The New X-Men Villain is….Oscar Isaac

Posted on November 24, 2014 at 3:34 pm

Copyright Marvel 2014
Copyright Marvel 2014
Ever since he played Joseph in “The Nativity Story, I’ve been saying that Oscar Isaac should be a full-on movie star. He gave my favorite performance of last year as Llewyn Davis in the Coen Brothers movie “Inside Llewyn Davis,” and I have just seen him, superb again, in the upcoming “A Most Violent Year.” He was the best part of “Sucker Punch” and the Russell Crowe “Robin Hood” (as Prince John).

I was thrilled to hear that he will be in the new “Star Wars” movie and now more good news — he will also be the bad guy in the next X-Men movie, as Apocalypse. This is excellent news.

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Actors Behind the Scenes

The Cast of the New “Star Wars” Movie Includes Oscar Isaac

Posted on April 29, 2014 at 10:28 pm

I’m delighted to hear that Oscar Isaac, whose performance as the title character in “Inside Llewyn Davis” was my favorite of 2013, will play a lead role in the new “Star Wars” movie.  Also announced for the cast: the legendary Max von Sydow as well as Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Adam Driver (also from “Inside Llewyn Davis” as well as “Girls”), and Domhnall Gleeson.  “Star Wars” fans will be very excited to hear that Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, and Peter Mayhew will be back.

It is a bit concerning that so far only one actress has been announced, and director J.J. Abrams deserved the criticism he got for the treatment of women characters in the last “Star Trek” movie.  I hope he will do better.

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Actors Behind the Scenes

2013 at the Movies: The Best, The Worst, Breakthroughs, and Special Mentions

Posted on December 22, 2013 at 6:00 pm

As I think back over the past year, these are the films I remember best:

Top ten:

Inside Llewyn Davis

The Kings of Summer

The Way Way Back

The Wolf of Wall Street

American Hustle

20 Feet from Stardom/Muscle Shoals

No

Gravity

12 Years a Slave

Nebraska

Honorable mention: Before Midnight, Museum Hours, In a World, Frozen, The Spectacular Now, Her, Much Ado About Nothing, Short Term 12, Don Jon, Fruitvale Station, Enough Said, Upside Down, Philomena, 56 Up, The World’s End, Still Mine, Rush, What Maisie Knew, 42, Trance

 

Best ensembles:

What Maisie Knew

American Hustle

Kings of Summer

The Wolf of Wall Street

Best romantic couple: Celine and Jesse

Runners-up: Beatrice and Benedick

Worst romantic couple: Romeo and Juliet

Best Superhero: Iron Man

Best Supervillain: Loki

MVPs: Benedict Cumberbatch is this year’s Jessica Chastain, with lead roles in five major films plus the narration of the 3D IMAX “Jerusalem”  Runners up: Louis C.K. and Jennifer Lawrence for outstanding work in two roles each and Brie Larson for three

Breakthroughs: Lupita Nyong’o, Michael B. Jordan, Ryan Coogler

Overdue breakthroughs: Oscar Isaac, Brie Larson, Lake Bell, Tom Hiddleston

Everything old is new again: Black and white cinematography in “Nebraska,” “Frances Ha,” and “Much Ado About Nothing”

Still getting better: Dame Judi Dench

Just Plain Fun: Now You See Me, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, About Time, Populaire, Austenland

Worst: Identity Thief, Out of the Furnace, After Earth, Free Birds, Getaway, Lone Ranger, The Host, To the Wonder, Gangster Squad, Romeo & Juliet, Escape from Planet Earth, Burt Wonderstone, Hangover 3, Only God Forgives, Broken City

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Lists

Inside Llewyn Davis

Posted on December 19, 2013 at 6:00 pm

A-
Lowest Recommended Age: Mature High Schooler
MPAA Rating: Rated R for language including some sexual references
Profanity: Strong language
Alcohol/ Drugs: Drinking, drug use and drug overdose
Violence/ Scariness: A few punches, drug overdose
Diversity Issues: None
Date Released to Theaters: December 20, 2013
Date Released to DVD: March 10, 2014
Amazon.com ASIN: B00DVZ414C

Inside-Llewyn-Davis-cat

Oscar Isaac gives the best performance of the year as the title character in the most intimate and profound movie yet from the Coen brothers.  The story is set in the New York folk music world of 1961 and the Coens insisted on filming the songs live rather than pre-recording, and one of the wonders of this film is the way that Isaac makes each song more than a musical performance — each is a part of his characterization that tells us who Davis is and where he is on a week-long journey we will see in near Sisyphian terms.  The breaths and pauses are as much a part of the performance as the notes he plays and sings.  When he is not singing, Davis reacts very little, and one of the great pleasures of this film is seeing Isaac convey immense conflict and sensitivity to us in the audience while those around him see only his superficial expressionlessness.  In one scene, a doctor offhandedly gives him surprising news about someone else.  In that one moment he says almost nothing but conveys a dozen different emotions and questions and losses.  This is the story of a man who expresses himself only through his music.  But he does not have the gifts to make him successful enough to support himself or achieve any sense of security and acceptance.

The Coens like to put their central characters under a lot of stress, and in this film Davis must deal with disappointment and anger all around him and his own sense of frustration in not being able to honor the songs that are his whole world by making them as important to others as they are to him.  Ultimately, it becomes a larger story about the way all of us struggle to find meaning and a place for ourselves.  And all of that is to the heavenly music impeccably curated by T. Bone Burnett and performed by a cast that includes Justin Timberlake, Carey Mulligan, and Broadway’s Stark Sands.  The Coens also like to create physical environments that reflect the internal pressure (the peeling wallpaper in “Barton Fink” was almost another character).  Here, the re-creation of early 60’s Greenwich Village is relatively low-key and naturalistic, but there are still cramped corridors with impossibly acute vectors to amplify Davis’ external manifestation of the grungy world that seems to have no exit.

The film’s title, “Inside Llewyn Davis,” is the also the name of a record album made by the early 1960’s folk singer played by Isaac.  We first see him singing in a Greenwich Village club, performing “Hang Me, Oh Hang Me,” a song that “was never new and never gets old.”

The folk singers of the early 60‘s thought of themselves as truly authentic in a world where suburban materialism and conformity were idealized.  A movement that presaged and in some ways helped to spark the counterculture and protest of the late 60’s was, of course, inherently inauthentic itself.  Folk music is beautiful wherever it is sung, even in the kind of homogenized, commercial versions looked down on by Davis (and gently mocked in “A Mighty Wind”).  But what makes it authentic is that it is music sung by folk in their community, not by professional musicians in a New York club.  The essence of the struggle any artist — or any person — faces between integrity and selling out is explicit here.  Davis criticizes his friend and sometime lover as “careerist” for trying to get ahead in the music business.  But he himself makes a trip to an influential producer to see if he can get better bookings.  And as authentic as Davis may think he is, he is contemptuous the performances by a soldier and a woman from the country, both of whom arguably have a better claim to “authenticity” than he does.

Like all Coen brothers anti-heroes, Davis is a man under pressure.  He has nowhere to live, and sleeps on couches he scrounges from friends.  He seems to have no sense of gratitude.  He shows some sense of responsibility.  He spends the night at the home of a benign Columbia professor who loves his music, stopping to play a cut from the album he made with his former partner (Isaac sings with Marcus Mumford).  Then, when he is leaving, the professor’s marmelade cat slips out the apartment door just as it swings shut and locks behind him.  Davis scoops up the cat and takes him on the subway, calling the professor’s office to let him know the cat is safe.  He then drops the cat off at another apartment he often uses as a place to stay, the home of singing duo Jim (Justin Timberlake) and Jean (Isaac’s “Drive” wife, Carey Mulligan), where he finds out that Jean is (1) pregnant and (2) furious because it might be his.  He again responds responsibly, if not graciously.  And when Jim (of course not knowing anything about his relationship to Jean) arranges for Davis to get a quick gig as a session musician for a silly but irresistible little novelty ditty called “Please Mr. Kennedy,” he gives it his best.

We follow Davis over the course of a week, one frustrating encounter after another, with Jean, with the head of the tiny record label that produced his last record, a doctor who performs abortions, his silent father in a nursing home, his suburban sister, on a long ride to Chicago with a jazz musician (Coen brothers regular John Goodman) and his near-silent driver (Garrett Hedlund), a nerve-wracking audition with an important producer (F. Murray Abraham).  In each of them, Davis is subdued. He has feelings, but he expresses them in his music.  There is something in these ancient songs about death, betrayal, and injustice that touches his heart. Singing them is his deepest connection to himself.  “Just exist?” he asks his sister, when she suggests he give up folk music.  But even when he wants to give up, he can’t.

Davis knows that things seem hopeless for him.  He tries to slide his box of remaindered LPs under a table only to find an almost-identical box of another singer’s records there already.  He looks out of the car window at a highway exit that he and we know could lead to an important chance at connection and meaning.  We see around Davis what he cannot.  We see him make a decision as he leaves the recording studio that suits his purposes at the moment but that we know he will be bitter about forever. A young, tousled-hair singer goes on at the club and we know he will transform the world in a way Davis can not.  But in a very real and very satisfying way, the Coens and Isaac have reclaimed him for us with their own story that was never new, and never gets old.

Parents should know that this film includes strong language, a fistfight, references to sex, adultery, abortion, and suicide, drinking, smoking, and drug use and overdose.

Family discussion:  Why was it so hard for Llewyn to succeed?  What do we learn about him from the decision not to go to Akron?  From his heckling of another performer?

If you like this, try:  “Don’t Look Back” and “A Mighty Wind” — and the Showtime concert featuring the music from the film, “Another Day, Another Time”

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