Personal blog of freelance critic Jake Cole, with exclusive content and links to writing around the Web.
Sunday, April 15, 2012
The Cabin in the Woods (Drew Goddard, 2012)
Drew Goddard made his feature debut with 2008's Cloverfield, penning the film's ambitious but misguided script that sought to comment on modern mindsets regarding the documentation of our lives via the kaiju film genre. His idea, clever on paper, was that a group of privileged New York yuppies contending with 9/11-esque frenzy would nevertheless ensure that their bewilderment and horror was caught on video for posterity, or at least for YouTube hits. Unfortunately for Goddard, director Matt Reeves' muddled direction and some dire acting performances sapped whatever potential the script contained, resulting in a lifeless film that only occasionally hinted at just how far it wanted to go with its metaphor.
By teaming up with his old Buffy and Angel boss Joss Whedon, however, Goddard got a second chance to say something with horror, and The Cabin in the Woods truly delivers on his promise. At times recalling Sam Raimi's 2009 return-to-form Drag Me to Hell, The Cabin in the Woods differs from that film, and other self-aware horror movies, by not merely calling attention to horror tropes but breaking them down, working out how they apply to the genre, as well as how filmmakers (and participatory audiences) apply them to it. To oversimplify it into a pitch, where movies such as Drag Me to Hell or the Scream series are about horror films, The Cabin in the Woods is about horror itself.
Friday, November 11, 2011
The Rum Diary (Bruce Robinson, 2011)
The Rum Diary, Thompson's fictionalized account of his time in Puerto Rico as a struggling writer, itself embodies a sense of emergence in the author. Imperfect as the book is, it shows Thompson on the cusp of finding himself, precisely through the substances that would later derail him. It is in Thompson's most booze-soaked, tongue-loosened moments that The Rum Diary foretells the man who would win infamy by spilling out his chemically rotted brain with each article. But Robinson's depiction of the cult hero's excess carries a sense of foreboding irony that would make him the perfect choice to survey the writer's late career, not the birth of his inspiration.
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Let Me In
However, I'm linking my review for Matt Reeves' unexpectedly wonderful remake of the haunting Let the Right One In, one of my favorite films of the preceding decade, because I don't think I have much to add to it. Much of what I wrote in my review of Tomas Alfredson's original applies to Reeves' film as well, but key differences make them divergent and equally worthy in their own ways. I did not care for Reeves' Cloverfield despite the valid excuses for its paper-thin writing, bludgeoning post-9/11 culture commentary and infuriating direction, but this movie is as far as you can get from that glorified mess. The clear link that bonds the two is, of course, a love of monster movies, but where Cloverfield was about the monster in blatantly symbolic terms, Let Me In connects with the monster, tries to understand it. In the process, it sees the evil in all of us. I still prefer Let the Right One In, but I was pleasantly surprised by this movie and look forward to revisiting it often.
So, please, check out my review at Final Girl Project, and also take a look at Matthew Zoller Seitz's spot-on praise for the best sequence of the film, and one of the best of any 2010 movie.
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Burn After Reading


A subtle send-up of the spy thrillers by John le Carré, the film centers on four main characters: Linda (Frances McDormand), who wants plastic surgery so she can finally find the perfect man; her airheaded best friend Chad (Brad Pitt); Osborne Cox (John Malkovich), an alcoholic CIA agent who plans to write a scathing memoir after being forced to resign; and ex-Secret Service agent Harry Pfarrer (George Clooney), who’s having an affair with Osborne’s wife (Tilda Swinton). While Cox’s wife files for divorce, Chad finds a CD full of CIA secrets at the gym in which he and Linda work. Seeing a way to pay for her elective surgeries, Linda (with Chad’s help) conspires to blackmail Cox in exchange for the disc.
From here on out it’s standard Coens’ fare: dumb people try to pull off something far beyond their limited grasp and understanding, and a lot of people die painful deaths. The brothers are clearly influenced by the work of Flannery O’Connor; “Fargo” or “Barton Fink” are grotesque morality plays just as complex, esoteric, horrifying and (often) darkly funny as O’Connor’s short stories. We don’t really get anyone to root for, save perhaps gym boss Ted (Richard Jenkins), who longs for Linda just the way she is. Everyone else is a self-absorbed monster.
What really sets this apart from their previous screwball efforts is the acting. Swinton has a look of perennial exasperation, as if the totality of everyone’s idiocy is too much to bear. Malkovich brings all his snarling venom to the forefront as the misanthropic Cox; when he spits out to one character, “You’re in league with morons,” his words are so acidic they could burn through steel.
In the latest collaboration with the brothers, Clooney does a fine job of tearing down his leading-man persona for more character-driven work. A sex-obsessed, paranoid man, Harry generally stops panicking only long enough to run a few miles and bed yet another woman. Clooney has proven several times over his ability to carry a film, but it is when he takes a back seat that he really shines.
But the real stars are McDormand and Pitt. McDormand, in her best performance since 2005’s “North Country,” is the kind of person who thinks she’s humble and down to earth but is really elitist. She acknowledges (and greatly exaggerates) her own physical flaws but expects her soulmate to be perfect. Linda’s disposition is that of McDormand’s own Marge Gunderson (“Fargo”) mixed with a bitter edge brought on by age and loneliness.
Despite a host of great performances, Brad Pitt steals the show. He hops through the film with earbuds on, raucously dancing to music only he can hear, with facial expressions that look almost childish. His role is the smallest of the principal cast, but I can guarantee it’s the one you’ll be talking about the most.
“Burn After Reading” certainly won’t keep the attention of all the converts “No Country For Old Men” brought to these stylish cult directors, but people looking for another surreal, non-linear, brilliant mess in the style of “The Big Lebowski” should be quite pleased. At one point, a CIA superior (played by J.K. Simmons, who can always turn every piece of his dialogue into a one-liner) tells his subordinate to come back to him “when it all makes sense.” He’s in the wrong movie. A friend I saw it with said it dragged. I disagree; like all of the brothers’ films, it simply takes its time. Aided by director of photography Emmanuel Lubezki (filling in for a busy Roger Deakins), the Coen brothers have offered up 2008's best-looking comedy, and one of its funniest.
Thursday, January 22, 2009
The Visitor

Written and Directed by: Tom McCarthy

Jenkins plays Walter Vale, a college professor stuck in the same class he's been teaching all his life but never cared about. He flunks a student's late paper without ever bothering to ask what the kid's "personal reasons" were for the tardy submission, though perhaps more out of self-loathing than any strictness on his part. One day a colleague informs Vale he has to go to New York City to give a conference on the book he co-authored. Vale tries to come up with some lame excuses before finally admitting that he only put his name on the book as a favor and has no clue how to give a lecture on it.
But go he must, and soon Vale walks into his apartment in New York, goes to the bathroom, and finds an African girl taking a bath. Her boyfriend Tarek rushes in threatening Vale before the befuddled professor finally manages to spit out that the couple is in his apartment. Tarek, a Syrian djembe player, and Zainab, a jewelry maker from Senegal, are both illegal immigrants who got swindled by an opportunist who dumped them in an empty apartment. The couple packs their things to go, but Walter stops them and invites them to come back in and stay.
Walter slowly changes while living with his new friends. On his way to deliver a lecture written by someone else for a book he didn't really co-author, he stops in a park and listens to two street performers drumming on plastic buckets. Vale watches for a moment, then barely bobs his head momentarily along with the beat. Jenkins turns this simple gesture into almost a plot point without calling attention to it. Soon he comes alive for perhaps the first time in his life. Tarek teaches him to play the djembe, while Zainab slowly warms up to Walter as she learns to trust him. Before long Walter can play full songs with Tarek, and the look of pure elation on his face feels natural yet transcendent.
Around the midpoint of the film immigration officials arrest Tarek and place him in detention, which drives Walter to do everything in his power to get his best friend free. A fourth major character joins the film, Tarek's mother Mouna. This could have been a death trap in the form of a contrived romance, but McCarthy steers above such pitfalls. Walter and Mouna do bond however; both know lives of unfulfillment and form a tight bond. You get the sense that a romance could develop between the two, but we are fortunately never rushed into it.
The ending of the film likewise avoids the cliché of the "happy ending." Instead we get a moment of simple poignancy that reaffirms Vale's new outlook on life, even in the midst of hardship. While the film may drag a bit in the middle, its understatement and resonance more than makes up for any shortcomings. Though Jenkins will get the lion's share of the kudos, all 4 of the actor possess a terrific on-screen charisma as individuals and within the small ensemble. The Visitor came and went with little fanfare this year, but there's a lot to love in this little film, and I highly recommend it.