Posts Tagged ‘jazz’

Sweet and Lowdown

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Sign up for Blockbuster, Get 50% off first month.

Whether it’s the quirky antics of Emmett Ray (Penn) or the wonderfully, understated affection of Hattie (Morton), this movie manages to strike a chord with a host of movie audiences. The story, about the second-greatest guitar player in the world and his tragic life as a musician/womanizer, is made even more interesting by the biographical method that Allen uses to unfold the story. What is particularly interesting about this approach is to note how every person sounds almost magical when talked about by fans and others-to witness their (often) destructive lives is something far different. Additionally, Allen’s humor penetrates the film, but it is not distracting. In fact, in most places, it serves to make the “storytelling” style of the film more enjoyable to watch.

Samantha Morton’s performance as Hattie (a mute lover of Emmett’s) is absolutely superb. I find myself leaning forward towards the screen, as if expecting her to speak at any moment. Morton manages to leap along just fine without any dialogue; her performance is believable and is truly one of the most endearing aspects of the film. One feels for Emmett’s loss and tragedy, but it is nothing compared to the emotion one feels for Hattie’s character.

A fan of Woody Allen will certainly enjoy this film and those that have given up on Allen in recent years will find this film to be a nice change. Great acting, a charming story, and a modern day tragedy. All of this plus some great jazz and guitar playing make this film worth a look.

Round Midnight

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Sign up for Blockbuster, Get 50% off first month.

This movie has a lot going for it. Dexter Gordon, a real (and real good) jazz-musician-turned-actor stars as Dale Turner, an alcoholic saxophone player who moves to Paris and rediscovers his music and life.

His world-weary voice and vibrant music talent help him to carry the role, deemed good enough to have been nominated for an Academy Award. Herbie Hancock wrote the music, obtaining a sound track that is sprinkled with Hancockian licks and solid jazz classics, apparently performed by a number of famous jazz musicians, such as Freddie Hubbard, Bobby Hutcherson and Pierre Michelot. With their support and the convenience of having a number of hit tunes to use in the sound track, it’s no wonder Herbie won the Academy Award for best score for this movie. It’s wonderful.

Where the movie disappoints, though, is in the story, which is convoluted and unconvincing. It is supposedly based on things that happened to Bud Powell and Lester Young, but because it is not a biopic of either one of those guys, it ends up being about nobody. The frenchman who befriends Dexter Gordon’s character is just not believable, especially when he says things like “Your music changed my life” to a fictional guy who doesn’t play an original tune in the entire movie. I can’t get wrapped up in somebody’s life when I don’t know who they are, and while some attempt is made to sway the audience to care about these forlorn characters, ultimately, the audience is left feeling detached and empty. For a peek into the world of 1960’s jazz, though, the movie is adequate, and the sound track is first rate and pretty much worth the price of admission.

You won’t be overwhelmingly impressed by this movie, but you won’t feel like you completely wasted two hours, either.

New York, New York

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Sign up for Blockbuster, Get 50% off first month.

This film is certainly well done. Robert DeNiro gives a good performance, but not nearly as great as Liza Minnelli. Often when Minnelli plays, she gives an aura of competence on the screen that forces the viewer to think, “Nobody else could have done this,” and as it were, truly nobody could. The sheer power of her performance alone is more than enough reason to watch this movie.

DeNiro plays as Jimmy, a tenacious and compulsive saxophone player that insists on getting what he wants, and what he wans is “1) Music, 2) Money, and 3) Women. But sometimes you find the right woman first, and then the numbers switch around.” He meets Francine (Minnelli), a singer who counterparts his persevering behavior enough to get him what he wants but hold her own. The two then go off to make their name in the music business any way they can, meaning eventually the music and their relationship start to tug them in different ways, and with conflict we have drama. Two hours and forty minutes of it, in fact.

The character of Jimmy is such that I couldn’t help but ask, “Are the viewers supposed to want him to succeed because he’s the hero, or are they supposed to want him to succeed because he’s going to keep trying anyways and we just want him to stop?” He tends to insist a bit too much, and watching his character is only worth the time when DeNiro’s playing off of Minnelli. The audience sympathizes with Francine because they can’t possibly imagine dealing with Jimmy, but since they can’t imagine dealing with Jimmy, they also have to wonder what the heck she’s doing with him. The two characters are constantly at edge, even when it seems they are going to reconcile.

Such a method of exposition is at least interesting to watch, but it’s largely stretched out and filled with more big-band music than one can possibly hope to sit through comfortably. The first two hours of the movie kept a good pace, but somewhere after the two hour mark the movie does a sort of Singin’ in the Rain-ish musical-in-a-musical that’s packed with so many layers of stories that it becomes confusing and, most importantly, completely useless. All of it has Minnelli, and Minnelli continues to sing afterwards. By the end of a good half-an-hour of her reaching crescendo after crescendo, one’s ears are in need of a rest… and it’s not like the movie has ended yet.

It’s a shame, in fact, that overall the movie feels displeasing to me, considering how strong the acting and directing are. Here is a movie that’s deserving of praise but very difficult to watch. See it if you can, take from it what you can get, but don’t expect to feel like watching it ever again.

New Orleans

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Sign up for Blockbuster, Get 50% off first month.

The movie showcased the ascent of New Orleans ragtime music versus the uptown music. Miralee Smith (Dorothy Patrick) was the young opera singer who, together with her conductor, was attracted to ragtime music, against the wish of her mother and many. Mrs. Smith, to keep her daughter away from ragtime music and its staunch supporter, Mr. Duquesne (Arturo de Cordova), made sure New Orleans had no place for either of them. And in Chicago Mr. Duquesne popularized the music as jazz.

The real draw, of course, lies in the jazz music as epitomized by Louis Armstrong and his Band, Woody Herman and his Orchestra, and the beautiful voice of Billie Holiday, plus the professional musicians playing the cornet, trombone, clarinet, double bass … . Billie Holiday exuberates a cool confidence with her unique rich voice and her swaying along the melody. Her rendition of Ms New Orleans was impressive, but the most outstanding moment was when she sang farewell to Storyville and later joined by the chorus of the black folks who were forced to leave New Orleans. Not to mention the solo played by Louis Armstrong and Woody Herman.

Cast

  • Arturo de Córdova … Nick Duquesne (as Arturo De Cordova)
  • Dorothy Patrick … Miralee Smith
  • Marjorie Lord … Grace Voiselle
  • Irene Rich … Mrs. Rutledge Smith
  • John Alexander … Col. McArdle
  • Richard Hageman … Henry Ferber
  • Jack Lambert … Biff Lewis
  • Bert Conway … Tommy Lake
  • Joan Blair … Constance Vigil (columnist)
  • Louis Armstrong and His Band … Original New Orleans Ragtime Band
  • Billie Holiday … Endie (Miralee’s maid)
  • Woody Herman and His Orchestra … Themselves
  • Shelley Winters … Miss Holmbright (Nick’s Chicago secretary; uncredited)

The Jazz Singer

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Sign up for Blockbuster, Get 50% off first month.

Jesse Robins (Rabinowits) Neil Diamond plays the son of Rabbi, and wanting so much to have his only son follow in his foot steps but Jesse has other dreams and ideas. He is a wonderful singer and wants to write music, and is being smothered by his father makes for strained relationships. The father played by Sir Lawrence Oliver is outstanding, and Neil Diamond gives it the extra tense and scared view.

Jesse is called to Hollywood by some friends where he meets Luci Arnez who is a talent rep. she starts helping him and although Jesse is married, he starts to fall in love with her, and stays in Hollywood, when the father goes to see where he lives, and finds Luci Arnez, and as Jesse tries to explain the situation, it just causes more strain on their relationship.

This is a wonderful story line, it is believable, the struggle to find your way is always on the edge, and to find meaning to one’s life. Neil Diamond does a fabulous first time acting job, and the music that was written for this movie is outstand; Hello, Love On The Rocks, America and more.

Cast

  • Al Jolson as Jakie Rabinowitz (Jack Robin)
  • May McAvoy as Mary Dale
  • Warner Oland as Cantor Rabinowitz
  • Yossele Rosenblatt as himself
  • Eugenie Besserer as Sara Rabinowitz
  • Otto Lederer as Moisha Yudelson
  • Bobby Gordon as Jakie Rabinowitz (age 13)
  • Richard Tucker as Harry Lee

The Five Pennies

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Sign up for Blockbuster, Get 50% off first month.

Danny Kaye played Loring “Red” Nichols, the well known cornet player who rose to his fame in 1930s and whose Jazz group “Five Pennies” was once home to Glenn Miller and Benny Goodman and more – great musicians in the 40s Swing music.

The movie was coherent, tightly woven both in the musical and emotional aspects. The duets between Danny Kaye (played by Red himself) and Louis Armstrong – the Battle Hymn of Republic and the Saints are marching – were wonderful. On the emotional side, Barbara Bel Geddes (Mrs. Ewing in Dallas) as Danny Kaye’s sweetheart was a loving wife who endured long tours in the Five Pennies group, a devoted mother and a steadfast lady who held the family together. The bonds between the Five Pennies musicians, father and daughter, husband and wife are close and personal.

Susan Gordon, as the couple’s daughter Dorothy from 6 – 8 yrs old, was a delight. She was intelligent, passionate for her father’s music and love, and would settle for nothing less. The night when father and daughter developed a closer bond over the song “Five Pennies”, a table of cards, followed by a duet in the bar was touching. Susan Gordon’s performance was subtle yet memorable. The dramatic turn when Danny Kaye threw away his cornet and work in a wartime shipyard at a meagre salary to make up for Dorothy in the subsequent years was heartbreaking. When the accomplished cornet player did make a comeback, it was not easy but gradual. The big finale was a tear jerker, but it’s worth every tear.

This is a well-balanced act between the musical and drama. Definitely worth watching it again and again.

The Cotton Club

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Sign up for Blockbuster, Get 50% off first month.

This movie made me feel like I was actually sitting in the Cotton Club. I developed an appreciation of the music from this era that has never gone away.

Part of the reason to watch this movie is the late, great Gregory Hines and his also-talented brother Maurice. Not many movies can legitimately incorporate tap-dancing into the plot. I am glad that Coppola took advantage of the opportunity to do so.

You also have to love Fred Gwynne. It was rather a shame that he was so type-cast via the Munsters. He had aspirations of being a more serious actor. He had a brief role as Michael Douglas’ boss in Fatal Attraction.

Jennifer Grey played Nicholas Cage’s wife in this film.

Ownie Madden had a hand in boxing back in the Cinderella Man days.

Dixie Dwyer was based on the actor George Raft, who had a role in Some Like it Hot.

This movie did not go over terribly well at the box office. It is not exactly uplifting to witness racism and mob violence. However, if you are a history buff, it follows true organized crime events pretty closely.

I was in it more for the music and the tap-dancing, which were outstanding. Richard Gere in his prime didn’t hurt either.

Cast

  • Richard Gere as Dixie Dwyer
  • Gregory Hines as Sandman Williams
  • Diane Lane as Vera Cicero
  • Lonette McKee as Lila Rose Oliver
  • Bob Hoskins as Owney Madden
  • James Remar as Dutch Schultz (Vera Cicero’s boyfriend)
  • Nicolas Cage as Vincent Dwyer
  • Allen Garfield as Abbadabba Berman
  • Fred Gwynne as Frenchy Demange
  • Gwen Verdon as Tish Dwyer
  • Lisa Jane Persky as Frances Flegenheimer
  • Maurice Hines as Clay Williams

Bird

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Sign up for Blockbuster, Get 50% off first month.

Bird is a 1988 American film produced and directed by Clint Eastwood.

The film is a biopic, a tribute to the life and music of jazz saxophonist Charlie “Bird” Parker, written by Joel Oliansky. It is constructed as a collage of scenes from Parker’s life, from his childhood in Kansas City, through his marriage to Chan Richardson, to his early death at the age of thirty-four.

Music

Initially, when Columbia owned the project, the studio executives wanted to hire musicians to re-record all of Parker’s music, largely because most of the original recordings were in mono, and considered of insufficient sound quality to accompany a feature film. Eastwood had some recordings of Parker made by Parker’s wife, Chan, from which he had a sound engineer electronically isolate Parker’s solos. Contemporary musicians such as Ray Brown, Walter Davis, Jr., Ron Carter, Barry Harris and Red Rodney were then hired to record backing tracks on modern sound equipment. Dizzy Gillespie was on tour at the time of recording, so trumpet player Jon Faddis was hired to record his parts.

Cast

  • Forest Whitaker — Charlie “Bird” Parker
  • Diane Venora — Chan Parker
  • Michael Zelniker — Red Rodney
  • Samuel E. Wright — Dizzy Gillespie
  • Keith David — Buster Franklin
  • Michael McGuire — Brewster
  • James Handy — Esteves
  • Damon Whitaker — Young Bird
  • Morgan Nagler — Kim
  • Arlen Dean Snyder — Dr Heath
  • Sam Robards — Moscowitz
  • Penelope Windust — Bellevue Nurse
  • Glenn Wright — Alcoholic Patient (as Glenn T. Wright)
  • George Orrison — Patient with Checkers
  • Bill Cobbs — Dr Caulfield

All Night Long

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Sign up for Blockbuster, Get 50% off first month.

All Night Long is a 1962 British film directed by Basil Dearden, and starring Patrick McGoohan, Marti Stevens, Paul Harris, Keith Michell, Richard Attenborough and Betsy Blair. The story, written by Nel King and Paul Jarrico, writing under the name Peter Achilles, is an updated version of Shakespeare’s Othello, set in the London jazz scene of the 1960s. The black and white film is notable for featuring performances by a number of prominent British and American jazz musicians.

Cast

  • Patrick McGoohan as Johnnie Cousin
  • Marti Stevens as Delia Lane
  • Paul Harris as Aurelius Rex
  • Keith Michell as Cass
  • Richard Attenborough as Rod Hamilton
  • Betsy Blair as Emily
  • Bernard Braden as Berger
  • Harry Towb as Phales
  • María Velasco as Benny
  • Carol White as Lucille (uncredited)