February 1st: The Birds and The Bees Disc 1
I do not watch films just for entertainment
or messages. As someone who has an interest in history as well, film viewing
can also be a dive into the past even for all of cinema’s schlockier aspects. A
double set from the British Film
Institute collecting together sex education films made in Britain, the
first disc, which goes from 1917 with Whatsoever
A Man Soweth to 1938, mostly deals with the crisis of venereal disease,
particularly the dangers of syphilis when it was still a major contagion. I will
admit that if all the films were about this, it would have been a struggle to
get through the films even as archival material. Thankfully The Mystery of Marriage (1932), despite
dancing around the subject of sex for good taste, is a legitimately charming
short film, comparing human relationships to those of animals and plants in
witty ways. These earlier films are also fascinating, not just for the social
and historical context, but also as movies. They sometimes get too preachy
unfortunately even for educational shorts, and they can be viewed as dated in
their gender politics in depicting women as willing carriers of STDs, but they
are also fully structured, mini-dramas around thirty minutes each with
narrative arches and characters. One, A
Test For Love (1932), also contrasts the mostly male centric concerns by
having the protagonist being a young woman who is infected and feels the social
stigma of what that represents. Even in the area of films to teach the public
about gonorrhoea, in an area of education (sex and reproduction) which is still
embarrassing to some and a controversial topic even in the present day, especially
with the lessons taught to children, you get the directors nonetheless playing with
various dramatic and directorial flourishes they could come up with as long as
they made a short that gave people a lesson. The films feel like
meat-and-potatoes melodramas and B-movies than merely documents to pass on
information viewing them now; the director of A Test of Love, Vernon Sewell,
did become a prominent director and worked with Peter Cushing, so I cannot dismiss this thought.
2nd February – GoldenEye (Martin Campbell, 1995)
Catching up with more James Bond
films within the last four months, I’m finding that I’m not enjoying them as I
wish I should. The only ones that have grabbed me, You Only Live Twice (1967) and Diamonds
Are Forever (1971), do so because the former goes as far as it can with its
Sixties aesthetics mixed with Japanophile chique, and the later because it is
so ridiculous that any patriotic feelings are squashed by Mr. Kidd and Mr. Whit’s
presence. It may also be because, as the only two Sean Connery Bond films I’ve seen in this recent re-evaluation,
that so far nobody does it better than the first person and films in the
series. After a long absence from the failure of Licence To Kill (1989), and made in the prime decade of mainstream cultural
weirdness, GoldenEye sadly doesn’t
become a grand return for the character or a crackpot piece of pulp, but
something stuck in-between without really succeeding in either. It’s a two hour
film that doesn’t have enough to justify that length but somehow is that long. Pierce Brosnan does make a great Bond,
and it has its moments, including Alan
Cummings stealing all the scenes he’s in, but the film’s transitions and
plot turns feel arbitrary rather than pulling you into them. Considering its
incredibly surreal, and stunning, opening credits sequence based on the fall of
the Soviet Union, and a major scene taking place in a graveyard for Soviet
monuments, it never however strengthens this peculiar tone or tackles real life
history with enough pulpy thought to it that it deserves, especially since the
series was born in the age of the Cold War. When a new, female, M played by Judi Dench calls Bond a ‘misogynistic
dinosaur’, it should be a sign of a film that drags its hero’s ideology over broken
glass or pushes the more lurid nature of the character to the lengths like the
Sixties Bond films did. Instead however Bond is blasé about all this and just
continues with sleeping with women and killing as he has done every time before
without the smirk or edge that should have been there after those words were
uttered.
From http://www.ukdvdsonline.com/UserFiles/productImages/bfivd915.jpg |
3rd February – The Birds and The Bees Disc 2
Disc 2 of this set is more divisive.
The later films – 1940 to 1973 – go from short form dramas to purely
educational shorts for the most part, which takes away from their interest
aside from the sociological aspects to them. There are some that stand out –
the animation Six Little Jungle Boys
(1945) and an American made film directed by the editor of The Testament of Dr. Mabuse (1933) – and
the social aspects of the films themselves are still fascinating. Despite the
growing frankness in the topics, you can argue the films become more puritanical
in tone, and in the case of Don’t Be
Like Brenda (1973), a mirror film to A
Test of Love about a young women also
victimised by stigmatism that is far and away more sexist and patronising in
tone than the sympathetic earlier short. There was also a fine line with sex
education that was broken, shown breaking with the inclusion of the controversial
film Growing Up (1971). Made by Dr Martin Cole, its depictions of real
male and female masturbation caused an outrage, the booklet with the DVD set
containing some of the most obscene and violent complain letters Cole got. Growing Up would probably never be acceptable to view in a
classroom this era either, with the usual diagrams used in these films replaced
by actual people, including children, being the stand-ins, which was extremely uncomfortable viewing for me
as someone raised in this decade’s view on sexual morality. It is worth
thinking of this film though compared to the education on the subject most of
us got; my own was honest and detailed, taught in primary school and later
taught in secondary school, but the approach Dr Cole used of real acts of sexual practice being depicted is
probably too far even now for some and, to my hazy memory, never was used in
the films my classes were shown. If these shorts, put together in an
exceptional set from the BFI, are to
be learnt from, it is the knowledge of how the taboos and views on sex and
sexuality in the United Kingdom have changed, and have not, and how they are
inherently my country’s views on them.
From http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m7z8o5DWvO1rnni91o1_500.jpg |
4th February – A Deadly Invention (Karel Zeman, 1958)
The two dimensional world of stop
motion, papercraft and animation are combined with live action in this incredible
visual achievement. Based on the work of Jules
Vern, of pirates and their desire to use a professor’s new technology as a destructive
super weapon, the world depicted is made from the use of extensively fabricated
sets and props, to create the sort of thing I am showing below, the only way to
fully show what A Deadly Invention looks
like...
From http://24.media.tumblr.com/cfa58bb98b82593842fc08e65a07374d/tumblr_mgirn2Z0R71qgfhxdo1_500.gif |
If there is a potential flaw with
this film, it’s the same that has effective many films which combine live
action with animated artistry, even Who
Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) to some extent, in that the actors themselves
and their plot is not as fascinating as the world around them and do not fully
become one with it. The film is still a marvel to see as an animation fan,
flying boats, underwater divers fighting a giant octopus, animated birds
against real people, and countless other sights that sparkle. When the film
gets comfortable with its tone, from a great scene onwards where one sees how
people get their news and sports coverage from a giant “movie” projector, A Deadly Invention becomes great
entertainment as well as a fest for the eyes.
From http://www.moviehoppingisnotacrime.com/_/rsrc/1349988730674/night-ten-cannibal-apocalypse/caradice.png?height=225&width=400 |
5th February – Cannibal Apocalypse (Antonio Margheriti,
1980)
Link to a review here - Cannibal Apocalypse Mini-Review
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