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Inessential Essentials: Re-considering Christopher Nolan’s Insomnia

The film: Insomnia (2002) Why It’s an Inessential Essential: Last week, Warner Brothers released a Blu Ray box set of British director Christopher Nolan ‘s films. Looking at the box set (other titles include: Memento , Batman Begins , The Dark Knight and Inception ), one is reminded of Nolan’s celebrity status as one of the most instantly recognizable filmmakers working today. Which makes it difficult to imagine a film that might be considered obscure or in need of reconsideration. But the clear outlier in the Christopher Nolan Director’s Collection is Insomnia , Nolan’s remake of the 1997 Norwegian film of the same name. As a remake and an adaptation, Nolan’s film isn’t as strong as it should be. But as a self-sufficient work, Nolan’s version is a modest success. The film’s chase and actions scenes alone are some of the best in his filmography, filmed with a confidence and an eerie atmosphere that stand out in his impressive, if inconsistent, body of work. It’s worth owning this box set, in other words, because it gives you a good picture of how the filmmaker takes his technical skill and polish and applied it to a number of disparate subjects and settings. The narrative and psychological underpinnings of  Insomnia are, typical of Nolan, basic to the point of being crude. His characters are not psychologically complex but they are all to some extent thoughtful and sophisticated, and Insomnia protagonist Will Dormer is no exception to that rule. Al Pacino plays Dormer, a burnt-out L.A. police investigator that used to be a big hot-shot but is now just a has-been. Dormer’s the subject of an Internal Affairs investigation, so he heads to Alaska to help look for a killer – and winds up accidentally fatally shooting his partner. Most of Insomnia ‘s surprisingly brisk two-hour runtime is spent watching Will fall apart and forming a precarious bond with Walter Finch (Robin Williams), the murderer Dormer originally set out to catch. How the Blu Ray Makes the Case for the Film:  In the director’s commentary track and an interview he recorded with Pacino, Nolan talks a bit about his creative process and inadvertently reveals why Insomnia is as good as it is. Being a left-brain thinker, Nolan deconstructs the way he shot the film in his audio commentary by addressing scenes within the order they were shot. This is pretty striking since this does not gives you an idea of the importance Nolan placed on certain scenes (two days to shoot the high school interrogation scene!) but how filmmakers work out of continuity and have to quickly form a rapport with actors. Insomnia is after all as successful as it is because of the atmosphere Nolan creates, and that’s not just a matter of slick mechanical direction of scenes but also of his actors. Some of what Nolan says is a bit hard to swallow, like when idly ponders, “I think Al was appreciative of getting to start with some physical action.” And while one should not be surprised to hear him talk passionately about “cross-cutting action,” it is interesting to hear him talk about the way that he establishes his relatively advanced technical skills as a filmmaker to accentuate the film’s human element. The weaker, more over-reaching psychological talking points in Hillary Seitz’s screenplay are made stronger by Nolan’s eye for detail, and you can tell why in the way that he talks about Pacino’s body language in close-up and his use of “small camera moves” to capture Dormer’s “virtuosity.” The human element at the heart of Insomnia may not be as strong as it should be, but by the standards established by Nolan’s films, it’s pretty strong. It should be noted however that while none of the special features in the Christopher Nolan Director’s Collection are exclusive to the set, save for a booklet and some glossy photo stills, there are a number of interesting and enlightening features on the other film’s Blu Rays, too. The “Batman: Unmasked: The Psychology of The Dark Knight” featurette on The Dark Knight is especially worthwhile, as is the inclusion of Jonathan Nolan’s script for Memento Mori , the short film that preceded Memento . Other Trivia: Speaking of continuity editing, it’s kind of neat to hear Pacino name-drop and talk about collaborating with everyone including, “Francis [Ford Coppola],” “[Sidney] Lumet,” and “Bobby De Niro.” These experiences really color his working with Nolan, especially when Pacino talks about how heart-broken Coppola was when working on some unnamed picture because the film’s shooting day was over (it was past 6pm, according to Pacino). Pacino found the Godfather director in tears in a cemetery, lamenting, “They won’t give me another set-up!” This is especially funny in light of how Nolan just finished talking a little about how much of a director’s job is a matter of “covering” his actors, thereby ensuring that he gets everything he needs so that he can later assemble it all in the editing room. Simon Abrams is a NY-based freelance film critic whose work has been featured in outlets like The Village Voice , Time Out New York , Vulture and Esquire . Additionally, some people like his writing, which he collects at Extended Cut .

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Inessential Essentials: Re-considering Christopher Nolan’s Insomnia

Meh Shot: Tom Cruise Breaks Bones in Jack Reacher Teaser Trailer

Oh, what a coincidence! Here comes the trailer for Tom Cruise ‘s Jack Reacher (formerly One Shot ), the action film based on a novel by Lee Child that stars the soon-to-be-divorcé as an ex-army cop who apparently drives around town in muscle cars getting into fights. The kind of angry, controlled rage-machine who gets into brawls, specializes in strategically breaking bones, asks questions later, etc. The badass clothing doesn’t quite fit on Cruise, but you know. He’s Tom Cruise . Plot is incidental to this first tease of a trailer, which sets up the eponymous loner-hero in mythic terms. “There’s this guy,” bandaged beaten up hospital guy says. “He doesn’t care about proof. He doesn’t care about the law. He only cares about what’s right.” Then comes that reedy Cruise voice to ruin it all: “You think I’m a hero? I am not a hero. And if you’re smart, that scares you.” Well, I guess I’m not smart. Because, yeah. Yawn . I’m not one of those folks hung up on how wrong Cruise is for the role, physically speaking, though Reacher’s dimensions (posted helpfully at Child’s website ) do make you wonder which actors out there might have fit the bill a little better: Measurements: 6’5″, 220-250 lbs., 50″ chest Hair: Dirty-blond Eyes: Ice blue Clothing: 3XLT coat, 95 cm. pants’ inseam It’s not even that Cruise isn’t the physical ideal for Reacher. The wandering ex-military bruiser with no regard for the law doesn’t really sit well on him. But we shall see; with writer-director Christopher McQuarrie ( The Usual Suspects , The Way of the Gun ) behind the camera, Josh Olson ( A History of Violence ) on scripting duties, and Werner Herzog playing baddie , there’s enough promise left in this thing. Still, while a lot of folks are getting a Drive vibe from this, I get more of a Gone in 60 Seconds feel — the middle-aged action hero wearing leather jackets, racing around in classic cars, lounging around with hot ladies in their underwear. It already feels like the mid-life crisis wish-fulfillment movie of the year for older dudes. Verdict: Unless the next batch of trailers really wow me, I’m only hanging in for the Herzog. [via Yahoo! ]

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Meh Shot: Tom Cruise Breaks Bones in Jack Reacher Teaser Trailer

Andy Griffith, America’s Sheriff, Dead at 86

A star of Broadway, movies and television, Andy Griffith died Tuesday at his home on Roanoke Island, North Carolina. The once aspiring preacher, trombone player and music teacher, he landed his first movie role in A Face in the Crowd in 1957. But it was his role as the affable and folksy-wise Sheriff Andy Taylor in the 1960s sitcom The Andy Griffith Show that won him legions of fans. Griffith had already had some experience in the limelight by the time the hit television show hit the air, according to The New York Times, which reported Griffith’s passing, which received confirmation by the Dare County sheriff Doug Doughtie today. He starred in the Broadway play No Time for Sergeants followed by Face (one of six movies during his career) to good reviews. He later starred in the 1980s and ’90s courtroom television show Matlock . Still, the fictional town of Mayberry will forever be etched in fans’ memories when it comes to Griffith. His lovable mess-up deputy Barney Fife (Don Knotts), Gomer Pyle, young son Opie (Ron Howard) and Aunt Bee (Frances Bavier) debuted at number four in the ratings and never dipped below the top 10. It even hit number one its last season in 1968 and it continues in syndication. Griffith’s career slid after the show though he had signed a five-year deal with Universal Pictures, though he never received offers that appealed to him. He told The Virginia Pilot in 2008: “I thought I was hot stuff and go right into the movies. It didn’t work out that way.” After some false starts on follow up shows in the ’70s, he made some made-for-TV movies, but more success followed with his role as a lawyer in the series Matlock which debuted in 1986, which ran until 1992, for NBC, followed by another three years on ABC, longer than The Andy Griffith Show . While official awards mostly alluded him (he never won an Emmy for his role of Sheriff Andy Taylor, while Don Knotts picked up a slew of the trophies throughout the ’60s) Griffith did receive an Emmy nomination for the 1981 TV movie Murder in Texas . He received recognition in 1987 with a People’s Choice Award for Favorite Male Performer in a New TV Program and in 2004 TV Land gave the The Andy Griffith Show its Legend Award. And perhaps ultimately fitting, his character was placed at number 8 in TV Guide’s top “50 Greatest TV Dads of All Time” in 2004. [Source: The New York Times ]

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Andy Griffith, America’s Sheriff, Dead at 86