TV Review – Irma Vep

Irma Vep (HBO)
Written and directed by Olivier Assayas

I can’t say I have ever been enamored with the work of Olivier Assayas. I’ve seen several of his films: Irma Vep, Summer Hours, and Personal Shopper. They are not bad films by any means, but I never fell in love with his work like I have with other directors. Having just recently watched and reviewed the original Irma Vep, I decided to check out his 2022 television adaptation of the film, wondering why he would choose to revisit this and what the project would add to the original movie. Once again, I walked away, unsure how to feel. I was not unimpressed but certainly not head over heels.

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Movie Review – A Decade Under the Influence

A Decade Under the Influence (2003)
Directed by Ted Demme and Richard LaGravenese

Across the globe, there have been numerous cinematic movements. Two of the most influential were the French & Italian New Waves. Through revolutionary experimentation with style & content, the artists behind these movements were able to show how film could tell stories far beyond what people had once imagined. These films often touched on political topics, particularly social injustice and hypocrisy among the ruling classes. The United States saw a similar but much smaller film movement in the 1960s, but something different from the upheaval brought about by their European counterparts. John Cassavettes helped birth American independent cinema, but it was not widely recognized at the time. It would be the 1970s when the States would see their own transformation of movies.

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Movie Review – This Film Is Not Yet Rated

This Film Is Not Yet Rated (2006)
Written by Kirby Dick, Eddie Schmidt, and Matt Patterson
Directed by Kirby Dick

The United States is currently experiencing one of its most consistent features: moral panic. Every generation has gone through multiple cycles of this nonsense, yet we seem to learn nothing from them. Social media is the root of all evil in society. Or it’s LGBTQ people existing. Or it’s an accurate survey of American history. Or it’s rap music, dancing, comic books, video games, television, comprehensive sex education, the list goes on and on and on. Shortly after its creation, the novel was said to be aiding in the decay of society. All these young people spending hours in books thinking about people and places that don’t exist. Oh, the humanity! 

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Movie Review – Overnight

Overnight (2003)
Written and directed by Tony Montana and Mark Brian Smith

At some point in the early 2000s, a DVD of The Boondock Saints showed up in my dorm and was watched incessantly by several of the other guys on my floor. I will admit I have seen it more than once, mainly because it seemed to be ambient white noise in many dude’s dorm rooms at the time. I couldn’t articulate my criticisms of the picture then, but it felt like a loud and pointless exercise in cliche machismo. Just a few years later, another DVD showed up in my dorm, and that was the documentary Overnight, which told the behind-the-scenes stories of the man who made The Boondock Saints and helped me finally understand why I hated that picture.


As the title suggests, seemingly overnight, Troy Duffy went from being another schlub to being in the middle of a bidding war over his screenplay for The Boondock Saints. It was Miramax, headed by convicted rapist Harvey Weinstein, that won. They offered Duffy $450k to rewrite and direct the film, even dangling the final cut as an added cherry. The film would be given a $15 million budget, while Duffy’s band, The Brood, would write & record the soundtrack. Hey, and while they were at it, Miramax offered to buy J. Sloan’s, the bar where Duffy worked, and would act as co-owners with him. Two of Duffy’s friends, as well as the managers of The Brood, decided to document this rise to fame in Hollywood. Instead of a story of triumph, they chronicled a perfect example of mediocrity and self-destruction.

In 2024, masculinity in America has completely lost the plot. Faced with a society growing more accepting of transgender and nonbinary people, a subset of American reactionaries have decided to attempt a shitty cosplay of characters from 300. Combined with the supplement grift, an extension of the centuries-long tradition of snake oil, it has created one of the most obnoxious, idiotic bursts of meaningless noise I have ever experienced. You can see the roots of this mindset in the way Troy Duffy accepts this rash of good luck with a sense of entitlement. Of course, Troy should have all these things; he’s super awesome, right?

You can understand the hunger to get out from the grinding gears of capitalist wage slavery, but Duffy, like so many before him, is drunk on the consumption culture of America. Promises of making him co-owner of his workplace send the future director into nightly drinking binges with his buddies, chucking glasses across the bar to hear them shatter against a wall. He regularly puffs on cigars and buys office space to prop his shoes up on a desk. He does what so many of us working poor people do when we have this opportunity, which is to behave like a child’s version of a rich person. Why would a stand-up fella like Harvey Weinstein ever lie to Mr. Duffy? He’s a man of his word, right?

Duffy failed to calculate how to hold onto the riches he attained. Because he started from such a place of resentment, he demands what his movie should be and who should be in it. Like so many people at the top of the American food chain – well, let’s not go that far – like many of the people who believe the delusion that they are at the top of the food chain, Duffy thought he could throw his weight around, and people in Hollywood would do as he commanded. He forgot that he lived in a nightmarishly transactional and vindictive society. Hollywood even more so than other parts of the country. Soon enough, no one returns his calls, and Duffy is left in the dark about whether The Boondock Saints will ever be made.

The thing about Troy Duffy, for all his posturing to present himself as a Boston townie, what we don’t see in this documentary is that he was actually born & raised in Connecticut, attending private schools, and had a Harvard-educated father who was an English teacher that had his children regularly write book reports for him. There’s nothing necessarily wrong with these things (though I personally think private schools should be banned), but it reveals that Duffy’s pose as some sort of “guy from the streets” is a farce. 

The true face of privilege emerges as the man torpedoes his own film career and then proceeds to fuck things up for his band, which includes his own brother. At one point, a producer overseeing the recording of The Brood’s first album remarks that Duffy’s brother is the creative heart of the band, something Troy surely picks up on, leading to him trashing things like a spoiled toddler. The directors of Overnight recorded their own firing as managers of the band, cut out from every last dime with no acknowledgment of their work to get to this point. 

Duffy never sees the failures as his own fault or the result of just how the Hollywood system works. Nope, there’s a tinge of conspiracy theory in his words. They have it out for him because his movie is so good, and they know it. As someone who has had the displeasure of seeing The Boondock Saints multiple times, it is not good, save Willem Dafoe’s performance, which is not helped in any way by Duffy’s horrible writing. Eventually, he would get the damn thing made after obtaining more financing from Franchise Picture. A dismal debut at Cannes in 1999 resulted in no one clamoring to buy the thing. The Columbine shootings would be cited as a reason why, but the imagery of The Matrix didn’t seem to slow that movie’s success down.

I won’t say that Duffy is talentless. Based on his background, I expect him to have a solid understanding of literature and writing. However, arrogance can be a hell of an obstacle to overcome. The Boondock Saints is such a dismally lousy movie because it is someone trying to write characters whose experience he only knows from other movies. He’s not a poor kid from Boston and didn’t try to educate himself on what that would be like. Instead, he lazily cribs from more talented filmmakers like Tarantino and Rodriguez, thinking he can lift the best bits and have a good movie.

While Overnight is not a spectacularly shot documentary, the camera work here is often horrible; it is a rare up-close glimpse of someone self-sabotaging with such vivid detail. There never seems to be a moment that the film’s subject is aware enough to understand how someone outside this situation will view him. He is wholly subsumed in his narcissism, happy to ruin the opportunities of people around him to soothe his own fragile ego.

Movie Review – Goodbye, Dragon Inn

Goodbye, Dragon Inn (2003)
Written by Tsai Ming-liang & Sung Hsi
Directed by Tsai Ming-liang

Since March 2020, I have only seen a single film in a movie theater, and that was here in the Netherlands. The dangers associated with COVID-19, not just death but permanent or even temporary disabling, just made the act of going to the theater simply not worth it. I’ve felt justified in my choice the more horror stories I hear from the States about people talking at full volume or scrolling through their phones during the movie as if they were in their own house. I would consider attending an art-house theater because the crowds would be smaller and more respectful. But even then, most of my film-watching life will be at home for the rest of my life. Before COVID, I visited the theater at least once every other week. But life is change, and we have to move on with it.

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Movie Review – Millennium Actress

Millennium Actress (2001)
Written by Sadayuki Murai and Satoshi Kon
Directed by Satoshi Kon

Perfect Blue was my introduction to Satoshi Kon, which blew my mind. It was my first time seeing anime that wasn’t fantastical but grounded in reality. However, that didn’t stop Kon from showing us why animation was the best way to present this story. He did things with animation that were impossible with live action or too cost-prohibitive. Still, it felt right at home with any Hitchcock or De Palma psycho-thriller. Over the 2023 holidays, we watched Tokyo Godfathers, another film whose premise doesn’t automatically lead one to animation. However, Kon shows us again why he could only tell this story the way he wanted with the near-limitless possibilities of the form. Going into Millennium Actress, I wondered how he would showcase the art form with this film.

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Movie Review – Irma Vep

Irma Vep (1996)
Written and directed by Olivier Assayas

“Cinema” is a term used to describe the production of films as an art or industry. Now, those are two very different terms, art and industry. They are the two points of tension that films have endured since they became popularized. In reading Hollywood: An Oral History last year, I was fascinated with the early chapters in how the interviewees describe how American film enthusiasts were just slapping together things and figuring out what these “movies” were or could be.

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Movie Review – In the Soup

In the Soup (1992)
Written by Tim Kissell and Alexandre Rockwell
Directed by Alexandre Rockwell

One of the misconceptions about being an artist is the glamor of living in squalor. I don’t recommend it as I was someone who has lived in less than stellar circumstances. You can still produce great art without living in poverty if you can avoid it. There’s not much romantic about being unable to afford groceries for a week or feeling an icy winter draft blow through poorly insulated windows. There’s also the misunderstanding that working in the arts is about refusing to compromise your personal vision. The challenge is balancing your perspective with getting work to pay your bills. Writing is a job like any other that involves taking gigs and doing what you can to get to the next one. Along the way, you keep working on the personal pieces, and one day, they come to fruition.

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Movie Review – The Player

The Player (1992)
Written by Michael Tolkin
Directed by Robert Altman

Robert Altman has been one of my favorite directors since I first learned of him in college. I’d known of his movies, the Robin Williams-led Popeye, especially as a kid. It’s hard to nail down precisely what appeals to me about Altman, but his signature of having large, sweeping ensemble casts is one of them. While his stories might have a protagonist, they are not who the film is entirely about. Altman loves to let his camera wander like an eye, using advancements in sound recording to give the audience snippets of conversations. It’s the voyeurism of Hitchcock paired with a California pothead vibe. The Player couldn’t be a more perfect film for the director, who had struggled through the 1970s and 80s with a contentious studio system. Altman’s loose narratives and penchant for being over budget made the executives & accountants fume. 

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Movie Review – Intervista

Intervista (1987)
Written by Federico Fellini and Gianfranco Angelucci
Directed by Federico Fellini

When you think of Federico Fellini and movies about movies, you probably think of 8 ½, and rightly so. It’s one of the best movies ever made and the best movie about a movie ever made. However, I already reviewed it when I did a series on the iconic Italian director in 2022. When I discovered this late-career picture, I put it in this series instead. Intervista was Fellini’s second to last film, and like most artists in old age, as they grappled with their mortality, he returned to his memories. This wasn’t new for Fellini; nostalgia has always played a significant role in his work. 8 ½‘s beautiful dream/memory sequences of Guido’s and the reflections of childhood presented in Amarcord are some of the strongest examples of this in his films. Intervista is a movie about falling in love with making movies, and Fellini goes back into his memories of this time.

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