The hyena that shows up in Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (1922) is there clearly representing a HYENA, not a werewolf! In the novel, the hyena was another of Dracula's shapeshifting incarnations. Just because a previous intertitle card tells of one of his better-known forms --that of a wolf, oddly enough in the light of modern vampire lore--, it doesn't mean the viewer can't see what is going on in the screen. What is it with all the people today seeing a failed attempt by the filmmakers to portray Dracula as a werewolf?
Saturday, August 7, 2010
Saturday, July 17, 2010
Femininity and masculinity in the roles of Marlon Brando
Dad (Karl Malden) and the Kid (Brando): One-Eyed Jacks
Like a Freudian Picasso who could use his own body as a canvas in which the strokes would be only red and green colors, the Brando that swaggers in A Streetcar Named Desire is not just the Michelangelo-like sculptured physique and the Beethoven-kind of bursts of rage; but also an artist so incredibly innovative that he is able to create from the black and white screen into the Tennessee Williams' and Elia Kazan's poetic scenary the most multidimensional of all moments: a human life.
From 1951 on, many were the traits in Brando's style and persona which made a more or less conscious impression: the rebellious attitude, the enigmatic mumbling, the Byronic romanticism, the iconoclastic approach to acting, the link between sexuality and individuality. Sexual allure is precisely what defined, if not Brando's technique, his stardom; yet what can be found at the core of his absolute greatness, it is not his sex-appeal, but the ambiguity which rooted this: the inextricable confussion in the On the Waterfront antihero of male and female characteristics as never before nor after has blessed any actor of his class.
One of the most noted venusian artists of his time, Roger Vadim benefited himself from his own singular feminine side. In the same way, Brando was the most convincing Fletcher Christian on the screen: flamboyant, mannered, cocky, petulant, too much delicate. Not too much, really. The little there is to know about Christian's womanizing means looks smooth as well, and his suggested game is perhaps a reflection of that of Brando's friend, the director of And God Created Woman.
It was another filmmaker friend of Brando, however, who exerted a huge influence on him and the development of his craft. After working together in Streetcar, Kazan and Brando went to make only two more movies, Viva Zapata! and On the Waterfront. This final collaboration contains what are probably the most elaborate and at the same time simple examples of the great actor's unique androginy. When the main character, Terry Malloy, is in the company of his comrades, the melancholic gaze of his eyes of wasted prize-fighter underlines the substantial difference between his conflicted inner self and the confidence that exude from the naturality of the others. He does not fit in this man's world, Kazan implicitly communicates through the camera angles and the light that make Malloy to show almost like a womanly vulnerability, both his weakness and his real strength in this harsh environment. Stanley Kowalski has become Blanche DuBois, but Waterfront, despite its documentary-like realism, has got an idealist heart; hence the triumph of good in the uplifting end.
Waterfront was that moment in cinema when the doors got opened; without it is impossible to conceive the emergence, if not of all Brando heirs, at least of some of the most sexually ambivalent and universally appealing: John Travolta, Leonardo DiCaprio, Johnny Depp. Nonetheless, it seems unlikely that the gender dynamics which fueled Brando's psychological richness in characters can be ever matched.
Thursday, July 15, 2010
10 things you want to know about the Method
1. The Actors Studio was founded by directors Elia Kazan and Robert Lewis, and producer Cheryl Crawford in October of 1947. Another former Group Theater member, Lee Strasberg was invited to join in 1949; by 1951, he was already its power.
Irene Selznick, Tennessee Williams, Elia Kazan on the set of "A Streetcar Named Desire". New York City, 1947
2. It was Stella Adler who taught Brando the Stanislavskian system of acting --never Strasberg, as it is all too frequently assumed. Founding member of the Group, Adler was trained by Konstantin Stanislavski himself, whom she visited in Moscow circa 1934.
3. Jimmy Dean only attended about just a couple of sessions at the Studio. However, Strasberg was proud of Dean's character job in the 1956 epic film Giant.
4. 'Method' was a term coined by Strasberg to rename the Russian 'System' for the American stage.
5. Brando hated Strasberg and vice versa. Al Pacino loved them both; always had. Pacino first became aware of the Studio when he saw Brando in the Kazan pictures as a teenager. Many years later, he was Strasberg's most excellent disciple, protégé and friend. Then, in 1972, Pacino had his breakthrough playing the cold-blooded son to Brando's Godfather.
6. Among the alumni who could not stand the rigor of Strasberg, besides Dean, there have been other more contemporary greats, such as Harvey Keitel, who does acknowledge Strasberg as one of his mentors.
Harvey Keitel and Zina Bethune in Martin Scorsese's Who's That Knocking at My Door (1967)
7. It seems that the only girl --the one student, with disregard of their gender, Pacino aside-- who ever actually enjoyed the guy was Marilyn. She was devoted to Strasberg's dissecting lessons and overall psychoanalytical take on anything. Marilyn was a real sweetheart.
Laurence Olivier, Marilyn Monroe and Susan Strasberg
8. The soon to be called Method acting had its first time in the spotlight when the triumphant performance of Brando in the world debut of Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire", directed by Kazan, hit the Ethel Barrymore theater on December 3, 1947. 'Stella!!!' (an almost unbearable screaming which is also the laconic emblem of a shocking new kind of artistic expression) was, along with a ripped T-shirt and the desperately inarticulate style of a caveman, the trademark of an instant phenomenon. True or false, Brando and the Actors Studio went up to be so immediately and profoundly associated, it can be said the Method is modeled after him.
Brando (Stanley Kowalski) and Jessica Tandy (Blanche DuBois)
9. The best-known action movie star to have ever been a member of the Studio was Steve McQueen. From The Great Escape (1963) to The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), McQueen has turned out to be presumably one of the most oddly underrated leading men of the era.
10. Around the time The Godfather: Part II was in production, Kazan was unavailable. So, Francis Coppola approached Strasberg for the role of the venerable and treacherous Hyman Roth, following Pacino's advice. It is a tribute to Strasberg's prowess that he nailed the part (seemingly) effortlessly, and made it his own for generations to come and sing the praises of the legendary guru in a top demonstration of his method.
Mr. Pink don't tip
Nice Guy Eddie: C'mon, throw in a buck!
Mr. Pink: Uh-uh, I don't tip.
Nice Guy Eddie: You don't tip?
Mr. Pink: Nah, I don't believe in it.
Nice Guy Eddie: You don't believe in tipping?
~Quentin Tarantino
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Who is there among us who knows?
The echo of a love song heard before it's sung,
wandering through a memory dreamed when you were young.
Foolish or fantastic -- which do you suppose?
Who is there among us who knows?
From nowhere, the thought of someone gone for many years.
Then all at once a footstep: Lo, and he appears.
Imagined or a mystery --which, do you suppose?
Who is there among us who knows...
Or even cares which one is true?
There's hardly anyone except a haunted few...
Who long ago remembered somewhere they would see
someone wrapped in twilight, carrying the key,
carrying the secret everywhere he goes,
someone here among us who knows.
Someone here who may not even know she knows.
wandering through a memory dreamed when you were young.
Foolish or fantastic -- which do you suppose?
Who is there among us who knows?
From nowhere, the thought of someone gone for many years.
Then all at once a footstep: Lo, and he appears.
Imagined or a mystery --which, do you suppose?
Who is there among us who knows...
Or even cares which one is true?
There's hardly anyone except a haunted few...
Who long ago remembered somewhere they would see
someone wrapped in twilight, carrying the key,
carrying the secret everywhere he goes,
someone here among us who knows.
Someone here who may not even know she knows.
Music: Burton Lane. Lyrics: Alan Jay Lerner
Vocal: Jack Nicholson
Vocal: Jack Nicholson
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
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