Thursday, July 19, 2012

Film Review - Magic Mike

Directors: Steven Soderbergh
Cast: Adam Rodriguez, Alex Pettyfer, Channing Tatum, Cody Horn, James Martin Kelly, Joe Manganiello, Kevin Nash, Matt Bomer, Matthew McConaughey, Olivia Munn, Reid Carolin

We can be relaxed when Jane Fonda plays a confident, unrepentant prostitute in Klute, Dolly Parton a proud madam in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas or Natalie Wood a celebrated striptease artist in Gypsy. But we feel more than a little uneasy when leading actors appear in male versions of these roles, and an essential part of Billy Wilder's Irma la Douce, Paul Schrader's American Gigolo and Paul Thomas Anderson's Boogie Nights is to make us warm to and understand Jack Lemmon, Richard Gere and Mark Wahlberg as respectively a pimp, a gigolo and a porn star.

This is the task that Steven Soderbergh has taken on in Magic Mike. His debut film, the provocatively titled but essentially chaste sex, lies and videotape, set in prosperous, middle-class Louisiana, won the Palme d'Or at the 1989 Cannes festival. Now, more than 20 films later, he's moved across the Gulf of Mexico to Tampa on the west coast of Florida with what might have been called "stripping, self-deception and G-strings", a raunchy but still essentially chaste tale set in the louche Xquisite Club, a "Male Dance Revue" venue.

Magic Mike is inspired by the teenage experiences of its principal star, Channing Tatum, and scripted by his producing partner, Reid Carolin. The toned and tanned Tatum plays Mike, a handsome, 30-ish blue-collar construction worker employed as a roofer by day and a star striptease artist by night. He lives quite well in a beach house overlooking the Gulf and is served by good-looking prostitutes, one of them a psychology student working her way through college. Apart from the fact that both of Mike's bosses are ready to pay him as little as possible, there is little suggestion of the economic necessity that drove the unemployed Sheffield steel-workers into the clothes-shedding business in The Full Monty. There is little pride and no obvious shame in his work. His aim is to save enough money to realise his true ambition – to own a firm producing superior custom-built furniture, though not, presumably, imitation Chippendale.

On a building site he meets the well-built teenage Adam (British actor Alex Pettyfer), a college dropout who's given up an athletic scholarship after a row with a coach. He inducts, or seduces, this naive youngster into the stripping business, although at the age of 19 Adam is legally too young to be working at such a place as the Xquisite. Mike's motives are interestingly mixed and unclear. He presumably needs a young follower, someone to mentor and perhaps to vindicate and validate his own dubious life.

atum plays Mike as a mumbling, ambling, charismatic sub-Brando type, and Adam has a sister, Brooke, employed as a nurse (Cody Horn), who has a certain resemblance to Eva Marie Saint in On the Waterfront. Mike is drawn to Brooke, and her ambivalent attitude to him resembles the relationship Saint has to Brando's similarly shambling, dubiously employed and charming Terry Molloy.

Adam proves an adept pupil and immediately fits into the club's all-male team, whose backstage dressing room behaviour is indistinguishable from football players or chorus girls. They only truly come alive in performance, dressing as cops, firemen, trench-coated private eyes, hoodies and other parodic macho males, before stripping down to their thongs for their laughing and shouting all-female audience, a youngish, well-heeled middle-class crowd. The stage show's thrust is pelvic but not penetrating, something it shares with the film itself. As recalled by Tatum, it's all oddly innocent and good tempered. Soderbergh, as director and cinematographer (under his customary pseudonym of Peter Andrews), gives it a golden glow. Gregory Jacobs, one of the film's producers, has said that he and Soderbergh "both felt it was something we hadn't seen in a movie before, and Channing's approach was fearless".

In fact the film isn't especially original and takes few real risks. When the stripping has to stop there is always an opaque veil in the form of a posing pouch or leather jock strap to bring an acceptable pudeur to unacceptable pudenda. One wonders what Michael Winterbottom, an equally versatile and prolific director who really does go out on a limb, would have brought to this milieu. Moreover, the film never touches on such matters as the performers engaging intimately with the customers, and only briefly raises the question of ageing and of the role of the mafia muscling in on the business. This latter arises when some mob enforcers pursue Adam for drug money that he can't repay, and Mike is forced to draw on his precious savings.

The film's most interesting and memorable character is Dallas, the club's flamboyant owner, whose aim is to move to Miami and get into the big time. As played by Matthew McConaughey in a Stetson, black waistcoat, leather chaps and little else, he's a warm-up artist who can bring the seated customers from zero to near orgasm in 10 seconds without leaving the stage. One of the rare occasions he's seen in broad daylight outside the club is when he escorts his boys to a sunny "sand-bar party" in the Gulf, an outing that resembles the episode in Max Ophüls's Le Plaisir when the Victorian madam takes her girls on an outing into the Normandy countryside. McConaughey's performance reminds one of two other great movie MCs, Gig Young's increasingly hysterical superintendent of the dance marathon in Sydney Pollack's They Shoot Horses, Don't They? and Joel Grey's sinister host of the Kit-Kat club in Bob Fosse's Cabaret, both winning Oscars for best supporting actor.




Film Review - The Dark Knight Rises

Directors: Christopher Nolan
Cast: Aidan Gillen, Anne Hathaway, Christian Bale, Daniel Sunjata, Gary Oldman, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Juno Temple, Liam Neeson, Marion Cotillard, Matthew Modine, Morgan Freeman, Sir Michael Caine, Tom Hardy

Old superheroes never die; they simply hang up their capes and retreat to the shadows, awaiting the moment when fashions change and they're required again. One minute Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) is hobbling around his country pile, leaning on his stick like a latterday Howard Hughes and woefully proclaiming that "there's nothing out there for me". The next he's back in the bat-suit, back in the saddle – recalled to save the world or Warner Bros, whatever comes first.

Preamble complete, the dark knight duly rises for the bruising final stanza in Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy, a satisfying saga of revolution and redemption that ends the tale on a note of thunder. If viewers were wanting a corrective to the jumpsuit antics of The Avengers, or the noodling high-school angst of The Amazing Spider-Man, then rest assured that Batman delivers in spades. Here is a film of granite, monolithic intensity; a superhero romp so serious that it borders on the comical, like a children's fancy-dress party scripted by Victor Hugo and scored by Wagner.

Still, cometh the hour, cometh the man. Gotham City is facing nuclear catastrophe, with the authorities powerless in the face of a hydra-headed terrorist threat. No sooner has Wayne affixed his bat-ears than he's being bamboozled by a mercurial cat-burglar (Anne Hathaway) and savaged by Bane (Tom Hardy); a fanatical warlord who comes disguised, rather alarmingly, as a monstrous rough-trade gimp. Poor Batman. Bane not only out-punches our hero, he out-rasps him too – delivering his lines in a choked, muddy drawl that makes him sound like Marlon Brando, down a well-shaft, gargling from a jerry-can. Bane might be fomenting a mass uprising against Gotham's moneyed elite; he might be singing the show-tunes from La Cage aux Folles. It is sometimes hard to tell.

So Bane lures Batman to the sewers and proceeds to beat him to a pulp, only for Batman to rise up, yet again, on a mission to storm the city and save the day. Bane can't believe it. He thinks it's impossible and says as much, gazing in horror at the illuminated bat-sign that signals his enemy's return. "Impoffububble," he says.

Even at this stage, however, it is by no means certain that Batman will prevail. Gotham City is now in lock-down; with its bridges detonated and smirking revolutionaries in charge of the courts. Moreover, the man himself has been showing distinct signs of wear and tear. A doctor tells Wayne that he has no cartilage in his knees, and that his brain tissue is concussed. His back has been broken and imperfectly set (by Tom Conti, incidentally, which doesn't inspire much confidence). As Wayne hauls himself up from his slough of despond, he seems all-but primed to be sent tumbling right back down again.

No such worries for the film itself. The Dark Knight Rises may be a hammy, portentous affair but Nolan directs it with aplomb. He takes these cod-heroic, costumed elements and whisks them into a tale of heavy-metal fury, full of pain and toil, surging uphill, across the flyovers, in search of a climax. "I'm still a believer in the Batman," murmurs Joseph Gordon-Levitt's rookie cop at one point. Arm-twisted, senses reeling, I am forced to concede that I am too.