Displaying items by tag: Jason Schwartzman

Friday, 07 March 2025 11:41

Last Showgirl, The

last showgirl

THE LAST SHOWGIRL

 

US, 1984, 88 minutes, Colour.

Pamela Anderson, Billy Lourd, Kiernan Shipka, Brenda Song, Dave Bautista, Jamie Lee Curtis.

Directed by Gia Coppola.

 

While The Last Showgirl is a story of a Las Vegas show closing down (fewer coming to the spectacles, more a new popularity of circuses), it provides a fine comeback for Pamela Anderson, a varied career with Playboy, Baywatch, her relationships in the public eye, but her later championing of environmentally friendly products.

The film has been directed by Gia Coppola, the project has quite a number of the Coppola clan involved. She is a granddaughter of Francis Ford, niece of Sophia, cousin of Nicolas Cage and Jason Schwartzman (who has a role here) and the screenwriter is married to a cousin.

In many ways this is a familiar story, and many audiences who have had experiences of being fired, terminated, will resonate. Pamela Anderson plays Shelley, 57, who has danced in the show for 30 years, devoting her life to it – and in rather moving speech to her estranged daughter, she explains how important this has been for her, the show, the costumes, the dancing, even if she is only one out of 80 in the ensemble, smiling and happy to be entertaining the audience. Which is not enough for her daughter giving rise to some emotional confrontations.

Shelley also explains why this is the job she has loved for so long, even as she regrets the consequent neglect of her daughter growing up, that she is one of the regular people doing the best they can with the tools they have.

A lot of the action takes place in the dressing room, leaving some of the spectacle of the show until the later part of the film. In the dressing room interactions, Shelley has become something of a mother figure, to Jody (Kioernan Shipkin) who has left home and alienated her mother. And there is a good friend, Annette, former dancer, now aged, heavily made up, something of a fright wig, working in the gambling pit, played by Jamie Lee Curtis – and a long dance sequence that she choreographed. The daughter is played by Billy Lourd (daughter of Carrie Fisher which means that she brings a lot of experience to the role of the daughter of a showbiz personality).

A pleasant surprise is the casting of Dave Bautista, not in an action show, but as the organiser of the girls, getting them on stage at the right time, reticent in his own way, a friend for Shelley.

A sympathetic portrait of one of the regular people – facing age, jobless, with the possibility for a different future and renewing relationships.

  1. A showgirl in Las Vegas story? The background of the shows, the popularity, decline, audiences, change in sensibilities? The effect on the long-time showgirls?
  2. A star vehicle for Pamela Anderson, audience knowledge of her career, personal story? Her nominations for awards?
  3. Audience response to Las Vegas, favourable, life and style, criticisms? The casinos, the familiar exteriors, the streets, the interiors, the gambling areas, the shows? Costumes and decor? The dressing rooms, behind-the-scenes, the management, control of the action, lighting…?
  4. Shelley and her story, the opening, the close-ups, her age, the audition, lying about her age, the music? And the return to this sequence as the show was closing?
  5. Shelley, 57, 30 years as a dancer, her long speech explaining to her daughter her love for the show, what it meant, the glamour, the costumes, the impact for the audience? Hannah and her criticism, the showgirls being one of 80, not individuals, and her mother’s choice of this way of life while neglecting her in her growing up?
  6. Shelley’s explanation of ordinary regular people, doing what they can with the tools that they have? Audience sympathy and understanding for her?
  7. The background of the of the girls, their age, Jody and her age, her family, separations, seeing Shelley as something of a mother figure? Friendships, clashes, reliance? Especially with the show closing? Mary Anne, age and background, age, auditions, bond with Shelley?
  8. Eddie, a different role for Dave Bautista, his long-time with the show, relationship with the girls, timing, his announcements, the show going on? The conversations with Shelley? The realisation that he was Hannah’s father, but nobody knowing, his admiration for Shelley but her not responding to him except as a friend and professionally? The invitation to the dinner, the conversation, the past, the tensions, Shelley leaving?
  9. Hannah, her life, her mother, with the other family, moving to choose and, visiting her mother, her hard attitude, yet wanting to understand, the discussion about the commitment to the show compared with commitment to family, her eventually seen the show, her dismissing the show, her mother just wonder amongst 80? Her later returning, seeking out her mother, some kind of understanding, and needs for her mother, reconciliation?
  10. The friendship with an net, her being a shadow dancer, age, gambling habit, in the pit, finance, her make-up and dress, the bonding and chats with Shelley, and the significance of the long dance sequence and her costume?
  11. The repeat of the audition sequence, Shelley and her dance, explaining she was a dancer, her answering back to the man auditioning, her defiance?
  12. Sequences her partner bird in Las Vegas, her posture, the dance movements?
  13. The film keeping the show and the dance and the staging until later, the emphasis on the costumes, elaborate, their weight, the dances and the poison movement?
  14. The film showing the end of the show business era, and its effect on those concerned? And the challenge for the committed Shelley to imagine a different way of life and future?
Published in Movie Reviews
Wednesday, 09 October 2024 12:18

Megalopolis

megalop

MEGALOPOLIS

 

US, 2024, 138 minutes, Colour.

Adam Driver, Giancarlo Esposito, Natalie Emmanuel, Aubrey Plaza, Shire LaBeouf, Jon Voight, Laurence Fishburne, Talia Shire, Jason Schwartzman, Kathryn Hunter, Dustin Hoffman.

Directed by Francis Ford Coppola.

 

Those who are old, who have lived a full life, deserve the opportunity to reflect on the past and what it has meant, to ponder the present and raise issues, to hope for the future. And this is what Francis Ford Coppola, memories of The Godfather and Apocalypse Now, has ventured, and the-the-top extravaganza into science fiction, futuristic fantasy, a megalopolis. It was released as Coppola turned 85. And, this review is written from the perspective of someone who is four months and one day younger than Coppola.

The setting is New Rome, a New York of the future, focus on the glitter of the Chrysler Building, other landmarks, but Coppola wants to highlight the decline of American society by likening it to the collapse, before the ultimate fall, of the Roman Empire. And the characters have evocative Roman names, Caesar, Cicero, Julia, Crassus, Clodio…

Coppola has gone for the spectacular, lavish sets, skyscrapers to a neo-coliseum with Ben Hur chariot rides and gladiator wrestling, but in the context of technological and communications developments. There is a powerful inventor of a new creative substance with multi-use, played by Adam Driver, a blend of the idealistic and the self-indulgent. He is the Caesar. There is t Mayor, Giancarlo Esposito, clinging to power. He is the Cicero. There is the ageing banker, Jon Voight, poised for a fall, manipulated by his crazy-ambitious grandson Shia LaBoeuf, and his manipulative wife, Aubrey Plaza. Voight is the Crassus. But, acknowledging the mundane glamour of media, Aubrey Plaza is Wow Platinum.

Dustin Hoffman plays a political manipulator and there are Coppola regulars from the past, Laurence Fishburne, Talia Shire (his sister) and Jason Schwartzman) his nephew).

This review will enlist the assistance of ideas from psychologist, Carl Jung. It suggests four different perspectives on how Megalopolis might read be viewed and reviewed – and may contribute to an understanding of why Coppola is intended epic has been a box office failure with barbs from critics.

If one looks at the film, really looks, sees the images, hears the music and sounds, is immersed in the sense atmosphere, there is much to dazzle, excite and admire. If one prefers to look beyond this sense excitement, to be excited by ideas, imagination, themes, the New York-N or ew Rome connections, then the film is a feast of intuitions.

There is the more subjective response, personal factors and connections, appreciations of Coppola and his work, the intrigue of the potential collapse of the American Empire, evaluation of the characters and performances, liked or disliked. And, on the other hand, there is a more objective judgement, the perspectives of critics, the question of whether Coppola’s vision is substantial or ephemeral somewhere in between. The issue of whether his insights have depth insight, the consistency of the screenplay, Coppola’s interpretation of the past, his assessment of the present, and the quality of his optimism for the future.

Megalopolis has not been popular with the wide audience, but it surely has its place in the history of cinema.

  1. Status of the film? In the career of Francis Ford Coppola? Ambitious, an old man, in his early 80s, filmmaking, screenplay, reflections on message?
  2. The visuals of the film, a future New York, New Rome, Chrysler building and reminders of New York City? Parallels with ancient Rome especially the Coliseum, wrestling and chariot races? The special effects, the stopping of time? The editing and pace?
  3. The cast, mixture of the young and the veterans, the status they bring to their rules?
  4. The use of names, the application of Caesar, Cicero, Crassus, Julia…?
  5. The introduction to Caesar Catalina, setting the tone of the film, on the Chrysler building, on the edge, stopping time? His invention, the material and its use? As a person, the death of his wife, the blame, Cicero and the prosecution? His work, ambitions? His lifestyle, the drugs? The encounter with Wow Platinum and the affair? Her role in the media? The antagonism towards Cicero? Crassus and the banking? Clodio and his antagonism? The encounters with Julia, the connections with her father, her attitude, assisting him, managing, the relationship, the pregnancy, her decisions with her father, the baby and her bonding with Caesar? The experience of the banking failure, the consequences? The physical attack, his injuries, hospital, his recovery? His relationship with his mother, her outbursts, seeing her in the crowd at the end?
  6. Julia, the initial introduction, the nightclub, her friends, the wildlife, drinking, drugs, sexuality, of relationships? Her relationship with her father? Her changing, the encounters with Caesar, on his side, managing him at events, PR, the relationship, the increasing complications, the pregnancy, the birth of the child? The culmination with her father, her mother, her final choices? The stopping of time?
  7. Crassus, the banker, profligate life, drinking, the family, meeting with Wow Platinum, the marriage, her manipulation, the media and interviews, her brashness, with Caesar, opportunist, the marriage, with Clodio, teaming with him, the plan, the management of the bank, to bring down Crassus? His age, careless life, realisation of what was happening, feigning his illness, turning the tables on Clodio and Wow?
  8. Cicero, the mayor, his wife, Julia as his daughter, his practice of the law, antagonism towards Caesar? His role in the city, his ambitions, the crises, the conflicts? Relationship with his daughter, the clashes, disappointments? The challenges and his various responses? Mediation, concessions? His reliance on his friend, and sharing the downfall?
  9. Clodio, young, his friends, careless, dressing as the Roman woman, partying, yet ambitious, his friend and manipulation, resorting to violence, with Well, the connections, interviews with Crassus, bringing him down, his defeat?
  10. Dustin Hoffman as the dealmaker, sinister, his remarks, insinuating, Cicero relying on him – Claudio and turning against him, his death?
  11. The chauffeur, his being the narrator, his views on characters and situations, a measure of judgement?
  12. The people of New Rome, the populace, the responses to the leaders, victims of the leaders?
  13. The film as reflections of an old man, critique of the past, ambivalence towards the present, possible hopes for the future?
Published in Movie Reviews