FIND REVIEWS
[AA-AM] [AN-AZ] [BA-BM] [BN-BZ] [CA-CM] [CN-CZ] [DA-DM] [DN-DZ] [EA-EM] [EN-EZ] [FA-FM] [FN-FZ] [GA-GM] [GN-GZ] [HA-HM] [HN-HZ] [IA-IM] [IN-IZ] [JA-JM] [JN-JZ] [KA-KM] [KN-KZ] [LA-LM] [LN-LZ] [MA-MM] [MN-MZ] [NA-NM] [NN-NZ] [OA-OM] [ON-OZ] [PA-PM] [PN-PZ] [Q] [RA-RM] [RN-RZ] [SA-SZ] [SN-SZ] [TA-TM] [TN-TZ] [UA-UM] [UN-UZ] [VA-VM] [VN-VZ] [WA-WM] [WN-WZ] [X] [YA-YM] [YN-YZ] [Z]
Snow Day
(PG; 89 min.) A phenomenon residents of Northern California may not fully understand is the coveted snow day, when roads and schools close due to excessive snowfall. But those who spent their childhoods with snowy winters know first-hand the decadent joy and the delicious sense of freedom a snow day brings. This family comedy explores the ins and outs of a snow day, a day that kids pray for and parents generally dread. Snow Day's most poignant theme is that of young love, with a young man (Mark Webber) determined to get the girl of his dreams (Emmanuelle Chriqui) to notice himfailing to recognize that his best friend (played by Schuyler Fisk, Sissy Spacek's daughter) has feelings for him. The movie also explores family bonding with Jean Smart playing a driven career mom who learns the joy of spending time with her 4-year-old son (Connor Matheus). Mostly, though, Snow Day is a kids-versus-adults movie where kids triumph. With characters at preschool-, elementary school- and high school-ages, and with parents and other adults in the movie, Snow Day serves its purpose as a silly family comedy with a wide range of humor that works on many levels. (SQ)
Snow Dogs
(PG; 99 min.) Cuba Gooding Jr. inherits a dog team and goes mushing with the help of M. Emmet Walsh and James Coburn.
Snow Falling on Cedars
Full text review.
Snowriders
Warren Miller's 47th feature-length ski adventure film captures some of the most beautiful mountains in the world, along with the world's best mogul skiers, heli skiers, snowboarders and more.
Snowriders 2
(90 min.) Warren Miller's latest offering scales more snowy peaks with renowned skiers and snowboarders from around the world. (Plays Nov 14 at Gunn High School in Palo Alto, 6:30 and 9:30pm; Nov 15 Flint Center, 8pm. Call BASS for ticket information.)
Solaris (2002)
Full text review.
Solas
(Not rated; 98 min.) A Spanish drama about a mother and daughter, each struggling with unhappy lives, who reconnect when the mother moves in with her daughter to be near the hospital where her alcoholic husband is recovering.
Soldier
(R; 95 min.) With sparse dialog punctuated by bloody Ultimate Fight-style punch-outs and outer-space explosions, Soldier is very much a video game with humanoid interest backstory. Kurt Russell is the title character, bred from birth to fight for next century's U.S. Army. However, his advanced years40make him obsolete, and he is literally tossed away like so much trash onto a garbage-dump moon, his platoon replaced by a troop of younger, colder, faster genetically designed soldiers. Too old, indeed. Kurt shows them that the young soldier may run fast, but the old soldier knows how to run. This male menopause space opera is neither too loud nor too long for an action film; but the usually engaging Russell is too cold and distant. (DH)
A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries
Full text review.
The Solid Gold Cadillac/Phffft!
(1956/1954) Comic star Judy Holliday plays a minor stockholder who plots a takeover of a mismanaged company with the help of the company's pushed-aside founder (Paul Douglas). BILLED WITH Phffft!, in which lawyer Jack Lemmon and soap-opera writer Holliday get divorced when their marriage fizzles (or goes "phffft!" to use an expression popularized by newspaper columnist Walter Winchell). Now single, Lemmon goes after Kim Novak while Holliday pursues Jack Carson, although the two still have a backhanded interest in getting together. (RvB)
Solo
(PG-13; 93 min.) Military bad buys commission a no-hearted android killer named Solo (Mario Van Peebles), but there's just one hitch: Solo's loathe to go ballistic on just anyone; he's been programmed to make his own decisions. Fresh off the Panthers project, a gorgeously sculpted Van Peebles is quite a specimen. Who better to fulfill the military's missionsomething to do with taking a bite out of crime in some verdant but corrupt South American (natch!) garden of Eden? Clichés, Solo's got a million of them. In fact, the scenes with ruddy-cheeked but invariably passive peasants might remind you of any number of films in which the American hero swoops in, takes over and attains god-like stature. Only this time, the good guy "wears" black. Now, checking a superpowered man of color "run" the jungle like Johnny Weismuller may excite some viewers, but not me. There are gazillions of non-Europeans strutting their stuff in films these days, acting like they're Supermen. Right? Give this one two shrugs and a bag of popcorn. (NB)
Solomon and Gaenor
Full text review.
Some Like It Hot
(1959) Two half-frozen and broke Chicago musicians of the Jazz Age (Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis) accidentally witness a gangster massacre. Disguised as women in an all-girl orchestra, they hit the road for Florida. Their new pal in the orchestra is the tightly clad Sugar Cane (Marilyn Monroe, never better), a ukelele player with a weakness for saxophonists. Lemmon and comedian Joe E. Brown (one of your standard comedic Palm Beach millionaires) wrap up the film with a famous last line. This capping bit of dialogue seems to be a message to the future about how the years to come would thaw out the frozen differences between the genders. The women's disguises change the attitudes of the men, giving them a new perspective and secret knowlege. ("Now you're gonna see how the other half lives!" Curtis threatens.) The last great screwball comedy and probably the late Billy Wilder's best picture. (RvB)
Some Like It Hot/The Apartment
(1959/1960) Two half-frozen and broke Chicago musicians (Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis) of the Jazz Age accidentally witness a gangster massacre. Disguised as women in an all-girl orchestra, they hit the road for Florida. Their new pal in the orchestra is the tightly clad Sugar Kane (Marilyn Monroe, never better), a ukulele player with a weakness for saxophonists. Lemmon and comedian Joe E. Brown (your standard comedic Palm Beach millionaire) wrap up the film with a famous last line. This capping bit of dialogue seems to predict that, in the years to come, the then-frozen differences between the genders would thaw. The women's disguises change the attitudes of the men, giving them a new perspective and secret knowledge. ("Now you're gonna see how the other half lives!" Curtis threatens.) The last great screwball comedy and probably the late Billy Wilder's best picture. BILLED WITH The Apartment, in which a minor functionary (Jack Lemmon) receives temporary status through pandering to a lecherous crew of his superiors, especially Fred MacMurray; Shirley MacLaine is the tough-mouthed but tenderhearted elevator girl who snaps him out of it. Terrific locations help the mood of Manhattan isolation, and MacLaine is adorablebut the film has a serious moralizing streak voiced by the recently demised Jack Kruschen, as the doctor upstairs. (RvB)
Some Mother's Son
Full text review.
Someone Else's America
Full text review.
Someone Like You
(PG-13; 93 min.) The film of Laura Zigman's hair-dryer novel Animal Husbandry is, to use the novel's main metaphor, the same old bull. Jane (Ashley Judd) is a booker for a TV talk show who is dropped ruthlessly by her new boyfriend, whom she stole fair and square from a mysterious other woman. The ditched girl builds up her self-esteem by writing a popular theory on male behavior based on the notion that a bull will never return to a cow he's previously fertilized. Hugh Jackman and Marisa Tomei liven up this bovine mess a little, but Juddflat of voice, flat of expression, hell, flat even of much-flaunted bodyis a chore to watch. (RvB)
Something New
(PG-13; 100 min.) Yet another music video director making her feature debut, Sanaa Hamri mechanically directs Something New right out of the romantic comedy rule book. Uptight, African American career girl Kenya (Sanaa Lathan) meets earthy, sensitive white landscaper Brian (Simon Baker). This interracial coupling upsets Kenya's friends and family, but Brian doesn't seem to have any friends or family, so it is his job to be supportive. It is also his job to teach Kenya how to "get back to nature," a potentially odd role reversal the film isn't willing to explore. Instead, all prejudice simply vanishes when Kenya learns to loosen up. Talented supporting players like Taraji P. Henson and Alfre Woodard are reduced to sidebar characters who constantly bug Kenya about her social life. Kriss Turner wrote the screenplay. (JMA)
Something's Gotta Give
Full text review.
Something to Talk About
This is one of those "my-life" movies that rates somewhere between mediocre and meaningful. The plot is not too overdone, the characters are not too predictable, and the ending is not too Hollywood. Anyone who has suffered through a nasty relationship might actually find something to relate to in the particularly ugly story of Grace (Julia Roberts) and Eddie (Dennis Quaid), a married couple whose hectic lives get even messier when infidelity becomes a variable. Something To Talk About is probably not a good choice for that first date, but it makes for a decent couple of hours. (BB)
Something Wild
(1986) Fondly remembered Eastern seaboard road movie about a married Manhattan businessman (Jeff Daniels) spirited away from his life by a teasing and impulsive punkette who calls herself "Lulu" (Melanie Griffith, never better). Abruptly, danger enters the picture as Lulu's spurned, jealous and violent boyfriend (Ray Liotta) discovers the pair. Jonathan Demme directs. Keep an eye out for John Waters as a used-car salesman. (RvB)
Sonar Kella (The Golden Fortress)/Sherlock Jr.
(1974/1924) Satyajit Ray's answer to Sherlock Holmes: Feluda (Soumitra Chatterjee), befriended by a detective-novel writer, investigates the case of a reincarnated boy. Filmed in Rajasthan and at the palace at Jaisalmer. BILLED WITH Sherlock Jr. A daydreaming movie projectionist imagines himself to be a great detective on the case of a missing watch. Sherlock Jr. is not just a deathless comedy, it's also Buster Keaton's meditation on the way movies tend to infect the subconscious of those who watch them. (The ending shot is a masterpiece: Keaton the detective looks past the viewers' heads into the big mystery of love and sex itself.) Silent, with organ accompaniment by Jerry Nagano. (RvB)
Sonic Outlaws
The gargantuan egos of a band named U2. A scad of very expensive copyright lawyers. A quartet of pranksters from Contra Costa County calling themselves Negativland. Casey Kasem. And Snuggles, a little dead dog from Ohio. Such are the components of Craig Baldwin's documentary Sonic Outlaws, about the fair use of copyrighted images for the purposes of satire, and how new Supreme Court lawthanks, 2 Live Crew!has made it easier for you to use parody to let the air out of advertisers and popular artists. Baldwin's documentary is impressionistic and sometimes scatter-shot, but he has an interesting subject: how hip, erstwhile rebels turn conservative when confronted by satire, as Negativland found out when it did a brilliant parody of U2's monster hit "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," spliced in with the syrupy-voiced Kasem's toweringif all too understandablestar fit about having to dedicate a record to "a goddamn dead dog."
Son of the Bride
Full text review.
Son of the Mask
(PG; 98 min.) The power of the Mask devolves to the son of a cartoonist (Jamie Kennedy) in a sequel to the Jim Carrey hit.
Sophie Scholl: The Final Days
(Unrated; 117 min.) Far and away the best of the five 2005 Academy Award nominees for Best Foreign Language film, Sophie Scholl hinges on a superb centerpiece performance by Julia Jentsch. She plays the title character, a coed arrested (along with her brother and a friend) in 1943 for distributing anti-Nazi fliers. Like a 20th-century Joan of Arc in a red sweater and humble hair clips, she faces her accusers with a fearless slate of cold logic. Director Marc Rothemund stages two "hearings," a private one with investigator Robert Mohr (Alexander Held) and a public one with the more demonic Roland Freisler (Andre Hennicke). Sophie matches the former with her decisive will, but the second, engulfed by Nazi ardor, sees her only as a monster. In German with English subtitles. (JMA)
Soul Food
(R; 114 min.) Young Ahmad (Brandon Hammond) searches for a way to hold his extended African American family together when the clan matriarch (Irma P. Hall) succumbs to illness. The tone ranges from mawkish to melodramatic and back again as writer/director George Tillman Jr. throws problems at his characters and then saves them the trouble of solving them. You could put on five pounds just looking at the lovely food of the title, but it falls short in the metaphor department; it's supposed to be what connects the family during its ups and downs, but Tillman substitutes a different kind of dough at the last minute. Still, the movie is a pleasant plea in favor of love and understanding, filled with likeable, all-American characters, and really doesn't deserve its R rating. (BC)
Soul Plane
(R; 90 min.) Starring Kevin Hart, Method Man and Snoop Dogg. If there's a better tagline around right now than the one for this politically incorrect comedy about an African American-owned airline"What goes up must get down"I haven't seen it. (Capsule preview by SP)
Soul Survivors
(PG-13; 96 min.) A thriller about a co-ed(Melissa Sagemiller) who is haunted by a sinister spirit after surviving a car wreck. Casey Affleck, Luke Wilson and Eliza Dushku also star.
Sound and Fury
Full text review.
The Sound of Music
(1965) The 400-passenger-capacity zeppelin of the American musical. It stars that precious Julie Andrews, who ditches her career as a nun and nannies a family of singing Teutonic children over the Alps. This much-honored Rodgers and Hammerstein musical was proclaimed as the movie the 1960s would be remembered by. It is rememberedas an object lesson in how popular doesn't equal great. Songs include "You Are Sixteen Going on Seventeen" and "The Lonely Goatherd," the latter a song title from a more innocent time. (RvB)
A Sound of Thunder
(PG-13; 103 min.) This story about a hunter who travels back through time and screws up the futureyes, basically that one Simpsons episode without an all-powerful Ned Flandersearned itself more cred than, say, The Butterfly Effect, by virtue of being based on Ray Bradbury's short story. I mean, if you're going to do one of the oldest sci-fi ideas in the book, at least take it from the guy who wrote the book. (Capsule preview by SP)
South Bay Jewish Film Series
The festival concludes with a A Tickle in the Heart, the story of the Epstein Brothers, once known as the kings of klezmer. This feature is billed with the short film "When Shirley Met Florence."
South Bay Jewish Film Series 1998
The series concludes Nov 12 (7:30pm) and Nov 15 (1:30pm) with The Assistant, a 1997 Canadian adaptation of Bernard Malamud's novel. Joan Plowright and Armin Mueller-Stahl star. (RvB)
South Pacific
(1958) Rossano Brazzi and Mitzi Gaynor star in the famous film version of Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical based on the novel by James Michener. Songs include "Some Enchanted Evening" and "There Is Nothing Like a Dame."
South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut
Full text review
Space Cowboys
(PG-13; 120 min.) As an actor, Clint Eastwood hasn't changed in 40 years. When he's a drag today, it's the same reason he was a drag in the old days: because he overworks that glare and scowl that's been his bread and butter. Because he's directing, he's more alert than the 58-year-old Harrison Ford has been in his last few movies. Still, it'd be wrong to expect Space Cowboys to be a revelation of Eastwood as an actor or a director. As always, he's only as good as the script, and this one by Ken Kaufman and Howard Klausner is never more than serviceable. In a prelude set in the late 1950s, taken pretty heavily from Philip Kaufman's The Right Stuff, we see two pilots testing an X-15 plane, wrecking it and surviving. Forty years later, a Russian satellite called "Ikon" is reentering Earth's atmosphere and must be fixed before it crashes into the earth. There's some malarkey about why this can't be done the easy way, how the satellite is an enduring symbol of Russian technology, and the decommissioning of it could cause civil war in the former USSR After a little reluctance and hemming and hawing by the same supercilious desk-pilot (James Cromwell) who used to ride the test pilots' tails in the 1950s, we get around to the reactivating of Team Daedalus, the only ones old enough to remember the Ikon's technology: James Garner (72) as Tank Sullivan, Donald Sutherland (64) as Jerry O'Neil, Eastwood (69) as Frank Corvin and Tommy Lee Jones (the baby of the bunch at 54) as "Hawk" Hawkins. Of the four, Sutherland is the most fun as the gamey old lech, toying with his dentures and wearing a snow-white toupee that looks like it might be the same wig the actor wore for Fellini's Casanova in 1976. The special effects are immaculate; the slow transforming of the malign satellite with sound effects (which would be inaudible in space, of course) is big on the big screen. Technology and uninspired news coverage took the drama out of the shuttle flights, and the re-entry scenes here make it look exciting, with the craft glowing like a briquette and popping heat tiles. Too bad the action outside the cabin isn't matched by drama within it. At heart, Space Cowboys is a too-familiar movie. Except for a few scenes of Jones courting the always sturdy Marcia Gay Harden, the film has zero gravity. It's yet another funny-codger movie, about old age without the dignity, complete with a nude scene and fistfight. When one of the quartet is diagnosed with a terminal illness, your own knowledge of old movies tells you how this will come out. This kind of retreading can really make you feel old. (RvB)
Space Jam
Full text review.
(PG; 90 min.) One of the inside jokes in the 1945 Road to Utopia has Bob Hope sighting the Paramount mountain and claiming that there's gold in them thar hills. The shot in Space Jam of Daffy DuckTM kissing his own ass, which is stamped with a Warner Bros.TM logo, isn't quite the same kind of in-joke; it's a way of warning us that these characters are all copyrighted from here to eternity. Space Jam's story features aliens who want to kidnap the Warner Bros. characters and enslave them as attractions at an interplanetary theme park. Under the direction of Bugs BunnyTM, the denizens of the land of the Looney TunesTM challenge the invaders to a basketball game, and Bugs goes to our dimension to enlist the aid of Michael JordanTM. The movie teams Bill Murray and Daffy Duck and doesn't give them a joke to work with. That's unforgivable enough, but you get even angrier watching the film's celebration of how playthings of deathless comedic minds like Chuck Jones and Tex Avery have become emblems of a communications company. How can you care if aliens are going to enslave them, when they're enslaved already? (RvB)
Spanglish
Full text review.
(PG-13; 131 min.) As suffused with authentic Latin tanginess as a Taco Bell, the dramedy Spanglish marks a rare failure for director James L. Brooks (As Good as It Gets). Spanglish isessentiallya romance between an illegal-alien maid and her American master. The latter is John (Adam Sandler), a successful restaurateur. His new maid is Flor (Paz Vega, who looks like Penelope Cruz's little sister)good-hearted, hard-working, so forth. The story is narrated in the form of an admissions essay to Princeton written by Flor's daughter, Christina (Shelbie Bruce). John is a hard-working dad without the malicious crudeness that is usual to Sandler's comedy. Hold back Sandler's rage, and his style is flabby and dull. The dissatisfied mom, Deborah (Téa Leoni), goes from impulsive to infantile; it's a lethal role. Spanglish is not a complete misfire. Brooks' time-tested sense of shtick is intacteveryone's got a routine here, even the dog. The scene of Christina simultaneously translating for Paz is as expertly timed as a vaudeville act. But John Seale's stuffy cinematography makes Los Angeles look about as subtropical as Duluth. Brooks' vision is patronizing, in the true sense of that overused wordhe's blithely vague about what the underclass goes through. (RvB)
The Spanish Prisoner
Full text review.
Spartan
(R; 106 min.) Espionage films don't have to be logical, but they do have to be fast-moving enough so that the troubling questions don't get a word in edgewise. For the first hour, Spartan moves along with all due speed; David Mamet's Hemingway-like inflection, understatement and repetition is at its best, and the metallic dialogue chimes instead of rattles. The solitary, demanding covert-operations soldier Scott (Val Kilmer) is called into a code-red situationthe president's daughter (Kristen Bell) has disappeared, seemingly under the most sordid of circumstances. It turns out that she's been mistakenly swept up by Arabian white slavers. (Prostituted to the Arab oil sheiks! Now she'll know how her dad, the president, feels.) Scott is the point man on a rescue operation, but at the last minute the girl is found drowned, an obvious ruse. The movie's high point is the arrival of a swarm of dead-faced Midwestern presidential henchmen, including William H. Macy and a very tense Ed O'Neill, sharp, dour and looking as constipated as H.R. Haldeman. Stressing the morose, clipped soldier talk, Mamet, as usual, wanders into late-show plotting and lapses of logic. And the essential story is like a man committing murder to cover up a case of shoplifting. Still, Mamet's attention to the visuals is a breakthrough. The atmosphere of ruthless competition between men is reflected in the comfortless, even science fiction-like cityscapes of airports and bunkers, such as the motto in big letters on the wall of an Army training center: "A Goddess Lives Here. Her Name is Victory." Kilmer may not be one of the best actors around, but he has that quality the best ones have, which is that he's getting more interesting as he decays with the years. He plays a man on guard for so long, he's forgotten what he's guarding. The classical illusion to the frightening Spartans doesn't seem overreached here, and it's clear (unlike so many directors that try to enshrine the military virtues) that Mamet's more on the side of the Athenians. (RvB)
Spawn
(PG-13; 90 min.) Todd McFarlane's boring comic book is transferred into a suitably boring movie. A killer from the CIA is killed; he is given a chance to come back from the grave to see his wife again if he becomes a warrior for Satan. In his new "Hellspawn" form, Spawn goes after the people who set him up, especially Martin Sheen, who is carrying out a world-domination scheme, laughing a hearty villains' cackle at the thought of the apocalypse. Spawn's premise is a Batman knockoff: What if Batman could kill people with big chains that sprouted out of his body? What if the Joker was a demon who was fat and said obscene things and, instead of being the hero's enemy, was sort of his sidekick? But there's no way to write about Spawn without making it sound like more fun than it is; some interesting computer effects punctuate a shamefacedly derivative movie shaped out of other movie's taglines, attempted comic relief by John Leguizamo's repulsive Clown. Comic-book fans won't think it's violent enough, and everyone else will be grossed out. The moral of the story is a weird match of Christianity and Zen ethics: Violence is terrible, literally damnableunless you control your emotions when you use it. (RvB)
Speaking in Strings
(Unrated; 73 min.) Documentary on the life of top violinist Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg. The showings coincide with her featured concert with the Cabrillo Music Festival orchestra.
Species
Alien DNA has been sent to us via radio signals, so government scientists have decided to splice some human genes with itjust to see what pops up. The result is "Sil," a topless killer who prowls L.A., morphing, mating and killing. Until the halfway point, Species is enjoyably bad, sporting as it does an outstandingly terrible script by Dennis Feldman. The team of experts tracking Sil, as overqualified a group of actors as ever stared down a bug-eyed monster, wallows in wretched dialogue fit for Whit Bissell, John Agar and Lyle Talbot. Wallowees include Forest Whitaker, Albert Molina, Michael Madsen and Ben Kingsley. A routine bug hunt at the end fails to raise the pulse. (RvB)
Species 2
(R; 93 min.) It's unfortunate that despite the success of the Alien series, the sophisticated sci-fi thriller Species was greeted with such little enthusiasm, though noted design wiz H.R. Giger was the visionary behind the creatures in both series. If it was the aggressive sexual nature of Sil (Natasha Henstridge) that turned people off, maybe the male predator in Species II will be less jarring. Astronaut Patrick Ross (the stone-faced Justin Lazard) becomes infected with alien DNA during a mission to Mars and, upon his return, begins a violent one-man breeding marathon to populate the planet with his offspring. Original cast members Michael Madsen and Marg Helgenberger reunite to stop this global disaster and enlist the help of Eve (Henstridge), Sil's more subdued genetic duplicate. This surprisingly good sequel pushes boundaries with the graphic sexual nature of the aliens and the uncomfortably realistic gore. Like Species, the biggest flaw in Species II is the lame open-ended climax. (SQ)
The Specter of the Rose/Leave Her to Heaven
(Both 1946) "Oh, the smell of art! The lovely smell of art!" Before Ben Hecht became the master of wisecracking '30s dialogue and co-writer of the thrice-made version of The Front Page, he experimented with decadent writing, publishing a few 1920s novels in the style of Huysman's Against the Grain. The Specter of the Rose, written, produced and directed by Hecht, reveals the more lushly artistic side of the wisecracker. Not film noir, it's film pourpre ("film purple") rooted in Theophile Gautier's pretty poem about a grateful dead rosebud and the von Weber-scored ballet adapted from it (debuted by Nijinksy in 1911). This tale of madness at the ballet stars Ivan Kirov (who is, for all intents and purposes, Buster Crabbe). He plays the Indiana-born ballet legend known as "Andre Sanine." No one notices that the man's ballet name is an anagram for "Insane." Moreover, after his dancer wife dropped dead on the stage, she was apparently too frail a creature to be subjected to an autopsy. The stain of her untimely death still blots the life of Sanine, plagued as he is by musical hallucinations. George Antheil's musica knockoff of Saint-Saëns' Danse Macabreurges the dancer to kill! Sounds rare so far? But I haven't mentioned the steely Judith Anderson as "Madame La Sylphee" or Lionel Stander as a Brooklyn poète maudit given to recitations that'll make you bay like a timber wolf ("You are the exclamation point at the end of the woid 'beauty," he tells leading lady Viola Essen). Co-director Lee Garmes' photography is formal perfection. Almost never revived, this is sterling camp that plays like the collected works of George Kuchar rolled into one. BILLED WITH Leave Her to Heaven. The more familiar and serious noir story of a well-bred girl on the warpath (Gene Tierney, never lovelier). Co-stars Cornel Wilder and Vincent Price. Screened in a brilliant nitrate color print from the UCLA archives. (RvB)
Speed 2: Cruise Control
(PG-13; 133 min.) A crashing bore. While vacationing in the Caribbean, Sandra Bullock and her new cop-boyfriend, Jason Patric, foil a scheme by cyber-wizard/explosives expert/vengeful madman Willem Dafoe to steal a bunch of diamonds and wreck their cruise ship. Director Jan De Bont (Speed, Twister) has a problem with premature climaxhe blows his wad on the shipwreck, making for a limp finaleand even greater problems with plausibility, which he tries to hide with an overabundance of explosions and electronic gizmos. One thing he can't hide: Speed 2 is dead in the water. (BC)
Speed Racer/Gigantor/Astro Boy
(1963/1967) The three godfathers of anime, together again. Osamu Tezuka's Astro Boy (nee Tetsuwan Atom: "Mighty Atom") wasn't the first Japanese animated show, but the dubbed version brought to the states by producer Fred Ladd captivated Yankee kids years before Pokémon. It's Pinocchio, basically, featuring a flying humanoid robot instead of a puppet. According to Jonathan Clements and Helen McCarthy's Anime Encyclopedia, Stanley Kubrick was so taken by the show that he offered Tezuka a job as production designer on 2001. Nothing came of it, except, perhaps, A.I., decades later. Gigantor (doing business in Japan as Tetsujin 28-go, or Ironman #28) is an early animated treatment of the eternal giant-robot story. Interestingly, Tetsujin/Gigantor was originally supposed to be a vintage Imperial Army war surplus robot who never got a shot at the United States. Quite rehabilitated from the war, this "bigger-than-big, stronger-than-strong" robot took care of Japan's underworld, under the guidance of young Jimmy Sparks, an animated character aptly considered the luckiest little boy in the world by most 6-year-olds in 1963. Speed Racer (a.k.a. Mach 5, Go Go Go!), from 1967, needs no introduction. Monkey-navigated race cars, once considered a pie-in-the-sky fantasy, are now a part of the amazing future in which we live. (Plays Aug 27 at sunset in San Jose, in the Circle of Palms adjacent to the San Jose Museum of Art; free; please, no outside food or drink.) (RvB)
Speedy/Hot Water
(1928/1924) An enchanting Harold Lloyd comedy about "Speedy" Swift, a lad too befuddled by baseball to hold down an honest job. His girlfriend's grandpa is the owner/operator of the last horse-drawn trolley in New York City. The traction monopoly has hired leg-breakers to put the old man out of business. Lloyd outfoxes the thugs as he tours New York in extensive footage that's so detailed that it's like a time machine voyagethe film includes a captivating extended sequence at the long-gone amusement park Luna Park. Babe Ruth turns up in a small part, to be greeted enthusiastically by Lloyd's Speedy: "Gee, Babe, you've done more for baseball than cheese did for Switzerland!" BILLED WITH Hot Water. Another ripping one by Lloyd, this time about the dangers of marriage. He's a newlywed husband carrying home too many groceriesand a live and angry turkey henon a crowded street car. Before the evening is through, our hero has wrecked his new car, gotten drunk and murdered his somnambulist mother-in-law with chloroformor so he thinks. Lloyd's pretty co-star from The Kid Brother, Jobyna Ralston, returns as his wife. As the "corpse" (a temperance lecturer, so she got exactly what was coming to her), Josephine Crowell executes a double take that belongs in the Double Take Hall of Fame. Dennis James at the Wurlitzer. (RvB)
Spellbound (2003)
Full text review.
Sphere
(PG-13; 132 min.) You'd think that everyone would know by now that whenever the U.S. government calls you in to examine alien spacecraft, the end result is usually gruesome death or psychological torture. Still, Dustin Hoffman (who teams with director Barry Levinson for their second film in a few months), Sharon Stone and Samuel L. Jackson journey 20,000 leagues under the sea to poke around a crashed 300-year-old spaceship and the mysterious golden sphere it houses. But Sphere (based on a Michael Crichton book) is not purely about gratuitous gore, and it emerges as an engagingly tense psychological sci-fi thriller. Hoffman and Stone turn in good performances, but it's Jackson's creepy act that's more chilling than most creatures Hollywood special effects could create. (KR)
Spice World
(PG; 93 min.) The Fab Five (Scary, Ginger, Baby, Posh and Sporty) are planning a big tour but are being hounded by a ruthless tabloid photographer, their type-A manager and a daffy documentary crew. Of course, the lasses have little time for such matters. They are more concerned with the condition of Nicola (a pre-fame Spice) who couldn't be down because she got pregnant. Well, she's about to have a baby, and the girls must decide what is more important: keeping engagements or girl power. Preteens probably won't get the British humor and won't be able to keep up with the flashbacks and the flash-forwards, but so what? Spice World moves along at a brisk pace, and the Spice Girls provide plenty of candy for the eyes and ears. (TSI)
Spider-Man 2
Full text review.
(PG-13; 125 min.) A stunner, with a rich mixture of acrobatics, action, character development and the kind of operatic superhero grandeur that made so many people addicts in their youths. Tobey Maguire returns as both the selfless but never humorless heroa direct descendant of Harold Lloyd's scurrying go-getters from the silent era. In Thomas Harris' novel Red Dragon, the psycho Dolarhyde is described as "not a monster but a man with a monster on his back," and that's what's after Spider-Man in this sequel: the maddened scientist Dr. Otto Octavius, "Dr. Octopus" (Alfred Molina), a bigger, badder spider who can follow our hero wherever he hides. Kirsten Dunst is excellent as the love of Parker's life, who is slipping out of his orbit. The human drama of Parker's poverty-plagued life contrasts with his adventures in the skies. Director Sam Raimi handles the sometimes frightful battle scenes as well as he handles the inspired comedy. There have been few movies that delivered the flamboyant promise of superhero film as well as this. Yet one loves Spider-Man 2 the most for not forgetting how hard it is to live on the ground. (RvB)
Spike and Mike's Classic Festival of Animation
Full text review.
Spike and Mike's Classic Festival of Animation 2000
Full text review.
Spike & Mike's Classic Festival of Animation 2001
Full text review.
Spike and Mike's 1997 Festival of Animation
Full text review.
Spike and Mike's 1998 Festival of Animation
Full text review.
Spike & Mike's Sick & Twisted Festival of Animation 1997
Full text review.
Spike & Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation 1998
The annual gross-out animation fest returns with 20 brand-new films including, Steve Margolis' "Animalistic Times," Liam Hogan and Trevor Watson's "Below the Belt" andgo figureScott Roberts' "Monica Banana." The festival also features in uncensored form "Frosty" and of course "The Spirit of Christmas" by the new gurus of cartoon crudeness, Matt Stone and Trey Parker.
Spike & Mike's Sick & Twisted Festival of Animation 1999
Full text review.
Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation 2001
Full text review.
Spike and Mike Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation 2002
Full text review.
Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation 2003
Full text review.
Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation 2004
(Unrated) Twenty-three films, with only two reruns this time. One of the reruns is Breehn Burn's very funny if overlong Here Comes Dr. Tran, about a mild little boy being scandalized by a macho narrator, and one of Craig McCracken's one-joke No Neck Joe shorts. There are three nominally new Happy Tree Friends pieces by Mondo Media, with the usual animal cruelty, and three new pieces by Bill Plympton. Unseen by our reviewers. (Plays at Camera 12 in San Jose.) (RvB)
The Spinning Wheel Film Festival
A daylong fest of films related to the Sikh experience, including documentaries, made-for-on-line shorts and feature films. Highlights: Priceless Being a Sikh, New Mexico's Sat Bir Singh's parody of the Mastercard commercials. Kavi Raz directs and stars in The Gold Bracelet (2006), which played at last year's Cinequest. It's the story of Arjun Singh and his family, and their life in California, where they face everything from assimilation to discrimination. The film is inspired by the real-life tragedy of a Sikh who was shot by a hate-addled American who thought he was avenging the World Trade Center. (Raz and writer Tami Yaegar will be attending.) Saka Sirhind demonstrates the historical irony behind the killing of Sikhs by our deluded would-be patriots who got blood in their eye when they saw a turban. This is an animated version of the martyrdom of the two children of Guru Gobind Singh, who refused to convert to Islam. Professor Narindra Singh directed this as well as the equally instructive short Sikhs Protect America, about an FBI agent of that faith. Dominic Ozanne's Who Do You Think You Are, Gurinder Chadha, is a profile of the director of Bend it Like Bendham and the locally shot The Mistress of Spices. In Amu, the American-raised Kazu (Konkona Sensharma) arrives in Dehli, feeling caught between two worlds. In the flashback sequences, writer-director Shonali Bose recalls the anti-Sikh violence following the assassination of Indira Gandhi in 1984, violence the director saw firsthand working at the relief camps. On hand is the film's co-producer Dr. Bedabrata Pain. (Plays Feb 3 in Palo Alto at Stanford's Cubberly Auditorium; www.bayareawheel.com.) (RvB)
Spirited Away
Full text review.
Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron
(G; 82 min.) Animated horses cavort in the Old West. Matt Damon voices the title equine.
Spirits
Full text review.
(Unrated; 120 min.) Vietnamese-American filmmaker Victor Vu demonstrates just how shuddery a ghost story can be. In a series of three interlocking stories, we learn of the fate of a young writer named Loc (Tuan Cuong). In the first episode, "The Visitor," Loc comes to reside in a remote bungalow on the edge of a cane field. As in Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House, the fault is not in the people who lived there but in the house itself. At first, Loc is tended by a mysterious, otherworldly woman named Hoa (Kathy Nguyen). In the following episodes"Only Child" and "The Diviner"Vu follows up Loc's storytelling us how he wrote a well-known novel about the ghost he met and how he tried to commit suicide to be with her. After he's well again, the house has its vengeance on Loc's new wife, Linh (Kathleen Luong). "The Diviner" is where the ghosts take final possession of Loc and the house. Sadness and pity run through Spirits, sharpening its horror. Vu uses a minimum of gore, special effects and makeup; the good-looking film's three-part structure has shape and balance as well as uncanniness. (RvB)
The Spitfire Grill
Full text review.
(PG-13; 115 min.) Percy (Allison Elliott), after a stretch in the Maine State Prison, is given a job in a small Maine town at the Spitfire Grill. Crusty owner Hannah (Ellen Burstyn) isn't getting around as well as she ought to be, and so the young girl keeps the Spitfire going. Two men complicate the blissful picture: Nahum (Will Patton), the mean husband of the grill's other employee, the slow-witted Shelby (Marcia Gay Harden); and Eli (John M. Jackson), a sort of wild man of the forest. The Spitfire Grill is a Shirley Temple movie for the New Age in which the girl of bad background meets and overcomes prejudice with her selflessness and charm. First-time director/writer Lee David Zlotoff is the man who invented MacGyver, and the movie plays like prestige televisionsoftly, tastefully. It's asking a lot from a young actress like Elliott to make this relentlessly slick tale breathe and to keep up her end of scenes with an actress as good as Harden. What really makes The Spitfire Grill frustrating is its message-bearing. Zlotoff is trying to tell us something about how it takes a village etc. The film is not meant to be watched so much as cuddled, but as shabbily written as it is, it represents the people-oriented alternative to the bullying actioner. (RvB)
The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie
(PG; 90 min.) In his first big-screen adventure, the titular sea creature and his best friend Patrick journey on an epic quest to retrieve King Neptune's lost crown and save the town of Bikini Bottom from the evil Plankton. Of course, many important life lessons about being yourself and the power of children can be found in the film, but as with the popular Nickelodeon show, the emphasis here is on the weird humor. We're talking David Hasslehoff-turning-into-a-human-power-boat-with-pectoral-launching-capabilities-weird. It's this and countless other insanely random touches that make The SpongeBob Squarepants Movie an inevitable hit with its other targeted demographic: stoned teenagers. (JL)
Spriggan
(Unrated; 90 min.) Anime icon Katsuhiro Otomo served as "General Supervisor" for this Indiana Jones-inspired popcorn anime that's highlighted by stunningly animated action sequences but feels slight in comparison to Otomo's landmark Akira. Spriggan centers on a plot to unearth Noah's Ark, which gives whoever possesses it the power to control the weather and wipe out mankind. To keep the ark from falling into the wrong hands, American scientists turn to the hotheaded, lethal Yu, a 16-year-old Japanese member of the Spriggan supersoldier squad. (The name "Spriggan" doesn't exactly paralyze the viewer with fear like it does the movie's characters. "Spriggan" sounds more like a certain notorious daytime talk-show host with a penchant for staging fistfights.) The film's main villain is an amusing choice: a spoiled American supergenius kid with psionic powers. The genetically engineered little snot gives a speech about how the free world's new post-Cold War enemy is the polluted environment, which comes off dated after recent events. (JA)
Spring Forward
Full text review.
Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... and Spring
(R; 103 min.) Buddhism: so beautiful, so simple, so drastic. Buddhists would likely respond that suffering on Earth is so terrible that it requires a drastic remedy. Behind a gateless gate, five episodes take place in a serenely beautiful place of worship, a tiny floating temple in a mountain lake in South Korea. Near this small temple, an apprentice monk's first childish act of cruelty leads to exile from the world of worship in favor of the world of flesh. Finally, after much off-screen torment, he returns to repentance and the simple life. It's easy to see why this superb import has picked up a word-of-mouth audience in Northern California. Its stealthy observations of the seasons and the natural world recall Rivers and Tides, the Andy Goldsworthy documentary. Director Kim Ki-Duk (The Lake) brings a hardheaded approach to Buddhist purity. As in Zen, the struggle to master the senses and the desires is a species of war, not for the weak. It should be warned that the early sequence of the boy's wanton mistreatment of a small fish and reptiles is a little hard for the sensitive, as is the borderline mishandling of a cat, whose tail is used as a sumi brush to ink the Pranja Paramita Sutra on the deck of the temple. (The cat forgives and forgets, though; it's just all part of the road to transition to a higher form of life.) (RvB)
Sprung
(R; 105 min.)The premise of this stereotype-ridden comedy directed by and starring Rusty Cundieff (Fear of a Black Hat) is, as one of the female stars declares, "All [black] men are dogs." Cundieff plays Montel, a sweet-tempered type, whose buddy Clyde (Joe Torry) is sex-obsessed. Their female counterparts are Brandy (Tisha Campbell) and Adina (Paula Jai Parker). When fate brings Brandy and Montel together, their conniving "friends" put aside their differences to keep them separated. In the end, of course, their perfidy backfires. Unhappily, what could have been a cute comedy about black men and women hitting it off, as opposed to hitting out at one another, is subverted by clownish stereotyping. (NB)
Spy Hard
(PG-13; 95 min.) It isn't easy to parody spy moviesthey're already parodies. Even Roger Moore admitted that James Bond was patently silly as he wheezed into his 50s, still wenching around like a Stanford fratboy high on cavier and vodka martinis. Spy Hard looks like it was written by a couple of former college roommatesJason Friedberg (whose father, Rick Friedberg, directed) and Aaron Seltzerbut it's at least as funny as any of Leslie Nielsen's Naked Gun series. Nielsen is glamorous superspy Dick Steele, chasing down long-legged brunettes and the self-styled "General" Rancor (Andy Griffith), who plans to ... to ... well, whatever it is, it's really bad. The jokes are really bad too, which is good. They range from references to at least a dozen moviesTrue Lies, Rambo, Potemkinto "Weird Al" Yankovic's John Barry-esque theme song. The extremely silly title sequence, which Yankovic directed, should be enough to get at least a grin from Maurice Binder fans everywhere. (BC)
Spy Kids
(PG; 88 min.) There's more style and personality than is usually found in kid's movies here, because of Tarantino collaborator Robert Rodriguez (director of El Mariachi, From Dusk Till Dawn and Desperado). Rodriguez was the total-filmmaker here (editing, writing, directing, and co-producing with his wife, Elizabeth Avellan). Spy Kids has a Latino flavor, too. It's set matter-of-factly in a fantasy version of Mexico, the way American movies are set matter-of-factly in a fantasy version of the United States. Antonio Banderas plays "Gregorio Cortez," (a reference to a pioneering Chicano film) a great secret agent who retired to become a consultant; his wife Ingrid (Carla Gugino, bland as a Taco Bell enchirito) is also an ex-agent. The kidnapping of active agents brings them back on duty. The Blofeld here is the host of a gloppy kid's TV show played by Alan Cumming (as "Fegan Floop," coasting a little too close to Willy Wonka in his purple Edwardian velveteen wardrobe), who is building child-bots to conquer the world. When Floop's forces track down the two agents, only Cortez's childrenbossy elder Carmen (Alexa Vega) and the younger clumsy son Juni (Daryl Sabara)can foil the plot. Rodriguez is a fine kid-wrangler, as seen from his episode in Four Rooms and the movie has throughout the refreshing sense that here's an adult director not talking down to the children. Still, Spy Kids is uneven at best, veering in mood from Roald Dahl to Sid and Marty Kroft; some heavy sentiment made me think the actual director had been "Señor Spielbergo, the Spielberg of Mexico" as seen on The Simpsons. (RvB)
Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams
(PG) A film made to be played over and over in a DVD by kids loses a certain something on the big screen. It seems overburdened, busy and brash; the actors always seem inundated by the flood of effects. Of course that could be said about 50 percent of all movies today, and unlike many kids' movies, Spy Kids 2 seems handmade by someone who has a child's sweet tooth and love for carnival colors. In this opus, Carmen (Alexa Vega) and Juni (Daryl Sabara) head for a Mysterious Island off the coast of Madagascar in search of a stolen "transmooker," which short-circuits electrical devices. The tropical island is inhabited by a weird professor (Steve Buscemi) and dozens of gene-spliced animals of various size as well as "skeletons! Dead ones!" Meanwhile, the kids' parents (Antonio Banderas, Carla Gugino) ride to the rescue. The opening sequence at a hilariously dangerous amusement park is the highlight, but again the casual Latinness of the movie is also worth celebratingthe film takes place as much in Aztlan as in Disneyland. (RvB)
Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over
(PG) Juni (Daryl Sabara) comes out of retirement to rescue his ungrateful big sister, Carmen (Alexa Vega); her brain has been trapped in a computer game by the sinister Toymaker (Sylvester Stallone). Cameos include appearances by George Clooney, Salma Hayek, Alan Cumming, Tony Shalhoub and Carla Gugino and Antonio Banderas, the latter two who only turn up at the end. Significantly, auteur Robert Rodriguez refers to this film as "a digital file." Watching it is like participating in a video game in which the contests (races and fights) are all physical; Juni doesn't really get much of a chance to match his wits against anything. In 3-D, this newest Spy Kids is impressive both as a technical feat and an eye ache. A treat for kids who have never seen a 3-D film, it's perhaps the least appealing of the series to adults; moreover, Sabara has to carry the picture, and it's a task he's not up to either in human form or cyber form. (RvB)
The Squid and the Whale
Full text review.
(R; 80 min.) This funny and scarifying divorce movie set in mid-1980s Brooklyn is the dream project of Noah Baumbach (co-scripter of The Life Aquatic; director of 1995's Kicking and Screaming, New Yorker occasional-piece writer and heir presumptive to Woody Allen). The tormented Berkman family members enjoy the magic unique to joint custody. Boys Walt (Jesse Eisenberg) and Frank (Owen Kline) go wild as their newly divorced parents carry out a clash of egos. The father, Bernard (Jeff Daniels), is appalling: Daniels is a marvel playing as fatuous and snobbish a minor novelist as ever wore badger beard or corduroy coat. Though Daniels' awfulness is dazzling, don't miss the passive manipulations of the mother, Joan (Laura Linney), who uses her children as a sounding board for her sexual adventures. The film is more than just white whine, thanks to Baumbach's urgency and shrewdness. (RvB)
Stage Beauty
Full text review.
(R; 105 min.) Director Richard Eyre's cross between Shakespeare in Love and All About Eve also includes nuggetsand why?of Peter Greenaway's The Draughstman's Contract. Based on Jeffrey Hatcher's didactic play, Stage Beauty concerns the legalization of women on the English stage in the 1660s. The popular transvestite actor Ned Kynaston (Billy Crudup) is a public favorite; after-hours, Ned is also the secret "mistress" of the Duke of Buckingham (Ben Chapin), prime minister and best chum of the king. The would-be actress Maria (Claire Danes) loves Ned hopelessly. When the ban is lifted against actresses, Ned becomes obsolete. Ironically, Maria may be a woman, but she's an untried actress. The two must coach each other. She teaches him how to be a man onstageand to be a man in the bedroom. There's something about this plot to disquiet gay and straight audiences alike. It's well art-directed, anyway, with the mucky crowd scenes, shadowy palaces and rickety, septic theaters. Crudup is one of the best-looking men in the movies, but he's crucially miscast here. Despite how hard he has worked, and despite the risk he takes, it's hard to believe him as the androgynous toast of London. They needed David Bowie and they got James Taylor. (RvB)
Stagecoach/The Quiet Man
(1939/1952) During an Apache uprising, a stagecoach full of mixed souls makes a perilous trip to Lordsburg, N.M. This film's high reputation comes from its complex plot, inspired by Maupassant's short story "Boule de Suif," only with an improbably happy ending. John Ford's direction drew in a crowd that customarily avoided horse operas as kid stuff. Stagecoach is a story of the closing of the West, with the gunslingers, the whores and the gamblers on their way out of town. These colorful characters are about to be replaced by the "blessings of civilization," as a well-known line of dialogue has it. Blessings, that is, like the skinny peddler Mr. Peacock (Donald Meek) and the fat, embezzling banker Gatewood (Berton Churchill). Their fellow passenger, the drunk Irish doctor Josiah Boone (Thomas Mitchell), gets plenty of screen time and many of the best scenes, including this corny favorite: rallying for a medical emergency, the drunken sawbones calls thickly for "Coffee. Lots of it. Black." Mitchell, who played Scarlett's father in Gone With the Wind, is plainly the actor Ford found the most interesting here. Doc Boone is a comic Irish role, but often you wince with Mitchell instead of just at him. Boone drools a little when he's deeply drunk, and Bert Glennon's photography gives this sponging character dark shadows. (Boone was supposed to be an army surgeon during the Civil War; maybe what he saw there turned him to the booze.) While Claire Trevor's shamed but gold-hearted prostitute Dallas has her own realistically tough moments, Stagecoach made a major star out of the tall, courtly B-picture actor who played an outlaw named the Ringo Kid. And millions since have found a kind of music in the phrasings of John Wayne's confident voice. The remarkable finale is still rousing: three dozen horsemen in pursuit of the stagecoach across a dry lake bed. Enos "Yakima" Canutt's stunt and second-unit work here is still astonishing, if maybe compromised by timethe modern viewer might be too aware of all of that horseflesh murdered by trip wires. (Old-time cowboy star William S. Hart doubted Stagecoach's big chase scene anyway, commenting that the Apaches were usually smart enough to pick off a stagecoach's ponies first.) BILLED WITH The Quiet Man, Ford's Irish adventure, with Wayne as a transplanted American boxer and Victor McLaglen as the stubborn brawler he takes on in one of the screen's most famous fistfights. (RvB)
Stage Door
(1937) George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber's comedy/drama about aspiring actresses sharing a boarding house; the film co-stars Katharine Hepburn, Eve Arden, Ginger Rogers, Ann Miller and a brilliant cat named Whitey (who earned $25 a day for his part). (RvB)
Stage Fright/Mr. And Mrs. Smith
(1950/1941) Marlene Dietrich is at the door. She's wearing a pleated dress covered with dried blood. "Johnny, you love me?" she asks the startled man letting her into his apartment. "Please tell me you love me." Nothing can follow an opener like that, especially not the rest of this moderately entertaining British mystery. Stage Fright is set around the environs of the postwar Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (RADA). Johnny, we learn, was the love slave of Dietrich's Charlotte Inwood, a noted actress. He was so in love, in fact, that upon Charlotte's request Johnny stupidly stole into her apartment to fetch a clean dress for her. Naturally, he was caught in the act by the maid, even as he was stepping over the corpse of Dietrich's late husband, who had recently been corrected with a fireplace poker. Anyway, what's really interesting to director Alfred Hitchcock here is the device of Eve (Jane Wyman), a novice actress posing as a maid to get the goods on Dietrich, and the theater world setting. A highlight: Dietrich sighing out the Cole Porter number "I'm the Laziest Girl in Town," later parodied by Madeline Kahn in Blazing Saddles. The film also stars Alistair Sim, the comic relief as Eve's roguish dad, a down-at-the-heels pleasure-boater who calls himself "Commodore"; Miles Malleson, who played the versifying hangman from Kind Hearts and Coronets; and Patricia Hitchcock, the director's daughter, playing a girl nicknamed "Chubby." BILLED WITH Mr. and Mrs. Smith, a film featuring the arthritic old comic plot of two people who aren't sure that their marriage is really legal. Carole Lombard and Robert Montgomery, in midquarrel, learn that a shifting state line has nulled-out their marriage. The most Hitchcockian part of this near-uncanonical comedy is a scene of the couple's first meeting at an awful Italian restaurant, which I guess you could link to similar ghastly dining experiences in both Rich and Strange and Frenzy. Auteurism only goes so far, however, and the Norman Krasna script epitomizes the gimmicky, forced comedy of the Studio Age. During the filming of this movie, Hitchcock made an indelicate remark about how actors ought to be treated like cattle. To get revenge, Lombard had three live cows brought to the set. It was her last film before the masterpiece To Be or Not to Be and her subsequent untimely death in a plane crash; of all the cool blondes Hitchcock worshipped, she was the wittiest. (RvB)
Stand by Me
(1986) River Phoenix, Corey Feldman, John Cusack and Kiefer Sutherland look impossibly young (and they were) in this nostalgic movie about boyhood friendships based on Stephen King's short story The Body.
Standing in the Shadows of Motown
Full text review.
Stanford Jazz Film Festival
As part of the ongoing Stanford Jazz Festival, there will be a program titled "Hot Giner and Dynamite!" featuring film footage of jazz greats like Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, Chet Baker and Louis Armstrong. The evening is hosted by jazz collector Mark Cantor.
A Star Is Born
(1954) The classic version of the story of the rising star versus the falling star, with Judy Garland as the singer who is brought to fame by her husband, the hard-drinking actor Norman Maine (James Mason). It's Garland's most interestingly high-strung roleshe sings the tense, pain-drenched saloon song "The Man Who Got Away." The performances certainly aren't on the nose; Garland looks nearer to ruin than her co-star; she's as brittle as glass. Mason, on the other hand, looks as if he has years of coasting left in him. As indeed he did. (RvB)
Star Kid
(PG; 101 min.) This is one of those rare cases where the previews actually make the movie look worse than it is. Granted, Star Kid is hardly a standout, but minus a few stereotypes, it could pass as decently entertaining fare for older kids, thanks to its young star, Joseph Mazzello (Jurassic Park), who turns in a winning performance. Mazzello plays Spencer, an unhappy boy who stumbles across a prototype of alien technology accidentally sent to Earth, a "cybersuit," kind of an intelligent suit of armor with super powers and a negligible personality. Kids will probably enjoy some of the stunts Spencer pulls off when he dons the high-tech suit, especially his means of getting even with the neighborhood bully. Unfortunately, the novelty of the alien suit soon wears thin, and in the last half of the movie, the filmmakers seem to have been thinking a bit like Spencer when he first puts on the cybersuitthey're so caught up in how cool it is, they're not really sure what to do next. (HZ)
The Star Maker
Full text review.
(R; 105 min.) Dr. Joe Morelli (Sergio Castellitto) travels the back roads of post-WWII Sicily with a sound truck and a scam. He claims to be a talent scout for the Italian movies, filming screen tests for those who can afford it. His tests open up the souls of the villagers, who rewrite their audition lines from Gone With the Wind according to their own humors: "Give it to me, Scarlett," demands a mafioso. It's a delightful picaresque that turns dour when director Giuseppe Tornatore (Cinema Paradiso) points both barrels of a Marxist/Catholic conscience on the hustler by adding a good-hearted village girl to put him in the right frame of mind for punishment. (RvB)
Star Maps
Full text review.
(R; 95 min.) A young man strives to be a movie star in an independent feature written and directed by Miguel Arteta. Stars Douglas Span.
Starship Troopers
(R; 126 min.) The first utopian fascist movie since the end of the Third Reich. By rooting for the computer-generated insectsarachnids from the planet Klendathuyou can have an OK time. The gory combat between perfect people and perfect bugs lacks the humanity of, say, 2,000 Maniacs. Robert Heinlein apparently considered himself the last of the centurions when he wrote the source novel. Life in the hills near Santa Cruz later mellowed Heinlein into a militant libertarian, but director Paul Verhoeven includes the writer's earlier ultramontaine politics here uncritically: the failure of democracy is taught in school, only ex-soldiers can vote, floggings are therapeutic. Verhoeven stages the future as Beverly Hills 2100; the perky unknowns resemble action figures and dolls. As a sop to the liberals, the future is sex-equal. Someone in production design had a little in-joke by placing the official-looking initials "FTA" all over the Starship Troopers' boot camp; every ex-soldier knows what "FTA" stands for. As a quick antidote, read Harry Harrison's Heinlein parody, Bill, the Galactic Hero. (The first reader to call my voice-mail with the name of the character in Harrison's novel stolen for the movie Men in Black wins a prize.) (RvB)
Starsky & Hutch
(PG-13; 97 min.) Director Todd Phillips is hard to figure out. He started his career 10 years ago with a fantastic documentary of murder-rock psycho G.G. Allin called Hated; since then he's done frat movies like Old School and the much better Road Trip. Now he seems to be onto remakes of '70s TV shows, with Starsky & Hutch this year and The Six Million Dollar Man next year. I hated the idea for this movie, but I have to admit the casting of Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson as S&H is brilliant. And Snoop Dogg as Huggy Bear? I smell Oscar! (Capsule preview by SP)
Star Spangled Rhythm
(1943) Eddie Bracken plays a sailor on leave from the war; he comes to visit his father (Victor Moore), who is employed as a security guard at Paramount Studio. The old man decidesunder the influence of switchboard girl Betty Huttonto pretend to be the head of the studio. From that misunderstanding grows a revue that rallies pretty much all the actors on the Paramount lot. Stars: Bob Hope and Bing Crosby, Mary Martin, Ray Milland, Dick Powell, Alan Ladd, "Rochester" Anderson, Preston Sturges (making a rare before-the-camera appearance) and many more. The film made a hit out of the Johnny Mercer number "Black Magic." (RvB)
Star Trek: First Contact
Full text review
(PG-13; 105 min.) The aliens running loose in the eighth Star Trek film are the Borg: half-machine hive-society creatures. Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) flies to 2063 to head off the Borg at the past, setting off a messy tri-form story. Firstly, Picard fights off an infestation of Borg on the Enterprise; secondly, the subsidiary members of the crew try to help out Zefram Cochrane, the hungover inventor of Warp Drive. Thirdly, Data is alternatively seduced and tortured by the Borg Queen (Alice Krige). Somewhere in this story of conflict between the Borg and humans is a study of conflict between inhuman perfection and the fallibility but warmth of flesh. Picard's dilemma at being both an icy commander and a brittle human being reflects the issue, so do Data's ambitions to be a humanas poignantly staged as the dilemma of a colonized man trying to imitate the manners of the colonials. (RvB)
Star Trek: Insurrection
(PG; 103 min.) Captain Picard (Patrick Stewart) leads a guerrilla action to prevent the genocide of a band of peaceful Luddites, while Lt. Riker (Jonathan Frakes, who also directed) takes the Enterprise into battle against a horde of (literally) corrupt space aliens. The second Next Generation ensemble piece is an entertaining mix of action, jokes and romance, free of unpleasant surprisesgood triumphs over evil, love conquers all, Geordi LaForge (LeVar Burton) has trouble with the warp core, etc.which is exactly what it should be.(BC)
Star Trek: Nemesis
Full text review.
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
(1982) Star Trek always played with nautical imagery. But here, though, is the only installment in the franchise that really seems like a high-seas adventure. Kirk matches up against a Melville-quoting space pirate (gorgeously played by Ricardo Montalban). The directing (by Nicholas Meyer) and acting is of a uniformly high leveleven Shatner, monarch of hams, is moved to a truly moving performance. Reliably humdrum television hacks Leonard Nimoy, Walter Koenig and Kirstie Alley (as a perky Vulcanette) similarly reach into themselves to find fuel for something epic. (RvB)
Star Wars: Special Edition
Full text review.
(PG; 125 min.) The Star Wars trilogynow being rereleased in cleaned-up printsis a roller-coaster ride so technically precise that it convinced a lot of politicians and defense contractors it could be built in real life. The general passion for the Star Wars movies is probably due to the fact that it was the first real movie a lot of grownup children saw. The new prints feature some revamped explosions and sound effects, and some new scenes of Jabba the Hut, with a stuck-pig expression on his face just like the one Casper the Friendly Ghost used to get when he used to discover someone teasing a bunny. (RvB)
Star Wars: Episode IThe Phantom Menace
Full text reviews.
Star Wars: Episode IIAttack of the Clones
Full text review.
Star Wars: Episode IIAttack of the Clones (IMAX)
(PG; 142 min.) The highlight is a scene on a colossal assembly line, derived from the great Bob Clampett/Daffy Duck cartoon Baby Bottleneck: Jumbo stamping machines try to make robots out of the characters. Maybe the assembly line should have won. Then again, perhaps the film will look a whole better remastered for the giant IMAX screen. Either the special effects will be overwhelming, or you'll really be able to pick them apart.
Star Wars: Episode IIIRevenge of the Sith
Full text review.
(PG-13; 140 min.) The long-hoped-for summer-box-office savior is no masterpiece, but unlike the last two episodes, Sith happens. Though tempted to the Dark Side by his enormous fortune, George Lucas decided to add some actual political commentary to Episode IIIRevenge of the Sith (Anakin: "If you're not with me, then you're my enemy!" Obi-Wan: "Only a Sith deals in absolutes!"), which shows that there are some things even escapism can't escape. Lucas' epic films inflamed some all-too-easily inflamed imaginations. They spawned Star Wars weaponry, Ronald Reagan's deep thoughts about the Evil Empire and the names of Enron's imaginary subsidiary companies. So this last-minute identification of Bush's conquistador policies with the Dark Force is something of a real shock. Revenge of the Sith is as episodic as its predecessors. The interplanetary scenes are once again pasted together with bizarrely shaped computerized wipes. Still, this keystone in the Star Wars series proceeds, in its own square-wheeled way, to an operatic point: the Chancellor becoming the Emperor, and the Jedi scattered from their temple. If technology is what this way-too-sexless sextet is about, the tech side has improved dramatically since the last one. Episode III looks light-years better than its two predecessors. The computerized color palette has grown more sophisticated, yet more natural. Pity there was no technology advanced enough to repair Hayden Christensen's essential lack of mojo (apparently only evil can give you mojo, since Vader has plenty of it). The Emperor is probably right. Resistance is futile. The Star Wars saga is made up of basically terrible movies, but it has achieved stature just by being around so long. The old movie Force is with these films; they are suffused with the personalities of everything that went before themall those Errol Flynn and Flash Gordon matinees. Even if you know better, you can't resist reverberating inside while watching the Emperor knight his new apprentice: "From this day forward, you shall be known as Darth Vader!" The clunkiness just adds to the charm. (RvB)
State and Main
Full text review.
State Fair
(1945) Rodgers and Hammerstein's bucolic musical remake of a 1933 Will Rogers picture, featuring the adventures of a farm family and their prize hog, Blue Boy. The film is best remembered for its catchy theme song and the ballad "It Might As Well Be Spring." (RvB)
The Statement
Full text review.
The Station Agent
Full text review.
Stay
(R; 98 min.) Marc Forster is either the world's most underrated or overrated director, depending on who you're screaming about it with. Personally, I think his Monster's Ball and Finding Neverland are the kind of movies that seem notable while you're watching them but, as Ricky Roma says of great meals in Glengarry Glen Ross, fade with time. However, you can't say he doesn't have range; this latest film is a Twilight Zone-type thriller about Ewan McGregor being haunted by visions of the dead. (Capsule preview by SP)
When hoity-toity psychiatrist Sam Foster (Ewan McGregor) inherits troubled young patient Henry (Ryan Gosling), who is insistent on committing suicide on his upcoming 21st birthday, Sam tries everything he can to change young Henry's mind. But drawing himself into Henry's troubles proves to be a poor decision. The worse decision? Going to see Stay. The storyline exists to serve a plethora of cinematic tricks that overload the film so badly that a junior-college film student wouldn't want to take credit for it, and the whole thing serves up a twist ending so simplistic and insulting that it belongs in the trash bin of a Twilight Zone writer's office. (JL)
Steal Big, Steal Little
(PG-13; 134 min.) You'll wonder if this is a film about a family land war or the Second Coming, so pure and good is the hero of Steal Big, Steal Little. Big-hearted Ruben Martinez (Andy Garcia) finds himself in a legal brouhaha with his amoral twin brother, Robby Martin (also played by Garcia), when their wealthy adoptive mother bequeaths her enormous Santa Barbara estate to the trustworthy but easily duped Ruben. For those of us unfamiliar with the inner workings of property law, the legal battle that ensues becomes one more obstacle in an already confusing story that's crammed with numerous interesting ideas and yet too many uninteresting characters. Robby and his land-developer cohorts are ridiculously evil, and Ruben, although likable, is niceness to the point of nausea. The film does celebrate a bit of California's Mexican heritage and makes a few timely jabs at immigration laws even in its heavy-handed proclamations that land "ownership" often means nothing more than a piece of paper. (HZ)
Stealing Beauty
Full text review.
(R; 119 min.) The snoozy new Bernardo Bertolucci film represents Bertolucci's return to moviemaking in Italy after an international career with such films as The Last Emperor and Little Buddha. Hence, it is a working vacationa few snoozy summer days of lolling in the Tuscan hills with friends, gossiping, drinking wine and trooping down to the nearest town for some pizza. This group of vacationers is finally stirred by the arrival of Lucy Harmon (Liv Tyler), a gorgeous young American virgin seemingly doubly impenetrable, by fiat of nationality as well as maidenhead. It is her beauty that our director proposes to steal, and he does so, coasting his camera on her face as she tries to enjoy herself while being perturbed by men, among them Jeremy Irons as a dying house guest intent on one last conquest. I suppose in Bertolucci's view you're either for or against sex, as if it were a ballot initiativehow did the director of Last Tango in Paris ever become so fuzzy-minded? Stealing Beauty is too wispy to be anything but erotica, but it is erotica that stints portions. Sex-positivity, like beauty, isn't enough to sustain a film. (RvB)
Stealing Harvard
(PG-13; 83 min.) Jason Lee and Tom Green will do anything to get a young woman into the nation's educational playpen for the elite.
Stealth
(PG-13) Has there ever been a good movie about a supervehicle? Firefox? Blue Thunder? Killdozer? The Car? Nope, they all sucked. Well, I kind of liked The Car, actually, but sadly there's no cover of demonic possession here to spice things up. Instead, Jamie Foxxthey must have signed him up pre-Oscar, huh?and Jessica Biel star in a movie about a superplane with an "artificial intelligence program" (the premise-teat from which all frustrated sci-fi screenwriters suck) that goes whackety-whack. They're determined to destroy it, but personally I think they're being hasty. There are plenty of uses for an intelligent bomb-delivery system, like putting Herbie out of his misery once and for all. (Capsule preview by SP)
Steal This Movie
Full text review.
Steam
(Unrated; 96 min.) Orientalism deluxe. Francesco (Alessandro Gassman) plays an unhappily married Milanese businessman who inherits a Turkish bathhouse in Istanbul from his aunt, the black sheep in his family. The bathhouse, once a gay men's club, is the last little piece standing in the way of the bulldozing of its neighborhood by developers. As Francesco gets to know the family who ran the hamam (bathhouse), he becomes convinced that he might be able to fix the place up and run it as in the old days. The spirit of the steambath seems to have taken him over, since he also develops a romantic interest in Mehmet (Mehmet Gunsur), the son of the Turkish family who are his hosts and guides. Despite how director Ferzan Ozpetek describes this as a love story, the culture is more intriguing than the individuals. It's as if the Turks depicted had only two sides, compliant and violent. (RvB)
Steamboy
Full text review.
(PG-13; 126 min.) In the world of animation, a new film by Katsuhiro Otomo generates the same expectations as George Lucas returning to Star Wars. Arguably the most revolutionary Japanese animated film ever made, Otomo's Akira (1988) helped introduce Americans to this unique genre and increased its popularly a hundredfold. Meanwhile, Otomo kept a low profile, waiting until the mid-'90s to begin Steamboy, a new film that would grow to be perhaps the most expensive and most eagerly anticipated anime of all time. Despite the monumental nature of this event, however, American distributor Sony Pictures has decided to release the film in its full-length, Japanese-subtitled, 120-minute version only in San Francisco and other select cities. Other markets (including San Jose) will instead get an English-dubbed, 106-minute version. I can't comment on the long version, but I suspect that the cutting has the same effect as Miramax's recent butchering of Stephen Chow's Shaolin Soccer. The basic plot is still there, but the rhythm and, more importantly, the breathing room are gone. The short version careens across the screen with a noisy, unpleasant clatter, the plot points hitting like so many clanging nails. Only a trip to the big city or a look at the future DVD will show if the real Steamboy has any potential. (JMA)
Steel
(PG-13; 105 min.) The Hollywood minds must have been hard at work creating this celluloid flophey, why don't we get Shaq (Shaquille O'Neal) to star as DC Comics' street-crime-fighting man of steel, fill him up with urban catch phrases and jokes about missed free throws, then pit the chromed superhero against nebulous gunrunner, former Brat Packer and all-around bad actor Judd Nelson. Feeling more like an A-Team episode than a feature film, Steel isn't interesting enough to be taken seriously and isn't smart enough to be funny. Shaq is sincere, trying his dog-gone best to be an actor, and a supporting role by Shaft star Richard Roundtree adds some credibility, but it's not enough to save this battle of slow wits from its childish self. (KR)
Stella Maris
(1918) Mary Pickford was nicknamed "America's Sweetheart" because of her immense popularity with moviegoers during the teens and 1920s. Later, her marriage to Douglas Fairbanks Sr. made the two of them the most famous couple in Hollywood. Though Pickford was best known as a spunky, virginal sprite of indeterminate age, she was also a keen businesswoman: "It took longer to make one of Mary's contracts than it took to make one of Mary's pictures," the producer Samuel Goldwyn once said. Here, Pickford plays a dual role, as a rich lady and her servant, a crippled girl. Silent.
Stella Street
(R; 80 min.) Celebrity impersonation has rightly been considered a rung below plate spinning in the world of entertainment, and unfortunately, the British import Stella Street doesn't do much to advance the art. This certainly isn't SCTV. Based on a long-running BBC-2 series, its premise is that a quiet southwest London suburban circle has suddenly become the pied-a-terre of A-list Hollywood stars. Drawn by the luminaries, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards buy the corner shopwith less than hilarious consequences. The cast membersPhil Cornwell, John Sessions and Ronni Aconaplay the stars and their entourage. They also play a pair of locals who watch the invasion, first with bemusement, then with anger. Mrs. Huggett is a charwoman who gets hired to clean the celebrity pads; Len McMonotony is a string-vest-wearing weirdo of the school of Rowan Atkinson, a North English gardener with a taste for arson. Cornwell seems the best at the game, doing a first-rate Michael Caine and David Bowie. Acona's version of Madonna is good and loathsome, if second-rate compared to Julie Brown's attack in the HBO special Medusa: Dare to Be Truthful. The joke about art thieves trying to steal one of Damien Hirst's grisly (but apparently blue-chip) taxidermed calves is a highlight. But the Yank accents and idioms are very spotty. And the Nicholson, Pacino and Rolling Stones imitations are kind of what you'd dread seeing performed against a brick wall at Laffy McChuckles in Wichita. (RvB)
The Stepford Wives (2004)
Full text review.
(PG-13; 93 min.) I can tell you're annoyed at me for being excited to see how director Frank Oz turned the earnest '70s feminist fable (one of my cult favorites of the era) into a dark comedy. Just when I was going to give you coffee! I thought we were friends! Friends ... friends ... (Capsule preview by SP)
Stephen King's Thinner
(R; 92 min.) A refreshingly straight-faced adaptation turning on what one character calls "a Gypsy curse straight out of Shock Theater." An obese lawyer, Billy Halleck (Robin John Burke), pays a severe price for overconsumption, racism and reckless driving when he knocks over an old Gypsy woman; cursed, he finds himself wasting away to a skeleton. King is one of the last people in movies to be allowed to suggest that even a handsome-looking small town can harbor corruption; his stories always work best when he's drawing horror out of real-life situations. The plot is essentially a realistically dark disease-of-the-week tale, with Halleck's physical change accompanied by maniaBilly suspects that his wife (Lucinda Jenney) is having an affair with his doctor (Sam Freed). Director Tom Holland, not given to winking at the audience, handles matters seriously, though the movie never transcends Romany stereotyping, and is hampered by discursive sequences of a car crash and a gun fight that nearly ruin the mood. (RvB)
Step Into Liquid
(Unrated; 95 min.) Usually I'd recommend you avoid doing so. Luckily, this isn't a film about creepy moist spots on the carpet but rather a documentary about surfing. The genius ad line promises: "No special effects. No stuntmen. No stereotypes."
Stepmom
(PG-13; 127 min.) Despite an impressive cast that turns in solid performances, Chris Columbus' Stepmom never achieves greatness. In this bittersweet story of a broken family in turmoil, Susan Sarandon stars as Jackie, the perfect mom, who is worshipped by her two children (Jena Malone and the adorable Liam Aiken). When her husband (Ed Harris) becomes serious about Isabel (Julia Roberts), a hip young fashion photographer, the family dynamic shifts as the children reluctantly spend their time between the two homes and, more importantly, between the two women. Inexperienced Isabel struggles with becoming a responsible parent-figure and winning the children's respect. When the family learns that Jackie is dying, both women must come to terms with Isabel's new role as the children's stepmother, and in a slow process, Jackie grooms Isabel for motherhood. While this picture successfully captures the ugliness, jealousy and general sadness that this painful situation creates, the almost-plodding script feels forced, as if it's been tinkered with a few too many times. While the characters are sympathetic on an individual level, together they never quite gel. The predictable ending may leave a person sobbing, but it's a cheap cry that leaves one resenting Columbus' relentless emotional manipulation. (SQ)
Sting of Chance
Full text review.
Stir of Echoes
(R; 112 min.) (R; 112 min.) At a beer-soaked party in Chicago, a telephone lineman (Kevin Bacon) allows himself to be hypnotized as a joke; afterward, he discovers that he has gained the power to see a ghost of a young girl that is haunting his house. Stir of Echoes is the directoral debut of David Koepp, screenwriter for both Jurassic Park films, and it's a credible attempt at scaled-down horror, based (loosely) on the typically sturdy plotting of Richard Matheson's 1958 novel. Bacon seems to have found that getting a character together was easier that figuring out what to do with the character once he was created. Bacon's Mike is apparently an old punk-rock musician who has settled down uneasily to family life; his wife (Kathryn Erbe) has just unpleasantly surprised him with a new pregnancy. You'll wait in vain for the gaff that worked so well in The Shiningthat the supernatural threat will be a manifestation of Mike's resentment toward his wife and his job. Koepp puts up all this background just to leave it there, and Bacon's acting seems like a stunt, instead of a character that builds. However, there's a certain creepiness to the old neighborhood, with its drooping trees and gray skies. As every critic in the U.S. has pointed out by now, it's unfortunate that Stir of Echoes has been released into the slipstream caused by the very similarand very goodsurprise hit The Sixth Sense. But Stir of Echoes doesn't need a point of comparison to look inferior; Koepp doesn't direct this simple story with the pointedness and economy it needs, and the stretched-out tale is padded to two hours. (RvB)
Stonewall
Full text review.
(Unrated; 98 min.) A fictionalized account of the 1969 riot outside Manhattan's Stonewall Inn that was the shot heard 'round the world for gay people. The event is seen through the eyes of two characters: the earnest hotspur Matty (Frederick Weller) and his lover, the frivolous drag queen LaMiranda (Guillermo Diaz). The late Nigel Finch's film is at its best when depicting sequences of the early days of the gay liberation movement; we get a good sense of how underground it all was, in scenes of rented basements and dress codes for picketing. (RvB)
Stop Making Sense
Full text review.
(1984) Jonathan Demme's narrativeless account of a Talking Heads show can make you feel like you're seeing a rock concert for the first time. It embodies a perfect show; multiple points of view, no harassment by drunks, no gouging by concessionaires, no intimidation by security guards. The drama builds from a solo performanceodd-duck vocalist David Byrne's nigh-novelty hit "Psycho Killer"to a full chorale behind "What a Day That Was." This ever-beguiling film explains without words how a stripped down avant-garde quartet became a grand show band. (RvB)
Stormy Weather/Cabin in the Sky
Full text review.
The Story of Adele H.
(1975) Isabelle Adjani, not yet 20, stars in a classic about the art of stalking. It's Francis Truffaut's true life story of Adele, the passion-maddened daughter of Victor Hugo. Bruce Robinsonyes, that Bruce Robinson, scriptwriter of Withnail and I, and still an actor todayplays the dandyish English officer for whose sake Adele crosses an ocean and destroys herself. (RvB)
Stormy Weather/Sun Valley Serenade
(1943/1941) Glenn Miller flies to Idaho and gets wrapped up with some minor musical-comedy complications involving a Norwegian war refugee (ice-skating champ Sonja Henie). Well-appointed stuff that skates along, with the aid of Astaire-Rogers choreographer Hermes Pan, songs by Harry Warren and Mack Gordon and "Chattanooga Choo-Choo" as performed by Dorothy Dandridge and the Nicholas Brothers. BILLED WITH Stormy Weather. "Celebrating the Magnificent Contribution of the Colored Race to the Entertainment of the World During the Past 25 Years." After receiving a magazine with this lofty sentiment on the cover, retired hoofer Bill "Bojangles" Robinsoncalled "Bill Williamson"takes a trip down memory lane. There were musical numbers, yes, but there was also tragedy, due to his strangely abstract love affair with singer Selina Rogers (Lena Horne). She wanted the stage; he wanted the home in the country. Still, there is hope for a happy ending. If she is rigid in the acting scenes, the beautiful Horne is superb in her performance of the wartime title number (is that a real tear in her eye?), complete with a ballet in the tempestuous clouds performed by Katherine Dunham and her dancers. Shallower natures will prefer the berserk exuberance of Cab Calloway performing "Geechy Joe" in a voluptuous zoot suit, as well as Fats Waller flirting his way through "Ain't Misbehaving," shortly before his death at age 39. The Nicholas Brothers' athletic dance routine is a jaw-dropper, even for those who have seen it all. And the house band includes Benny Carter, Coleman Hawkins and Illinois Jacquet. There are racist moments, naturally, like the gollywog bonnets during the cake-walk routine, but these incidents don't detract much from one of the finest musicals of the 1940s. The studios should have made a hundred movies with these talents. Thanks to racism, they didn't. Our loss. (RvB)
A Story of Healing
A screening of A Story of Healing, a documentary about medical volunteers who provide reconstructive surgeries to disfigured and disabled children in Vietnam. The film won the Oscar for Best Documentary Short Subject this year. (Screens June 29, 8pm, at the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts, 500 Castro St, Mountain View; $25; 650/903-6000.)
The Story of Temple Drake/Three on a Match
(1933/1932) William Faulkner's sordid but frequently incisive 1931 novel Sanctuary was the source. Temple Drake, a man-teasing college girl"too young to realize that people don't just break the law for a holiday"is abandoned by her drunken cake-eater boyfriend in a bootlegger's lair. She's raped and falls into sexual slavery, but goes along with it, maybe liking it, maybe notand thereby hang a thousand English-lit theses. Miriam Hopkins stars as the Southern belle gone wrong; Jack La Rue is the "Popeye" character, renamed "Trigger." BILLED WITH Three on a Match. Three girls who were fellow students at P.S. 62 go their separate ways: Mary (Joan Blondell) ends up in reform school; Bette Davis becomes a secretary; and Vivian (Ann Dvorak), the ritziest of the three, marries well but sickens of the rich life. She ditches her silk-hatted husband (an uncustomarily boring Warren William) in favor of strong drink and weak men. It's Dvorak's picture. Her awkward but forceful acting has something juicy that smoother actors lack. Humphrey Bogart has a small part as the kind of stolid, staring gunman type he'd later be mocking, right before punching them out. Did Bogart learn the toast "Here's looking at you" from this movie. (RvB)
The Story of Us
(R) Bland and lifeless, Rob Reiner's watered-down, wannabe weeper never gets off the ground. Michelle Pfeiffer and Bruce Willis star as an unhappily married couple who keep a stiff upper lip for the sake of their two kids while they try to figure out if they're still an "us." The problem with The Story of Us is that it's not a romantic comedy or a romantic drama. It's not romantic at all; it's just sort of awful. The script's poorly written, the dialogue's trite and there's no chemistry between any two characters. While always lovely, Pfeiffer just looks strained and Willis gracelessly smirks his way through the film. There's no heart and no soul in this disjointed disaster. Reiner never explains why the marriage is failing (Is it really because Willis' character forgets to put wiper fluid in the car?). Bubble-gummy high school romance flicks have more depth. Ultimately, The Story of Us leaves the viewer walking out with a sense of indifference and wasted time. (SQ)
The Story of the Weeping Camel
Full text review.
Storytelling
(R; 84 min.) The bilious Todd Solondz's newest, after the deceptively titled Happiness, contrasts the dithering of privileged Americans with the fury of various underdogs. In the first section, Vi (Selma Blair), a timid young student in a brutal creative-writing class, abnegates herself in front of a cold, imposing university professor (Robert Wisdom) who once won the Pulitzer Prize for his writing. In the second, longer section, a dim, foolish screw-up who calls himself Scooby (Mark Webber) is sought out as the perfect subject for a semi-ironic documentary, much to the confusion of Scooby's angry parents (Julie Hagerty and John Goodman) and their maid, who suffered through her own youth in El Salvador. (RvB)
The Straight Story
Full text review.
Strange Brew
(1983) Good day, eh? Staple characters of the SCTV sketch comedy show, Bob and Doug McKenzie (played by Dave Thomas and Rick Moranis), guzzle beer and get in more trouble than a hoser has a right to.
Strange Days
(R; 145 min.) In L.A. at the end of this millennium, the drug of choice is "playback"other people's memories pumped directly into the cerebral cortext. An ex-cop turned pusher (Ralph Fiennes) moons after his ex-girlfriend (Juliette Lewis), now a rising rock star, while he and his beautiful-black-female-security-expert buddy (Angela Bassett) dodge a pair of rogue cops trying to cover up a murder. It's an extremely violent, bitter movie, but for the most part exciting, and surprisingly political for a thriller. Be warned that it contains a horrifying rape-murder. The ending is patently ridiculous, the first-person point of view gets pretty gimmicky after a while, and Lewis can't act worth beans. On the other hand, she's very adept at walking around in the buff, and she does that a lot here. (BC)
StrangeLand
(R) Imagine the horrifying feeling of cold steel needles sinking into your fleshwait, you say you got a nose ring last weekend, and it cost you $60? Now you see the natural unscariness of StrangeLand. Madman Carlton Hendrix (Dee Snider) takes the nom de torture Captain Howdy and kidnaps Colorado Springs teens, whom he forcibly pierces in his torture dungeon. According to the talkative maniac, it's all part of the important primitive rituals that have marked rites of passage since the dawn of time ("The term 'sadist' is so maligned"). Supremely incompetent police detective Mike (Kevin Gage) is the father of one of the missing girls. In the fullness of timetime which an aging Snider obviously doesn't have much left ofthe detective tracks down the maniac. After a stint in a mental hospital, Carlton is as good as new: demure, spectacled, looking much like Snider does when it comes time to meet with his stockbrokers. He's renounced his old ways. But then vengeful townspeople (led by Robert Englund) kidnap him, incompletely lynch him and set him off on a new reign of discomfort-infliction. The tackle-box-faced Snider, late of the band Twisted Sister, scripted the film, whence all of his yakking about the importance of primitive rituals and who are we to judge if a man puts turkey skewers through his buttcheeks in an attempt to seek god, etc.all arguments I'd be more willing to accept if Snider hadn't put them in the mouth of a madman. At his age, Snider would be better off arguing that a total hip replacement counts as body manipulation. (RvB)
The Strange Love of Martha Ivers/On Dangerous Ground
(1946/1951) Barbara Stanwyck stars as a woman with a secret, which is uncovered by the reappearance of her first love. This early noir also stars Lizabeth Scott, Van Heflin and Kirk Douglas in his first film appearance. BILLED WITH On Dangerous Ground. "No beast so fierce but knows some touch of pity / but I am a man and have none."Richard III. Nicholas Ray directs Robert Ryan in this outstanding noir. It's about plainclothes detective Jim Wilson, whose boiling rage is bringing him to self-destruction. One night, Wilson goes too far, kicking in a suspect's bladder (Richard Irving plays the taunting masochist who provokes him). His superiors send Wilson out to snow country on a rehabilitation assignment to investigate a murder. Therein a plot switch that seems like Andre Gide's Pastoral SymphonyWilson learns to feel again through his attraction to a blind woman (d
