; the second is an oddity.