Showing posts with label Wallace Shawn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wallace Shawn. Show all posts

Saturday, June 7, 2014

24. The Princess Bride (1987)



Code-name: Iocaine


Director: Rob Reiner

Writer: William Goldman (novel AND screenplay) 
Type: Fantasy, comedy, romance, adventure, book-to-movie adaptation

Cast:

Buttercup, the Princess Bride- Robin Wright
Wesley- Cary Elwes
Vizzini- Wallace Shawn
Fezzik- Andre the Giant
Inigo Montoya- Mandy Patinkin
Prince Humperdink- Chris Sarandon
Count Rugen- Christopher Guest
The Albino- Mel Smith
Miracle Max- Billy Crystal
Valerie- Carol Kane
The "Impressive" Clergyman- Peter Cook
The Grandson- Fred Savage
The Grandfather- Peter Falk

Notable Nominations:

OSCAR- Best Original Song- "Storybook Love" by Willy DeVille
Grammy- Best Score for a Motion Picture- Mark Knopfler

Write-up:

Some Spoilers To Follow

Skepticism Turned to True Love

Considering how I grew up with a lot of Disney movies involving fairytales and princesses, I don't know why I resisted this movie for the years that I did. One of several movies my mom tried to sell me on over the years , but I don't remember any specifics other than "it's a cute movie."

The day I saw it for the first time, it was during my art class in middle school. I believe it was towards the end of the year on this particular occasion.

I saw this movie, figured I'd give it a shot and... at some point, I was immediately turned onto it and the love affair began.

I don't remember the specific moment where it "clicked" for me... but I'd wager it was when Vizzini, Fezzik and Inigo were introduced and they were being pursued by "Zorro."

It's funny how the trivia for this movie says that the Dreaded Pirate Roberts look was modeled after Zorro because I didn't know what else to think of it.
Ironically, the school year ended after Wesley gets 50 years sucked away by "the machine" and is presumed dead... the worst possible cliffhanger imaginable for this movie.

Of course, I'm freaking out, not wanting to leave things off without knowing what happens. But if I remember right, I didn't get my hands on a Blockbuster rental for a couple weeks, maybe even a month after this. Guess I wasn't in that much of a hurry...


A Little Bit of Everything

First of all, this movie is told in somewhat of a creative way. We're introduced to an unnamed grandson, home sick from school, who receives a visit from his grandfather (also unnamed). To help him feel better, the grandfather reads him a book that was read to him by his father, that he read to his father.

As he tells the story, we the audience see the visuals come to life, and occasionally we cut back to them during some dramatic parts of the story.
After giving him the "in my day, television was called books" line, the grandfather runs down all of the things that happen:
"Fencing, fighting, torture, revenge, giants, monsters, chases, escapes, true love, miracles..."

It's amazing that a balance is struck between all the genres represented here. It's one thing to carry on a love story, which includes a love triangle. It's another to give an additional storyline to a presumed second-tier character that, crazy enough, intersects with the main storyline that provides plenty of good action scenes and comic relief.


Plot


At the center is the relationship between a girl and her farm boy, Wesley. For years, she loved bossing him around and asking him to do tedious tasks for her, but he had nothing but love for her. By the time they come to realize this, he leaves to seek fortune across the sea (I assume to marry her), and is killed by pirates.
After weeks of mourning, Buttercup becomes engaged to Prince Humperdrink, who falls for her beauty and according to the law of the land, he has the right to choose his bride.

We're introduced to, we originally presume, the main villain and his two lackeys that kidnap Buttercup to start a war between the countries of Gildar and Florin.

As they make their escape, they're pursed by "the man in black" (aka "Zorro"... minus the cape). This pursuit becomes increasingly serious (just follow the "inconceivable!" s) so Vizzini splits the crew up one by one, hoping his men with their unique skill sets can stop him.

1)

The Adversary: Inigo Montoya
-we hear his backstory, how he's searching for the "six fingered man" who killed his father... you know the drill :-P
The Skill: Fencing (both left AND right handed)

The rewatchability value of this movie is pretty amazing. If anything, it's worth waiting for all three of these duels. Some great banter is in this first one with Inigo so excitable and "The Man in Black" being so laid-back and sarcastic.


One final "inconceivable" later...


2)

The Adversary: Fezzik
The Skill:...
Fezzik: no tricks, no weapons, skill against your own
The Man in Black: You mean, you put down your rock, I'll put down my sword and we try to kill each other like civilized people?

Somehow, Fezzik loses this fight, despite his massive strength and size. After the thrill of the previous fight, this duel is a little anti-climatic and feels drawn out. It also takes a few views to understand his dialogue.
...I forget the circumstances, but I think my mom said she briefly met Andre the Giant once when she was working at the Penny Arcade years ago.

3)

The Adversary: Vizzini
The Skill: "A Battle of Wits"

After bragging about being smarter than Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, the Man in Black challenges Vizzini to a battle of wits to the death.

Here we see the "odorless, tasteless, dissolves instantly in liquid and one of the more deadly poisons known to man"... known as Iocaine... fictional, by the way.

He supposedly pours the poison into one goblet and Vizzini has to pick which one has the poison in it.
Now this banter is hilarious because it goes on for ages and the result... a catch-22, really... the first time I saw it, it totally caught me off guard as did the explanation. Very unexpected and in a cool way.

SPOILER

The Man in Black is Wesley who inherited the pirate ship Revenge and the name of Dread Pirate Roberts from the very pirate that was rumored to have killed him... It also turns out that the name was passed down through a series of individuals. Although Wesley started as a prison on presumed death row, the pirate never killed him and they wound up becoming friends.

Not all things are as they seem in this story, which always keeps it exciting.


I had my suspicions and hopes early on that Wesley was the Man in Black. For a split second, when he said to Buttercup "he died well, that should please you," I remember feeling overcome with sadness that my hopes had been dashed...

Then of course, it was all a façade and Wesley was alive.

Meanwhile as we see the various duels unfold, we also see Prince Humperdink [who I always joke is wearing a dress in these scenes, lol] and Count Rugen pursuing Buttercup's kidnappers.


Wesley and Buttercup have their reunion, but it only lasts through the dreaded "fire swamp." It's pretty rough and graphic at points, especially when Wesley comes face to face with the ROUSes (rodents of unusual size).

She goes back with Humperdink and Wesley is held in the Pit of Despair to await torture.
The plot stalls for only 10-15 minutes or so. Buttercup comes to realize [mostly thanks to a crazy-ass dream where this old lady breaks the fourth wall to wake her up to the truth that] she will always love Wesley. Humperdrink plays along, but only we the audience know he has an even more devious plan in mind.


Not only is he not a real Prince Charming, but he SPOILER had actually hired Vizzini and his crew to murder Buttercup so he can start a war with Gildar... seriously, some crazy stuff goes on that goes against the conventions of most fairytales.


Like Buttercup preferring farm boy-turned-pirate Wesley over a Prince... of course, you had to be there in the beginning to believe why this is. Plus all sorts of despicable reasons as to why Humperdink is a bit of a jerk that has no business marrying anyone.

As I mentioned earlier, the most unconventional part that works with this movie is how the supporting characters, the lackeys, particularly Inigo Montoya gets his storyline... not only continued but resolved.  Heck, if you really look beyond the surface, he's the most interesting, most complex character this movie has... except for maybe Humperdink.

So we get to the point where I left off the first time...

Buttercup loses her temper with Humperdink, so he uses his torture machine to kill Wesley.
By some miracle, Inigo and Fezzik find him and bring him to Miracle Max to revive.

To be brutally honest, the rest of this movie probably would have fallen apart had it not been for Fezzik. If he hadn't found Inigo (back to being the drunkard he was when Vizzini hired him), Wesley wouldn't have been saved and neither would have Buttercup. Plus, it helped lighten the mood (the movie was getting kinda dark and hopeless at this point) and kept the momentum going.

Although we don't see all the details, the grandfather's narration clues us in that Fezzik found the "six-fingered man" and wakes Inigo out of his stupor. Inigo decides to look for Wesley because he needs a brilliant mind to plan his storming of the castle.

Three parts of the movie are particularly memorable and always worth the revisit of the whole.

The first is Wesley's three-part duel with Vizzini and his crew.
The second is the scene with Miracle Max.
And the third is the wedding ceremony between Buttercup and Humpderink
(well, four if you include Wesley's "To the Pain" speech to Humperdink)

From start to finish, Miracle Max is probably the funniest, most quotable scene this movie has. The man is played by none other than Billy Crystal, completely unrecognizable except for his voice. If he wasn't funny enough on his own, Carol Kane who plays his wife... forget about it! :-P

It's hard to resist the temptation of quoting this scene as it's progressing. It's even harder not to do it while imitating their voices.

So Wesley is revived (without much strength in his extremities) and goes with Inigo and Fezzik to storm the castle.

Buttercup and Humperdink are married by the "impressive" clergyman who begins the sermon with the ever-memorable "wah-widge... wah-widge is what bwings us togetha today"

Everyone gets exactly what they want out of the deal... except for Humperdink, obviously.

And the grandson, who was calling for Humperdink's murder earlier on when Wesley was presumed dead :-P

Inigo's final showdown with Count Rugen is pretty impressive, although one can't help but wonder how he survived that blow to the stomach... especially considering this is set in medieval times.

But yeah, it's a great conclusion to his 20 year request for revenge and it proves cathartic for him as well as Mandy Patinkin, the actor who plays him. According to a bit of trivia, his final blow to Count Rugen was, to him, like killing the cancer that killed his father.

"Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die!"


Wesley's "To the Pain" speech, in a nutshell, is his wish for Humperdink "to live in anguish wallowing in freakish misery forever" because it is the only punishment worthy of him after all the trouble he put him and Buttercup through.


This fantasy involves maiming his limbs, taking out his tongue and his eyes.

The only thing that remains are the ears. ("Wrong! Your ears you keep!")
Once the speech is done, Buttercup ties up Humperdink (wearing another dress, btw, lol) to leave to rot and the foursome head for the horizon on the four white horses Fezzik finds for them.

Actors and Actresses

For the most part, this is another of those movies where, for me, it's more about the story and the genres represented more than the actors.

However, I cannot go into this movie without giving a good part of the discussion to Cary Elwes.
With Cary Elwes as Wesley, he was the quintessential knight in shining armor... minus the armor, obviously. For the sake of his beloved, he's willing to go to any lengths to reunite with her and he looks dashingly handsome while doing so. He has vulnerability and doesn't let that hold him back. So handsome, great speaking voice and overall, he's aged well.
It was interesting to see him as the villain in "Ella Enchanted," the reverse of the role he's best known for. [He's also great in "Robin Hood: Men in Tights," like the second coming of Errol Flynn, albeit more comedic]
What's incredible to me about him is that, despite all the years that have gone by, he still embraces this role and he looks back on it as one of the best experiences he ever had on a film.

The same goes for Mandy Patinkin. He's done so many other things since this movie. Most recently, the ShowTime series "Homeland," and he still loves it when people come up to him and quote his infamous line.


Wallace Shawn is hilarious in this movie, despite only being in it for a short time.

He introduced us to "inconceivable!"

Early on what made this movie work for me was the banter between Fezzik and Inigo, completing each other's sentences and such. They're lackeys originally, but they get along so well that they become best friends.


Buttercup's resolve in her love for Wesley as much as he's persistent about getting her back. Other than that, Buttercup might not be the strongest character in this movie. But as of lately, we've been spoiled by free-minded princesses and this movie came out 25+ years ago so that can be overlooked. Sure, she's blonde, but I don't find her all that pretty. And she's kinda one-note.


Chris Sarandon makes a pretty good villain, something he did a bang up job of in the 80's. Between this and "Fright Night," which I only saw recently because Anton Yelchin starred in the remake.

He also plays a good role further into my countdown, so I'll talk about him more then.

Between "The Wonder Years" and "Boy Meets World," the Brothers Savage were pretty big in the late 80's, early 90's. Fred Savage was here just before he did "The Wonder Years" and has since gone on to directing as well as occasionally acting.

I remember one cameo he did on "Boys Meets World" where I did not like him much at all... he was putting the moves on Topanga despite being her teacher and threatened to have Corey expelled after getting into an altercation with him.

And In Memorium, Andre the Giant (1946-1993) and Peter Falk (1927-2011) will be missed for their various contributions, but certainly in their loveable, memorable roles here.


Overall, though, the movie's biggest star has to be the script.





Wednesday, March 12, 2014

36. Clueless (1995)



Code-name: Christian



Writer/Director: Amy Heckerling
[Loosely based on "Emma" by Jane Austen]
Type: chick flick, high school dramedy

Cast:
Cher- Alicia Silverstone
Dionne- Stacey Dash
Josh- Paul Rudd
Tai- Brittany Murphy
Amber- Elisa Donovan
Murray- Donald Faison
Travis- Breckin Meyer
Elton- Jeremy Sisto
Debate professor Mr. Hall- Wallace Shawn
Ms. Geist- Twink Caplan
Gym Teacher Ms. Stoeger- Julie Brown
Cher's dad- Dan Hedaya
Christian- Justin Walker

Write-up:

As much as I love the 80's, which is home to the original "Valley Girl," I found that movie boring and I'm not a fan of Nicholas Cage in his goofy roles.
"Clueless" is the movie I go to for that iconic brand of girl culture.
Maybe a year or so ago, I also saw Gwyneth Paltrow's version of "Emma," the Jane Austen novel this movie is supposedly based on.
I think I spent most of the movie trying to refute that claim.
Yeah, the story has its similarities, but again, it's just not "Clueless."

It's just as much girl culture as it is high school culture. This is one of those rare occasions where the protagonist is one of the most popular girls in school, and she really isn't all bad. Her greatest fault is that she's extremely superficial and takes things for granted because her dad's a super rich litigator.
And her actions throughout the film to change that motivated by her desire to prove her former brother-in-law that he's wrong about her.

Why is his opinion so important to her? I'm not entirely sure. My guess is that she's used to everyone liking her and she wants to convert the one person who doesn't. Plus, he lives in her Beverly Hills mansion with her, so the teasing thrown in her direction is constant.

I guess you could say that I've been a fan of this movie as long as it's been around. My earliest memory was watching the movie with my friend, Pat, and the biggest thing that stood out was the conundrum of Christian.
More on him later.
In chick flick fashion, it's something I could watch hundreds of times and not get sick of it. The story is still very relatable and there's a character in it for everybody, whether you identify with them personally, want to be them or knew people like them. Probably the greatest thing about it for me is that there's always some treasure to be found in it. As you get older, some references and quotes become clearer.

Before I go into the cast, here's IMDB's trivial list of "what-if cast members"
Other people who auditioned for "Clueless" included Reese Witherspoon (Cher), Terrance Howard (Murray), Jeremy Renner (Christian & Josh), Zooey Deschanel (Cher & Amber), Owen Wilson (Travis), Leah Remini (Tai), Seth Green (Travis), Lauryn Hill (Dionne).and
Paul Rudd also auditioned as Murray, Christian and Elton.

All of these characters became big in their own ways. Some of which, I didn't even know they were acting in the 90's because they came to my attention in the last 10 years.

Except for Paul Rudd, Brittany Murphy, Breckin Meyer, Donald Faison, and Jeremy Sisto, the majority of the young cast are best known for their given roles.
Even the star Alicia Silverstone. She got as far as the fanboy disaster known as  "Batman & Robin" and really hasn't been heard from outside of one or two cameos and direct-to-DVD films.

The guy who plays her dad, Dan Heyada, I'd only seen in a similar role in the SNL-inspired film "The Night at the Roxbury." In a word, Mel Horowitz is a "ball-buster," doesn't take excuses from anyone. It goes with the territory of his professional life. As an on-screen dad, he has varying shades of protectiveness, bravado, and his unique brand of kindness. In some ways (less exaggerated, of course), he's a lot like my dad, so that's one part of it that drives it home for me. 

Another piece of myself I see in this movie comes from Tai. I didn't need the "Which Clueless Character Are You?" quiz I took recently to tell me that. She's the new girl that Cher and Dionne "adopt," take under their wing and give her the tools she needs to survive Bronson Alcott High School. Not that I'd ever been "the new girl," but she's socially awkward, kinda shy and sometimes, I wish I had Cher as a "life coach."

Possibly following Josh's example, she advised Tai to
  • read one non-school book a week ("Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus")
  • improve her vocabulary ("I hope not sporadically")
  • improve her physique ("and my buns, they don't feel nothin' like steel")
  • try to do something good for mankind or the environment
The only bit of advice that went array went array in a MAJOR way.
Of course, I'm talking about the Elton debacle here.
Cher finds high school boys so vastly immature that she can't see herself dating them, but she tries to set up Tai with Elton. Gently nudging her in his direction. Taking her to a party where he'll be there and gets them to dance together (I dare you to say you didn't know  "Rollin' with the Homies" before seeing this movie!).
Unfortunately, he misinterprets her intentions, thinking she's the one into him and the horror didn't end with him abandoning her at a gas station. And the bad karma continued with her later into the film where Tai ended up becoming a monster that outdid her in the popularity department. (Although not to the same degree as Cady Heron in "Mean Girls," another Amy Heckerling production).

Before Tai came along, we got to know Cher as the popular girl who knew how to schmooze teachers into changing her grades. All except for Mr. Hall, her debate professor (Wallace Shawn, otherwise known as Rex from the Toy Story movies or that "inconceivable girl" from "The Princess Bride") and Ms. Geist.
Her solution, ultimately, was setting them up and magically, that improved everyone's grades. Ah, only in the movies would that ever happen.
But it's definitely worth Cher's dad's response to her C in debate turning into an A;
"I couldn't be happier than if they were based on real grades."

It's always interesting to see how teachers are portrayed on film and how iconic they can be sometimes. My friend Pat and I still look back on and bring up Ms. Stoeger in gym class:
"Cher! Earth to Cher! Come in, Cher!"
By the way, not all female gym teachers are same-sex oriented. One of my middle school gym teachers was married to the brother of one of my other gym teachers. But that's just one example.

Speaking of same-sex oriented, now's the time to bring Christian to the discussion.
He's the transfer student that joins Cher's debate class in the spring semester and she falls head over heels for him. She pulls out all the stops to get him to notice her. Drawing attention to her mouth, dropping her pen for him to pick up, sending gifts to herself... The one bit of advice I actually tried was "showing more skin."  One day, I wore a nicer top to school to get my crush to notice me at our lunch table. I did get the reaction I wanted, but it was more like shock and it only lasted for a moment :-P oh well

So she did get a couple dates with him.
The first one was to a dance party where they ended up running into Tai and Josh was nice enough to dance with her. But my favorite part of that was before they even left the house.

Mel: Cher, come in here... what is that?
Cher: A dress
Mel: Says who?
Cher: Calvin Klein
Mel: It looks like underwear. Go put something over it
Cher: Daddy, I was just going to...

Worth a laugh every time I watch 8-)

The second was one-on-one. Cher did all her preparations, most don't go as well as she hoped nd he ends up high-tailing it in the middle of "Spartacus" (he had a thing for Tony Curtis) when she starts to get fresh.
It took a guy's perspective for Cher and Dionne to realize one of this movie's biggest bombshells: Christian was gay.

That stuck with me for the first couple years because I really didn't know what it meant. All I really grasped was that Cher and Christian were not going to happen as a couple.
Ironically, I had a friend named Christian who I had a crush on for maybe a couple months and he came out of the closet a couple years later. Apparently, it took me years to become perceptive in such things because I fell for two gay men in high school.  
Every now and then, it happens with actors too... as if it's bad enough that you don't have a chance with them because you don't run in the same social circles. :-P

But once this realization comes and goes, Christian becomes a fixture in Cher's life as one of her best shopping partners. And we all know how much Cher loves to shop. (I'm not a girly girl who loves clothes shopping, but this quick short scene makes me wish I had a best gay to shop with too).
It's a shame that the newer generations who see this movie won't know what Polaroids are. When she shops, Cher trusts them over mirrors any day.

One scene all of us can relate to is where Cher fails her driving test. My weakness was parallel parking (just like Judy Funnie in "Doug"). Cher was just a terrible driver in general on the day where it mattered most. It was only a matter of time before she found her kryptonite, the one situation she couldn't talk her way out of.
And the timing of it causes a rift between her and Tai, who drops the ultimate insult:
"You're a virgin who can't drive."

Probably one of the strongest themes this movie has is not to trust a book by its cover or trust first impressions of people.
Tai hit it off with the ever-tardy skateboarder Travis because they have things in common and Cher talks her out of it because he's a stone that "no self-respecting girl ever dates"... and by the end of the movie, she realizes she was wrong about him.
The same thing with Josh, who she ends up falling head over heels for.

I mean, how could you not? Paul Rudd, he's one of those people I am so happy that they're still acting and doing really well in the industry. I remember seeing him cast in "Anchorman" and the movies that followed... I almost always enjoy watching him and he's still as good looking as he was in this, his first big movie role.

Brittany Murphy, I kept up with a lot of her movies after this one... heck, I think I had to be told it was her because she was blonde in every other role after this one. Uptown Girls, Just Married (ok, that one was bad), Little Black Book (cringe-worthy at times)... it sucks what happened to her a couple years ago. She was gone too soon :(

Yeah, is it that obvious how much I love this movie? :-P
It's iconic, it's quotable, great cast and great story.

***

The next two weeks will focus on more dramatic films that got Oscar buzz in recent years.

The first one is a Best Picture winner I still argue against... but seeing it was a uniquely breath-taking, pulse-quickening, intense experience.
:-P I think I might have given it away already, but oh well, so be it.