#21- Cabaret

Quick Recap: The movie follows Sally Bowles, an American, and Brian Roberts, an Englishman, as they navigate their way through Berlin in the 1930s. Bowles is a singer at the local Kit Kat club, while Roberts is working on his doctorate in philosophy while tutoring students in English. The two become friends and later lovers. While their affair is going on, the Nazi party is beginning its rise in Germany and by the end of the film has completely taken over Berlin.

Fun (?) Fact: If you are looking for a film version of the stage musical, this ain’t it. Cliff Bradshaw on the stage is now Brian Roberts. Sally Bowles is American instead of British and most of the songs have been cut while others have been added in.

It's ok because Joel Grey is still the Emcee

It’s ok because Joel Grey is still the Emcee

My thoughts: Let’s just go ahead and get this out of the way before I start this review: The only association I have of Liza Minnelli and pop culture is this:

other Lucille!

other Lucille!

Whew. I feel better now. So anyway, I saw the stage version of ‘Cabaret’ a few years ago and quite enjoyed it so I figured this would be the same but better. The fact that the film version was so different from the stage version took me awhile to pick up on. I just thought that maybe I had slept through the whole thing or just completely missed the point. The themes are the same though.

As someone who doesn’t always enjoy ‘sing talking’, I like the director’s idea to put all musical numbers inside the Kit Kat club and to have them complement the plot that is going on outside.Those scenes were my favorite, especially seeing the rise of the Nazi party in the club. At the beginning of the film, members of the Nazi Party are kicked out but by the end they make up the majority of patrons. It was such a striking way to tell that part of the story.

Liza Minnelli is brilliant in her role as Sally Bowles. She plays the perfect mix of broken, optimistic, captivating girl. I spent the entire movie going back and forth between feeling sorry for her and loving her unique style.

The issue I had with the movie was how hard everyone tried to drive the point that pre war Germany is BAD. It’s a place where people cheat on each other, have abortions and go to a seedy nightclub where anything can happen. So it’s no wonder the Nazi Party has risen to power in all this mess. In reality, it was much more complicated than that. The same goes for the subplot of Fritz and Natalia. It was like someone said, ‘Hey! We are making a film about pre-war Berlin! Where are the Jews? The audience is going to get really confused if we don’t throw in some Jews!’ And so they did.

The most powerful scene in the movie is at the beer garden as the young boy stands up and starts to sing a German national song. He begins the song as a loving tribute to his country and then people start standing up and singing along. At the end of the number, everyone is angry and the song has become a sort of marching song for the Nazi Party.

Final review: 3/5. I loved the musical numbers at the Kit Kat club and loved Liza Minnelli’s performance. I can see why it is considered a great film, but I wouldn’t want to sit through it again.

Where/how I watched it: Netflix DVD while I enjoyed a St. Arnold Icon. It is not my favorite hefeweizen but it was good.

go get some!

go get some!

Up next: Still waiting on Psycho. Until then, I’ll watch ‘It Happened One Night’

 

#17- The Red Shoes

Quick Recap: Victoria Page is an aspiring ballet dancer who is discovered by Boris Lermontov, owner of a ballet company. After his main ballerina quits to get married he invests all of his time and energy into Page. He first casts her as the lead role in ‘The Red Shoes’, a ballet based on the Hans Christian Andersen tale. It is so well received that Lermontov casts her in all lead roles. She instantly becomes famous. Things sour when Page falls in the love with the company’s composer. She must now choose between a life of dancing or following the man she has fallen in love with.

Lermontov: Why do you want to dance? Vicky: Why do you want to live? Lermontov: Well, I don't know exactly why, but... I must. Vicky: That's my answer too

Lermontov: Why do you want to dance?
Vicky: Why do you want to live?
Lermontov: Well, I don’t know exactly why, but… I must.
Vicky: That’s my answer too

 

Fun (?) Fact: I couldn’t find much in the way of interesting tidbits so instead, I’ll do a quick synopsis of the fairy tale, ‘The Red Shoes’- a girl sees a pair of red shoes in the shoemaker’s window and purchases them. She and her boyfriend go to a carnival where she enjoys herself. She becomes tired but realizes the shoes are possessed and she can’t take them off. She continues to dance, becoming more exhausted. She dances for years on end, until she finally dies. I highly suggest reading this heartwarming tale to your child before bedtime.

the shoemaker with his shoes

the shoemaker with his shoes

My thoughts: I’m not a fan of the ballet. I had a mild interest when ‘Black Swan’ came out, but I knew that seeing a performance would be anti-climatic. I do love all kinds of music and I generally love live performances, but there is just something about ballet that seems like a completely different world. The same can be said about my thoughts on opera, although that’s for a different post. I write all this to say that I had very low expectations for this movie. I really had to psyche myself up to get ready to watch it. The movie started off slow, introducing so many characters that I wasn’t sure who I was supposed to invest my attention in. And honestly I was pretty bored. It seemed that this movie would be yet another case for how crazy and uptight ballet dancers can be. I get it. They are intense people. It seems every dancing movie loves this trope. But then I became hooked on the actual ‘Red Shoe’s’ performance. For the first time, I was watching ballet and feeling real emotions. Moira Shearer, who played Victoria Page, does a perfect job of telling this story within a story. I was amazed how the director chose to show the ballet as the audience was supposed to and then what Page had in her mind. It was beautiful. I wasn’t surprised to learn that this movie was considered to have some of the best uses of color for its time.  As the story continued, I got to see Page’s relationship with the composer, Julian Crastor, develop. Lermontov was jealous but not because he was in love with Page. It was more than that. To him, Page falling in love and getting married was a death sentence for her career. At the movie’s end, Page returns to Lermentov, who convinces her to play the lead role in ‘The Red Shoes’ one more time. No one has done it since her and no one can do it better. She agrees, although she knows that her husband would disapprove. In the movie’s most climactic scene, Page must choose between her love of dancing and her husband. In a split second, she chooses dancing, and her husband leaves. As she prepares to start the performance, she realizes what she has done and, with the red shoes on, jumps to her death off of a balcony. The absolute best scene of the movie is at the end. Knowing that Page is dead, Lermentov makes a decision to continue on with the performance. In Page’s place is an empty spotlight that moves around, just as she would’ve done. The red shoes are left on stage.

The shoes

The shoes

It is truly one of the most heartbreaking and emotional scenes I have witnessed in a movie. I was taken aback by how powerful such simplicity could be.

Final review: 5/5. I generally make it a point to wait a while before posting a review so that I can gather my thoughts. I’m so glad I did that because when I finished the movie last night, I was still ‘meh’ about the whole thing. But after a night full of nightmares related to the story,I knew how important this film really is. Yes, it’s ballet but I promise, it is a necessity to watch.

Where I watched it: Netflix

Up Next: A Hard Day’s Night. Considering my son’s middle name comes from a Beatle’s song, I’d say I’m excited to watch.

#14- My Brilliant Career

Quick recap: The story takes place in the Australian outback, at the turn of the century. Sybylla is a free-spirited young woman who dreams of one day becoming a writer. Her family tries their best to convince her that the only way to be happy is to snag a guy and get married. Sybylla is having none of that and continues on her merry way, thankyouverymuch. She eventually falls in love with Harry, a rich young man.  She must now choose between a life of marriage and kids or her BRILLIANT CAREER. (spoiler alert: she chooses the career. Otherwise this would be ‘My Brilliant Hobby that I Eventually Gave Up Because Dr.Grant From Jurassic Park Fell In Love With Me.)

that kiss left a lot to be desired...

that kiss left a lot to be desired…

Fun (?) Fact: My brain thought it would be fun to have me read everything in an Australian accent, hours after watching this movie. I did feel a tad more sophisticated, so I’m not complaining.

My thoughts: ‘Keep an open mind’, I told myself, after reading the description of the movie. And then in the first 5 minutes of the movie Sybylla announces to herself, ‘My brilliant career!’, and I rolled my eyes so far back into my head that it gave me a headache.

the queen of eye rolls

the queen of eye rolls

But onward I pressed to complete this movie and add it to my list. It did eventually get better and I found myself rooting for Sybylla and her wild ways. Throughout the film Sybylla regards herself as plain and ugly and she pulls it off. Not like a certain teen movie where a girl is considered plain and ugly until she takes off her glasses, wears her hair down and trades her overalls for a dress. I learned after watching the movie that the story is based off a novel with the same name, written in the early 20th century. Knowing that tidbit made me appreciate the ‘feminist’ viewpoint a little more. Sybylla has many great lines about her beliefs on marriage but my favorite is when she announces that she doesn’t want to be a ‘part of anyone’. She wants to be her own person. Awesome. 21st century Me finds it hard to believe that she really would have to give up everything once she got married, but in context I suppose it’s true. One thing that especially stuck out for me is the main fact that Sybylla has no brilliant career. There are several shots of her writing and once can assume it is a passion of hers, but there are also scenes of her announcing that she wants to become a world class pianist. It isn’t until the final scene that you finally see her finishing the manuscript and sending it off.  More power to her to chase her dreams but I wouldn’t call it a brilliant career just yet. The novel looks rather boring anyway.

It's possible for you to be a brilliant writer and also not have crazy hair. Just saying.

It’s possible for you to be a brilliant writer and also not have crazy hair. Just saying.

Final review: 2/5. It’s a nice little film with a good message for girls. It might not hurt if I showed my son this one day so that he understands that he too can be a complete person all by himself. As for me, I was mostly bored. Except for the accents. And Dr.Grant.

Where I watched it: Netflix instant

Up next: The Red Shoes

#7- Broken Blosssoms

quick recap: This is a heartwarming tale about a father’s love for his daughter. There are kittens and unicorns and happiness all around. That’s what I told myself at 1 in the morning after watching this movie so that I could actually get some sleep. It’s really about a father who brutally harms his daughter frequently and who later beats her to death. Before dying, a young Chinese man (who is not at all chinese) falls in love with her. Upon discovering the young girl’s body, the man shoots the father and then stabs himself with a sword.

fun (?) fact: Liquor stores in Texas close at 9 so I couldn’t get tequila like I wanted after watching this movie

my thoughts: To say this movie is depressing is an understatement. During the first beating scene, I had the worst knot in my stomach and it didn’t go away after that. The love story between ‘Chinky’ (His nickname in the film. Seriously. Look it up.) and Lucy was really sweet. Also, wow, Lillian Gish was amazing. Beyond amazing. I thought she was sort of odd looking in Griffith’s other films but she is so beautiful and innocent in this film.

making herself smile for her father

The most heartbreaking scene is at the end of the movie when Lucy’s father is getting ready to beat her for being with a Chinese man. Lucy locks herself in the closet and the look on her face and the emotions she showed are so real. And that’s what made this movie so difficult to get out of my mind last night. The scenes were so realistic, save for the drunken father’s Popeye-esque scowl.

not Chinese at all. Kind of ruined his acting for me

Final review: I suppose I should figure out what this part means. I think this will be my opinion, how I felt about the movie and not necessarily how you might feel. In this instance, I give it a 5/5 because of its lingering effect on me.