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Best Picture
| THE WINNER:
Unlike the clear narrative of the first film, this one often feels a little muddy. Plus, I always get lost in the sheer volume of characters that we are asked to keep up with. The brilliance of the original is that we understood who everyone was in their relation to the central plot, but here I found an overpopulation of unfocused and unnecessary characters. But why write a script with land as a crime? Why not drugs? booze? prostitution? Why land and water? Because it makes sense, that's why. Drugs would have been a sexier mcguffin but it would have made less sense. The brilliance of Towne's script is that everything makes logical sense. He wraps the story so that something that looks like a throw-away subplot comes to mean something later. Take, for example, Curly (Burt Young) whom we meet at the very beginning as Gittes shows him photographs of his wife in various sexual positions with another man. Later, when Gittes arrives at their door he is greeted by his wife who now sports a black eye. Their home becomes a diversion as Jake and Evelyn elude some men who are following them. The movie would be nothing if we didn't remember the characters. The movie is populated with memorable faces like Noah Cross with his large frame and beady eyes; Hollis Mulwray with his small frame and beaky face; Curly, with his portly build who nearly destroys Gittes venetian blinds when he finds out about his wife; Duffy (Bruce Glover), a sinister type with the face of a happy pervert; Even the puny knife-wielding thug (Roman Polanski) who gives Gittes a warning by slicing his nose stays in our minds. |
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Best Actor
THE WINNER:
In a year in which all of Francis Ford Coppola's media attention was focused on The Godfather Part II, his other film, The Conversation, languished. It received a Best Picture nomination and favorable reviews but it faltered at the box office. That is always a mystery to me because in the year of the Watergate disaster, this film should have irresistible. It is one of Coppola's best and, as I said, it contains Gene Hackman's best performance. He plays Harry Caul, a surveillance expert who makes a living taping private conversations for money. He is a legend among his colleagues in the field of surveillance probably because they aren't privy to his work. He lives alone, keeps to himself, has no friends, builds his own surveillance equipment and values his privacy. His private work station is located in the back of a cold, empty warehouse behind an ugly chain-linked fence. |
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Best Actress
THE WINNER:
That real emotion made her a box office attraction with nineteen seventy-three’s The Exorcist, a film so successful that it convinced Warner Brothers to give Burstyn complete creative control over her next project. She selected a script written by Robert Getchell called Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore about a widowed mother trying to find her independence. For a director, she turned to a young, up and coming director named Martin Scorsese because she was impressed by his latest film Mean Streets. What becomes clear to us is that this isn't a household that anyone could understand who doesn't live under their roof. That's why the family members who constantly intrude are always expressing angry opinions about the children's welfare. They may be right to be concerned. Nick is always angry, always trying to force happiness on his wife and children (at one point he pulls the kids out of school to take them to the beach) and we see that it has an effect on Mabel. He wants happiness and she drives herself mad trying to provide it. "Tell me what you want me to be", she tells Nick. She may be mad or she may not. This is a woman who is in desperate need of therapy and when she is sent away to an institution for six months, we are left at the house with Nick and the kids. We are never privy to what she revealed or concealed while she was away. Everything always seems staged in Mabel's life, everything is for the benefit of seeming happy. Take for example the scene in which she returns home from the institution and is greeted by a large party of family and friends thrown by Nick who ends up throwing everyone out. There is a sense that everyone is happy to see her back in her occupied role of wife and mother but there is a sense that this may have been the problem in the first place. Cassavettes films are always fascinating. They never feel like a staged production, but more like he is following people around in their lives and recording the events that take place. It is an improvisational style that works beautifully because we never know what is coming next. When his camera is on Mabel, we can see an outsider's point of view of a woman who's mind is burning under the wreck of a staged production she is forced to perform. Rowlands never forces the slightest bit of sympathy from Mabel. She creates a woman who always seems in a panic state, always seems as if she afraid of failing to please. There is a display a childishness, when she is angry she makes sour faces and points with her thumbs. What is most unsettling is that for all the attempts to force happiness and push her into therapy, no one ever stops long enough to simple ask her what is wrong. That's tragic. |
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