The Essential Jekyll and Hyde

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde began life when Robert Louis Stevenson, living in Edinburgh and broke, wrote the story as a potboiler. It’s said that the original draft so horrified his wife that he burned it and then–in a fit of commercial savvy–rewrote it. He structured the story as a…

Heavy Housekeeping

Julia Roberts plays the title role in Mary Reilly, roughly the bazillionth film to retell Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr.Hyde (see the related story on page 62). This one, from a novel by Valerie Martin, takes this apparently inexhaustible tale from a woman’s point…

Faulty Memory

While watching Unforgettable, the third feature from that startling spinner of contemporary noir director John Dahl, I thought of the same cheap crack that every film critic in the country will make if unimpressed by the film: It’s forgettable. Indeed, it is not especially memorable. Certainly it isn’t upto the…

Tennessee in Mexico

“Nothing human disgusts me, unless it’s unkind or violent.” So remarks Hannah Jelkes, the spinster-paragon of The Night of the Iguana. She could be speaking for her creator, Tennessee Williams. That’s very likely just what Williams had in mind–reading or watching him, one always has the feeling that Williams saw…

Long Live the King

Theater Works used to be housed in a small, barnlike building on West Thunderbird Road, a facility which made up in charm some of what it lacked in space and flexibility. With the inventive sets and lighting designs of technical director Jim Hyte, the old barn made an excellent, intimate…

A Royal Pain

Horror has an emotional shelf life. The remoteness of the Inquisition or the Diaspora makes these episodes of history less likely to stir up rage and sorrow in modern people than the Holocaust, many of whose victims are still among us. Ted Bundy and Charles Manson still make us shudder,…

Short Subjects

Jackie Chan is the Richard Clayderman of movie stars–he’s popular all over the world, and a cult favorite even in this country, but for the mainstream American audience he needs a letter of introduction. For Clayderman, that letter was the TV ads for his albums; for Chan, star of dozens…

20th-Century Bard

Although his film career prior to Richard III has consisted largely of forgettable supporting roles in films such as The Shadow, The Keep and Last Action Hero, Sir Ian McKellen has been one of the leading lights of the British classical stage since the early 1960s. Acclaimed in most of…

Rocky Rogue

Jimmy the Saint is a suave, gentlemanly reformed gangster trying to make it as a legit Denver businessman. His firm records on video–in something like the manner of a dating service–the final advice and messages of its aged or ailing clients, so that they can continue being of use to…

Nightmare Ally

The City of Lost Children begins with one of the more creepy dream sequences I’ve ever seen in a movie. A child sits in a crib in a glowingly lighted room that’s decorated for Christmas in warm Victoriana. Sure enough, Santa emerges from the fireplace; and then, seconds later, another…

Leigh Low

Georgia has been racking up the raves, and I wish I could more wholeheartedly join in. There’s no disputing that it has some forceful, occasionally even harrowing, passages, or that the performances of its lead actresses are very fine at times. But there’s something too self-assured about the film–the central…

Techno Prisoners

Except for Arizona as a setting, the current film Broken Arrow has little in common with the like-titled movie of 1950, that wonderful James Stewart-Jeff Chandler Western directed by Delmer Daves. The only other point of agreement might be their inversion of the reactionary values of their respective genres–Daves’ film…

The Doctor Is in Pain

As with Philadelphia and Salvador, the title of director Michael Hoffman’s film Restoration is meant to have a double meaning. The setting of the film is England during the 1660s–the Restoration period. But the film is also about the restoration of the hero’s soul. Said hero is Robert Merivel (Robert…

Neck-rophilia

With the exception of the Western, the vampire movie may just be the most durable of all genres. It’s produced everything from cinematic masterpieces like Carl Theodor Dreyer’s Vampyr (1932) and F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu (1922) to indelible pop-culture classics like Tod Browning’s Dracula (1931) to lesser interpretations without number. Just…

Apartheid and Seek

The novel Cry, the Beloved Country, written by a white South African schoolteacher named Alan Paton, was published in 1948, the year apartheid became official in South Africa. The story concerns two elderly fathers, one Zulu and one white, who become linked by tragedy–the former’s son is charged with the…

Robbins Hoodlum

Writer-director Tim Robbins’ Dead Man Walking is about a man awaiting execution, and the suffering and hope and reconciliation connected to his crime. The heroine, Sister Helen Prejean (Susan Sarandon), is a New Orleans nun who counsels Matthew Poncelet (Sean Penn), a death-row inmate at Angola State Prison. Despite a…

Gloomy Roomies

Sometimes it’s difficult to decide which is more annoying–a fluffy Brit period piece or a depressing Brit period piece. Carrington, to its credit, isn’t fluff. It’s a tough, solid piece of work, intelligently written and directed by Christopher Hampton. It’s also excellently acted. In most respects, it’s hard to fault…

Pauly Sci

Filmmaker Jason Bloom has nothing but the highest praise for the star of his first feature: Pauly Shore. On the basis of his award-winning student film, Irving (“a black comedy about a Jewish vampire”), Bloom was brought aboard a feature project called BioDome, a spoof inspired by Biosphere2. “We planned…

Uneven Dozen

Terry Gilliam, director of the apocalyptic scifi thriller 12 Monkeys, is a conflicted figure. He has the sense and sensibility of a grand English eccentric, yet he’s American. He is full of wonder and mystical awe, yet he also seems a sociological pessimist. His work mixes a childlike humor and…

Less Is Moor

It’s no exaggeration to say that Kenneth Branagh has made Shakespeare a player in the movies. Branagh’s two Shakespearean films as adapter/director/star–a rousing Henry V and a sunny, blissfully humane Much Ado About Nothing–transcended the Classics Illustrated style of Franco Zeffirelli’s Romeo and Juliet. Branagh’s films were in no way…

Hodgepodge Lodge

Ted the Bellhop (Tim Roth) is having a rough first night at the decrepit-looking old L.A. hotel where he works. It’s New Year’s Eve, and he’s the only bellhop on duty. In one room, a coven of chic Wiccans is preparing for some sort of pagan ceremony. In another, a…

Ms. Houston, We Have a Problem

Waiting to Exhale has a phony gloss that makes it feel faintly retro. All those impeccably dressed actors ambling around Phoenix locations like Arizona Biltmore, declaiming their emotions in smooth ‘n’ silky tones–it’s rather like a two-hour commercial for Martini & Rossi. Based on a popular novel by Terry McMillan,…